Tonight is the celebration of yet another Jacked Up Bush Administration Policy: The DTV Transition. Millions of people, many in rural areas or poor or in vulnerable populations (elderly) are now left out and lack television reception. Its like 3% of the population has had television, still a key toward being informed and in some cases being safe, yanked out of their homes for no good reason.
So now we have the White House on board officially in favor of a strong public option to compete directly with the private insurance industry. While many of us understand that a single payer system would be the best option, it seems that the majority are making the decision to rally around a bona fide public option that would force the private insurance industry to clean up its act or say buh-bye.
The Federal Court in San Francisco has accepted that John Yoo can be called before the court to testify on the grounds that his memoranda justifying torture techniques using non-conventional interpretations of the law might make him complicit in the acts of torture and the abrogation of constitutional rights of detainees that followed. I think this is an extremely dangerous precedent.
Somewhere along the last century, a romantic notion of summer vacation became lodged in our national psyche. Summer vacation has come to be regarded by many as much a part of being a kid as eating candy and jumping rope. But the summer vacation rhapsodized about is largely a sentimental myth.
In the weeks ahead, Congress will take up one of the most pressing and glaring problems facing our nation -- our broken and dysfunctional health care system. As most of you already know, while American taxpayers spend more per capita on health care than anyone in the world, we have a health care system which leaves nearly 50 million people without access to a doctor. Even those with coverage are never more than one accident away from bankruptcy, or one job loss away from losing the coverage that they and their family rely on. The current situation is disgraceful, and at a time of economic turmoil, it's a threat to our nation's livelihood. That's why our nation must move towards a system of universal coverage.
The 20th annual Human Rights Watch International Film Festival has come to New York's Lincoln Center and runs until June 25th. The festival brings together 23 films with stories from around the world. The festival is very well-curated, presenting a broad range of difficult and disturbing themes in ways we first-worlders can handle.
In April, the Department of Homeland Security issued a report (PDF) warning that the shifting political climate and tanking economy was spurring a resurgence of violent right-wing extremism (known as "terrorism" when applied to those holding other political views) in the United States. At the time, a number of right-wing commentators lambasted the report as a politically motivated attack on mainstream conservatism rather than what it was: an early warning on the dangers posed by a violent, fringe minority within their movement. Under pressure from GOP lawmakers, Homeland Security Chief Janet Napolitano apologized for the report. But in the short weeks since, the department's warnings have proved prescient.
Abandoning emerging economies to the assistance of the International Monetary Fund is like assigning a child to a tutor who is not only failing, but bullying other children and selling drugs on the side. However, leaders at home and abroad have failed to realize the disservice they are committing and have promised the IMF $1.1 trillion dollars.
A former Holocaust Museum staffer: "The entire time I worked there, we always expected something terrible to happen. I was very lucky it didn't while I was there -- but it wasn't for lack of trying. Our head of security was a former FBI guy and he said we would not believe the volume of threats. ... Working at the Holocaust Museum in the first years of the Clinton administration was like having a front-row seat to right-wing hate groups. They are a peculiar American pathology, and they are not going anywhere."
On Saturday last, my husband began complaining of shortness of breath and chest pain. I immediately called 911, because we live so far from medical care, and I hoped that our local emergency service would be able to provide oxygen and stabilize him during transport to the hospital 45 miles away. It's been a rough 5 days, and nights. And we both made it through because medical science, and her practitioners, can be truly amazing.