Showing posts with label health care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health care. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

the big story (late edition)

US Government Finally Admits Most Piracy Estimates are Bogus



Copyright infringement is not nearly the economic boogeyman we've been led to believe

We've all seen the studies trumpeting massive losses to the US economy from piracy. One famous figure, used literally for decades by rights holders and the government, said that 750,000 jobs and up to $250 billion a year could be lost in the US economy thanks to IP infringement. A couple years ago, we thoroughly debunked that figure. For years, Business Software Alliance reports on software piracy assumed that each illicit copy was a lost sale. And the MPAA's own commissioned study on movie piracy turned out to overstate collegiate downloading by a factor of three.

Can we trust any of these claims about piracy?

The US doesn't think so. In a new report out yesterday, the government's own internal watchdog took a close look at "efforts to quantify the economic effects of counterfeit and pirated goods." After examining all the data and consulting with numerous experts inside and outside of government, the Government Accountability Office concluded (PDF) that it is "difficult, if not impossible, to quantify the economy-wide impacts."

More specific studies that focus only on single industries don't fare much better because "the illicit nature of counterfeiting and piracy makes estimating the economic impact of IP infringements extremely difficult." And when it comes time to choose a substitution rate (how much of the infringing activity should be counted as a lost sale), we're left only with "assumptions... which can have enormous impacts on the resulting estimates."

The GAO then went on to slam three particular reports often linked to the government. They're all commonly cited, they're all bogus, and at least one is still being used officially.

Read more...

earlier:
Obama's Healthcare Reform Won't Stop Premium Increases


The new law doesn't prevent rate hikes such as Anthem Blue Cross' double-digit increase last year. "It is a very big loophole"

Public outrage over double-digit rate hikes for health insurance may have helped push President Obama's healthcare overhaul across the finish line, but the new law does not give regulators the power to block similar increases in the future.

And now, with some major companies already moving to boost premiums and others poised to follow suit, millions of Americans may feel an unexpected jolt in the pocketbook.

Although Democrats promised greater consumer protection, the overhaul does not give the federal government broad regulatory power to prevent increases.

Many state governments -- which traditionally had responsibility for regulating insurance companies -- also do not have such authority. And several that do are now being sued by insurance companies.

Read more...

Friday, April 9, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)

Elena Kagan - Justice Stevens More Conservative Replacement




Elena Kagan, President Obama's solicitor general, is rapidly emerging as a frontrunner to replace retiring Chief Associate Justice John Paul Stevens. Kagan is widely praised as an accomplished and intelligent attorney, but is far more conservative than Stevens and could shift the political dynamic of the high court.

Conservatives are responding favorably to the potential of a Justice Elena Kagan while liberals worry that, by choosing her, the administration would miss the opportunity to elevate a genuine progressive.

Read more...


*Pope stalled 1985 pedophile case

*US government 'abused rights' of Hurricane Katrina victims

*Obama Administration Missed Chance To Get Tougher On Unsafe Mines

*America: The Grim Truth

*MSNBC’s Ratigan Breaks Down Banking Scam

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy



*New York Times Insists Economy in “Recovery”

*Soros Dems Say American People Rank IRS Over Tea Party

*Consortium To Prolong Global Financial Recession For Another Year

earlier:
Justice John Paul Stevens to Retire From Supreme Court



A Liberal Voice for 34 Years, Stevens Clears Way for Obama's Second Nomination

Justice John Paul Stevens, 89, who served on the high court for a near record breaking 34 years, announced his retirement today, giving President Barack Obama his second chance to name a Supreme Court justice.

"Having concluded that it would be in the best interests of the Court to have my successor appointed and confirmed well in advance of the commencement of the Court's next Term, I shall retire from regular active service as an Associate Justice," Stevens wrote in a letter to the president, stating his retirement would be "effective the next day after the Court rises for the summer recess this year."

Read more...

*Mining Company Has History Of Safety Violations

*Study: Insurance Firms Heavily Invest in Fast-Food Industry

*Forget Gold, Here Are The Commodities That Could Have Made You A Killing This Year


*Wal-Mart Just Killed The Dream Of Pricing Power

*ACORN Staffer Reported Prostitution Claims to Police

*Congressman Stupak to Retire. Can the tea parties claim victory?

*Could the U.S. Lose Its Base in Kyrgyzstan?

