Showing posts with label trying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trying. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Exclusive: Syrian forces trying to secure border areas in Idlib province

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Exclusive: Syrian forces trying to secure border areas in Idlib province

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Unintended Consequences - Creating More Debt by Trying to Make Less

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Unintended Consequences - Creating More Debt by Trying to Make Less

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Paul Ryan still trying to convince us he doesn"t have "a racist bone in my body"

Rep. Paul Ryan at CPAC 2014.
Rep. Paul Ryan. Bones non-racist. Words … different story.


Rep. Paul Ryan continues to self-righteously push back against his racist dog whistles having been recognized for what they are. “I don’t have a racist bone in my body,” he told Bill O’Reilly. (Probably not! But then, racism tends to be carried more in the brain than the bones.) In case you find yourself in danger of being convinced by Ryan’s simplistic assertions that, whatever he may have said, he just isn’t racist, David Corn has rounded up a few examples from Ryan’s history of blowing that particular dog whistle.

There’s the time when, speaking to an audience of Ayn Rand acolytes, Ryan’s solution to “the victimization class” was “trying to recruit a lot of minority legislators to work with us.” That makes pretty clear who he thinks “the victimization class” is. Most crucially, Ryan’s recent finger-pointing at inner-city (read: black) culture is nothing new. In 2012, for instance, he said:


… the best thing to help prevent violent crime in the inner cities is to bring opportunity in the inner cities, is to help people get out of poverty in the inner cities, is to help teach people good discipline, good character.


Please read below the fold for more on this story.



Daily Kos



Paul Ryan still trying to convince us he doesn"t have "a racist bone in my body"

Friday, March 28, 2014

Reporter detained by Capitol Hill police for trying to ask EPA chief a question

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Reporter detained by Capitol Hill police for trying to ask EPA chief a question

How Deficit Hawks Are Trying to Pit Millennials Against Seniors to Attack Social Security and Medicare



A Tea Party congressman calls out greedy Wall Streeters for the ruse.








Generational grievances pitting struggling young millennials against supposedly better-off seniors is creeping back into American politics, fanned by a new wave of deficit hawks who want to undermine public confidence in Social Security and Medicare—as the first step in cutting the social insurance programs.


A string of recent examples—rants from MSNBC’s wealthy young commentator, a notorious elderly-attacking House candidate, think tanks promoted on NPR—generational warfare cheerleaders are proclaiming that America is heading toward an epic and immoral conflict as better-off seniors are robbing millennials of shrinking federal dollars because retirement programs cost too much. That’s simply false, as Social Security is solvent through 2033, and spending as a percentage of GDP is close to where it’s been since 1975, at 21 percent. 


This line of attack isn’t in a political vacuum. It comes as some Democrats are reframing the debate on Social Security and campaigning for increased benefits. Nor is it a new argument, as a right-wing club of libertarians, Wall Street bankers and deficit hawks have tried for decades to undermine and privatize the program. Amazingly, the generational warmongers are not just irking progressives who see shifting political winds; they"re scaring at least one Republican congressman who called out the generational warfare ruse and game plan in fundraising letter.        


Pennsylvania Republican Tom Marino is a former U.S. Attorney and conservative two-term incumbent. His re-election website boasts he is anti-Obamacare, pro-gun, pro-fracking and anti-gay marriage. Yet, the top news item on his website is a letter from Vivian Mae Marino, “to let all of you know that my son, Tom Marino, will save Medicare and strengthen Social Security.”


Why is a 62-year-old Tea Partier calling on mom? Because a generational antagonist bent on sounding “the alarm of gerontocracy, or rule by the elderly,” may run against Marino as an independent in 2014. That self-proclaimed Paul Revere for millennials is Nick Troiano, 24, who co-founded a group supposedly representing young Americans who are losing sleep because they feel Congress is stealing their future by spending on seniors. Never mind that his deficit hawk group spectacularly imploded last month, after e-mails revealed that it couldn’t balance its budget, and had burned through funds from Wall Street billionaire Pete Peterson, the leading Social Security privateer.


“As a college student in Washington, D.C., this individual [Troiano] founded a group called The Can Kicks Back,” Marino’s appeal said. “The Can Kicks Back claimed to be concerned about our nation’s debt and deficit. In reality, it is just another front group funded by Wall Street billionaire Pete Peterson.” Marino’s letter did what Republicans almost never do—unmask other Republicans’ real agenda. “Why are Pete Peterson and Kick The Can Back so dangerous?” he wrote. “Their goal is to increase tax loopholes for the largest corporations in the country and they plan to pay for this corporate giveaway to the Fortune 500 by cutting Social Security benefits for older Americans.”


Marino didn’t stop there. “One commentator recently suggested that The Can Kicks Back’s strategy was, ‘to attempt the enlistment of millennial (young Americans age 18 to 25) in the effort to impoverish their grandparents,” he said. “Within just a day of his announcement, this individual considering running against me claimed that he had already raised $ 10,000. How much of that do you think was from Peterson and other Wall Street fat cats who want to get their hands on your Social Security benefits.”


This spat captures the contours of an old and still looming political fight where centrist Democrats and most Republicans refuse to fortify America’s most popular and widely used social insurance programs by a mix of simple tax increases and more realistic cost-of-living increases. More than 80 percent of Social Security benefits go to people with incomes of less than $ 30,000—and most average less than $ 12,000 a year. Yet faces are appearing on America’s airwaves posing a false analysis and choice: that federal finances are a mess; and that the only fix is depriving seniors of earned social insurance benefits so those funds could be diverted to struggling youths. 


