Sunday, December 27, 2015
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
On Medicare-for-All, Clinton Reminds Us That She's Part of the Problem
http://www.commondreams.org/views/2015/12/22/medicare-all-clinton-reminds-us-shes-part-problem
If the Hillary Clinton
campaign had its way, supporters of Bernie Sanders – whose backing she
will obviously want in November should she win the Democratic nomination –
would feel that, while Clinton might not be all that they want in a president,
she would at least go part of the way there. But if you followed the
third debate deep enough into the night, you witnessed, in what stands as the
most disingenuous moment of the Democratic race thus far, Clinton not simply
disagreeing with Sanders on his Medicare For All, single payer health insurance
plan, but knowingly distorting it. This was not Hillary Clinton offering a more
moderate version of a solution, this was Hillary Clinton acting as part of the
problem.
Clinton argued that the
Sanders plan “really does transfer every bit of our health care system
including private health care, to the states to have the states run. And I
think we've got to be really thoughtful about how we're going to afford what we
proposed.” Between that and Sanders’s public university free tuition
plan, she said “we’re looking at 18 to $20 trillion.” And indeed, the
single-payer bill Sanders introduced in 2013 called for a 2.2 percent tax on
individual incomes up to $200,000 and couples up to $250,000 (and higher rates
for higher brackets), a group she pledges would see no tax increases under a
Clinton administration. But the reason that a recent Kaiser Family
Foundation poll found 52 percent of Democrats strongly backing a Medicare For
All plan, and another 29 percent somewhat favoring it, is that they understand
that there is a payback for that tax increase. And so does Hillary
Clinton.
In ignoring the fact that a
single payer plan would, as Sanders quickly pointed out, do “away with the cost
of private insurance,” meaning that “the middle class will be paying
substantially less for health care,” not only was Clinton wrong on the claim
that the Sanders plan would cost the middle class more, but she knew it.
As Sanders said of her, “I know you know a lot about health care.”
Hillary Clinton, let’s remember, was the point person for Bill Clinton’s
unsuccessful 1993 health insurance reform, to the point where it was sometimes
called “Hillarycare.” People have applied a lot of negative labels to
Hillary Clinton over the years, but “stupid” is not one you hear very often.
This was not an actor like Ronald Reagan, delivering lines he may or may
not have understood. This was not George W. Bush, struggling over words
and concepts. It was a telling, cynical moment.
In a 2004
interview, Senator Elizabeth Warren (then a professor) told Bill Moyers
that when explaining a banking industry-backed bankruptcy bill to First Lady
Clinton in the late 1990s she found that “I never had a smarter student.”
Warren went on to tell how Clinton flipped from opponent to proponent of
the bill, however, once she saw herself as representing Wall Street in the
Senate.
The health care story is
similar. Back then, the for-profit health insurance industry went all out
to obfuscate the facts of the Clinton bill, most memorably with a series of TV
ads featuring a pair of actors named Harry and Louise. Yet by the time
Senator Clinton was running for reelection in 2006, yesterday’s enemies had
become today’s campaign contributors. The New York Times reported her the
second highest recipient of health care industry campaign contributions,
trailing only Republican Senator Rick Santorum. Washington health care
lawyer and lobbyist Frederick H. Graefe told the paper that “People in many
industries, including health care, are contributing to Senator Clinton today
because they fully expect she will be the Democratic presidential nominee in
2008.” Therefore he felt that “If the usual rules apply,” early donors
would “get a seat at the table when health care and other issues are discussed.”
Sanders, of course, famously
does not take such contributions – and there we have the root of the
difference. So, much as Clinton might hope Sanders backers won’t fret too
much about her supposed inevitability as the nominee because she’ll at least
give us Bernie-Lite, it ain’t necessarily so. As Sanders charged in an
earlier debate, there’s always a price to be paid for becoming a darling of the
corporate world. And it’s generally the people Clinton claims she’ll
shield from tax increases who wind up actually paying it.
Those overwhelming numbers of
Democrats who support a Medicare For All approach obviously include many
Clinton supporters. One hopes they will not sit quietly by as their
candidate carries corporate America’s dishonest baggage.
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Wednesday, December 9, 2015
Who voted for Citizens United?
Justice Kennedy,
Chief Justice Roberts,
Justice Alito,
Justice Scalia,
Justice Thomas
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._FEC#Majority_opinion
Bernie Sanders on Racial Justice
https://berniesanders.com/issues/racial-justice/
Issues
Racial Justice
We must pursue policies to
transform this country into a nation that affirms the value of its people of
color. That starts with addressing the five central types of violence waged
against black, brown and indigenous Americans: physical, political, legal,
economic and environmental.
