Showing posts with label Winning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winning. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2014

How can politicians make Obamacare the winning message? It’s in the polls.


Everyday Americans get up in the morning and go to work. They provide their services to companies and corporations. In return they expect a living wage. They expect that their work entitles them to financial security and healthcare security. For thirty plus years both have been eroding.

When President Obama ran for president in 2008 he understood that the root of every American’s economic security laid with ensuring every American would have access to affordable health care. He knew a single-payer health care system was the most effective system. However he was pragmatic enough to settle for RomneyCare on Viagra to begin the codification of health care as a right.


The reason health care reform has always eluded presidents of the past is because of ideological rigidity. President Obama minimized his ideological rigidity to the consternation of his left flank to get an imperfect law that will ultimately get improved. A few months ago I wrote a piece that placed this into context:


The genius in achieving the passage of Obamacare is immediately evident after reading the transcribed talk titled “A Brief History: Universal Health Care Efforts in the US” given by Karen S. Palmer MPH, MS in San Francisco at the Spring, 1999 Physicians For A National Health Program (PNHP) meeting. The talk revealed the headwinds that have blown over every President attempting to pass some form of universal healthcare. Doctor associations, insurance industry, unions, and other groups have always created opposition in some combination that guaranteed failure. She described the reason for failure as follows.

Political naiveté on the part of the reformers in failing to deal with the interest group opposition, ideology, historical experience, and the overall political context all played a key role in shaping how these groups identified and expressed their interests.


In effect, the very compromises President Obama has been knocked for are the compromises that allowed the passage of the Affordable Care Act. It was a running start that will need modification. The president is cognizant of this fact and he stated that much in the State Of The Union Speech on January 25th, 2011.



Please read below the fold for more on this story.



Daily Kos



How can politicians make Obamacare the winning message? It’s in the polls.

Friday, March 14, 2014

Ron Paul is Winning in Virginia!

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Ron Paul is Winning in Virginia!

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Paul: Women winning "War on Women"



Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul said Sunday that women are winning the so-called “War on Women,” and that political rhetoric from the left that paints Republicans as anti-women prevents lawmakers from working on policies that help move the country forward.


“The whole thing of ‘The War on Women,’ I sort of laughingly say, ‘Yeah, there might have been — but the women are winning it,’” the potential 2016 Republican presidential contender said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”


 ”Over half of the young people in medical school and dental school are women, law school the same way. I think women are doing very well, and I’m proud of how far we’ve come. And I think some of the victimology and all of this other stuff is trumped up. We don’t get to any good policy by playing some sort of charade that somehow one party doesn’t care about women or one party is not in favor of women advancing.”


He was responding to a question from CNN’s Candy Crowley, who had asked him about former GOP presidential candidate Mike Huckabee’s controversial comments last week.


Huckabee said at the winter meeting of the Republican National Committee: “If the Democrats want to insult the women of America by making them believe that they are helpless without Uncle Sugar coming in and providing for them a prescription each month for birth control because they cannot control their libido or their reproductive system without the help of the government, then so be it — Let’s take that discussion all across America.”


Crowley asked whether Paul thinks Republicans need to address their “words and tone” when reaching out to women and minorities.


“Somewhat,” Paul said. “And I think also a lot of the debates we have in Washington and in the public, generally, are dumbed down. They’re mischaracterized and we get to the point where we’re talking about stuff and throwing stuff back and forth and we’re never getting to the truth.”


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POLITICO – TOP Stories



Paul: Women winning "War on Women"

Thursday, December 26, 2013

10 Crazy Things More Likely Than Winning The Lottery

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10 Crazy Things More Likely Than Winning The Lottery

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Immigration Reformers Are Winning August

immigrationmarch.banner.ap.jpg

Activists lead a march in favor of immigration reform in Sacramento, California, last week. (Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press)

Activists opposed to immigration reform were all set to spend this month putting pressure on lawmakers to kill the legislation. But it hasn’t exactly been a show of force.


Last week, the Tea Party Patriots and NumbersUSA, two groups opposed to “amnesty” legislation, heavily publicized a rally in Richmond, Virginia, featuring Steve King, the firebrand Republican congressman who recently claimed most undocumented youth are physically fit drug mules. But only a few dozen people showed up — far short of the hundreds organizers had planned for.


