Sunday, January 26, 2014

Can Congress Force the Presidents Hand on the Keystone XL Pipeline? Should They?

Dirty Alberta Tar Sands Oil - Photo by: corpethics.org
Dirty Alberta Tar Sands Oil - Photo by: corpethics.org
 Can Congress overrule Obama on the Keystone XL pipeline? {Hope NOT!} The State Department is in the midst of an extensive environmental and national interest review of the pipeline, which supporters say will help meet America’s energy and economic needs, and which opponents say will accelerate climate change. Read more of the Washington Post article by Juliet Eilperin, "Can Congress Overrule Obama on the Keystone XL Pipeline?"

 "Supporters say will help meet America’s energy and economic needs," THAT'S A LIE! The fact is that NONE of the tar sands crude will be used in America at all. The crude to go through the pipeline to the Gulf is going to be shipped to China and other nations. The refinery is owned by Shell Oil and a Saudi Arabian oil company. As far as our economic needs, it has been proven that the pipeline will cause gas prices to go up 25 to 40 cents per gallon at the pump. As far as jobs where as supporters originally said the pipeline would create "tens of thousands of jobs," which they have backed down from, the pipeline will create approximately 2,000-4,000 construction jobs while it is being built, but once operational will only create about 50 permanent jobs.

 In an article written by Brendan Smith for Labor Network for Sustainability 5 Reasons Why the Keystone Pipeline is Bad for the Economy   After a year of extreme weather — at an extreme cost to the economy — this age old jobs vs. environment debate is emerging as a false choice. Hurricanes, floods, and droughts are already having a devastating effect on American jobs, and that is nothing compared to what will happen if we throw open the spigot to the tar sands from Canada, considered the dirtiest oil in the world.
Here are 5 reasons why building the Keystone pipeline is bad for the economy — and workers:

1. Building the Keystone pipeline and opening up the Tar Sands will negatively impact national and local economies: Burning the recoverable tar sands oil will increase the earth’s temperature by a minimum of 2 degree Celsius, which NYU Law School’s Environmental Law Center estimates could permanently cut the US GDP by 2.5%.

2. The same fossil fuel interests pushing the Keystone pipeline have been cutting, not creating, jobs: Despite generating $546 billion in profits between 2005 and 2010, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, and BP reduced their U.S. workforce by 11,200 employees over that period. In 2010 alone, the top five oil companies slashed their global workforce by 4,400 employees — the same year executives paid themselves nearly $220 million. But at least those working in the industry as a whole get paid high wages, right? Turns out that 40 percent of U.S oil-industry jobs consist of minimum-wage work at gas stations. Instead of bankrolling an industry that is laying off workers and threatening our economic future, isn’t it time to take the billions in subsidies going to oil companies and invest instead in a sector that both creates jobs and protects the planet?

3. Unemployment will rise: According to Mark Zandi, the Chief Economist of Moody’s Analytics: “Superstorm Sandy wreaked havoc on the job market in November, slicing an estimated 86,000 jobs from payrolls.” In the wake of Hurricane Irene, the number of workers filing unemployment claims in Vermont went from 731 before Irene to 1,331 two weeks afterwards. Hurricane Katrina wiped out 129,000 jobs in the New Orleans region — nearly 20 percent. For the U.S. economy as a whole, 2011 cost US taxpayers $52 billion.

4. Poor and working people will be disproportionately affected: KXL and projects like it result in disproportionately negative impact on already struggling working families. According to a recent report by the Center for American Progress called “Heavy Weather: How Climate Destruction Harms Middle- and Lower-Income Americans, lower-and middle income households are disproportionately affected by the most expensive extreme weather events. Sixteen states were afflicted by five or more extreme weather events in 2011-12. Households in disaster-declared counties in these states earn $48,137, or seven percent below the U.S. median income.

5. Building the sustainable economy, not the Keystone pipeline, will create far more jobs: Our nation is in desperate need of jobs. Approving the Keystone pipeline locks our nation into a trajectory of guaranteed job loss and threatens the stability of the US economy. Why keep the “job-killing” course, when the alternative-energy path is already out-performing other sectors of the economy. For example, the solar industry continues to be an engine of job growth — creating jobs six times faster than the overall job market. Research by the Solar Foundation shows a 13 percent growth in high-skilled solar jobs spanning installations, sales, marketing, manufacturing and software development — bringing total direct jobs to 119,000 in the sector. And according to the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts–Amherst, investment in a green infrastructure program would create nearly four times as many jobs as an equal investment in oil and gas.

 You may remember that when Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney spoke of the 47% that would never vote for him, he referred to them as "takers." The 1% has consistently referred to themselves as "Job Creators," which just doesn't pan out and has been disproved.

“If you want to create jobs, cut taxes on the people who create jobs.” This plausible-sounding policy proposal, which translates politically into lowering marginal tax rates on high earners, has generated massive discussion. Forbes - June 2013 - Who are the Real Job Creators.
Bottom Line
 I am all in favor of government doing less, spending less, and extracting less from the citizenry in taxes. There may be sound rationales for skewing the tax cuts that emerge from such reforms toward the highest earners. Attempting to foster long-term job creation in the economy at large is not one of them.
 People like Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney and other members of the 1% often portrayed themselves as "Job Creators," and take credit for creating the best economy in the world. They pretend that they have superior knowledge, and through their own hard work, they have risen above the rest of the us in America in terms of economic wealth and political power. Well the political power part is true, mainly because of the U.S. Supreme Court 2010 Citizens United decision, which allowed unlimited campaign contributions from corporations, without even disclosing the donor. They claim to be held back by the fact that so many of their fellow citizens are "moochers" and expect a free ride and a free lunch at their expense. The Bush tax cuts were in place for 10 years and when Bush left office we were losing 700,000 jobs a month.
 The Keystone XL pipeline will carry the dirtiest fuels in the world, tar sands oil. TransCanada wants to build the northern section of the pipeline but needs approval of the President because it crosses an international border. The Keystone XL pipeline, if built, will stretch 2,000 miles from Alberta Canada to the Gulf Coast of the United States. The pipeline could cause devastating environmental damage to ecosystems, water, and public health, there have been numerous disasters of late with train derailments, chemical spills, and more that has already caused damage. Imports of dirty tar sands would double with the Keystone XL pipeline, which would transport it to refineries and ports on the Gulf coast for international export. America would not benefit from a drop of oil, but would sustain all the environmental, and other risks. What will America gain? 50 permanent t jobs, an increase in our own gas prices at the pump, of 25 to 40 cents per of gas, and risks. What will the big oil companies, including Shell and that Saudi Arabian oil company gain? Billions of dollars in increased profits, sound familiar?

Please contact your Representatives in Congress and the Senate by clicking on the "Find/Track Politicians, Bills, and Voting Records" page on the grey line above. Once on the page go to GovTrack and by simply putting in your zip code it will find all your Representatives and assist you in contacting them.  The only way we can make a difference is to call and write our Congressmen/women, and Senators. When enough people contact them they have no choice but to listen. Right now only the ultra-rich and corporations have their ear, and the influence, and it's working, FOR THEM. 




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Wednesday, January 22, 2014

“Like Gravity” Fast Track Trade Sinks Jobs and Wages




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“Like Gravity” Fast Track Trade Sinks Jobs and Wages



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Graphic by secure3.convio.net




Earlier today I asked my followers on Twitter and Facebook to join me in contacting their Congressmen/women and U.S. Senators to urge them to oppose the “Fast-Tracking” of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement, because it is being negotiated in total secrecy and could end up being a NAFTA on steroids. I understand President Obama wanting to not have to include Congress in the negotiations because they oppose and block everything he does. But, to have this complete deal being done with no one else involved is just to dangerous. If you would like to help, use this link, it will ask for your zip code and immediately find your Congressmen/women and U.S. Senators and give you their phone numbers. If you prefer, they will automatically e-mail all 4 of your Reps.

  http://www.stopfasttrack.com/?congress_success=18

A few hours after I made that request the Center for Media and Democracy’s PR Watch posted this article.
Read the article here.  http://www.prwatch.org/node/12367


PLEASE NOTE THAT WE ARE NOW PUBLISHING THIS BLOG ON WORDPRESS AT www.Medic3569.wordpress.com
We will continue to post all articles here as well, but the articles will be posted to Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ from WordPress. Thank you for subscribing to our blog. 

