Category Archives: National

Sen. Ron Wyden: Missing the Point

In December of 2006, I introduced the Healthy Americans Act to reform the nation’s health care system. Some on both sides of the aisle liked my bill, while others on both sides of the aisle did not. But the time has long since passed for debating the merits of the Healthy Americans Act. While I like to think that the legislation I spent many years developing helped advance and inform last year’s debate, it became pretty clear at the beginning of 2009 that the White House and the Congressional leadership of both parties wanted to go a different way.

It’s correct that I wanted health reform to do more to create choices and promote competition. But instead of spending the year on the sidelines criticizing my colleagues and advocating for my personal approach, I spent the year looking for opportunities to improve the legislation that WAS advancing through Congress. The same can be said of my health advocacy today, as I continue to look for ways to improve what is now law.

For example, in writing the Healthy Americans Act and working with the Congressional Budget Office on its score, I learned that giving consumers more choices is one of the most powerful ways to reduce health insurance costs and hold insurance companies accountable. While I certainly didn’t get everything that I wanted, I did get a provision included in the final bill that will allow a small group of Americans to convert their tax-excluded employer subsidies into vouchers that they can use to choose their own plans on the new health insurance exchanges. And I am already looking for opportunities to expand this provision so that more and more Americans are ultimately empowered to make their own health care choices.

Another provision that I got included in the final law came directly from my original legislative proposal. “Empowering States to be Innovative” (Section 632 in the Healthy Americans Act and Section 1332 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act) reflects my long held view that when it comes to health policy what works best for people in Tampa Bay, Florida doesn’t always work as well for the residents of Coos Bay, Oregon. My state of Oregon has, in fact, long led the country in innovating approaches that have played a major factor in Oregon having some of the highest quality and lowest cost health care in the country. So both in writing my legislation and working to improve what is now law, I wanted to make it possible for states to keep innovating new approaches.

However, for states to really be empowered to be innovative the federal government has to be willing to give states a little leeway to implement their own approaches. A state, for example, will struggle to offer a public option on its exchange if it has to follow the exact standards of the federal law that doesn’t provide for one. And, of course, no state-based approach — no matter how innovative — can work if everyone who participates in the state program gets fined by the federal government for failing to comply with the federal mandate.

So, in both the Healthy Americans Act and in the current health reform law, I included a provision that would allow states to gain an exemption from certain federal requirements — such as the individual mandate, the employer penalty and the exact standards for designing the exchanges, subsidies and basic health insurance policies — if they could find a way to do a better job of covering their state’s citizens. And I have been working to help states, like my home state of Oregon, take advantage of this option and hopefully move-up the date when states can start applying for waivers. The reason for this — as the legislators in my state will attest — is that it’s a lot less cost effective for states to implement their own approaches in 2017 if they also have to pay to implement the federally mandated approach in 2014. For those who claim this position represents a retreat from the health reform law, they are mistaken. I have been advocating virtually non-stop for states to have the right to go their own way, including during the Senate Finance Committee’s mark-up up last fall when I got the provision included in the Senate bill. My letter to the state of Oregon last week was a continuation of my effort to promote state innovation in health care.

Of course, the temptation in today’s gotcha political culture is to take any senator’s comments on health care as being about scoring political points and either helping or hurting the White House. The truth here is that I have supported both an individual mandate and a state waiver for more than five years.

Again, both the individual mandate and the state waiver were a part of legislation that I introduced in 2006. And while this provision would allow states to opt-out of the federal health insurance mandate — which is what some politically motivated people are calling for right now — under my approach states will only be granted a waiver if they demonstrate they can do a better job of providing health care in their state than under the new federal law. To date, I haven’t seen a single one of those states currently filing lawsuits against the individual mandate propose better ways of covering their citizens. In fact, one of the reasons I have been drawing attention to the state waiver is to highlight the insincerity of those filing lawsuits. If states aren’t happy with the federal law they should be spending their energy innovating ways to do better rather than wasting taxpayer dollars on lawsuits that — if successful — would leave their state’s citizens with nothing.

