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Jamie Court

Jamie Court

Posted: December 7, 2010 08:38 PM

The news of Elizabeth Edwards' death Monday struck all of us. She was a personal hero, a battler for the rights -- especially health care -- that so many Americans lack. When Edwards was the main speaker and honoree at Consumer Watchdog's 2007 Rage for Justice dinner, she had an audience of hundreds sobbing. Not just for Edwards, who was at the time successfully fighting off the metastasized cancer that killed her, but for the powerful empathy of her words and her strength of belief in social justice.

Her scornful words for "compromise" as it is practiced in politics only have a stronger punch today. So don't cry for her. Get out there and have the guts to stand up for justice. Get your own rage going.

Part 1:

Part 2:


Click on the videos to hear her whole concise and deeply affecting speech. Here, also, are some excerpts:

Compromise today is too often applauded simply for itself. The cost of compromise to principles and real lives doesn't seem to matter.  It matters here. This organization understands that the way to build a fair and just society is not through baby steps or incremental goals, but with big steps and big solutions… and an obvious backbone to match.


We speak out for those people who need someone to stand up for them without compromise.Those who need a champion cannot afford compromise, in the face of forces that are powerful, persistent and pernicious and greedy.

We don't have universal healthcare in this country because powerful corporations  who profit from health care beat us. The pharmaceutical companies stole our tax money when they successfully lobbied--maybe the better words are bullied and threatened--their way into protecting their industry from that old free-market practice of bargaining for the best price.

And our tax money was stolen too by Bechtel and Halliburton and a handful of corporations that were awarded no-bid contracts in Iraq from an admix that has taken very good care of its friends and supporters while it has failed to protect the most needy among us.

I don't know how many tomorrows I have. Really, none of us do. I want to fight now, I need to fight now and I am buoyed by the fact that you are fighting now.

We will each by judged by the mark we left on the lives of others. I chose to campaign only because it is about a woman in Cleveland who came up and whispered in my ear, "I am really afraid because I found a lump in my breast, and I can't go to the doctor. I have no insurance." It's about Beverly in Detroit who broke down, unable even to speak, when she said she couldn't sleep, so afraid was she for the life of her son, who is serving in Iraq.

With less armor than I have, they fight, too.


 

Follow Jamie Court on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RaisingHellNow

The news of Elizabeth Edwards' death Monday struck all of us. She was a personal hero, a battler for the rights -- especially health care -- that so many Americans lack. When Edwards was the main ...
The news of Elizabeth Edwards' death Monday struck all of us. She was a personal hero, a battler for the rights -- especially health care -- that so many Americans lack. When Edwards was the main ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dch58
To think is to differ.
11:54 AM on 12/08/2010
What a beautiful and courageous person she was.
11:30 AM on 12/08/2010
Yes it is sad that she passed away. But whenever a celebrity or someone very well off develops cancer, I think about all my friends and relatives who fought this disease without health insurance and without money. I had a cancer scare a few years ago; I realized that should I develop cancer, I would have to sell everything I owned to pay for the treatment and, if I lived, I would be completely destitute. This country still needs national heath care.
10:51 AM on 12/08/2010
Appreciate the post, but she died Tuesday, not Monday.
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unfoxworthy
We:ScottOlsens,the misfits,out to change the world
08:05 AM on 12/08/2010
Thanks Jamie.
I hope we don't forget these words...
and this person anytime soon.
I remember these words slapping me awake, when I was lulled into thinking compromise is can work in any case (but it can't in EVERY case).
03:48 AM on 12/08/2010
How very sad that this magnificent woman was felled by betrayal in her private life. I strongly believe that infidelity and marital betrayal are powerfully carcinogenic. We have so many novels and movies based on true stories that illustrate this- or that would, if they told the whole truth.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
keldog4511
You ARE your own flotation device!
12:14 PM on 12/08/2010
Elizabeth Edwards was not felled. She held on, she stayed up, despite her husband's stupidity. I have no doubt that this certainly played a role in her cancer but her legacy is that she did not let this break her. At her bedside were her children AND her husband, despite his betrayal. There is no doubt that she was the glue that held it all together for that family. He will have to live with that the rest of his life. For Mrs. Edwards, she is at peace.
02:02 PM on 12/08/2010
we can never know, but I think she was more likely felled by the rush of hormones from fertility treatments
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VFausone
12:25 AM on 12/08/2010
What a profoundly beautiful woman she was.
apoyo
Micro-bio? Sounds serious.
10:09 PM on 12/07/2010
"With less armor than I have."

What a wonderful lady.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
diak0n0s
Under the scrutiny of the HP "moderators".
10:03 PM on 12/07/2010
OK. I'm glad you think so.

Now we're waiting to see Government files from Great Britain, France, Iran, China and Russia.

That will make us safe to the bone.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ReflectionsOfMyLife
The changing of sunlight, to moonlight...
09:36 PM on 12/07/2010
Elizabeth Edwards, thank you for your courage. You will be missed.