The Only Way We’re Going To Slow Down the Injustices is to Overturn Citizens United – Your Help is Needed

The Only Way We’re Going To Slow Down the Injustices is to Overturn Citizens United – Your Help is Needed

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Who was Guilty of What – Graphic by blogs.reuters.com

Remember the money you had in your 401k when the financial collapse happened? Remember the money you had built up in the equity in your home when the financial industries greed caused a near global economic collapse? We know who has your money! No, they’re not in jail, they’re living very comfortably on your money, and even getting richer while they block all regulation to prevent it from happening again.
The following is from Bloomberg Opinion – Prosecutor’s Balk, Bankers Walk, January 21, 2014.
The chance for senior government officials to make millions of dollars after their public service ends convinces them -– subliminally or not -– to pull their punches. No doubt that’s why Jimmy Cayne, the former chief executive officer of Bear Stearns & Co., continues to enjoy playing bridge and golf, his $400 million-plus fortune, his sprawling mansion in Elberon, New Jersey, and his duplex at the Plaza Hotel.
Dick Fuld, the former CEO of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., testified before Congress that his 2000-2007 Lehman compensation was about $310 million. He later conceded it could have been $350 million. The real number is closer to $520 million, according to people who prepared and studied Lehman’s public filings.
When Stan O’Neal resigned from Merrill Lynch & Co. in 2007, less than a year before it almost went bankrupt, he was given a parting gift of $161.5 million and a board seat — which he still holds — at Alcoa Inc.
Folks these are some of the people that have YOUR money, the money that used to be in the 401k’s, your equity in your house, you know, the money the middle class used to have!
About 3,500 bank executives went to jail after the 1980s savings-and-loan crisis, which wasn’t nearly as devastating as the 2008 debacle.
Not even the oleaginous Angelo Mozilo, the former Countrywide Financial Corp. CEO who walked off center stage with a net worth of about $600 million, has spent time in jail for creating and selling billions of dollars of squirrelly home mortgages that found their way into the securities that Wall Street sold to investors.
When Tim Geithner, the former Treasury secretary, takes over as president of Warburg Pincus LLC, the private-equity firm, even a high-school dropout can discern a pattern.
When the general counsels at JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Deutsche Bank AG — Stephen Cutler, Gary Lynch and Richard Walker, respectively – previously had been directors of enforcement at the SEC, the picture becomes perfectly clear.

Read More:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-01-21/prosecutors-balk-bankers-walk.html?alcmpid=view

If we are not successful in getting the states to pass resolutions to get the Congress to overturn Citizens United, and even worse, if the U.S. Supreme court sides with McCutcheon in McCutcheon v FEC, which they probably will because the same “Conservative-5″ are still there, we are only going to see things get worse in many areas, the least not being income inequality. So far 16 states have passed resolutions, there are over 120 organizations working on getting these State resolutions. Join in, go to www.United4thePeople.org to be a part of getting our Republic back!


Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Senator David Vitter (R-LA) Announces Run For Governor of Louisiana, Remember the "Vitter Amendment" he Wrote That Had No Basis in Reality


Senator David Vitter (R-LA) Getty Images explaining a situation he had with "Hookers." Photo by Getty Images.
Sen. David Vitter announced on Tuesday morning that he will run for governor of Louisiana in 2015.
PLEASE check out my blog post fully explaining why the "Vitter Amendment" had no basis in reality, because Congress and their Staffers GET EMPLOYER-PAID HEALTH INSURANCE! Their paid health insurance is considered part of their salary and the Office of Personal Management (OPM) simply would not of allowed Senator Chock Grassley's bill to force the Congress and staff to buy insurance through the Affordable Care Act exchanges. It's as simple as that. But to this day you can hear hear TeaPublicans say the President gave Congress a "exclusion" from the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare,) which just is not the facts.

http://medic3569.blogspot.com/2013/10/the-vitter-amendment-is-total-bs.html

"I believe that as our next governor I can have a bigger impact addressing the unique challenges and opportunities that we face in Louisiana," Vitter said in a Youtube video launching his gubernatorial run.
The conservative Republican said that while his "active campaign" won't start until next year, he has already laid the groundwork for it by holding hundreds of listening sessions across the state. He said if he becomes governor it will be his "last political job, elected or appointed. Period."  Read More from Politico

We have a tough fight in 2014 and one reason is because of the gerrymandering state legislators are doing and the Voter ID (suppression) laws that Governors have implemented in 34 states. We need to take back control of the State Legislatures and not allow people like Mr. Vitter to govern any state.

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Sunday, January 19, 2014

What is the Republicans/TeaPuplicans Plan for Jobs Since they are Blocking Every Jobs Bill the President Endorses?

Similar to Healthcare - We don't Have a Plan; But We'll Block Any Plan You Have For Jobs Mr. President


Bobblehead S. E. Cupp, on CNN's Crossfire this week, had Former Labor Secretary, (under President Clinton,) Robert Reich (who helped create a net 22 million job increase) and Governor Tim Pawlenty. and what she had was Republican talking points, typical of right-wing media and talking heads. She kept spewing prepared Republican/Teapublican talking points, not listening, or even hearing what her guests were saying. What is the Republican's plan for creating jobs? They don't know, but they know their willing to obstruct any ideas the President has, sound familiar? What's their plan for healthcare for 40 million Americans that didn't have it, and/or couldn't afford it? OH! That's right, they don't have one, but they spent taxpayer money to the tune of over $60M voting 48 times to repeal the Affordable Care Act.  Here's just a snippet from the conversation on CNN's Crossfire where Governor Pawlenty says what he thinks business is saying, and what Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich said to set him straight:
   
PAWLENTY: "Guess what? There's a consistent answer from those folks about what they want. And they basically say to government, do things to encourage me, not discourage me. Make the load lighter, not heavier. And that includes things like taxation, like energy policy, like health-care policy and more. But they're basically saying don't do things to make my life more difficult, more expensive, more bureaucratic, more inefficient."
CUTTER: "Well, Governor..."
REICH: "Actually, it's..."
CUTTER: "Go ahead."
REICH: "Stephanie, I'm sorry to interrupt you, but I just want to say that -- that I'm very proud to be part of an administration that presided over the creation of 22 million net new jobs. That was the Clinton administration."

 See the interview from CNN's Crossfire Here

Original meme by www.Facebook.com/StoptheObstructionistTeaParty and www.Medic3569.blogspot.com

What Does Raising the Minimum Wage Do? Help or Hurt Job Creation?

Republicans and Tea Party members say that government wants to force employers to raise wages, raise taxes on "top job creators," (which we absolutely know has been proven not to be true that the "trickle down theory" by cutting taxes on the rich creates jobs,) and force employers to cut-off hiring at 50 employees to avoid the Affordable Care Act mandates, is not a recipe for creating jobs. Robert Reich speaking on raising the minimum wage says: "Raising the minimum wage, we've been raising the minimum wage in this country since 1935. Raising the minimum wage is good for the country. It puts more money in the pockets of people. Sixty-five percent of Americans want to raise the minimum wage. Most minimum- wage workers these days are not teenagers. They are breadwinners. If you help them, you are helping the economy overall."
"And a lot of employers will benefit from a higher minimum wage. We know empirical studies show that. This is not a matter of government planning. This is a matter of doing what we have done in this country -- in fact, if we had a minimum wage today that was as high as it was in 1968, adjusted for inflation, it would be $10.40 an hour. And if you add in productivity improvements, minimum wage actually would be $15 an hour."

 A large swath of economists agree, raising the minimum wage is a good idea. 

 In a letter released Tuesday, January 14, 2014 through the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank, 75 economists, including seven Nobel Laureates, argue that the government should hike the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 an hour by 2016 and then peg future increases to inflation. A proposal from Senate Democrats, backed by President Obama, to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour is currently stalled in Congress. Read More from The Huffington Post. Economist Joseph Stiglitz and Larry Summers, argue that the "weight" of the evidence indicates past minimum wage hikes haven’t hurt the job market.  

 "Research suggests that a minimum-wage increase could have a small stimulative effect on the economy as low-wage workers spend their additional earnings, raising demand and job growth, and providing some help on the jobs front."

