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The Republican Healthcare Plan: Gut Medicare and Blame Obama Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Saturday, 12 November 2016 15:09

Pierce writes: "My Walk To Work, November 11, 2016: Part Two. Every few days, when I walk to the BlogCave, I stop at a local McDonald's for one of their Triglyceride Festival breakfasts. Every time I've done this, there has been a table full of elderly gents sitting at the same table by the side door."

President Barack Obama. (photo: Getty Images)
President Barack Obama. (photo: Getty Images)


The Republican Healthcare Plan: Gut Medicare and Blame Obama

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

12 November 16

 

Ladies and gentlemen, introducing Paul Ryan.

y Walk To Work, November 11, 2016: Part Two.

Every few days, when I walk to the BlogCave, I stop at a local McDonald's for one of their Triglyceride Festival breakfasts. Every time I've done this, there has been a table full of elderly gents sitting at the same table by the side door. (Yeah, elderly. They're older than me.) All of them wear baseball caps. One of them always wears a cap that marks him as a "Vietnam Veteran." Sometime last summer, I noticed that a couple of them had taken to wearing those familiar red baseball caps that told the world that the elderly gents were ready to Make American Great Again. Presumably, most of these guys, if not all of them, benefit from Medicare.

Gentlemen? May I introduce you to Paul Ryan, the zombie-eyed granny starver from the state of Wisconsin? Jonathan Chait in New York would like to explain to you all how you are about to get bamboozled into a worse life than you have right now.

"Your solution has always been to put things together, including entitlement reform," says Baier, using Republican code for privatizing Medicare. Ryan replies, "If you're going to repeal and replace Obamacare, you have to address those issues as well. … Medicare has got some serious issues because of Obamacare. So those things are part of our plan to replace Obamacare."

Yep. That's what's going to happen to your healthcare, gentlemen. And he's going to blame the black guy for it, and my money's all on you guys buying that wholesale. It is, of course, a blatant lie, because Paul Ryan is the…say it with us now…Biggest. Fake. Ever.

The Medicare trust fund has been extended 11 years as a result of the passage of Obamacare, whose cost reforms have helped bring health care inflation to historic lows. It is also untrue that repealing Obamacare requires changing traditional Medicare. But Ryan clearly believes he needs to make this claim in order to sell his plan, or probably even to convince fellow Republicans to support it.

One of the few positions on which the President-elect was marginally consistent during the campaign was that he would not touch entitlements. However, his economic plan was so stuffed with vague nonsense that I am fairly sure this is what's going to happen: Ryan will come up with some bullshit "stimulus" program that is larded with tax-cuts and other goodies, and he will offer it to the White House in exchange for his life's dream of shredding what's left of the social safety net. He will put together a big pot of offal, slap a label reading "Medicare" on it, and then peddle it to the suckers.

The guys at McDonald's will find themselves choosing between cat food and insulin and it will be Barack Obama's fault. Lovely.

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FOCUS: All Current Members of the Democratic National Committee Should Resign. We Need a New Democratic Party. Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36361"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Saturday, 12 November 2016 12:32

Reich writes: "All current members of the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic state central committees should resign, and Democrats should elect people who are committed to creating a New Democratic Party."

Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)
Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)


All Current Members of the Democratic National Committee Should Resign. We Need a New Democratic Party.

By Robert Reich, Robert Rich's Facebook Page

12 November 16

 

lan A: All current members of the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic state central committees should resign, and Democrats should elect people who are committed to creating a New Democratic Party that will

(1) organize and mobilize millions of people into an activist army to peacefully resist Donald Trump’s takeover of America,

(2) provide this activist army with daily explanations of what is occurring in Trump’s administration, along with tasks that individuals and groups can do to stop or mitigate their harmful effects,

(3) protect vulnerable populations from harassment and exclusion, including undocumented young people, recent immigrants, people of color, and women,

(4) recruit a new generation of progressive candidates to run at the local, state, and national levels in 2018 and beyond, including someone to take on Trump in 2020, and

(5) do everything possible to advance the progressive agenda at state and local levels -- getting big money out of politics, reversing widening inequality, expanding health care, reversing climate change, ending the militarization of our police and the mass incarceration of our people, and stopping interminable and open-ended warfare.

Plan B: Create a new organization outside the Democratic Party to do (1) through (5) above.

Which plan do you prefer? Or do you have a Plan C? And how do you suggest we get started?

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FOCUS: It's Time for Progressives to Seize Control of the Democratic Party Print
Saturday, 12 November 2016 11:50

Galindez writes: "Donald Trump's victory has left the Democratic Party open to redefining itself. They understand that both candidates got fewer votes than Mitt Romney and John McCain. They understand that working people in the rust belt voting for Trump cost them the election. On a conference call Thursday night sponsored by Democracy for America, former Labor secretary Robert Reich weighed in, as reported by The Hill."

Presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont talks to supporters during a rally at the University of Washington, in Seattle. (photo: Joshua Trujillo/Seattlepi.com)
Presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont talks to supporters during a rally at the University of Washington, in Seattle. (photo: Joshua Trujillo/Seattlepi.com)


It's Time for Progressives to Seize Control of the Democratic Party

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

12 November 16

 

onald Trump’s victory has left the Democratic Party open to redefining itself. They understand that both candidates got fewer votes than Mitt Romney and John McCain. They understand that working people in the rust belt voting for Trump cost them the election. On a conference call Thursday night sponsored by Democracy for America, former Labor secretary Robert Reich weighed in, as reported by The Hill.

“The Democratic Party can no longer be the same. It has been repudiated,” Reich said.

“This has been a huge refutation of establishment politics and the political organization has got to be changed ... if the Democratic Party can’t do it, we’ll do it through a third party.”

Reich is not the only Democrat who feels that way. When incoming Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer endorsed Minnesota congressman Keith Ellison for party chair, he said that we need leadership that puts grassroots organizing ahead of fundraising.

Ellison, on the same conference call with Reich, said it’s “not about money first, not about polls first, it’s about voters first.” That is the leadership we need at the top of the Democratic Party.

Despite Schumer’s admission, we should not expect the establishment to give up power without a fight.

“They’ll hold on to the party mechanisms until you rip it out of their dying hands,” said Jonathan Tasini, a Sanders surrogate. “It’s all about power and money and influence for them.”

The time to rip it out of their hands is now. The momentum from Bernie’s campaign along with the repudiation of the Clinton wing by the voters has put us in a position of strength.

Remember what happened eight years ago? A black man was elected President. It sent shockwaves through the right wing of this country. The response was the Tea Party.

“We have to install the playbook of the Tea Party,” said Ohio state lawmaker Nina Turner, a Sanders surrogate. “The Tea Party had mainstream Republicans shaking in their boots. Even the ones who hung on knew they had to listen to what the grassroots was saying.”

We have to be careful to not fall for half measures. Establishment Democrats like Schumer may throw us some bones, like shuffling the chairs in Washington while leaving the same players in place to run the machine.

Cenk Uygur, the host of the progressive political commentary show The Young Turks, said, “Everybody in the building needs to be fired immediately.”

That probably won’t happen right away, but we have to push for wholesale change. In 2018, we have to be depending on real progressives with a progressive agenda to take back Congress, not Republican-lite candidates like Evan Bayh. In 2020, we need a progressive candidate at the top of the ticket so Americans can choose between our vision for America and the conservatives’. We will win if we stop trying to moderate our positions for big money.

As Bernie would say, “our job” is to make the Democratic Party the people’s party. Before Tony Cohelo shifted the party focus to raising corporate cash, Labor unions, women groups, civil rights groups, anti-poverty organizations, peace groups, environmental groups, and others controlled the direction of the party. We have let corporate money have too much influence. It’s time get the money out and put the people back in.

To my friends in the Green Party and other left party efforts: We need you in this fight. Our system is rigged in favor of the two major parties. The fastest path to power is taking control of one of those vehicles. When we get there, we can un-rig the system so everyone can have a voice. Without those reforms, let’s put aside our differences and seize the day.



Scott Galindez attended Syracuse University, where he first became politically active. The writings of El Salvador's slain archbishop Oscar Romero and the on-campus South Africa divestment movement converted him from a Reagan supporter to an activist for Peace and Justice. Over the years he has been influenced by the likes of Philip Berrigan, William Thomas, Mitch Snyder, Don White, Lisa Fithian, and Paul Wellstone. Scott met Marc Ash while organizing counterinaugural events after George W. Bush's first stolen election. Scott will be spending a year covering the presidential election from Iowa.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Does Trump Have a Mandate? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=63"><span class="small">Marc Ash, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Saturday, 12 November 2016 10:02

Ash writes: "For the second time in the fledgling 21st century, we are set upon by a right wing radical assuming the power of the US presidency without having won the popular vote."

New York, mass demonstrations continue for a second night in the wake of the U.S. elections. (photo: Pacific Press/Shutterstock/Rex)
New York, mass demonstrations continue for a second night in the wake of the U.S. elections. (photo: Pacific Press/Shutterstock/Rex)


Does Trump Have a Mandate?

By Marc Ash, Reader Supported News

12 November 16

 

or the second time in the fledgling 21st century, we are set upon by a right wing radical assuming the power of the US presidency without having won the popular vote.

