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| Pennsylvania Likely to Get Healthcare Before Rest of U.S. |
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| Written by David Swanson |
| Tuesday, 02 March 2010 20:28 |
I've been writing about various states just beginning campaigns for single-payer healthcare. Pennsylvania is on the cusp of completing one. They claim to have the best legislation , which will provide everyone with healthcare, pay for it, and in fact save people and businesses money , as well as getting around the federal restrictions Congressman Dennis Kucinich has attempted unsuccessfully thus far to waive for states. In Pennsylvania they have Democratic and Republican cosponsors. Imagine that in Washington, D.C.! And they have a governor ready to sign the bill into law. Health Care for All Pennsylvania clearly has one of the best websites . Pennsylvania's campaign at http://healthcare4allpa.org , led by Chuck Pennacchio, makes a good model for other states to learn from and provides resources other states might do well to borrow or modify. This website is full of PDFs, power points, charts, and videos explaining the benefits of state-level single-payer healthcare, plus all kinds of references for further reading, and even a good list o f links to similar campaigns in other states, including California, Connecticut, Florida, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, and Wisconsin. The Pittsburgh City Paper covered this story last week: "The chance of anything of substance happening in Washington, D.C. ... is less than zero," says Chuck Pennacchio, executive director of Health Care for All Pennsylvania. "We've been saying that for more than three years. Now people are finally listening." |
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Hiyam Noir Poetry

"In the Toxic Garden"
those dead uncountable
The impossibilities
of my dreams
did not discourage me
from continuing to believe
so I am returning
as in my worst nightmares
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"We have to be willing to tell the hard truth about the power we have to corrupt the most pure, most sublime recognition of truth.
You can't finally tell the truth through the mind, because the mental process is busy with damage control. But there are a few questions you can ask to support truth telling, and you can deeply examine and ruthlessly, often painfully, answer them.
The questions are, 'What is my life standing for?' What has it stood for?' 'What is the deepest call for my life to stand for?' All you have to do is be really willing to look very carefully and see." - Gangaji








I've been writing about various states just beginning campaigns for single-payer healthcare. Pennsylvania is on the cusp of completing one. 
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Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) postures as a deficit hawk, attacking efforts to inject recovery spending into the economy because he fears “borrowing another 