Friday Reads

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Good Morning!

I don’t have a lot of time to distill these articles for you. I’ve got more of a link dump than anything.  Let’s just say elections have consequences and the consequences of the 2016 election are looking increasingly dystopian.  I have three superheros doing what I’d like to do.  Go Wonder Woman!  Go El Peso Hero!  Go Captain America!!!  Notice both Marvel and DC have made a villain of Orangeholio!  We need to take this goon down!!!!

I’m headed to get what could be my last mammogram for awhile and blood draw and whatever else I need.  The Republicans just voted to take away my health care.  The repeal of the ACA puts millions of American’s Health–including mine–at risk.  It’s waiting now for the signature of our Comic Book Villain whose installation by the Russians has me in mind of a bad James Bond movie.
 The ReThuglicans are also talking about drastically changing Medicare which is the only thing that looms on the horizon for those of us that will likely be uninsurable in the private market. I am a cancer survivor. Things are coming unraveled quickly for many who were given hope during President Obama’s tenure. I owe both my home and health to his policies which were placed in jeopardy by the slash and burn policies of former Governor Bobby Jindal.

Now, Republican congressional leaders say they will repeal the ACA early this year, with a promise to replace it in subsequent legislation — which, if patterned after House Speaker Paul Ryan’s ideas, would be partly paid for by capping Medicare and Medicaid spending. They have yet to introduce that “replacement bill,” hold a hearing on it, or produce a cost analysis — let alone engage in the more than a year of public debate that preceded passage of the ACA. Instead, they say that such a debate will occur after the ACA is repealed. They claim that a 2- or 3-year delay will be sufficient to develop, pass, and implement a replacement bill.

This approach of “repeal first and replace later” is, simply put, irresponsible — and could slowly bleed the health care system that all of us depend on. (And, though not my focus here, executive actions could have similar consequential negative effects on our health system.) If a repeal with a delay is enacted, the health care system will be standing on the edge of a cliff, resulting in uncertainty and, in some cases, harm beginning immediately. Insurance companies may not want to participate in the Health Insurance Marketplace in 2018 or may significantly increase prices to prepare for changes in the next year or two, partly to try to avoid the blame for any change that is unpopular. Physician practices may stop investing in new approaches to care coordination if Medicare’s Innovation Center is eliminated. Hospitals may have to cut back services and jobs in the short run in anticipation of the surge in uncompensated care that will result from rolling back the Medicaid expansion. Employers may have to reduce raises or delay hiring to plan for faster growth in health care costs without the current law’s cost-saving incentives. And people with preexisting conditions may fear losing lifesaving health care that may no longer be affordable or accessible.

Furthermore, there is no guarantee of getting a second vote to avoid such a cliff, especially on something as difficult as comprehensive health care reform. Put aside the scope of health care reform — the federal health care budget is 50% bigger than that of the Department of Defense.3 Put aside how it personally touches every single American — practically every week, I get letters from people passionately sharing how the ACA is working for them and about how we can make it better. “Repeal and replace” is a deceptively catchy phrase — the truth is that health care reform is complex, with many interlocking pieces, so that undoing some of it may undo all of it.

Take, for example, preexisting conditions. For the first time, because of the ACA, people with preexisting conditions cannot be denied coverage, denied benefits, or charged exorbitant rates. I take my successor at his word: he wants to maintain protections for the 133 million Americans with preexisting conditions. Yet Republicans in Congress want to repeal the individual-responsibility portion of the law. I was initially against this Republican idea, but we learned from Massachusetts that individual responsibility, alongside financial assistance, is the only proven way to provide affordable, private, individual insurance to every American. Maintaining protections for people with preexisting conditions without requiring individual responsibility would cost millions of Americans their coverage and cause dramatic premium increases for millions more.4 This is just one of the many complex trade-offs in health care reform.

Given that Republicans have yet to craft a replacement plan, and that unforeseen events might overtake their planned agenda, there might never be a second vote on a plan to replace the ACA if it is repealed. And if a second vote does not happen, tens of millions of Americans will be harmed. A recent Urban Institute analysis estimated that a likely repeal bill would not only reverse recent gains in insurance coverage, but leave us with more uninsured and uncompensated care than when we started.5

Put simply, all our gains are at stake if Congress takes up repealing the health law without an alternative that covers more Americans, improves quality, and makes health care more affordable. That move takes away the opportunity to build on what works and fix what does not. It adds uncertainty to lives of patients, the work of their doctors, and the hospitals and health systems that care for them. And it jeopardizes the improvements in health care that millions of Americans now enjoy.

