Sunday, October 30, 2016

Observations

A word of preface: I have been observing American politics for 50 plus years. In that time I have seen the vile (George Wallace), the wimpy (Mike Dukakis), the "too nice" (Mr. Jimmy) and the simply  ignorant (George W. Bush, who was unable to discern a Shi'ite from a Sunni when elected).

         In this cycle, though we have a man who has proclaimed himself "smarter than the generals" ,a "genius" for paying no tax for over a decade,  a devaluer of women ("Grab 'em by..."), and much more and much worse.  This is a man who apparently thinks military prep school equates with  real military experience, that Michele Bachmann is remotely capable of giving good advice, and that the American electorate is too stupid to see through all the smoke and mirrors. Regarding the last statement, he is partially correct, in that some otherwise intelligent people, when confronted by the guy they watched on a TV reality show, just lose their minds. These might be the same ones who just looove the Kardashians, also vapid and devoid of merit.

        Barry Goldwater scared me, but at least he was sane. Trump is not. The irrational belief that if he is not elected it must be because of something crooked, rather than his own inadequacy, indicates the scope of his narcissistic sociopathic personality disorder. Don't misunderstand me, many successful persons are sociopaths, but function well. It is when the belief in infallibility creeps in that problems arise. Trump has never apologized for anything and rarely admitted to a mistake. The string of his bad business decisions added to the many outrageous and grotesquely ignorant statements he's made during the campaign should be off- putting to most voters. Sadly, however,  some of his most vociferous (and, potentially violent) supporters are folks for whom he cares essentially not at all. The retired union worker should examine Trump's record in Atlantic City. Every female in America should reflect on just those things he has stated publically. Until he needed these voters, Trump has been pro-choice; now he magically isn't.  

        Unfortunately, Trumps blustering bully boy tactic plays into the mindset of many who, rather than accept responsibility for their actions or lack thereof, in determining the condition of their own lives, revel in Trump's "blame game." They aren't unemployed because they have limited skills and no desire to get them, they're unemployed because of all those damned immigrants! And so it goes. This gives us the spectacle of Trump on the right hand side of his mouth blaming trade agreements for  business moving off shore, while from the left side , ordering all his brand name "merch" to be produced elsewhere. Can you sat "hypocrite?"


         Unfortunately, the more they embrace the rabid Evangelical mindset, the more irrational they become. For those who cling to both Trump and their conservative religious dogma, and love to wear that "WWJD?"  bracelet...ask yourself how the man whom you claim to be the sole author of good in the universe would react to Donald Trump's politics of hate and exclusion. Yeah, I thought so.

Friday, October 28, 2016

Faith and Freedom?


             Whose faith and what Freedom?



   This meme was posted in a comment to a friend's page (they didn't post it) and after reading it I realized that I had gained insight into the mindset of those who buy into the Trump thingy. 

      After thinking about it a while and getting more and more frustrated, I decided to address all these issues. Note that this is apparently the brainchild of something or someone called the "Faith and Freedom" coalition. What leaps off the page is that "freedom" is waaay out of place in the minds of this group. They are explicit in the fact that they do not favor freedom to do, be, or think anything other than their dogma. So, in order:

        Abortion on demand: So much has been said regarding this issue by both sides that it's more than clear what the real issue is. Evangelicals (and Catholics) are opposed to abortion. Noted. Oddly enough they are , as a rule, steadfastly pro death penalty.  The position today of the largest Evangelical sect in the USA and how (and why) it changed speaks volumes.

         When Roe v Wade was first decided, most of the Southern evangelicals who today make up the backbone of the anti-abortion movement believed that abortion was a deeply personal issue in which government shouldn’t play a role. Some were hesitant to take a position on abortion because they saw it as a “Catholic issue,” and worried about the influence of Catholic teachings on American religious observance. Shortly after the decision was handed down, The Baptist Press, a wire service run by the Southern Baptist Convention — the biggest Evangelical organization in the US — ran an op-ed praising the ruling!  “Religious liberty, human equality and justice are advanced by the Supreme Court abortion  decision,” was the most salient quote." Of course this was because at the time, the SBC was busy fighting school segregation battles (yeah, still).
So this is a personal liberty issue, opposed by those who  are screaming about their personal liberty (to discriminate) is threatened. Final word on this issue. Marla Maples was quite clear that her daughter was born solely  because she refused to have the abortion that Donald Trump wanted her to. Remember, if his mouth is open he's lying. We'll lump defunding Planned parenthood in here since it's essentially the same issue, albeit even more mean spirited, in that it has an overwhelming effect on the poor, about whom neither Trump or Pence care one bit.