Physical Violence Perpetrated by the State
Sandra Bland, Michael Brown,
Rekia Boyd, Eric Garner, Walter Scott, Freddie Gray, Jessica Hernandez, Tamir
Rice, Jonathan Ferrell, Oscar Grant, Antonio Zambrano-Montes, Samuel DuBose and
Anastacio Hernandez-Rojas. We know their names. Each of them died unarmed at
the hands of police officers or in police custody. The chants are growing
louder. People are angry and they have a right to be angry. We should not fool
ourselves into thinking that this violence only affects those whose names have
appeared on TV or in the newspaper. African-Americans are twice as likely to be
arrested and almost four times as likely to experience the use of force during
encounters with the police. African-American and Latinos comprise well over
half of all prisoners, even though African-Americans and Latinos make up
approximately one quarter of the total US population.
Perpetrated by Extremists
We are far from eradicating
racism in this country. Today in America, if you are black, you can be killed
for getting a pack of Skittles during a basketball game. Or murdered in your
church while you are praying. This violence fills us with outrage, disgust and
a deep, deep sadness. These hateful acts of violence amount to acts of terror.
They are perpetrated by extremists who want to intimidate and terrorize black,
brown and indigenous people in this country.
Addressing Physical Violence
It is an outrage that in these
early years of the 21st century we are seeing intolerable acts of violence
being perpetrated by police and racist acts of terrorism by white supremacists.
A growing number of
communities do not trust the police. Law enforcement officers have become
disconnected from the communities they are sworn to protect. Violence and
brutality of any kind, particularly at the hands of the police meant to protect
and serve our communities, is unacceptable and must not be tolerated. We need a
societal transformation to make it clear that black lives matter and racism
will not be accepted in a civilized country.
We must demilitarize our
police forces so they don’t look and act like invading armies.
We must invest in community
policing. Only when we get officers into the communities, working within
neighborhoods before trouble arises, do we develop the relationships necessary
to make our communities safer together. Among other things, that means
increasing civilian oversight of police departments.
We must create a police
culture that allows for good officers to report the actions of bad officers
without fear of retaliation and allows for a department to follow through on
such reports.
We need police forces that
reflect the diversity of our communities, including in the training academies
and leadership.
At the federal level, we need
to establish a new model police training program that reorients the way we do
law enforcement in this country. With input from a broad segment of the
community including activists and leaders from civil rights organizations we
will reinvent how we police America.
We need to federally fund and
require body cameras for law enforcement officers to make it easier to hold
them accountable.
We need to require police
departments and states to collect data on all police shootings and deaths that
take place while in police custody and make that data public.
We need new rules on the
allowable use of force. Police officers need to be trained to de-escalate
confrontations and to humanely interact with people who have mental illnesses.
States and localities that
make progress in this area should get more federal justice grant money. Those
that do not should get their funding slashed.
We need to make sure federal
resources are there to crack down on the illegal activities of hate groups.
Political Violence
Disenfranchisement
In the shameful days of open
segregation, literacy laws and poll taxes were used to suppress minority
voting. Today, through other laws and actions — such as requiring voters to
show photo ID, discriminatory drawing of Congressional districts, restricting
same-day registration and early voting and aggressively purging voter rolls —
states are taking steps which have a similar effect.
The patterns are unmistakable.
11 percent of eligible voters do not have a photo ID—and they are
disproportionately black and Latino. In 2012, African-Americans waited twice as
long to vote as whites. Some voters in minority precincts waited upwards of six
or seven hours to cast a ballot. Meanwhile, thirteen percent of
African-American men have lost the right to vote due to felony convictions.
Yet in 2013, the Supreme Court
struck down a key part of the seminal Voting Rights Act, even while saying
“voting discrimination still exists; no one doubts that.”
This should offend the
conscience of every American.
The fight for minority voting
rights is a fight for justice. It is inseparable from the struggle for
democracy itself.
Addressing Political Violence
We need to re-enfranchise the
more than two million African-Americans who have had their right to vote taken
away by a felony conviction, paid their debt to society, and deserve to have
their rights restored.
Congress must restore the
“pre-clearance” formula under the Voting Rights Act, which extended protections
to minority voters in states and counties where they were clearly needed.
We must expand the Act’s scope
so that every American, regardless of skin color or national origin, is able to
vote freely.
We need to make Election Day a
federal holiday to increase voters’ ability to participate.
We must make early voting an
option for voters who work or study and need the flexibility to vote on
evenings or weekends.
We must make no-fault absentee
ballots an option for all Americans.