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With this deed done and awaiting our Russian Puppet President’s signature, they are moving on to defunding Planned Parenthood. This is truly turning into a nightmare for which I have no adequate descriptions. People are going to die. Lots of people are going to die.

During a news conference on Thursday, House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said the process to dismantle Obamacare will include stripping all federal funding for Planned Parenthood, but he did not provide much further detail.

His remarks come two days after a Republican-led House investigative panel released a report that recommended the health care provider be defunded. The investigative panel—created to examine allegations that Planned Parenthood was selling fetal tissue for profit—was then disbanded, because it was not reauthorized for a new Congress. Planned Parenthood was never found guilty of any wrongdoing at the state or federal level, despite multiple GOP-led investigations.

Democrats immediately denounced the move. “I just would like to speak individually to women across America: This is about respect for you, for your judgment about your personal decisions in terms of your reproductive needs, the size and timing of your family or the rest, not to be determined by the insurance company or by the Republican ideological right-wing caucus in the House of Representatives,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). “So this is a very important occasion where we’re pointing out very specifically what repeal of the [Affordable Care Act] will mean to women.”

The measure to cut funding will appear in a special fast-track bill expected to pass Congress in February, during a session that allows legislation to bypass filibuster. The bill would need only a simple majority of senators to pass, rather than a 60-vote supermajority. Should the measure pass, according to the Washington Post, the largest women’s health care organization in the country would lose 40 percent of its funding. Planned Parenthood received $528 million in federal funding in 2014, and the government is its largest single source of funding.

A federal law known as the Hyde Amendment forbids the use of any federal funds for abortions. The money Planned Parenthood receives is for preventative screenings, birth control, and general women’s health care for their 2.5 million patients.

 calls for us to not put up with demagoguery.  We are literally now in a fight for our lives and for the American Way of life with White Nationalists and Right wing extremists.elpesoherocrop

As Americans continue to grapple with Donald Trump’s presidential win, it’s a lesson we need to remember more than ever: there’s nothing wrong with shaming people who have done shameful things. And there are few things more shameful than supporting a fascistic bigot.

Yet since the election, we’ve heard again and again that calling Trump enablers out for their bigotry is fruitless and wrong-headed. This line of argument, which comes mostlyfromwhite men who have the privilege of seeing racism and sexism as a thought experiment rather than a destructive reality, says that “identity politics” hurt Democrats and that the election is proof that feminism “lost”.

Trumpites and misguided liberals are eager to “move on,” insisting against allevidence that Trump’s campaign had nothing to do with sexism or racism. By doing so, they are encouraging Americans to be polite in the face of demagoguery.

But we cannot retreat from this clear line in the sand. Not only because shaming is deserved, but because it is effective, too.

I understand that Mitch McConnell intends to railroad through all the cabinet appointees too.  He also has totally changed his tone on blocking SCOTUS appointments.  He now suggests that no one do to him what he’s been doing for 8 long years; obstructing everything in his path.

031616-kgo-donald-trump-manure-art-imgRolling back regulations for out of control Wall Street is on the agenda too.  Don’t even get me started on what they intend to do on denying climate change.  Nuclear options will be exercised. Be prepared to see arcane congressional procedures used to tear down everything achieved in the 20th and 21st century.

GOP lawmakers indeed look forward to exploiting this rare alignment. Folks on the Hill estimate that CRA will be used to nix somewhere between 8 and 12 rules. (Which ones should get the axe, and in what order, remains a subject of energetic internal debate. Those mentioned to me include the Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces executive order, greenhouse-gas emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks, and the Stream Protection Rule.) Not that there aren’t plenty of others they consider worthy of takedown. It’s largely a question of floor time, they tell me. The incoming president has his own priorities, not to mention a raft of appointees to be confirmed. Even with fast-tracking, lawmakers can invest only so much time tackling individual rules.

There is, in fact, a push in the House to supercharge the CRA. Currently, only one rule can be tackled per resolution. The Midnight Rules Relief Act would change that, allowing Congress to bundle and dispatch multiple rules with a single resolution, making the process even easy-peasier. The House passed the bill (for the second time since Election Day) on Wednesday, its second day back from break. Obama has vowed to veto it, but that only matters for another couple of weeks.

Safe to say, Democrats will find themselves less than delighted by CRA’s impact on the “new day coming” later this month. Fiddling with the legislative process invariably has unforeseen consequences. And now congressional Dems have little recourse but to try and gum up the works as much as possible, using whatever obscure, complex mind-numbingly arcane tools they can dig up. It won’t be pretty—but, then again, so little of what Congress does ever is.