        Repeal Obamacare: In a sense we should, but not to go back to tens of millions being uninsured and taking no responsibility for  their own welfare. Obamacare is what it is because of obstructionist tactics of the Tea party during the fight to pass it. It should have been better, but Big Pharma's lobbying efforts saw to it  that it was a bad compromise at best. All that said, I have lost count of the former students and younger friends who are,  for the first time, insured and getting regular medical treatment. All are employed, but none could afford health care until the ACA. Remember, the multi-billion dollar drug industry has a huge interest in maintaining the status quo and it doesn't match yours. One word: "Epi-pen"  Again, many of the most rabid Evangelicals are lower middle class people with limited access to health insurance. A vote for Trump is definitely counter to their best interest, but, of course whatever the reverend says, huh?

        Federal Tax Increase: Of course as this is meant  to be interpreted, it is simply a lie. Trust me, those who would be expected to pay more income tax  aren't the religious poor.  Of course any tax Trump paid would be more, wouldn't it. It hurts my head to endeavor to understand how those who struggle to get by and are, as I am, honest taxpaying citizens can be less than outraged at Trump's "I'm too smart to pay taxes."  But them why would we expect an oligarch to feel otherwise?

        Same sex marriage:  Has a non-issue ever been more argued with less real reason? Evangelicals hate Islam, in part because of Shari'ia, or Islamic law, which also governs civil matters in Islamic states.. And yet.....here we have the Evangelical version, in which persons unknown to most of them, whose lives generally are lived just  like everyone else's who have decided that their version of religious law as they believe it, should be followed by us all. Even for the Pilgrims, a religious society if there  ever was one, marriage was a civil rite, designed to settle issues of inheritance and property. Of course, the same morons who cherry pick from the OT to justify their homophobic hatred, also steadfastly ignore all the other verbage in the same chapter, because it really isn't about the right to happiness of all people, it's about "my way or the highway."

        Common Core: Not even gonna go there much , except to say that in a country as large as ours, a kid ought to be able to move to another state and be on roughly the same page academically. As  20 year teacher I have seen the results when that isn't the case, and students suffer. Of course again, the Evangelicals want to scrub the texts of all those unpleasant historical realities. It must be noted that both North Korea and the former Soviet Union did exactly the same thing. Is that who we should emulate?

        School vouchers: Sure, let's publicly fund religious schools, OK? No one remembers the Bible riots in Philadelphia over somewhat the same issue. 30 years ago if I had run on a platform of allowing Catholic schools to receive public money, I'd have been burned at the stake by these same Evangelicals who now want to send their kids to Charters, many Church afiliated  (of which more than half fail or are  involved in financial crimes). Of course no one is more rabid and foaming at the mouth on this issue than a converted Catholic Evangelical, like Mike Pence. Of course to even hint that Trump cares is ludicrous, since he and his brood went to military or prep schools like he did.

          Amnesty for illegal aliens: I guess this one depends on where you live. The one factor here which is often mentioned and always false, is "They're taking our jobs!" No they're not. No, isn't happening. This goes along with "they get Social Security!"  No they can't. This topic may well be the most understood one in the list, because it's based on a lie(s). Living in Central Florida I taught in a school with 28 separate  languages spoken by students. No one cared about their kids getting a good education like these immigrants, be they Haitian, Vietnamese, Muslim, whatever.  What do Trump and Pence really know about this? Not a G***amn thing.

