Lessons from Massachusetts

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Health Reform Failure

By Steffie Woolhandler and David U. Himmelstein
Boston Globe Sept. 17, 2007

In 1966 – just before Medicare and Medicaid were launched – 47 million Americans were uninsured. By 1975, the United States had reached an all time low of 21 million without coverage. Now, according to the Census Bureau’s latest figures, we’re back where we started, with 47 million uninsured in 2006 – up 2.2 million since 2005. But this time, most of the uninsured are neither poor nor elderly.

The middle class is being priced out of healthcare. Virtually all of this year’s increase was among families with incomes above $50,000; in fact, two- thirds of the newly uncovered were in the above-$75,000 group. And full-time workers accounted for 56 percent of the increase, with their children making up much of the rest.

The new Census numbers are particularly disheartening for anyone hoping for a Massachusetts miracle. In the Commonwealth, 651,000 residents are uninsured, 65 percent more than the figure used by state leaders in planning for health reform. Their numbers came from a telephone survey done in English and Spanish. But that misses people who lack a land-line phone – 43.9 percent of phoneless adults are uninsured, according to other studies.

It also skips over the 523,000 non-English speakers in Massachusetts whose native language isn’t Spanish (e.g. Portuguese, Chinese, or Haitian-Creole), another group with a high uninsurance rate. In contrast, the Census Bureau goes door-to-door for its survey and has translators for almost every language. It gets a more complete picture.

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Send in the clowns

Columbia Christians for Life sent this email today with a link to a story in USC’s campus newspaper. Pride Week is shaping up to be crazy. Literally.

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Columbia Christians for Life: The Students at Sodomy and Fornication-infested, taxpayer-subsidized, South Carolina state government-controlled, university in Columbia, SC react to strong Biblical preaching on sin and hell. See front page story and photo at: The Gamecock.

They also sent this.

Mayor Coble officially welcomes Sodomite Parade to City of Columbia, SC in Letter of Support on behalf of the Mayor and the Columbia City Council

Bible-believing Christians:   

Please come to the Columbia City Council meeting on Wednesday, September 19, to sign up on the public speaking list to register your opposition to the Mayor of Columbia, Bob Coble’s endorsement of sin, and criminal behavior (SC Code of Laws 16-15-120, “Buggery” / Sodomy); and thereby undermining the morals, safety, security, and health of the greater Columbia area, and the State of South Carolina.

Title 16 – Crimes and Offenses

Chapter 15.
Offenses Against Morality and Decency
www.scstatehouse.net/code/t16c015.htm

SECTION 16-15-120. Buggery.
Whoever shall commit the abominable crime of buggery, whether with mankind or with beast, shall, on conviction, be guilty of felony and shall be imprisoned in the Penitentiary for five years or shall pay a fine of not less than five hundred dollars, or both, at the discretion of the court.

The founding fathers of America knew that only a moral and virtuous people were capable of liberty, and worthy of economic and political prosperity.

Sodomy is a Crime:
Against the Laws of God
Against the Laws of Nature
Against the Laws of South Carolina

Bob Coble’s endorsement of those who commit the abominable crime, and immoral acts, of buggery/sodomy, is a threat to the security, safety, health, and prosperity of Columbia and the State of South Carolina.

Genesis 19:24,25 – “Then the LORD rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the LORD out of heaven; And He overthrew those cities, and all the plain, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and that which grew upon the ground.”

Dirty business

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We have been very active in Charleston and North Charleston in opposing the proposed expansion of Kinder Morgan’s dry bulk importing terminal at Shipyard Creek. KM has a history of non-compliance with DHEC and EPA regulations at this facility, and they have recently resorted to harassment of an individual through use of Homeland Security. I have posted a number of articles at Charleston Peace.

We are trying to get as much coverage on these issues as possible, hoping that continued exposure will convince Kinder Morgan to work with us to clean up their existing facility. I hope you will be willing to help spread the word!

Thanks,
Kristen French

A cautionary tale

Greetings All,

My friend Ron Keine read a message I copied to my list because it was an on-the-ground report from one of the protesters in Texas in the wake of the recent commutation there. He asked if I would consider sending out his thoughts on something that was said in that message. I have to admit that the following is not quite what I expected. I have never seen him be so eloquent and so SPOT ON. I hope you take a few minutes to read this. And while he did not mention it, I want to add a group that is also often demonized by some abolitionists – prison workers and other government employees, including politicians. The following message really applies to all of us.