We must automatically register
every American to vote when they turn 18 or move to a new state. The burden of
registering voters should be on the state, not the individual voter.
We must put an end to
discriminatory laws and the purging of minority-community names from voting
rolls.
We need to make sure that
there are sufficient polling places and poll workers to prevent long lines from
forming at the polls anywhere.
Legal Violence
Millions of lives have been
destroyed because people are in jail for nonviolent crimes. For decades, we
have been engaged in a failed “War on Drugs” with racially-biased mandatory
minimums that punish people of color unfairly.
It is an obscenity that we stigmatize so many young Americans with a criminal record for smoking marijuana, but not one major Wall Street executive has been prosecuted for causing the near collapse of our entire economy. This must change.
It is an obscenity that we stigmatize so many young Americans with a criminal record for smoking marijuana, but not one major Wall Street executive has been prosecuted for causing the near collapse of our entire economy. This must change.
If current trends continue,
one in four black males born today can expect to spend time in prison during
their lifetime. Blacks are imprisoned at six times the rate of whites and a
report by the Department of Justice found that blacks were three times more
likely to be searched during a traffic stop, compared to white motorists.
Together, African-Americans and Latinos comprised 57 percent of all prisoners
in 2014, even though African-Americans and Latinos make up approximately one
quarter of the US population. These outcomes are not reflective of increased
crime by communities of color, but rather a disparity in enforcement and
reporting mechanisms. African-Americans are twice as likely to be arrested and
almost four times as likely to experience the use of force during encounters
with the police. This is an unspeakable tragedy.
It is morally repugnant that
we have privatized prisons all over America. Corporations should not be allowed
to make a profit by building more jails and keeping more Americans behind bars.
We have got to end the private for-profit prison racket in America. Earlier
this year, Sen. Sanders introduced legislation that will end the private prison
industry.
The measure of success for law
enforcement should not be how many people get locked up. We need to invest in
drug courts as well as medical and mental health interventions for people with
substance abuse problems, so that people struggling with addiction do not end
up in prison, they end up in treatment.
For people who have committed
crimes that have landed them in jail, there needs to be a path back from
prison. The federal system of parole needs to be reinstated. We need real
education and real skills training for the incarcerated.
We must end the
over-incarceration of nonviolent young Americans who do not pose a serious
threat to our society. It is an international embarrassment that we have more
people locked up in jail than any other country on earth – more than even the
Communist totalitarian state of China. That has got to end.
We must address the lingering
unjust stereotypes that lead to the labeling of black youths as “thugs” and
“super predators.” We know the truth that, like every community in this
country, the vast majority of people of color are trying to work hard, play by
the rules and raise their children. It’s time to stop demonizing minority
communities.
In many cities all over our country, the incentives for policing are upside
down. Departments are bringing in substantial sums of revenue by seizing the
personal property of people who are suspected of criminal involvement.
So-called civil asset forfeiture laws allow police to take property from people
even before they are charged with a crime, much less convicted of one. Even
worse, the system works in a way that makes it very difficult and expensive for
an innocent person to get his or her property back. We must end programs
that actually reward officials for seizing assets without a criminal conviction
or other lawful mandate. Departments and officers should not profit off of such
seizures.
Local governments that rely on
tickets and fines to pay bills can become dependent on implicit quotas for law
enforcement. When policing is a source of revenue tied to the financial
sustainability of agencies, officers are pressured to meet internal goals which
can lead to unnecessary or unlawful traffic stops and citations which disproportionately
affect people of color. Implicit quota systems promote racial stereotyping and
breed distrust between officers and communities of color.
Furthermore, we must ensure
police departments are not abusing avenues of due process to shield bad actors
from accountability. Local governments and police management must show zero
tolerance for abuses of police power at all levels. All employees of any kind
deserve due process protections, but it must be clear that departments will
vigorously investigate and, if necessary, prosecute every allegation of
wrongdoing to the fullest extent.
Addressing Legal Violence
We need to ban prisons for
profit, which result in an over-incentive to arrest, jail and detain in order to
keep prison beds full.
We need to turn back from the
failed “War on Drugs” and eliminate mandatory minimums which result in
sentencing disparities between black and white people.
We need to take marijuana off
the federal government’s list of outlawed drugs.
We need to allow people in
states which legalize marijuana to be able to fully participate in the banking
system and not be subject to federal prosecution for using pot.
We need to invest in drug
courts and medical and mental health interventions for people with substance
abuse problems, so that they do not end up in prison, they end up in treatment.
We need to boost investments
for programs that help people who have gone to jail rebuild their lives with
education and job training.
