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This is huge. He's now the first sitting President to endorse marriage equality.
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A reminder of how, when he excersizes his intellect, President Obama seems to rise to gracefullness seemingly without effort. That was the man I campaigned for. And this also serves as a reminder why blithering idiots like Sarah "Blood Libel" Palin can't even touch Obama's shoelaces. Oh, and John Boehner? He declined an inviatation to accompany the President to the event on Air Force One to attend...are you ready?...A GOP Fundraiser. Priorities, folks, priorities.


The text to the speech is here. http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/01/obamas-arizona-speech-transcript-video/69467/

(Thanks to The Octothorpe)

 

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He is the major model of a Modern US President....


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Click Picture for full story.
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Some may recall that, over the summer, I posted a blog titled "Don't Ask, Don't Tell, Don't Donate." Looks like the sentiment is spreading.

************************************************************************
Under the headline Don't Ask, Don't Give, John Aravois and Joe Sudbay of the widely-read AmericaBlog today called for a boycott of LGBT donations to the Democratic party over the failures of the Obama administration and the DNC to properly support and advocate for gay causes.

Joe and I are launching today a donor boycott of the DNC. The boycott is cosponsored by Daily Kos, Michelangelo Signorile, Paul Sousa the founder of Equal Rep in Boston, and soon others. It's really more of a "pause," than a boycott. Boycotts sounds so final, and angry. Whereas this campaign is temporary, and is only meant to help some friends - President Obama and the Democratic party - who have lost their way.

We are hopeful that via this campaign, our friends will keep their promises.So please sign the Petition and take a Pledge to no longer donate to the DNC, Organizing for America, or the Obama campaign until the President and the Democratic party keep their promises to the gay community, our families, and our friends. You can find our Frequently Asked Questions, below, that explain the entire campaign. You can use our "Tell a Friend" page to tell all of your friends, family members, and coworkers about this effort (and we won't keep any of the email addresses you entire, they'll all be deleted after the emails are sent).

Tensions between the DNC and AmericaBlog came to a boil last week after openly gay DNC treasurer Andy Tobias revealed that the DNC had "intentionally" asked Maine contributors to support NJ Gov. Jon Corzine with no such accompanying request to help Maine's marriage equality effort.

Here are the specific beefs: FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

What is this?
We are asking voters to pledge to withhold contributions to the Democratic National Committee, Organizing for America, and the Obama campaign until the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) is passed, Don’t Ask Don’t Tell (DADT) is repealed, and the so-called Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) is repealed -– all of which President Obama repeatedly promised to do if elected.

Why are you asking people to take this pledge?
Candidate Obama promised during the campaign to be the gay community’s “fierce advocate.” He and the Democratic party have not kept their promise.

Can you give examples of how the President and Democrats have not been fierce advocates for the civil rights of gay and lesbian Americans?
 

blackleatherbookshelf: (Sophie Cat)
No Country for Sick Men
To judge the content of a nation's character, look no further than its health-care system.

"Us Canadians, we're kind of understated by nature," Marcus Davies told me in his soft-spoken way. "We don't go around chanting 'We're No. 1!' But you know, there are two areas where we feel superior to the U.S.: hockey and health care."


Davies is an official of the Saskatchewan Medical Society, so it's not surprising that he would want to extol Canadian medicine. But that feeling of patriotic pride in the nation's health-care system is something that just about all Canadians share. They love to point out that Canada provides coverage for everybody, usually with no copay and no deductible—while the U.S. leaves tens of millions of its citizens uninsured. They love to remind us that, while the U.S. lets some 700,000 people go bankrupt due to medical bills each year, the number of medical bankruptcies in Canada is precisely zero.

Yet I wasn't inclined to let Davies go unchallenged. I agreed that Canada does an admirable job of providing free and prompt care to anybody with an acute medical condition. But for nonemergency cases, the system often provides nothing but a long wait. Last summer I tried to get an appointment with an orthopedist in Canada to treat my aching right shoulder; the waiting time, just for an initial consultation, was 10 months. How could you be proud of that?

