Kathy Kattenburg marvels:

A Stunning Achievement

Who knew that Harry Reid had the kind of steel in his spine that it took to get health care reform through the Senate? If anyone had told me a year ago that he would have the fortitude, perseverance, toughness, and sheer guts that it took to pass this legislation against the implacable, uncompromising opposition and nihilistic obstructionism of Senate Republicans, I would have fallen on the floor laughing. In Ezra Klein’s words, “Harry Reid has much to be proud of today.”

And Kevin Drum:
I’m 51 years old and this bill is, without question, the biggest progressive advance in my adult life. You have to go back to the great environmental acts of the early 70s to get close, and to the civil rights/Medicare era to beat it. That’s four decades, the last three of which have constituted an almost unbroken record of conservative ascendency. And now that ascendancy is just days away from being—finally, decisively—broken.

[..] A trillion dollars in benefit for low and middle income workers. 95% of Americans insured. Medical bankruptcies on the verge of disappearing. And for the first time ever, an acknowledgement that decent healthcare ought to be universal in the United States. This is historic. This is a cause for celebration, not recriminations. As recently as 2005, I wasn’t sure I’d ever see this day, and now, a mere three years later, it’s here. I can still hardly believe it.

But remember, Harry Reid is “a poor leader” and “a tool”…

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  1. schu says:

    The best thing about this bill is that it can be used as a stepping stone to create something that can help people. Basically the insurance companies have lost in the long run. Now they will milk the gray areas until the next revision. Eventually they will be out of the mainstream of Health Care and the real death panels will destroyed. But there is still a lot of work to do. The bought and paid for insurance representatives to congress, both Republican and Blue Dogs, and especially the main representative from the industry in the senate, from Connecticut, must be defeated.

  2. Metavirus says:

    you do pose an interesting question. i have been thinking about my harry-hating lately. i can see it lessening in the wake of the senate passing something, although i am still pondering whether something better could have been shepherded through by someone lese. i guess we'll never know. he certainly did do something historic, which is something for him to be proud of. so a guarded kudos for now.

    • schu says:

      I am not a fan of his, and I do feel that he needs to be replaced by another democrat. My major problem with him is his corruption. I never felt that he was a good leader, but he has seemed destine to leave his mark on history.

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