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Connie Schultz
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With Parkinson's, His Voice for Health Care Grows Stronger

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Last Tuesday, 60-year-old Robert A. Letcher showed up for a rally outside a congressional office in Columbus, Ohio, and decided he no longer could just stand there as an angry crowd screamed obscenities at him and fellow supporters of health care reform.

So he grabbed hold of his walking stick with one hand, held his sign in the other and slowly walked to the other side of the driveway. Then he sat down on the pavement and held on to his handmade poster, which read:

Got Parkinson's?

I DO and YOU might

Thanks for Helping!

That's Community.

Columbus Dispatch photographer Doral Chenoweth captured what happened next. The video, which went viral on the Internet and on TV news shows, is not for the faint of heart.

A man in jeans puts his hands on his thighs and leans over Letcher. "If you're looking for a handout, you're in the wrong end of town," he yells. "Nothin' for free over here. You have to work for everything you get."

Letcher remains silent.

Another man — dressed in a white shirt, tie and khakis with a cell phone clipped to his belt — joins in the taunting.

"No, no!" he yells. "I'll pay for this guy! Here ya go. Start a pot. I'll pay for ya." The man then pulls out a dollar and throws it at Letcher.

A man standing next to him, patting a baby strapped to his chest, grins as the guy in the tie turns away and then pivots to yell again at Letcher.

" I'll decide," the man shouts, pointing at his own chest and then jabbing his finger at Letcher, "when to give you money. Here, here's another one." He throws another dollar at Letcher. "Here ya go."

Someone else yells, "You love a communist! A communist!"

Letcher never says a word.

The video, which does not identify Letcher or the men who taunted him, ignited the blogosphere. Most people, even those who oppose health care reform, were horrified. Here in Ohio, a lot of us felt a particular brand of shame. We know that images of screaming white guys trying to take down a man who's already on the ground feeds the worst stereotypes of hateful hayseed Midwesterners.

We also know they don't speak for us — or most of America.

On Friday, I reached Letcher by phone at his home in Columbus. Why, I asked, was he willing to sit down on that pavement and subject himself to that kind of abuse?

"Because I could," he said in the slow, halting voice of a man for whom talking is now an act of physical exertion. "My weakness is my strength. I was the calmest person there. And I was the safest person because anyone who touched me would have been arrested."

Letcher has no interest in returning fire, even though his life has changed so dramatically in the past five years. He has a doctorate from Cornell University and taught at three colleges, most recently Ohio State University's John Glenn School of Public Affairs. He has been on the progressive side of causes his entire life but never more so than when he became the beneficiary of government health care.

After he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2005, Letcher went on Medicare, which paid for the brain surgery at the Cleveland Clinic that changed his life.

"Everyone who loved me cried after that surgery it helped me so much," Letcher told me. "I had been so stiff and in so much pain. I could not lift a sandwich to my mouth. ... I didn't care whether I lived or died."

He cares now. That's why he showed up at that rally in Columbus and made those opponents of health care reform confront the reality of Robert A. Letcher.

"I don't mind those people ridiculing me, laughing at me," he said. "This battle is about people like me, and I knew if I sat there, they could not just ignore me."

His protest is one of gratitude.

"I will spend the rest of my life thanking the public for my health care," he said.

After what happened to him last Tuesday, I'd say the gratitude is ours.

Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and the author of two books from Random House, "Life Happens" and "... and His Lovely Wife." She is a featured contributor in a recently released book by Bloomsbury, "The Speech: Race and Barack Obama's 'A More Perfect Union.'" To find out more about Connie Schultz (cschultz@plaind.com) and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
An Acadamy Award performance. Hollywood would be jealous.
Comment: #1
Posted by: David Henricks
Sun Mar 21, 2010 12:13 AM
I'm the Parkinson's person Ms. Schultz wrote about. (Thanks to her for writing about this matter.)
Let me tell you a bit about me. First, my parents raised me to think about other people; like:
• "Whatsoever you do to the least of us..."
• "He's not heavy, he's my brother."
• "Do unto others what you would have them do unto you."; and, especially in our large family,
• "Share, and share alike."
One of my brothers said that if our parents would have written a book about how they raised seven kids on so little money, they would have been rich. But they didn't, and we weren't. We shared a lot and handed stuff down a lot--and our parents did without, often, and a lot.
Last Tuesday, i got up,, made my sign, went to the demonstration, and came home. I thought it was over. But i guess i was wrong on that!
My sign borrowed from the "Got Milk?" ad: "Got Parkinson's?// I DO and YOU might// Thanks for helping!// That's community."
Medicare paid for brain surgery that significantly mitigated my suffering. When I got my brain implants turned on, life became almost ordinary for awhile--and we all cried tears of happiness. That's why I can honestly say that I am not driven by “EGO”; rather, I am driven by “I-OWE”.
But Parkinson's is still eating away at my nervous system, and some day I'll die from it. In the meantime, i have dedicated myself to thanking my family and friends, and the broader public for helping me. I do so mostly by writing, and occasionally by putting myself in harm's way, to bring attention, not to me--i'm the luckiest guy since Lou Gehrig--but to people who need help so badly and couldn't make the rally.
My hope is that my Mother and deceased Father would be proud of me.
PS: One small correction: I was diagnosed with Parkinson's in 2000, and saw signs of it retrospectively to 1995-96.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Robert Letcher
Sun Mar 21, 2010 6:18 AM
What happened to Mr. Hendricks was toatally uncalled for. But one point that I would like to note is that he got help within the system, as is, without waiting for this totally America changing, unaffordable, distructive bill. Ten or fifteen years after this bill becomes law I truly believe Mr. Hendricks would not be able to get the care that he needs. It won't be there. As a lifelong taxpayer I would also say to Mr Hendricks, you are welcome .
Comment: #3
Posted by: james bentley
Sun Mar 21, 2010 7:50 AM
A correction on my earlier post. It should have been directes to Mr. Letcher. A thousand pardons Mr. Hendricks.
Comment: #4
Posted by: james bentley
Sun Mar 21, 2010 8:50 AM
Connie this article as it pertained to health care and the gentleman affected was one which brought me to tears, as I read the hateful and selfish comments of some of the citizens who seem to have no compassion for fellow human beings in need.
They are no doubt the same type who are more likely to be racist , selfish, and shallow thinkers. Humans rule the planet and therefore should protect the health and well being of each and every ruler..be he poor, colored, female, caucasian,native, yellow,etc.since we are all one human family. God created us in HIS image and surely HE is charitable and giving. Verily..blessed is he who prefereth his brother(fellow man) before himself/herself. For any person to desire to
withhold health care from fellow human beings I can only say ..may GOD have mercy on his soul.To politicians and or Kings/Queens who have the privilege of being rulers or law makers, is entrusted the over-all welfare of those they represent. Let us then be mindful that every person is entitled to humane treatment and thoughtfulness. Hatefulness is not a spiitual value, nor is it of GOD. Through the clash of differing opinions,may the truth shine forth.
Comment: #5
Posted by: richard Yates
Mon Mar 22, 2010 1:38 PM
James, (if I may be so bold),
Mr. Lechter who is also a taxpayer was helped. We currently have 30 million fellow Americans who are not helped. I sincerely hope that you or your children are not dropped from your insurance if you develop a chronic condition. I also hope that you or your children never reach the cap on your insurance.

I share your concerns about how we will fund this bill. Isn't it ironic that we don't worry about how we will fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan but we lay awake at night wondering how we will fund a bill supporting our own families, friends and neighbors?

Debbie Key ~ paying taxes since 1982
Comment: #6
Posted by: capiscan
Sun Mar 28, 2010 6:26 AM
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