NY Times: BOB HERBERT: A Less Than Honest Policy

December 29, 2009
OP-ED COLUMNIST
A Less Than Honest Policy
By BOB HERBERT

There is a middle-class tax time bomb ticking in the Senate’s version of President Obama’s effort to reform health care.

The bill that passed the Senate with such fanfare on Christmas Eve would impose a confiscatory 40 percent excise tax on so-called Cadillac health plans, which are popularly viewed as over-the-top plans held only by the very wealthy. In fact, it’s a tax that in a few years will hammer millions of middle-class policyholders, forcing them to scale back their access to medical care.
Which is exactly what the tax is designed to do.

The tax would kick in on plans exceeding $23,000 annually for family coverage and $8,500 for individuals, starting in 2013. In the first year it would affect relatively few people in the middle class. But because of the steadily rising costs of health care in the U.S., more and more plans would reach the taxation threshold each year.

Within three years of its implementation, according to the Congressional Budget Office, the tax would apply to nearly 20 percent of all workers with employer-provided health coverage in the country, affecting some 31 million people. Within six years, according to Congress’s Joint Committee on Taxation, the tax would reach a fifth of all households earning between $50,000 and $75,000 annually. Those families can hardly be considered very wealthy.

Proponents say the tax will raise nearly $150 billion over 10 years, but there’s a catch. It’s not expected to raise this money directly. The dirty little secret behind this onerous tax is that no one expects very many people to pay it. The idea is that rather than fork over 40 percent in taxes on the amount by which policies exceed the threshold, employers (and individuals who purchase health insurance on their own) will have little choice but to ratchet down the quality of their health plans.

These lower-value plans would have higher out-of-pocket costs, thus increasing the very things that are so maddening to so many policyholders right now: higher and higher co-payments, soaring deductibles and so forth. Some of the benefits of higher-end policies can be expected in many cases to go by the boards: dental and vision care, for example, and expensive mental health coverage.

Proponents say this is a terrific way to hold down health care costs. If policyholders have to pay more out of their own pockets, they will be more careful — that is to say, more reluctant — to access health services. On the other hand, people with very serious illnesses will be saddled with much higher out-of-pocket costs. And a reluctance to seek treatment for something that might seem relatively minor at first could well have terrible (and terribly expensive) consequences in the long run.

If even the plan’s proponents do not expect policyholders to pay the tax, how will it raise $150 billion in a decade? Great question.

We all remember learning in school about the suspension of disbelief. This part of the Senate’s health benefits taxation scheme requires a monumental suspension of disbelief. According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, less than 18 percent of the revenue will come from the tax itself. The rest of the $150 billion, more than 82 percent of it, will come from the income taxes paid by workers who have been given pay raises by employers who will have voluntarily handed over the money they saved by offering their employees less valuable health insurance plans.
Can you believe it?

I asked Richard Trumka, president of the A.F.L.-C.I.O., about this. (Labor unions are outraged at the very thought of a health benefits tax.) I had to wait for him to stop laughing to get his answer. “If you believe that,” he said, “I have some oceanfront property in southwestern Pennsylvania that I will sell you at a great price.”

A survey of business executives by Mercer, a human resources consulting firm, found that only 16 percent of respondents said they would convert the savings from a reduction in health benefits into higher wages for employees. Yet proponents of the tax are holding steadfast to the belief that nearly all would do so.

“In the real world, companies cut costs and they pocket the money,” said Larry Cohen, president of the Communications Workers of America and a leader of the opposition to the tax. “Executives tell the shareholders: ‘Hey, higher profits without any revenue growth. Great!’ ”

The tax on health benefits is being sold to the public dishonestly as something that will affect only the rich, and it makes a mockery of President Obama’s repeated pledge that if you like the health coverage you have now, you can keep it.

Those who believe this is a good idea should at least have the courage to be straight about it with the American people.

Roger Cohen is off today.