Abby Huntsman, the poised 27-year-old daughter of multi-millionaire 2012 GOP presidential candidate, Jon Huntsman, and a co-host of MSNBC’s millennial-targeted show, “The Cycle,” is a prime example. Two weeks ago, she went into an on-air tizzy about how Social Security would disappear for her peers if older Americans kept getting all the benefits. “At the rate we are spending, the system will be bankrupt by the time you and I are actually eligible to get these benefits,” she declared, citing new Pew Research Center research. “Would you rather have 80 percent of what you have today, or nothing at all?” 


Baby boomers will have to forgive Huntsman for plagiarizing the Beatles—she calls her TV commentary Abby’s Road. But they shouldn’t let her off the hook for wild inaccuracies, Los Angeles Times business columnist Michael Hiltzik noted. Telling her peers that they will get zero when the retire, which is incorrect, so that they will accept a budget deal that would instead lower their eventual retirement benefits, is not looking out for her generation.


On Thursday, Huntsman hit back at Hiltzik, flashing his column on the air, and declaring, “entitlement reform is the most pressing long-term budget decision we have to make as a country. Come on, man! It isn’t about me. It’s about the major problem.” Her solution, needless to say, was cutting Social Security, screening incomes of Medicare recipients, and postponing the onset of that program from age 65 to 67.


The problem is that Huntsman doesn’t understand the real problem—and refuses to consider other options besides spending cuts, as Hiltzik said in a Friday piece. “That’s where she really goes off the rails,” he said, citing her remarks no one is discussing serious options. “We have been debating those options, for years.”


Huntsman is not alone in resurrecting a generational warfare meme. Comedian Bill Maher recited the same incorrect clichés in jokes on his TV show. But more serious is the Pew Research Center report—and a new related book—cited by Huntsman, from ex-Washington Post reporter turned Pew research czar Paul Taylor.


Taylor’s book, The Next America: Boomers, Millennial and The Looming Generational Showdown, is a full-throttled Pew production. It’s packed with facts, figures, graphs, and dire-sounding analysis to support a particular conclusion, which Taylor told NPR. Speaking of Social Security and Medicare, he said, “Everybody who looks at the demographics knows that those systems are going broke within 15 or 20 years and the longer you wait, the more the burden of the solution is going to fall on millennials.”


It’s worth noting that this is the same line that U.S. News and World Report, the pro-business weekly magazine, took in its November 5, 1984 editorial, after President Ronald Reagan, the conservative Republican, and Democratic House Speaker Tip O’ Neill, put together a bill modifying but not privatizing Social Security—as right-wingers had hoped. The magazine called it “nothing less than a massive transfer of wealth from the young, many of them struggling, to the elderly, many of them living comfortably.”


Fast-forward 30 years and Paul Taylor is making the same case on NPR—as an information broker to its educated, influential audience. “I leave this book thinking we have very serious demographically driven challenges,” he said on March 4. “We’ve got to rebalance the social safety net so it’s fair to all generations.” 


Pew isn’t the disinterested wise observer that’s NPR presents. It and the right-wing Laura and John Arnold Foundation have lead a tag team effort to cut back government employee pensions. They recite austerity frames—talking about slashing spending and avoiding other options where wealthy interests would pay more. Taylor is a bit too black and white when he says “everyone” in Washington knows that a retirement safety net crisis will explode in 15 or 20 years. That’s not how liberal economists see it.


“It is striking that NPR is willing to focus so much more attention on the threat to the living standards of millennials presented by a 2-3 percentage point increase in payroll taxes,” blogged Dean Baker, at Washington’s Center for Economic and Policy Research after Taylor’s appearance. That focus ignores the “policies that could lead to much or all of the benefits of productivity growth over the next three decades going to those at the top, as has been the case for the last three decades,” he said, referring to America’s wage and income stagnation.  


When you peel back the details, what’s going on here is simple and not new. Right-wingers—starting at the libertarian Cato Institute which doesn’t want federal social insurance programs to work, going next to Wall Street firms that see a gold mine from privatizing Social Security, and continuing to today’s spokespeople for these interests—want to undermine public confidence in government and push for-profit substitutes. They know that seniors and near-retirees won’t buy into any of this, which is why they have tried for decades—as Republican Congressman Marino’s fundraising letter noted—to create generational grievances pitting America’s young against its elderly.


“I’m not quite a believer in cabals, but that’s sort of what happened,” said Eric Kingson, Syracuse University Professor of Social Work and co-director of Social Security Works, the national advocacy organization. “It [generational warfare] doesn’t take off when people see their parents and their grandparents struggling on fairly minimal income.”


Right Wing History Repeats Itself


Experts who have studied America’s social insurance programs for decades know that cutting Social Security would cause more poor seniors in the future—including today’s millennials. That is because smaller baseline benefits would yield smaller future monthly checks, even after cost-of-living increases. How do they know that? Because in the early 1980s, when Social Security faced a funding shortfall in a bad economy, Congress’s fix ended up shrinking payments to today’s retirees by more than 20 percent, compared to what they would have been if left alone. Three factors did that: increasing income taxes on Social Security benefits, delaying annual cost of living increases every year by six months, and eventually raised the retirement age from 65 to 67.


The losers in that political fight—lead by the Cato Institute and anti-tax Wall Streeters—have been fighting to privatize Social Security ever since. Their best strategy, as laid out in the fall 1983 Cato Journal, was seen as fomenting a generational divide fighting for a shrinking slice of the federal pie. At the same time, they also began to push businesses to replace employee pensions with individual retirement accounts, which, as AlterNet’s Lynn Stuart Parramore has described in detail, have produced far less for retirees.


