September 3, 2009 archive

Docudharma Times Thursday September 3

Obama Aides Aim to Simplify and Scale Back Health Bills



By ROBERT PEAR and JACKIE CALMES

Published: September 2, 2009


WASHINGTON – President Obama plans to address a joint session of Congress next week in an effort to rally support for health care legislation as White House officials look for ways to simplify and scale back the major Democratic bills, lower the cost and drop contentious but nonessential elements.

Administration officials said Wednesday that Mr. Obama would be more specific than he has been to date about what he wants included in the plan. Doing so amounts to an acknowledgment that the president’s prior tactic of laying out broad principles and leaving Congress to fill in the details was no longer working and that Mr. Obama needed to become more personally involved in shaping the outcome.

Kicking Inclusion Up a Notch

As Group Lobbies for More Pickup Soccer Fields It Hopes to Empower D.C.’s Latino Community

By Martin Ricard

Washington Post Staff Writer

Thursday, September 3, 2009


Every evening, on the open patch of grass of an unkempt softball field in the Shaw neighborhood of Northwest Washington, a group of men of all ages gathers and plays soccer for hours.

The men aren’t part of any organized league. They don’t communicate over an e-mail group list. There is no need. Everyone knows that at a certain hour, unless the space is occupied, it’s time to play.

But some players and activists say that opportunity is threatened as gentrification and permit requirements to use athletic fields contribute to a shortage of athletic spaces.

Muse in the Morning

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Muse in the Morning

A Transition through Poetry VII

Art Link

Tarnished Silverpink

Sorry

I’m sorry that you hurt

I’m sorry that in living my life

I have caused you pain

I’m sorry that you are having trouble

attaining your goals

Love may mean

never having to say you’re sorry

But Friendship demands it

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–July, 1992

Late Night Karaoke

Open Thread

Is Obama Dumping the Public Option?

Original article, by David Corn, via motherjones.com:

“It had better be wrong.”

That was the response of Representative Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) to Wednesday’s Politico story  that the Obama White House, as it retools its strategy for health care reform, has no intention of fighting for the inclusion of a public option that would offer government-run health insurance to companies and people who can’t obtain affordable coverage elsewhere. And Jacob Hacker, a health policy expert who can be called the godfather of the public option, says, “The White House…has to be told in no uncertain terms that dropping the public plan is stupid and premature.”

Dick in 2012!

RawStory, Sept 02, 2009

Disillusionment and Ignorance, a Perfect Storm

Disillusionment: A feeling that arises from the discovery that something is not what it was anticipated to be, commonly held to be stronger than disappointment especially when a belief central to one’s identity is shown to be false. (Wiktionary).

Ignorance:  the state in which one lacks knowledge, is unaware of something or chooses to subjectively ignore information. This should not be confused with being unintelligent, as one’s level of intelligence and level of education or general awareness are not the same. The word “Ignorant” is an adjective describing a person in the state of being unaware. (Wikipedia)

Disillusionment describes many of those who voted for Obama and the democrats, whether they were progressives, independents, or other groupings.  

Ignorance describes many of those on the right who still think the republicans are the answer to our problems.  

Of course, the two conditions or states aren’t exclusive to any definitional groupings of people.  They exist across all spectrums.  But generally, these two states of being are extremely prevalent in Amercian society today.  

Perfect Storm:  an expression that describes an event where a rare combination of circumstances will aggravate a situation drastically. (Wikipedia)

Has the overall disillusionment and ignorance of the American people ever been at a higher level?  Probably not, when considering the scope that exists now.  Have the stakes been any higher for the average American citizen?  Probably not, considering the numbers involved and the systems that are simultaneously crashing.  

Is a Perfect Storm developing among the American people?  Where the disillusioned and the ignorant “aggravate a situation drastically”?  I believe so.  It all depends on whether things actually improve.  If things don’t improve, the Perfect Storm could continue to develop to a point where it explodes.  

Time will tell.  I go back to the fifties and have never seen the levels of disillusionment and ignorance we have now.  We seem to be heading to an abyss where the entire concept of this country is completely lost.  How the disillusioned and the ignorant react as we get closer to the abyss may not be pleasant.

Pony Party: Emily Litella

Real. People. Dying. Unnecessarily.

Real people … who we knew and loved … who died unnecessarily in the U.S.

