Poetry
of Bad ObamaCare News
In
fairy tales, as in Washington, things are true that can’t possibly be — and
what is not true can be defended by tilting the facts a certain way and
catching the light just so.
Kathleen
Parker, “Poetry of Bad ObamaCare News," Washington Post, February 15, 2014
Last week the Congressional Business Office issued a
report saying that Obamacare would reduce the workforce by 2.3
million by 2021, would let 31 million of
the current 55 million uninsured remain uninsured. Others noted that only 3
million of a goal of 7 million had signed up on health exchanges.
These developments,
says no less an authority than House minority leader, Nancy Pelosi, are
good things. as least promising things. She says ObamaCare gives
people the freedom to do what they want,
like writing poetry, rather than laboring in dead end jobs.
Instead of working
at these dreary jobs and having their incomes go up while their subsidies go away, ObamaCare allows people can stay at home, write great books, compose poetry, chase girls or boys, travel the Earth, indulge in one’s fantasies, and do anything else they choose or want to do.
But, to quote Ms. Parker, “Today,
knowing what we know, how does one justify spending $1.2 billion for a health care overhaul that disincentivizes
people to work and leaves 31 million uninsured."
How?
"One writes poetry.”
How?
"One writes poetry.”
As the father of a nationally known poet, Spencer Reece, who has written a new book of poetry, The Road to Emmaus: Poems (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014)
and as author of a book Why ObamaCare Is in Trouble: Healthcare.gov and
Other Stories), which is still a work in progress and which contains a
section of bad poetry, I would like to contribute to ObamaCare with this bit of poetic doggerel.
Why not write poetry instead of work?
Why not? Poetry pays more than mere work.
ObamaCare beats soda jerking.
ObamaCare
beats retail clerking.
Why work when you can do job shirking ?
Tweet: ObamaCare
encourages incentivizes some people to leave work and leaves 31 million
uninsured. These people will be free to do other things, like write
poetry and pursue other satisfying endeavors.
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