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Why Universal Health Care Is Unambiguously Necessary for America
Why Universal Health Care Is Unambiguously Necessary for America
Given the importance of medicine, I feel that it would be useful to clarify this issue. I will explain clearly, and with evidence, why it is that universal healthcare of any sort would be better than the current system in every significant way. If you find yourself disagreeing with this assertion, I ask that you read on before replying, as all conceivable objections will be addressed and resolved.
·mrdestructo.com·
Why Universal Health Care Is Unambiguously Necessary for America
Greg Kaufmann: The Expert Testimony of Tianna Gaines-Turner (The Nation)
Greg Kaufmann: The Expert Testimony of Tianna Gaines-Turner (The Nation)
Gaines-Turner closes by saying that “millions of Americans just like me will work with you to help you with the answers to poverty that you seek.” “We invite you to come to Philadelphia to see where and how we live, to come to our grocery stores, childcare centers, and elder homes, and to visit with my neighbors. And then we can talk like equals, and join in the idea of putting poverty in the past, of investing in helping American people do and be their best. It’s the patriotic thing to do.”
·thenation.com·
Greg Kaufmann: The Expert Testimony of Tianna Gaines-Turner (The Nation)
Conor Friedersdorf: All the Infrastructure a Tyrant Would Need, Courtesy of Bush and Obama (The Atlantic)
Conor Friedersdorf: All the Infrastructure a Tyrant Would Need, Courtesy of Bush and Obama (The Atlantic)
America has stepped back from the brink in the past when wars ended. But we've never had a "war" go on this long -- and there's no end in sight. It's time for the people to pressure their elected representatives, so that, through Congress, we can dismantle the infrastructure Bush and Obama have built. In less than four years, an unknown person will start presiding over the national-security state.
·theatlantic.com·
Conor Friedersdorf: All the Infrastructure a Tyrant Would Need, Courtesy of Bush and Obama (The Atlantic)
Ezra Klein: The most important issue of this election: Obamacare (Washington Post)
Ezra Klein: The most important issue of this election: Obamacare (Washington Post)
Which is all to say that, yes, this election matters more than most. It matters more politically because the party in power will likely see their agenda affirmed by a cyclical recovery. But it matters more to actual people because the Affordable Care Act is poised to reshape American health care in two years. A vote for Obama is a vote for the law to take effect and for 30 million Americans to get health insurance they won’t get otherwise. A vote for Romney is a vote for the law — and its spending and its taxes — to be repealed. There are few elections in which the stakes are so clear.
·washingtonpost.com·
Ezra Klein: The most important issue of this election: Obamacare (Washington Post)
Andrew Cohen: No One in America Should Have to Wait 7 Hours to Vote (The Atlantic)
Andrew Cohen: No One in America Should Have to Wait 7 Hours to Vote (The Atlantic)
There is no hidden agenda here. The strategy and tactics are as far out in the open as those voters standing in line for hours waiting for their turn to vote. This transparency—of motive and of evidence—is also what distinguishes the complaints that Democrats have about Republican tricks on voting from Republican complaints about Democratic tricks on voting. Widespread "in-person" voter fraud or voting by illegal immigrants exists mostly in the minds of conspiracy theorists. Yet proof of voter suppression is visible to all of us with the naked eye. All we have to do is look. There is no political equivalence here—only more lamentable false equivalence.
·theatlantic.com·
Andrew Cohen: No One in America Should Have to Wait 7 Hours to Vote (The Atlantic)
Glenn Greenwald: Obama and progressives: what will liberals do with their big election victory? (The Guardian)
Glenn Greenwald: Obama and progressives: what will liberals do with their big election victory? (The Guardian)
With last night's results, one can choose to see things two ways: (1) emboldened by their success and the obvious movement of the electorate in their direction, liberals will resolve that this time things will be different, that their willingness to be Good Partisan Soldiers depends upon their core values not being ignored and stomped on, or (2) inebriated with love and gratitude for Obama for having vanquished the evil Republican villains, they will follow their beloved superhero wherever he goes with even more loyalty than before. One does not need to be Nate Silver to be able to use the available historical data to see which of those two courses is the far more likely one.
