Media fails spectacularly at smearing Rand Paul for surgery in Canada
{mosads}Fast forward to 2019: Paul needs hernia surgery, one of the injuries he suffered in the attack. He chooses a hospital in Canada, leading to the big “gotcha!” moment some in media pounced on.
Lousiville’s Courier Journal’s lead paragraph: “Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, one of the fiercest political critics of socialized medicine, will travel to Canada later this month to get hernia surgery.”
Get it? Paul is against socialized medicine. Yet, when he needs treatment himself, he forfeits his principles.
One has to read down to the sixth paragraph before learning that the hospital performing the surgery, Shouldice Hospital, is privately owned.
The story also appeared in USA Today, since the Courier Journal and USA Today fall under the Gannett Co. umbrella.
Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, one of the fiercest political critics of socialized medicine, will travel to Canada later this month to get hernia surgery. https://t.co/WNxAhH89Za
— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) January 14, 2019
So, as long as the paper eventually gets it right deep into the story, who cares, right?
Not quite. We live in a world of news consumers increasingly scrolling headlines and short-story blurbs on social media without reading the whole story. It’s a fast-food journalist world, making it more crucial than ever for publications to tell the real story in its headlines and blurbs/lead paragraphs.
“This is a private, world renowned hospital separate from any system and people come from around the world to pay cash for their services,” Paul spokeswoman Kelsey Cooper told The Hill.
Then there’s the viral world of Twitter that only adds kerosene to the fire by taking the lead graph in the Courier Journal to shape a hypocrisy narrative around Paul.
Per the Democratic Coalition in a tweet to its more than 200,000 followers:
Oh, the irony: Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, one of the fiercest political critics of socialized medicine, will travel to Canada later this month to get hernia surgery.
Tell Congress we need #MedicareForAll now: https://t.co/iQQ4yeeBjyhttps://t.co/yqvqcdub8w
— Democratic Coalition (@TheDemCoalition) January 14, 2019
The tweet was retweeted more than 6,700 times and liked more than 8,800 times. And no need for a screen grab, because the tweet hasn’t been deleted.
Rand Paul, enemy of socialized medicine, will go to Canada for surgery https://t.co/8TESKnG0oB pic.twitter.com/w5sdzSkhq1
— Talking Points Memo (@TPM) January 14, 2019
That was retweeted more than 1,200 times and liked nearly 2,000 times.
Universal healthcare for me but not for thee: Rand Paul is flying to Canada for surgery https://t.co/8TESKnG0oB pic.twitter.com/1Gg0Uth26l
— Talking Points Memo (@TPM) January 14, 2019
Sen. Rand Paul is leaving the U.S. for quality health care in Canada. https://t.co/cfjB8gkmzE
— HuffPost (@HuffPost) January 15, 2019
From Newsweek:
Rand Paul, who calls universal healthcare “slavery,” will have surgery in Canada but insists hospital is private https://t.co/Bwhorepov9 pic.twitter.com/P2g1IFtrtX
— Newsweek (@Newsweek) January 14, 2019
From Splinter:
Free market boner Rand Paul is getting hernia surgery in Canada https://t.co/FtFfcZ3xHo pic.twitter.com/SKIoy7FyYq
— Splinter (@splinter_news) January 15, 2019
From Vox’s Matthew Yglesias:
Why is Rand Paul having surgery in the socialist dystopia of Canada? https://t.co/zKwpA8KrfF
— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) January 13, 2019
This isn’t really a good “gotcha.” This hernia clinic, in my hometown of Thornhill, is one of a very small number of private, for-profit clinics that were grandfathered into Ontario’s socialized health system. https://t.co/Z6MmI5ojTV
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) January 14, 2019
“All charges are payable on admission by credit card, bank draft or cash,” the hospital notes.
Per Axios and Survey Monkey, 65 percent say fake news is usually reported because “people have an agenda” in the media, while just 3 percent think fake news “makes headlines by accident.”
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