Here’s wishing a peaceful and meaningful holiday season to our Muslim and Jewish brothers and sisters, with Ramadan starting up last week, at the same time as Rosh Hashana – the Jewish New Year. May we all be sealed in the book of life….

paz!

–abe

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HATRED IN OUR MIDST
a message from Ron Keine

Sometimes I am amazed by some of the things I have heard come out of the mouths of my brother and sister abolitionists.

It was a wonderful but stressful morning. I had given a short welcome speech to the general assembly at UCLA. The subject of the speech was how happy I was to see so many concerned people in attendance joining together to stop government killing. Later I poured my heart out telling my story of how I was wrongfully convicted and sent to Death Row. As many of my fellow exonorees can tell you, this is not easy–especially for a then fledgling speaker like me. After the speech, you are both physically and emotionally drained. The question-and-answer period was pure torture as the audience touched on some of the very subjects I did not want to talk about. Some of the aspects of my ordeal are still very sensitive to me. Still I complied.

As I walked outside to the patio for lunch, I saw many large tables full of people. One group beaconed to me the availability of an open seat.

The table chat was friendly until a man said that he had read a news article about me and wanted to know if I was indeed the past Chairman of my local Republican party. “Yes” I proudly replied. “Are you still a Republican?” he queried, to which I again said, “Indeed.”

The woman sitting next to me blurted out loudly that she hated Republicans. I politely thanked her for that information.

She again reiterated her statement but louder this time.

She went on to say that she couldn‚t believe that she was even sitting at the table with Republican scum. She looked at me with a face that blared of hate and anger. This woman was not only a lawyer but also the wife of a prominent doctor who had authored books speaking out against the death penalty.

I was floored. I said, ” Ma’am, I come from Michigan, and in Michigan it is the Republicans that keep the death penalty off the law books.”

She then said that she couldn‚t eat any more with a Republican at the table. In fact she might be getting sick if she stayed any longer. I said “No problem,” and I left the table. This is not the way an honored guest and exonoree should be treated.

As I stood by the building, finishing my lunch, I felt devastated. I had come all the way to California, with no pay, to help fight the death penalty. We are all here for a common cause–a cause I have dedicated my life to. I had received a standing ovation for my speech. Now I just wanted to go somewhere and hide.

I then spotted my fellow exonoree, Shujaa Graham, and went over to talk to him. I told him what had happened. Those of you who know Shujaa know that it didn’t take long for him to talk me into a lighter mood.

Another time I was in Chicago at a North Western Wrongful Conviction seminar. Sitting at the breakfast table I witnessed a lady bad mouthing Catholics as the Catholics at the table sat flabbergasted. This woman is a devout Christian but hates Catholics. I couldn’t help wonder, “What kind of religion is this that teaches her to hate other Christians?” She went on to say that Catholics worship plaster idols which finally got a verbal war going at the table.

These are all abolitionists. They are all there for a noble cause: a humanitarian effort to rid our land of its worst atrocity. Where does all this hate come from?

At that same meeting in Chicago, I and several of our exonorees gave a speech in a standing room only auditorium. The last speaker was Jesse Jackson Jr. I was totally horrified at what he said. He talked about many troubles in the world today and blamed them all on Republicans and white people. It was supposed to be a speech against capital punishment (which he did mention), but it was a campaign speech instead.

I followed him off stage. As I approached him, in anger, his security thugs stepped up to make sure I didn‚t violate him. As I looked around, it reminded me of what comedian Ron White said. “I didn’t know how many of these bouncers it would take to kick my ass but I could see how many they were going to use.”

Being careful not to transgress the line, I stood two feet in front of the Reverend and told him that I have never, in my life, heard such racism, bigotry and hate spewing from the mouth of a man of the cloth, especially a congressman with a master’s in Theology. “You were supposed to be here to help our cause. Instead, you set us back.”

He just looked at me. He was speechless. He turned and walked away with his entourage in tow.

While lobbying in New Mexico I was able to talk to several Republican house legislators whose votes were crucial. They refused to even listen to coalition people because they were “fuzzy headed liberals.” We won that vote, but the bill was shot down in the senate committee.

One woman recently published a letter proclaiming her distaste for rich people. Rich people give a lot of money to our anti-death-penalty coalitions.

