It is nice to see that there are at least a few Democratic senators who can sometimes remember why they chose to become members of Congress. There was a reason why Rockefeller became a Democrat. It was to fight for people in need. The video is long, but it’s worth watching. It is an emotional appeal to protect the S-CHIP program. Rockefeller begins:
I’ve heard a lot of talk about old people, disabled people, you know, vulnerable populations, pregnant women, the elderly, et cetera, but again, you just don’t hear people talking, public officials or people about Medicaid, because it’s something they’d rather not hear about; something they’d rather not have in their communities.
Now, my experience was different because I was reborn (in a secular sense) by becoming a VISTA volunteer, when I went to West Virginia, not expecting to stay, and then finding after one year of living with people, none of whom had work, none of whom had health insurance, none of whom went to school because there was no school bus – and you have heard this speech before – and I could not leave. And, it was because I became so devoted to those people and the unfairness.
I will tell you the story of Eddie…
Eddie was an 18 year-old boy that Rockefeller tried to help get a job while a VISTA volunteer. At the job interview, Eddie was so humiliated by the fact that he did not know how to work the office’s venetian blinds, something that he had never seen before, that he flunked the interview. Rockefeller was visibly upset telling the story because he was with Eddie, but unable to help him. He concludes with:
But he had Medicaid. He had me by his side and it didn’t work. He had Medicaid by his side and it did work.
Full transcript below:
Senator ROCKEFELLER: Over the last two weeks [pause] Senator Nelson, do I have your full attention? [lengthy pause]
I’ve heard a lot of talk about old people, disabled people, you know, vulnerable populations, pregnant women, the elderly, et cetera, but again, you just don’t hear people talking, public officials or people about Medicaid, because it’s something they’d rather not hear about; something they’d rather not have in their communities.
Now, my experience was different because I was reborn (in a secular sense) by becoming a VISTA volunteer, when I went to West Virginia, not expecting to stay, and then finding after one year of living with people, none of whom had work, none of whom had health insurance, none of whom went to school because there was no school bus – and you have heard this speech before – and I could not leave. And, it was because I became so devoted to those people and the unfairness…
I will tell you the story of Eddie. The story of Eddie is of an 18 year-old boy, fully-capable and prepared to work, terrific physical/mental specimen, great attitude, leader in our youth movement, in our VISTA community. I had lined up a job at Union Carbide, not… I’m sorry, not a job, but a job interview for him. I took him with me in my Land Rover or whatever it was, and we went down to Union Carbide. Well, that meant that we had to go to Charleston. He’d never been to Charleston which is only 45 minutes away. And, he’d never crossed a street; he’d never seen a red light, so he was confused by that, but I was with him. And, we went into the Union Carbide building, it’s a big company; had a lot of elevators – he’d never been in an elevator. A lot of people get claustrophobic; he got claustrophobic in the elevator, but I was with him and he was steady.
So, we come out on the third floor and we walk into the interviewer’s office, (and he was a very nice man) but the room was set up so that Eddie and I, sitting side-by-side, were facing a big window with sunlight streaming directly into our eyes, which didn’t bother me but made Eddie understandably nervous. So, the plant manager…the plant interview, who was sensitive to Eddie, said “Why don’t you let the blinds down, Son? And the sun won’t be in your eyes.” Well, it happened that the blinds were venetian blinds. Two ropes that don’t meet on one side and one rope which does on the other. There are no blinds in that VISTA community. He fiddled with that for a while, but he was humiliated and embarrassed, and so what he did was, he reached up and he took the bottom 7 or 8 slats on the blind, and [voice breaking] he just hung his full weight on those slats – which didn’t move…I’m sorry…and um, so then he sat down and we proceeded with the interview…but…he couldn’t give his name. He’d been stripped of all self worth…what I’d done to him was substantially [voice breaking] damaging to him…and a year later he was gone from Emmons and I have no idea where he is today.
But he had Medicaid. He had me by his side and it didn’t work. He had Medicaid by his side and it did work.
So, I like to keep poor people where they have healthcare benefits. I don’t wish to see them handed over to the tender mercies of a private exchange or whatever. And I think you will understand the spirit in which I tell this story.
