A telegenic appointment

When I heard about the apparent appointment of television doc Sanjay Gupta as surgeon general, I was immediately taken back to his treatment of Michael Moore and Moore’s film Sicko during an appearance on CNN two years ago.

Paul Krugman also remembers what he calls the “mugging” of Moore:

You don’t have to like Moore or his film; but Gupta specifically claimed that Moore “fudged his facts”, when the truth was that on every one of the allegedly fudged facts, Moore was actually right and CNN was wrong.

What bothered me about the incident was that it was what Digby would call Village behavior: Moore is an outsider, he’s uncouth, so he gets smeared as unreliable even though he actually got it right. It’s sort of a minor-league version of the way people who pointed out in real time that Bush was misleading us into war are to this day considered less “serious” than people who waited until it was fashionable to reach that conclusion. And appointing Gupta now, although it’s a small thing, is just another example of the lack of accountability that always seems to be the rule when you get things wrong in a socially acceptable way.

You can watch the exchange between Moore and Gupta here.

What does this say about Gupta as an advocate for healthcare reform? Hard to say — reading the transcript left me somewhat befuddled as to Gupta’s position. Things don’t work and it’s a shame that there are so many uninsured Americans, but no one has a good plan and.. and… You get the point.

In the end, the rumor raises some troubling questions — again — about where Barack Obama is heading as he enters his presidency. After peopling his cabinet with Clintonites and the kind of insiders acceptible to the powers that be, one has to wonder how aggressively he will push back and whether he will show the commitment to social and economic change necessary to drag us out of this mess, whether he is willing to ignore conventional wisdom and be as bold as he needs to be.

We will begin learning the answer to those questions in 13 days.

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Author: hankkalet

Hank Kalet is a poet and freelance journalist. He is the economic needs reporter for NJ Spotlight, teaches journalism at Rutgers University and writing at Middlesex County College and Brookdale Community College. He writes a semi-monthly column for the Progressive Populist. He is a lifelong fan of the New York Mets and New York Knicks, drinks too much coffee and attends as many Bruce Springsteen concerts as his meager finances will allow. He lives in South Brunswick with his wife Annie.

One thought on “A telegenic appointment”

  1. I will be totally disappointed and disgusted if Gupta actually becomes Surgeon General and gets to wear that nifty admiral of the ocean seas costume/uniform. He is a corporate shill and a flunky for the medical industrial complex. You can bet your bippy that he is against any form of universal health care. There are other better choices that Obama could make.I was turned against him by his biased and flawed attack on Michael Moore. Gupta had his facts wrong and was obviously pushing the corporate anti universal health care point of view. Hey, maybe Gupta is a doctrinaire strait-jacketed goofertarian?

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