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Alan Grayson

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Rick Santorum Is Wrong

Posted: 01/04/12 08:00 PM ET

Maybe I should leave it alone. Maybe I should just let Rick Santorum enjoy the 15 minutes of fame that comes with getting 30,000 Republicans to vote for you. (Less than one-hundredth of one percent of the U.S. population, by the way.)

But there is something that Rick Santorum said last month that really bothers me. And I'm going to tell you what it is.

On December 5, Santorum was talking to a group of about 100 students at Dordt College, a small Christian college in Iowa. A student referred to a 2009 Harvard study showing that more than 44,000 Americans die each year because they don't have health coverage. The student then asked Santorum what that meant for the Christian responsibility of caring for the poor. Specifically, the student questioned whether "God appreciates the fact" that all those Americans die each year for lack of healthcare.

Santorum's response? Rick Santorum "rejects" the idea "that people die in America because of lack of health insurance."

Wake up, Rick.

The student was referring to the same study that I publicized on the Floor of the House two weeks after it was published in the American Journal of Public Health. Here it is. It documents that 44,789 Americans die each year because they have no health insurance. In fact, if you take two Americans who are physically identical -- same age, same gender, same race, same weight, same smoking history -- and one of them has health insurance and one does not, then the one without health insurance is 40 percent more likely to die each year.

Here is a link to my speech on this, entitled "I Apologize to the Dead and Their Families."

I remember the same response from right-wingers then as we hear from Santorum today -- anyone can go to an emergency room. I ask them to show me an emergency room that will provide chemotherapy to a cancer victim. There isn't one.

But to answer that challenge, I started a website called www.NamesOfTheDead.com. I invited surviving family and friends to tell me about people whom they had loved and lost, because they had no health coverage. And they did -- thousands of them. I read some of their stories on the House Floor.

Then I gave a speech identifying how many people died each year for lack of health care in each district represented by a Republican healthcare opponent. The Republicans interrupted that speech for two hours, until the House Parliamentarian told them that they had to let me continue. A reporter who has covered Capitol Hill for more than 25 years told me that that kind of interruption had never happened before.

But Rick Santorum apparently never got the memo. He thinks that no one in America ever dies because he has no health care.

Why does Santorum think that? Because he has to. He has to engage in flat denial of the reality that 50 million Americans -- one out of every six of us -- face each day. Because to face that reality would mean that Santorum would have to face the brutality, the swinishness, the cruelty and the savagery of the policies that he so enthusiastically espouses.

For God's sake -- every single other industrialized country in the entire world has universal health care. Why can't we? How many more people have to die? How many more sacrifices on the altar of Almighty Greed?

Any health care system that denies necessary care on the basis of wealth is evil. It doesn't matter how you micromanage it, or tinker with it. It's evil.

When Justice Harry Blackmun began voting against death in every death penalty case, he gave this simple and eloquent explanation: "From this day forward, I no longer shall tinker with the machinery of death."

We need to reach the same kind of realization in health care. Forget about the tinkering. This is America, not Myanmar. People who are sick need to be able to see a doctor. Because we are human beings, not cattle. End of story.

Are you listening, Rick Santorum?

Courage,
Alan Grayson

P.S. To the tens of thousands of us who helped our campaign during 2011, thank you. From my heart, thank you.

 

Follow Alan Grayson on Twitter: www.twitter.com/alangrayson

Maybe I should leave it alone. Maybe I should just let Rick Santorum enjoy the 15 minutes of fame that comes with getting 30,000 Republicans to vote for you. (Less than one-hundredth of one percent ...
Maybe I should leave it alone. Maybe I should just let Rick Santorum enjoy the 15 minutes of fame that comes with getting 30,000 Republicans to vote for you. (Less than one-hundredth of one percent ...
 
 
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02:53 PM on 02/15/2012
Well stated Alan. The health care issues is driven by greed, period. From the AMA to big pharma, and everyone in between. I have asked this question for years; how can anyone call themselves a christian and deny another the right to see a doctor and recieve the care that they need?