“We must prepare the political ground so that the fiasco of the last 18 months is not repeated,” Cato Journal’s influential 1983 article, “Achieving A “Leninist” Strategy,” began. “We must begin to divide this [pro-Social Security] coalition and cast doubt on the picture of reality it presents to the general public.” Cato knew who it wanted on its team. It “should consist not only of those who will reap benefits from the IRA-based private system [that a lawyer and columnist Peter J.] Ferrara has proposed, but also the banks, insurance companies, and other institutions that will gain from providing such plans to the public.” 


And Cato knew its target. “The young are the most obvious constituency for reform and a natural ally for the private alternative,” it said. “The overwhelming majority of people in this group have stated repeatedly that they have little or no confidence in the present Social Security system.” Youthful indignation and grievance could be powerful, Cato said, fantasizing about its coming revolution. “Younger workers… would see just how much of a loss they are taking by participating in the program… assuming, for the sake of argument, that they would ever have received those benefits.” 


Needless to say, Social Security has not collapsed as Cato forecast—even though today’s generational warfare arguments are basically repeating 30-year-old rhetoric. The program is solvent under promised benefits through 2033—a half-century after Congress reformed it. Social Security advocates say such longevity is a sign of its great success. But, as was the case in 1983, federal law requires Social Security to pay out only what it takes in. The next funding shortfall is predicted to come in 2033, when benefits would be cut by about 20 percent to Baby Boomers and GenXers if no revenue changes were made. But modest increases in payroll taxes—fifty cents a week for most workers, and raising the cap on how much of one’s annual income is subject to Social Security taxes (the first $ 117,000) would more than offset 2033’s predicted shortfall.


Those simple options, needless to say, are almost never discussed by Cato’s narrative or by its more modern descendents. Cato’s generational warfare script had another dark thread that was developed in a second article the same issue of the Cato Journal, where it suggested that elderly people were more likely to be greedy when the government was signing the check, which amounted to taking money from younger people’s pockets. That feeds rightwing scripts that seniors are immorally stealing federal funds from the young. 


“If transfers to aged parents were purely a family decision, I doubt those among today’s elderly who have accumulated significant wealth would be willing to ask their children for a significant portion of their income,” Marilyn Flowers wrote. “Yet these same individuals seemingly have no qualms about using their political clout to demand through Social Security what is, in an objective sense, the same thing.”   


Back To Reality


There have been many fact-filled rebuttals to these frames—that seniors are taking too large a slice of America’s limited public resources—even as this pro-austerity script has evolved under the more recent deficit hawk banner. It’s key to note what these right-wingers aren’t calling for. They don’t want to cut corporate subsidies or defense spending, nor do they want to pay more in taxes—such as taxing investment income. They’ll cite big numbers on how much is spent on safety nets to scare people, but they don’t mention the even bigger sums spent on corporate welfare. That’s was the striking takeaway from David Sirota’s investigate report on the joint Arnold Foundation and Pew attack on pensions for The Institute for America’s Future and PandoDaily, which prompted WNET, New York City’s largest public television station, to return Arnold’s $ 3.5 million grant and cancel a “Pension Peril” series.   


Social Security defenders like Kingson know that the right’s arguments are simplistic while real life is more complicated. It’s almost impossible to quantify how much money flows from one generation to the next over a lifetime—such as parents raising children and paying for college, helping with a first home down payment or bailing out a child’s bad business decision; to elderly people on the other end not being paid at all for their care giving as their life partners age in their own homes. This reality points to Kingson’s biggest disappointment with today’s political leaders—they aren’t noting how American of all ages are facing intertwined economic struggles.


“Obama’s failure is not building on his promise of we’re in all in this together,” Kingson said. “The concept of all of us being connected and being together leads to policies of compassion, citizenry, decency, dignity. It leads to form social structures that support human beings throughout life. And we as a country aren’t seeing ourselves as being in it together, and nobody is speaking out for that with moral force today.”


“Instead, there’s moral force that’s being exerted from the right in a negative way,” he continued. “They have a narrative that government is falling apart, too much money is being spent, you’re being screwed—and we thought that Obama was going to do this—counter that.”    


But a funny thing is happening as today’s generational warmongers—MSNBC’s Abby Huntsmen, prospective GOP House candidate Nick Troiano, Pew research czar Paul Taylor—are that saying generational conflict is America’s fate.


“What’s so fascinating is there isn’t any tension at the moment,” Taylor told NPR. “You have a generation coming in that isn’t wagging its finger with blame at mom or grandma. In fact, they’re living with mom and grandma… and maybe that’s the best basis upon which to go forward and rebalance our books on Social Security and Medicare.”


In other words, there’s no real generational warfare. There are just new faces touting an old line, which is an opportunistic political attack for sponsors to line their pockets or hobble effective government programs—which is exactly what Republican Rep. Tom Marino wrote in his edgy March 10 fundraising appeal unmasking this rhetorical red herring.


“You will not believe the length to which this community organizer and his Wall Street friends will go to buy a seat in Congress,” Marino’s letter began. It ended, “We’ll let the billionaires know that we mean business when we tell them to keep their hands off the Social Security benefits we have earned.”


 

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How Deficit Hawks Are Trying to Pit Millennials Against Seniors to Attack Social Security and Medicare

How Deficit Hawks Are Trying to Pit Millennials Against Seniors to Attack Social Security and Medicare

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How Deficit Hawks Are Trying to Pit Millennials Against Seniors to Attack Social Security and Medicare

Monday, March 3, 2014

U.S. Media Desperately Trying To Protect Image Of Obama as Putin Outmaneuvers White House….

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U.S. Media Desperately Trying To Protect Image Of Obama as Putin Outmaneuvers White House….

Monday, February 17, 2014

Is Apple Trying to Buy Tesla?


