Three weeks ago, in a previous article I wrote, I asked the question: How long will it take for race to appear in the Senate's health care debate?
Well, thanks to South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham, I now have my answer. Last Sunday Sen. Graham outlined the many reasons why it was unconscionable for tyrannical Democrats to burden his state with health care. Among his complaints, South Carolina has too much unemployment and too many Black people.
What?!
While making the point that the Senate health care bill's extension of Medicaid will place a burden on states, Sen. Graham made the following comment:
I have 12 percent unemployment in South Carolina. My state is on its knees. I have 31 percent African American population in South Carolina. How did they get the 60th vote?
If the senator wanted to explain the impact of the Medicaid expansion, why not just mention the percentage of his state that's actually receiving Medicaid? Or why not tell us the percentage of his state's budget that's going towards Medicaid? Instead he tells us the Black percentage and then moves on with the rest of his conspiracy theory.
The fact that Sen. Graham didn't bother to explain the point he was trying to make suggests to me that instead of attempting to seriously discuss Medicaid, poverty and unemployment, he was simply suffering from Racial Tourette's Syndrome (RTS). RTS is a condition which sometimes causes Republicans (and some Blue Dog Democrats) to randomly mention or use images of Blacks and/or Latinos in an effort to motivate their conservative base. Although RTS is not a fatal condition, it has been known to kill legislation and, on occasion, the hopes of certain Democratic candidates.
While my diagnosis of Sen. Graham's condition may appear cynical, it's not quite as cynical as suggesting that he was simply channeling the spirit of Strom Thurmond, the once segregationist senator who's seat Graham took over in 2003. Now, that would be cynical.
Nevertheless, we cannot escape the fact that Sen. Graham's comment falls right in line with what I predicted three weeks ago. Quoting from my previous article:
I hardly expect one of the Senators to set up an easel with one of those pictures of President Obama dressed as a witch doctor. No, it will be far more subtle than that. Instead of shouted, race is likely to be whispered and alluded to in the form of comments about "those people" who take advantage of big government and who make it harder for the good, tax paying Americans. You know "those people"--they're the same ones who hang out with the welfare queens, standing on the corner eating candy bars that they purchased with their fraudulently obtained food stamps.