I do not attend church, yet I find the doctrine both compelling and confusing. Taking care of your fellow man, helping the poor, and showing compassion are all sensible and morally right in their nature. What confuses me the most is the lack of these concerns in the policies of the Republican party. They are the self annointed party of the christians, yet their policies are in direct conflict with that which they proclaim to represent.
The only credit I will ever give them is they are masters at turnig average citizens against one another, and they use religion to accomplish it. As you stated, they claim that nobody dies from lack of health insurance in America, they also claim (Santorum in Florida debate I believe) that people do not suffer from starvation in America either. What a broad brush they paint with. While people might not be droping like they do in African countires, there are million of americans that do not get enough to eat on any given day.
The truth is simple; they have theirs, and they relly are not concerned with those that don't.
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Stalling
Holy Money
08:13 PM on 01/07/2012
Isn't Jesus from the Middle East?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tyler Austin
Women = people. Corperations ≠ people.
11:52 PM on 01/06/2012
Double think leads to double speak.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nherent
Subversivist.
04:27 PM on 01/05/2012
So much fanatical sympathy for the unborn.
Those who are without access to healthcare but are sick or dying?.......not so much.
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
01:38 PM on 01/11/2012
Especially since a number of those who die from lack of health care are babies -- wanted babies -- whose mothers could not afford adequate prenatal care.
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Joni Geller
"I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one."
02:52 PM on 01/05/2012
Hopefully, we will all find our ways to the polls and vote who we believe to be the better choice. Grant you the electoral college will do the rest, but I believe the American people will come together as one if the situation calls for it (i.e., Pearl Harbor, 9/11). We are a nation made up of differences, and we don't always agree with each other, but we still find a way to move forward. I think of society much like a baseball game - two teams fighting to be number one - but during the world series back in the 80's a huge earthquake happened in CA and I remember baseball players scrambling to find their family members in the stands. Those guys could have cared less at that moment who would win the race. All they cared about were their loved ones ... and in the end isn't that what you would care about too?
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Pat Bateman2000
GOP - No Fact-Checkers Allowed
02:14 PM on 01/05/2012
Someone has to explain to me was Jesus a Republican only? It would seem so based on the right's rhetoric. I have known many democrats that were also Christians. I guess the difference is we're smart enough to know that fear and loathing in Jesus' name is just wrong. After all taking his name in Vain is also a sin.
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Mabila
I am not exhausted defending this President!
02:49 PM on 01/05/2012
Agree with you! This has baffled my mind for the longest. Jesus came to save the poor, sick, hungry, lowly, naked, dejected, homeless against injustice. To me, the DNC espouses the same values. I vote DNC and I love Jesus!
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busterggi
I'm a Sally Randian
02:06 PM on 01/05/2012
In the universe between Santorum's ears everything is perfect or will be once Obama is gone and an American theocracy has been established.

Then we can invade Iran and China & dissolve all unions & eliminate all government waste spent on people he doesn't believe exist or at least don't deserve to exist.
01:31 PM on 01/05/2012
The question really is of these 44,000 deaths how many were refused healthcare because they didn't have insurance. Not having insurance is the public's tight to chose if they want. Why should health care be a right, if you don't want to pay for it. Then you have to pay a fine or have it taken from your tax refund. When you force someone to do something you are taking away his freedom to chose and that is what America was built on.
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Nonyabizz
Facts are really just a liberal plot
01:21 PM on 01/05/2012
Meh, that's the standard GOP response to facts...
"I don't accept that".
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jobscabin
Its just as normal to be different
01:18 PM on 01/05/2012
Thank you again, Mr Grayson. It was true then. It is true now. Republicans have no compassion for the dying. They only have eyes for money.
jhNY
Mercy.
12:30 PM on 01/05/2012
Nostalgia is a dangerous political worldview, making practitioners blind to current realities while seeking to substitute them with a return to a glorious, fictional yesterday that never has been.
Hambone1
When not just ANY bone will do
11:06 AM on 01/05/2012
To the people in Mr. Grayson's district: PUT THIS MAN BACK IN OFFICE WHERE HE BELONGS!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paul Is Right
01:59 PM on 01/05/2012
No thank you.
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blabberator
Who cut the cheese?
10:37 AM on 01/05/2012
Santorum

Such holy richeousness ... such a lack of compassion.
Lies and denials.
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Nefarious Newt
Looking up from a new perspective
10:34 AM on 01/05/2012
The reason a person like Rick Santorum can make these "holy" pronouncements is that he, like too many, choose ignorance over reality. For them, ignorance really IS bliss; if you close your eyes, plug your ears, and refuse to look out the window at the world as it is, it is easy to stand on a stage or in a church and spout ridiculous platitudes and pitiless rhetoric with a straight face. Santorum, like his Republican brethren, walks past the real problems of the world, intent on peddling fear over problems that pale in comparison. What price the public debt, when one in six Americans live in poverty? How does a "Christian" lay themselves down to sleep, knowing that somewhere near, a child's belly is gnawed by hunger and a family huddles for warmth in a cold, dark home?
01:17 PM on 01/05/2012
So true. Too many people simply chose not to know what is going on not only in our country, but in the world. This ignorance does not bode well for our species.
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RTFanatic
People have more fun than anyone
02:03 PM on 01/05/2012
Or the Rick Santorums of the world and their ilk simply DON'T CARE that people die from lack of health coverage.
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10:22 AM on 01/05/2012
This is a perfect example of what happens in goper politics today--if you disagree with a premise or policy, not only is the other guy wrong, but you put on the blinders and deny factual evidence. Very similar to the gopers denying that any jobs have been created during Pres Obama's tenure. Another "ignore the man behind the curtain" moment.
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RS
I think, therefore, I don't listen to Limbaugh
01:14 PM on 01/05/2012
...if you disagree with a premise or policy, not only is the other guy wrong, but you put on the blinders and deny factual evidence..."

And call the other guy one of the following ad nauseam:

1. "COMMUNIST!"
2. "PINKO!"
3. "SOCIALIST!"

'Nuff said.