        Iran Nuclear Deal: This reminds me of the uproar over the HPV vaccine. People for whom the mention of private parts causes palpitations rushed to claim that they were certain that protecting girls from this dangerous virus would lead to increased promiscuity. These are the same ones who claimed that access to birth control would lead to: (long list; increased teen pregnancy, higher rate of STDs, etc.) Of course the opposite as been the case in every instance. Do we learn from this? No, of course not. The pundits are ready to pounce and prognosticate, assuming that because this President thought it a good idea, it will be a bad idea. There is zero actual indication, just  partisan nay-saying.

        First Amendment  Defense Act: Say whaaat? Since when has the first Amendment required a defense? Since when has the Federal Government  ever prosecuted any one for simple speech?  This comes from those who would love to be allowed to incite riot (a crime) and use hate speech  to inspire violence against anyone they don't like. Have you ever noticed that those who bitch about "politically correct" speech are those who mourn the fact that the "good old boy race and gender words are out of favor? It slips by these morons that actions we have seen taken against hate speech users have not been federal at all (the only scope of the Bill of rights), but have been the actions of private companies which refuse to allow their sponsored duck call making,  race baiting, inbreds to hurt their profit line. It is a measure of just how ignorant many of the Far right are that they know almost nothing of the reality in such cases.

         Of course this also omits the obvious fact that there has been a First Amendment protection group for 94 years. It's the American Civil Liberties Union. Of course, the Evangelicals care nothing for the civil liberties of anyone who doesn't agree with them. 

        They are in good company, since it is obvious from Trump's own words that he has almost no understanding of the mechanics of Government either. He has, at various times,
made statements that indicate that he thinks the President can pass or repeal a law ("repeal Obamacare"), delete a Constitutional Amendment (as in Mrs. Clinton would "repeal the 2nd Amendment") or in the case of Louie Gohmert, an ardent supporter's, misstatement, appoint a Supreme Court justice even with a House and Senate majority from the other party.


        When considering the "Freedom" part of the meme, it is obvious that the "Faith and Freedom" group , in five of the ten items  is definitely not in favor of any person's freedom except their freedom to impose their will on persons who don't share their beliefs.    

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Curiosities

Curiosities
        There are aspects of some of Trump's more rabid supporters which are de facto proof that they simply have been gulled by a master of bloviation and bombast.

        We live in a retirement community which, while by no means all "Red," is undoubtedly majority Republican, based on the number of Trump stickers in evidence. Many of these individuals are former union members, now retired, who are able to live here because they had decent retirement plans and health  insurance, much of it negotiated in collective bargaining. Please don't misunderstand, some American unions have, in my opinion, been exceptionally greedy and have hurt the public perception of the labor movement, but  enough about the UAW and Teamsters.

        For a former Union employee to support Trump is to completely ignore  his consistent anti-labor actions and positions. Even his own product line is produced by non-union workers outside the US.  If you believe that Trump has any intent of moving production back here, you are delusional.  Trump is Scott Walker on a bad hair day as regards his position on labor rights.  He has, at times, simply used bankruptcy to avoid paying for work done.  He stiffed thousands of union employees in Atlantic City. This managerial genius (just ask him) has a deplorable failure rate. This is, in part, why US banks are leery of loaning him any more money.  Which brings me to the next issue.


        So where does Trump find financing? Why from Russian oligarchs like his apparent pal, Vladimir Putin. I was appalled back in  2001 when we heard this from George W. Bush, “I looked the man in the eye. I found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy,.... . . I was able to get a sense of his soul.”  That was hideous, and as Bush found out, a misimpression,  and President Obama has no such illusions. Meanwhile Trump owes money to some of Putin's high powered friends, and , make no mistake about it, Putin is no democrat. He has said that he considers the collapse of the Soviet union “The greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.”  These comments in 2005 are a mirror of the  man. Bush was still POTUS and Putin was waxing nostalgic over the anniversary of the end of WWII (The "Great Patriotic Struggle" in Soviet era history books. ) The memory of all of us needs to be jogged to recall that prior to Hitler's abrogation of his treaty with Stalin, the Soviets had been silent Nazi allies. There is little evidence that Putin's moral fiber is much stronger than "Uncle Joe's."  The Russians/Soviets have ever been political pragmatists. Trump as debtor to them is economically frightening, but  Trump in control of  nuclear weapons, having demonstrated that he is frequently incapable of exercising even a modicum of  control over himself,  is dangerous.  


