------------ New ------------

Shifting Sands: Jewish Women Confront the Israeli Occupation

Shifting Sands: Jewish Women Confront the Israeli Occupation (Paperback)

~ Osie Gabriel Adelfang (Editor), Cindy Sheehan (Foreword), Amira Hass (Foreword)

   
Progressive Partners





United Progressives does not necessarily endorse the views of our contributors.

Search

Books by Anna Baltzer

Banner

Rethink Afghanistan

Order the complete Rethink Afghanistan documentary on DVD
Banner

Books by Members

Banner
Refresh page to see more titles.

Endorsements

Green Party Presidential Candidate Cynthia McKinney Endorses United Progressives Platform

Endorsements

Tennessee Green Party candidate for U.S. Senate Chris Lugo endorses our platform

From FPIF

FPIF Latest Content
FPIF Latest Content
Pennsylvania Likely to Get Healthcare Before Rest of U.S. PDF Print E-mail
Written by David Swanson   
Tuesday, 02 March 2010 20:28
David SwansonI'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."

In fact, this month the Pennsylvania Democratic State Committee called for the passage of a single-payer system. Pittsburgh City Council and Allegheny County Council also previously passed resolutions supporting various single-payer initiatives.

[State Senator Jim] Ferlo says he's not sure the most viable Democratic candidate ran against Brown in Massachusetts, and he believes Brown's victory was voter reaction to the Democratic Party. "We finally win power in the House, Senate and White House and we're sitting on our hands. That's why I think a lot of people are frustrated," Ferlo says. "They want decisive action.

"I hate to criticize my own party," Ferlo adds -- but "[w]hat great things have they done?"

Ferlo's own initiative is Senate Bill 400, known with a companion measure in the House as the Pennsylvania Family and Business Health Care Security Act of 2009. The legislation proposes a statewide, publicly funded health-insurance system to replace what Ferlo calls "profit-driven insurers."

"We're basically talking about keeping private choice for providers and consumers," Ferlo says, while using a "cost-effective method" of paying for it. Ferlo likens his approach to a "'Medicare for All' system" -- citing the federally funded health-insurance system offered to seniors. Twelve percent of Pennsylvanians are enrolled in Medicare; 62 percent use a private insurer. But despite Medicare and other government programs, fully 1 million Pennsylvanians have no insurance at all -- something Ferlo calls "morally repugnant."

. . . Says Gary Tuma, Gov. Ed Rendell's press secretary: "Always we'd want to see the details of a bill, but in general, if a bill for single payer got through the House and Senate, yes, he'd sign."

Many see that as a significant concession. "California passed [a reform proposal] twice and now a third time, and [Gov. Arnold] Schwarzenegger vetoed it," says Pennacchio, of Health Care for All Pennsylvania. "What's different about Pennsylvania than other states is we have a commitment from the governor to sign."

David Swanson is the author of the new book "Daybreak: Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union" by Seven Stories Press. You can order it and find out when tour will be in your town: http://davidswanson.org/book .


 

Artwork by Nohad Nassif

Free Membership

By joining, it is understood that you support progressive values, as generally defined by our platform. Notice: We are currently having difficulties with attempts to log in using Internet Explorer v.6. For the moment we recommend using a different browser.

Members Online

None

Smart Bookmarker

Banner

Hiyam Noir Poetry

Hiyam Noir Avatar

"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

more

Books We Recommend

The Bush dynasty, the powerful forces that put it in the White House, and what their influence means for America
Banner

News & Opinion

Think Progress
  • Vitter: ‘I Don’t Think We Have To Quote Unquote Pay For’ Tax Cuts For The Rich

    Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) postures as a deficit hawk, attacking efforts to inject recovery spending into the economy because he fears “borrowing another dime from China.” In reality, Vitter is really a deficit peacock who is currently fighting vigorously to extend the Bush-era tax cuts for the richest two percent of Americans, a $678 billion dollar give away and one of the largest structural causes of the deficit.