Journalists posted photos of a lonely-looking King under a gazebo in a mostly empty public park. A reporter for Breitbart News, Matthew Boyle, tweeted, “If grassroots wants to kill #Amnesty they have to show up. #teaparty they are not here in Richmond.”


steveking650.jpg

@seungminkim/Twitter

Activists on both sides of the immigration debate had put heavy emphasis on the importance of flexing grassroots muscle during this month of congressional recess. The idea is to show Republicans in the House of Representatives, which hasn’t settled on a path forward on the issue, where the most passionate support lies. And as August winds down, the Richmond event seems indicative of the overall trend. Hundreds of immigrant advocates have appeared at rallies and town halls across the country. But the other side, the opponents, have been mostly absent.


Hundreds of reform advocates recently rallied at the Bakersfield, California, office of Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the House GOP whip. (A local television station put the number at “more than 1,000“; Breitbart reported it was about 400, mostly “Mexican in origin,” and noted the presence of “about two dozen counter-demonstrators.”) More than 500 pro-reform activists, including the mayor of Springfield, Ohio, and local clergy, showed up at Speaker John Boehner’s district office. The Washington Times counted about 60 pro-reform activists calling on Rep. Frank Wolf in Herndon, Virginia. They marched through the streets of Asheboro, North Carolina, and gathered alongside the Catholic diocese in Salt Lake City. In Corpus Christi, Texas, a Republican congressman, Blake Farenthold, took to Twitter to beseech opponents to show up and counter the 10,000 pro-reform petitions that activists delivered to his office.


Anti-immigration-reform groups were hard pressed to come up with evidence of similar grassroots fervor for their side. Indeed, many of the examples they cited seemed to show the opposite. A NumbersUSA organizer passed along footage from a town hall where Kansas Rep. Lynn Jenkins was asked repeatedly about immigration; all the questioners in the clip are pro-reform, but booing rumbles through the crowd as they speak. At a town hall for Rep. Karen Bass, the California Democrat is asked about an unrelated piece of legislation that would deport “illegal alien gang members” (and explains why she opposes it). In Elkhorn, Nebraska, Republican Lee Terry is asked, “Will we see a path to citizenship in the immigration bill?” as DREAM Act activists are shown in a local television report.


Anti-reform groups appear to be canceling events for lack of participation. The Tea Party Patriots once boasted of summer rallies in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Dallas; and South Carolina, but they’ve disappeared from the calendar on the group’s website. Another anti-immigration-reform group, the Black American Leadership Alliance, had planned a nine-city “We Are America Tour,” but had to drop half the stops. “Dear friends, it is with deep regret that I must inform you all that we had to drop several rallies,” an organizer wrote on Facebook, in a post that has since been removed but was spotted and preserved by the pro-reform group America’s Voice. “We were unable to get organizers for the following: Miami, FL., Chicago, IL., Roanoke, VA., and Wisconsin. The Ohio rally is still going to happen, but not under the “Tour” title. FAIR is leading that rally. That leaves us with 4 rallies. Phoenix, AZ. Richmond, VA. And rallies in Houston, and Dallas, TX. Even the rallies in Houston, and Richmond, VA, are not completely confirmed at this time.”


balascreenshot.jpg

Courtesy of America’s Voice

FAIR stands for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, a Washington-based group that opposes legal and illegal immigration. In a Washington Post article last week, the group’s communications director acknowledged being outgunned by activists for the other side. “It’s a staggering, well-financed hard push by the left and the right,” Bob Dane told the Post.


A Black American Leadership Alliance representative was unavailable for comment. The Tea Party Patriots’ national coordinator, Jenny Beth Martin, told me the disappearing rallies were not “set in stone,” so their listings were removed until they could be finalized. Martin also told ABC News that Tea Party activists are more focused on the push to defund Obamacare than on defeating immigration reform. Roy Beck, the executive director of NumbersUSA, which claims to be the largest grassroots group against citizenship for undocumented immigrants, previously told me his group was gearing up for a major August mobilization, but in an interview Monday he denied that was ever the goal. “We did not try to organize anything massive,” he said.


NumbersUSA has alerted its members to 181 past events, with 70 more scheduled for this week and 142 still to come, involving more than 100 Republican members of Congress. Members have reported back to the group that they felt they were in the majority at 90 percent of the events, Beck told me, based on the way the audience rumbled and booed.


As for the poorly attended Richmond rally, Beck acknowledged it was disappointing, but blamed the lack of turnout on a bad location choice. “We picked a spot that, it turns out, has the highest homicide rate in the city, and apparently a lot of people were afraid to come,” he said. Beck seemed to associate this danger with the African-American population: “We wanted to be there at a place where we could talk about the huge population of descendants of slavery who have never yet been part of the American Dream,” he said. “But sometimes passion and principles get in the way of practicality.”