I continue to support the individual mandate unless a state can demonstrate that it will provide equal or better health care without one. I continue to prefer the individual mandate from the Wyden-Bennett bill to the one contained in the bill that passed, because it was accompanied by greater consumer choice and a rock-solid guarantee that all Americans would receive the same level of health coverage as their Member of Congress.

I voted for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, not because I thought it was the best we could do, but because I thought it was a whole lot better than the current system. I still know that to be true. But in my mind, passing that law is far from “mission accomplished” and my constituents can count on me to keep working to improve that law and our nation’s health care system, regardless of which way the political winds may be blowing.

Read more: Individual Mandate, White House, Politics, Ron Wyden, Wyden Free Choice Amendment, Wall Street Journal, Health Reform, Oregon, Politics News

Wyatt Closs: 2010 Workers’ Voice Awards: Worker Worthy Pop Culture Standouts

Wanna honor Labor Day but not work at it? Check out any of these pop culture expressions from the last year. Just in time for your nod to Labor Day, lets give props to those who have amplified workers’ voices in one form or another this year.

THE LIST (* indicates best in category)

Television (Reality)
*Undercover Boss
Ice Road Truckers
30 Days
Dirty Jobs
America’s Toughest Jobs

Television (Comedy)
*The Office
The Simpsons
30 Rock
Parks and Recreation

Television (Drama)
*Nurse Jackie
The Closer
United States of Tara
Rescue Me

Music (For Listening)
*”Even If Its So” – Q Tip
“Two Step Blues” – Little Brother
“21st Century Breakdown” – Green Day
“Hope” – Rahel

Music (For Rallying)
*”Fight Smash Win” – Street Sweeper Social Club
“Drop It (Like a Hot Muppet)” – Magic Drum Orchestra

Art Shows
*”Myth and Manpower” – Craft and Folk Art Museum, Los Angeles
“Closed Mondays” – grayDUCK Gallery, Austin
“Today I Made Nothing” – Elizabeth Dee Gallery, New York
“Small Trades (Irving Penn)” – Getty Center

Books
*”Shopclass as Soulcraft” – Matthew Crawford
“Border Songs” – Jim Lynch
“Wherever There is a Fight” – Elaine Elinson
“The Legend of Colton Bryant” – Alexandra Fuller

Film (Feature)
*Up In the Air
The Maid
Humble Pie
Adventureland
Extract

Film (Documentary)
*Yes Men Fix The World
Capitalism: A Love Story
Floored
The Philosopher Kings
Parking Lot Movie

For detailed commentary on each of these categories, check out the whole series of blogs on workers voices in arts and entertainment (all freshly posted in last two weeks) at http://www.startalkfm.com/wyatt-closs or click right here.

Special thanks to those who served on a loose-knit jury of artists, entertainment professionals, and economic justice activists to help make these selections.

Hopefully, this list inspires many in the arts, letters, and entertainment worlds to take on more stories and expressions about work, workers, and working family issues. As said at the outset of this series, there are so many rich stories out there about America’s workers and a tremendous market for those stories as well.

Maybe at some point we’ll get a Downtown LA hotel ballroom, a red carpet, the obligatory step-and-repeat wall, starlets pumping their fists in the air going “Woo, workers rock!” Yeah. Until then, there’s this.

Read more: Ceos, Immigration, Service Economy, Donna Summer, Matt Damon, The Chemical Brothers, Movies, Mtv, Bailout, Unions, Workplace, Up in the Air, Austin, The Yes Men, JJ Abrams, John Steinbeck, Sundance Film Festival, Protest, Jobs, Michael Moore Capitalism: A Love Story, Economic Crisis, Folk Art, Film, Labor Unions, Elvis Presley, Tyler Perry, Seth MacFarlane, Adventureland, Awards Season, Entertainment, Work, Jason Reitman, Diego Rivera, Working Women, March on Washington, Books, Janitor, Elaine Elinson, Norman Lear, Economy, Reality Television, Chile, Getty Center, Reality TV, Motorcycles, Bbc, Workers, Martin Starr, Music, Undercover Boss, Arts, Musicians, Television, Nurses, Labor Day, Michael Moore, Edie Falco, Elizabeth Dee, Entertainment News, MTV Video Music Awards, Humble-Pie, Arts News, James Brown, Tom Morello, Politics, Matthew Crawford, Judd Apatow, George Clooney, Hip-Hop, Emmy Awards, Big Banks, Wall Street, Howard Zinn, Boycott, Art, Nurse Jackie, Entertainment News

