Wednesday, May 12, 2010
This Poem Moved Me to Tears...
http://jezebel.com/5535538/happiness-really-isnt-thathappy
Thursday, May 6, 2010
This Happens in America
If you don't think that women are at risk of hard-nose tactics, consider this: Just two years ago Juana Villegas was arrested for a routine traffic violation in Nashville after leaving a clinic for a pre-natal visit and detained when she was unable to produce a license. Despite the fact that driving without a license is a misdemeanor in Tennessee that generally leads to a citation, Ms. Villegas was taken into custody due to suspicions about her immigration status.
Ms. Villegas was jailed for six days, during which time she gave birth to a little boy while shackled to a bed under the watchful eye of the sheriff's officer. Barred from speaking to her husband, her baby was taken from her upon birth, leading to a number of health repercussions for both mother and baby. Local police stood by their actions, calling Nashville "a friendly and open city to our new legal residents." In a chilling display of Nashville's "friendliness," local police also confiscated Villegas' breast pump.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Health Care
It addresses a bit of the problem with the employer-based health care model as a whole by encouraging small businesses to offer insurance while mitigating the cost to those businesses by offering a tax deduction, and mitigates the effect of the profit motive of large insurance companies on national health by taxing those companies whose administrative costs (read: executive compensation packages) exceed a certain percentage of their operating budget.
This is why health care goes hand in hand with financial reform and student loan reform. To avoid that latter provision about administrative costs having the unintended consequence of premiums actually rising as that tax gets passed onto consumers, executive pay needs to come down across the board so that lower compensation packages at insurance companies won't lead to a brain drain at the companies to whom we are entrusting the health of our nation. (I.e. That tax needs to be borne by the executives, not the consumers, but compensation should be competitive even if it includes a public service component.)
Student loan reform comes in as we need to mobilize our economy to pay for these reforms, given the good chance that despite OMB projections, health care reform may cause a net increase in the deficit (and almost certainly will over the short term). More students in college with less debt takes the long view of our economic health as a nation. That's assuming that the gov't can in fact make student loans better without the middle man, and I don't know what the projections are for the short term consequences to the banking sector.
Nevertheless, the economic picture for our country is not pretty over the short term no matter which way you paint it (and the banking sector has been resilient despite the creative destruction of some of its members), and this looks better than the status quo to me.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
A Little Note Since It's Been A While
This article rang a little hollow to me since I read it after looking at photos of Gawker Media's NSFW party, filled with glossy thin white flat-ironed women with whom I can't relate any better than if they were supermodels. That was more damaging to my self image for the day than looking at LOVE's naked cover girls. A place like Gawker Media, to which I would actually look for role models, is apparently just as inaccessible to me as Wilhelmina.