Rahm Emanuel, Obama’s Chief of Staff Says to Tune out ‘The Left’

Rahm Emanuel: Don’t Worry About the Left

By Jonathan Weisman

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2009/12/18/rahm-emanuel-dont-worry-about-the-left/

Turn off MSNBC. Tune out Howard Dean and Keith Olbermann. The White House has its liberal wing in hand on health care, says White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.

“There are no liberals left to get” in the Senate, Emanuel said in an interview, shrugging off some noise from the likes of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) that a few liberals might bolt over the compromises made with conservative Democrats.

As the White House leans on conservative Democrat Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska for the 60th health care vote, Emanuel has made the case that this generation of liberal political figures will not make the mistake of their predecessors. The late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy’s greatest regret was not cutting a deal with Richard Nixon on universal health care. Former PresidentBill Clinton has forever rued the day he did not take moderate Republican Sen. John Chafeeup on a compromise that could have secured a health care bill early in his presidency.

Liberal senators nearly scuttled the creation of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program -– S-CHIP –- because Clinton compromised with Republicans and agreed to take the program out of Medicaid and involve private insurers.

“Every time they’ve gotten close to the deal, they’ve passed up the opportunity and chosen to walk away from a particular where they’ve lost the forest for the trees,” Emanuel said.

The comments may not endear the powerful White House chief of staff to liberal activists, furious that Senate Democratic leaders, at Emanuel’s urging, cut a deal with Sen. Joe Lieberman to drop a federally run insurance policy option, then eliminate a Medicare buy-in proposal.

“I don’t think the White House recognizes how much trouble they’re in,” said one former Democratic official this morning. “I think they’re miscalaculating what’s happening with progressives and the left. They feel like they’re being taken for granted.”

But Emanuel pointed to a New York Times column by economist Paul Krugman and another coming from National Journal writer Ronald Brownstein pressing for passage of the Senate health bill. “What you’re seeing is the progressive backlash against the progressive backlash,” he said.

Breakdown FM: w/ Davey D on All Day Play Radio #2 Remember the Time When Hip Hop Was Raw?

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Breakdown FM w/ Davey D on All day Play #2

You can peep this podcast click the link below..

http://www.alldayplay.fm/episodes/episode-2-0

Remember The Time…

01-Notorious BIG “Whatcha Wanna Do? (DJ Noodles remix) (New York)

02-DJ Shadow Beats  (Davey D Speech mix)

03-Kanye West  w/ Adam Levine ‘Heard ‘Em Say’ (Chicago)

04-Christion ‘No Place’ (Oakland)

05-Christion ‘It’s Gonna Rain’ (Oakland)

06-Common w/ Darien Brockington ‘Testify’  (remix) (Chicago)

07-Jay-Z ‘Never Change’ (Davey D Ossie Davis remix) (New York)

08-Bahamadia ‘Spontaneity’ (Philadelphia)

09-Medusa ‘Fiend or Fix’ (Los Angeles)

10-Game w/ Will Iam ‘Compton’  (Compton)

11-Ice Cube w/ Dr Dre (natural Born Killaz’ (Los Angeles)

12-Sim City ‘Watch Me’ (Washington DC)

13-Wise Intelligent ‘Genocide’ (Trenton)

14-Jean Grae w/DJ  Jazzy Jeff ‘Supa Jean’ (New York)

15-Queen Latifah ‘Dance For Me’ (East Orange, NJ)

16-Queen Latifah Interview w/ Davey D-paying dues’

17-Queen Latifah ‘Nature of a Sista’ (East Orange, NJ)

18-Queen Latifah Interview w/ Davey D ‘Being an actor’

19-Queen Latifah ‘Just Another Day’ (East Orange, NJ)

20-Bang Data w/ Deuce Eclipse ‘Mi Viejo (A Mi Padre) (Oakland)

21-Bang Data w/ Deuce Eclipse ‘El Pacino (Oakland)

22-Azeem ‘Latin Revenge’  (Oakland)

23-Nina Dioz ‘El Arafato’ (Mexico)

24-MV Bill “so Deus Pode Me Juga’ (Brazil)

25-Downtown Science ‘Natural People’ (New York)

26-E-40 ‘The Story’ (Bay Area)

27-Joi “killing Time’ (New York)