It’s interesting: I took 500…remember in those days, back in ’64 ’65, the big rage was Olivetti typewriters? They were slim. They were modern. They were chic. You could say ‘dude’ about them. They were cool. And I had one of those. And every night I would sit down and I would write pages and pages and pages of what went on during that day. Psychologically…to me…when things went well…when things didn’t go well…the individual parts of our community. There were only 356 people in this whole community, but it was a huge community in terms of the implications of people. And, um, I have that in my office at home, and in the 43 years since I’ve left Emmons, I’ve never opened that diary to read it…[voice breaking]…can’t do it…and now I’m embarrassed…
[Turning to Senator Baucus] Have I talked enough Mr. Chairman, I was trying to cover for you…[Turning to room] This is all at the request of the Chairman. I just had to talk so he could work some things out. [laughter]
It was a little bit more painful for me and, I hope not for him, but I don’t care about that because I feel the way that I feel and I am who I am. This endeth the reading of the evening lecture. [laughter followed by prolonged applause]
Senator BAUCUS: I think the applause is a testament as is often said of the passion…I don’t know of a Senator with a deeper sense of purpose and conviction and passion for his state, and especially for lower-income people than you.



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Jay the Healthcare Hero stands up for the Americans who think they are getting served by their congresscriminals in this important and encompassing debate, but aren’t.
[snark on]
If Jay wanted to know where Eddie was today, he’s given the telco industry the power to find him, all he needs to do is ask, I’m sure out of gratitude they’d oblige.
[/snark off]
You go Jay! At least a few are paying attention.
ah jeez Jon, I’m a blubberin’ without even clicking on the video – can’t be a bawlin’ with calls to make :D
Well said, Senator Rockefeller. Thank you.
Thanks for posting this jon.
This needs to go viral.
I hope someday he can publish the journal and perhaps use the proceeds to meet his passion for the disenfranchised.
LOL, you got a long way to go, jello jay. you aint’ getting off the hook that easily
Remember why you fight why you love why you care Remember your soul and try and do whats right.
I think he might be remembering himself still EW yesterday was calling him Jay Rock
And here he is, becoming Jay RockWithDeepRoots.
I sent the Senator a thank-you email when he stood up against the five traitors in the Finance Committee WRT the public option.
Change is a-comin for that crew, and they won’t like it.
Jay is getting Cred quite fast I respect EW’s judgment still from Jello to Rock this fast I wonder what happened in his life?
On most issues he is not great but he does have a special passion about health care.
Which is taking us the GOP and the Dems by surprise nobody was predicting this Black Swan.
…to which many will dismiss with a simple “the poor will always be with us”.
Many of these so called public servants have not witnessed what Rockefeller has. Oh if they have, they are literally blind to it. Many people are trained from an early age to ignore a situation when there is “nothing in it for them”. Move on, keep your eyes on your prize. Then they claim to be public servants.
Great post, Jon. Reminds me of when I read about Bobby Kennedy going to the deep South and being absolutely stunned by what he saw. He had no idea, none, that people in his own country were “living” under such dire circumstances. His life was too far removed from such experience. I was no Bobby fan until I read that.
Rockefeller impressed me when someone asked him (might have been Tweety) about the possibility of raising taxes, and he said – on camera – you know, I’m doing great, if my taxes go up, it isn’t going to hurt me. IOW, he didn’t know why other people in his financial position were howling about it.
* * * ATTENTION FIREDOGS * * *
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee just sent me an email with a link to their petition that will be sent to Rep John Boehner.
The following statement sums up the point of the petition:
In addition to signing the petition, you can also write a comment to let Boehner know what you think.
Please check this out and consider signing the petition!
http://www.dccc.org/page/s/BoehnerF
Frankly, I think that signing this petition will also let House Democrats know that millions of Americans do want REAL health care reform and just how much we want it!
Sadly, I believe Bobby’s epiphany came during Jack’s campaign, in the same place, my own native WVa, still desperately poor at the time.
Check the post below on that very subject.
Rocky saw the netroots love for Dodd and Feingold during FISA and decided he wanted some. This was a filler speech at the behest of the Chair.
When will we quit being seduced by words? When will touching forty-year-old stories stop being enough? Where has Rocky been all summer? Why does he think being a flare in the darkness for two weeks will get him the love he seeks?
Had he wanted Public Option in the Finance Committee bill, Rocky could have defied Max and had Health Subcommittee hearings all summer, publicly and grandly, in opposition to the secret Gang of Six disaster that produced nothing.
