A People’s Bailout

Jobs with Justice coalitions and ally organizations around the country will take part in an emergency campaign over the next 2 ½ months to get Congress and the new administration to enact a Peoples Bail-Out.

Immediately we call for:

Pass a large economic stimulus/recovery package, on the scale of the emergency we face;

Pass the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA);

Stop evictions due to foreclosures;

Emergency action so people losing jobs don’t lose health care.

Lay the groundwork for a long-term recovery program including:

Green jobs and clean energy;

Restore worker justice, including EFCA and other reforms;

Health care for all;

Retirement security;

Re-regulate the finance system and make the speculators pay to clean-up their mess

Fair Trade and Migration policies

Green Answers To The Crisis

This is an email I got from a friend in the Green Party.

Six Green steps for economic recovery:

(1) Enact a massive Green public works program, creating new living-wage jobs in conservation (including weatherization and energy retro-fitting); clean and safe energy technologies to replace fossil fuel and nuclear sources and create a carbon-free economy; repair and improvement of America’s deteriorating infrastructure (especially water and sewer systems); and improvement of public schools and Green job training programs.

“The collapse of the I-35 bridge in Minneapolis in 2007 was a result of the neglect and starvation of funds for maintaining infrastructure that was built decades ago. The ideology of privatization and hostility to ‘big government’ is no longer tenable during the financial crisis — the current White House and Congress conceded as much when they began pushing for bailouts. Public works programs built America, and public works, with hundreds of thousands of new Green jobs, is what America needs now for economic recovery,” said Rosa Clemente, the Green Party’s 2008 candidate for Vice President (http://www.rosaclemente.com).

“We’re encouraged that President-elect Obama intends to launch a public works program along these basic lines, but we hope Congress and his own administration don’t undermine and dilute such a program out of traditional Democratic and Republican loyalty to corporate interests and fear of being labeled liberal or socialist. It’s time to follow the lead of the Green Jobs For All movement,” Ms. Clemente added.

(2) Bail out financially ailing towns, cities, and states before bailing out private corporations: millions of public sector and contractor jobs depend on the fiscal security of municipal and state governments.

Greens noted that municipalities and states are businesses that drive state and local economies throughout the US. They also provide the social safety net that millions of working people need during the current crisis.

(3) Jumpstart our country’s mass transit system, giving people an alternative to cars while saving them money and providing jobs.

“Making autos more efficient will only get us part way toward solving our energy and climate challenges. We need to get people out of their cars altogether. Communities need the ability to provide local solutions for mass transprotation: new trains, subways, light rail wherever they fit,” said Wes Rolley, co-chair of the Green Party’s EcoAction Committee.

(4) Enact a Single-Payer/Medicare For All national health plan, providing every American with coverage and removing the burden of health care from small and large private businesses.

“The skyrocketing cost of health care under our private health care system has created much of the economic instability as businesses struggle to provide workers health benefits. If President Obama and Congress have the political will to resist the power of the insurance, HMO, and pharmaceutical industries that siphon their profits off America’s need for health care, the relief that Single-Payer will be a huge economic boost,” said Sanda Everette, co-chair of the Green Party of the United States.

Single-Payer would cover all Americans regardless of income, employment, residence, age, or prior medical condition, allowing choice of health care provider, and costing working people far less than they now pay for private coverage. In 2003, the New England Journal of Medicine published an article estimating that Single-Payer could cut health care costs by $350 billion annually (http://www.pnhp.org/publications/nejmadmin.pdf). Greens sharply criticized Barack Obama during the election season for rejecting Single-Payer out of concern for health insurance companies.

(5) End the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.

“The staggering expense of the Iraq and Afghanistan invasions and occupations haven’t only cost American, Iraqi, and Afghan lives. It also ate up trillions of dollars away that could have been spent on human and environmental needs. If we call home our troops right now, we can divert the money needed for military occupations to Green public works and other programs to jumpstart the economy — a new peace dividend,” said Starlene Rankin, co-chair of the Lavender Green Caucus.

The Green Party opposed both wars from the beginning and has criticized Mr. Obama’s plans for delayed and partial troop withdrawal from Iraq and for sending more troops to Afghanistan.

(6) End the war on drugs, which wastes billions annually, hasn’t curbed drug use, and ruins lives by incarcerating nonviolent offenders (mostly young, African American, Latino, and poor white) at further government expense.