I was at the fast and vigil at the U.S. Supreme Court last year. Among our own peace-loving, understanding and humanitarian anti-death-penalty activists there was all too much of this bigotry going around. When I gave a private speech to this group I dumped my planned oration to address this problem. I might have hurt a few feelings, but most agreed with me. Not wanting to let this simple letter become a tome, I’ll cut to the chase.

I have seen so many instances of this bigotry, racism, bias and hate among our own abolitionists that it makes me sick. Democrats hating Republicans, Republicans hating Democrats. People hating other people because of their religious or political preference, ethnic origin, race, and human status in life.

This kind of behavior does not belong in our midst. This may be the status quo to many groups of people in this world. This may be commonplace to the pro-death penalty vultures, but it should NOT be evident in our abolitionist movement. We are a unique people. We are all working to better this world and end the killing of our citizens. Why can’t we all just get along? Why can’t we accept that other people may have differing opinions without hating them for it? Remember that WE are supposed to be the good guys. We can expect this kind of treatment from our foes, but when it comes from within our own midst, it is truly shocking.

What we must remember is that whatever we do, however we act, reflects directly on our fellow abolitionists and the groups or coalitions we represent. We must stand out as an example of what is right. We cannot let a few bad apples tarnish our image and circumvent our credibility

— Ron Keine

Creating peace

From Dee Partridge in Charleston:

Thank you to all who came out to support The Peace Alliance in its efforts to create a US Department of Peace and Non-Violence. The Concert for Peace was held on Saturday, Sept. 15, at Unity Church of Charleston and was a great success! We had a turn out of about 125 people over the two hour span, and brought in around $650 for the local chapter of the campaign. The weather held out for us as we listened to Austin O’Malley’s solo Native American Flute and the jazz and blues sounds of Bradford Station. The event ended with the Unity Montessori School Choir singing songs from around the world, to remind us that the US Department of Peace and Non-Violence is for our children and our children’s children.

We were grateful that ABC News 4 came out and reported on the concert. We were featured during the 7 o’clock and 11 o’clock news casts, and I was very thankful that the message was about what the Department could do domestically, instead of it being suggested that it was an “anti war” rally. The Department of Peace and Non-Violence would do so much for South Carolina, as we are ranked #6 in Domestic Violence in this country. Patrice Smith said at the end of the 11 o’clock newscast that there are 80 countries around the world working to create Departments of Peace in their governments. I think that was a good point to end with to get people thinking about what it would mean for the US to lead the way.

My email address is dee_partridge@msn.com if you want to be included on my list for future actions towards this campaign. I am eager to get Charleston talking about this bill, and see what we can do to get South Carolina on board.

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Make a fashion statement

The Network has new t-shirts!

Available in black, navy and purple, L and XL sizes, short-sleeved ($20) and long ($25). Choose from two different designs.

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On back: “South Carolina Progressive Network: It’s about justice. It’s about democracy. It’s about time.”

To order, call 803-808-3384.

Happy birthday & thank you

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Remembering Margaret Sanger
By Gloria Feldt

“Woman must have her freedom, the fundamental freedom of choosing whether or not she will be a mother and how many children she will have. Regardless of what man’s attitude may be, that problem is hers – and before it can be his, it is hers alone.”

Sept. 14 is the birthday of Margaret Sanger, founder of the U.S. birth control movement. She was born Margaret Higgins in Corning, New York, in 1879, though ever vain, she would later alter the family Bible to appear three years younger. The sixth child of eleven living siblings, her earliest childhood memories were of crying beside her mother’s bed as after she almost died following a difficult childbirth.

Sanger’s mother, Anne Higgins, did die, worn out from those too frequent pregnancies and births, at age 50. These experiences formed the sensibilities that propelled Margaret Sanger to advocate for birth control. She dedicated her first book on the fundamental rights of women to control their fertility to her mother. The quotation above and those that follow reveal her clear worldview about women and a laser-like focus on the work she believed to be the most essential to women’s health, well-being, and rightful place in the world:

“She goes through the vale of death alone, each time a babe is born. As it is the right neither of man nor the state to coerce her into this ordeal, so it is her right to decide whether she will endure it.”