This is a flash in the pan. Don’t be fooled. None of his colleagues are.
Signed:)
Only slightly OT: Is everyone getting clued in to Rick Sanchez on CNN? Man, this guy is hitting hard against the Healthinsurance monopoly with both fists! And hitting hard. The other night CNN w/ Anderson Cooper did a great piece on the onerous paperwork we all have to deal with when going through the healthcare meat grinder. 1st MSNBC and now CNN. Are we approaching a media tipping point? “The Media is the message.”
Wow….
Did I repeat info some of you already had? Sorry!
Honestly, information moves so fast at the FDL blogs that it’s impossible to keep up with it.
So I hope that repeating *important* information is seen as being useful rather than an annoyance.
I signed, and I asked him to peer out from his phony suntan and look because lots of us have our hands up. There’s no reason he can’t find us, and we are VOTERS and he should think about that, too.
Btw, Alan Grayson was just on MSNBC:
On his reference to the Holocaust:
Then he said that Republicans need to get over their manufactured and phony outrage and get to work.
Grayson rocks!
Its possible but do you really think EW would get seduced that easy? Time will tell on this one I’m hopeful sure I want to believe and to believe you do have to trust.
GOPers for all their talk of belief never trust the poor,women, gays, dark people we have to risk trusting sometimes or we will be them.
Your ideas I admit are possible we should prepare for a betrayal.
Honestly? I don’t care if he was a goose-stepping Nazi before all this. There is nothing, I repeat NOTHING more important at this point in the nation’s history than this healthcare tragedy. The battle has laid bare all the inequities, the injustices, the systemic corruption of the gov’t and society. Years later this will be seen as THE defining moment. Our last chance to salvage the last shards of democracy. This is the crossroads. I’ll take Jay Rock in this battle. Perhaps it has transformed HIM and he may be induced to vote differently in the future.
Right on, Teddy.
Keep the forest in sight.
signed…Mr. tan in a can(I cannot attribute this, but it was a commentator here) has been duly notified.
could it be that our collective voices are having an impact on the diamond hearts of our politicians or would that be an oxymoran(sic)
Could be?
Sorry for putting up this long letter, but this is what I sent to Boehner with my petition:
If you haven’t see this petition yet, take a look at http://www.dccc.org/tellboehner
He may have also visited WVa. *g* I was thinking specifically about mississippi during his own campaign in 1967………turns out he went to many similar areas in a variety of states. But I remember a photo of him outside a shack in MS.
I also sent Reid a letter today telling him that if he fails as a leader I WILL GIVE ALL THE MONEY I CAN TO PROGRESSIVE GROUPS WHO WILL FLOOD NEVADA WITH ADS UNTIL HE IS INTRODUCED ON THE FOOD CHANNEL AS “THE FORMER SENATOR FROM NEVADA.”
Ridiculous.
You want to primary Reid? So that a Republican can win? This isn’t the The People’s Republic of Massachusetts we’re talking about. Its Nevada: far from a safe Democratic seat.
Don’t lose your heads folks. Pressure your Senator to vote him out as leader if you are pissed but do you really want to give the seat to a Republican?
And who are you going to get to run against him?
Rockefeller as a Black Swan?
You’re right.
Good point!
Now, I hope the full Senate will pass Rockefeller and/or Wyden’s amendments on the full floor. They should get the votes at that point.
And the narrative has changed a great deal the past 5 days; the PO is building momentum. It will be a pleasure so see all of Rockefeller, Wyden, Harkin, Dodd, Schumer, and Cantwell’s work and commitment pay off in the Senate.
Is it getting cold in here? Feels like an icy breeze all of a sudden. Oh, I see it’s just TP.
We need more Democrats in congress crying for the dying. http://www.dailykos.com/storyo…..y-Hardball
I don’t know … in another way, it’s kind of disturbing when he reveals that his clearly heart-felt speech has just been filler to stall while Baucus works something out with another member of the committee. For me, it undermined the whole point so much that I went from chocking up to throwing up at the end when the interlude received polite applause and then the committee resumed its business of screwing people like “Eddy”. Maybe I’ve become too cynical.
I agree. This was like the musical interlude radio stations put on when they’ve lost their feed to what they were broadcasting. The conclusion should have been accompanied by a narrator saying “And now we return to regular programming.”
I’m sick of them all.