Friday, July 26, 2013

Republican Health Care Panic

Paul Krugman via Seniors for a Democratic Society.

Yet even as Republican politicians seem ready to go on the offensive, there’s a palpable sense of anxiety, even despair, among conservative pundits and analysts. Better-informed people on the right seem, finally, to be facing up to a horrible truth: Health care reform, President Obama’s signature policy achievement, is probably going to work.

And the good news about Obamacare is, I’d argue, what’s driving the Republican Party’s intensified extremism. Successful health reform wouldn’t just be a victory for a president conservatives loathe, it would be an object demonstration of the falseness of right-wing ideology (my em). So Republicans are being driven into a last, desperate effort to head this thing off at the pass.
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And the prospect that such a plan might succeed is anathema to a party whose whole philosophy is built around doing just the opposite, of taking from the “takers” and giving to the “job creators,” known to the rest of us as the “rich.” Hence the brinkmanship.
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No, Republicans may be willing to risk economic and financial crisis solely in order to deny essential health care and financial security to millions of their fellow Americans. Let’s hear it for their noble cause!
Noble. Yeah. Yeesh. Lyinsackacrap assholes. But we knew that.

BTW, I am hereby decreeing that when referring to Repugs, "lyinsackacrap" is henceforth ONE WORD. Hey, English is a living language that evolves with the times, unlike Repugs.

Related Update:

Maddowblog

Senate GOPer calls shutdown threat 'the dumbest idea I've ever heard'

The idea was first pushed by one guy. It was Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) who said two weeks ago that he and his party should shut down the entire federal government unless Democrats agree to block all funding of the Affordable Care Act, even if that denies health care coverage to millions of American families.

Then Rubio picked up some friends. The number of Republican senators endorsing this tactic grew, just over the course of two weeks, to 17 -- roughly a third of the Senate GOP caucus -- including members of the Republican leadership. Before long, Club for Growth, Heritage Action, and the Senate Conservatives Fund were all on board, too.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the shutdown: all of a sudden, a fair number of Republicans, including Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.), started to realize their party's idea was blisteringly stupid.
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On Wednesday, the number of Republican senators on record with the government-shutdown threat was 17. Yesterday, while the right tried to find new signatories, the number of backers actually dropped to 12 -- Sens. Ayotte, Boozman, Cornyn, Kirk, and Wicker all pulled their support without explanation.

It's like watching a balloon deflate, quietly and slowly.
More like "gasbag" than "balloon" but Rachel is very polite.

Second, if this plan implodes, and I suspect it will, it's going to make Sens. Rubio, Ted Cruz (R-Texas), and Mike Lee (R-Utah) -- the ringleaders of the gambit -- look awfully foolish. They pushed a ridiculous idea, got the base all worked up, received assistance from prominent right-wing activist groups, and even had Rush Limbaugh rallying support for the cause.

If, after all of this, the scheme falls apart, and even gets mocked by their own allies, it will reinforce the impression that these far-right senators are inept show-horses who aren't serious about governing and can't even execute their own bad ideas.
Shorter: we're winning.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

My grandmother, who was born in the deep South in the late 1800's, would have never thought to utter a curse word, but regularly referred to 'Damnyankees,' claiming that it was one word. If there's a heaven I hope she has reformed and is pleased that her grandson is a liberal Democrat in a solid blue state.

Gordon said...

I think after being in heaven a while she'd get the message and will be an even better person in her next reincarnation. :-)

Anonymous said...

Wonder who passed a note to Richard Burr, telling him which side is up? The man is so stupid and banal that he makes the comatose appear intellectually lively. Sigh.

Jay in N.C.

timr said...

the gop aka the rethuglician party is, as you say always for the "job creators" aka the rich, or as I like to think of them the "filch" or FILthy riCH.

BTW, I really enjoy your blog.

Anonymous said...

Pls have my senator (didn't vote for him) Ted Cruz run for prez in 2016.cuz I won't have to donate much $ for the dem. dem is shoo-in