DANCING NEBULA

DANCING NEBULA
When the gods dance...

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Ron Paul's Campaign Manager Died of Pneumonia, Penniless and Uninsured

Ron Paul's Campaign Manager Died of Pneumonia, Penniless and UninsuredAt CNN's Tea Party-indulging debate on Monday, Ron Paul, a medical doctor, faced a pointed line of questioning from Wolf Blitzer regarding the case of an uninsured young man who suddenly found himself in dire need of intensive health care.

Should the state pay his bills? Paul responded, "That's what freedom is all about: taking your own risks. This whole idea that you have to take care of everybody—"

He never quite finished that point, letting the audience's loud applause finish it for him. So Blitzer pressed on, asking if he meant that "society should just let him die," which earned a chilling round of approving hoots from the crowd. Paul would not concede that much outright, instead responding with a personal anecdote, the upshot being that in such a case, it was up to churches to care for the dying young man. So basically, yeah. He'd let him die.

Ron Paul's Campaign Manager Died of Pneumonia, Penniless and UninsuredAs it turns out, Paul was not speaking purely in hypotheticals. Back in 2008, Kent Snyder — Paul's former campaign chairman — died of complications from pneumonia. Like the man in Blitzer's example, the 49-year-old Snyder (pictured) was relatively young and seemingly healthy* when the illness struck. He was also uninsured. When he died on June 26, 2008, two weeks after Paul withdrew his first bid for the presidency, his hospital costs amounted to $400,000. The bill was handed to Snyder's surviving mother (pictured, left), who was incapable of paying. Friends launched a website to solicit donations.

According to the Wall Street Journal's 2008 story on his death, Snyder was more than just a strategic ally: He was the only reason Paul thought he ever had a shot at the presidency in the first place.

"It was Kent more than anyone else who encouraged and pushed Ron to run for president," said Jesse Benton, a spokesman for Mr. Paul. "Ron would not have run for the presidency if it had not been for Kent. Ron was really hesitant, but Kent drove him forward."

And so, what started in February 2007 with one laptop in Snyder's Arlington, Va., apartment, quickly grew into a $35 million campaign employing 250 people. In the fourth quarter of that year, Snyder raised a stunning $19.5 million for Paul — more than any other Republican candidate had raised at the time.

After Snyder's death, Paul posted a message to the website for his Campaign for Liberty — a pre-Tea Party organization which served Paul as both presidential marketing tool and platform to promote his non-interventionist, free market ideals.

He wrote:

"Like so many in our movement, Kent sacrificed much for the cause of liberty. Kent poured every ounce of his being into our fight for freedom. He will always hold a place in my heart and in the hearts of my family."

And that, friends, is what freedom is really all about.

*The Kansas City Star quoted his sister at the time as saying that a "a pre-existing condition made the premiums too expensive." [The Political Carnival, photo via Ron Paul's Flickr]

1 comment:

  1. This concept of "freedom" (let them die in this example) is what alienates me from Libertarianism and people like Paul. In addition, Paul is a physician and one of the major motives expressed in Hippocratic writings for pursuing medicine is the love of mankind, or philanthropy. This quality has sometimes been called caring, compassion, humanitanism, altruism or beneficence. There is no compassion here, but rather the values of the merchant: money before all things. Sickening.

    I do not understand where this teabagger/libertarian concept of freedom arises. Certainly not from the Christian moral structure that these people claim guides them and the USA. Christianity is compassion. There is "freedom" to choose self-interest or love of the other but love and giving is central to Christianity. There are few Xians in this country.

    Does this Darwinian view of freedom come from some early American tradition? Where is it? The Mayflower folks didn't jump off the ship and head in independent directions hell-bent on single-handed conquest. The early history of the United States is one of community, collectivism, veneration of the commonweal. Even recent history is populated with religiously-motivated socialist communes like the Shakers, New Harmony, Rappites, Oneida, Brook Farm and many others. The spirit of American is not embodied by some carefully unshaven white male leaving Carl's Jr., fat all over his plaid shirt, jumping into a Ram and plowing through downtown NYC to serve eviction notices and roll over the homeless:) The spirit of America is best represented by the old tradition of barn raising.

    This freedom we hear about now is the creation, I think, of those greedy few who fear unity of the majority more than anything.

    But, hey, elect one of these air heads. Send CNN's corporate mouthpieces to the homes of senior citizens (they seem to be big teabaggers) when their social security and medicare are cut. Damn fools. Could be their all suffering from dementia. IDK. Watch your mom or partner die for lack of care, with Dr. Paul smiling on.

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