"You're right," Davies said frankly. "We keep people waiting, to limit costs. But you have to understand something basic about Canadians. Canadians don't mind waiting for elective care all that much, so long as the rich Canadian and the poor Canadian have to wait about the same amount of time."

In that last sentence, Davies set forth the national ethic of health care in his country: medicine is not a commodity to be sold to the highest bidder, but a right that must be distributed equitably to one and all. In short, the Canadians have built a health-care system that neatly fits the Canadian character: ferociously egalitarian, but thrifty at the same time.

I found that same pattern—a health-care system that reflects a nation's basic cultural values—everywhere I went when I traveled the world for a PBS documentary and a book about how other wealthy countries provide health care. "The fundamental truth about health care in every country," notes Princeton professor Uwe Reinhardt, one of the world's preeminent health-care economists, "is that national values, national character, determine how each system works."

The design of any country's health-care system involves political, medical, and economic decisions. But the primary issue for any health-care system is, as President Obama made clear last week, a moral question: should a rich society provide health care to everyone who needs it? If a nation answers yes to that moral question, it will build a health-care system like the ones in Britain, Germany, Canada, France, and Japan, where everybody is covered. If a nation doesn't decide to provide universal coverage, then you're likely to end up with a system where some people get the finest medical care on earth in the finest hospitals, and tens of thousands of others are left to die for lack of care. Without the moral commitment, in other words, you end up with a system like America's.

Around the world, cultural influences govern much of the nitty-gritty of daily medical practice. In the Confucian nations of East Asia, doctors were traditionally expected to treat people for free; they earned a living by selling medicine to be taken once the patient went home. To this day, doctors in Japan and China do both the prescribing and the selling of medicine. And guess what? Those doctors tend to prescribe far more drugs than their Western counterparts, who don't share in the pharmacy's profit.

British women tend to have their babies at home; American women tend to deliver in the hospital, but go home a day or two after the birth; Japanese women remain in the hospital with the baby an average of 10 days after delivery. In Britain, Spain, and Italy, the basic rule of medicine is that people never get a doctor's bill; health care is funded through general taxation. But just across the border, in France, patients are expected to make a cash payment for any encounter with the health-care system, even though the insurance plan will reimburse most of that copay within a week or so. The French have decided that people should be reminded on every visit that health care costs money—even if it's the insurance company's money.

In Germany and Austria, health insurance pays for a week at a spa, if a doctor prescribes it to deal with stress. In Britain, when I asked whether the National Health Service would provide the same benefit, my doctor laughed at the very thought of it.

But the most important influence of national culture can be seen in the most basic question facing any country's health-care system: who is covered?

On this fundamental issue, the United States is the odd man out among the world's advanced, free-market democracies. All the other industrialized democracies guarantee health care for everybody—young or old, sick or well, rich or poor, native or immigrant. The U.S.A., the world's richest and most powerful nation, is the only advanced country that has never made a commitment to provide medical care to everyone who needs it.

Our lack of universal coverage has consequences. According to government and private studies, about 22,000 of our fellow Americans die each year of treatable diseases because they lack insurance and can't afford a doctor. This generally happens to people with a chronic illness who have too much money to qualify for Medicaid, but too little to pay for the drugs and treatment they need to stay alive. Among the rich nations, this happens only in America. Likewise, the U.S. is the only developed country where medical bankruptcies can happen.

Those Americans who die or go broke because they happened to get sick represent a basic moral decision our country has made. All the other rich countries have made a different decision: they cover everybody. A French physician, Dr. Valerie Newman, explained it this way: "You Americans say that everybody is equal," she said. "But this is not so. Some are beautiful, some aren't. Some are brilliant, some aren't. But when we get sick—then, yes: everybody is equal. That is something we can deal with on an equal basis. This rule seems so basic to the French: we should all have the same access to care when it comes to life and death."

Other nations adhere to the same principle, with slightly different explanations. For Switzerland—a rich, capitalist country that didn't create a universal health-care system until 1994—the underlying rationale is the concept of solidarité. That's a crucial word in the Swiss vocabulary, freighted with meanings that include "community," "equal treatment," and "despite our differences, we're all in this together."

