Effigy optional

Read this and ponder how much is already going on locally. This comes from Bill Wilson at Americans for Limited Government:

Americans for Limited Government President Bill Wilson today urged more than 400,000 ALG activists nationwide to “hold rallies, demonstrations, tea parties, and protests in opposition to Barack Obama’s insidious efforts to take over the health care system and take away private health options from the American people.”

Wilson said that “Homegrown, grassroots efforts staged in front of House members’ district offices and at town hall meetings across the nation against ObamaCare are all the more imperative as Blue Dog Democrats attempt to defend the compromise they reached this week with House leadership on the language for the health care bill.”

Wilson said local efforts in Congressional districts throughout the month of August will culminate in the August 22nd “Recess Rally,” which Americans for Limited Government is co-sponsoring.

“There are going to be boots on the ground in districts across the country, and they’re not going to be happy when the politicians return home for their August recess and try to defend this mealy-mouth ‘compromise’ reached by the Blue Dogs,” Wilson promised.

The deal reached between Blue Dog lead negotiator Congressman Mike Ross (AR-CD4) and House leaders would cut $50 billion out of a bill that Kaiser Health News reports would cost more than $1.5 trillion

Said Wilson of the deal, “96.6 percent of a catastrophe is still a catastrophe.  The government-run health care legislation still creates an unsustainable entitlement that will permanently shackle taxpayers to an insurmountable burden that can never possibly be paid back.”

The House legislation proposes to cover individuals individuals up to 400 percent of the poverty level, or making approximately $43,320 or less annually, will be eligible for some level of health coverage under the plan whether through the public “option,” Medicaid, or otherwise.

“Barack Obama has promised the impossible: expanding care to 45 million without raising costs or increasing the deficit,” said Wilson.

“An average premium goes for $4,700, bringing the total cost of the additional care to 45 million more people to roughly $211.5 billion extra annually.  That money is not going to grow on trees—it’s going to come off the printing press and from overseas loans from China and Japan,” Wilson explained.

Wilson instead promoted what he called the “private option” as an alternative to the bill proposed in Congress.  “We desperately need entitlement reform, not an entitlement expansion.  The private option means giving all Americans the option not to participate at all in any government-sponsored plan,” said Wilson. 

Wilson continued, “It means unrestrained consumer choice, unrestricted insurance companies, the removal of all insurance coverage mandates, no obligatory coverage either for employers or individuals, market-set pricing instead of government-appropriated and controlled pricing, increased competition by reducing and removing those barriers to entry for insurance companies, pharmaceuticals, and other health care institutions, and finally, entitlement reform.”

“Medical institutions are already in the red, and they will not emerge by permanently funding the health care system by a government that has expanded the national debt for every single year since 1958.  That is a path to certain national insolvency,” Wilson concluded. (Emphasis mine.)

When you look at the political awakening which has occurred in our fair region just in the last six months (remember, the Rick Santelli rant which led to the initial April TEA parties occurred in mid-February), it’s a fascinating study in political activism. In that span we’ve had two TEA parties (April 15th and July 4th), seen the formation of a local Americans for Prosperity chapter, and had the protest that inspired the title of this post. Even the Salisbury city election occurring in the midst of the planning of the original TEA Party seemed quite sedate by comparison.

(An interesting sidebar occurs to me in reviewing the healthcare protest post because I also added the items from Melody Scalley there – how much is this grassroots awakening helping her in the Virginia House of Delegates District 100 race or the Independent Party member, Libertarian, and Republican running in a special election just across the border today in Delaware Senate District 19. From what I’ve heard, even the Democrat in that Sussex County district is running as sort of a Blue Dog.)

So I don’t know yet if we’ll have a formal event locally on August 22nd but I suspect the protest last Tuesday at Frank Kratovil’s doorstep won’t be the last one we’ll see – not by a long shot. It may even shake up the Republican Party establishment a little bit.

Late edit, Monday 10 a.m. Julie Brewington at AFP reminded me that the Congressman will be touring around the Eastern Shore this week, and he’s scheduled a number of agriculture-related events this week (probably to brag about the billion dollars he cost taxpayers in the middle of the night.) From his Congressional website, this is his official schedule for the week.

Note that:

All events listed are open to the press but RSVPs are appreciated to ensure proper accommodations.

Author: Michael

It's me from my laptop computer.