In the instance of George W. Bush, he proceeded as though a mandate were his birthright. Thus far there is no indication that Donald Trump has any greater concern for the majority that rejected him than George W. Bush did.

In addition, Mr. Trump assumes power under black personal storm clouds. According to USA Today, Trump is today facing no fewer than 75 concurrent lawsuits. A fraction, however, of the estimated 4000 business and personal legal actions he has been involved in throughout the years. On the order of 100 times what the Clintons have faced.

This too speaks to mandate. How can any elected official so encumbered with legal burdens be entrusted to determine the fate of the nation? In fact, radically alter it.

While the lack of a mandate meant nothing to Bush and may mean less to Trump, it returns moral authority to the majority that opposed him and legitimizes their opposition to him. It was Bush’s willingness to “reorder America and the world” without majority consent that gave rise to the Obama presidency. If Trump ignores the American majority he surely strengthens it, and inevitably dooms his agenda as well.

Trump, of course, can quite easily alleviate these problems with one simple action on his first day in office: choose a Supreme Court nominee that is seen as fair and moderate. The unifying effect that would have on the nation would be immeasurable and would set him on a course to a successful presidency and imbue him with the legitimacy the American majority did not grant him on Election Day.

There is no question that Donald Trump assumes the presidency without majority consent. No legitimate argument for a mandate can stem from that. He can only achieve a mandate through unifying action.

What will it be: unification and success, or division and failure? The choice is yours, Mr. Trump.



Marc Ash is the founder and former Executive Director of Truthout, and is now founder and Editor of Reader Supported News.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Something to Celebrate: 6 Women Who Just Won Historic Firsts Print
Saturday, 12 November 2016 09:52

Excerpt: "Last night's results took us by surprise. Like so many others in the media, we were preparing to celebrate the historic election of the nation's first female president."

Ilhan Omar, the first Somali American woman to be elected to public office in the United States. (photo: Lorie Shaull/Wikimedia Commons)
Ilhan Omar, the first Somali American woman to be elected to public office in the United States. (photo: Lorie Shaull/Wikimedia Commons)


Something to Celebrate: 6 Women Who Just Won Historic Firsts

By Liza Bayless & Paulina Phelps, YES! Magazine

12 November 16

 

A woman was not elected to the highest office. But other women who ran on platforms of equality and progressive reform did win.

ast night’s results took us by surprise. Like so many others in the media, we were preparing to celebrate the historic election of the nation’s first female president. Despite the upset, one loss does not devalue another victory. Across the country, women of various backgrounds shattered the status quo. They ran on platforms of equality and progressive reform against long-time incumbents in historically conservative states. And they won.

Here are the stories of the women behind some of last night’s notable firsts.

(photo: Flickr)

Kate Brown

(D-OR) First elected openly LGBTQ governor

Kate Brown has been serving as Oregon’s governor since her successor resigned amid a corruption scandal in 2015. Yesterday, she was elected by the state to serve the next two years of what would have been the rest of former Gov. John Kitzhaber’s term.

Brown—previously Oregon’s secretary of state and majority leader of the state Senate—is the first openly LGBTQ candidate to win a gubernatorial election. She has been married to her husband since 1997, but was outed as bisexual years before that. She has since embraced her identity publicly, taking opportunities to speak about her sexuality.

“You can’t be what you can’t see,” she told the Washington Blade. “If I can be a role model for one young person that decides their life is worth living because there’s someone like them in the world, it’s worth it.”

Brown is also a survivor of domestic violence. She has been vocal against Donald Trump’s comments about women, which she said in the same interview were “re-traumatizing” for her.

As governor, Brown has already put billions of dollars into Oregon’s education budget and increased the minimum wage. Next, she hopes to introduce gun safety legislation—especially on campuses—increase high school graduation rates, and pass protections for LGBTQ people.

(photo: Wikimedia Commons)

Tammy Duckworth

(D-IL) First Thai American woman elected to Senate

Like most of the women on this list, Tammy Duckworth has been making history for years. Elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2013, she became the first female veteran, the first disabled woman, and the first Asian American woman to represent Illinois.

Born in Bangkok to a World War II veteran father and a Thai mother, Duckworth grew up in various places throughout Asia, where her father worked for the U.N. and numerous corporations. She moved to Hawai’i at age 16, where she also attended college, before earning her master’s in Washington, D.C.

She joined the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps in 1990 and later served as a helicopter pilot because it offered combat opportunity. In 2004, Duckworth was deployed to Iraq, and lost both her legs after her helicopter was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade. She has since advocated for veterans, and recently denounced Donald Trump’s comments about wanting a Purple Heart.