"To have a great sense of solidarité among the people," former Swiss president Pascal Couchepin told me, "all must have an equal right—and particularly, a right to medical care. Because it is a profound need for people to be sure, if they are struck by the stroke of destiny, they can have a good health system."

That principle seems so obvious to people in Europe, Canada, and the East Asian democracies that health officials asked me over and over to explain why it isn't obvious to Americans as well. "The formula is so simple: health care for everybody, paid for by everybody," a deputy health minister in Sweden told me. "You Americans are so clever. Why haven't you figured that out?"

This formula is so basic in the other industrialized democracies that virtually all of them have included some version of a "right to medical care" in the national constitution. Nearly all European countries (the striking exception is Russia) have signed on to the European Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights, which serves as a sort of continentwide Bill of Rights, enforceable by the courts. "Everyone has the right of access to preventive health care and the right to benefit from medical treatment," the charter says.

The new democracies that have emerged in the two decades since the fall of the Soviet Union generally include a "right to health care" in their constitutions. The Czech Constitution, written in 1992, is typical. "The state is obliged to guarantee the right to life and the right to protection of health, and health care for all," the document declares.

In the U.S., in contrast, neither the federal Constitution nor any state guarantees "health care for all." Some Americans have gone to court claiming a right to care. The legal theory is that our Declaration of Independence says we all have "inalienable rights," including a right to life, and you can't have life without medical care to keep you alive. No U.S. court has ever bought this argument.

In the other advanced democracies, though, there's no debate. All of them recognize a right to "health care for all" as a moral obligation. But they don't all agree on the way to assure that right.

Some nations—Britain, Spain, Italy, and New Zealand, among others—have decided that providing health care is a job for government, just like building roads or putting out fires. In those countries, government owns the hospitals, employs many or most of the doctors, and pays the bills. That seems pretty close to what Americans think of as "socialized medicine."

But many rich democracies—Germany, France, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Japan—provide universal coverage with private doctors, private hospitals, and mainly private insurance plans. Unlike Americans, who switch to government-run insurance (Medicare) at age 65, Germans stick with private insurance from cradle to grave. Japan has more for-profit hospitals than the U.S., and far fewer doctors on the government payroll than we do. This is universal coverage, but it's not socialism.

Some countries—Canada, Taiwan, Australia—have a blended system, with private-sector doctors and hospitals, but a government payment system. The Canadian model—private providers, but public insurance to pay them—is the system Lyndon Johnson copied when he created Medicare in 1965. The difference is that Canada, Taiwan, and Australia provide the public insurance for everybody, while the U.S. restricts it to seniors and the disabled.

In our current debate on health care, many have warned that universal coverage will inevitably lead to "rationing" of health care. The argument overlooks a basic fact: the United States already rations health care. Indeed, every country rations health care, because no system can afford to pay for everything. The key distinction is the way rationing happens.

In the other developed democracies, there's a basic floor of coverage that everybody is entitled to; that's why nobody dies in those nations for lack of care. But there are limits on which procedures and which medications the system will pay for. That's where the rationing kicks in. "We cover everybody, but we don't cover everything," the former British health minister John Reid explained.

In the U.S., in contrast, some people have access to just about everything doctors and hospitals can provide. But others can't even get in the door (until they are sick enough to need emergency care). That amounts to rationing care by wealth. This seems natural to Americans; to the rest of the developed world, it looks immoral.
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While I am sure this Texan asshat woun't recognize irony if it hit him over the head with an I-Beam, the ridiculousness of his complaint merits this repost from the Wall Street Journal. 'Cause, y'know, big government spending is tyranny and public transportation is, y'know, socialist. So why didn't you spend more gubernmt money on...oh WAIT...we don't like gubment! Unless we think we want somethin'...And dang, we teabaggers had to pay more money to use, like, those capialist taxies! Damn your facist trains!



Tea Party Protesters Protest D.C. Metro Service

Brody Mullins reports on money and politics.

Protesters who attended Saturday’s Tea Party rally in Washington found a new reason to be upset: Apparently they are unhappy with the level of service provided by the subway system.

Rep. Kevin Brady asked for an explanation of why the government-run subway system didn’t, in his view, adequately prepare for this past weekend’s rally to protest government spending and government services.

