Posted on 03/24/2010 10:50:07 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
When the House of Representatives passed health care reform, they made history. Never mind that the victory was a narrow 219-212, with 31 Democrats deserting their party on this vote. Never mind that not a single Republican voted for health care reform. It was about time that the myth of bipartisanship bit the dust, about time President Obama shrugged of the role of conciliator and healer and embraced his mandate as change agent instead. The passage of health care reform is the first improvement in the social contract in a generation. It is a victory for President Obama, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.), but mostly for the American people.
To be sure, the legislation is imperfect. To paraphrase the president, it is not radical reform, but it is reform. While we will not have universal health coverage, about 95 percent of the population will be covered, up from 83 percent now. Congress will have the possibility of amending current legislation to expand it, so that, in time everyone will be covered. This compromise reflects compromises in other social contract legislation, such as the minimum wage, which excluded private household workers and farm workers. Eventually, these workers were also covered by labor standards legislation, although the struggle continues to treat these workers fairly.
It occurs to me that the very Tea Party protestors who so strongly protested the passage of health reform might be prime beneficiaries of it. After all, the racist and homophobic epithets showered on Congressmen Emmanuel Cleaver, Barney Frank and John Lewis were a reprehensible example of the biases that many in the Tea Party bring to the table. They arent so much against health reform as they are against folks they chose to describe in words Congressman Clyburn says he had not heard since the 60s. Their language reveals the origins and intent of the Tea Party movement. It also suggests that these folks need a health care intervention.
Racism is, after all, a disease. For these Tea Party members it is a pre-existing condition. My tongue is only partly planted in my cheek when I suggest that these folks need every provision of this new health reform legislation to get the mental health services that they need to overcome their racism. It cannot be healthy for people to work themselves up into such frenzy that they spit on legislators and shower them with epithets. Congressman Emmanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.) is a more magnanimous soul than I. From my perspective, the spitter should have been prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
The Tea Party ugliness does not detract from Sunday nights victory. It does, however, remind us of the fallacy of post-racialism, and the rigidity of Tea Party attitudes. In the wake of the virulent Tea Party racism, some of the leaders attempted to distance themselves from the worst of the nonsensical Tea Party behavior. Republican National Committee Chairman, the ambiguously Black Michael Steele, said the racism could be narrowed to just a few ignorant people, not the whole movement. Why is Mr. Steele making excuses for these people? Does he doubt that they call him the n word, too, when they cant run roughshod over him?
Congressman Clyburn called health care reform The Civil Rights Act of the 21st century. His wording reminds us that no civil rights legislation was passed without extreme resistance. No doubt, epithets were tossed around when the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was passed, and diversionary tactics were used to attempt to sway votes. No step toward social justice has been made without resistance. From that perspective, the Tea Party resistance is completely consistent with history.
?At the same time, the tone and tenor of Tea Party resistance reminds us how much more work we must do before our nation truly becomes post-racial. And it reminds us how much help racists need. Perhaps, thanks to heath care reform, they can get much-needed mental health assistance to help with the fatal pre-existing condition virulent racism.
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Julianne Malveaux is President of Bennett College for Women. She can be reached at presbennett@bennett.edu.
I wonder where she was during Michael Steele’s Senate race, when protesters threw Oreo cookies at him? Good to know they were just trying to give him a snack.... those liberals/Democrats could not possibly have meant to imply a racial slur, I guess....
Well, googled and found the answer.. .
As you know, that 'stupid' is the common denominator of the majority - not all perhaps; and I add that as a kindness - but surely a majority, of Demrat Congress. Anyway it was Barbara Milkulsky/D/MD.
The ignorance here; does reach across the country by their representation.
If you didn't have such a big butt, you might get your tongue planted all the way in your cheeks.
Her abusive locution is part of the hoary old 'Rat pitch that "Republicans aren't real people" -- and they moaned and groaned when Sarah Palin made a remark about "real Americans"! lol ..... to finish connecting the dots here, then, I guess the Democrats are selling the notion that "real Americans" aren't "real people", ergo "Americans" are not "people". Q. E. D.
Way to go, 'Rats.
Call it George McGovern's Last Theorem. No wonder he was rejected by 49 states!
Call it George McGovern's Last Theorem. No wonder he was rejected by 49 states!
Good one and lol/;^)
as for "way to go rats!". . .
if wishes were horses; they would be gone. ..if only/sigh.
A PBS staple. She was the one who wished Clarence Thomas would get a heart attack.
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