If we had a pile of money, we'd throw this out as a contest, the first verifiable usage of an excuse not to go to work, due to having "Post-Health-Care-Fatigue Syndrome."
David Corn has catapulted PHCFS into the lexicon today with this post:
Will Post-Health-Care-Fatigue Syndrome Thwart GOP Plans?
There is a palpable sense in Washington that this battle over health care reform has nearly broken the town. Legislators and their staff aides, the president and his people, reporters and pundits, political strategists and advocates -- they've all been consumed by this fight for nearly a year and they're experiencing Post-Health-Care-Fatigue Syndrome (PHCFS). After all, this long-running drama followed months of political and policy intensity: the economic collapse, the subsequent bailouts, the start of the Obama administration. Moreover, that stretch came after a titanic and tiring presidential campaign, with competitive primaries and multiple candidates on each side, that lasted for almost two years. Obama and his crew have basically been going non-stop for three years, and on some days at the White House, it really does show.
Go read the post.
We're almost going to be gridlocked, too exhausted to get anything meaningful done for the rest of the year.
And Corn pegs the PartyofNoicans the bigger loser of PHCFS.
(Cross-posted at The Garlic.)
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