Seriously.

The Texas Republican on Wednesday released a letter he sent to Washington’s Metro system complaining that the taxpayer-funded subway system was unable to properly transport protesters to the rally to protest government spending and expansion.

“These individuals came all the way from Southeast Texas to protest the excessive spending and growing government intrusion by the 111th Congress and the new Obama administration,” Brady wrote. “These participants, whose tax dollars were used to create and maintain this public transit system, were frustrated and disappointed that our nation’s capital did not make a great effort to simply provide a basic level of transit for them.”

A spokesman for Brady says that “there weren’t enough cars and there weren’t enough trains.” Brady tweeted as much from the Saturday march. “METRO did not prepare for Tea Party March! More stories. People couldn’t get on, missed start of march. I will demand answers from Metro,” he wrote on Twitter.

Brady says in his letter to Metro that overcrowding forced an 80-year-old woman and elderly veterans in wheelchairs to pay for cabs. He concludes that it “appears that Metro added no additional capacity to its regular weekend schedule.

blackleatherbookshelf: (cat face)


Or to quote another friend, "The Stupid! It Burns!" (Thanks Grimm!)
blackleatherbookshelf: (Sophie Cat)
blackleatherbookshelf: (cat face)
There must be something in the water for them South Caroliner Politicos. First there was Governor Mark Sanford, who gave new meaning to Appalchian Trail. He had an affair and now he won't shut up about it. There's his second in command, Lt . Gov. Andre Bauer, who just might be having affairs with men, and he won't talk about it. Other than to deny it without being prompted. A lot. And then there's this freak of nature:


Meet South Carolina Republican Rep. Joe Wilson, the man who will now live on in YouTube infamy for being the utter jackass who squealed "You lie!" when President Obama firmly denied any Free Illegal Immigrant Health Care was in his Health Care reform bill. While watching the President give his speech, when I heard the shout from the crowd, my first thought was if there were any civilian spectators who had opened up a protest. But no. It was bona fide elected evidence that not only should abortion remain legal, it should be extended into the 89th trimester. If there was ever a living, breathing, vomiting piece of proof that the Republican Party has zero interest in Bi-Partisan Heath Care legislation, this man is it. We won't even go into liklihood of Wilson's subliminal racism.

On a positive note, soon after Mr Wilson's extraordinary show of how out of touch the Rebuplican party is circa 2009, his web site had crashed, he had taken a beating on his Twitter page and Democrat Rob Miller had raised thousands of unexpected dollars online for a possible rematch with Wilson in next year's midterm elections, according to Lachlan McIntosh, Miller's campaign manager. In the eight hours since Wilson's outburst, former-Marine Rob Miller has received nearly 3,000 individual grassroots contributions raising approximately $100,000, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee said. So sometimes, the system works.
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Seems a comment I made on Laura Antoniou's blog has inspired this bit of satire on YouTube. To say I'm flattered in putting it mildly.



Thanks to Tim Brough, for the initial inspiration
Lyrics © 2009 Gray Miller


 
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Poor, hapless Mike Castle (R: DE) got ambushed by the Birthers at a Town Meeting:

 

Thankfully, there are still a few journalists left who won't let this moronarama continue without a fight.
Have at 'em, Chris Matthews!

 


Sometimes I really wonder about the future of mankind.
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Dear Mr President, Mr Vice president, Madame First Lady, David Plouffe, et. Al,

Over the last week, my e-mail inbox has been flooded with messages from BarackObama.com. They are mostly requests for what ever the current pet project is this week, including but not limited to Health Care and Energy Policy. At the end of each is a bright blue prompt button that reads “Donate Now.”

So why am I so reluctant?

Last year, at the ripe age of 48, I did something I have never done before. I volunteered for a political candidate. During the Pennsylvania Primary and the general election, I worked a phone bank in the Philadelphia Suburbs and went door to door in get out the vote efforts. After eight years of ignorance and mean-spirited government, I could no longer see myself sitting by as the party in power found more and viler things to do to America. That is what I saw coming in John McCain and to a greater extent with Sarah Palin. I even went further. I donated money to then candidate Obama’s campaign. Bought t-shirts and memorabilia. Even put signs in the front yard. One of the main reasons I went all in?

