Sunday, September 29, 2013

HAM SENATOR TED CRUZ WITH GREEN EGG ON HIS FACE - HEALTH CARE AND THE NAZIS

 
Ted Cruz
 
 
Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz pulled an all-nighter as marathon anti-Obamacare speech churned on.  He jumped from children's books to the civil war in his bid to block parts of the bill that would extend health insurance in the US.
 
At an early stage, he read the Dr Seuss children's classic Green Eggs and Ham, which he billed as a bedtime story to his daughters. While the tactic had charm, some commentators pointed out that the book may not have been the best choice:
 
"The narrator keeps insisting that he hates green eggs and ham, but he's never had green eggs and ham," wrote Matt Iglesias at Slate. "When he finally tries them – he likes them! The Democrats' bet on the Affordable Care Act is that it's like green eggs and ham – they're convinced the public will like it when they try it.
 
 
McCain 7 ways
 
U.S. Senator John McCain (R-AZ) leaves the Senate chamber after fellow Republican Senator Ted Cruz held a marathon attack on "Obamacare" at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, September 25, 2013.
 
Senator John McCain lashed out at fellow Republican Ted Cruz on Wednesday over a Nazi appeasement comparison he made during his all-night, anti-Obamacare marathon on the U.S. Senate floor.

Speaking after Cruz had the floor for 21 hours and 19 minutes, McCain said he took umbrage at the Texas senator's efforts to pressure other Republicans to get behind his strategy for fighting President Barack Obama's signature health care law.

Cruz, a leader of the conservative Tea Party movement, has been urging his colleagues to join him in using the threat of a federal government shutdown to block funding for Obamacare.

McCain said he was particularly upset that Cruz had compared those unwilling to embrace his methods to British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and others who were willing to appease Nazi Germany before World War Two.

McCain, a Vietnam veteran and former prisoner of war, said the comparison was inappropriate. He said he had taken Cruz aside privately to tell him, and got a response he did not like: Cruz told him his appeaser reference applied not to distinguished members of the Senate but only media "pundits."

"I resoundingly reject" Cruz's comments, said McCain, a senior Republican and former presidential candidate.

"I think it's wrong and I think it's a disservice to those who stood up and shouted at the top of their lungs that we cannot appease and that we must act," he said.

He said the remarks were a disservice to those, including his father and grandfather, who fought in World War Two.

McCain also objected to the suggestion that Republicans who do not support Cruz's strategy were not fighting hard enough against the law, which most Republicans oppose.

REUTERS/Jason Reed WASHINGTON

Dan Roberts in Washington
The Guardian, Wednesday 25 September 2013 09.15 EDT
 

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