“The war on drugs is America’s longest and costliest war. With Afghanistan providing the world’s world’s biggest poppy crop, it’s one of the main reasons the US is fighting a war there,” said Cliff Thornton, co-chair of the Green Party and co-founder of Efficacy, Inc. (http://www.efficacy-online.org), which promotes major reforms in drug policy.

Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron has estimated that legalizing cannabis would save federal, state, and local governments $44 billion a year in enforcement costs (http://www.prohibitioncosts.org/mironreport.html). Governments could collect another $33 billion in revenues by taxing cannabis as heavily as alcohol and tobacco.

Any thoughts?

Random Thoughts

As a regular feature, these are my notes that did not make it into a post and want to get feedback from my readers.

1–What the hell is “cross wheel drive”?

2–I have an idea of Time magazine.  Make the” Man Of The Year”–the CREDIT CARD.  It can symbolize the economic crisis which is all about the credit and its influence on the population.

3–If the Big 3 go bust and you have a car under warranty you will be screwed.  Under bankruptcy all obligations are terminated and a warranty is an obligation.  Merry Christmas!

4–During this Xmas season, take a look at the presents you buy and receive–how many of them were made in the US?  Very few.  We are no longer a manufacturing country, but a nation of consumers.

5–Dell computers has outsourced their tech support to India, but if you would like to talk to someone in the US–it will cost you $12.95 a month.  Not bad, charge people to talk to an American…now that is a great idea!  (sarcasm intended)

6–How would someone do something illegal and then post it on youtube or facebook?

7– Congress will be getting a pay raise when the new Congress convenes in January.

8–A kidnapping expert in Mexico has been kidnapped…..sorry but that is just damn funny!

How About Making Healthier Easier?

The state of Mississippi tried to pass a bill that would ban restaurants from serving certain foods to overweight patrons.  It failed.  The government, both state and federal, has tried for years to get the poor to adopt a healthier diet.  They have failed.  All attempts to help low income families learn to eat healthier have failed, for the most part.

Why is this?  First of all, healthier foods are far more expensive than high fat low nutrition foods.  That is the main cause of the unhealthy diet–cheaper foods make the food budget go further.

I am sure that somewhere within the HHS catacombs there is a new plan to help the poor learn to eat healthier.  They will fail also.  With the incoming administration there will be an emphasis on health care and one of the canons will be preventive measures like a healthier diet.  And now we are back to where we began…it will fail.

I know somewhere someone is saying, “there has got to be an answer”.  Uh huh and there is.  It does not take a rocket scientist to figure it out.  The answer is in the food stamp program which many poor people are benefitting from.  Take the program and make it where if healthier foods are bought then they would be half priced or 2 of 1 type of thing.  This would not be that difficult because all stores are computerized and it would take an adjustment in the software to make it viable.

The government will want all of us to focus on the preventive side of the health care equation, but telling people about the benefits of eating healthier will not make it so.  There has got to be an incentive for such an approach

Without the incentive ALL attempts to make a healthier population will FAIL.  This is an easy approach and will have a high rate of success—but there is the problem…it is not complicated enough for government.

copyright:  CHUQ/Info Ink

New Rules

Cash-strapped consumers might get some welcome news on Thursday when regulators vote to rein in controversial credit card practices.

The proposed rules, which have received overwhelming consumer support, prohibit banks from practices like raising the interest rates on pre-existing credit card balances unless a payment is over 30 days late, and applying payments in a way that maximizes interest penalties.

The Federal Reserve Board, the Office of Thrift Supervision and the National Credit Union Administration, are all expected to approve the regulation. The rules are expected to take effect by 2010.

If approved, the Fed’s rules will mean an end to double-cycle billing, which averages out the balance from two previous bills. That means that consumers who carry a balance can get hit with retroactive interest on their previous month’s bill – even if they’ve already paid that off.

Consumers would also be given a reasonable amount of time to make payments, and payments would be applied to higher-rate balances first, to reduce interest penalties and fees.

Credit card statements would clearly list the time of day that a payment is due, and any changes to accounts would be in bold or listed separately.

And, finally, no more universal defaults – policy which allows credit card issuers to increase the interest rate on one card if a customer misses a payment on another card.

Consumer advocacy groups say credit-card reform couldn’t come soon enough. Travis Plunkett, the legislative director for the Consumer Federation of America said new rules are “essential” at a time when “so many Americans are falling behind on their loans.”

In the midst of a credit crunch, Americans have about $976.3 billion in revolving credit and 4.9% of all credit cards were delinquent in the third quarter, according to the latest data from the Federal Reserve.