Friday, April 2, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)

Reserve Reveals Bear Stearns Assets it Swallowed



April 1 (Bloomberg) -- After months of litigation and political scrutiny, the Federal Reserve yesterday ended a policy of secrecy over its Bear Stearns Cos. bailout.

In a 4:30 p.m. announcement in a week of congressional recess and religious holidays, the central bank released details of securities bought to aid Bear Stearns’s takeover by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Bloomberg News sued the Fed for that information.

The Fed’s vehicle known as Maiden Lane LLC has securities backed by mortgages from lenders including Washington Mutual Inc. and Countrywide Financial Corp., loans that were made with limited borrower documentation. More than $1 billion of them are backed by “jumbo” mortgages written by Thornburg Mortgage Inc., which now carry the lowest investment-grade rating. Jumbo loans were larger than government-sponsored mortgage buyers such as Fannie Mae could finance -- $417,000 at the time.

“The Fed absorbed that risk on its balance sheet and is now seen to be holding problematic, legacy assets,” said Vincent Reinhart, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington who was the central bank’s monetary- affairs director from 2001 to 2007. “There is both an impairment to its balance sheet and its reputation.”

The Bear Stearns deal marked a turning point in the financial crisis for the Fed. By putting taxpayers at risk in financing the rescue, the central bank was engaging in fiscal policy, normally the domain of Congress and the U.S. Treasury, said Marvin Goodfriend, a former Richmond Fed policy adviser who is now an economist at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.


Read more...


*Everything You Need To Know About The Latest Jobs Figures

*Sharp Increase in March in Personal Bankruptcies

*Hiring Hot Spots: These companies have been expanding their workforces aggressively

*VIDEO: Congressman says New Health Care Law Trumps Constitution



*California probe clears ACORN of criminal activity

*Cops & CPS Seize Child From Parents For Mistrusting Government

*“We Are in a Cabal... Five or Six Players ... Own the Regulatory Apparatus. Everybody Is Afraid to Regulate Them"

*VIDEO: Officers Accused Of Using Taser On 10-Year-Old



*Second Mexican helicopter sighted in US airspace

*Great-grandmother given an electronic tag and curfew for selling a goldfish to a 14 year-old

*100 million Americans question or find fault with the official 9/11 story

earlier:
Census Project Adds to the Job Picture



200,000 new jobs will be announced today, half of those are temporary Census positions. Critics say that's a drop in the bucket.

When March employment figures are released Friday by the Department of Labor, analysts are expecting to see the biggest U.S. job gains in more than two years.

But perhaps half the 200,000 or so positions expected to be added to payrolls may be the byproduct of a government effort that has turned into a fortuitous job generator: the U.S. census.

The constitutionally mandated nationwide head count arrives this year at a crucial time -- after the start of the country's economic recovery, but before private-sector employers have created many jobs. That's a stroke of luck for the Obama administration, which has been criticized for failing to revive the labor market. And it's a windfall for the 700,000 temporary employees the census expects to hire, although most of the jobs will last only two to six weeks.

This year's census isn't just about counting heads, it's helping create jobs in an economy that needs them badly.

Read more...

*Banks, Debt Collectors Find Ideal Debtors: Working Poor

*For Unemployed, Tax Deadline Brings New Worries...

*...Health Care's Job Creation: up to 100,000 New IRS Agents


*2 million eager for health care on parents' plans

*Five Reasons the Democrats Are Not Running Scared - Yet

*US to impose new airline security measures

*Army chief reverses course, to uphold policy on gays

*Rhode Island looks to slow recovery


*Mexico drug gangs turn weapons on army

*Obama and China's Hu discuss nuclear Iran in phone call

*Vanishing Beaches: Southern California beach erosion is worst in a decade

*Thirteen Israeli air strikes hit Gaza Strip

*US Sues KBR On Security Costs

*One of the Metro bombers could be teen 'Black Widow' – report




Thursday, April 1, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)

VIDEO: Paul Krugman Admits There Are 'Death Panels'



*Obama's New Fuel Standards Will Add Almost $1000 to Auto Prices

*Sell-off in US Treasuries raises sovereign debt fears

*2010 US Census Warning: Authorities Seizing Personal Property, Issuing Code Violations



*Depressions Last HOW LONG?


earlier:
Homeowner Program Favoring White Borrowers



A new survey from the National Community Reinvestment Coalition has raised new questions about the Obama administration’s $75 billion Home Affordable Modification Program. The program is designed to provide financial incentives for mortgage lenders and servicers to reduce monthly payments for struggling homeowners.