·guardian.co.uk·
Glenn Greenwald: Obama and progressives: what will liberals do with their big election victory? (The Guardian)
Doug Henwood: Why Obama lost the debate
Doug Henwood: Why Obama lost the debate
I don’t agree with this completely, but it’s a solid argument. More broadly, the political problem of the Democrats is that they’re a party of capital that has to pretend for electoral reasons sometimes that it’s not. All the complaints that liberals have about them—their weakness, tendency to compromise, the constantly lamented lack of a spine—emerge from this central contradiction. The Republicans have a coherent philosophy and use it to fire up a rabid base. The Dems are afraid of their base because it might cause them trouble with their funders. Romney believes in money. Obama believes in nothing. Most liberals want to write off Obama’s bad performance as a bad night. It’s not just that. It’s a structural problem.
·lbo-news.com·
Doug Henwood: Why Obama lost the debate
Can-Do Honolulu
Can-Do Honolulu
From Honolulu’s Department of Information Technology, city/government data made publicly available for citizens to use and build apps around. Collaboration with Code for America in some cases. ‘Citizens Analyzing Numbers Discover Opportunity’
·can-do.honolulu.gov·
Can-Do Honolulu
Max Read: There Is No Such Thing as 'Politicizing' a Tragedy (Gawker)
Max Read: There Is No Such Thing as 'Politicizing' a Tragedy (Gawker)
Before he entered the theater, he purchased guns, whether legally or illegally, under a framework of laws and regulations governed and negotiated by politics; in the parking lot outside, he was arrested by a police force whose salaries, equipment, tactics and rights were shaped and determined by politics. Holmes' ability to seek, or to not seek, mental health care; the government's ability, or inability, to lock up persons deemed unstable — these are things decided and directed by politics. You cannot "politicize" a tragedy because the tragedy is already political. When you talk about the tragedy you're already talking about politics.
·gawker.com·
Max Read: There Is No Such Thing as 'Politicizing' a Tragedy (Gawker)
Adopt-a-Siren
Adopt-a-Siren
A Code for America effort. You agree to listen for the siren test and report any problems.
·sirens.honolulu.gov·
Adopt-a-Siren
David Graeber: Of Flying Cars and the Declining Rate of Profit (The Baffler)
David Graeber: Of Flying Cars and the Declining Rate of Profit (The Baffler)
Why the sci-fi visions of the 50s and 60s didn't come true. That pretty much answers the question of why we don’t have teleportation devices or antigravity shoes. Common sense suggests that if you want to maximize scientific creativity, you find some bright people, give them the resources they need to pursue whatever idea comes into their heads, and then leave them alone. Most will turn up nothing, but one or two may well discover something. But if you want to minimize the possibility of unexpected breakthroughs, tell those same people they will receive no resources at all unless they spend the bulk of their time competing against each other to convince you they know in advance what they are going to discover.
·thebaffler.com·
David Graeber: Of Flying Cars and the Declining Rate of Profit (The Baffler)
Tim O'Reilly: Before Solving a Problem, Make Sure You've Got the Right Problem
Tim O'Reilly: Before Solving a Problem, Make Sure You've Got the Right Problem
I was pleased to see the measured tone of the White House response to the citizen petition about SOPA and PIPA, and yet I found myself profoundly disturbed by something that seems to me to go to the root of the problem in Washington: the failure to correctly diagnose the problem we are trying to solve, but instead to accept, seemingly uncritically, the claims of various interest groups.
·plus.google.com·
Tim O'Reilly: Before Solving a Problem, Make Sure You've Got the Right Problem
Sarah Lai Stirland: Expert Labs: Putting The 'Public' Into Public Policy Wasn't Easy (TechPresident)
Sarah Lai Stirland: Expert Labs: Putting The 'Public' Into Public Policy Wasn't Easy (TechPresident)
Two years and several reports later, we thought we’d try to look at how Expert Labs fared. The premise behind the project was that the federal government could and should engage in conversations with people on their existing social networks. The idea was to use existing commercial social networks to crowdsource policy decisions and to synthesize the responses in an intelligent manner.