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The other surge

More military donors backing Democrats

Assessed positively this week by the war’s lead general, the presence of U.S. troops in Iraq appears to be causing a surge of another sort — and one that’s not positive for President Bush or the Republican Party. Since the start of the Iraq war in 2003, members of the military have dramatically increased their political contributions to Democrats, marching sharply away from the party they’ve long supported.

In the 2002 election cycle, the last full cycle before the war began, Democrats received a mere 23 percent of military members’ contributions. So far this year, 40 percent of military money has gone to Democrats for Congress and president, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. Anti-war presidential candidates Barack Obama and Ron Paul are the top recipients of military money.

* Read the full report: here.

Congressional Democrats Embrace Equal Pay

Congressional Democrats are moving rapidly on legislation aimed at overturning a controversial Supreme Court ruling they say eviscerated pay discrimination provisions of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

Within weeks of the May 29 court bombshell, Congress held hearings on proposals to restore equal pay provisions in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act to the status before the ruling, written by the court’s newest justice, Samuel Alito. On July 31, the House of Representatives voted 225-199 to pass a bill, and a Senate companion bill is expected to get hearings this fall.

The business community has lined up against the measure, however, and President George W. Bush pledged a veto if it passes Congress. That could make the issue part of the 2008 presidential campaign.

So far, votes are mostly along party lines: only two House Republicans voted for it, Representatives Chris Shays of Connecticut and Don Young of Alaska. All but six House Democrats voted for it. Two powerhouse Republicans are lead sponsors in the Senate, however: Senators Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania and Olympia Snowe of Maine, leading Marcia Greenberger of the National Women’s Law Center to predict a more bipartisan prospect there.

“The leadership in both the House and Senate are committed to move this very quickly because the decision has caused an unacceptable gaping hole in civil rights laws,” she said.

House sponsors named their proposal the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2007 to honor the Alabama woman who sued Goodyear Tire Company after belatedly discovering she had been paid far less than virtually all her male factory co-workers. A jury found Goodyear’s bias to be so pervasive it awarded $3 million to Ledbetter, who had gotten a top performance award from the company in 1996. Because of a 1991 law capping damage awards, that $3 million was reduced to $300,000.

Then the Supreme Court, now under Bush appointee Chief Justice John Roberts, ruled against her, agreeing with a Bush administration argument that she had filed her lawsuit too late; she would have had to file charges within 180 days of the first discriminatory paycheck she got from Goodyear. The Ledbetter legislation would restore the traditional standard, enunciated by most federal courts and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, that pay discrimination claims had to be filed within 180 days of any discriminatory paycheck – including the last one.

When Ledbetter testified before the House Committee on Education and Labor, she said it would have been impossible for her to meet the Alito-Roberts criteria. She had been hired in 1979 as a line supervisor and said she worked hard for 19 years, did every job the men did, but had no clue she got much less money for the same work.

In her final years at Goodyear, “I got the feeling I was being paid less than the men but there was no way to know. Pay levels were kept strictly confidential.” An anonymous note told her the brutal truth. “I found out I was making $3,700 a month and all the men were earning $4,300 to $5,200 a month.”

The business community was thrilled at the ruling, one of the most favorable they have gotten so far from the Roberts court, but their opposition to the Ledbetter bill is proving to be a tricky sell. The labor policy chief for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Michael Eastman, told the Washington Post that it is a tough issue, since “everyone is opposed to unequal pay for equal work.” So far, business – and the bulk of congressional Republicans – are making a more technical argument: that the Democratic bills would lift the statute of limitations and subject businesses to frivolous claims filed decades after a problem.

The American Bar Association debunked that notion. ABA President Karen J. Mathis said in a June 1 op-ed that the ruling would make Title VII “almost useless in combating pay discrimination in the workforce” because “it is difficult, if not impossible, for an employee to know within six months that pay bias has cheated him or her of a fair paycheck.”

In an Aug. 14 policy position, the ABA urged Congress to overturn the Supreme Court ruling “to ensure that in claims involving discrimination in pay, the statute of limitations runs from each paycheck reflecting an improper disparity.” It said the Supreme Court’s reading of the law “will engender confusion and unfairness. It will deny remedies to many victims of discrimination, encourage subterfuge by employers, precipitate unwarranted claims and generally frustrate the purposes underlying Title VII.”

What happens next depends partly on whether Lilly Ledbetter becomes a household name – and whether grass roots groups connect with the issue. A DakotaWomen site posted a blog recently that criticized Representative Michele Bachmann (R-MN) for saying if the bill passed, corporations wouldn’t hire women out of fear they would be sued 40 years from now.