The survey found white homeowners are almost 50 percent more likely to receive a loan modification under the mortgage program than African Americans or Latinos. Meanwhile, loan servicers foreclose on delinquent African American borrowers more quickly than white or Latino borrowers.

Read more...

*Letter Suggests Pope Knew of Abuse

*Bill Clinton Apologizes To Haiti For Effects Of Free Trade

*U.S. Foreign Aid May Entice Partners To Stay In Afghanistan

*Obama Appoints Pesticide Lobbyist Gets Posted as Chief Agricultural

*Hook-Up Culture At Boston University Leads To Skepticism About Sexual Assault


*Census 2010: Are you counted?

*Good Guys Win: No DWP rate hike ... for now

*Metrolink workers object to personality testing


*R.I. flooding: 'It makes you want to cry'



*India begins census that will include photos and fingerprints of all adults

*Dagestan suicide bombings have Russia looking to Putin

*US isn't concerned with Iran’s nuclear threat but with its oil power




Wednesday, March 31, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)

The coming inflation wave



(Fortune) -- Whether the American economy is in an inflationary or deflationary environment sounds like it should be a fundamental and settled question. But due to the unprecedented financial crisis, the answer is actually subject to intense debate among economists.

Making economic projections is far from a scientific process, so it's not surprising to find valid arguments on both sides of the divide. The economists who are right will help investors drive returns over the next three years.

Inflation can be a positive or negative, depending on the level and duration of it in our economy. The main negative associated with inflation is a drop in purchasing power of money, and therefore, consumers. In extreme cases, consumers may actually start hoarding if they fear continued and aggressive price increases. The positive side of inflation is to decrease the real value of debt, or essentially provide debt relief.

Read more...

*Iran Nuclear Scientist Defects to U.S. In CIA 'Intelligence Coup'



*Obama wants U.N. sanctions on Iran in weeks

*Pharma Planning to Dump Experimental and Controversial Vaccines in Public Schools


*Health Reform Law to Spawn More Tax Men?

*Subway riders question NYPD’s ‘ridiculous’ show of force

*Iraq election challenged over 'banned' candidates

*WikiLeaks to release video of civilians, journalists being murdered in air strike

*Children WILL face 'naked' airport scans

*Report: California’s foreign-born population has peaked

*VIDEO: Ed Asner for 9/11 Truth



earlier:
Recession Leading to the End of Speeding 'Cushion'



The recession may be claiming a new victim: the 5-10-mph "cushion" police and state troopers across the USA have routinely given motorists exceeding the speed limit.

As cities and states scramble to fill budget gaps with revenue from traffic citations, "not only are the (speeding) tolerances much lower, but the frequency of a warning instead of a ticket is way down," says James Baxter, president of the National Motorists Association, a Wisconsin-based drivers' rights group that helps its members fight speeding tickets.

"Most people, if they're stopped now, are getting a ticket even if it's only a minor violation of a few miles per hour," Baxter says. He cites anecdotal evidence of drivers being pulled over at slower speeds.

Read more...

*4 dead in D.C. shooting


*US oil company donated millions to climate sceptic groups

*Two-Thirds of Boys in Afghan Jails Are Brutalized

*Time Magazine: E.U. Members Sell Weapons with Torture Potential

*Elizabeth Warren: Banks Fought For the Very Thing They Are Now Fighting Against

*Catholic League Defends Pope, Blames Homosexuality for Molestations

*Is America ‘Yearning for Fascism’?

*Double suicide bombings kill 12 in Russia's Dagestan

*Canada to pull out of Afghanistan in 2011




Tuesday, March 30, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)

Debt Overload: Many US States Will Become the Next Greece



California, New York and other states are showing many of the same signs of debt overload that recently took Greece to the brink — budgets that will not balance, accounting that masks debt, the use of derivatives to plug holes, and armies of retired public workers who are counting on benefits that are proving harder and harder to pay.

And states are responding in sometimes desperate ways, raising concerns that they, too, could face a debt crisis.

Some economists fear the states have a potentially bigger problem than their recession-induced budget woes. If investors become reluctant to buy the states’ debt, the result could be a credit squeeze, not entirely different from the financial strains in Europe, where markets were reluctant to refinance billions in Greek debt.