Read the article on exactly what the CRA is and how it will be used.gallery-1467572034-trump-modok-full-2-188533

To this end, one obscure legislative tool is suddenly getting scads of attention: a rarely used oversight measure called the Congressional Review Act, or CRA. Passed in 1996 as part of Newt Gingrich and the Revolution’s “Contract with America,” the CRA allows Congress to overturn rules freshly issued by federal agencies without going through all the rigamarole required to pass regular bills. Most notably, CRA resolutions cannot be filibustered, meaning Republicans need only a simple majority in both chambers to get the rollback party started. Those last-minute “midnight regulations” Obama has been so defiantly issuing on everything from fuel efficiency standards to the funding of Planned Parenthood? Any—or all––could easily be rendered Dead On Arrival under the CRA.

That’s the bottom line.  Everything is under attack.  EVERYTHING.

Actually, let’s talk a bit about global warning before the NASA is torn apart by the witch hunt and we no longer hear abou the science.

In September, Arctic sea ice shrank to the second-lowest level since records began in 1979. The lowest sea ice extent was recorded on September 17, 2012, when it fell to just 1.31 million square miles (3.39 million square kilometers).

The polar sea ice has a direct influence on ocean circulation, weather and regional climate across the globe. Vanishing sea ice is an easy indicator that climate change is taking place.

According to NASA, many global climate models predict that the Arctic will be ice-free for at least part of the year before the end of the 21st century. Some models predict an ice-free Arctic by midcentury.

Here’s an NPR story about the coastline in Louisiana disappearing that’s a direct result of this.  Land and History are washing away.

Louisiana is losing its coast at a rapid rate because of rising sea levels, development and sinking marshland. Officials are trying to rebuild those marshes and the wetlands, but much of the coast can’t be saved. This makes Louisiana’s history an unwitting victim. As land disappears and the water creeps inland, ancient archaeology sites are washing away, too.

Richie Blink was born and raised in Plaquemines Parish, La. — way down south of New Orleans along the Mississippi River. Now he works for the National Wildlife Federation.

When he was a kid, his dad showed him a special place in Adams Bay, where they’d go fishing.

“We would come out of the floodgates and my dad would say ‘Head for the Lemon Trees!'” Blink says.

What’s locally known as the “Lemon Trees” is a stand of weathered old trees on a grassy tuft of land. It’s a well-known landmark for fishermen, but Blink says they would rarely stop there to hunt or fish because it’s a sacred Native American site.

“The legend goes that you were always to bring some kind of sacrifice, so somebody left some lemons for the ancestors,” Blink says.

And those grew into big trees with grapefruit-sized lemons. But as land was lost to the Gulf of Mexico, saltwater made its way into the freshwater marsh, killing off the trees and other plants.

The trees stand like skeletons on the edge of this scrappy, wind-beaten island. Waves beat against the dirt, washing it away, exposing shards of ancient pottery.

 I feel like I wake up to a new horror every day.  If Trump plans to build a boom economy on a fossil fuel bubble, it will fail badly and likely take the future of the planet with it.

Each of these bubbles just might expand for a while in the short run — which so-called balanced and objective journalists will report as signs that Trump’s policies are “working.” But they’ll have to join with Trump in denying reality in order to do so. Let’s examine each of these bubbles to see why.

The most troubling aspect is Trump’s commitment to the “carbon bubble,” a commitment to expanding the production of fossil fuels, despite the fact that 80 percent of existing reserves are unrecoverable or unusable —worth absolutely nothing — if we’re to survive as a civilization. Treating those reserves as if they will actually be used vastly overvalues them, creating a carbon asset bubble, just as multiple factors overvalued housing in the Bush years, in turn creating strong incentives for a wide range of foolish, destructive and even criminal acts.

The carbon bubble does exactly the same thing. It’s not just fossil fuel reserves that are overvalued by the bubble, but everything associated with the sector — pipelines, power plants, refineries, etc. — as well as assets at risk from climate change, such as waterfront property (see Miami Beach, still in deep denial).

The carbon bubble risk is only made worse by the fact that renewable energy costs have dropped dramatically in recent years, and become increasingly competitive. Thus, even if those reserves were not unburnable because of their potential impact on climate change, they will become so for economic reasons in the next few decades. For example, the World Economic Forum’s recently released “Renewable Infrastructure Investment Handbook: A Guide for Institutional Investors” reported:

[T]he unsubsidized, levellized cost of electricity (LCOE) for utility scale solar photovoltaic, which was highly uncompetitive only five years ago, has declined at a 20% compounded annual rate, making it not only viable but also more attractive than coal in a wide range of countries. By 2020, solar photovoltaic is projected to have a lower LCOE than coal or natural gas-fired generation throughout the world.