Geri Spieler: The Obama Backlash: Taking on the Radicals

Book Review– The Backlash: Right-Wing Radicals, High-Def Hucksters, and Paranoid Politicsin the Age of Obama by Will Bunch

It would be easy to write an Obama-backlash book using buzzwords with cliché’ ridden accounts of the right-wing talk show blather-babblers.

Fortunately, Will Bunch does not resort to such pedestrian style bloggisms. As an experienced and award winning journalist, Bunch does his homework and reports on what he has learned in this straightforward accounting of the paranoid fringe tilting at delusions of conspiracy.

Stories about the “Oath Keepers,” “Birthers,” the Tea Party, Knob Creek militia, FEMA internment camps, the resurrection of the John Birch Society and Sarah Palin is all here in Bunch’s over-the-top horrific telling of right-wing populism.

The Backlash goes into the deep background and the bizarre rise of Glenn Beck, the current darling of the Fox News rabid reporters. What is more shocking than Beck’s popularity is the stark indifference of Beck’s handler’s to his lack of proficiency as a news caster or that he has a passing relationship with the truth.

Beck’s raw ambition got him into radio when was only 13 years old in Seattle, WA, where he had an on-air job at an FM station doing the overnight shift on weekends. From that first job he never left radio and moved from one station to the next immediately after high school.

Bunch tells Beck’s story in a series of personal and professional vignettes mixing his failed personal life with his ever-increasing success as a radio personality. His self-styled showmanship was modeled after a format called the “Morning Zoo.” It was a mid-1980’s drive-time fast-paced show with skits, parody songs and caricatures. Beck was riding high in the jocular, content-free teenybopper radio-land for while, but his lack of discipline got him into trouble more than once.

“An admitted sufferer from attention-deficit disorder, Beck clearly struggles with impulse control even after he finally stopped drinking and doing drugs in 1994 with the help of a then-friend, Senator Joe Lieberman,” Bunch wrote.

Beck’s troubles began long before his attempt at recovery as Bunch describes Beck’s downfall both in his personal and professional life.

This was especially true in the late 1980s in Phoenix when, desperate to get his Morning Zoo out of a deep ratings rut, he staged a series of inane pranks against the show’s number-one drive-time rival — crashing the wedding of its program director to plaster his own show’s bumper stickers on the bridal car, and finally, unbelievably, calling the wife of his rival deejay to make fun of… her recent miscarriage.

Bunch weaves Beck throughout the entire book as a backdrop for the many right-wing organizations and events dotting the country.

In his report on the Tea Party Convention, he reveals that as the event planners tried to paint the Tea Party as saving the country for the poor, oppressed, unemployed, retired and small business owners. It failed miserably in trying to make the case it was the right wing baby boomers Woodstock while charging attendee’s $549 a ticket.

It was in fact the fundraising scheme of a small-time lawyer, Judson Phillips, just one of many who took advantage of the many Tea Party believers eager to buy a piece of the myth.

As Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin stump for the little guy, both are fanatically exploiting their celebrity by raking in hundreds of thousands of dollars for speaking engagements to the unemployed faithful, while offering no solace to those unable to pay their utility bills, but quick to blame Obama.

The convention itself became so controversial, Michele Bachmann and Marcia Blackburn, two two right-wing congresswomen, cancelled their appearances, as well as American Majority president, Ned Ryun. Bunch quotes Ryun as telling the media, “Listen, I’m all for a person making a buck, but this seems very crass, very opportunitistic.”