Beck admitted that his side is not as galvanized as activists were in May of 2007, when an outpouring of grassroots anger — directed by NumbersUSA — helped derail the last immigration-reform push. But that’s because reform has less chance of passing this time, so activists are less concerned, he said. “This year, it’s very much like there’s a wildfire out there coming for your town, but everybody knows there’s a reservoir between the fire and your town, and that’s the House of Representatives,” he said. “Everybody has been told by the media the bill is dead on arrival in the House.”


In any case, Beck said, all the rallies in the world won’t do reform advocates any good if Republican members of Congress aren’t taking positions in favor of reform, and that’s not happening in a major way. McCarthy said he was for a piecemeal approach, with border security coming first. Tennessee Rep. Scott DesJarlais, confronted by an 11-year-old girl whose father faces deportation, told her it was brave of her to speak, but “we have laws, and we need to follow those laws,” to applause from the audience. Virginia Rep. Bob Goodlatte, who as chairman of the Judiciary Committee is something of a gatekeeper for immigration policy, reiterated that he does not believe the undocumented should get a “special pathway to citizenship” not available to would-be legal immigrants.


“August is so much more important to the pro-[comprehensive immigration reform] side than to us,” Beck said. “They really had to change a lot of minds. Our job is to hold people where they are …. We’re just feeling that the line has been held.”


Advocates of immigration reform say Beck is moving the goalposts. They count 23 Republican members of Congress who have come out in support of a path to citizenship, including many for the first time this month.


“I knew we were going to do really well [mobilizing people]; I just didn’t think the other side wouldn’t show up,” said Frank Sharry, the longtime immigration-reform advocate who heads America’s Voice. “In 2007, they were formidable. You could argue they kicked our ass. They generated a huge volume of opposition to the bill, and it was a big factor in our defeat.”


To Sharry, the rapidly forming takeaway from this August’s political-organizing battle is that opponents of immigration reform are a paper tiger.


Before the recess, “there was a sense that immigration reform was going to be a hot topic, and Republicans would come back telling leadership we want no part of it,” Sharry said. “If anything, you have more and more members saying, ‘We’ve got to do this.’ That’s a surprising and welcome development.”


Sharry agreed with Beck that attendance at town halls is not the same as votes in Congress. But, he said, “I think it shows that at this point, the forces for reform — left, right, and center — are much stronger than the forces opposing reform. I think we’re more likely to come into September with momentum than they are, and that’s not what many would have predicted just a few short weeks ago.”






    








Master Feed : The Atlantic



Immigration Reformers Are Winning August

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Lottery Legend Has Seen A Lot Of Winning Tickets





In this 2011 photo, Tennessee Education Lottery President and CEO Rebecca Paul Hargrove and her finance officer, Andy Davis, stand after completing a presentation to a state Senate task force in Nashville.



Erik Schelzig/AP

In this 2011 photo, Tennessee Education Lottery President and CEO Rebecca Paul Hargrove and her finance officer, Andy Davis, stand after completing a presentation to a state Senate task force in Nashville.



In this 2011 photo, Tennessee Education Lottery President and CEO Rebecca Paul Hargrove and her finance officer, Andy Davis, stand after completing a presentation to a state Senate task force in Nashville.


Erik Schelzig/AP



Life took a dramatic turn last week for 16 co-workers from a New Jersey town hit hard by Hurricane Sandy. The employees of a government garage in Ocean County reportedly have one of three winning tickets in the $ 448 million Powerball jackpot announced Wednesday.


Will their lives change for the better? Or will they end up like many lottery winners, losing the money, their relationships and their for sense of self?


Ask Rebecca Paul Hargrove. She’s a lottery legend, but not because she hit a big jackpot. Hargrove is president and CEO of the Tennessee Education State Lottery Corporation, and before that, she launched the lotteries in Florida and Georgia in the 1980s and ’90s.


“I’ve met hundreds of winners in my almost-30 years in the business, and what I’ve found is people really don’t change much,” Hargrove tells Weekend Edition Sunday host Rachel Martin from her hometown of Nashville, Tenn. “If they were unhappy before they won, they’re still unhappy. If they saved money before they won they still save money.”


They pay off bills, buy a house and a car, perhaps take a grand vacation. But most, she says, “they say to me, the best thing about winning is security for their children’s future.”


Interview Highlights


Do lotteries prey on lower income people who can’t really afford to play week after week?


“I think that is one of the myths that has been perpetrated year after year after year after year. Let’s just take Tennessee. We did close to $ 1.4 billion last year. There are about 6 million people in the state. And you take the number of people over the age of 18 and divide it into a billion four, and it just can’t be poor people who are buying. The numbers don’t work. People from all walks of life buy tickets.”