Add to this the fact that renewable energy — particularly solar and wind — is a new technology sector, in which large efficiency gains are to be expected. That’s quite unlike the fossil fuel industry, whose costs are increasing because the cheap, easy-to-get fuel has already been burned. By 2030, renewables could well leave fossil fuels in the dust. Which is why Trump’s embrace of the carbon bubble is particularly foolish.

So, I leave you with a lot to read and be depressed about for which I am sorry but we cannot afford to be ignorant in a day and age where ignorance is valued and so on display.

What’s on your reading and blogging list today?


43 Comments on “Friday Reads”

  1. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    Coward:

    Planned Parenthood tried to deliver 87,000 petitions to Speaker of The House Paul Ryan’s office, but they were greeted by six security guards as the leader of “The People’s House” closed his office and refused the petitions.

    http://www.politicususa.com/2017/01/06/paul-ryan-unleashes-security-guards-prevent-planned-parenthood-delivering-petitions.html

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      As the lead speaker of the House he is suppose to represent “we the people”………..I am shaking my head, and getting pissed with each minute that moves toward 20 Jan.

  2. minkoffminx's avatar Minkoff Minx says:

    Shooting at Ft Lauderdale airport. 9 dead?

  3. Sweet Sue's avatar Sweet Sue says:

    Great work, Dak and good luck with those tests.
    I’m going to send a hundred bucks to Planned Parenthood this weekend.
    That’s where I got BC pills in 1970.

    • Enheduanna's avatar Enheduanna says:

      I was just starting out in the early 70s and went to the PP clinic for affordable yearly GYN exams and BC pills. The doctors were excellent.

      I’ve been giving about $100 a year and looking for those matching dollar solicitations, but I think I will set up a monthly contribution and do a little more. At least as long as I’m working.

      I read recently that donations are up 40% for PP so I hope we can keep that up and offset the loss of federal funding. Maybe we can flood them with calls similar to what happened with the attempt to change ethics rules.

      • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

        I went to them as a teen also. PP gets 40-something % of its funding from Federal sources, so this will be an enormous cut. None of the Federal funding goes for abortions anyhow, so it will be cancer screenings, contraception, and prevention that are gutted.

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      It makes me cry………looking back, and seeing where we are in 21st century.

  4. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    More depressing news: No backbone found in Dem Senators.

    Democratic Senators Refuse To Join House Dems In Objecting To Electoral College Results

    As The Washington Post reported several House Democrats tried to object to the results but were ruled out of order because by rule their objections had to be joined by a Senator, “Reps. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.), Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) and Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) raised the first objection Friday after the joint meeting was gaveled to order. They were among several House Democrats who considered lodging objections on grounds of “voter suppression” or apparent Russian interference in the campaign. But they were hampered by the fact that federal law demands that any objection be sponsored by both a House member and a senator.”

    Politico’s Connor O’Brien observed that there were at least 5 Democratic Senators in attendance at the joint session, but none of them would sign on and formally object to the Electoral College results.

    http://www.politicususa.com/2017/01/06/democratic-senators-refuse-join-house-dems-objecting-electoral-college-results.html

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      I am seeing a disease that has spread in the democratic party. No spine, none.

      • contrask's avatar contrask says:

        I really think Biden has a spine. I’m totally confused. Why did I spend my morning calling offices? Why should we care. The message coming to me is lay down and let them rape you and don’t complain

        • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

          It’s something more, there are few fighting, and a few just not doing what we need to see get done.

          • contrask's avatar contrask says:

            It just has to be. Warren was quiet too & we know she has a spine! God I’m confuse and demoralized right now & it seems like the re-ubs are going to run us into the ground

          • babama's avatar babama says:

            Yes, I think it was strategic. There are going to be far bigger fish to fry, D senators will need to use their political capitol where it can do the most good. My inner Snark wonders, where was Bernie? This was his moment to lead “Our Revolution” ™!

          • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

            Nope, spineless.

            Challenging the EC votes would have been a strategic move to show the Rethugs that Dems will fight against everything in the Rethugs’ vicious agenda. And it would have shown that the Dem Senators supported their Dem Congresspeople. Yes it would have been symbolic; there would have been the allowed 2-hr discussion and then the Rethugs would have enough votes to continue.