We must investigate local
governments that are using implicit or explicit quotas for arrests or stops.
We must stop local governments
that are relying on fines, fees or asset forfeitures as a steady source of
revenue.
Police departments must
investigate all allegations of wrongdoing, especially those involving the use
of force, and prosecute aggressively, if necessary. If departments are
unwilling or unable to conduct such investigations, the Department of Justice
must step in and handle it for them.
Economic Violence
Weeks before his death, Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke to a union group in New York about what he called
“the other America.”
“One America is flowing with
the milk of prosperity and the honey of equality,” King said. “That America is
the habitat of millions of people who have food and material necessities for
their bodies, culture and education for their minds, freedom and human dignity
for their spirits … But as we assemble here tonight, I’m sure that each of us
is painfully aware of the fact that there is another America and that other
America has a daily ugliness about it that transforms the buoyancy of hope into
the fatigue of despair.”
The problem was structural,
King said: “This country has socialism for the rich, rugged individualism for
the poor.”
But what King saw in 1968 — and what we all should recognize today — is that it
is necessary to try to address the rampant economic inequality while also
taking on the issue of societal racism. We must simultaneously address the
structural and institutional racism which exists in this country, while at the
same time we vigorously attack the grotesque level of income and wealth
inequality which is making the very rich much richer while everyone else —
especially those in our minority communities – are becoming poorer.
In addition to the physical
violence faced by too many in our country we need to look at the lives of black
children and address some difficult facts. Black children, who make up just 18
percent of preschoolers, account for 48 percent of all out-of-school
suspensions before kindergarten. We are failing our black children before
kindergarten. Black students are expelled at three times the rate of white
students. Black girls are suspended at higher rates than all other girls and
most boys. According to the Department of Education, African-American students
are more likely to suffer harsh punishments — suspensions and arrests — at
school. Black students attend schools with higher concentrations of first-year
teachers when compared with white students. Black students are more than three
times as likely to attend schools where fewer than 60 percent of teachers meet
all state certification and licensure requirements.
Communities of color also face
the violence of economic deprivation. Let’s be frank: neighborhoods like those
in west Baltimore, where Freddie Gray resided, suffer the most. However, the
problem of economic immobility isn’t just a problem for young men like Freddie
Gray. Despite hard-work and the will to get ahead, millions of Americans spend
their entire lives struggling to survive on the economic treadmill.
We live at a time when most
Americans have less than $10,000 in savings and millions of working adults have
no idea how they will ever retire in dignity. An unforeseen car accident, a medical
emergency, or the loss of a job could send their lives into an economic
tailspin. And the problems are even more serious when we consider race.
Let us not forget: It was the
greed, recklessness and illegal behavior on Wall Street that nearly drove the
economy off of a cliff seven years ago. While millions of Americans lost their
jobs, homes, life savings and ability to send their kids to college,
African-Americans who were steered into expensive subprime mortgages were the
hardest hit.
Most black and Latino
households have less than $350 in savings. The black unemployment rate has
remained roughly twice as high as the white rate over the last 40 years,
regardless of education. Real African-American youth unemployment is over 50
percent. African-American women earn 64 cents for every dollar white men make.
This is unacceptable. The American people in general want change — they want a
better deal. A fairer deal. A new deal.
They want an America with laws and
policies that truly reward hard work with economic mobility. They want an
America that affords all of its citizens with the economic security to take
risks and the opportunity to realize their full potential.
Addressing Economic Violence
We need to give our children,
regardless of their race or income, a fair shot at attending college. That’s
why all public universities should be made tuition free. We should pay for that
with a tax on Wall Street speculators.
We must invest $5.5 billion to
create 1 million jobs for disadvantaged young Americans who face high
unemployment rates and job-training opportunities for hundreds of thousands of
young adults. We should pay for that by ending the loophole allowing Wall
Street hedge fund managers to pay a lower tax rate than nurses or truck
drivers.
We must increase the minimum
wage to a livable wage of $15 an hour by 2020 —which will increase the wages of
about half of African-Americans and nearly 60 percent of Latinos.
We must invest $1 trillion to
put 13 million Americans to work rebuilding our crumbling cities, roads,
bridges, public transportation systems, airports, drinking water systems and
other infrastructure needs. We should pay for that by closing offshore tax
loopholes.
We must pass federal
legislation to ensure pay equity for women.
We must prevent employers from
discriminating against applicants based on criminal history by “banning the
box.”
We need to ensure access to
quality affordable childcare for working families, especially for parents who
work non-traditional hours.
We must fundamentally re-write
our trade policies and rebuild factories that were closed as a result of bad
trade deals.
[…]
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