Each year, Duckworth and her former crewmates gather to celebrate their survival in the 2004 crash. “You can choose to spend the day of your injury in a dark room feeling sorry for yourself or you can choose to get together with the buddies who saved your life, and I choose the latter,” she told the Chicago Tribune.

In office, she has promised to fight for civil rights for LGBTQ people, protection of the Affordable Care Act, basic assistance for people facing poverty, and a reduction in gun violence.

(photo: Kamala Harris campaign website.)

Kamala Harris

(D-CA) First biracial and Indian American woman elected to Senate

In 2010, Kamala Harris made history as the first female, first Black, and first Asian American to be elected attorney general of California. Now, she will be the first Indian American and first biracial female senator.

Harris’ upbringing was a multicultural one. Born to an Indian mother and Jamaican father in California, she attended Howard University and received a law degree from the University of California.

Harris earned President Obama’s endorsement for the Senate, and was also speculated to be a potential replacement for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, though she has said she had no interest in filling the position.

In an interview with the New York Times Magazine, Harris discussed racial discrimination among prosecutors, saying: “They were talking about how these young people were dressed, what corner they were hanging out on, and the music they were listening to. I remember saying: ‘Hey, guys, you know what? Members of my family dress that way. I grew up with people who live on that corner.’”

Harris has been committed to making higher education more accessible and expanding voting rights. She is also expected to work toward mending the criminal justice system, an issue she has focused on for much of her career.

(photo: Flickr)

Pramila Jayapal

(D-WA) First Indian American woman elected to the U.S. House of Representatives

Soon representing Washington’s 7th congressional district, Pramila Jayapal is the first Indian American woman elected to U.S. Congress. Born in India and raised in Indonesia and Singapore, she came to the United States at age 16 to attend Georgetown University.

Jayapal has been involved in Seattle-area civil rights activism for more than 20 years. She founded and served as executive director of pro-immigration advocacy group OneAmerica until 2012. In 2013, she was given the White House’s Champion of Change award.

She began her political career as a Democrat in 2014 when she ran for state Senate and won. After two years in state office, she decided to run for Congress and went on to a significant victory in the primary over her opponent, Democrat Brady Walkinshaw.

Jayapal’s progressive beliefs align with Bernie Sanders, who endorsed her in April. In a statement addressing the 1 percent, Jayapal said: “What Congress needs is a progressive voice who is unafraid to take on these powerful interests.”

(photo: Catherine Cortez Masto campaign website.)

Catherine Cortez Masto

(D-NV) First Latina elected to Senate and first female senator from Nevada

Catherine Cortez Masto is both the first Latina and woman to enter the Senate from Nevada. The granddaughter of a Mexican immigrant, Cortez Masto was born and raised in the state.

Before being elected as Democratic senator, she served two terms as attorney general, during which time she worked to provide financial aid for students and strengthen laws preventing sex trafficking.

In her race for the Senate, Cortez Masto ran against Joe Heck to fill Democratic minority leader Sen. Harry Reid’s seat in Congress—one of the most competitive Senate elections among a total of 34.

“My grandfather came from Mexico for the very reason that many other families have come here, which is an opportunity to succeed, to make sure your kids have more than what you had,” she told Mother Jones. “Because of his hard work and courage and the hard work of my parents, my sister and I are the first to graduate from college … That, to me, is the American Dream.”

As senator, she has said she will work to overturn Citizens United, protect access to Medicare and Social Security, raise the minimum wage, and craft comprehensive immigration reform.

(photo: Wikimedia Commons)

Ilhan Omar

(Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party-MN) First Somali American Muslim woman elected to state legislature

Ilhan Omar is the first Somali American woman to be elected to public office in the United States. After fleeing the Somali Civil War with her family at age 8 in the early 1990s, Omar spent the next four years in a Kenyan refugee camp.

In 1995, Omar’s family arrived in Virginia and eventually resettled in Minneapolis, home to the nation’s largest population with Somali ancestry. She studied political science and international studies at North Dakota State University.

Omar has worked at the Minnesota Department of Education and as a senior policy aide for a Minneapolis senior council member. In August, she beat a 22-term incumbent by more than 10 percent of the primary vote.

She has said she believes it’s time leaders of her district truly represent the community’s diverse history, one that includes immigration. But her success hasn’t come from just popularity among Somalis.

“That ability to create connections with people who don’t look like me, who don’t share my identities, has sort of been the success of my campaign,” she told the digital media company Refinery29.

In office, Omar is expected to focus on closing the opportunity gap by supporting universal pre-kindergarten, hiring more teachers of color, and fighting for better rights for immigrants and LGBTQ people. She is also committed to making higher education more affordable and ensuring clean air and water.

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