Original meme by www.Facebook.com/StoptheObstructionistTeaParty and www.Medic3569.blogspot.com

 Republicans Say President Holding Up  "All There Jobs Bills"

 The problem with that statement is that they don't have ANY jobs bills. So how do they get around that? Call every bill a "Jobs Bill." On Speaker John Boehner's Blog page he says that the White House is "pivoting" back to jobs and the House doesn't have to pivot because they have always been about jobs. He offers a list of "Jobs Bills," the problem? He lists numerous bills, but in the description of the bills offers misleading or straight out false information. He lists bills that favor the oil & gas industry by more deregulation (remember, after 300,000 people in West Virginia had their drinking water contaminated by a Koch Brothers affiliated chemical company he said "there are plenty of regulations in effect.") and bills that help the ultra-rich with more tax relief, etc., but none of the bills actually create a significant number of jobs. Check the Speaker's page and then check the actual bills at www.GovTrack.us.

But for Boehner, the best course of action is to cut off those struggling most, while asking the Senate to pass the “jobs bills” already approved by the House.
What “jobs bills”? As it turns out, Boehner has decided that every time House Republicans pass a bill that advances House Republican priorities, the party gets to label that a “jobs bill.” The GOP approved more oil drilling? That’s a “jobs bill.” The GOP voted to take away health care benefits from millions of Americans? That’s a “jobs bill,” too. The GOP disapproves of clean-air regulations? “Jobs bill.” The GOP wants more “transparency” in federal spending? “Jobs bill.” Republicans cut food stamps? “Jobs bill.”
I’m not exaggerating in the slightest; this is all from the list of “jobs bills” the Speaker of the House has pulled together and presented to the public. How many actual jobs would be created if these bills became law? No one knows because Republicans never submitted them for independent economic scrutiny, but GOP leaders are confident the answer is, at a minimum, some.

Photo by legalinsurrection.com
  What the Republicans "Say" and "Do" are Different, as Usual
Republicans came out this year saying they have a "Jobs Agenda," and it's not just the same old "cut taxes to the rich job creators" and "remove all those pesky regulations that tie the hands of industry." 

Nationwide, many our lifeline systems are approaching a different kind of catastrophe. One trillion dollars is the price tag on the U.S. infrastructure deficit, an issue President Obama knows well.

“We must rebuild our infrastructure and find new and clean sources of energy,” Obama said.
Quietly and consistently, infrastructure is emerging as one of the three key elements of Obama’s clarion call to returning to the domestic agenda.

Second only to jobs—above even energy—infrastructure, that critical and unsexy topic has come to the fore of the president’s mind and message.

Back in June, 2011 The U.S. Conference of Mayors, put forward a resolution to Congress that the $126 billion dollars going annually to pay for America’s wars abroad be spent at home instead.

The mayors set an agenda that mirrored the presidents: jobs, sustainable energy, and rebuilding America—roads, dams, water and sewer systems, among others.

“That we would build bridges in Baghdad and Kandahar and not Baltimore and Kansas City, absolutely boggles the mind,” L.A.’s flamboyant and outspoken Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said. Read More from The Daily Beast June 23, 2011 article.

Michael Tomasky in an article The GOP's "Jobs" Hypocrisy for The Daily Beast on January 3, 2014 writes about a piece by Michael R. Strain of National Affairs "A Jobs Agenda for the Right" whereas Michael makes some suggestions to the Republicans. It includes, ready? wait for it, INFRASTRUCTURE! Where did we hear that before? One particular part of Michael's work is this: 

 "This employment crisis is one of the most important and immediate social and economic problems facing the country today, and none of our elected leaders can afford to ignore it. Yet both parties are more or less doing just that. The Democrats talk about jobs policies, but their approach to the problem — with its emphasis on massive short-term fiscal stimulus and inefficient public spending — has proven neither popular nor (at least in the form attempted at the beginning of the Obama years) up to the challenge. It consists of the timeworn economic mantras of the left and is not equipped to address the problems we now have.

 Republicans are, if anything, worse off. They often refuse to even acknowledge the problem, or to acknowledge the fact that it requires ambitious policy solutions. They, too, mostly repeat familiar formulas from their party's glory days which offer proposals that do not seem well connected to today's economic realities. Some of their ideas — fostering a more stable business climate and financing lower tax rates by shrinking a few tax loopholes, for example — could help, but they are not nearly adequate for the challenge America confronts. To offer the public a plausible agenda for a true recovery of the labor market, Republicans will have to dig deeper."
  
 He continued "Anyone who has driven on a highway in Missouri or has taken an escalator in a Washington, D.C., Metro station knows that the United States could use some infrastructure investment. And expanding public-transportation options from poor neighborhoods to commercial centers could increase economic mobility and the incomes of the poor — a goal conservatives should certainly support. Today's low interest rates only increase the desirability of a multi-year program of high-social-value infrastructure spending.

 The 2009 stimulus bill failed to direct funds effectively to such projects, but that does not mean that infrastructure spending, if properly conceived and directed, cannot do a great deal of good. And, of course, to ensure that federal debt is on a stable trajectory, any large increase in spending should be coupled with restraints on the future path of middle-class entitlement spending and a reining in of tax expenditures.

 Carefully targeted infrastructure spending should also be coupled with a more pro-growth monetary policy. Monetary policy surely offers the best way to boost aggregate demand in the short term. By keeping the federal funds rate at zero and pursuing its long-term asset purchase program (known as quantitative easing or QE), the Federal Reserve has done much to support the economy during the Great Recession. But growth is still slow and the labor market is still very weak. Is there more the Fed could do?"

 Back to Michael Tomasky "UM, O.K. There are people who’ve been trying to do just that. And not only Barack Obama. John Kerry led this effort in the Senate, and he was joined by Republican Kay Bailey Hutchison (who’s since retired). Their attempts to fund a modest infrastructure bank were supported by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. But it could never get anywhere because of rock-solid GOP opposition. Does Strain not even know this? Or is he pretending it never existed so he doesn’t have to deal with the political reality of Republican obduracy?

I think, of course, it’s the latter, and there’s further evidence for my guess in the way Strain talks about recent history. The 2009 stimulus was not a failure in infrastructure terms at all (has he read Michael Grunwald?). But even if you believe it was an infrastructure failure, or have to say so for political reasons, should you not acknowledge in fairness that it was Democrats and liberals who wanted it to have more infrastructure spending, and that nearly 40 percent of bill took the form of tax cuts because that’s what Republicans demanded (before they decided en masse to vote against it anyway)?"

Meme by waliberals.org

President Obama's Proposed Jobs Bills

First there's  The American Jobs Act which calls for:

1. TAX CUTS TO HELP AMERICA’S SMALL BUSINESSES HIRE AND GROW.

2. PUTTING WORKERS BACK ON THE JOB WHILE REBUILDING AND MODERNIZING
    AMERICA.

3. PATHWAYS BACK TO WORK FOR AMERICANS LOOKING FOR JOBS.

4. TAX RELIEF FOR EVERY AMERICAN WORKER AND FAMILY.

5. FULLY PAID FOR AS PART OF THE PRESIDENT’S LONG-TERM DEFICIT REDUCTION
    PLAN. 
Learn more at www.WHITEHOUSE.gov

 80% of our infrastructure is deemed "obsolete" or "in need of immediate repair." Infrastructure bills in the past have gone through the House and Senate with ease, but that's before the day after our current President's first inauguration where Senator Mitch McConnell laid out the 1st priority of the Republican Party, which was to "make the President a one-term President." That was their first priority, not the wars, not the great recession created by President George W. Bush, who came into office with a $500M surplus and left with a $10B deficit, with two unpaid wars going on, one of which President Bush out right lied about to get us into. Or the unpaid "Prescription Drug Bill" that cost us over $720B that they said would only cost us $320B and gave drug companies a windfall by not allowing Medicare and Medicaid to negoiate the prices of prescription drugs, not the 700,000 jobs per month being lost when President Obama took office, no, first priority was to make the President a one-term President. The Republican Party then started to have other problems, the ultra-rich backed Tea Party started to challenge Conservatives and blocked anything that didn't fit into their absurd agenda. The Republican Party became broken and produced the "Worse Productive Congress in the History of the United States," the 113th Congress. Obstruction was to put it lightly. Closing down the government to try to repeal The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare,) after already spending $59M to have 47 votes to repeal the law may have been the beginning of the fall of the Tea Party, but we'll just have to hope and see in the 2014 elections. House Speaker John Boehner finally stood up to some of the "groups" like Freedom Works, The Club for Growth, and Heritage Action, when the House passed the Ryan-Murray budget. But came right back and said there was no way they were going to raise the minimum wage, extend the Emergency Unemployment Compensation, and said, after Freedom Industries, a chemical company affiliated with the Koch Brothers, contaminated the drinking water for over 300,000 people in West Virginia, that "there are plenty of regulations in place."
 We need jobs, not deregulation, not blocking of the Dodd-Frank Financial Reform bill, not Voter ID Laws, not blocking raising the Minimum Wage, not cutting Food Stamps by $40B, not easier permitting processes for drilling and Fracking, not a Keystone XL pipeline that will bring tar sands oil through our country only to go to a refinery in the Gulf owned by a Saudi Arabian oil company and Shell oil, to be exported to China and other nations, that will raise gas prices 25-40 a gallon here in the U.S., not stalling immigration legislation, not spending more than $70B of taxpayer money voting to repeal the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare,) not giving $154B in tax subsidies to corporations like we did last year, WE NEED JOBS!

