
(AP Photo/John Bazemore)
“Cockamamie” -- That’s what the Republican governor of Florida - a state where four out of eighteen million residents have no health insurance - has publicly called President Obama’s efforts to use the power and best experience of our federal government to provide coverage for them, and for nearly all of the other forty-three million uninsured Americans.
According to the Encarta World English Dictionary, cockamamie is an adjective with two meanings:
1. having very little importance or meaning
2. having little or nothing to do with reality
The irony here is as obvious as the shameless demagoguery exhibited by Governor turned U.S. Senate candidate, Charlie Crist, the ultimate political opportunist. In fact, which side is it in the health reform debate that has relied on relentless factual distortion and outright disinformation? It’s clear to anyone willing to do even a little digging that the opponents of health reform have largely made their case based on arguments having “little or nothing to do with reality”. And just how much “importance or meaning” this kind of opposition will have in the long run remains to be seen.
So Governor Crist, in an attack mode effort to throw oratorical red meat at a hungry partisan crowd and offer them an easy, nasty label for the President's health reform efforts, chose the very word that best describes most of the “opposition” to national health reform. Thanks, Charlie.
Speaking of cockamamie - and we are - Crist recently went even further in exemplifying the kinds of tactics used by opponents of real health reform, writing an Op-Ed piece claiming that his own weak-kneed failure of a statewide health reform effort, something called Cover Florida, was actually a "model" for “working with the private sector” - rather than the elected government that we fund with our tax dollars - to insure the uninsured, and to reform a for-profit health care system gone wild.
The truth, as many have now reported, is that Crist's Cover Florida program is a hole-riddled joke. Introduced in January 2009, this Swiss cheese program has signed up less than 4,000 of the state’s 4 million uninsured to date. I was never a Math guy, but my calculator tells me that in eight months, this “model” program has succeeded in enrolling one tenth of one percent of Florida’s uninsured.
Could that have something to do with the fact that, in order to gain passage in a legislatively Republican-dominated state, the program dispensed with requirements to cover things like cancer drugs and treatments, extended hospital stays, and prescription drug costs that go too high? Now that’s what I call working with the private sector.
As has become standard operating procedure for Team Crist, the political calculation is that it's worth taking a shot - forgive me, Sarah Palin - at putting lipstick on a pig and moving on. Their cynical assessment is that they, like the architects of health reform "opposition" nationwide, can get away with distortion and deceit because many reasonable people remain uninformed, and are likely to stay that way. Besides, let's face it, it's the unreasonable, anti-information folks they're after anyway.
The sad Sunshine State truth is, healthcare costs are swallowing up more and more hard-working families, and are growing at a rate that far outpaces the growth in people’s wages -- helping fuel a whopping sub-category of foreclosures and bankruptcies.
But rather than demonstrating a non-partisan commitment to helping solve The Healthcare Crisis, Governor Crist has run the opposite way, to the right, showing an audacious lack of veracity as he continues to pull trick plays out of the national Republican/Reactionary/Corporate Health Care playbook - no doubt with a snappy title like "Telling Lies To Power, People & The Press".
Here, in a state with so very much riding on the outcome of this health reform debate, one would think that the governor might be doing just a little more than sucking up to corporate campaign contributors and pandering to the extremist base - and I do mean Base - of his party.
One would be wrong.
Cockamamie.










Comments
Four out of eighteen million without health insurance? That's not bad.
The real reason the Republicans will do anything to stop any meaningful healthcare reform is that it would be decades before an Republican stood a chance obeing elected.
When you look at all the tentacles hooked to healthcare strangling America, foreclosures, bankruptcies, uncompetitive businesses, and people just plain dying, there is no way the GOP can allow any real changes theat help real people. America and its people are being used for the political ends of desparate people clinging to power.
The idea that the government should run health care...and our car companies...and our banks...etc...is Cockamamie.
If President Obama manages to provide Health Care for every American Citizen that does not have it, well, no Republican will ever be elected to National Office for quite some time. If he also saves the American Auto Industry and can pull our financial sector out of the 'black hole' its fallen into he may go down in history as one of the greats. The Republicans cannot afford for him to save America and as a friend of mine said .... 'we always end up cleaning up their mess'. I'm just afraid that we have already reached the point of no return. We fit the classic case (in every detail) of the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire. I'm making travel plans!
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