Real Life Stories of Americans

THE SILENT … NOW DECEASED

“My daughter got sick with cancer after her husband lost his job. She never told anyone she was sick because she knew the financial hardship it would cause and eventually the hospital would take their house for unpaid medical bills. We lost her in the following spring … We read her diary and learned all she was feeling and thinking. Now I wonder how many others are just like her in this America? And how many before her?”

Deaths due to Preventable Diseases: Dead Last

Rankings 1st to 19th. France, Japan, Australia, Spain, Italy, Canada, Norway, the Netherlands, Sweden, Greece, Austria, Germany, Finland, New Zealand, Denmark, Britain, Ireland, Portugal, United States

http://www.medicareforall.org/…

Overnight Caption Contest

Bush’s third term? You’re living it

I just have to pass this along, from the Asia Times:

Bush’s third term? You’re living it


It sounds like the plot for the latest summer horror movie. Imagine, for a moment, that George W Bush had been allowed a third term as president, had run and had won or stolen it, and that we were all now living (and dying) through it. With the Democrats in control of Congress but Bush still in the Oval Office, the media would certainly be talking endlessly about a mandate for bipartisanship and the importance of taking into account the concerns of Republicans. Can’t you just picture it?

There’s Dubya now, still rewriting laws via signing statements. Still creating and destroying laws with executive orders. And still violating laws at his whim. Imagine Bush continuing his policy of extraordinary rendition, sending prisoners off to other countries with grim interrogation reputations to be held and tortured. I can even picture him formalizing his policy of preventive detention, sprucing it up with some “due process” even as he permanently removes habeas corpus from our culture.

I picture this demonic president still swearing he doesn’t torture, still insisting that he wants to close Guantanamo, but assuring his subordinates that the commander-in-chief has the power to torture “if needed”, and maintaining a prison at Bagram air base in Afghanistan that makes Guantanamo look like summer camp. I can imagine him continuing to keep secret his warrantless spying programs while protecting the corporations and government officials involved.

If Bush were in his third term, we would already have seen him propose, yet again, the largest military budget in the history of the world. We might well have seen him pretend he was including war funding in the standard budget, and then claim that one final supplemental war budget was still needed, immediately after which he would surely announce that yet another war supplemental bill would be needed down the road. And of course, he would have held onto his Secretary of Defense from his second term, Robert Gates, to run the Pentagon, keep our ongoing wars rolling along, and oversee the better part of our public budget.

Bush would undoubtedly be following through on the agreement he signed with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki for all US troops to leave Iraq by the end of 2011 (except where he chose not to follow through). His generals would, in the meantime, be leaking word that the United States never intended to actually leave. He’d surely be maintaining current levels of troops in Iraq, while sending thousands more troops to Afghanistan and talking about a new “surge” there. He’d probably also be escalating the campaign he launched late in his second term to use drone aircraft to illegally and repeatedly strike into Pakistan’s tribal borderlands with Afghanistan.

If Bush were still “the decider” he’d be employing mercenaries like Blackwater and propagandists like the Rendon Group and he might even be expanding the number of private security contractors in Afghanistan. In fact, the whole executive branch would be packed with disreputable corporate executive types. You’d have somebody like John (“May I torture this one some more, please?”) Rizzo still serving, at least for a while, as general counsel at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

The White House and Justice Department would be crawling with corporate cronies, people like John Brennan, Greg Craig, James Jones and Eric Holder. Most of the top prosecutors hired at the Department of Justice for political purposes would still be on the job. And political prisoners, like former Alabama governor Don Siegelman and former top Democratic donor Paul Minor would still be abandoned to their fate.

In addition, the bank bailouts Bush and his economic team initiated in his second term would still be rolling along – with a similar crowd of people running the show. Ben Bernanke, for instance, would certainly have been re-appointed to run the Fed. And Bush’s third term would have guaranteed that there would be none of the monkeying around with the North American Free Trade Agreement that the Democrats proposed or promised in their losing presidential campaign. At this point in Bush’s third term, no significant new effort would have begun to restore Katrina-decimated New Orleans either.

If the Democrats in Congress attempted to pass any set of needed reforms like, to take an example, new healthcare legislation, Bush, the third termer, would have held secret meetings in the White House with insurance and drug company executives to devise a means to turn such proposals to their advantage. And he would have refused to release the visitor logs so that the American public would have no way of knowing just whom he’d been talking to.

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