(Newser) – Apple might just be shopping for a certain electric car company, suggests the San Francisco Chronicle, reporting that Tesla’s Elon Musk held a secret meeting last year with the Apple executive in charge of mergers and acquisitions and “probably” CEO Tim Cook. Industry analysts have been floating the idea of such a bold merger for a while, but the Chronicle piece is the first to suggest that it’s gone beyond speculation. “Such a high-level meeting between the two Silicon Valley giants involving their top dealmakers suggests Apple was very much interested in buying the electric car pioneer,” write Thomas Lee and David R. Baker.


A blogger at 9to5mac, however, doubts that Apple wants to buy or that Musk would sell even if it did. Instead, Seth Weintraub writes that Apple is probably more interested in getting in on Tesla’s upcoming “giga factory,” a green venture that aims to double the world’s production of lithium-ion batteries. Tesla is set to announce it soon. The Chronicle story, incidentally, also says Apple is interested in acquiring sensor technology that can predict heart attacks.




Newser



Is Apple Trying to Buy Tesla?

Monday, February 10, 2014

Ask Alyssa: How To Start A Career In Writing By Trying Really Hard

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Ask Alyssa: How To Start A Career In Writing By Trying Really Hard

Monday, December 9, 2013

There Is No Reason To Fear The New World Order Trying To Discredit You


fanof2012
Planet Infowars
December 9, 2013


Many conspiracy theorists fear that saying things about “way out there” conspiracies like the alien cover-up and holographic planes on 9/11 will discredit them simply because humans, by nature, will not believe things that sound too crazy to believe. They also fear that the New World Order will try to discredit conspiracy theorists who talk about these “way out there” subjects just like how the New World Order nitpicks every single mistake conspiracy theorists make to try to discredit them. Well guess what folks, the New World Order is severely discrediting themselves when they do this, so there is no reason to fear the New World Order discrediting you for making mistakes and discussing conspiracy theories that sound too crazy to believe!


In my recent interview with ET contactee and metaphysics expert George Kavassilas, I discussed with George about how his original prediction about Earth ascending into 5D consciousness between the 2012 December solstice and the 2013 March equinox turned out to be wrong (he did retract that prediction in late 2011, but sadly many people didn’t seem to listen and now as a result people try to discredit him.) George told me that he actually wants New World Order forces to try to discredit him because when they do that, they are basically making themselves more out in the open which can wake up more sheeple. He said that by giving the New World Order more “discrediting ammunition,” we can more easily crush the New World Order.


Read more


This post appeared in the Activism category.


All of the views expressed are not necessarily endorsed by Infowars.com.


This article was posted: Monday, December 9, 2013 at 1:04 pm









Infowars



There Is No Reason To Fear The New World Order Trying To Discredit You

There Is No Reason To Fear The New World Order Trying To Discredit You

There Is No Reason To Fear The New World Order Trying To Discredit You
http://www.infowars.com/wp-content/plugins/wp-print/images/printer_famfamfam.gif


fanof2012
Planet Infowars
December 9, 2013


Many conspiracy theorists fear that saying things about “way out there” conspiracies like the alien cover-up and holographic planes on 9/11 will discredit them simply because humans, by nature, will not believe things that sound too crazy to believe. They also fear that the New World Order will try to discredit conspiracy theorists who talk about these “way out there” subjects just like how the New World Order nitpicks every single mistake conspiracy theorists make to try to discredit them. Well guess what folks, the New World Order is severely discrediting themselves when they do this, so there is no reason to fear the New World Order discrediting you for making mistakes and discussing conspiracy theories that sound too crazy to believe!


In my recent interview with ET contactee and metaphysics expert George Kavassilas, I discussed with George about how his original prediction about Earth ascending into 5D consciousness between the 2012 December solstice and the 2013 March equinox turned out to be wrong (he did retract that prediction in late 2011, but sadly many people didn’t seem to listen and now as a result people try to discredit him.) George told me that he actually wants New World Order forces to try to discredit him because when they do that, they are basically making themselves more out in the open which can wake up more sheeple. He said that by giving the New World Order more “discrediting ammunition,” we can more easily crush the New World Order.


Read more


This post appeared in the Activism category.


All of the views expressed are not necessarily endorsed by Infowars.com.


This article was posted: Monday, December 9, 2013 at 1:04 pm









Infowars




Read more about There Is No Reason To Fear The New World Order Trying To Discredit You and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, December 2, 2013

Dem Rep. Ellison: Obama Meant "If You Misunderstood What I Was Trying To Say, I"m Sorry"





REP. KEITH ELLISON (D-MINN.): You know, I just want to say that I think that everything that the president said and did was in pursuit of trying to get Americans, all Americans health care. So I think even though he may have said, if you like your decent insurance, your insurance that works, then you can keep it, I think that people really get that. When — he owned it. He said, look, man, if you misunderstood what I was trying to say, I’m sorry about that.


I think that shows integrity. He didn’t do anything to self-promote. He did — what he was doing he was trying to do — to help Americans all over this country for decades.


REP. TOM COLE (R-OK): I’m going to disagree a little bit–


(CROSSTALK)


ELLISON: Intentions count.


COLE: — with Keith. We knew back in 2009, 2010, this was going to happen. The Congressional Budget Office put out studies about it. We made the points, and we know now the administration had plenty of documents.


(CROSSTALK)


COLE: — were going to lose health care here. So I think this does get to credibility as well as competence.


ELLISON: These plans actually, many of these, these high-deductible, high-exclusion plans, they don’t — they were not quality plans in many cases. And the fact is, they were for a small — they might work for somebody who had a lot of money saved up, but for other folks, they just didn’t. There’s a reason those premiums were low.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Dem Rep. Ellison: Obama Meant "If You Misunderstood What I Was Trying To Say, I"m Sorry"

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Biden Trying to Show US Still Focused on Asia


It’s up to Vice President Joe Biden to show that the U.S. effort to focus more on Asia hasn’t fizzled out.


