Oct 23, 2009
Florida Congressman Alan Grayson keeps provoking congressional
Republicans and their media allies with fact-based challenges to the
lies being used to block health care reform.
The insurance-industry stooges keep taking the bait.
And the truth about the high cost of delaying needed changes in
America's health care delivery system keeps getting the attention it
deserves.
Why is Grayson so effective?
Because, unlike many other Democrats and mainstream Republicans, he
refuses to be intimidated by the bullying tactics employed by the GOP's
"Party of 'No' caucus" and its accomplices.
No matter how desperately Republicans in Congress and their amen
corner in the media may try to the censor the dissident Democrats,
Grayson is reminding America about the trail of dead left by
insurance-company greed and political neglect.
The Florida Democrat who drew national attention last month when he declared on the House floor that the Republican plan for uninsured Americans was "don't get sick, and if you do get sick, die quickly," was back on the House floor this week to announce the creation of a website to honor the victims of the current system.
Grayson, who has taken the lead in highlighting a Harvard study that shows 44,000 Americans die annually
because they have no health insurance, told the House and the nation:
"I think it dishonors all those Americans who have lost their lives
because they had no health coverage, by ignoring them, by not paying
attention to them, and by doing nothing to change the situation that
led them to lose their live."
With that in mind, he announced the launch of a Names of the Dead website.
Grayson's welcoming message at the site declares:
Every year, more than 44,000 Americans die simply because have no health insurance.
I have created this project in their memory. I hope that honoring
them will help us end this senseless loss of American lives. If you
have lost a loved one, please share the story of that loved one with
us. Help us ensure that their legacy is a more just America, where
every life that can be saved will be saved.
Visitors to the site are invited to add the names and stories of people
who have died. They're also asked where they stand with regard to the
health-care reform debate. There are links to the Harvard study,
Grayson's speeches and his congressional and campaign websites.
The last link stirred predictable objections from Republican
political operatives who are not used to Democrats who take the health
care debate seriously enough to try and win it.
"What is wrong with this man? Alan Grayson's morbid exploitation of
'the dead' for personal political gain may be the most shameless stunt
he's pulled yet," grumbled Andy Sere, spokesman for the National
Republican Congressional Committee.
Sere and his compatriots -- who are paid to pull shameless stunts
for political gain -- charged that Grayson had committed some kind of
ethics violation. They weren't sure what kind exactly, but they wanted
to get the term "ethics violation" in play.
As when congressional Republicans threatened to sanction him for
bringing up the fact that people die when they are denied insurance and
health care, Grayson responded with a cry of: Bring it on!
"Let them file a complaint," said the congressman, who reminded
reporters that he had paid for the website with his own money. "I'm
sure I'll be vindicated."
Actually, he's already been vindicated.
Opponents of health care reform are so desperately frightened by Grayson's tactics that they immediately attacked the "Names of the Dead" site and posted false names -- "Wile E. Coyote" and "Hugh G. Reckshinn" -- to mock the reality that Americans die because our insurance industry.
When your critics are reduced to making light of the innocent dead, you have won the debate.
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John Nichols
John Nichols is Washington correspondent for The Nation and associate editor of The Capital Times in Madison, Wisconsin. His books co-authored with Robert W. McChesney are: "Dollarocracy: How the Money and Media Election Complex is Destroying America" (2014), "The Death and Life of American Journalism: The Media Revolution that Will Begin the World Again" (2011), and "Tragedy & Farce: How the American Media Sell Wars, Spin Elections, and Destroy Democracy" (2006). Nichols' other books include: "The "S" Word: A Short History of an American Tradition...Socialism" (2015), "Dick: The Man Who is President (2004) and "The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism" (2006).
Florida Congressman Alan Grayson keeps provoking congressional
Republicans and their media allies with fact-based challenges to the
lies being used to block health care reform.
The insurance-industry stooges keep taking the bait.
And the truth about the high cost of delaying needed changes in
America's health care delivery system keeps getting the attention it
deserves.
Why is Grayson so effective?
Because, unlike many other Democrats and mainstream Republicans, he
refuses to be intimidated by the bullying tactics employed by the GOP's
"Party of 'No' caucus" and its accomplices.
No matter how desperately Republicans in Congress and their amen
corner in the media may try to the censor the dissident Democrats,
Grayson is reminding America about the trail of dead left by
insurance-company greed and political neglect.
The Florida Democrat who drew national attention last month when he declared on the House floor that the Republican plan for uninsured Americans was "don't get sick, and if you do get sick, die quickly," was back on the House floor this week to announce the creation of a website to honor the victims of the current system.
Grayson, who has taken the lead in highlighting a Harvard study that shows 44,000 Americans die annually
because they have no health insurance, told the House and the nation:
"I think it dishonors all those Americans who have lost their lives
because they had no health coverage, by ignoring them, by not paying
attention to them, and by doing nothing to change the situation that
led them to lose their live."
With that in mind, he announced the launch of a Names of the Dead website.
Grayson's welcoming message at the site declares:
Every year, more than 44,000 Americans die simply because have no health insurance.