·techpresident.com·
Sarah Lai Stirland: Expert Labs: Putting The 'Public' Into Public Policy Wasn't Easy (TechPresident)
Squashed: "Some people shouldn't own houses"
Squashed: "Some people shouldn't own houses"
‘The problem with the expansion of homeownership wasn’t that some people don’t have what it takes to be homeowners. They did. The problem was that traditional methods of discrimination were replaced by new forms of exploitation. Borrowers in certain neighborhoods were steered toward subprime loans. Appraisals were deliberately inflated. Loans with predatory terms were set up and designed to fail. None of that had to happen. And now, as that house of cards is collapsing, we’re losing decades of progress in integrating and stabilizing neighborhoods.’
·squashed.tumblr.com·
Squashed: "Some people shouldn't own houses"
Jay Rosen: A Brief Theory of the Republican Party, 2012
Jay Rosen: A Brief Theory of the Republican Party, 2012
‘In so far as a political party in the United States can "decide" anything, the party decided not to have the fight it needed to have between reality-based Republicans and the other kind. And so it is having that fight now, during the 2012 election season, but in disguised form. The results are messy and confusing.’
·jayrosen.posterous.com·
Jay Rosen: A Brief Theory of the Republican Party, 2012
Coyote Tracks: The enemy of my enemy
Coyote Tracks: The enemy of my enemy
‘There are a lot of stories out there which are genuine examples of terrible government overreach and/or the evils of the current copyright system. Megaupload’s story is not one of them. “The enemy of my enemy is my friend” is not a universal truth—and sometimes it puts you in the company of pretty crappy friends.’
·tracks.ranea.org·
Coyote Tracks: The enemy of my enemy
Paul Carr: Costolo is Right: Wikipedia’s SOPA Blackout is a Terrible Idea (PandoDaily)
Paul Carr: Costolo is Right: Wikipedia’s SOPA Blackout is a Terrible Idea (PandoDaily)
‘The trouble with taking a political stance on one issue is that your silence on every issue becomes a stance. Human rights abuses in Libya? Not as important as SOPA. Roe v Wade? Not as important as SOPA. Everything else that’s happened in the world until now, and everything that will ever happen from this day forward? Not as important as SOPA. This Wednesday, with its quixotic yelp in support of the Internet community’s issue-du-jour, Wikipedia will do more damage to its independence than SOPA ever could.’
·pandodaily.com·
Paul Carr: Costolo is Right: Wikipedia’s SOPA Blackout is a Terrible Idea (PandoDaily)
Information Diet: Dear Internet: It's No Longer OK to Not Know How Congress Works
Information Diet: Dear Internet: It's No Longer OK to Not Know How Congress Works
‘It's no longer acceptable for us to not take responsibility for our Congress anymore. If we want it to be better then throwing bums out, and replacing them with new bums doesn't seem to be doing the trick. Let's work instead to educate whomever is in Congress, and the professional class around them. Let's do more of the stuff that works, and less of the stuff that doesn't.’
·informationdiet.com·
Information Diet: Dear Internet: It's No Longer OK to Not Know How Congress Works
Joshua Kopstein: Dear Congress, It's No Longer OK To Not Know How The Internet Works (Motherboard)
Joshua Kopstein: Dear Congress, It's No Longer OK To Not Know How The Internet Works (Motherboard)
‘So it was as proponents of the Hollywood-funded bill curmudgeonly shot down all but two amendments proposed by its opponents, who fought to dramatically alter the document to preserve security and free speech on the net. But the chilling takeaway of this whole debacle was the irrefutable air of anti-intellectualism; that inescapable absurdity that we have members of Congress voting on a technical bill who do not posses any technical knowledge on the subject and do not find it imperative to recognize those who do.’
·motherboard.vice.com·
Joshua Kopstein: Dear Congress, It's No Longer OK To Not Know How The Internet Works (Motherboard)