n2doc
n2doc's JournalNYT op-ed: Why I Provide Abortions
IN public health, you go where the crisis is. If there is an outbreak and you have the ability to relieve suffering, you rush to the site of the need. This is why, a year and a half ago, I returned to my hometown, Birmingham, Ala., to provide abortions.
For the previous two years, I had been flying to the South from Chicago to provide care to women whose access to abortion services was limited to a few clinics, despite the fact that abortions are deemed legal by the Supreme Court. These women face harsh life circumstances and incessant hostility, merely for wanting to exercise their rights.
My decision to provide abortions represented a change of heart on my part. I had been working for 12 years as an obstetrician and gynecologist, and had never performed abortions because I felt they were morally wrong. But I grew increasingly uncomfortable turning away women who needed help.
Ultimately, reading a sermon by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. challenged me to a deeper spiritual understanding. I was moved by his discussion of the quality of the good Samaritan and of what made the Samaritan good. The Samaritan reversed the question of concern, to care more about the well-being of the person needing help than about what might happen to him for stopping to give help. I realized that if I were to show compassion, I would have to act on behalf of those women. My concern about women who lacked access to abortion became more important to me than worrying about what might happen to me for providing the services.
more
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/18/opinion/why-i-provide-abortions.html?_r=0
House Bill Would Make It Harder To Prosecute White-Collar Crime
CEOs could be off the hook for even gross negligence.
Zach Carter
Senior Political Economy Reporter,
House Republicans on Monday unveiled legislation that would decriminalize a broad swath of corporate malfeasance, a move that injects white-collar crime issues into the thus-far bipartisan agenda on criminal justice reform.
The public debate over criminal justice reform has focused on reducing severe sentences for nonviolent drug offenses. But some influential conservative voices, including the billionaire Koch brothers and the Heritage Foundation, have quietly advocated for curbing prosecution of corporate offenses as well.
The House bill would eliminate a host of white-collar crimes where the damaging acts are merely reckless, negligent or grossly negligent. If enacted, it would make it more difficult for federal authorities to pursue executive wrongdoing, from financial fraud to environmental pollution.
Department of Justice spokesman Peter Carr blasted the legislation in a statement provided to HuffPost, saying it "would create confusion and needless litigation, and significantly weaken, often unintentionally, countless federal statutes," including "those that play an important role in protecting the public welfare ... protecting consumers from unsafe food and medicine."
more
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/white-collar-crime-prosecution_564a2336e4b06037734a2f84
Jindal Exits Presidential Race, Returns To Louisiana With 8 More Weeks As Governor
Louisiana governor and GOP presidential candidate Bobby Jindal announced on Tuesday night that hed be exiting the presidential race and returning to Louisiana where his incumbent will be elected on Saturday.
This is not my time, he said during a Fox News interview.
Jindal, who never gained much traction in the primary and recently was polling at under one percent, has just less than two months as head of Lousiana, a state that has been struggling under his leadership. Currently, his disapproval rating has hit a historic 70 percent.
Since Jindal took office in 2008, Louisiana has earned some dubious honors. The state has the largest gender pay gap in the country, with women making 66 cents for every dollar a man earns.
more
http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2015/11/18/3723408/jindal-drops-out/
The Big Idea That Could Bring Disaffected Voters Back to the Polls
Bernie Sanders has a plan to expand, not save, Social Securityand it should be popular.
By William Greider
At his inauguration in 1981, Ronald Reagan declared that government is not the solutiongovernment is the problem. The election of 2016 will tell us whether the American people are ready to overthrow the tyranny of that reactionary proposition. I know its possiblebut only if the Democratic Party finds the courage to embrace a serious left turn.
The 2016 election is not actually about personalities. Its about ideasbig ideas for governing that, win or lose, can change the country for better or for worse. Republicans are stuck in the past, still longing for the return of their dead president and his trickle-down Reaganomics. Left-liberal and progressive Democrats are prodding their party to reverse the Gipper in major ways by doing big things that would benefit millions of peoplelike expanding Social Security benefits instead of cutting them. So despite the medias trivial pursuits, I expect the 2016 election will ultimately pivot on ideological conflict, powered by the great social and economic dislocations that have shaken societys self-confidence. Dozens of right-left governing issues are already in play, setting up an emotional clash between bleeding-heart optimism on the left and nostalgic resentments on the right.
The most significant of these collisions may be the reemergence of an old and familiar argument about reforming Social Security. This time, left-ish Dems want to expand its benefits and protections and raise the payroll tax on top-level incomes to pay for the expansion. The herd of GOP candidates is once again promising to cut Social Security benefits and maybe turn the government system over to private enterprise (that is, the financial system that wreaked havoc on US prosperity). Veteran campaign reporters evidently think its boring, since they seldom mention the issue.
But dont be surprised if the fight over this old New Deal program emerges next year as a crucial battlefront between the parties. In fact, it may provide Democrats with a great opportunity to change the shape of the American electorate and reconnect with disenchanted working-class voters who feel the Democratic Party abandoned them.
more
http://www.thenation.com/article/the-big-idea-that-could-bring-disaffected-voters-back-to-the-polls/
Toon: The GOP Fireside Chat
Today on AM hate radio
The Savage Wiener was trying to convince his listeners that the President is an ISIS agent bent on helping them achieve world domination. He's been doing this for a while now. His big 'insight' today was to mock the President's statement calling out Repubs for blocking 3-year old refugees, while inserting his own lie that '95%" of the syrians that the President wants to let in are "healthy males of military age". Let that particular lie sink in for a moment. Hillary Clinton is also, in his fantasy world, the chief architect of the 'arab spring' that 'led to ISIS'...
I got sick of the ranting and listened to some sports talk crap (not much variety here in Savannah), but later on the Wiener was conducting some sort of butt kissing, fawning interview with Trump. The two just love each other. How anyone can listen to this crap on a regular basis and not be driven stark raving mad is beyond me, but maybe that explains the state we are in.
Hillary Clinton Attacks Bernie Sanders’ Progressive Agenda
Jonathan Cohn
Senior National Correspondent
This is why Hillary Clinton makes so many progressives queasy.
The former secretary of state and front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination has launched a new attack on her chief rival, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). The subject is taxes and Sanders' apparent willingness to raise them, even on the middle class, to pay for his ambitious domestic agenda.
Sanders has proposed a variety of new programs designed to help Americans pay for everything from child care to college tuition. Most famously, Sanders is also a longtime proponent of single-payer health insurance -- in other words, expanding Medicare so everybody, not just the elderly, could enroll in it.
While Sanders has supported the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, he has described the legislation as merely a first step toward guaranteeing that every American has health insurance. He has said that creating a single-payer system, similar to the schemes that now operate in countries such as France and Taiwan, would achieve that goal.
more
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/clinton-sanders-taxes_564bcbbfe4b06037734ba1bd
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