“We lived in Skagway for five years,” Chuck said. “And at that time the railroad went from Skagway to Whitehorse, and that was our lifeline. There was no road out of Skagway when we lived there.”
“We appreciated it so much,” Sally said. “Anytime there was something serious, we’d get on the train and go to the hospital there, and they’d be so kind to take care of us.”
And that was it: a simple admission that I didn’t think much of then, and still don’t think much of now. Whitehorse General Hospital, where my own daughter was born three years ago, remains, to this day, the closest major hospital to Skagway. When Chuck and Sally chose to take their kids there, it would have been a choice dictated strictly by geography, not politics. There are many things one could criticize about Sarah Palin’s views of health care in the United States. That she once participated in cross-border medical tourism to Canada is not one of them.
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