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HOUGHTON -- Carrying signs, waving flags and singing patriotic songs, a conservative group calling itself Concerned Citizens of the U.P. (CCUP) -- opponents of healthcare reform -- walked across the Portage Lift Bridge from Hancock to Veterans' Park in Houghton on Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 7, for a "TEA Party" gathering of speeches, prayers, songs and demonstrations of solidarity in their common cause.*
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Also gathered in the park were local residents favoring healthcare reform, who stood peacefully with their own signs in a counter-demonstration.
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State Rep. Mike Lahti (D-Hancock) was on hand to greet constituents and listen to what they had to say.
"It's good that people who are concerned about issues in government that affect them come out and talk about it -- express their opinions and ask questions of legislators," Lahti said. "Today we've got people demonstrating against change in healthcare and others demonstrating peacefully in favor of healthcare reform."
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Nearby a group of children dressed in Pilgrim costumes, others in military uniforms and some dressed to represent the Revolutionary War era marched up the hill from the bridge carrying signs. Copies of the U.S. Constitution were handed out to people arriving at the park for the speeches, which began around 12:30 p.m. with the Pledge of Allegiance, prayers and references to the "spirit of our founding fathers."
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Lahti commented on the historical improvements to the Constitution since the original one was written by those founding fathers.
"Back then you couldn't vote if you were a woman. Negroes were (considered) three fifths of a person," he noted.
Keweenaw County Commissioner Don Keith (R-Eagle Harbor) chatted with Lahti and mingled with the crowd.
"I'm still listening," Keith said. "I've come to hear other people expressing their concerns."
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Some former Republican candidates who lost the race for U.S. Representative of Michigan's First District, the office now held by Congressman Bart Stupak (D-Menominee), talked about why they both opposed Stupak in the last election.
Linda Goldthorpe of Newberry said she wasn't discouraged by the size of the First District -- "the second-largest Congressional district in the country," with 31 counties. She wanted and still wants to take Stupak's seat.
"I'm basically pro-life libertarian," Goldthorpe said. "I think both parties have gone away from the people."
Tom Casperson, a Republican candidate who defeated Goldthorpe and ran against Stupak in 2008, said his main issue is big government; but both he and Goldthorpe commented on Stupak's 72 percent rating by the National Right to Life (anti-abortion) Committee as being unsatisfactory.
"He (Stupak) said his record was distorted," Casperson said.
"Healthcare reform needs to happen, but not the way they're doing it," Casperson said. "Don't put 'may' and 'shall' in the bill if it's meant to make it vague. Someone's going to have to interpret it."
Casperson said, as an example, that the bill needs to be clear on whether it is funding abortion.**
"People didn't get to discuss the 1000-page bill (HB 3200, America’s Affordable Health Choices Act)," Casperson noted.
Among the people holding signs supporting healthcare reform was Randall Freisinger of Houghton.
"I'm here to show support for universal health care and also to counter the number of what appear to be staged demonstrations that would suggest that ordinary Americans are opposed to health care," Freisinger said.
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Jill Burkland of Houghton held a sign that said, "Compassionate Christians Support Health Care for All!"
"Compassionate Christians" are "myself and other people like me who want to remind people that Jesus stood up for the poor, the sick, the hungry, children," Burkland explained. "We need to take care of the people of this country. I'm really bothered by the selfishness of people. They're only interested in their own pocketbook and not in the welfare of the people."
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A sign of one of the anti-reform marchers "Washington, God Does Have the Final Word" brought to mind a question on separation of church and state, to which Donnis Schrader of Freda, who carried the sign, gave a firm reply.
"I don't think there is such a thing as separation of church and state," Schrader said.
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Houghton County Commissioner Anton Pintar (Democrat, District 3) stood with other pro-reform demonstrators during the rally, with a sign showing Democrats support healthcare.
"We're here today just to show there's support for healthcare reform," Pintar said.
He added he was not surprised at the large turnout of anti-reform people for the rally (WLUC-TV6 in Marquette estimated the crowd at more than 400).
"Hopefully the level of discussion here will be on a rational basis and counteract the misinformation and lies that are out there," Pintar said.