In a philosophic bent, Bunch refers to Neil Postman’s prophetic book, Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business, to illustrate the obvious of how television is doing our thinking for us, and “people medicate themselves into bliss,” according to Postman, by believing anything they see and hear on television, as evidenced by the fiction that is accepted as fact on Fox News.

The Backlash is disturbing in that it validates what we don’t want to believe, and that is while “fake news” began on the Comedy Channel’s The Daily Show with Jon Stewart as a parody, Fox News has become reality as the most widely watched cable news show in the country.

If you are looking for an answer or some solace to the disconcerting uneasiness that the Glenn Beck’s of the world are multiplying, you won’t find it in the The Backlash. Bunch is just reporting here and offers no predictions of whether this marginal world of extremists will succeed in taking over the White House or Congress. He offers no philosophical musings beyond the Huxleyan references to what the deliberate manufacturing of falsehood is doing to our lives.

Yet, like Bunch’s excellent previous book, Tear Down This Myth: The Right-Wing Distortion of the Reagan Legacy, The Backlash is a must-read for those who want to understand what is happening on the political scene and a context behind the doctrine of fear and hate.

This review first appeared in the New York Journal of Books, www.nyjournalofbooks.com

Reviewer Geri Spieler, author of Taking Aim At The President: The Remarkable Story of the Woman Who Shot at Gerald Ford. Spieler is writing a new book debunking San Francisco Values.

Read more: Birthers, Backlash, President Obama, Liberal, Fema, Right Wing, Democrats, John Birch Society, Politics, Will Bunch, Conservatives, Sarah Palin, Gop, Glenn Beck, Oath Keepers, San Francisco, Tea Party, Republicans, Books News

Matt Vasilogambros: Drake’s New Ad Campaign Gets A Near-Failing Mark

Drake University officials are receiving poor grades today from the advertising world after its new “D+” marketing campaign was highlighted by the advertising blog AdFreak this morning.

The AdFreak blog post — entitled “Drake University’s ad campaign gets big D+” — describes Drake officials “feverishly scrambling” to explain the logic behind a symbol with such a negative connotation in all realms of academia.

Launched this semester, the Drake Advantage initiative attempts to highlight the relationship between the skills that students bring to the university plus the opportunities offered by Drake — its official slogan reading, “The Drake Advantage: your Potential + our Opportunities.”

Admissions literature display prominent plus symbols throughout pages that describe the university’s academic excellence, while also being displayed next to edgy statements that aim at standing out from normal college literature. From, “The way we see it, it’s an advantage,” to, “Your Perseverance + Academic Rigor,” the handouts and admissions website continue to stick to the “+” theme.

In an internal e-mail released to faculty and staff yesterday, Vice President of Admission and Financial Aid Tom Delahunt and Executive Director of Marketing and Communications Debra Lukehart executive director of Marketing and Communications wrote: “The D+ was not designed to stand alone or represent a grade. Instead, it was designed to be paired with prose and draw attention to the distinctive advantages of the Drake experience.”

The e-mail, which was recovered by the website The Awl, continues, “Our experience in the survey and in the field suggests that the kind of students whom we want to attract to Drake easily understand and appreciate the irony of the D+, and that it is having the intended effect of encouraging students to find out more about what makes Drake so special.”

Drake students have not taken kindly to the new theme, some seeing it as a tarnish on the university’s reputation. Senior Josie Berg-Hammond said that the decision to use the new slogan was absent-minded and that a lot of people might not understand the meaning without further explanation.

“It just seems that there are so many other ways at promoting the school with funnier slogans that are eye-catching, without something that seems too obviously related to the grade D+, which is kind of like a joke of a grade,” Berg-Hammond said.

Although junior Aaron Ruggles finds issues with the new slogan, he said that he does not see the new campaign, or the reaction to it, as something that will change the overall reputation of Drake.

“Once you get past the initial shock of what Drake is doing and then watch the rest of the slides (on the website), you kind of understand what they were getting at,” he said. “But why did no one catch this before?”