One of the most horrific things I have heard a president utter was when George W Bush stood at a microphone and tried to get a constitutional amendment off the ground to equate marriage as one man one/woman. He wanted to take an entire segment of the population and give them a separate set of rights. The irony of this was: The week he made this putrid statement, I was visiting Jerusalem and been to the Holocaust Museum. Enshrined early on one of the many walls is the historical moment that began Adolph Hitler’s move to his “Final Solution,” when he proclaimed that Jews (and others) were non-citizens of Germany and therefore not subject to the same rules protecting “real” citizens. To see and hear an American President suggest something similar sent chills down my spine.

Then came Candidate Obama. A man who said he would be a “Fierce Advocate” for gays and lesbians. Who openly said on the campaign trail that “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” was weakening our military by excluding the best and the brightest, like Dan Choi. Mr Choi, a West Point graduate and officer in the Army National Guard who is fluent in Arabic. Let me repeat a key part of Dan Choi’s credentials: fluent in Arabic. The candidate who said that “For the record, I opposed DOMA [the Defense of Marriage Act] in 1996. It should be repealed.” A Candidate who looked at me and my partner as something other than a wedge issue to bring out the lunatic fringe. So while I was working what is basically a call center job that pays a bit better than minimum wage, I clicked that “Donate Now” link several times in 2008. My partner and I were moved to tears on Election night, when the news reports decisively stated that history had been made that moment. My partner, whose mother had been involved in Civil Rights marches in the 60’s and himself a teenager that stood next to her at the infamous “I Have A Dream” speech. I was in Washington DC in January of 2009, surrounded by an incredible amount of positive energy. Seas of smiling faces, thrilled that the reign of stupidity was finally coming to an end, and I had been a small part of that change.

At last, hope. At last.

Or was it? Imagine my dismay when a news item came up just a short time ago in which President Obama's Justice Department issued a stunning brief on the Defense of Marriage Act, once again equating the relationship my partner and I share to incest and pedophilia. President and Mrs Obama, in my life I have had three life partners, and have buried two. Do you have any concept of how hurtful being told the memory in my heart of our years is equal to the crime of child molestation?

Then there is the case of Mr Choi. An Arabic Translator.  Who returned recently from Iraq, only to be told in May that the Obama administration was about to dump him. The guy who can actually be in the cell where those terrorists we are all so afraid of might be and understand what the hell they are saying. Or are we still more afraid of the fact that the man who can understand the terrorist's confession might have a boyfriend than of a budding terrorist plot against that United States? Or is the man who once claimed to be a “Fierce Advocate” for the gay community and told Rolling Stone Magazine that “I don’t do cower” suddenly mortified that almost 400 translators could be kissing someone of the same gender after telling their commanders what the kid who witnessed an Afghani bombing was saying? Where’s the “fierceness?” Where’s the “hope?”

Were the gay supporters of candidate Obama just props to be used, a basis for coin? Because right now, that is how I feel. When President Obama hastily arranged a benefits package for Federal Employees, it seemed like a lame attempt to staunch bleeding support from the GLBT community. It looked almost cowardly, like a half-assed brushing of crumbs from what was described a year earlier as a potential boon. Because all President Obama would have to do is muster up the courage President Harry Truman displayed when he signed an executive order as Commander in Chief, instituting the immediate racial integration of the US Military. When some of his generals made the expected bigoted objections, Truman’s response was to tell them they could place their resignations on his desk in the morning. None did. That was July 26th, 1948. The 61st anniversary of which is coming soon.

Will I get an e-mail on that date with a fresh “Donate Now” button at its base? Because until I see some real, aggressive, progressive action on the promises candidate Obama made, my gay wallet is closed. Emotions and civility do not seem to make enough of an impression in politics…so it has to be the one that comes in dollars donated. Poetry is not policy. Neither are proclamations. Statements of solidarity are not real change. We spent a lot of time during the campaign discussing “The Audacity Of Hope.” The hope is dwindling. It has been replaced by the toxicity of audacity.

Tim Brough
Philadelphia, PA

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