- 13. March 2010: Census and Sensibility (Part II)
- 13. March 2010: Census and Sensibility
- 2. March 2010: It Was Never About Your Health
- 2. March 2010: Is The Government A Rights Supplier?
- 21. February 2010: The Economic Traffic Jam
- 16. February 2010: Congressional Gains May Be Smaller If Dems Are Right
- 12. February 2010: Why Not Nullification?
- 9. February 2010: First Amendment Idiots (I can say that, can’t I?)
- 3. February 2010: No Judicial Activism Here...
- 22. November 2009: Boy, Is Our Face Red
Blogroll
It Was Never About Your Health
The health care reform debate has been raging for over a year now, and one fact about it has become more clear with every passing day. This has never been about your health.
Many leftist pundits and campaign strategists have been trying to make this point at the expense of the Republicans, but it really only sticks to the left. Yes, it is true that the Republican minority has been fighting these bills on every ground possible. It is also true that they are doing so because many of them are aware that this is a massive power grab by the Federal government, and the left in particular.
They have been fighting even on points that some of them agree with, because history has taught them that the Dems will try to get “bipartisan” agreement on a bill to nail down Republicans in the press. Once a Republican has signed on to legislation, the Dems call a press conference and talk about the bipartisan bill they have forged. If they expect it to be difficult, they put the name of a Republican on the bill to make it harder for the right to fight.
The problem for the left with this bill, is that at least in the Senate none of the Republicans have turned on America yet. The left had crowed about the wonderful things they were going to do for the downtrodden, how they were going to fix the broken health care system, and how they could do it because of the super-majority they held. This was to be their show of force. They were going to pass this bill, and tell the people how terrific they were, and declare themselves heroes of the working class.
The working class started the difficult times for the Dems by showing up at town hall meetings across the Country and declaring loudly that they didn’t want this bill. This of course made the Dems angry. How dare these unwashed masses question their moral authority? They were doing this for them! They even told Americans that were getting involved in their governance to shut up, and called them terrorists.
The angry reaction by the left in these meetings was partly for petty reasons; not wanting to be challenged in public, not wanting to be shown to be less informed than those that were questioning them at these meetings, and not wanting to answer to the people they believed they were smarter than.
Mos of it was about power. The left thought they had it, and in these meetings they felt it slipping away. They believed that a Democrat majority had been elected as a mandate to push through whatever they felt like doing. They thought the people had finally handed them the power they deserved, and were angry that everything was not under their control.
One of the greatest outcomes of this push for the health care reform bills has been that people are remembering that our Constitution vests most of the political power in their hands. The people, and particularly those on the right, are finally waking up.
Let’s hope that this leads to an electorate that is ever more willing to demand the power that our Constitution was supposed to guarantee.
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