An example he gave was the idea held by some anti-reform people that the government would create "death panels" to decide who among senior citizens should be allowed to live.
"One of their objectives is to generate fear," Pintar said.
At least one family in the audience seemed to believe such misinformation, judging from their sign suggesting healthcare reform could "kill Grandma."
John Leinonen of Calumet, holding this sign, said, "They're gonna have people before boards when they're older."
His father, Jerry Leinonen of Calumet, added, "They're going to cut off care to the elderly."
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When asked the source of their information, John Leinonen said they had heard this on a Christian radio station.
(President Barack Obama assured Congress in his speech Wednesday night, Sept. 9, that his plan for healthcare reform does not include government boards that would kill off senior citizens. "It is a lie, plain and simple," Obama said.)
John's sister, Amy Leinonen of Houghton, said she agreed with some of what her father and brother believed.
"I just wanted to see what it was like," Amy said, explaining why she was attending the rally. "So much is going over there (for war) that they don't have enough money for health care. Obama doesn't seem like he has much experience in being a leader."
However, Amy said she did not have health insurance and "probably" would sign up for a government plan if it were available.
Some senior citizens who benefit from the existing government plan -- Medicare -- still criticize the idea of government funding for healthcare reform.
"We want to keep America the way it's always been," said Don Britz of Houghton. "We're not for change at all."
Britz, who receives Medicare, added, "I don't think I'd support it if we didn't have it."***
Susan Rokicki of Calumet said she came to the rally thinking it was more of a discussion.
"I thought it was a discussion on healthcare reform and that people would be attempting to talk about this with each other and share healthcare experiences," Rokicki said. "It's not happening. Only one viewpoint has been expressed here."
If there was discussion among people of different opinions, it may have been between individuals in the audience. The speakers did not invite comments from the pro-reform supporters.
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Joanne Thomas of Allouez commented on the anti-reform people who complained about the government spending money on healthcare.
"Where was this kind of concern for government spending before Bush's invasion of Iraq, which has drained our treasury?" Thomas noted.
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Dr. Pichai Sripaipan of Houghton said he came to listen to what the speakers had to say.
"Certainly health care is getting more expensive," he said.
He attributed the rise in cost to two main factors: the high cost of medical technology and the legal system that obliges doctors to practice defensive medicine, for fear of lawsuits. Under the present system doctors order a lot of tests to be sure they have covered all possibilities. If a doctor does not order a certain test and the patient goes to another doctor who does order the test and then finds something wrong, the first doctor may be sued for neglect, Sripaipan explained.
He said he had not read the entire 1000-page House Bill 3200 on health care, but believed it needs to be re-written.
Sripaipan, an orthopedic surgeon, said he would not be in favor of a government plan that restricted certain operations to younger patients, for example, paying for a hip replacement for a 40-year-old but not an 80-year-old person.
Editor's Notes: * T.E.A. in the context of the TEA Party stands for "Taxed Enough Already," and refers also to the Boston Tea Party, a revolutionary protest against taxes. In April 2009 these TEA Parties were held to protest the stimulus package. They are usually locally organized and nationally coordinated by anti-government groups.
** In his speech to Congress Wednesday night, Sept. 9, Obama said, "under our plan, no federal dollars will be used to fund abortions."
*** In his Sept. 9 speech, Obama said also that Medicare "remains a sacred trust that must be passed down from one generation to the next. And that is why not a dollar of the Medicare trust fund will be used to pay for this plan. The only thing this plan would eliminate is the hundreds of billions of dollars in waste and fraud, as well as unwarranted subsidies in Medicare that go to insurance companies -- subsidies that do everything to pad their profits but don't improve the care of seniors. And we will also create an independent commission of doctors and medical experts charged with identifying more waste in the years ahead."
Read President Obama's Sept. 9, 2009, speech on healthcare to the joint session of Congress on the White House Web site.
**** See the TV 6 (WLUC) videoclip of the Houghton TEA Party, including Joe Hernandez's statement and a statement by CCUP Chair Mary Sears.
U.S. Congressman Bart Stupak released a radio statement after President Obama's speech.
This is the fourth in our series of articles on the healthcare reform issue.
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