Mitt Romney's telling blunder reminds me of Ann Richards wonderful line about 
George Bush being "born with a silver spoon in his mouth."
Sooner or later, the truth will come out of the mouths of these pampered scions 
of the ruling class.
Hajja Romi/Blue

Why Romney's "Firing" Gaffe Resonates

by David Atkins

Much has been made of Mitt Romney's "I like being able to fire people" gaffe:


"I like being able to fire people who provide services to me," Romney said at a 
Monday breakfast in New Hampshire, when talking about health care. "You know, 
if someone doesn't give me a good service that I need, I 
want to say, 'I'm going to go get someone else to provide that service 
to me.'"
If you haven't seen it yet, video is here:



Romney
 was making a fairly mundane point about being able to change from one 
health insurance company to another and used a particularly unfortunate 
choice of words, particularly given his reputation as a heartless, 
robotic job-killing vulture capital CEO. But watching the video clip is 
profoundly disturbing in a way that goes beyond just a thoughtless 
gaffe. James Fallows postulates that it's because he used the word "enjoy" in 
the context of the act of firing someone--an act that should in no way be 
enjoyable for the 
person on either end of the pink slip, if they have any empathy.

But
 not even that gets at the heart of what is so wrong with Romney's 
statement. It goes much deeper, to Romney's sense of privilege, and a 
relationship to the world around him that is alien to most Americans and
 reinforces everything that is wrong with the 1% in America.

The 
key part of what's off-putting about the gaffe isn't the first part 
about liking to fire people, so much as the second part about "who provide 
services to me." Liking to fire people is bad enough, but this is the real 
kicker.

When
 it comes to basic services like healthcare, almost no one in America 
sees the relationship that way. Most of us wouldn't speak of "firing" 
our health insurance company. No matter how much we might detest our 
insurance company, we probably wouldn't describe the experience of 
removing ourselves from their rolls an enjoyable one.

But most of all, we don't see the health insurance company as providing us a 
service. We see ourselves, rather, as indentured supplicants forced to pay 
exorbitant monthly rates for a basic need that responsible people with 
means can't get out of paying for if we can help it. We don't see 
ourselves as in control of the relationship with them. They are in 
control of us--and no more so than when we get sick and need the 
insurance most. If the company decides to restrict our coverage or tell 
us we have a pre-existing condition after all, we're in the position of 
begging a capricious and heartless corporation to cover costs we assumed we 
were entitled to based on a contractual obligation. It's precisely 
when we need insurance most that we're least able to "fire" the 
insurance company.

The same goes for the rent/mortgage, for the 
utilities, for the car, for the cell phone bill, for nearly everything. 
Most of these things are necessary commodities for most Americans. Many 
are socially expected, even if not technically necessary. They all have 
(usually far overpriced) unavoidable monthly charges and premiums that 
fall on overworked and underpaid Americans every month like a load of 
bricks.  We see many of them increase by at least 5-20% year over year 
even as our wages stay flat. All we can do is struggle to keep up, 
trying to find the least bad service for the lowest price we can afford,
 but knowing we're getting gouged every step of the way.

Romney 
talks about paying for health insurance as if it were the same as 
getting a pedicure, hiring an escort or getting the fancy wax at a car 
wash. It's a luxury service being provided to him, and he doesn't like it, he 
can take his business elsewhere. Romney's is the language 
of a man who has never wanted for anything, never worried about where 
his next paycheck would come from, never worried about going bankrupt if he got 
sick.

It is the language of an entitled empowerment 
utterly alien to the experience of most Americans, who feel victimized 
and bled dry without recourse by these rentier corporations. Romney sees
 himself as in charge of the relationship between himself and these 
entities. Most Americans don't. That's why the statement rankles and 
feels so off-putting to us. The mention of enjoying the act of "firing" 
them is just icing on the cake.

When it comes to health insurance companies and their ilk, most Americans think 
of the relationship more like this:



It's an experience Mitt Romney wouldn't even begin to understand.

To watch the videos, go to
http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2012/01/why-romneys-firing-gaffe-resonates-by.html


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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