Biden is set to arrive Monday in Tokyo on a trip to Asia. The region is watching carefully to see how committed the Obama administration is to increasing America’s influence there.


Biden will meet with leaders in Japan, China and South Korea.


He’ll try to show that while the administration has paid great attention to Mideast flare-ups and dealt with a series of domestic distractions, the U.S. still intends to be a Pacific power.


At the same time, several disputes among Asian nations seem to be boiling over, threatening instability in the region. And now China has declared a new maritime air defense zone over the East China Sea.


© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – Politics



Biden Trying to Show US Still Focused on Asia

Democratic Rep: Ohio Republicans actively trying to ‘suppress the voting rights of African-Americans’

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Democratic Rep: Ohio Republicans actively trying to ‘suppress the voting rights of African-Americans’

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Ted Cruz vs. CNN Anchor On Obamacare: "I Appreciate Your Trying To Lecture Me"


CHRIS CUOMO, CNN: Obamacare, the rollout is a fiasco. You say you believe you feel vindicated because to you this proves that you were right about the law, correct?


SEN. TED CRUZ (R-TX): Well, the people who I think are vindicated are the millions of Americans all across this country who spoke up and who said this law isn’t working. It is a disaster, and we’ve seen in recent weeks that what all those millions of Americans were predicting, all of that and more is coming to pass. Already over 5 million Americans have lost their insurance because of Obamacare.


And, you know, three and a half years ago, reasonable minds perhaps could have differed on whether Obamacare would work. Today, that’s not possible. In my view, coming together to stop Obamacare is the essence of pragmatism because it is self-evident this isn’t working. Nobody’s defending it.


And the reasonable common sense thing to do is simply to start over and to say this is killing jobs, and over 5 million people are losing their health insurance, premiums skyrocketing across the country. This isn’t working, let’s start over.


CUOMO: How can we say it’s not working when it isn’t implemented yet? How can you say premiums are skyrocketing when they haven’t put the plans into effect yet? You’re being a little dangerous with how much political spin you put on something that’s so central to the well being of so many families?


CRUZ: Well, I appreciate the adjective you tossed my way.


You know, John Adams famously said facts are stubborn things. Here are some facts: about 100,000 people have signed up and gotten new insurance under Obamacare. About 5 million people have lost their insurance because of Obamacare. Those are facts, and those are real people that can’t be spun away.


You know, when I go back to Texas, I travel the state and I see people all the time who come up to me, men and women across Texas, and they grab me by the shoulder and they’re afraid. They say, “Ted, you know, I just lost my health insurance. I got a child with diabetes. I’m scared. Please stop this from happening.”


Those are real facts.


CUOMO: What do you say to them, Senator? When they say, “Please help me”, what is the fix that you offer them? I looked at the list of bills that you’ve sponsored. There’s not one that offers a solution to the current problems with health care except to get rid of the existing law. Is that enough?


CRUZ: Well, that’s the only solution that will work. All of these Band-Aid fixes that the president is pushing, the congressional Democrats are pushing won’t fix the problem. Every one of those bills, they have great titles, like “if you like your plan you can really, really, really keep them”, but if they were passed into law, it wouldn’t fix the problem for the 5 million people who have lost their health insurance, they wouldn’t get it back.


The way to get — CUOMO: You don’t think you have a responsibility as a U.S. senator to do better than that in terms of offering a solution for what to do next?


CRUZ: Well, I — I appreciate your trying to lecture me in the morning. Thank you for that.


CUOMO: No, not all, Senator. I’m worried, the same as you. Anybody who looks at the situation has worries. Families need health insurance.


CRUZ: So, if you’re worried, did you speak out for the 5 million people who lost your insurance?


CUOMO: Absolutely. We’ve been covering it doggedly. We’ve been covering it doggedly and you know that I’m sure you watch the show. The problem is I don’t have the power to fix it; you do. That’s what a U.S. senator does, is you sponsor law. You know this. It’s not a lecture, it’s a concern.


I’m asking, what are you going to do about it?


CRUZ: Well, and I share that concern and have every day been working to highlight the millions of people who have lost their job because of Obamacare, the millions of people who have been forced into part-time work, there are single moms, there are young people, Hispanics, African-Americans, people struggling who are now on part-time work. You can’t feed your kids with 29 hours a week. There’s over 5 million people who have lost their health insurance.


And the way to fix that is to stop this broken law. It was broken at the outset, and all of the bills that have been proposed by the Democrats, they’re designed to be political Band-Aids. Their effort is to cover their political rear ends, not to fix the problem. And the common sense reasonable thing to say is this thing isn’t working.


Now, in addition to that, you want a positive, affirmative solution? You know, the single best thing we can do is expand competition. Let people purchase health insurance across state lines. If you want to expand access, what you want to do is increase choices and drive down cost.


What Obamacare does is decreases choices and drives up cost. It doesn’t make sense, and it isn’t working.


CUOMO: And how does that –


CRUZ: I’d like to see something that empowers consumers, not Washington bureaucrats.


CUOMO: And I think those are strong ideas that need to be developed as plans. We haven’t really heard them in a great way. That’s what people are waiting for, what are the better ideas, but you do also have to think, how do you deal with the problems of the system as it existed before, pre-existing conditions, caps on service, slow walking of claims, that the insurers had too much power. That was a big part of what this law was about, not to mention the 20 plus million uninsured people. You can’t forget about all that, senator, can you?


CRUZ: I am not remotely forgetting about that, but the tradeoff in this plan was in order to cover roughly 15 million to 20 million people who don’t have insurance, which is about a third of the population that doesn’t have insurance. What Obamacare does is it jeopardizes the health care of 200 million Americans who do have health insurance and it’s a tradeoff that Obamacare made that — you know, the five million who’ve lost their health insurance is just the first shoe to drop.