Read more...

*Christopher Hitchens: The Pope Is Not Above the Law

*The New Health Care Law: Expect Flood of Divorces

*Only Two States Get Obama Education Grant

*Lil' Rhody's Big Flood

*Pupils 'frogmarched by teachers to have fingerprints taken' so they could eat in cafeteria

*Will Health Reform Law Stop Insurers From Denying Coverage? A Loophole That Deserves More Attention

*Illusions versus reality: NATO and Afghan opium







earlier:
"Too Big Too Fail" Accounting Tricks as SEC Starts ‘Repo 105’ Probe



US regulators on Monday asked more than 20 financial groups whether they engaged in transactions along the lines of “Repo 105” – an accounting device that helped Lehman Brothers conceal its high leverage ratio during the financial crisis.

The corporate finance division of the Securities and Exchange Commission wrote to chief financial officers of “close to two dozen” large foreign and domestic banks and insurers, demanding details of repurchase agreement deals.

The SEC probe includes whether companies booked repos as asset sales for accounting purposes over the past three years, and whether these deals were concentrated with certain counterparties or certain countries. Regulators also asked companies to quantify the amount of repos that were disclosed as asset sales and to explain the “business reasons” for use of these structures.

The heightened scrutiny of repos is the result of a report by a court-appointed examiner this month which found that Lehman used the Repo 105 technique to book temporary repurchase agreements as permanent asset sales in 2008. This helped Lehman conceal about $50bn from its balance sheet, thus reducing its leverage ratio and appearing healthier to the eyes of investors and analysts.

Read more...

*Obama signs health care reconciliation bill

*Big Pharma Wins Big With Health Care Reform Bill

*VIDEO: Health Insurance Mandate



*Health care: What you need to know in the first year

*Senator Specter wants to extend U.S. privacy curbs to Web-cam use

*Marine's dad ordered to pay protesters' court fees

*We Better Smash The Estimates Of 190,000 New Jobs This Friday

*If the US declares economic war on China, should world tremble?

*Consumer spending rises modestly; incomes flat



*Russia Attack: Will Media Propagandists Now Push for Naked Body Scanners?

*U.S. transit security gets boost after blasts



*Have the 'Black Widows' Returned with Moscow Bombing

*James Lovelock: Humans are too stupid to prevent climate change

*Job Market So Bad 260 People Applied To Scoop Poop

*Arctic States Meet Over Resources, Military Concerns

*Ralph Nader: Attention Deficit Democracy

Saturday, March 27, 2010

the big story (weekend)




It was truly a super Sunday for Obama supporters. The long-argued Health Care bill passed the House of Representatives and every member of the uninsured would now have the ability to get insurance. It was hailed as the most significant piece of legislation since the passage of Medicare. Lives would even be saved. Not true. There are four long years until the apparatus kicks in for wider health coverage. Even then the new law affects only an estimated 30 million of the 50 million uninsured.

It was truly a black Sunday for Obama opponents. The long-argued Health Care bill passed the House of Representatives and every member of the insured would now have to lose their insurance as government took over one-sixth of the US economy. It was hailed as the day socialism seize American medicine. Lives would be shortened via "death panels." Not true. What frightened tea party devotees into action sits more comfortably with bailout than Bolshevism. The health industry receives gets 30 million new customers.

The past week as been a tale of preaching to the choir, scaring the choir, or celebrating with the choir. But the members of Congress have mostly been lying to the choir. And cable news is more than complicit in creating a childish narrative of Republican versus Democrat. TV news became TV sitcom and real-life, especially in regards to the new Health Care law, does not make for tidy, 30 minute-long entertainment.

President Obama touted many of the pro-health reform cliches during his signing ceremony for the bill. But the one that had the most ability to soften public opinion was the promise of near-immediate coverage of children with pre-existing conditions. The President proclaimed:


"This year, tens of thousands of uninsured Americans with a preexisting condition and parents whose children have a preexisting condition will finally be able to purchase the coverage they need"



But the AP quickly reported that:


Under the new law, insurance companies still would be able to refuse new coverage to children because of a pre-existing medical problem, said Karen Lightfoot, spokeswoman for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, one of the main congressional panels that wrote the bill Obama signed into law Tuesday



And to further abuse the illusion of medical euphoria that any Obama supporter may have had ABC News reported this weekend that Houston Tracy has a pre-existing condition. Houston is a 12-day old newborn and his pre-existing condition applied to him at the moment of his birth. A shocking new precedent that the Hope of this legislation was to make a thing of the past, not the wave of the future.

