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Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Scott of the Antarctic & The Tea Party Opposition to Health Care

Scott in winterquarters, October 1911


Robert Falcon Scott, the Antarctic explorer who with his entire party died of exposure in their race to the South Pole, left a journal in which one reads his observation:

We could have come through, had we neglected the sick.

Scott of the Antarctic was not of the generation that could neglect the sick.


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essentially a rephrasing of a brilliant post at: http://bouphonia.blogspot.com/2010/03/calm-despair.html

6 comments:

Ruth said...

What a poignant and powerful connection.

Word verification: inglety

Ruth said...

(I'm certain Mr. Wordman got the connection with England, but just in case, in Turkey they call England Ingiltere. I think it's similar in other languages.

Unknown said...

Why should we be concerned with the sick? What a lunatic idea! Let them eat cake.

Montag said...

I was awestruck at the juxtaposition, for it reminded me of different times and attitudes.

If we were to ignore them, we could - in the words of Scrooge - thus decrease the surplus population. And the gradual death by famine and disease is tolerable, while abortion is not.
Is this hypocrisy? Or is it some worse moral blindness?

Ruth...where does "inglety" appear? I thought it was in my post, but if it is, I seem to have a curious blindness to it.

Ruth said...

It was the word verification thingy that you have to put letters into to prove you're not a robot.

Montag said...

Oh, those things. Anyone that uses such lingo would seem to be a mech from odd time-space espy...(there, I used "espy", and that's very Dr. Robotica.)

Ig leads to Iglet - a small Ig - and add -y for the adjective. Sounds suspiciously Inuit.