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Monday, March 18, 2024
March 18, 2024

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Pitts: Tables can quickly turn on opponents of Obamacare

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Luis Lang would like you to send him some money.

He has taken to GoFundMe (gofundme.com/s78e9w), the crowd-funding website, trying to raise $30,000. Lang, who is 49 and lives in Fort Mills, S.C., is slowly losing his eyesight to diabetes. Without surgery, he’ll go blind. Those grim facts notwithstanding, some may not find Lang the most sympathetic candidate for charity.

In the first place, as some observers noted after reading about him in a Charlotte Observer story by Ann Doss Helms, he has a $300,000 home and a wife who doesn’t work; why, they ask, can’t he raise the money from them?

In the second place, Lang has had diabetes for years, but has not always followed doctors’ advice to control it.

In the third place, he’s a smoker who is still smoking despite his bleak prognosis.

But there’s a bigger reason some may find it difficult to feel his pain, and therein lies a tale. It seems Lang, who is a Republican, knew the Affordable Care Act — the dreaded Obamacare — required him to buy health insurance, but he refused to do so. He figured he was making a pretty good living as a self-employed handyman and prided himself on paying his own medical bills.

Then came 10 days of grinding headaches, an emergency room visit, and a diagnosis that he’d suffered a series of mini-strokes. Then came $9,000 in medical bills, an empty savings account, bleeding in his eyes, a partially detached retina, and an inability to work.

At which point he tried to buy him some Obamacare only to discover that he was outside the open enrollment period and that with zero income, he makes too little to get a federal subsidy that would help him buy a private policy.

Obamacare offers expanded Medicaid coverage to help people like him, but South Carolina is one of 21 Republican-led states that have refused to participate in that program.

So Lang is, well … out of luck. And who does he blame for that state of affairs? Well obviously, it’s President Barack Obama’s fault for passing flawed legislation.

You see, though he refused to buy coverage, Lang thought it would be available to him in an emergency.

His wife, Mary, feels he “should be at the front of the line, because he doesn’t work and because he has medical issues.” Which is not unlike refusing to buy auto insurance, but expecting Geico to sell you a policy after you total the Toyota.

Some donations, some scorn

Still, if Lang doesn’t exactly tug at your heart like baby seals do, he is getting traction. At this writing, he’s over halfway to his goal, most of it raised from liberals taking the occasion to rip his and his party’s failings. Many skip the donation and go straight to the scorn.

“Sorry,” writes Joel, “I’m way too busy thinking only about myself.”

“Call Mitt Romney or Jeb Bush,” writes Jeannie, “they have plenty of money.”

“I want to donate enough to really help you out,” writes Ed, “but I can’t figure out how to get GoFundMe to accept bootstraps.”

Lang’s response? “It turned into a political thing,” he complained. “That wasn’t my intention when I reached out.”

But how could it not be political? Lang’s party claimed health care reform would send death panels after Nana, that “self-reliance” could cure cancer, that emergency rooms provided all the health care poor people need. In a nation of government-funded police, fire departments, schools, libraries and road maintenance, it argued that government-funded health care was somehow a moral crime.

Lang apparently bought it all. Now, the bill comes due, and whatever he thought of Obamacare as a model for financing health care, surely Lang must concede that GoFundMe is even worse. Yet, that’s the fix he finds himself in.

So yes, he’d like you to send him some money. Do what you can.

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