A harsh reality for any Obama Democrat. But the so-called tea party as made numerous assumptions not grounded in fact. The group has decried the new law, calling it socialism and warning about the end of private insurance. But health industry stocks have risen the past week and during the anticipation of the bill's passage. The reason is because of the legal mandate for Americans to purchase privately-owned health insurance. The Obama administration, in a very pro-insurance move, negotiated this aspect and decided to forgo an actual government-run program via the so-called public option. This was a betrayal to progressives. All the while, the nation's only truly socialist-style system, the Veteran's Administration, was never in serious consideration as a model for reform.

Key insurance lobbyists guided and even penned much of the language in the new law, including the provision that the IRS enforce the new mandatory enrollment. The law, in effect, is an insurance company bailout. According to Time magazine, the health industry is not only excited about their rising stock values and 30 million new customers but they are eager to remind the public that they must buy the very product that many Obama supporters thought they were punishing. In a program called "Enroll America":



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 "We are participating in it," says AHIP spokesman Robert Zirkelbach. "The goal is to get everyone covered."

Other parts of the health industry, including drug companies and hospitals, are also expected to join the effort, which will focus on making sure as many uninsured Americans as possible get insurance under the law President Obama signed Tuesday




It may jog conservative memories to note that the very idea of the individual mandate to purchase insurance comes from likely 2012 Republican Presidential contender, Mitt Romney. Many of the controversial parts of the new health care law come directly from the health reform law Romney championed and signed into being during his tenure as Massachusetts governor. A law that passed with the vote of then-state legislature and now tea party darling, US Senator Scott Brown. To misquote John Kerry: Republicans were for ObamaCare before they were against it.

But some of the tea party grievances that the news media considered outlandish do have credence. The taxes are about to get steep. There is already a whopping 10 percent tax on the tanning industry as of July 1. Many other "sin taxes" are on the horizon with the justification that they keep health care cost low for the the private insurers. Everything from salt to soda taxes is currently being considered. The individual mandate itself is a new tax for the uninsured. All with the IRS in waiting.

Another pertinent tea party worry, "death panels," may well come to American shores. While end-of-life counseling can hardly be called a "death panel" the tea party-ers may want to look into beginning of life death panels. The United Kingdom, a long-time conservative cautionary tale against single-payer health care, is now rationing the care for premature babies. In the name of saving it's health system money, British doctors are not resuscitating preemies under 22 weeks old. A strict limit that recently applied to a baby 21 weeks and 5 days old.

Another strike against the potential quality of the new US system may come from the very people who legislated it. Both those on the right and the left may want to take note: lawmakers that are now celebrating health care reform are trying to avoid it themselves. Politico reports that new health care law may exempt top Congressional staffers from having to enroll.

It may not come as a surprise that in a recent poll the majority of Americans now want to repeal the new law of the land. But close study of numerous surveys find that the concerns about this bill do not fall into convenient liberal or conservative lines. All sides have their concerns as the competing narratives start to fray as public opinion gets more nuanced. Not good for bumper stickers and certainly not good for anyone who thinks they can predict the upcoming mid-term elections.

Both parties have made threats, promises and celebrations but neither has been fully honest.



*Bank of America, Wells Fargo might not pay federal taxes for 2009

*South Korean navy ship sinks near sea border with North

*Israel could use tactical nukes on Iran...

*...U.S. and Israel sign massive arms deal


*The McCain-Lieberman Police State Act?

*Past Decade Was Warmest on Record

*State by State: Who qualifies for free/reduced-price lunch

*Pupils suffer panic attacks after school stages fake shooting

*Police say gunfire that hit Cantor's office was random


*Treaty to cut US-Russia nukes

*Many in the Tea Party are Unemployed, on 'Welfare,' and Lots of Time to Kill

*View from the US: The 'special relationship' is a very British obsession

*Geely seals deal to buy Volvo from Ford

CoOlDiGgY Big Balls of the Week

Bill McCollum



Why? Because he is the Attorney General, from Florida, who is heading up a multi-state lawsuit to stop the new health care law. We are not saying their isn't a need for major reform but this lawsuit opens the debate up and brings to the forefront the issue of whether an individual mandate is Constitutional. Our selection is about what a brave move it is to take on a popular sitting President's signature program. David and Goliath. Congrats on the big balls, Mr. McCollum!!!

related stories:
*Florida State Attorney General Heads Up Lawsuit to Overturn New Health Care Bill

Friday, March 26, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news





TAMPA — Almost nine years into the war in Afghanistan, there's still no guarantee of success or even much agreement on how to achieve it.

