Who
can forget the great (descriptor used with healthy dose of irony)
health care reform debate of summer 2009? In a historic low point for
American discourse, crazed tea party crackpots and others situated on
the extreme right side of the political spectrum attempted to derail the
eventual passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA) by any means they deemed necessary. These efforts included the
sensational and oft-repeated claim that group of government drones would
render service decisions that could theoretically result in the
arbitrary deaths of American citizens. It is still hard to recall the
death panel “conversation” without overt queasiness.
Having failed to gain traction for the propaganda outside the usual
circle of tinfoil hat wearing paranoids, the right then sought to take
the wind out of the act’s sails by senselessly voting for its repeal in
the House no less than 37 times.
These “symbolic” gestures have been an epic waste of taxpayer resources
even as issues related to consistently high unemployment,
infrastructure dissolution and climate change languish.
Then the repugican cabal apparatus tried a new tactic, espousing the dire warning
that Obamacare would bring the country to financial ruin, ruin I say!
The folks who spread this disingenuous swill would have loved us to
forget that Wall Street already tied its hand at that last decade. But
instead of repugican howls for accountability at the time, we received
cynical claims that further deregulation was the solution. That’s just
what an alcoholic needs: increased access to spirits.
And then, oops! As Obamacare began to become the law of the land, we experienced a marked slowdown in health care costs.
In even worse news for right wing agenda, the reversal may be permanent
if the economy continues to grow. Better get back to that middle class
job killing stat! I am certain repugican cabal opposition to raising the Federal
minimum wage is just a coincidence.
Having dispatched the more obvious objections to Obamacare with
amazing speed in this era of legislative inertia, the right is launching
a new scare tactic. Designed to divert attention away from the fact
that health care reform is already working to relieve budgetary strain
while increasing access to health insurance for Americans previously
locked out, the wingnut media apparatus would now have us believe
that a doctor shortage is the next danger.
The Wall St. Cheat Sheet ran an article this week with a rhetorical question for a headline: Does Obamacare Mean Fewer Doctors and Less Accessible Healthcare?
Note to wingnut pundits: the inclusion of a question mark at the end
of a provocative headline is a dead giveaway that what we are about to
read is not solid analysis, but rather a rudimentary attempt to plant an
idea. This is NOT journalism.
But I digress. Among the more flimsy evidence writer Meghan Foley
offers is data from a “Physicians Foundation survey of 13,000 doctors
[which] discovered that 60 percent of respondents would retire today if
they could, an increase from 45 percent who gave the same answer before
the legislation was passed.”
Here’s an idea. Perhaps those doctors who wish they could retire are
among the throngs of Baby Boomers who, having lost savings, pensions,
jobs and homes in the housing bubble burst and financial crash of 2008,
can no longer afford to do so. How in the world is this survey direct
evidence of Obamacare creating a doctor shortage? To suggest that other
factors may be at play could be the understatement of my professional
writing career.
I give the right’s media arm credit for Playskool Weeble-like
resiliency, but the arguments and objections against implementing reform
are becoming more pathetically desperate. If the repugican cabal and
its voices are the “true patriots” they often claim to be, how about
getting behind a law that was passed democratically and which is already
demonstrating significant benefits with regard to the finances and
security of the nation and its denizens. Give it up already.
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