The next shoe to drop is going to come and it’s coming now that more and more people are going to discover they can’t keep their doctors. Texas oncology, one of the largest oncology providers in Texas just announced it’s not going to participate in Obamacare. I have friends who are cancer survivors, who have discovered they can’t keep going to their doctors.


The next shoe to drop is small businesses and small plans are going to begin canceling plans in large numbers, and after that, you’re going to see premiums this spring go up dramatically because so few people are signing up and the final shoe to drop is there are roughly 140 million Americans in large plans by employer-provided health care and up to 100 million of them may lose their health care because of Obamacare. I think that’s unacceptable.


CUOMO: And that’s why we need solutions and what I want to ask you here before I let you go to get back to the work in Washington, Senator, is going forward, are you willing to work together with other members of Congress to find solutions instead of shutting down the government, to help find laws that fix debt, that deal with fiscal crises we have coming, that deal with health care. Will you do more than just fight and oppose?


CRUZ: Let’s be very clear from day one. I’ve been willing to work with anyone, Republicans or Democrats. I don’t think we should have shut down the government. The reason there was a government shutdown is President Obama and the Democrats refused to negotiate, refused to compromise, refused to do anything about the millions of people being hurt from Obamacare and let me give you an example of working together that is before the Senate just today.


I am a co-sponsor with New York’s Democratic senator, Kirsten Gillibrand, of an amendment to change how sexual assault is prosecuted in the military. Sexual assault has been a terrible crisis in the military. Our military commanders have worked hard to fix it, and yet, it has persisted. Senator Gillibrand has proposed changing the way sexual assault cases are prosecuted so there’s a decision to prosecute would be made by an impartial military prosecutor.


I’m a co-sponsor with her and we’re working hard to build a bipartisan coalition so that we can make sure the men and women of our military are protected and safe and not victims of violence at home. Their job, their responsibility in what they step forward to do is to protect our nation.


CUOMO: That is great. And as you know, the members of that constituency wish it hadn’t taken this long, but it’s great to see the bipartisanship. Is this your green eggs and ham moment, perhaps, Senator where you’ve now tried it and it turns out that you like it? You like working with members from the other side and you can get to work on finding solutions instead of just opposing Obamacare and helping with debt relief?


CRUZ: See, you’re starting with the premise that I’ve just opposed Obamacare. I am happy to work with everyone. My top priority in office is restoring economic growth bringing back jobs and the reason is simple.


That’s the top priority of 26 million Texans and I’m happy to work with anyone to do that, throughout the Obamacare fight, throughout the shutdown, I was reaching out to Democrats saying let’s work together to provide meaningful relief for the millions of people who are being hurt because of Obamacare, and what President Obama and the Democrats said is we will not negotiate, we will not compromise.


In fact, President Obama invited all of the Senate Republicans over to the White House in the middle of the shutdown. We all sat there. He called us in a room and said, ‘I called you over here to tell you I’m not going to negotiate; I’m not going to compromise on anything.’ That’s not reasonable. That’s not how you get anything done. I think it is clear and I wish they would stop being partisan in how they approach that.


CUOMO: That is clear, but certainly, that is the wish for both sides. We all know that the shutdown didn’t work. It punished families unfairly. I know you know that. Hopefully, we don’t see a repeat of it. I appreciate you coming on the show this morning, senator.


CRUZ: It’s good to be with you.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Ted Cruz vs. CNN Anchor On Obamacare: "I Appreciate Your Trying To Lecture Me"

Friday, November 15, 2013

Ezra Klein: WH Trying To Buy Time Until People Realize Obamacare Offers Better Insurance





LAWRENCE O’DONNELL: What you heard from today from the White House about how the president hopes to fix this situation. What’s your reading of how that will work?


EZRA KLEIN: It isn’t a fix. And part it’s not a fix because the situation actually isn’t that broken. What’s broken is another part of the law. So, what he said today, the new policy he’s got coming out, you’re basically dealing with an optional opportunity for insurers to keep putting forward plans that are not going to be profitable for them any longer. And the president really rolled over on insurance today and then fundamentally they are responding to a new set of rules that the Affordable Care Act brings out.


The idea that it’s kind of up to them now, I don’t think is actually all that accurate. I mean, some of them will take the opportunity to extended the plan for an extra year, but for a lot of them it’s not going all that profitable to do so because they simply would have to send out the cancelation notices a year later. They would have to reconstruct infrastructure around the plans in the meantime.


The problem, ultimately, is that the fundamental machinery of the law, mainly Healthcare.gov and the digital architecture it stands atop, is that it is still not working. It is that fundamental problem where people having their plans being canceled, if they can see, often times that they could get better insurance, they can’t see that now. I think fundamentally the White House is trying to buy time until those people can see that.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Ezra Klein: WH Trying To Buy Time Until People Realize Obamacare Offers Better Insurance

Friday, November 1, 2013

Israel lobby trying to ‘undermine’ Iran nuclear talks – Press TV

Israel has been trying to “undermine” ongoing nuclear negotiations between Iran and the world powers by putting more pressure on the United States to toughen sanctions against Tehran, an analyst says.



Link for the four minute audio interview is here. Embed would not work for some reason.


342x256_JimDeanPressTV

342x256_JimDeanPressTV



___________________________


In an interview with Press TV on Thursday, Veterans Today columnist Jim Dean said there are some efforts by the Israel lobby in the US for using “military option” against Iran.


However, he said, the United States is now focusing on the peace in the Middle East because it is “critical” to Washington’s “economic survival.”


The US Senate is ratcheting up pressure on the White House to tighten sanctions against Iran in line with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s demand for more pressure against Tehran.


