Dr. Geography Brown

brown

When he ran for the Senate in Massachusetts Scott Brown touted himself as the independent voice that would speak for the people of the state.

Then he pledged that he was going to be the 41st vote to get rid of the Affordable Care Act thus becoming part of the Monolithic GOP, and disregarding how Romney Care in Massachusetts was doing the citizens well.

When he voted against his party’s line in the senate, it was usually when a bill was going to pass or fail by a majority anyway so his vote was not needed either way. He thus appeared to be independent as opposed unnecessary.

When his vote actually counted, he went with his party.

He claimed he was as totally dedicated to the people of the Bay State as he now is to the people of New Hampshire.

He is so concerned about New Hampshire that his campaign ads generally speak about the southern border and opposition to Obama, with very little dealing with what is good for the people of the state unless it is in the most generic GOP terms.

He is the expert on the Southern border who is more concerned about all those Central American kids than Obama and his opponent for the New Hampshire senate seat are.

He is more concerned about ISIS in the Middle East and their possible crossing of our southern border than Obama and his rival for the New Hampshire senate seat are.

Now, he is more concerned about Ebola sneaking over the southern border coming from countries south of it than Obama and Jean Shaheen, his senate seat rival, are.

Of course the fact that the countries these people are coming from have no cases of Ebola does not seem inconsistent with the claim they will be the source of the virus entering the country as opposed its coming in from Canada where people are more likely to have flown around the world where they could have come in contact with the virus, than the people in Central America are.

You would think, if he had the best interest of the people of New Hampshire as a priority, he would be little more concerned about our northern border and a little less obsessed about our southern one.

It’s this reliance on the scare tactic of Ebola, though, that is a little off. Actually it is a little hypocritical.

I had not been back in Massachusetts all that long when a national meningitis outbreak was traced back to a local compounding laboratory. It was a compounding laboratory, like so many others, that was not subject to regulation.
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As we were getting close to the 2012 elections and Brown was facing Warren, Brown donated $10,000 to the Meningitis Foundation of America. This was part of a larger donation that had been given to his campaign by the owners and executives of the pharmacy responsible for the outbreak.

Brown had advocated for the loosening of the USDA regulations that applied to such compounding laboratories which were supposed to mix prescribed drugs for individual patients, not produce such compounded drugs in bulk.

It was the bulk production that caused the outbreak.

Was he making symbolic reparations with some of the money while keeping the rest?

Brown, who is warning about the “diseased” undocumented people bringing illness to the United States, also had sold his contributors’ contact list to an anti-vaccine conspiracy theory promoter, Newsmax, who sent out emails to them bearing Brown’s name.

One email claimed to offer “simple strategies…to prevent, treat, and reverse memory loss, Alzheimer’s, Dementia, Parkinson’s, and other neurodegenerative disorders.”

Another email had cited Dr. Russell Blaylock as an expert on health issues.

Among some of Blaylock’s medical gems are that the Soviet Union introduced AIDS into the United States, the CDC is not to be trusted, and Health Care reform was a Nazi thing.

So knowing this, it would be rather surprising if people put their faith in Scott Brown as an expert in diseases, or even see him as someone who has anything legitimate to say on the topic.

Heck, anyone who went to grammar school would wonder about his geographic grasp of borders.

But they will listen to him, and will buy what he sells.

After all, this is a man who has spoken with kings and queens to arrive at his political views.

 

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