I have created this project in their memory. I hope that honoring
them will help us end this senseless loss of American lives. If you
have lost a loved one, please share the story of that loved one with
us. Help us ensure that their legacy is a more just America, where
every life that can be saved will be saved.
Visitors to the site are invited to add the names and stories of people
who have died. They're also asked where they stand with regard to the
health-care reform debate. There are links to the Harvard study,
Grayson's speeches and his congressional and campaign websites.
The last link stirred predictable objections from Republican
political operatives who are not used to Democrats who take the health
care debate seriously enough to try and win it.
"What is wrong with this man? Alan Grayson's morbid exploitation of
'the dead' for personal political gain may be the most shameless stunt
he's pulled yet," grumbled Andy Sere, spokesman for the National
Republican Congressional Committee.
Sere and his compatriots -- who are paid to pull shameless stunts
for political gain -- charged that Grayson had committed some kind of
ethics violation. They weren't sure what kind exactly, but they wanted
to get the term "ethics violation" in play.
As when congressional Republicans threatened to sanction him for
bringing up the fact that people die when they are denied insurance and
health care, Grayson responded with a cry of: Bring it on!
"Let them file a complaint," said the congressman, who reminded
reporters that he had paid for the website with his own money. "I'm
sure I'll be vindicated."
Actually, he's already been vindicated.
Opponents of health care reform are so desperately frightened by Grayson's tactics that they immediately attacked the "Names of the Dead" site and posted false names -- "Wile E. Coyote" and "Hugh G. Reckshinn" -- to mock the reality that Americans die because our insurance industry.
When your critics are reduced to making light of the innocent dead, you have won the debate.
John Nichols
John Nichols is Washington correspondent for The Nation and associate editor of The Capital Times in Madison, Wisconsin. His books co-authored with Robert W. McChesney are: "Dollarocracy: How the Money and Media Election Complex is Destroying America" (2014), "The Death and Life of American Journalism: The Media Revolution that Will Begin the World Again" (2011), and "Tragedy & Farce: How the American Media Sell Wars, Spin Elections, and Destroy Democracy" (2006). Nichols' other books include: "The "S" Word: A Short History of an American Tradition...Socialism" (2015), "Dick: The Man Who is President (2004) and "The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism" (2006).
Florida Congressman Alan Grayson keeps provoking congressional
Republicans and their media allies with fact-based challenges to the
lies being used to block health care reform.
The insurance-industry stooges keep taking the bait.
And the truth about the high cost of delaying needed changes in
America's health care delivery system keeps getting the attention it
deserves.
Why is Grayson so effective?
Because, unlike many other Democrats and mainstream Republicans, he
refuses to be intimidated by the bullying tactics employed by the GOP's
"Party of 'No' caucus" and its accomplices.
No matter how desperately Republicans in Congress and their amen
corner in the media may try to the censor the dissident Democrats,
Grayson is reminding America about the trail of dead left by
insurance-company greed and political neglect.
The Florida Democrat who drew national attention last month when he declared on the House floor that the Republican plan for uninsured Americans was "don't get sick, and if you do get sick, die quickly," was back on the House floor this week to announce the creation of a website to honor the victims of the current system.
Grayson, who has taken the lead in highlighting a Harvard study that shows 44,000 Americans die annually
because they have no health insurance, told the House and the nation:
"I think it dishonors all those Americans who have lost their lives
because they had no health coverage, by ignoring them, by not paying
attention to them, and by doing nothing to change the situation that
led them to lose their live."
With that in mind, he announced the launch of a Names of the Dead website.
Grayson's welcoming message at the site declares:
Every year, more than 44,000 Americans die simply because have no health insurance.
I have created this project in their memory. I hope that honoring
them will help us end this senseless loss of American lives. If you
have lost a loved one, please share the story of that loved one with
us. Help us ensure that their legacy is a more just America, where
every life that can be saved will be saved.
Visitors to the site are invited to add the names and stories of people
who have died. They're also asked where they stand with regard to the
health-care reform debate. There are links to the Harvard study,
Grayson's speeches and his congressional and campaign websites.
The last link stirred predictable objections from Republican
political operatives who are not used to Democrats who take the health
care debate seriously enough to try and win it.
"What is wrong with this man? Alan Grayson's morbid exploitation of
'the dead' for personal political gain may be the most shameless stunt
he's pulled yet," grumbled Andy Sere, spokesman for the National
Republican Congressional Committee.
Sere and his compatriots -- who are paid to pull shameless stunts
for political gain -- charged that Grayson had committed some kind of
ethics violation. They weren't sure what kind exactly, but they wanted
to get the term "ethics violation" in play.
As when congressional Republicans threatened to sanction him for
bringing up the fact that people die when they are denied insurance and
health care, Grayson responded with a cry of: Bring it on!
"Let them file a complaint," said the congressman, who reminded
reporters that he had paid for the website with his own money. "I'm
sure I'll be vindicated."
Actually, he's already been vindicated.
Opponents of health care reform are so desperately frightened by Grayson's tactics that they immediately attacked the "Names of the Dead" site and posted false names -- "Wile E. Coyote" and "Hugh G. Reckshinn" -- to mock the reality that Americans die because our insurance industry.
When your critics are reduced to making light of the innocent dead, you have won the debate.
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