Thursday, March 25, 2010

the big story (late edition)




Why the health insurance industry has been for the new health care law all along

After supposedly opposing the president’s health care bill, which would force Americans to buy private insurance, and giving Americans over the past year the impression that the battle was that of a populist president vs. big business, the insurance industry is suddenly embracing the new law and wants to get as many Americans enrolled as possible!

According to a TIME Magazine article: America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), the industry trade group, has agreed to sign on to a new, 50-state health care reform implementation effort, provisionally called Enroll America, which is being organized by Ron Pollack of the pro-reform group Families USA. “We are participating in it,” says AHIP spokesman Robert Zirkelbach. “The goal is to get everyone covered.”

The myth that insurance companies oppose legislation that would lay heavy fines on any citizen who doesn’t purchase their product was used by the mainstream media and the White House to make Americans believe that the victory of a few corporations somehow equated to victory for the people. While doing nothing to address the creation of new jobs so that the uninsured can sustainably afford the insurance they’re being forced to buy, the new law has assured the insurance industry an endless well of customers, backed by the US taxpayer if those customers are unable to pay.

Enroll America will focus on enticing the final 5% of Americans who will be eligible for health insurance under the new law but whom congressional budget scorers do not expect to enroll. On a state-by-state basis, the group will work to create an easy application process for benefits, including access to enrollment at doctors’ offices, pharmacies and government agencies that provide other benefits like food stamps.

Though the people behind Enroll America say they’re concerned that a small percentage of the population will defy the law, the IRS has been enlisted to help the government enforce the insurance mandate.

Read more...


earlier:



Legal loophole will exempt Congressional staffers from a law they wrote


The health care reform bill signed into law by President Barack Obama Tuesday requires members of Congress and their office staffs to buy insurance through the state-run exchanges it creates – but it may exempt staffers who work for congressional committees or for party leaders in the House and Senate.

Staffers and members on both sides of the aisle call it an “inequity” and an “outrage” – a loophole that exempts the staffers most involved in writing and passing the bill from one of its key requirements.

The bill requires “congressional staff” to buy insurance from the exchanges – with a stipend from the Office of Personnel Management But page 158 of the bill defines “congressional staff” narrowly, as “employees employed by the official office of a member of Congress, whether in the district office or in Washington.”

The Congressional Research Service believes a court could rule that the legislation "would exclude professional committee staff, joint committee staff, some shared staff, as well as potentially those staff employed by leadership offices.”

Read more...

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)




For centuries, it was the cook and the heat of the fire that cajoled taste, texture, flavor and aroma from the pot. Today, that culinary voodoo is being crafted by white-coated scientists toiling in pristine labs, rearranging atoms into chemical particles never before seen.

At last year's Institute of Food Technologists international conference, nanotechnology was the topic that generated the most buzz among the 14,000 food-scientists, chefs and manufacturers crammed into an Anaheim, Calif., hall. Though it's a word that has probably never been printed on any menu, and probably never will, there was so much interest in the potential uses of nanotechnology for food that a separate daylong session focused just on that subject was packed to overflowing.

In one corner of the convention center, a chemist, a flavorist and two food-marketing specialists clustered around a large chart of the Periodic Table of Elements (think back to high school science class). The food chemist, from China, ran her hands over the chart, pausing at different chemicals just long enough to say how a nano-ized version of each would improve existing flavors or create new ones.

Read more...

*55% Favor Repeal of Health Care Bill

*NATO rejects Russian call for Afghan poppy spraying

*Soldiers Take Psychiatric Medications for Stress

*Swine Flu Virus Not So New, Study Finds

*Pentagon eases 'don't ask, don't tell' law

*US supports Pakistan economic zones

*Is US using Google proxy to attack China?



*Apartment rents cheaper than stays in homeless shelters

*Why Greenspan's Explanation for the Economic Collapse is Rubbish

*Nano car bursts into flames, raising safety fears

*Tea Party protester apologizes for cruelty to Parkinson's victim

*Philip J. Berg Reveals More About "Barry Soetoro"




earlier:



Former Vice President Al Gore on Tuesday backed Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's "carbon surcharge" proposal for Department of Water and Power customers despite reports indicating that the plan could hike power fees as much as 28.4 percent.

"Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa of Los Angeles has introduced one of the most forward-thinking clean energy plans I have ever seen," Gore said in a statement. " ... This innovative proposal can be the catalyst the Department of Water and Power needs to power Los Angeles' use of green energy."

Villaraigosa's plan, which he said would cost the average customer about an extra $2.50 month (now he says it's up to $3.50 a month), is aimed at weening the city off coal power and onto 20 percent renewable energy by the end of the year. It will also create 16,000 jobs and retrofit homes and businesses with energy efficient gear.

But ... the Los Angeles Times reports that the hikes, the first of which has already been approved by the DWP board, would amount to 8.8 to 28.4 percent power-bill increases, and that some of the extra cash would go to initiatives already underway at the DWP.

Some on the City Council are challenging the initial rate hike and will debate whether to send the plan back to the DWP board for reconsideration Tuesday. Opponents are concerned that the hike comes at the worst time -- high unemployment plagues the city -- with a DWP that is the city's richest department. While the city faces a near-$700 million deficit in July and the possibility of 4,000 layoffs, many DWP workers are getting raises.

Still, Gore likes the plan

Read more...

*Poll: Americans Hate Wall Street

*Cops In N.J. Town Given Keys To Homes

*How to tell if you are Middle Class

*Panel to study what to do with U.S. nuclear waste

*UN body to look at meat and climate link



*Airport Worker Caught Ogling Image of Woman on Naked Body Scanner

*US authorities "deal" with Wikileaks

*UN head in Afghanistan meets with militant group

*Hungary, Latvia and Romania on verge of collapse Spain, Greece call for bailout fund

*Measure to legalize marijuana will be on California's November ballot

*Explain why you sold Britain's gold, Gordon Brown told

*Georgia accepts Gitmo inmates

*France ditches carbon tax as social protests mount

*"Childless on Principle" gains ground in Russia








*Why did Barry Soetoro change his name to Barack Hussein Obama?


the fairer sex

the Girls of CoOlDiGgYtm

(coming soon)
The Women of 'The Office' are Kinda Hot. The Top 10

girl blurbs


*Another mistress for Jesse "Tiger Woods" James...

*...Sandra Bullock has a prenup

*Surprisingly, NOT a porn parody: 'Laverne & Shirley' starring Jessica Biel and Jennifer Garner

*Crazy Brunette News: Megan Mullally Abruptly Quits Broadway Show

the random

Happy Birthday, Alyson Hannigan. Yes, it was yesterday but if she asks if we remembered, play along

CoOlDiGgY tech & media




LONDON - Internet cafe users in the British capital may want to watch what they download. Scotland Yard is advising administrators of public Web spaces to periodically poke through their customers' files and keep an eye out for suspicious activity.

The Metropolitan Police said Thursday that the initiative - which has been rolled out over the past weeks under the auspices of the government's counterterrorism strategy - is aimed at reminding cafe owners that authorities are ready to hear from them if they have concerns about their Internet users.

Posters and computer desktop images emblazoned with Scotland Yard's logo are also being distributed.

Read more...

*New Malware Overwrites Software Updaters

*Guys can pay girls to play online video games with them

*Time Warner offers free Wi-Fi in NYC

*Pedophiles and law-abiding citizens could be tracked down by the way they type

*Facebook linked to rise in syphilis

*First Google, then GoDaddy. Who's next to leave China? Yahoo!

*Wikipedia down after server overheats


*'At The Movies' cancelled after 24 years

*End of an ERROR: 'The Hills' Cancelled

*Top 10 Cable Networks In Primetime For Q1 2010

sports & health





*Wizards prove to be nothing but pushovers

*Tentative deal for Ryan Leaf: former QB on probation for 10 years

*NFL passes player safety rules

*Lingerie Football League Puts Star Players on Probation for Wearing Too Much


*Hormones in U.S. Beef Linked to Cancer Risk

*Diet, Exercise Touted in Fight Against Breast Cancer

*The Favorite Child: Unraveling This Pervasive Dynamic

the frivolous





*Prince vs the Taxman

*KC and the Sunshine Band Uses his Boogie Shoes Illegaly

*Reggie Bush cheat on Kim with this woman

*“One glass of water enough to get completely clean” – space-blogger




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