28-Jurassic 5 “Friend’ (Los Angeles)

29-Truth ‘BS’ (Atlanta)

30- Pinay Divas ‘Tripping’ (Bay Area)

31-Kanye West Jesus Walks (Chicago)

32-Brooklyn Funk Essential “The Creator Has a Master Plan’ (New York)

33-Sunshine Anderson ‘Heard It All Before’ (New York)

34-Glen Lewis ‘Never Too late’

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Breakdown FM w/ Davey D on All Day Play #1 Open Hearts & Minds On a Cold Rainy Day

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Breakdown FM w/ Davey D on All Day Play #1

Open Hearts & Minds On a Cold Rainy Day

Link to slamming new podcast on All Day Play Radio-The Bay Area’s Newest Radio station

http://www.alldayplay.fm/media/5322/view

 

Breakdown FM can now be heard on All Day Play Radio

01-Grandmaster Caz  w/ Willie Bobo ‘Fried Chicken Necks ‘ (Davey D Hot 97 Protest remix) (New York)

02-Paris ‘Sheep to Slaughter’ (Bay Area)

03-Jasiri X ‘The Box’ (Pittsburgh)

04-J-Boogie w/ Zion I ‘For Your Love’ (Bay Area)

05-Nas w/ Cee-Lo ‘Theme to less the Hour’ (NY/Atlanta)

06-Beanie Sigel ‘Dear Self’ (Philadelphia)

07-JenRo ‘Rule the World’ (San Francisco)

08-Menahan Street Band ‘The Traitor’ (Malcolm X-Davey D remx) (Brooklyn)

09-Vanessa German ‘One Wing’ (Tru and Living Davey D remix) (Pittsburgh)

10-Zion I w/ Brother Ali ‘Caged Bird’ (Oakland/ Minneapolis)

11-Zion I ‘In the Morning’ (Caged Bird pt2) (Oakland)

12-Akrobatik ‘Front Steps Tough Love’ (Boston)

13-Mystic ‘Beautiful Resistance’ (Oakland)

14-Erykah Badu ‘Soldier’ (Dallas)

15-Cihuatl Ce ‘Dreamah’ (Los Angeles)

16-Orgone ‘Said and Done’

17-Chamber Brothers ‘Ain’t No Mountain High Enough’  (martin Luther -Davey D remix)

18-Rakim ’18th Letter’ (NY)

19-Scarface ‘Never Seen a man cry’ (Houston)

20-Notorious BIG ‘Warning’ (Brooklyn)

21- Boss ‘Deeper’ (Detroit)

22-Born Jamairicans ‘Yardcore’ (Los Angeles)

23-Notorious BIG  ‘Kick in the Door’ (Brooklyn)

24-Heather B ‘No Doubt’ (New York)

25-Jay-Z ‘One Million’ (Brooklyn)

26-Motion Man w/ Kutmasta Kurt ‘We All Over’ (Bay Area)

27-DJ Revolution, DJ Kraze & Chino XL ‘World Championship’ (LA/Miami

28-Nas w/ Ludacris & Jadakiss ‘Made U Look’ (New York)

29-C-Murder w/ KRS-One ‘My Philosophy’ (Davey D rmx) (new Orleans/ New York)

30-Snoog Dogg w/ Dr Dre ‘The Next Episode’ (Los Angeles)

31-Brother Ali ‘Baby Girl’ (Minneapolis)

32-Menahan Street Band ‘Tired of Fighting” (Brooklyn)

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Oakland Launches a New Radio Station-All Day Play FM is Here…

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Youth Radio Launches Eclectic Music Site All Day Play.fm

DJ Pam the Funkstrees the Party Slapper is on All Day Pay FM

It’s launch day for AllDayPlay.FM, a music
blog, radio stream, and podcast platform featuring a roster of prominent San
Francisco Bay Area DJs.

The latest online venture from Oakland-based award-winning producer Youth
Radio
, AllDayPlay.FM provides one stop
listening, downloading, and news for fans of “urban eclectic” music,
encompassing electronica, hip hop, soul, and rock.