        Finally, for now, I remain baffled at the rabid support for Trump of those who call themselves Evangelical Christians. Of course as some of us know, "evangelical " is a code for "we're right, you're wrong, our way or the highway."  If anyone is truly concerned regarding either candidate's moral stance  consider this. Donald Trump has only been to church (any church) since his teens, other than his three marriages, to campaign. Period. Of course early in the campaign, in true Trump style he commented that "we don't really know anything about her (Ms. Clinton's) religious activities." As he is prone to do, he shot off his mouth with no real factual basis for his comments, other than the desire to slur his opponent.  He did it to his Primary opponents,  and he has certainly done it to Mrs. Clinton. I have just related  above the entirety of Trump's affiliation with a church - any church - essentially none for the last 50 years.

        So what of, his opponent? Heathen, demon seed, apostate heretic? Well, actually no. Hillary Clinton was raised from childhood in the United Methodist Church, which she still attends when in a stable schedule. She taught Sunday school as a teen, and worked with church sponsored  children's groups even in college. At Wellesley, “Clinton regularly read the Methodist Church’s Motive magazine,”  she and Bill Clinton were married by a Methodist minister, and  in 1993, she joined a women’s prayer group. When Bill Clinton was President, the Clinton family regularly attended Washington’s Foundry United Methodist Church. Hillary Clinton spoke at the church’s 200 anniversary in September. In that address, she spoke about the Methodist churches she attended as a child, in college, in Arkansas when Bill Clinton was governor, and in Washington, D.C., when he served as president. “In place after place after place,” Clinton said, “the Methodist church and my fellow Methodists have been a source of support, honest reflection and candid critique.”  During a presidential forum in 2007, Clinton said that “a lot of the talk about and advertising about faith doesn’t come naturally to me.” She said that faith “is something that — you know, I keep thinking of the Pharisees and all of Sunday school lessons and readings that I had as a child. But I think your — your faith guides you every day. Certainly, mine does. But, at those moments in time when you’re tested, it — it is absolutely essential that you be grounded in your faith.”


        To be frank, I couldn't care less about any body's religion except when they choose to flog me with it, but to choose Trump over Mrs. Clinton makes me wonder just how much Clorox,  these Evangelicals have been imbibing.  

Monday, October 24, 2016

Tidbits for Monday

                                    Tidbits for Monday
Trying to avoid politics; we'll see how it goes.

       Once and (oh, if it were only true) for all - The words "prejudice" and "bias" are nouns. Period. One can show prejudice, or have prejudice, even be a racist arsehole because of it,   but you can't "be prejudice" or, for that matter "be bias" no matter how many times in various semi literate ravings you choose to misuse it in that context.


        There is a great value to be ascribed to the simple concept of "knowing when to quit."  I am not a slobbering  groveling fan of Barbra Streisand, as are some I could mention, but I will readily concede that she is more than a little adept at interpreting a melody, and within her range, is  just about as good as it gets.  Additionally, she still has that ability at 74, and has adjusted the keys downward accordingly. Why mention this? well, Timmy, because in August,  Babs  released a  new and pretty damned good album called "Encores." As the name implies, these are not new material, rather great Broadway songs. She has chosen to do these classics as duets with some rather interesting singers, some of whom we expect to be good in the genre,   such as Anne Hathaway, Hugh Jackman, and Antonio Banderas, all with real; chops. Then there are some, less well  known as stage singers, who also perform admirably, among then Daisy Ridley, Chris Pine, Alec Baldwin, Jamie Foxx, Seth MacFarlane, and the divine Melissa McCarthy.