    Explaining his support for tax cuts for the rich on Wednesday, Vitter told a crowd at the Crowley city Chamber of Commerce that “virtually everybody” in the audience would be characterized as wealthy. As TPM notes, although the top tax cut set to expire applies to people earning over $250,000 a year, “the average household income in Louisiana was $43,635 in 2008.”

    Earlier this week, Vitter doubled down on his deficit hypocrisy and told WorldNetDaily radio that paying for the Bush tax cuts for the rich would be a “recipe for disaster.” He added, “I don’t think we have to quote unquote pay for” the tax cuts:

    VITTER: We aren’t talking about any additional cuts, we’re talking about keeping the present tax cuts in place. If we have to pay for keeping the present tax cuts in place, every year, every other year, that’s a recipe for disaster. That’s a recipe for significant tax increases, so I don’t think we have to quote unquote pay for that because it’s about Americans keeping their own money and our simply keeping the present tax rates in place.

    Listen here:

    Allowing the Bush tax cuts for the rich to expire would simply restore Clinton-era rates and help pay down the deficit — a move supported by even former Bush administration officials. For some reason, Vitter sees no problem borrowing more money from China to finance giveaways to the wealthy.

  • Obama Slams GOP For ‘Playing Games’ With His Nominees

    During a White House press conference this morning, President Obama responded to a question about whether he believes Elizabeth Warren could survive a Senate confirmation process. Warren has been rumored to be Obama’s leading nominee to head the Consumer Finance Protection Agency. In responding to the prospects of a Senate confirmation fight, Obama slammed the GOP for “playing games” with his nominees:

    QUESTION: Are you unofficially concerned about a Senate confirmation?

    OBAMA: [...] I am concerned about all Senate nominations these days.

    QUESTION: But with respect to Elizabeth Warren, are you –

    OBAMA: Hans, I wasn’t trying to be funny. I am concerned about all Senate nominations these days. I’ve got people who have been waiting for six months to get confirmed who nobody has an official objection to and who were voted out of committee unanimously, and I can’t get a vote on them.

    We’ve got judges who are pending. We’ve got people who are waiting to help us on critical issues like homeland security. And it’s very hard when you’ve got a determined minority in the Senate that insists on a 60-vote filibuster on every single person that we’re trying to confirm, even if after we break the filibuster, it turns out that they get 90 votes. They’re just playing games. And as I think Senator Voinovich said very well, it’s time to stop playing games.

    Watch it:

    The President is right. Since he took office, Republicans have abused a Senate rule which prevents the Senate from confirming more than a tiny fraction of Obama’s nominees unless its members unanimously consent to allowing the nomination to move forward.  Specifically, even the majority breaks a filibuster, the minority can force up to 30 hours of additional debate on the nominee before a final vote can be held. Thirty hours may not seem like a lot, but when you multiply it across the hundreds of judges, ambassadors and other officials that require Senate confirmation, there is literally not enough time to confirm more than a fraction of these nominees.  In other words, the Republicans are engaged in unprecedented use of this obscure loophole to hollow out the government and the federal bench — leaving the nation without essential judges, financial regulators and even national security officials in the process.

  • Majority Of Americans Support Letting Tax Cuts For The Wealthy Expire

    Despite the fact that Republicans in Congress have made reducing the deficit one if their signature issues this election season, they also have been arguing — without addressing the $700 billion cost — that the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy should not be allowed to expire. Yet a new USA Today/Gallup poll found that a majority of Americans see it differently. “While 37% support keeping the tax cuts for all Americans, 44% want them extended only for those making less than $250,000 and 15% think they should expire for all taxpayers”:

    wdsu3hwahukzxi-aabfdga

    Gallup notes the bottom line: “Democrats may not be putting themselves at great political risk by allowing the tax cuts to expire for wealthy Americans. In fact, the middle ground of extending tax cuts for low- and middle-income Americans but allowing them to expire for wealthy Americans — the Democrats’ most likely proposal — is the specific option the public prefers most.”

CB Workflows

Favorite Quotations

"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