Senior Matt Pruett said that he hopes people will look beyond the ironic slogan that brought him “complete, abject shock,” and see the university for its “A” quality academics.

“The actions of Drake’s administration are not representative of the students and professors here,” he said. “There are many professors who do their jobs well and make this a learning environment well above ‘D+’ potential.”

Read more: Drake New Marketing Campaign, The Midwest, Drake University, Drake Ad Campaign, Drake D+, College News

East Coast braces for weaker but still dangerous Earl – Washington Post


CBC.ca
East Coast braces for weaker but still dangerous Earl
Washington Post
NAGS HEAD, NC – Hurricane Earl's powerful winds and lashing rains began hitting the fragile Outer Banks late Thursday, and people all along the Eastern Seaboard braced for major disruptions and significant damage as
Earl bears downBoston Globe
Hurricane Earl Bears Down on Carolina CoastNew York Times
Earl takes swipe at North Carolina, heads up coastLos Angeles Times
CNN –ABC News –Wall Street Journal
all 12,256 news articles »

How To Solve America’s Tax Nightmare: CUT Tax Rates, Eliminate Tax Returns, Create VAT Tax

How about this for a tax plan: cut most people’s taxes by half, eliminate the need to file returns, and provide the Treasury with a better way to reduce the deficit. Sound impossible? It’s not. Here’s how to get it done.

Read more: Taxes, Income Tax, Vat, Irs, Employers, Tax Returns, Economy, Tax Revenues, Tax Bracket, Income Gap, Value Added Tax, Clean Slate Plan, Politics News

New, Top-Secret Tribune Project: No Ads, In-Depth Reporting

When I describe the Tribune’s top-secret project, everybody makes the same snarky comment. The Tribune is designing a weekly edition that it will offer subscribers for a surcharge. The premium content will consist of long, thoughtful reporting and commentary–local in its focus–on the news and cultural affairs. The inevitable comment is this: That’s what the Tribune is already supposed to be doing.

Read more: Newspaper Industry, Chicago Media, Newspapers, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Journalists, Journalism, Chicago News

Mark Joseph: Why Be President When You Can Be King(maker)?

Though he served as Prime Minister of Japan for a mere two years in the early ’70’s before being driven from power in Nixonian fashion in a Watergate-like scandal, for the next decade and a half Kakuei Tanaka served as Japan’s shadow leader, known forever as The Kingmaker for his uncanny ability to govern Japan from the shadows, often hand-picking who would lead the country by controlling a powerful bloc of legislators.

In modern American political history we haven’t had a Tanaka-like Kingmaker, until now, when Sarah Palin’s handpicked candidate Joe Miller came out of nowhere to defeat Lisa Murkowski. The Miller victory was but the latest in the successes Palin has had in races across the country, but it was clearly the most dramatic and portends what could be a political presence far more powerful than even a Palin presidential run and it raises a most interesting question: Why should Palin even try to run for President when she can essentially govern from her kitchen table in Alaska by endorsing candidates who share her political beliefs?

Like Kakuei Tanaka who wielded power far more powerfully and effectively through others, Sarah Palin may find that she can pursue her agenda far more effectively through the likes of Nikki Haley and Joe Miller than she ever could by running for President herself.

Read more: Lisa Murkowski, Kakuei Tanaka, Richard Nixon, Joe Miller, Sarah Palin, Politics News

Hurricane warning issued as Earl approaches East Coast – CNN


Reuters (press release)
Hurricane warning issued as Earl approaches East Coast
CNN
By the CNN Wire Staff (CNN) — Hurricane warnings and watches were issued for portions of the North Carolina and Virginia coastlines Wednesday as forecasters warned Category 3 Hurricane Earl would be approaching the East Coast by late Thursday.
Hurricane Earl Triggers Virginia State of Emergency, Carolina EvacuationsABC News
Officials checking with communities on supplies for Hurricane EarlBoston Herald
Emergency Preparations In Place Ahead Of EarlWCVB-TV
Baltimore Sun –NECN –BusinessWeek
all 7,440 news articles »