Fear of being labeled ‘racist’ and the Minnesota fraud disaster
In emergency medicine, there is no time to hedge. When someone’s life is on the line — whether on the scene of a car wreck, in the back of an ambulance, or in a trauma bay — you act on the information in front of you. Delay isn’t a strategy. Delay is a choice. And […]
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In emergency medicine, there is no time to hedge. When someone’s life is on the line — whether on the scene of a car wreck, in the back of an ambulance, or in a trauma bay — you act on the information in front of you. Delay isn’t a strategy. Delay is a choice. And choices have consequences.That is why the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee’s 205-page report on Minnesota’s Feeding Our Future fraud scandal is so personally infuriating. Because what I see in it isn’t a complicated policy failure. It’s a straightforward story about officials who had the information, had the authority, and chose not to act — for years.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Washington Examiner.