       Which brings me to track 3 - "Who Can I Turn To" from "The Roar of the Greasepaint...etc."  I don't know when Anthony Newly (dead for 17 years) recorded the track, but some genius decided it was worth dubbing into a "duet" for this album. At his best, Newly had a mere 1 1/2 vote vibrato, joining the late Ms. Garland in that club. By the time this was done, it seems like about 3 notes wide, especially in his lower registers - painful.  At least he has quit.


       Remember when base ball was called the national pastime?  I do. I am also appalled by the current price for decent seats in any major league ballpark, but today's newspaper gives us a new low (or high, depending upon interpretation).  Tickets for the first Cubs home game of the world series are selling in the >$6,000 range! Yeah, really.  This clearly puts the game out of the reach of most real fans. The only way such a price could be justified would be if  The Beatles magically reunited and played "Baby You're a Rich Man" and "Money" during  the seventh inning stretch.

  
      Karma is a bitch. One can only hope Roger Goodell finds that out this NFL season. The $35 million (yeah, really) dollar man seems to have odd priorities. He jumped through hoops, legal and political, to bench Tom Brady for four games for a non issue.  I know, don't start, I don't care and I'm not even a Pat's fan!

       Meanwhile, there have been a hoist of domestic violence incidents since "deflategate" and the offenders are still actively playing. I guess that if you don't get caught on camera it doesn't count?  Wait, it gets worse:  Every year, the NFL breaks out the pink shoes and pink gloves to raise awareness about breast cancer, and sells pink NFL memorabilia to allegedly "raise money" for the cause. However, here are the realities of the leagues "good works": For every $100 of pink NFL merchandise sold, $50 goes back to the retailer and $37.50 goes back to the manufacturer. Of the remaining $12.50, the NFL takes $1.25 and donates the rest to the American Cancer Society  a top-heavy pseudo charitable bureaucracy.  Out of the whopping  $11.25 that the NFL donates to the American Cancer Society, only $8.01 goes to cancer research. That gives it a 70% overall and a 60% financial (one star out of four) rating.  There must be a more deserving Cancer related  charity than that (Susan Komen, for the Cure, breast cancer specific, is a three star charity, for example!)

         As bad, and probably even worse, is the fact that the NFL makes $10 billion (nine zeros!) annually, and pays $0 (that's no zeros!) in taxes. If this doesn't offend you, it damned well should. When it comes to overpaid nonprofit executives, NFL commish Roger Goodell stands alone. His 2015 salary of $35 million is about 37  times bigger than the salary of United Way CEO Brian Gallagher, who was the 11th highest-paid American nonprofit executive in 2014.  As mystifying as it seems, while the NFL isn’t a charity that takes donations, it gets away with calling itself a nonprofit 501(c)(6) “trade association,” financed by 32 privately-owned, for-profit member teams ( except for the Green Bay Packers, which is a publicly-owned nonprofit with over 300,000 shareholders).

        Although the NFL operates solely for the profit of its member teams – which collectively bring in $10 billion a year – and got over $300 million in member dues last year, and pays its top executive a ludicrous salary, it gets the same exemption as churches and social justice organizations actually trying to do good in their communities. The NFL isn’t the only offender, as some  pro sports organizations are still "nonprofits" (an egregiously bullshit term)  like the National Hockey League, the Professional Golf Association, and the Association of Tennis Professionals. Meanwhile Major League Baseball gave up their tax-exempt status in 2007, and the National Basketball Association has never tried to classify itself as tax-exempt.  I've tried, and failed to figure out the structural differences between MLB & NBA and the NFL.  Imagine if the  media spent half as much time reporting on this scandal as they did on “Deflategate!”

        Finally, although I generally consider cheerleaders, as Lewis Grizzard once so eloquently opined, to be "the confetti of athletic competition," that doesn't alter the fact that generally NFL owners treat them like shit. Despite Cincinnati Bengals owner Mike Brown’s net worth of $924 million, Bengals cheerleaders were paid just $2.85 an hour for 300 hours of work they put in over the course of half a year. Slovakian minimum wage workers made 65 cents an hour more than Bengals Cheerleaders did last year. Likewise an Oakland Raiders' cheerleader, sued the owners for similar abuses. In the suit, the basis was that, even though the team she worked for was more than capable of paying her a fair wage, she was mandated to fund her own travel for games and required to buy her own cosmetics, which must be applied to a strict standard or she and her teammates face league fines. This is almost domestic financial violence.