Ledbetter’s House committee testimony was posted on YouTube. People for the American Way posted another of her statements on a separate YouTube site, gambling that the blatant pay disparities she suffered will resonate with many people.

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Ledbetter says her own experience confirms that connection. “Since the court decision, everywhere I go, women come up to me in the grocery stores, in church, just out in the park and they tell me they understand how I feel. They’ve been there. The same thing happened to them. Because of their sex, they did not get paid equally as the males.”

Peggy Simpson, The Women’s Media Center
12 Sept. 2007

Network Gets Busy

This week the Network resumes its monthly meeting schedule in Columbia, Charleston and Greenville after taking a summer break in July and August. The Charleston group merged their meeting with CAFE, which was meeting at the same time at the ILA Hall on Monday. (The Network meets there every second Monday of the month.)

Last night, the Columbia group met in a new location, the historic Modjeska Simkins house on Marion Street. I think she would have been pleased to see us gathered under her roof – black, brown and white, gay and straight, believers and humanists – talking about movement building. Being in that space was a privilege, and we thank the Columbia Historic Foundation for allowing us to meet there.

We had a good turnout, with several new folks. Our guest speaker was Martin Chernoff, who talked about the genocide in Darfur and a rally he’s helping organize that will be held Oct. 6 at 2pm at the State House. He sees South Carolina, an early primary state, being the perfect place to stage a big rally and invite the presidential candidates to participate. The event will include local and nationally known entertainers.

The Darfur Action Group has launched a savvy campaign and promises to stay engaged after the rally is over. For details, click here.

Frank Knapp and Dr. Sam Baker, who led the discussion after the Network’s screening of Michael Moore’s documentary Sicko earlier this month, talked about health care reform initiatives in South Carolina and where the presidential candidates are on the issue. Framing the debate is a priority, as the language is new enough to confuse voters. That’s just how the candidates – who have raked in megabucks from the insurance and pharmaceutical companies that stand to lose huge if this country goes for “socialized medicine” – want it. They want to appear to have a plan to fix the health care problem when, in fact, all but the good congressman from Ohio are reaching for Band-Aids when a tourniquet is in order.

If you want to join the new group South Carolinians for Universal Health Care, e-mail us at network@scpronet.com.

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Frank Knapp talks about health care reform efforts in South Carolina.

We talked about the Pride March, which will be held in Columbia Sept. 22. For a full schedule of Pride activities, which kick off Sept. 15, see SC GLPM’s Web site. If your organization wants to distribute literature, feel free to drop it off at the Network’s table.

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Network Co-Chair Rev. Bennie Colclough talks about the upcoming Pride March Sept. 22, where he’ll be a featured speaker.

Finally, we heard from Rehan Khan, who asked to speak on behalf of USC’s Student Muslim Association about a fundraiser (being held tonight on campus) for an injured Iraqi girl. Salee, who is 10, lost both of her legs during a U.S. led missile strike while playing near her house. She was recently brought to South Carolina to receive medical attention and prosthetic limbs by the No More Victims foundation.

Rehan also invited the Network to join them for a Fast-A-Thon on Oct. 4 and to break bread at a community meal on campus that evening. The South Carolina Fast-a-Thon was organized to raise money and awareness for impoverished people around the world. By pledging to fast on the 4th from sunrise to sunset, the group hopes to raise money and awareness for Iraqi war victims who need food and medical attention. All of the raised proceeds will go towards providing relief to victims of collateral damage. Find out more and make your pledge by clicking here.

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Medical student Rehan Khan invites the Network to join USC’s Muslim Students Association in a Fast-a-Thon Oct. 4 to raise money and awareness about poverty.

Our next Columbia meeting will be held on Oct. 9 (the second Tuesday of every month) at 7pm at the Simkins House, 2025 Marion St. We’ll hear from Conchita Cruz, newly hired to head up the Coalition for New South Carolinians. We hope you’ll join us. Free drinks and snacks. Good people. Big ideas. What more could you want?

If you’re in the Upstate, join us tomorrow night in Greenville at 7pm at Open Book, 110 S. Pleasantburg Dr. Meetings are informal and open to anyone interested in knowing more about the Network and getting involved to make change in South Carolina.