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Mayor of Hoboken Dawn Zimmer: Chris Cristie Holds Hoboken Sandy Relief Money Hostage for Expediting Rockerfeller Group Development Group

Governor Christie has Much Bigger Problems than his staff Closing a Bridge

July 9 2009, A Day New Jersey Changed Forever

Three mayors and two assemblymen were among at least 44 arrested Thursday morning in a major federal corruption sweep in New Jersey. 

 Hoboken's newly-elected mayor, Peter Cammarano, Secaucus Mayor Dennis Elwell and Ridgefield Mayor Anthony Suarez were arrested, as was Jersey City Deputy Mayor Leona Beldini. Assemblymen Daniel Van Pelt and L. Harvey Smith were also taken into custody. An aide to Smith, Richard Greene, was also arrested.

 Then Attorney General of New Jersey, Chris Christie, was catapulted to a savior, and the man to take corruption out of New Jersey. The newly elected Mayor of Hoboken, Peter Cammarano, was already being touted as "a raising star," but only one month into office he accepted a $25,000 bribe by an undercover investigator to "expedite" permits and projects from the fake developer.



Governor Chris Christie - Photo by www.upi.com
Mayor of Hoboken, NJ Dawn Zimmer

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Governor Chris Christie, Mayor Dawn Zimmer, The Rockerfeller Group, David Samson and Influence

 Steve Kornacki, host of Up with Steve Kornacki, on MSNBC, who cut his teeth on NJ politics, had Hoboken Mayor Dawn Zimmer on his show to expose a much more serious problem Governor Chris Cristie has than his staff closing lanes on the busiest bridge in the world.

 Hoboken is a one square mile city, land is at a premium. The Rockerfeller Group bought up 3 blocks in North Hoboken and want it deemed a redevelopment zone which would give it many benefits. The Mayor was told that the Governor favored the Project. Mayor Dawn Zimmer would not approve the project until a study was done, but with trying to recover from Sandy there was no money for a study right now.

 The Commissioner of the Port Authority, David Samson, was nominated to the Board of Commissioners by Governor Chris Christie. He was confirmed by the New Jersey State Senate on January 25, 2011 and was elected as the agency's Chairman on February 3, 2011. Mr. Samson is a Partner and founding member of the law firm Wolff & Samson, the firm that represents The Rockerfeller Group, as well as being the Chairman of The Port Authority of NY/NJ.

 The Port Authority offered to pay $75,000 for the study that Mayor Dawn Zimmer said was needed to move the Rockerfeller Group project forward, red flag one, why?

 Two senior members of Gov. Chris Christie’s administration warned Hoboken Mayor Dawn Zimmer earlier this year that her town would be starved of hurricane relief money unless she approved a lucrative redevelopment plan favored by the governor, according to the mayor and emails and personal notes she shared with MSNBC.

 The mayor, Dawn Zimmer, hasn’t approved the project, but she did request $127 million in hurricane relief for her city of Hoboken – 80% of which was underwater after Sandy hit in October 2012. What she got was $142,000 to defray the cost of a single back-up generator plus an additional $200,000 in recovery grants.

 After a media event to show how retail businesses were recovering from hurricane Sandy at a Shoprite in NJ  Lt. Governor Kim Guadagno pulled Mayor Zimmer aside in the parking lot and told "I know these things shouldn't be connected, but they are.The Governor favors this project, move the Rockerfeller Project forward or I don't think we're going to be able to help with Sandy Relief money. In other words "expedite" the project, sound familiar?

 There were 20 subpoenas issued Friday, there are investigations by the State Assembly, State Senate, as well as federal investigations into the lane closings of the Fort Lee access lanes to the George Washington bridge, but it looks like pandora's box has been opened. 

And Now What? February 3, 2014 Deadline for Answering the Subpoenas


 It appears that the lanes being closed on the world's busiest bridge may have not been retaliation for the Mayor of Fort Lee, N.J., Mark Sokolich,  not endorsing Gov. Chris Christie. The largest redevelopment project in NJ is the $1B project in Fort Lee. The Governor's office was 1of 2 organizations issue with the 20 that were issued yesterday. If the Governor is holding Sandy Relief Funds from Hoboken to get a private developer's project "expedited" that is a much bigger problem for Christie. The subpoenas issued require a response by February 3, 2014 and are asking for everything, letters, e-mails, any electronics devices used since September 2012. Let's see what the Governors office is going to do. Just a word for the 20 that received subpoenas,  if your thinking of deleting e-mails, shredding documents, or anything else that would obstruct the investigations, that's a good idea, if you don't mind spending many years in a State Penitentiary.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

How Fair Are Our Elections? Do the Democrats Have a Chance of Winning Back the House?

 Gerrymandering, Voter ID Laws Created for a Virtually Non-Existent Problem, Voter Suppression, Disenfranchising Voters, How Fair Are Our Elections?

Original meme by www.Facebook.com/StoptheObstructionistTeaParty and www.Medic3569.blogspot.com

 Republicans have passed "Voter ID" laws in 34 states that often address things other than preventing people to vote when their not eligible. Laws that restrict early voting hours, types of ID acceptable, not extending voting hours when their are long lines, limiting the number of voting stations in particular areas (where Democrats are more likely to vote,) all suppress, and disenfranchise the vote of minorities and other specified voting demographics. 


 A twitter friend of mine @HenryStradford  tweeted this: "The only true Democracy is India...imagine that! 1+Billion people...consider the logistics of holding elections. Yet, they do.." I have to wonder if he's right.


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The following is from a Center For American Progress Action Fund article on January 16, 2014:

  With election administration delegated to officials and boards in more than 3,000 counties and localities in the United States, the ease with which one exercises his or her right to vote can depend on where he or she lives. Not only do state voting laws differ across the nation, even within a state, county-based election administration varies widely.

  Take, for example, Florida’s Duval County, which during the 2012 election had provisional ballots cast at a rate four times higher than the state average. This is particularly alarming given that Duval County also rejected more than 34 percent of the provisional ballots cast in the county during the 2012 election. Similarly, voters in Indiana’s Tippecanoe County cast provisional ballots at a rate more than seven and a half times the state average. While provisional ballots are legally prescribed and serve as a fail-safe mechanism that allow voters to cast a ballot when questions regarding his or her eligibility to vote arise, both examples raise questions as to why these counties issued provisional ballots at rates so much higher than their state’s average.

Read the Report: http://www.scribd.com/doc/200129107/Unequal-Access-A-County-by-County-Analysis-of-Election-Administration-in-Swing-States-in-the-2012-Election

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Anything Different in the Upcoming Elections?

(CNN) -- The midterm elections are around the corner. The big question will obviously be what happens to control of the House and Senate. But control of Congress is only one part of the equation. There are a series of issues that will shape the individual races that will tell us a lot about which way American politics is heading.

 Former Ohio Rep. Steven LaTourette and the Main Street Partnership, a group with strong backing from the corporate world, are trying to counteract the power of the tea party, which they believe is damaging the standing of the GOP. "We want our party back," LaTourette explained to the The New York Times.

 The most visible battle between a mainstream Republican and tea party Republican is taking place in Kentucky, where Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is facing a challenge from Matt Bevin in the primary. In Texas, the controversial right-wing Rep. Steve Stockman is running against Sen. John Cornyn.

