Last week, many of you saw the video of a
Dallas AARP town hall meeting on health care that AARP officials
ended early after the audience raised too many objections. The
woman leading the meeting, for instance, tried to shut up
audience members who said they disagreed with her when she made
assumptions about what she thought they would agree with her on.
At one point, a man summed it up by asking, “Do you guys work for
us, or do we work for you?”
As bad as the video made AARP look, on some level, you could
write it off as an instance of a local AARP representative
getting frustrated and simply not having the experience or
temperament to deal with an audience that was pushing back
against her talking points. That’s why I found it much more
damning when I saw AARP vice president and spokesman Drew Nannis
appearing on Fox (clip below). Not only does he refuse to
apologize for the woman’s behavior, but he dismisses those
dues-paying AARP members as “a bunch of people yelling.” This is
wrong on several levels. First off, AARP is an organization that
claims to speak for its membership, but here we have a clear cut
case of mounting opposition to Democratic health care policies
among older Americans, not just in town hall meetings, but backed
up by polling data showing they remain the most skeptical of
Democratic proposals (see
here and
here). Yet instead of representing the concerns of older
Americans, AARP is doing the reverse. Its CEO, Barry Rand, who
was a major
Obama donor, has gotten cozy with the administration, and
along with the rest of the top brass at the Washington
headquarters, has decided to support liberal policies. Now the
group is actively working alongside the administration to sell
these policies that their members are rejecting — using their
members money to do so. In a typically liberal and patronizing
kind of way, they think they know what’s best for their members,
and they’re trying to tell them what to think.
But beyond that, there’s a basic customer service angle to this.
I can, in some small sense, sympathize with the woman on the
video. Back when I was 18, I worked at the box office of an
Atlantic City casino, and have some experience dealing with
frustrated customers, especially older Americans who can be
quite, shall we say, persistent about getting what they want. If
there was a dispute over a coupon or a comp they thought they
deserved, you can bet they’d make their voices heard. At times
this meant shouting at me, cursing at me, blowing smoke in my
face, and so on. Yet even as a teenager, I had a basic
understanding of the concept that the customer is always right,
something that AARP evidently does not get. No matter how angry
or unruly or even nasty these gamblers would act toward me, I
knew it was my job to remain calm and try to pacify the situation
rather than escalate the problem by shouting back. Yet, not only
did the woman running the meeting decide to mix it up with
dues-paying members, but a vice president from Washington went on
national television and defended her actions. So let’s just call
a spade a spade. AARP is not an organization that represents its
members, but a group that treats its members as dupes so it can
suck up their money and use it to advocate a liberal policy
agenda supported by its Washington leadership.
About the Author
Philip Klein is The American Spectator’s Washington correspondent. You can follow him on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/Philipaklein
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