On Monday, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Robert Menendez (D-NJ) said that the Senate aims to cut Iran’s current oil exports to 500,000 barrels per day.


Iran held nuclear talks with the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany in Geneva earlier this month. The two sides are set to meet again in Geneva on November 7-8.


Meanwhile, US Secretary of State John Kerry defended the talks with Iran in an apparent rejection of Netanyahu’s demand for more pressure against Tehran.


The top US diplomat said “some have suggested that somehow there’s something wrong” with giving diplomacy a chance. “We will not succumb to those fear tactics and forces that suggest otherwise,” Kerry said.



________________________________




Veterans Today



Israel lobby trying to ‘undermine’ Iran nuclear talks – Press TV

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Maddening: Trying to log onto federal health care site



GETTING NOWHERE: Potential customers in New Mexico for individual coverage by the federal government plan still have major problems creating accounts.



By Rob Nikolewski │ New Mexico Watchdog


SANTA FE – Dear readers, you may recall that on Tuesday — the first day of the rollout of the new health care law — I posted a story on my attempt to get information on what  individual health care coverage I was eligible for here in New Mexico.


I already have insurance through my employer, but like many in my state, I’m curious to compare what I’m paying for now with what I could get through the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange.


On Tuesday, I couldn’t get an answer. Nothing has changed in the last three days.


The NMHIX can handle accounts from small businesses. Officials at NMHIX boasted on Tuesday it had signed up 29 small businesses in the first 45 minutes of operation, and that by midday about 100 had enrolled.


But if you want information for individual accounts, NMHIX directs you to the federal government’s website, www.healthcare.gov.


That website features a smiling young woman and this headline:


healthcare.gov smiling woman


The page may say, “The Health Insurance Marketplace is Open!” but on Tuesday, I couldn’t create an account because, while filling out the application process, the drop boxes on the security questions didn’t work.


As has been mentioned in stories across the country, the healthcare.gov site was plagued with glitches.


So, now that three days have passed, I tried again.


I logged on at 10:49 a.m. Friday, saw the smiling woman and clicked on “Apply Now.” Up popped:


healthcare.gov we have a lot of visitors


After 14 minutes, the site took to me the “Let’s Get Started” page. I started filling out the necessary information — name, address, email, etc. — to create an account.


This time, I was able to get to the security questions and the drop boxes actually worked. Great, it looked like I was on my way.


But after filling out the three security questions, up popped:


healthcare.gov security question problem


I thought I filled out the questions correctly, but nevertheless I returned to the account page and tried again.


After filling out the boxes a second time, I got the same message.


So I called the NMHIX hotline again (hold times are shorter than on the federal number) and this time, I talked to an operator named Deborah.


“Am I doing something wrong when I fill out the security questions?” I asked.


“No, the security questions are not working,” she said. “They tell us it could be two to three weeks before they get it fixed.” ”They” meaning the fed’s www.healthcare.gov site.


Apparently, some applicants get as far as I did before the system freezes up, but Deborah said others don’t.


She said I could click on the “Chat” button to let the feds know about my issue. I did, where after a nine-minute wait, a chat operator named Salina came online.


I apologize for the inconvenience,” she wrote. “We are aware of the issues and we are working in resolving them.” 


Salina offered no time line for clearing up the glitches. “…Unfortunately, I do not have that information…Again, I apologize for the inconvenience,” she wrote.


After my story Tuesday, a couple of New Mexico Watchdog readers relayed similar stories. Bob in Santa Fe wrote to tell me his son thought he had created an account but:


“After about 15 minutes, he signed onto his account, found the email, and clicked on the link. Nothing happened for several minutes.  Then a message came up saying that too much time had elapsed, so this account was canceled! I tried again, but we were back to square one. I did get through, but after I had entered all of the information, a message told me that the system was down. Twice!”



Another reader, John, left me this comment: “I have been able to at least to get log-in information but so far have not been able to connect — the system says wait as we have heavy traffic, guess everyone else is attempting to check out health insurance at 4 and 5 AM. Looks they got  the slowest dial up speed they could!!”


We’re not alone, but that’s little consolation.


I’ll try again in a couple of days.


Contact Rob Nikolewski at rnikolewski@watchdog.org and follow him on Twitter @robnikolewski



Please, feel free to “steal our stuff”! Just remember to credit Watchdog.org. Find out more



Watchdog.org



Maddening: Trying to log onto federal health care site

Monday, September 9, 2013

Obama trying to sway war-weary public on Syria







US Secretary of State John Kerry speaks during a news conference with Britain’s Foreign Minister William Hague at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London, Monday, Sept. 9, 2013. Kerry said Syria’s President Bashar Assad could resolve the crisis surrounding a chemical weapons attack simply by turning over “every single bit” of his weapons stock to the international community within a week. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, Pool)





US Secretary of State John Kerry speaks during a news conference with Britain’s Foreign Minister William Hague at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London, Monday, Sept. 9, 2013. Kerry said Syria’s President Bashar Assad could resolve the crisis surrounding a chemical weapons attack simply by turning over “every single bit” of his weapons stock to the international community within a week. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, Pool)





US Secretary of State John Kerry speaks during a news conference with Britain’s Foreign Minister William Hague at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London, Monday, Sept. 9, 2013. Kerry said Syria’s President Bashar Assad could resolve the crisis surrounding a chemical weapons attack simply by turning over “every single bit” of his weapons stock to the international community within a week. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, Pool)





Britain Foreign Secretary William Hague, left, greets US Secretary of State John Kerry outside the Foreign Office in London,Monday, Sept. 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, Pool)





Britain Foreign Secretary William Hague waits to greet US Secretary of State John Kerry outside the Foreign Office in London, Monday, Sept. 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, Pool)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — President Barack Obama is hitting the airwaves to try to convince Americans that limited strikes against Syria are needed for the United States’ long-term safety, while Secretary of State John Kerry is vehemently defending the case against President Bashar Assad, saying his denial of chemical weapons use is “contradicted by fact.”