 There are certain must-wins for Democrats if they are to show that they are capable of taking advantage of this moment. In Florida's 13th District, Alex Sink, a well-known and well-respected Democrat, is attempting to win the seat of long-term Republican veteran Bill Young, who recently died, leaving  open this highly competitive district. If Democrats can't win this special election on March 11, it will signal trouble. Read More of CNN.COM's Five Big Questions on 2014 Elections

Retirements Hurt Democrats' House Prospects

AP Photo

 The Democratic quest to win the House majority has always been something close to mission impossible. A procession of lawmakers opting for retirement is pushing the prize even further beyond the party’s grasp.
Seventeen seats shy of the majority and confronting an electoral landscape tilted against them, Democrats have virtually no room for error in the November midterms. Yet the problems they’re encountering of late are coming from within their own ranks. Read More Politico - House Democrats Retiring

Democrats Will Need to Get Out the Vote To Have Any Chance 

 With all the Republicans efforts to tip the elections in their favor through Voter ID laws, suppressing votes, disenfranchising voters, gerrymandering, and the backing of the ultra-rich and corporations, it will be very difficult, to say the least, to keep control of the Senate, much less, to win back the House.  If the U. S. Supreme Court sides with McCutcheon in the McCutcheon v FEC, which it heard arguments for on October 8, 2013, it will be that much harder and a total disaster for our beloved country. The U. S. Supreme Court's 2010 Citizens United decision created "Corporate Personhood" and removed limits on how much corporations could contribute to political campaigns, and donors could be kept unanimous. As you can see in the meme below top donors from the fossil fuel industry contributed  over $11M in the 2012 election cycle. If the court sides with McCutcheon those same donors could contribute over $312M, or, 27x more.

  

Fixing a Big Part of the Problem - Taking Money out of Politics

Overturn Citizens United

 There is a growing movement across the country that is calling for the U.S. Supreme Court's decision, in the 2010 Citizens United v FEC case to overturn it through one or more amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

 There are currently Constitutional amendments pending in the Congress that would overturn Citizens United by (1) making it clear that corporations do not have constitutional rights, such as "free speech," which are only for natural persons; and by (2) restoring Congress' and the states' authority to limit campaign gifts and spending. See H.J. Res 20 and  H.J. Res 21.

Overturning the disastrous Citizens United decision is NOT a partisan issue, it is an Across-the-Aisle effort. In a 2010/2011 Peter Hart poll 79% of Americans, including 68% of Republicans, 82% of Independents, and 87% of Democrats "support a Constitutional amendment that would overturn the Citizens United decision and make clear that corporations do not have the same rights as people."

Furthermore, a 2012 Associated Press poll found that 83% of Americans, including 81% of Republicans, 78% of Independents, and 85% of Democrats believe "there should be limits on the amount of money corporations, unions, and other organizations can contribute to outside organizations trying to influence campaigns for President, Senate, and U.S. House."

Free Speech For People has compiled:
  • 111 Republicans who have called for an amendment to overturn Citizens United;
  • 9 Republicans who have criticized Citizens United for it's claim that corporations have constitutional   rights; and
  • 10 more Republicans who have criticized Citizens United in more general terms.
Information in this section of the post, some which has been reprinted was provided by Free Speech For People. 

More than 120 National Organizations -- have endorsed the United for the People collaborative's unified Call to Action for a Constitutional amendment. For information click the link above or go to www.United4ThePeople.org.

 Find an organization operating in your area. Get involved For A Better America and make your voice heard by contacting your;

U.S. Senators and Congressmen and women through GovTrack.us. and
State Assemblymen/women and State Senators at VoteSmart.org

Organizations involved in the effort that you should look at are:
Democracy is for People                        and as a resource: Siena College Moreland Commission poll


Move To Amend                                                                Huff Post Politics - Pearl Korn: Mission is Clear   

United For The People

Wishing Wayne LaPierre Had to go to One Scene of a Shooting

This meme was posted on my FB News Feed  on January 16, 2013.


 
This affected me because I was a Paramedic in New York City for almost 20 years and personally pronounced (made a "presumption of death" - only an MD can "Pronounce" in NY - but the time I gave was the official time of pronouncement) hundreds of people deceased. Too many of them were children. I started in 1991 during the height of the drug wars. Near the end of the drug wars the gangs were using younger and younger hungry children to deliver their product. Unfortunately when someone wanted to rip-off the drugs they simply shot the delivery boy. One gang (among thousands of drug gangs, I won't say the name, but they were headquartered at 157th St and St. Nicholas) was responsible for over 1000 homicides, it was determined a few years after the wars were over. The number of children I pronounced, myself, under the age of 14, I would put somewhere around 20. The thing that was the hardest was when the mother, or another family member, would come to the scene of the shooting where their child, the son, the brother, was on the street with the yellow blanket over him that I had placed after determining he was not viable. I can still hear the screeching screams of them. It literally gave me goosebumps. I would try what I could before the police would remove them from the scene. I think Mr. La Pierre should have to go to one of those scenes and scrape the grey brain matter off the street of a 12 year old while the mother, brother, and sister, scream in denial. Just once.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Senate Fails To Move Emergency Unemployment Compensation Forward 55-45, but Republican Constituents are Catching On that their Representatives Don't Care About Them

 Senate Republicans Move the Goal Posts and Deny 1.3 Million Americans Extended Unemployment Compensation, But Constituents are Starting to Realize It

Chart by www.cbpp.org

Well, the Senate failed to move the Emergency Unemployment Compensation bill forward because they couldn't get Republicans to vote for helping 1.3 million Americans in dire need of help.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has struggled to attract Republican votes as the GOP – still fuming about a rules change he pushed that diminishes their filibuster power – moved the goalposts on what it would take for GOP lawmakers to support an extension of the program.

Two procedural votes on different variations on an extension failed Tuesday afternoon, sending lawmakers back the drawing table.

 How can Republicans say they give an iota about Americans that are struggling?  At first, Senate Republicans said they would not support the extended benefits if it were not paid for. Then, after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid rounded up Democratic AND Republican proposals on how they would pay for an extension for varying lengths of time, the Republicans starting complaining about not being able to offer amendments to the legislation, therefore "moving the goalposts."

 Reid proposed a number of deals that would allow the Republicans to make amendments with 60 votes, as long as final passage of the bill would require only a majority of 51 votes. Minority leader Mitch McConnell rejected them immediately. The Republicans want a system where the minority of the senate that opposes unemployment insurance benefits gets both an amendment process where they can offer these poison pill amendments and then the minority of the Senate that opposes the bill can still kill the bill.”

 It outrages me that the Republicans/TeaPublicans really don't care what real people are going through so they can win political points. They don't have to worry about where their next meal, next tank of oil to heat there home, or tank of gas is coming from.

Republican Constituents Starting to Realize Their Politicians Don't Really Care About Them

 The PBS NewsHour.org reports that "Hardly a liberal bastion, El Paso County, in Colorado, has the largest number of people in the state who lost unemployment benefits, and many aren't happy about it. Plenty of Republicans, too, depend on jobless aid that Republicans in Congress are hesitant to prolong. The ideological argument for standing against an extension of benefits -- that the aid can ultimately make it harder to find work -- meets a more complex reality where people live.

 Democrats propose to extend the emergency benefits for people who have been or are about to be out of work for more than six months; Republicans are less inclined to take that step, particularly if it means the government borrows more money. The paralysis led to the expiration of benefits for 1.3 million long-term unemployed on Dec. 28. Lawmakers are still working on a compromise."

Read More

Republicans Need to Get in Touch With the People, and Reality

 The  TeaPublican run Republican Party needs to get in touch with reality. They don't understand that the 1.3 million Americans who have now received their last unemployment check are in desperate need of assistance. On average, the $237.00 a week was allowing those families just barely enough to scrape by, and now they've taken that away. You can't tell me that with corporate subsidies reaching $154B last year that they can't find the $6B it would take to extend the benefits that these families so desperately need. Wake up people, this is real, not a game. How far can people be pushed to their limit? What happens now, when the recipients of those benefits can't put anymore food on the table, gas in the car? And no, their not what a number of Republicans have said this week, lazy!

Please contact your Senators through GovTrack.us and tell them to stop playing games with peoples lives, they will hit their limit, it's not right.