That was the often gloomy take of experts meeting Wednesday at the start of a three-day symposium on Afghanistan and Pakistan at the University of South Florida.

"I'm a pessimist about where we are now, where we've been and where we're going," said Thomas Johnson, a professor at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif. "In April, Afghanistan will replace Vietnam as the longest U.S. conflict, and there's still debate about what the desired end state is."

Read more...

*US healthcare reform is boon for India outsourcing companies

*Toyota tops speed control complaints almost every year since 2004

*Jobless aid could halt after Congress fails to act

*Nation’s Largest Private Water Utility Joins Lawsuit Against Herbicide Maker



*What President Obama Didn't Say By Dennis Kucinich

*Cigarette taxes are gold rush for states

*Gov't unveils plan to shrink some home loans...

*...Q&A: Will foreclosure-prevention measures affect me?

*2,000 House staffers make six figures

*EU nations give Greece safety net



*Personal income falls in California for first time since Great Depression

*VIDEO: Al Gore and Mayor push council for massive energy rate increase. Promise 'lockbox' for tech that does not exist...

*...Los Angeles DWP now plans 37% rate hike instead of 28%

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...

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)




The cost of defying Obamacare by withholding compliance on your income tax return will not be for the faint hearted – families will be forced to cough up $2,250 a month while being closely scrutinized by an army of new IRS agents with fresh “combat training,” armed to the teeth with 12 gauge pump action shotguns.

“The Internal Revenue Service will function as the government’s chief enforcer for health care reform, should President Obama sign the bill into law as expected, monitoring both businesses and individuals to certify whether they have the insurance coverage the government requires,” writes Matt Cover of CNS News.

The penalties associated with defying mandatory health care are staggering. From 2014 onwards, for every month that individuals or businesses with over 50 employees fail to carry a minimum level of health insurance, they will be hit with fines of up to $750 a month for individuals and $750 per uncovered employee for businesses. For a family of four, this could amount to a whopping $27,000 a year ($2250 a month for each household).

Read more...

*Democracy No Longer Free: First Corporate Campaign Ads Appear After Supreme Court's Citizens United Decision

*Netanyahu is Loud and Clear: We Will Continue To Build

*Lawmakers Eyeing National ID Card

*US Halts Poppy Eradication in Afghan Areas

*US may try Cindy Sheehan for anti-war campaign

*America's Most Underwater Housing Markets

*VIDEO: Michael Moore: Healthcare Bill “A Victory for Capitalism”


*Judge won't force Miss. district to hold prom

earlier:







Despite laws prohibiting their trade, tools used for torture are being exported by some European countries to regimes around the world, with little regard for human rights, Amnesty International claims.

EU law expressly prohibits the export or import of goods that have no practical use other than for the purpose of capital punishment or torture, but the lack of enforcement means countries like Germany, the Czech Republic, Spain and Italy are still selling torture instruments abroad – to countries where there is documented proof of the use of such equipment for torture.

“Pepper sprays can be used by police officers in the situations of extreme violence, but they can also be misused, and they widely are in many places for torture and ill treatment,” says Mike Lewis from Amnesty International. “But there is also another category of equipment that we see being marketed by European firms, and in some cases imported into the European Union. Devices that have no other use but for torture and ill treatment – devices like electric shock belts.”

The organization is talking about devices like fixed wall restraints, metal thumb cuffs, spiked batons and sleeves and cuffs that can deliver electric shocks to about 50,000 volts.

Amnesty also says that in the last four years, the Czech Republic issued export permits for foot and hand shackles, electric shock tools and chemical sprays to countries where police and security forces are known to use them for torture. It named the counties such as Senegal, Cameroon, Pakistan, Moldova and Georgia.

Read more...