As traditional broadcast radio stations become increasingly formatted and
narrow, All Day Play is programmed by DJs and musicians pushing the
envelope: playing diverse, undiscovered talent and writing original
perspectives on music industry developments.

The radio stream is comprised of legendary mix DJs like Sake 1, Pam the
Funkstress
, and Davey D, as well as vibrant young crews like the Krazy Kids
and the Oakland Faders. Recent stories on AllDayPlay.FM include a feature on what rappers can learn
from American Idol’s Susan Boyle, an inquiry into SNL star Andy Samberg’s
Grammy nomination, and E-40’s spin on whether older rappers should move off
the scene to make room for up-and-coming talent.

Breakdown FM can now be heard on All Day Play radio

AllDayPlay. FM can also be found in the ITunes
Radio directory (in the Eclectic category), the Public Radio Tuner app on
the iPhone, Vimeo, Facebook, and
@alldayplayfm.

All Day Play’s ranks include: Blog editor and musician 1-O.A.K., Ant-1, Bay
Kid,  Davey D, DJ Able D, DJ Ambush, DJ Malachi, DJ Platurn, DJ Slow Poke,
D-Nastee, DnZ, D-Sharp, Dion Decibels, Matthew Africa, Mike Biggz, Pam The
Funkstress, Roach Gigz, Ren the Vinyl Archeologist, Ruby Red-I, Sake 1,
and
Zumbi.

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Obama Accepts Noble Prize &References Dr King Says Non-Violence is not an Effective Method For Heads of State

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Posting up excerpts of  acceptance speeches for the Nobel Peace Prize by both President Obama and Martin Luther King. The natural thing is to make comparisons and perhaps demand that Obama be more King-like especially as he is sending 30 thousand more troops to Afghanistan…

I think its good to see both speeches to see how each man reflects upon what they perceive as their constituents. King talks about the 22 million Black folks who are under seige in this country. Obama talks about a country ‘under seige’ by terrorism.

What stood out for me was hearing how Obama while referencing King, did not reference the people King stood for… He also seemed to make the case that Kings approach toward non-violence is impractical. He cited Hitler’s march to war as an example.

That too me is a direct challenge for us as activists to change the dynamics and make any President or other recipient see us as constituents. As it stands now, President Obama came to Oslo, picked up his award, made a brief speech and skipped all the traditional festivities. Why? Because he was concerned about taking a victory lap while his numbers are down and critics are on his heels making demands…

Here’s the the speech in its entirety

http://www.c-span.org/pdf/intl121009_obama.pdf

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Operation Small Axe Film on Oscar Grant Comes to LA

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If you live in LA, you may wanna come out to check the film Operation Small Axe. It will help bring folks up to speed about the upcoming Oscar Grant trial which is being moved to LA. Not only will you learn about Oscar Grant, but you also learn how the Oakland Police department has been on a mission to frame a journalist who was covering the rally where hundreds came out to protest Grants brutal slaying.

JR of the POCC and Block Report Radio has long been outspoken about police brutality and the terrorism that people experience in the hood at their hands.

The Oscar Grant rebellions was an opportunity for OPD to swoop in on JR, snatch his camera and come up with some bogus charges about him setting fires. He is scheduled to go to trial and is looking at 4 years for a crime everyone knows he had nothing to do with.. TYhis film brings to light all that has been going on around Oscar Grant and JRs case.

Lil Wayne Recruited by DEA to Go to Mexico Check Out Drugs

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Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Former Employee of Bank of America Blows Whistle on Horrible Banking Practices-How is Your Bank Treating You?

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By now many of y’all may have seen this video of a former Bank of America employee who decided to blow the whistle and alert the world about what really goes on behind closed doors at the height of this country’s recession. It’s interesting that this young woman came forth, because it was just two weeks ago I had my own horror stories as a customer of Wells Fargo. You name it, they were doing it. It ranged from them silently changing due dates, trying to charge me extra fees to pay my bills, charging late fees when the due date landed on a weekend and I attempted to pay the next business day to of course cutting credit lines with no warning, thus messing up my credit rating which made it next to impossible to get it restored. Oh yeah we shouldn’t forget the raised interest rates from fixed to variable..