Sunday, January 12, 2014

Senator's Daughter's Life Saved by a Procedure Developed in Socialized Medicine and Performed in Gov't Funded Facility - He then Totally Lies about it to Sway People Away From the ACA


Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) Has Daughter Whose Life was Saved at Government Funded Medical Institution, with a Procedure Performed Under the "Socialized" Healthcare Systems in Brazil and France

Senator Ron Johnson - My daughter's life was saved by a procedure that was developed in a "socialized" medical system in Brazil and France. Dr. Foker performed my daughter’s surgery at a government funded medical institution, The University Of Minnesota’s Medical School. Thirty years later I completely lied and tried to sway voters away from Obamacare by saying my daughter's life-saving surgery wouldn't have been possible under the Affordable Care Act.

Republican Senator Ron Johnson (Wisconsin) has repeatedly told his followers that a reconstructive heart surgery saved his baby daughter’s life, 30 years ago.

Johnson claimed that his daughter’s heart surgery wouldn’t have been possible, under the ACA.  You see, he was trying to sway voters away from the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Johnson claimed that the ‘healthcare freedom’ he enjoyed when his daughter was born would soon be a thing of the past, thanks to Obamacare. “I would not have run for the U.S. Senate had Obamacare not been passed,” he told CNSnews.com. Johnson even claimed that the ACA was an attack on ‘healthcare freedom’, and it was that freedom that allowed his daughters surgery to have a happy outcome. he said:

“What this health care law is all about, it’s an assault on our freedom. It’s going to lower the quality of our care. It’s going to lead to rationing. The types of medical innovation that saved my daughter’s life [and] that saves millions of Americans — I won’t say it’s going to come to a grinding halt, but it’s going to be severely limited.”

There are a few problems with almost EVERYTHING you said Mr. Senator.

As it turns out, however, the doctor who performed his daughter’s surgery does not agree with Johnson’s false interpretation of the law. Not only that, but he provided the Uppity Wisconsin with a great deal of insight about the surgery, including how it was developed and where it was performed. Surprise, it’s not quite the way Senator Johnson made it sound.

By now you have probably figured out that much of what republicans say is simply not true. In this case, however, it turns out there’s more than the usual amount of manipulation of facts.

Doctor John Foker, the physician who performed the operation on Senator Johnson’s daughter  was recently interviewed by Jud Lounsbury, a reporter with Uppity Wisconsin. It turns out the doctor completely disagrees with Johnson’s statements regarding the Affordable Care Act. He said he’s “generally supportive” of the new healthcare law, but stressed that he also thinks it does not go far enough.

    “Unfortunately it was written by the insurance and drug companies, so not so great”

he told Lounsbury.

Foker also said that “Republican lawmakers should relish the ACA’s “private-solution” approach.

Dr. Foker does not appear to support the GOP.

Dr. Foker, the miracle doctor who Senator Johnson cited time and time again as the man who saved his daughter’s life, is none too happy with the way republicans are behaving. He openly criticized the GOP for obstructionist tactics, which have served to keep many citizens from receiving healthcare coverage . His final word on the subject of republicans?

    “They’re never happy.”

 Did Johnson lie about his own daughter’s surgery?

That’s not all. It also turns out that Dr. Foker performed Johnson’s daughter’s surgery at a government funded medical institution, The University Of Minnesota’s Medical School. And the surgery that was used to save the girl’s life was not even developed in United States, under the “freedom of healthcare” system that Johnson claimed was threatened by the ACA. The surgery was first performed under the socialized healthcare systems in Brazil and France.

One can only wonder if Senator Johnson was purposefully lying about his own daughter or if he simply doesn’t understand the healthcare law and the medical profession. He seems to have seriously misrepresented the feelings of the doctor whose ‘freedoms’ he claimed to be defending.

 Read More www.addictinginfo.org

Friday, January 10, 2014

War on Poverty 50 Years Old

War on Poverty 50 Years Old - President Johnson Declared the War on January 8, 1964 During His State of the Union Speech

President Lyndon B. Johnson State of the Union Speech January 8, 1964
 President Lyndon Johnson stood in the Capitol on Jan. 8, 1964, and, in his first State of the Union address, committed the nation to a war on poverty.

 "We shall not rest until that war is won," Johnson said. "The richest nation on Earth can afford to win it. We cannot afford to lose it."

 There are currently 46 million Americans living below the poverty line. Take that in for a moment, Forty-Six (46) Million Americans. For a single parent with child the poverty line is $15,510/yr, ($1,292.50/mo or about $300.00/wk.) For a family of four the line is at $23,550. See the entire 2013 Federal Guidelines at Families USA

 On Nov. 22, 1963, just hours after Kennedy was assassinated, Johnson was meeting with advisers in Washington to get the affairs of state in order. The chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, Walter Heller, mentioned to Johnson that under Kennedy, he had begun looking at ways to help those in poverty — about 1 in 5 Americans at the time. The new President, historian Robert Caro told NPR's David Greene wanted to go "Full Tilt" on the program.

 That ambitious initiative would help Johnson politically. Many liberals, who had rallied around the cause of poverty, were suspicious of him — but it was something he knew the pain of personally.

 His father failed. He once had been a very respected state legislator and businessman, and he totally failed. And as a result, for the rest of his boyhood, Lyndon lived in a home that they were literally afraid every month that the bank might take away. There was often no food in the house, and neighbors had to bring covered dishes with food. In this little town, to be that poor, there were constant moments of humiliation for him, and insecurity. It was a terrible boyhood.

 He says, President Johnson, [the causes of poverty may lie]  "In a lack of education and training, in a lack of medical care and housing, in a lack of decent communities in which to live." These were to Johnson real-life foes, and Johnson knew what to do with enemies: You destroyed them. So he loved the word "war."
READ MORE: "For LBJ, The War On Poverty Was Personal" by NPR Staff.
 
 Unless your over, say, 55, you probably wouldn't remember the poverty that existed then. The same way that the ultra-rich can't really understand how little people live on in this country, and how hard it is to just survive, you can hardly the poverty was shared by both black and white equal measure. When you heard Former Presidential candidate Mitt Romney talk of the famous "47%" it was because he truly believed what he was saying because he had never lived not knowing where his next meal was coming from. From time-to-time you will see the media ask a politician how much a loaf of bread, or gallon of milk cost, often, they don't know. I remember seeing a news report in New York that I never forgot. They had discovered a 14 year old boy, who was attending public school that when he wasn't in school he was kept in a coffin at home. He ate and defecated in the coffin. For obvious reasons the boy was introverted and when asked the most obvious question of all by the media he said "I thought everyone lived the same way." My point is this, unless you witnessed it, you cannot imagine America's poverty before LBJ's anti-poverty effort. It was to be a worthwhile effort. People were highly motivated and totally committed to their mission.
New programs included Housing, Foodstamps, Headstart, and Medicaid. It was amazing how people could get by on so little and begin to lift themselves out of poverty. The Federal programs were equal in every state until the 1990's. Former President Clinton signed a bill that returned Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) to states in block grants. Since then the states decided your eligibility and fewer families qualified. The number of homeless families grew as a result. 

 

Homelessness 

 

by the National Alliance to End Homelessness
  It is very difficult to determine how many homeless people there are in the world because countries have different legal definitions for homelessness. Natural disasters and sudden civil unrest also complicate the picture. The best we have is a conservative estimate from the United Nations in 2005, which puts the number of homeless at 100 million.

 By the Numbers from the National Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH)

  Homelessness occurs when people or households are unable to acquire and/or maintain housing they can afford.

The Big Picture
  While circumstances can vary, the main reason people experience homelessness is because they cannot find housing they can afford. It is the scarcity of affordable housing in the United States, particularly in more urban areas where homelessness is more prevalent, that is behind their inability to acquire or maintain housing.
By the numbers:
  • There are 610,042 people experiencing homelessness on any given night in the United States.
  • Of that number, 222,197 are people in families, and
  • 387,845 are individuals.
  • About 18 percent of the homeless population - 109,132 - are considered "chronically homeless,"and
  • About 9 percent of homeless adults- 57,849 - are veterans. These numbers come from point-in-time counts, which are conducted, community by community, on a single night in January every other year. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) requires communities to submit this data every other year in order to qualify for federal homeless assistance funds. Many communities conduct counts more regularly.
How Many People are Homeless in the United States?

 One approximation of the annual number of homeless in America is from a study by the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, which estimates between 2.3 and 3.5 million people experience homelessness. According to a 2008 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development report an estimated 671,888 people experienced homelessness in one night in January 2007. Some 58 percent of them were living in shelters and transitional housing and, 42 percent were unsheltered.

