The U.S. and North Korea: The Need for an About Face

The current drift in U.S. policy toward North Korea is exposing the weakness of President Obama's foreign policy team, specifically the absence of both a lead strategic voice and an advisor with North Korean expertise.

What Will Happen to Jacob?

Jacob currently lives in a group home within our school district, and the boys who live there go to our school while they reside, there. Each boy's history is different, but all share dysfunctional/abusive family experiences that usually led to some acting out behavior requiring juvenile justice and family services interventions. Most of these boys are only with us for a few months before another family member opens up their home to the boy, and they leave us. Jacob is different. This is just one real story about one real child who is about to be profoundly affected by the state budget cuts that we hear about daily.

The Obama Effect in Lebanon

In the wake of the surprisingly strong showing by the pro-Western coalition in Sunday's elections in Lebanon, the debate is raging as whether President Obama can take any credit for it. McClatchy, Newsweek, Politico, the AP and a host of others pondered whether the President's dazzling speech in Cairo and recent diplomatic efforts in Beirut amounted to an "Obama Effect" which helped blunt Hezbollah and its allies, or instead played little role in the face of competing Christian factions, Saudi cash and other decidedly local factors.

Annual Health Insurance Renewal Debacle: A Case Study

As wonderful as my employee benefits company is (and their fees are reasonable), the health care expense for my family is nonetheless extraordinary, and illustrative of the inviability of continuing a market based health care system that relies on for-profit insurance providers. Why isn't the U.S. Chamber of Commerce demanding single payer universal healthcare on our behalf? Why aren't the Republicans that abhor needless bureaucratic burden on businesses demanding single payer?

Burger King Franchises Call Global Warming 'Baloney'

Mirabile Investment Corporation (MIC), a major owner of Burger King franchises in Tennessee, Arkansas, and Mississippi, decided to sell climate change denial along with their high fat, sodium, and calorie menu options. The store signs for MIC Burger King franchises were used to sell bull manure with their miscellaneous beef byproducts, announcing that "Global Warming is Baloney."

Supreme Court Rules in Favor of John Grisham

A system of elected judges simply cannot work. Elected judges become additional legislatures. Want to get rid of punitive damages against corporations? Bankroll a candidate who supports corporate interests. Can't get the legislature to pass a gay-marriage bill? Bankroll 3-5 gay-marriage supporters and stack the state supreme court. Judicial elections are cheaper anyway, so you save money by focusing on elected judges instead of elected representatives.

Obama's Cairo Speech Begins to Bear Fruit

"An American-backed alliance appeared to retain control of the Lebanese Parliament on Sunday in a hotly contested election that had been billed as a showdown between Tehran and Washington for influence in the Middle East." So reported Michael Slackman in yesterday's New York Times. When was the last time any party we backed won anything in the Middle East?

Ending the Economic Status Quo

The banking lobby still holds enough sway inside the Beltway to torpedo sensible consumer protection rules, even after releasing a flood of predatory mortgages that kicked off the current economic crisis. On issues ranging from payday loans to subprime mortgages, the banking industry continues to successfully defend itself against new regulations that would protect the consumer.

How stupid does Chief Justice Roberts think we are?

In a 5-4 decision in Caperton v. A. T. Massey Coal Co., the Supreme Court today ruled that elected judges should not participate in cases involving large campaign contributions lest they create the appearance of bias and undermine the opposing litigant's right to Due Process. Justice Kennedy, who evidently got up on the better side of the bed the morning that the case was argued, wrote the majority opinion, but what interests me more is the dissenting opinion of our Chief Justice, which begins on page 25 of the linked document, because it so wonderfully exemplifies the smarmy disingenuity of his political philosophy.

A Medical Bill Mistake Trashed my Credit Score

There is a mammoth scam afoot: It's called credit reporting and it can devastate your economic well-being, particularly if you have the double misfortune of dealing with corporate medicine. While Americans can now access that semi-holy document, the credit report, it is only available for free once a year from one of the three credit reporting agencies. However, as I recently discovered, annual access to this consumer dossier determining a borrower's economic fate is really just extortion foreplay for the various credit "protection" products credit reporting agencies offer.