A young, blonde white woman is ushered into a doctor’s office by a grim-faced black nurse, and then left alone in the doctor’s office, feet in stirrups, by a similarly unsmiling doctor. A maniacal Uncle Sam emerges between her legs, wielding forceps. (Or, as the official text puts it, “Creepy Uncle Sam.”) The tagline flashes: “Don’t let government play doctor.”
No, it’s not ill-advised pro-choice agitprop — it’s a right-wing campaign to get young people to “opt out” of signing up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act. (In the male version, a Ken-doll like young man curls up for a prostate exam as Uncle Sam wiggles plastic-gloved fingers.) As Yahoo News reported this morning, Generation Opportunity’s plan is to hit 20 college campuses and to spend up to $750,000 on the campaign, as “part of a coalition of right-leaning organizations with financial ties to billionaire businessmen and political activists Charles and David Koch.” It’s the grassroots counterpart to defunding Obamacare in Congress, the battle currently tearing Republicans apart, since part of the Affordable Care Act model is to get young, uninsured people to sign up to offset the new costs, or risk the penalty of a small fine.
Laws requiring ultrasounds before abortions have been pushed by Republicans in dozens of states, despite resistance from the medical community and activists comparing the insertion of a transvaginal wand to sexual assault. The irony of using the same imagery to oppose voluntary access to healthcare may have been lost on the creators of the video, but it wasn’t on women’s health organizations.
“This ad is brought to you by the same people who force Uncle Sam between our legs when it comes to reproductive health. It’s un-American to mandate forced ultrasounds, restrict abortion care, and deny contraception coverage while trying to trick students into forgoing Obamacare, which will help them get preventative care and end gender discrimination in insurance coverage,” said Ilyse Hogue, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America. “If this ad isn’t a parody from The Onion, then Generation Opportunity needs to look up the definition of ‘irony.’”









