I wonder. If Election Day was a holiday would more people cast a ballot? I'm not sure but in some states, including Delaware, Hawaii, Kentucky, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and West Virginia Election Day is a civic holiday. Some other states require that workers be permitted to take time off from employment without loss of pay. California
Elections Code Section 14000 provides that employees otherwise unable
to vote must be allowed two hours off with pay, at the beginning or end
of a shift.
Southern states on the other hand, do everything conceivable to keep "certain type of people" from voting. Florida has become the leader in voter suppression, resulting in a unhealthy and sickly electorate. How is it possible to diagnose a sickly electorate? It doesn't require much. The first to be hardest hit are former felons. These men and women having served their time, imprisoned and now released, are left out of the democratic process. In essence they are taxed without representation. They're denied the right to vote; access to proper healthcare; workforce reintegration, leaving them to decay in a society which thinks of them as vermin. This creates a higher rate of recidivism. Leaving this sector of the population vulnerable to disease, despair and all to often, hunger.
Since Gore vs. Bush, Florida is beholden to no one. Its Governors are using the guise of purging "non-citizens" from voter rosters to suppress the "Latino" vote who generally vote for Democrats. Florida's Republican government portray Latinos as leaches to our healthcare system and other social services. That is simply a blatant lie! A scare tactic to keep Latinos "in there place," by using healthcare as an agent of fear to keep them from registering to vote.
These tactics have become the norm for Florida. Suffrage for Latinos, Women, Former-Felons.... is an ideal setting for a political battle jeopardizing the health of the State, its inhabitants and Constitution.
source:
www.businessweek.com/debateroom/archives/2008/10/election_day_should_be_a_holiday.html
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Mitt says, "No Change to Medicare." Not True
A recent poll conducted by Kaiser Family Foundation and The Washington Post as the GOP
When it comes to Medicare it finds that among Republicans a
majority (55%) prefer the idea of keeping Medicare as it is rather than
changing to a system in which seniors are guaranteed a fixed amount of
money that could be used to purchase coverage "either from traditional
Medicare or from a list of private plans." Both Romney and Ryan have
proposed converting Medicare into a premium support program, with the
House Republican budget plan spearheaded by Ryan calling for such a
change to begin in 2023.
Romney has not spelled out full details of his Medicare plan. But if it is based upon Ryan's, the budget office says it would rein in Medicare spending more forcefully than Obama has.*
So if using Ryann's plan, will wheelchair scooters still be paid by Medicare?
Mauricio
Source:
Kaiser Health Tracking Poll: August 2012
*http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/16
prepares for its national convention, finds
that the Affordable Care Act is not the top health care priority among
Republicans.
|
Romney has not spelled out full details of his Medicare plan. But if it is based upon Ryan's, the budget office says it would rein in Medicare spending more forcefully than Obama has.*
So if using Ryann's plan, will wheelchair scooters still be paid by Medicare?
Mauricio
Source:
Kaiser Health Tracking Poll: August 2012
*http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/16
Labels:
healthcare,
medicare,
rnc,
romney,
ryan
Location:
Tampa, FL, USA
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