*Supreme Court Battle Quietly Brews Over Possible Future Nominations

*Illegal US immigrant detention practices questioned. Part 1







*Airport device follows fliers' phones

*Unclean Water Claims More Lives Than War

*Norman Finkelstein Responds to Clinton, Netanyahu AIPAC Comments


*Walls come down on age for over-55 communities

*Jane Hamsher: The Sober Reality of Health Care Reform

*France tells Greece: Broke? Buy a few warships

Monday, March 22, 2010

the big story (late edition)





As the Congress once again rallies to pass healthcare reform legislation, momentum is growing in many states to pass laws to block the changes -- a move that could lead to a legal battle over states' sovereignty.


Bills and resolutions have been introduced in at least 36 state legislatures seeking to limit or oppose various aspects of the reform plan through laws or state constitutional amendments, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

"There's going to be a big free-for-all lawsuit about this," said Michael Bird, legislative counsel for the NCSL.

The House of Representatives is to due vote on Sunday on a sweeping healthcare overhaul that would require all Americans to have health insurance, but would give subsidies to help low- and middle-income workers. It would also ban insurance practices like refusing coverage to those with pre-existing medical conditions.

Opposition efforts at the state level "in general ... seek to make or keep health insurance optional, and allow people to purchase any type of coverage they may choose," the NCSL said.

Read more...

RELATED: When drug makers' profits outweigh penalties

earlier:



As health insurance reform passes the House 219-212, how will this legislation affect you? The individual mandate will soon effectively make 30 million Americans criminals and subject to fines. The only guarantee is that you will have to buy insurance and the IRS is now involved. The "good parts" of this legislation are still 4 years away but many of the shockwaves start today. Below is a round-up of health insurance reform

*Health care stocks to outperform

*A look at the health care overhaul bill

*How the Health Care Overhaul Could Affect You

*Health Care Passage Hinged On Abortion Language

*Attorneys General in South Carolina and Florida Set to Sue on Health Care Reform

*Idaho is first to challenge federal health care mandate

*VIDEO: John Boehner - 'We have failed to listen to America'

CoOlDiGgY news (late edition)




Idaho has set the example for others states to follow in the continuing revolt against naked body scanners, by passing a law that limits the use of the x-ray scanning devices in airports and government buildings and also forces Homeland Security to disprove health concerns.

Athol Republican Rep. Phil Hart’s bill, which was passed 58-9 on Thursday by the Idaho state legislature, limits use of the scanners to people who have failed a prior security check, such as a metal detector.

The bill also enforces by law the option to take a manual pat-down as an alternative to the body scan, a choice that was never available in other countries that have introduced the scanners and one that the TSA has made clear it seeks to abolish, forcing everyone to use the scanners.

Read more...

*U.S. warns ships off Yemen of possible al Qaeda attack

*Underemployment At Record 20% According To Gallup

*Health Reform Bill Summary: The Top 18 Immediate Effects (editor's note: some points are up for debate)

*VIDEO: Profiting off Haiti's disaster?



*Health Care Mandate to Be Enforced by IRS ‘Bounty Hunters’

*New York Times Admits Right-Wing Duped Them on Now Defunct ACORN

*The Dodd Status Quo: Too big to fail is alive and well in the Senate's financial reform

*How the West poisoned Bangladesh

*The UK town printing its own currency

earlier:



WASHINGTON -- Thousands of protesters - many directing their anger squarely at President Barack Obama - marched through the nation's capital Saturday to urge immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.

At least eight people, including activist Cindy Sheehan, were arrested by U.S. Park Police at the end of the march, after laying coffins at a fence outside the White House. Friday marked the seventh anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

"Arrest that war criminal!" Sheehan shouted outside the White House before her arrest, referring to Obama.

At a rally before the march, Sheehan asked whether "the honeymoon was over with that war criminal in the White House" - an apparent reference to Obama

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*Census questions raise privacy, security fears

*Privately-owned Reserve wants to stay watchdog of small banks

*Obama Pays More Than Buffett as U.S. Risks AAA Rating

*Clinton Says U.S. Seeking Iran Sanctions That 'Bite'

*House approves huge changes to student loan program

*Cut off the cash and Israel might behave

*What Has MoveOn Moved On To?

*Chris Hedges: The Health Care Hindenburg Has Landed

*Do women have a place in the US army?



*34% more homeless people sleeping on New York City streets than last year

*Schwarzenegger Approval Rating Falls To Gray Davis Recall Level

*Socialist party crushes in French elections

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