Wash Post's Parker equates Palin's “death panels” falsehood with Slaughter's dentures story

From Kathleen Parker's March 3 Washington Post column [emphasis added]:

What do people remember from the summit, to the extent they watched? They surely remember Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan hammering the Republican message about deficit spending in the health-care legislation. And, they remember New York Democrat Rep. Louise Slaughter telling about a woman who, because she had no insurance, had to wear her deceased sister's dentures.

There's nothing to laugh at here, obviously. If true -- and she dared us not to believe her -- it's a pathetic tale. Right-wing talk show hosts who have made sport of Slaughter's story don't get much credit for cleverness, but truly, sometimes an anecdote is too strange to be effective.

Maybe Republicans can trade Sarah Palin's “death panels” for Louise Slaughter's dentures and call it a draw.

As a political point, however, the contrast between personal anecdote vs. mastery of health-care economics is stark and telling. If you're in the market for competence, which vendor gets your attention?

Previously:

Fox News personalities advance Palin's "death panel" claim

Politifact names "death panels" its “Lie of the Year”

Let them eat applesauce: Right-wing media mock the uninsured

Limbaugh calls Slaughter's tale of woman who wore dead sister's dentures the “sob story of the day”