Why do lotteries have such universal appeal?


“The last Gallup poll I read said that 76 percent of the population of the United States thought a lottery was a responsible way to raise needed revenue, as opposed to raising your taxes. And it’s a fun way to raise those needed revenues.”


In many states the money is earmarked for education. Is that how it gets actually spent?


“In the states where it goes to education, absolutely. But it funds different types of education. In Illinois, the common school fund when to K-12 education. And sometimes as has been the case in other states where dollars went to K-12 education they became replacement dollars, rather than enhancement dollars.


“In 1992, when then-governor Zell Miller ran for governor, he wanted to bring a lottery to Georgia that made a difference. That was the beginning of what is now very famous, and that’s Hope Scholarships. You graduate from a Georgia high school with a B average, and the lottery pays your way to school, tuition, books and fees. So when Tennessee started their lottery 10 years ago, and they saw what a difference it made in higher education in Georgia, they copied the Georgia model. So it’s pretty special.”




News



Lottery Legend Has Seen A Lot Of Winning Tickets

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Hitler Is Winning


Charles Burris
lewrockwell.com
June 8, 2013



Two superb articles posted on the Consortiumnews.com website make for fascinating reading. They are “How Wall St. Bailed Out the Nazis,” by Jerry Meldon, and “Hitler’s Shadow Reaches toward Today,” by Robert Parry. This is an important story I have intensively followed since I first read Carl Oglesby’s seminal book, The Yankee and Cowboy War, in 1976 which described the Gehlen organization’s penetration of the American intelligence services. For more books which relate to this topic, consult this Amazon book list (particularly items #23 through 40).


This article was posted: Saturday, June 8, 2013 at 12:28 pm


Tags: big brother, domestic news










Infowars



Hitler Is Winning

Hitler Is Winning


Charles Burris
lewrockwell.com
June 8, 2013



Two superb articles posted on the Consortiumnews.com website make for fascinating reading. They are “How Wall St. Bailed Out the Nazis,” by Jerry Meldon, and “Hitler’s Shadow Reaches toward Today,” by Robert Parry. This is an important story I have intensively followed since I first read Carl Oglesby’s seminal book, The Yankee and Cowboy War, in 1976 which described the Gehlen organization’s penetration of the American intelligence services. For more books which relate to this topic, consult this Amazon book list (particularly items #23 through 40).


This article was posted: Saturday, June 8, 2013 at 12:28 pm


Tags: big brother, domestic news










Infowars



Hitler Is Winning

Hitler Is Winning


Charles Burris
lewrockwell.com
June 8, 2013



Two superb articles posted on the Consortiumnews.com website make for fascinating reading. They are “How Wall St. Bailed Out the Nazis,” by Jerry Meldon, and “Hitler’s Shadow Reaches toward Today,” by Robert Parry. This is an important story I have intensively followed since I first read Carl Oglesby’s seminal book, The Yankee and Cowboy War, in 1976 which described the Gehlen organization’s penetration of the American intelligence services. For more books which relate to this topic, consult this Amazon book list (particularly items #23 through 40).


This article was posted: Saturday, June 8, 2013 at 12:28 pm


Tags: big brother, domestic news










Infowars



Hitler Is Winning

Hitler Is Winning


Charles Burris
lewrockwell.com
June 8, 2013



Two superb articles posted on the Consortiumnews.com website make for fascinating reading. They are “How Wall St. Bailed Out the Nazis,” by Jerry Meldon, and “Hitler’s Shadow Reaches toward Today,” by Robert Parry. This is an important story I have intensively followed since I first read Carl Oglesby’s seminal book, The Yankee and Cowboy War, in 1976 which described the Gehlen organization’s penetration of the American intelligence services. For more books which relate to this topic, consult this Amazon book list (particularly items #23 through 40).


This article was posted: Saturday, June 8, 2013 at 12:28 pm


Tags: big brother, domestic news










Infowars



Hitler Is Winning

Sunday, May 26, 2013

The Big Cities Winning The Battle For Information Jobs


We ranked 317 metropolitan statistical areas based on employment data in the information sector from the Bureau of Labor Statistics from 2001 through January 2013. Rankings are based on recent growth trends (the last year and the last two years), mid-term growth (2007-12), long-term growth (2001-12) and long-term momentum (2007-2012 relative to 2001-2006). The latter metric factors in whether the area is slowing or accelerating. We also broke down rankings by size since regional economies differ markedly due to their scale. For our big cities list, we ranked the 66 MSAs that each have more than 450,000 jobs overall.




Forbes – Business



The Big Cities Winning The Battle For Information Jobs