News/Campaigns/Healthcare

Palin goes on attack after Emanuel’s ‘Complete Lives System’

Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) praised a Senate committee’s decision to drop an end-of-life provision from its healthcare reform bill, but continued to pound away at the overall bill — especially a proposal by Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel.

“It’s gratifying that the voice of the people is getting through to Congress,” Palin said in a new note on her Facebook page posted early Friday morning of the Senate Finance Committee’s decision to drop end-of-life consultations from its health bill. (The Alaska politician had derided those consultations as “death panels” seeking to aid the euthanasia of the elderly.)

“However, that provision was not the only disturbing detail in this legislation; it was just one of the more obvious ones,” Palin added.

Palin alleged that Emanuel, a White House healthcare adviser and brother of White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, would advocate a “Complete Lives System,” which “if enacted, would refuse to allocate medical resources to the elderly, the infirm, and the disabled who have less economic potential.”

President Obama’s silence on the Complete Lives System is troubling, the 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate asserted, and called on the president to answer questions about the theory.

“Why the silence from the president on this aspect of his nationalization of health care? Does he agree with the ‘Complete Lives System’?” Palin asked. “If not, then why is Dr. Emanuel his policy advisor? What is he advising the president on?”

The note marks the latest in a series of attacks Palin has launched on the president’s heatlhcare reform proposals, and signals that while the conservative Republican had managed a small political victory over end-of-life care, she would continue to hammer away against Obama.

“We must stop and think or we may find ourselves losing even more of our freedoms,” she wrote.