            Now all the Democratic — and Independent — Senators go down in history as letting this travesty of an election stand without a word in opposition. Shame!

        • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

          Contrask. Tell you the truth, we only have one avenue, the courts. I think California did the right thing by hiring Eric Holder…………….because we are going to be in court over every damn move they take. Maybe that’s why…………..we are the people, they are going to ignore us.

          Just now the Governor of Fla. reached out to Trump/Pence instead of President Obama. In other words they are not acknowledging the current President. He came back later, but wanted everybody to know that Pence and Trump were friends of his……………that’s where we are at.

          • contrask's avatar contrask says:

            I saw that! I’m still shocked the reported had the presence to ask him if he had talked to his president! And then Obama did talk to Perry. Well, I never like Florida anyway, lol

  5. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Two contractors who helped renovate Trump’s DC hotel say they were stiffed on payment for their work.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/digger/wp/2017/01/05/two-contractors-allege-getting-stiffed-for-work-on-trumps-d-c-hotel/?utm_term=.2cf9db33cbb7

  6. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Have you seen this? Trump has ordered all Obama’s diplomats to get out by Jan. 20.

    In a break from tradition, President-elect Donald Trump has asked that all of President Obama‘s foreign ambassadors leave their posts by Inauguration Day, according to new reports.

    Citing unnamed sources, the New York Times and Politico report that Trump’s transition team sent an order saying all ambassadors had to be out of their posts by Jan. 20 “without exceptions.” The order was delivered by a State Department cable sent just before Christmas. This could leave the United States without Senate-confirmed ambassadors around the world for weeks or months after Trump takes office.

    • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

      Saw that last night. It was only one amongst a number of actions I was reading about after work, and saying “WTF?” every10 min or so. We are in a living nightmare.

    • Enheduanna's avatar Enheduanna says:

      tRump seems to have a virulent hatred of Obama now and it’s showing for all the world to see.

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      Yes, and Mattis, his Defense Sect. just found out that Trump has different plans for staffing, and Mattis will not be in charge of things. Hey Mattis, tell Trump to stick it.

  7. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    Mattis is actually a good candidate, so it’s telling and ominous that he’s getting overruled. He may be on his way out like Woolsey.

    The honeymoon seems to be ending between retired Gen. James N. Mattis and Donald Trump’s transition team amid an increasingly acrimonious dispute over who will get top jobs in the Defense Department — and who gets to make those decisions.

    With only two weeks left before Inauguration Day and days before Mattis’s Senate confirmation hearing, most major Pentagon civilian positions remain unfilled. Behind the scenes, Mattis has been rejecting large numbers of candidates offered by the transition team for several top posts, two sources close to the transition said. The dispute over personnel appointments is contributing to a tenser relationship between Mattis and the transition officials, which could set the stage for turf wars between the Pentagon and the White House in the coming Trump administration.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/josh-rogin/wp/2017/01/06/mattis-clashing-with-trump-transition-team-over-pentagon-staffing/?utm_term=.aaf335e8afd0

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      Like minds……………Deputy Defense, David McCormick, Hedge fund manager, number two under Mattis.

  8. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

  9. Pat Johnson's avatar Pat Johnson says:

    This incoming administration will act as a “wrecking ball” to whatever they touch.

    Led by an unstable lunatic they are poised to destroy every law and institution they will come in contact with come January 21st.

    Thanks to all those who preferred to stay home rather than vote. This is the result.

    • Enheduanna's avatar Enheduanna says:

      Amen. I’m madder about the no shows than the loony 27% of eligible voters who got him elected. There will always be that 27%. They are the ones who always gave GWB at least 27% in favorable ratings.

      The other demo I’m going to blame are the Bernie Boyz who couldn’t vote for a woman. I know the ones who attacked me online would have never ever voted for her.

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      Yep, the media did a good job of convincing them, as well as the Russians.

  10. Enheduanna's avatar Enheduanna says:

    Sometimes it’s the little things that can illustrate the person:

    http://wonkette.com/610137/guess-the-trump-kids-arent-allowed-to-swing-on-the-swingset

    tRump rejected Obama’s offer to leave behind a (rather elaborate) children’s outdoor play set; and trust me as a Southern lady with virulently racist relatives that would be because it was owned and used by a black family.

    Also tRump apparently does not like little kids. Or pets.

  11. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Unclassified report on Russian interference in our election.

    Click to access ICA_2017_01.pdf

  12. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

  13. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    This is why we still need to audit the vote!