How many of the homeless are children?

One out of 50—or about 1.5 million—American children are homeless each year, according to a 2009 study by the National Center on Family Homelessness.
See state-by-state rankings on child homelessness.

See more information on homelessness and how to help at the National Alliance to End Homelessness .

Food Stamps

by www.motherjones.com


Food Stamps (SNAP) is a nutrition assistance program serving over 40 million low income Americans. Basically the program provides about $1.50 per meal, per person, although that was prior to the $5B that was recently cut from the program. There currently proposed "Farm Bill" in the Senate would cut another $4B, and the currently proposed Farm Bill in the Congress would cut $40B. A disabled veteran that I spoke to was receiving $184.00 per month prior to the $5B cut that recently took place, he now receives $173.00 per month. That's not what I call "supporting our troops" like the Republicans like to continuously say.
 
Wikipedia - The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP),[1] formerly known as the Food Stamp program, provides food-purchasing assistance for low- and no-income people living in the U.S. It is a federal aid program, administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, under the Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) Administration, though benefits are distributed by each U.S. state's Division of Social Services or Children and Family Services.

SNAP is the largest nutrition assistance program and is estimated to have served more than 40 million low income Americans per year in recent years. The SNAP caseload has increased substantially as result the recent economic crisis, in addition to rising food prices[2] As an entitlement program, SNAP benefits costs $76.4 billion in Fiscal Year 2013 and supplied roughly 47.6 million Americans with an average of $133.08 per month in food assistance.[3] It is the largest nutrition program (see also WIC) and is a critical component of the federal social safety net for low-income Americans.[4] The high cost of the SNAP program makes the Nutrition title the most expensive, and contentiously debated, title of the United States farm bill.[5]


Education - Headstart

 


 In a conversation with Brian Williams on January 9, 2013 during a special NBC broadcast called "Poverty in America" House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) said "It has Failed" when he spoke of the War on Poverty. However, he did say:
 
"pre-K makes a difference,” but he did not endorse any specific solution – only to say that the government should “stop subsidizing programs that are failing.” 

President Obama called for universal pre-K to be a national priority in his State of the Union last year. But there has since been no movement in Congress on expanding it. Ryan, who has said social safety nets have “failed miserably,” has made it a point to go to impoverished areas over the past year to try and show Republicans in a more compassionate light. Read More.

Head Start is a federal program that promotes the school readiness of children ages birth to 5 from low-income families by enhancing their cognitive, social and emotional development. Head Start programs provide comprehensive services to enrolled children and their families, which include health, nutrition, social services and other services determined to be necessary by family needs assessments, in addition to education and cognitive development services. Head Start services are designed to be responsive to each child and family’s ethnic, cultural and linguistic heritage.

Healthcare and Social Security

 

by www.dailykos.com

 In order to fight poverty, Lyndon Johnson pushed legislation that introduced or led to healthcare programs such as Medicare and Medicaid; education programs such as Head Start; and an expansion to Social Security.

 Social Security  

 A system that distributes financial benefits to retired or disabled people, their spouses, and their dependent children based on their reported earnings. While you work, you may pay taxes into the Social Security system. When you retire or become disabled, you, your spouse, and your dependent children may get monthly benefits that are based on your reported earnings. Your survivors may be able to collect Social Security benefits if you die.

 Politicians took money out of Social Security. The following excerpt is from the 1998 Senate Budget Committee session. Note the underlined portions.

BEGIN EXCERPT
 
GREENSPAN: I will wait to see what the numbers look like.

HOLLINGS: Well, the truth is...ah, shoot, well, we all know there's Washington's math problem. Alan Sloan in this past week's Newsweek says he spends 150%. What we've been doing, Mr. Chairman, in all reality, is taken [sic] a hundred billion out of the Social Security Trust Fund, transferring it over to the spending column, and spending it. Our friends to the left here are getting their tax cuts, we [sic] getting our spending increases, and hollering surplus, surplus, and balanced budget, and balanced budget plans when we continue to spend a hundred billion more than we take in. 
 
That's the reality, and I think that you and I, working the same side of the street now, can have a little bit of success by bringing to everybody's attention this is all intended surplus. In other words, when we passed the Greenspan Commission Report, the Greenspan Commission Report only had Social Security in 1983 a two hundred million surplus. It's projected to have this year (1998) a 117 million surplus. I've got the schedule, I'll ask to put in the record the CBO report: 117, 126, 130, 100, going right through to 2008 over the ten year period of 186 billion surplus. That was intended; this is dramatic about all these retirees, the baby boomers. But we foresaw that baby boomer problem, we planned against that baby boomer problem. Our problem is we've been spending that particular reserve, that set-aside that you testify to that is so necessary. That's what I'm trying to get this government back to reality, if we can do that.

We owe Social Security 736 billion right this minute. If we saved 117 billion, we could pay that debt down, and have the wonderful effect on the capital markets and savings rate. Isn't that correct? Thank you very much, Sir. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

It should be obvious from the above that the government has for decades been taking the money intended to pay Social Security benefits and spending it as general revenue. The Social Security trust fund is filled with Government IOUs, and those people who insists Social Security is solvent are operating in the faith that T-bills are always good, because the taxpayer can always be forced to redeem them.

But there is a problem. There are so many T-bills in the Social Security fund that when the baby-boomers start applying for benefits, the sudden surge of T-bills being presented for payment would collapse the Federal System, because there are not enough young taxpayers to carry the extra load.
END EXCERPT

 Read More from What Really Happened.
  
We owe Social Security $736 Billion Dollars

The fact is that politicians took money from Social Security or it would be solvent today. We saw the baby boomer situation and were prepared for it. But then the money was taken out of the trust, and now they call it an "entitlement." REALLY?! I want to take $736B from the tax breaks for the ultra-rich and corporations and when they ask for it back tell them we don't have the money for their entitlements that they think they deserve.

Healthcare

In 1964, 44 percent of seniors had no health care coverage, and with the medical bills that come with older age, this propelled many seniors into poverty. In fact, more than one in three Americans over 65 were living below the poverty line -- more than double the rate of those under 65. Medicare was an important and big change in American health care -- it was called the "biggest management job since the invasion of Normandy" -- and it was up to John Gardner to make it work. He helped shepherd Medicare to reality, and the results have been extraordinary: virtually all seniors now have health care, and the poverty rate for the elderly has fallen to approximately one in ten -- a rate lower than that of the general population. Along with Medicare, the Johnson Administration established the Medicaid program to provide health care to the poor. 
People Don't Understand the Benefits of the "Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act"
Prior to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was signed into law people like to forget that the cost of their healthcare was going up significantly every year, doubling in four years. These increases were happening while insurance company executives were getting bigger and bigger salaries, and even bigger bonuses. The rise in healthcare premiums were slowed immediately when the ACA was signed into law. One of the reason the costs slowed was because the ACA had a provision that the insurance companies had to spend 80% of all the money they collected through premiums. Many people received refund checks from their insurance companies because they didn't spend the money from premiums on actual patient claims, and the law said they could no longer just give it to themselves. Most people didn't know why their insurance companies had sent then that check, and still don't. 

 The Cost of Medicare and Medicaid and Medicare Part D


Another reason the raising cost of Medicaid and Medicare was the passage of the "Prescription Drug Bill" in which immediately after it's passage former President George W. Bush went on television and was taking "a victory lap" for "helping the seniors" with the cost of their prescription drug costs. There were a few problems with this sham, these lies, of how "good" it was. Leading up to this bill coming to a vote the Republicans said it would only cost $395B over the first decade. Within two months of signing the Medicare Modernization Act (MMA) into law, President Bush quietly informed Congress that the true cost of the program would be $550 billion, not $395 billion, over the next decade. By the time the program was launched in 2006, the estimated 10 year price tag for the Medicare prescription plan had increased to $720 billion. 