I thought I was alone till I started speaking with people and realized folks with A-1 credit on down to regular average Janes and Joes were getting taxed by these banks, many of them who received bail outs.. Many of us have been feeling frustrated and helpless. Perhaps if people take a look at this courageous woman and start laying out their own, we will have a large list of grievances that we can we hold up as we demand change..Question of the day.. How has your bank been treating you?

-Davey D-

Why Is the Media So Obsessed With Horrifying Images of African-American Mothers?

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Why Is the Media So Obsessed With Horrifying Images of African-American Mothers?

By Melissa Harris-Lacewell, The Nation.

With Michelle Obama in the White House, I expected a resurgence of the Claire Huxtable stereotype. Instead, hideous depictions of abusive, irresponsible black moms are everywhere.

http://www.alternet.org/media/144190/why_is_the_media_so_obsessed_with_horrifying_images_of_african-american_mothers_/?page=entire

Bad black mothers are everywhere these days.

With Michelle Obama in the White House, consciously and conspicuously serving as mom-in-chief, I expected (even somewhat dreaded) a resurgence of Claire Huxtable images of black motherhood: effortless glamor, professional success, measured wit, firm guidance, loving partnership, and the calm reassurance that American women can, in fact, have it all.

Instead the news is currently dominated by horrifying images of African American mothers.

Most ubiquitous is the near universally celebrated performance of Mo’Nique in the new film Precious. Critically and popularly acclaimed Precious is the film adaption of the novel Push. It is the story of an illiterate, obese, dark-skinned, teenager who is pregnant, for the second time, with her rapist father’s child. (Think The Color Purple in a 1980s inner-city rather than 1930s rural Georgia)

At the core of the film is Precious’ unimaginably brutal mother. She is an unredeemed monster who brutalizes her daughter verbally, emotionally, physically and sexually. This mother pimps both her daughter and the government. Stealing her daughter’s childhood and her welfare payments.

The mother of 5 year old Shaniya Davis

Just as Precious was opening to national audiences a real-life corollary emerged in the news cycle, when 5-year-old Shaniya Davis was found dead along a roadside in North Carolina. Her mother, a 25-year-old woman with a history of drug abuse, has been arrested on charges of child trafficking. The charges allege that this mother offered her 5-year-old daughter for sex with adult men.

Yet another black mother made headlines in the past week, when U.S. soldier, Alexis Hutchinson, refused to report for deployment to Afghanistan. Hutchinson is a single mother of an infant, and was unable to find suitable care for her son before she was deployed. She had initially turned to her own mother who found it impossible to care for the child because of prior caregiver commitments. Stuck without reasonable accommodations, Hutchinson chose not to deploy. Hutchinson’s son was temporally placed in foster care. She faces charges and possible jail time.

These stories are a reminder, that for African American women, reproduction has never been an entirely private matter.

Nobel Laureate, Toni Morrison, chose the stories of enslaved black mothers to depict the most horrifying effects of American slavery. In her novel, Beloved, Morrison reveals the unimaginable pain some black mothers experienced because their children were profitable for their enslavers. Enslaved black women did not birth children; they produced units for sale, measurable in labor contributions. Despite the patrilineal norm that governed free society, enslaved mothers were forced to pass along their enslaved status to their infants; ensuring intergenerational chattel bondage was the first inheritance black mothers gave to black children in America.

Alexis Hutchinson

As free citizens black women’s reproduction was no longer directly tied to profits. In this new context, black mothers became the object of fierce eugenics efforts. Black women, depicted as sexually insatiable breeders, are adaptive for a slave holding society but not for the new context of freedom. Black women’s assumed lasciviousness and rampant reproduction became threatening. In Killing the Black Body, law professor, Dorothy Roberts, explains how the state employed involuntary sterilization, pressure to submit to long-term birth control, and restriction of state benefits for large families as a means to control black women’s reproduction.

