'What an honor': Marjorie Taylor Greene says her 'suffering' is over after being 'truly blessed' to destroy healthcare for families – We Got This Covered
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‘What an honor’: Marjorie Taylor Greene says her ‘suffering’ is over after being ‘truly blessed’ to destroy healthcare for families

Self-awareness has never been her strong suit.

In a display of tone-deafness, Marjorie Taylor Greene declared her congressional “suffering” officially over – now that she’s helped push through legislation that could strip healthcare access from millions of Americans.

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The Georgia representative took to social media to proclaim her “blessing” at finally getting to vote for the so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill.” Greene’s celebratory post declared an end to her four-year “suffering.” “I have served, or rather suffered, in Congress,” Greene wrote. For someone who voluntarily ran for office (twice!), her characterization of the experience as “suffering” raises questions about her understanding of the concept. 

The congresswoman’s jubilation centered around several conservative policy victories embedded in the massive spending package. Chief among these were defunding Planned Parenthood, eliminating government funding for gender-affirming care, and implementing school choice – a trifecta Greene described as “incredible conservative victories.” Nowhere in her gleeful announcement did she acknowledge the potential human cost of these policy changes.

House Republicans barely pushed the legislation through by a paper-thin margin, launching it toward a Senate where it faces uncertain reception. The bill represents a major political victory for the president, who had been relentlessly pressuring lawmakers for its approval as a foundational element of his upcoming term’s agenda. Reports indicate he grew increasingly irritated with hesitant Republican lawmakers, even suggesting their expulsion from the party – because nothing demonstrates leadership quite like threatening to banish anyone who questions your wisdom.

What Greene conveniently omitted during her victory celebration was the legislation’s staggering budgetary impact. According to independent analysis, this supposedly “beautiful” bill would pile nearly four trillion additional dollars onto our already astronomical national debt of $36 trillion. That’s not fiscally conservative policy-making; it’s more akin to financing a luxury yacht purchase while your home teeters on foreclosure.

The healthcare reductions alone amount to roughly six hundred billion dollars, potentially stripping medical coverage from over seven million Americans – approximately the entire population of Washington state suddenly facing medical bankruptcy. Greene’s characterization of these cuts as merely eliminating “fraudsters and non-citizens” conveniently ignores the millions of legitimate American beneficiaries who will suddenly find themselves without access to doctors or medications.

Similarly, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) faces approximately $267 billion in cuts over the next decade. States will shoulder an increasing burden of the program’s costs beginning in 2028, effectively forcing local governments to choose between feeding vulnerable residents or balancing already strained budgets.

Greene’s celebration included enthusiastic thanks to Trump and his “great White House team” for their collaboration on the bill. She also sent “big hugs, love, and thanks” to her district – Georgia’s 14th – for sending her to “fight” for them. Greene and her colleagues are prioritizing ideological victories over practical outcomes for American families. For a party that often claims to champion family values, their policies sure seem designed to make family life harder for those already struggling.


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Omar Faruque
Omar is the Lead Editor at WGTC who sees life and storytelling as one and the same—there’s always a story to tell. When not behind his keyboard, Omar is living his best life, whether that is embracing his inner superhero, geeking out over his latest obsession, or tucking himself into the coziest coffee-shop corner with a great book in hand.