Obama on Monday planned to make his case for punishing Assad for what the United States argues was his decision to use chemical weapons against his own people — a charge Assad denied in a new interview.


Assad warned of retaliation against the U.S. for any military strike in Syria. “You should expect everything,” Assad said in the interview aired Monday on CBS’ “This Morning.”


Asked if he was making a threat of a direct military response to an attack, Assad was vague, saying at one point, “I am not fortune teller to tell you what’s going to happen.” He added: “It’s not only the government (that’s) the only player in this region. You have different parties. You have different factions. You have different ideology. You have everything in this region now. So you have to expect that.”


Obama administration officials, meanwhile, planned more classified briefings on Capitol Hill. And White House national security adviser Susan Rice is scheduled to speak at a Washington think tank timed to the public relations blitz aimed at ensuring people the administration isn’t contemplating another commitment like Iraq and Afghanistan.


In the new interview, Assad told American journalist Charlie Rose there is no conclusive evidence about who is to blame for the chemical weapons attacks and again suggested the rebels were responsible. Rose said Assad also warned him previous U.S. military efforts in the region have proved disastrous.


And Assad argued the evidence Kerry has disclosed amounts to a “big lie” that resembles the case for war in Iraq that Secretary of State Colin Powell made to the United Nations over a decade ago.


Appearing Monday at a news conference in London with British Foreign Secretary William Hague, Kerry said of Assad: “What does he offer? Words that are contradicted by fact.”


“We know that his regime gave orders to prepare for a chemical attack. We know they deployed forces,” the secretary said. He added that the United States knows “where the rockets came from and where they landed … and it was no accident that they all came from regime -controlled territory and all landed” in opposition-held territory.


“So the evidence is powerful and the question for all of us is, what are we going to do about it. Turn our backs? Have a moment of silence?”


He said that if Assad wanted to defuse the crisis, “he could turn every single bit of his chemical weapons over to the international community” within a week. But he said that Assad “isn’t about to do it.”


Pressed further on Assad’s denials, Kerry said, “I just answered that. I just gave you real evidence. Evidence that as a former prosecutor in the United States I could take into a courtroom and get admitted.”


Meanwhile, Russian and Syrian foreign ministers said they will push for the return of United Nations inspectors to Syria to continue their probe into the use of chemical weapons. Russia’s Sergey Lavrov said after Monday’s talks with his Syrian counterpart Walid al-Moallem that Moscow will continue to promote a peaceful settlement and may try to convene a gathering of all Syrian opposition figures who are interested in peaceful settlement.


Lavrov said that a U.S. attack on Syria will deal a fatal blow to peace efforts.


Obama plans a series of interviews Monday and will meet with Senate Democrats Tuesday to seek support for U.S. military action against the government of Syria, according to two Senate Democratic aides. The meeting at the Capitol would come just hours before Obama addresses the nation in a prime-time speech on Syria from the White House.


Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is scheduled to speak Monday at a White House event on wildlife trafficking, planned to reiterate her support of Obama’s efforts to pass the Syria resolution, according to a Clinton aide who spoke on condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to speak publicly.


With Congress set to have its first votes authorizing limited strikes into Syria as early as Wednesday, Obama and his allies were arguing that the United States needs to remind hostile nations such as Iran and North Korea of American military might while working to reassure the nation that the lessons of the last decade were fresh in their minds.


“It is not Iraq, Afghanistan or Libya,” White House chief of staff Denis McDonough said Sunday during one of his five network television interviews. “This is a very concerned, concentrated, limited effort that we can carry out and that can underscore and secure our interests.”


But McDonough conceded the administration lacks “irrefutable, beyond-a-reasonable-doubt evidence” that skeptical Americans, including lawmakers who will start voting on military action this week, are seeking.


“It’s an uphill slog,” said Rep. Mike Rogers, the Republican chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, who supports strikes on Assad. “I think it’s very clear he’s lost support in the last week,” Rogers added, speaking of the president.


A survey by The Associated Press shows that House members who are staking out positions are either opposed to or leaning against Obama’s plan for a military strike by more than a 6-1 margin.


“Lobbing a few Tomahawk missiles will not restore our credibility overseas,” said Rep. Mike McCaul, the Texas Republican who chairs the House Homeland Security Committee.


Added Rep. Loretta Sanchez, D-Calif.: “For the president to say that this is just a very quick thing and we’re out of there, that’s how long wars start.”


Despite public backing from leaders of both parties to strike, almost half of the 433 current members in the House and a third of the 100-member Senate remain undecided, the AP survey found. They will be the subject of intense lobbying from the administration — as well as outside groups that have formed coalitions that defy the traditional left-right divide.


Public opinion surveys show intense American skepticism about military intervention in Syria, even among those who believe Syria’s government used chemical weapons on its people.


The United States, citing intelligence reports, says the lethal nerve agent sarin was used in an Aug. 21 attack outside Damascus, and that 1,429 people died, including 426 children.


Top administration officials, including Kerry, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power, planned to brief lawmakers ahead of the Wednesday vote on a resolution that would authorize the “limited and specified use” of U.S. armed forces against Syria for no more than 90 days.


The measure bars American ground troops from combat. A final vote is expected at week’s end and the House is expected to take up the issue the following week.


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Follow Philip Elliott on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/philip_elliott


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Associated Press writers Jim Kuhnhenn and Ken Thomas contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Obama trying to sway war-weary public on Syria