At the turn of the century many public reformers held African American women particularly accountable for the “degenerative conditions” of the race. Black women were blamed for being insufficient housekeepers, inattentive mothers, and poor educators of their children. Because women were supposed to maintain society’s moral order, any claim about rampant disorder was a burden laid specifically at women’s feet.

In a 1904 pamphlet “Experiences of the Race problem. By a Southern White Woman” the author claims of black women, “They are the greatest menace possible to the moral life of any community where they live. And they are evidently the chief instruments of the degradation of the men of their own race. When a man’s mother, wife, and daughters are all immoral women, there is no room in his fallen nature for the aspirations of honor and virtue…I cannot imagine such a creation as a virtuous black woman.”

Decades later, Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s 1965 report “The Negro Family: The Case for National Action” designated black mothers as the principal cause of a culture of pathology, which kept black people from achieving equality. Moynihan’s research predated the 1964 Civil Rights Act, but instead of identifying the structural barriers facing African American communities, he reported the assumed deviance of Negro families.

This deviance was clear and obvious, he opined, because black families were led by women who seemed to have the primary decision making roles in households. Moynihan’s conclusions granted permission to two generations of conservative policy makers to imagine poor, black women as domineering household managers whose unfeminine insistence on control both emasculated their potential male partners and destroyed their children’s future opportunities. The Moynihan report encouraged the state not to view black mother as women doing the best they could in tough circumstances, but instead to blame them as unrelenting cheats who unfairly demand assistance from the system.

Black mothers were again blamed as the central cause of social and economic decline in the early 1990s, when news stories and popular films about “crack babies” became dominant. Crack babies were the living, squealing, suffering evidence of pathological black motherhood and American citizens were going to have to pay the bill for the children of these bad mothers.

Susan Douglass and Meredith Michaels, authors of The Mommy Myth explain that media created the “crack baby” phenomenon as a part of a broader history that understands black motherhood as inherently pathological. They write: “It turned out there was no convincing evidence that use of crack actually causes abnormal babies, even though the media insisted this was so…media coverage of crack babies serves as a powerful cautionary tale about the inherent fitness of poor or lower class African American women to be mothers at all.”

This ugly history and its policy ramifications are the backdrop against which these three contemporary black mother stories must be viewed.

Undoubtedly Mo’Nique has given an amazing performance in Precious. But the critical and popular embrace of this depiction of a monstrous black mother has potentially important, and troubling, political meaning. In a country with tens of thousands of missing and exploited children, it is not accidental that the abuse and murder of Shaniya Davis captured the American media cycle just as Precious opened. The sickening acts of Shaniya’s mother become the story that underlines and makes tangible, believable, and credible the jaw-dropping horror of Mo’Nique’s character.

And here too is Alexis Hutchinson. As a volunteer soldier in wartime, she ought to embody the very core of American citizen sacrifice. Instead she is a bad black mother. Implied in the her story is the damning idea that Hutchinson has committed the very worse infraction against her child and her country. Hutchinson has failed to marry a responsible, present, bread-winning man who would free her of the need to labor outside the home. Hutchinson does not stay on the home front clutching her weeping young child as her man goes off to war. Instead, she struggles to find a safe place for him while she heads off to battle. Her motherhood is not idyllic, it is problematic. Like so many other black mothers her parenting is presented as disruptive to her duties as a citizen.

It is worth noting that Sarah Palin’s big public comeback is situated right in the middle of this news cycle full of “bad black mothers.” Palin’s own eye-brow raising reproductive choices and parenting outcomes have been deemed off-limits after her skirmish with late night TV comedians. Embodied in Palin, white motherhood still represents a renewal of the American dream; black motherhood represents its downfall.

Each of these stories, situated in a long tradition of pathologizing black motherhood, serves a purpose. Each encourages Americans to see black motherhood as a distortion of true motherhood ideals. Its effect is troublesome for all mothers of all races who must navigate complex personal, familial, social, and political circumstances.

Melissa Harris-Lacewell, an associate professor of politics and African-American studies at Princeton University, is completing her latest book, Sister Citizen: A Text for Colored Girls Who’ve Considered Politics When Being Strong Isn’t Enough.