See To Attack Obamacare Republicans Forget the Lessons of Bush's Medicare Reform
 
1. President Bush initially opposed it. On Jan. 1, 2006, the federal government launched Part D, which enabled the nation's 43 million Medicare beneficiaries to get subsidized prescriptions through a choice of private insurance plans. But in early 2003, the Bush administration was opposed to providing the new benefit to those enrolled in traditional Medicare (that is, 85 percent of all recipients). Instead, those wanting to gain the drug benefit would have to switch to an HMO or private Medicare Advantage plan. As the New York Times explained in March 2003:
The Bush administration backed away from its idea to offer no drug benefits to elderly people in the traditional fee-for-service Medicare program. But drug benefits available through private plans would be far more extensive, so Medicare recipients would have strong incentives to join private plans.
It was only the overwhelming public opposition to Bush's Medicare privatization agenda that forced Republicans to make the prescription drug benefit available to all Medicare recipients. It was with an eye towards the 2004 elections that House Majority Leader Tom Delay warned his recalcitrant colleagues:
"We must forget about ideological absolutes."
2. Medicare Part D was not paid for. When it was passed in December 2003, the new Medicare drug benefit was forecast by the Bush administration to cost $395 billion over its first decade. To pay for the program, President Bush and his GOP allies did—wait for it—nothing. As Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch admitted in 2009, during the Bush years:
"It was standard practice not to pay for things."
In contrast, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has forecast that with its cost savings and new revenue sources, the Affordable Care Act will reduce the national debt over the next two decades. In response, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, who voted for Medicare Part D, denounced the CBO for "budget gimmickry."

3. The Bush White House lied to Congress about the cost. Within two months of signing the Medicare Modernization Act (MMA) into law, President Bush quietly informed Congress that the true cost of the program would be $550 billion, not $395 billion, over the next decade. When Medicare actuary Richard Foster sought to present the true price tag to Congress in late 2003, then agency chief Thomas Scully threatened to fire him. By the time the program was launched in 2006, the estimated 10 year price tag for the Medicare prescription plan had increased to $720 billion.

As the New York Times reported later in 2004, the GAO ultimately concluded that the Bush administration "illegally withheld data from Congress on the cost of the new Medicare law" and that Scully "should repay seven months of his salary to the government." While Scully was later fined for other ethics violations, he was never held accountable for his role in the Medicare fraud. Today, Thomas Scully "now works for a law firm and a private investment firm, has registered as a lobbyist for Abbott Laboratories, Aventis Pharmaceuticals, Caremark Rx and other health care companies."

4. Part D costs could have been lower. Mercifully, those dire forecasts in 2006 did not come to pass. But it was much lower enrollment (77 versus 93 percent) and the rapid adoption of generic drugs, rather than "competitive mechanisms" which largely explain the lower Medicare Part D bill for taxpayers.

But the costs to Uncle Sam could have been much lower. Then as now, Democrats wanted the federal government to negotiate directly with the pharmaceutical companies and pass the savings onto the Treasury and beneficiaries. In November 2005, a report released by Democratic staff on the House Government Reform Committee showed that under the new Medicare plan, prices for 10 commonly prescribed drugs were 80 percent higher than those negotiated by the Veterans Department, 60 percent above that paid by Canadian consumers and still 3 percent higher than volume pharmacies such as Costco and Drugstore.com. The report concluded that:
"The prices offered by the Medicare drug plans are higher than all four benchmarks, in some cases significantly so. This increases costs to seniors and federal taxpayers and makes it doubtful that the complicated design of Medicare Part D provides any tangible benefit to anyone but drug manufacturers and insurers."
Which is exactly as Louisiana Republican Billy Tauzin designed it. Just months after shepherding the Medicare prescription bill he wrote through the House, Tauzin, the chairman of the Energy and Commerce committee, left Congress and accepted a $2 million-a-year job as president of PhRMA -- the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America. 
 The MMA's ban on Medicare negotiating better prices directly with the drug companies is the key reason why only 16 Democratic House members voted for it.

5. Part D would not have passed without Tom Delay's ethics violations.  Tom Sculley wasn't the only Bush administration rule-breaker who ethics violations made passage of the Medicare drug benefit possible.
As you may recall, Tom Delay twisted arms and extended debate on the bill by hours in order to ensure passage. But that wasn't all, as CBS News recounted Delay's reprimand from the House ethics committee:
The investigation, by a four-member subcommittee, was triggered when the retiring [Nick]Smith said that unidentified lawmakers and business interests promised substantial money to his son's congressional campaign if he voted for the Medicare legislation. Smith said the same interests threatened to support other candidates if he didn't change his vote from "no" to "yes." The committee found DeLay "offered to endorse Representative Smith's son in exchange for Representative Smith's vote in favor of the Medicare bill. In the view of the investigative subcommittee, this conduct could support a finding that Majority Leader DeLay violated House rules."
6. Democrats improved Medicare Part D. In his Washington Post screed, former HHS Secretary Leavitt declared, "Part D and the Affordable Care Act resulted from contentious negotiations and fierce legislative battles." That statement is true in much the same way that a Yugo and a Mercedes are both cars. 

After all, it's not just that only three GOP senators and zero House members voted for the Affordable Care Act. House Republicans have voted 39 times since 2011 to repeal the ACA. Meanwhile, Democrats opposed the Part D legislation because they wanted to make it better. And since 2003, they have. After all, it was Obamacare which has reduced the costs of the so-called "donut hole" which left Medicare recipients with the steep out of pocket costs for their prescriptions. And over 30 million Medicare recipients have taken advantage of new preventive services now covered by the ACA.

As Sarah Kliff noted back in June:
Eight years ago, the federal government rolled out Medicare Part D, a prescription drug benefit. For the first time ever, Medicare was launching a benefit administered exclusively through private health insurance plans. The benefit was not popular: In the spring of 2005, when enrollment efforts ramped up, polls showed Medicare Part D to be less popular than the Affordable Care Act. Fewer Americans felt they understood how it worked, too.
Things have improved, and not just because of the efforts of officials like Mike Leavitt. Unlike the Republicans still trying to kill the Obamacare, Democrats helped make Medicare and its Part D prescription drug benefit better.
Originally posted to Jon Perr on Wed Jul 17, 2013 at 01:09 PM PDT. DailyKos

Recap: White House Lied to Congress, Tom Delay's Ethics Violations, Politicians Leave Congress to Accept $2M-a-year Jobs at Pharmaceutical Companies and Lobbying Organizations. WOW! Now that's Healthcare Reform!

 

War on Poverty or War on Poor?

Original meme by www.Facebook.com/StoptheObstructionistTeaParty


Republicans and TeaPublicans are screaming that they will not consider extending the Emergency Unemployment Compensation to the 1.3 million Americans whose benefits ran out on December 28, 2013. I don't necessarily disagree with having a way to pay for anything that we spend, but let's look at how we can find that money in a way that doesn't crush middle America because they can't find a job. Right now there are 3 applicants for every job available in this country. Not only was the Prescription Drug plan not paid for, neither was the Iraq war which former President George W. Bush out right lied to the American people to get us into, and many other things the current President inherited. As Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch admitted in 2009, during the Bush years: "It was standard practice not to pay for things." I say that since the Afghanistan war is costing us $2B a week, and it would cost $6B to fully fund the Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) we bring the troops home just 3 weeks earlier. O.K. you don't like that one, how about taking $6B in corporate subsidies back from the corporations? How about the tax breaks for the wealthy that have gone on for 10 years under the premise that those tax cuts would "create jobs" which has been proven time and time again didn't happen. It always disturbs me when the Republicans have the gall to call the wealthy, who receive these tax cuts "Job Creators" when in fact everyone, except the low-information Fox News watchers, know is not the case.

You can't keep taking from the poor and middle class, giving to the rich and corporations, and continue the income inequality that has gone on for decades and expect the country, and economy,  to grow. But they don't care, who? you ask? The Ultra-Rich, the corporations, the people using the absurd Citizens United decision to contribute massive amounts of money to influence our politicians and elections. The war on poverty is no where as big as the war on the poor.


References for Wikipedia description of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)
  1. ^ "Nutrition Assistance Program Home Page", U.S. Department of Agriculture (official website), March 3, 2011 (last revised). Accessed March 4, 2011.
  2. Jump up ^ Wilde, Parke (January 2012). "THE NEW NORMAL: THE SUPPLEMENTAL NUTRITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (SNAP)". American Journal of Agricultural Economics 95 (2): 325–331. doi:10.1093/ajae/aas043.
  3. Jump up ^ "SNAP Monthly Data". Fns.usda.gov. 2013-12-06. Retrieved 2013-12-31.
  4. Jump up ^ Wilde, Parke (May 2012). Amer. J. Agr. Econ 95 (2): : 325–331. doi:10.1093/ajae/aas043.
  5. Jump up ^ "Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Participation and Costs". Food and Nutrition Services. Retrieved 17 December 2013.