        Hopefully, karma will manifest itself when Tom Brady wins another Superbowl ring while Roger Goodell continues to be just another grossly overpaid putz.

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Even More Things Which make me Say "Huh?"

       Even more things which make me go "Huh?"

        Saturday morning, 7:30 am news. A man's pet Emu was scared by a dog and ran away. It took a significant number of bodies and time to recapture the bird. Now the real question: Why the hell would someone keep a 125 pound, 5 1/2 foot tall,  "can kick you to death" flightless bird in an urban setting?  The eggs are relatively inedible, the bird has a brain about the size of its eyeball, and is rated by breeders as being "dumber than a turkey!" In fact, Smithsonian recently pronounced the Emu as (officially, I guess) the "dumbest bird in the world," That's a really stupid bird and, it seems to me, a reasonably poor  choice for a pet.


        Nest question. here's a hypothetical scenario. President George W. Bush, while President, went to Africa several times. At least twice, African heads of state donated various sums in kind or in gifts to the President which he gratefully accepted and then regifted to non-profit causes. Was anybody irate about this? Woodrow Wilson received (and kept) a limousine. Ronald Reagan received , kept and, after leaving the White House,  lived in, a $2.5 million house in Bel Air, CA.  Where's the outrage?   

        On the other hand, Hillary Clinton, while serving as Secretary of State, visited Morocco,  a friendly and  critical ally  in Northern Africa,  and gave a speech. The King, richer than God, as a symbol of  good relations between our nations,  gave a large monetary gift - not to her, not to her family, but to a charitable  foundation which is one of the most highly vetted and respected  charities in America, far more productive and efficient than the Red Cross, or even St. Jude's Children's Hospital.  The Clinton Foundation sponsors programs in public health, economic development, women’s rights and climate change.  Its work has been praised, including efforts to lower the price of AIDS medication and distribute it to children. The foundation and the Clinton Global Initiative have helped more than 435 million people in 180 countries. The secretary herself, and her husband, also gave over $1 million in each of several years to this charity, while receiving absolutely zero compensation whatsoever,  from it. Donald Trump is outraged.  It makes my head hurt.

       As a footnote, Trump has actively solicited contributions to his own charitable foundation,  from private citizens and corporations as well. Recent reporting on the Trump Foundation,  has centered on Mr. Trump’s repeated use of foundation money to make donations that simultaneously helped him solve a personal or business problem.  A recent Florida  lawsuit  was eventually settled with Mr. Trump agreeing to donate $100,000 to charity, but the donation came from the Trump Foundation instead of Mr. Trump himself. Using charity money to satisfy a personal lawsuit is typically considered to be self-dealing, an illegal use of nonprofit foundation funds. In more recent years, it appears that the major beneficiary of the Trump Foundation has been....Trump! Mr. Trump’s foundation does not show up on the charity registers in many states,  because the foundation  has, numerous times,  not complied with non-profit regulations. Again, it makes my head hurt.

        "Be an energy voter - it's not a partisan issue",  proclaims a recent commercial featuring a cast of paid actors portraying the spectrum  of American citizens. Of course, it absolutely is a partisan issue, and all you need to do to prove it is look at the energy barons in America and where their political support lies. Start with the Koch Brothers, Republican mega donors. Their $9.250,000  in lobbying alone, is a good indicator. While you're beginning to believe that they really care about you, consider this:

       Two of the world's largest energy companies, Royal Dutch/Shell and BP, are majority owned and controlled outside the US. One wonders how much Congressional "bang" they get for their $7.43 million bucks in direct lobbying? What we do know is that energy lobbying contributions show a 30 to 1 ratio in favor of fossil fuels (you know, CO2, acid rain, global warming and all that stuff ?)  Collectively, oil and gas alone fed the coffers of all Congressional  lobbying recipients a staggering $1.8 billion!   Statistically, about 70% of Petroleum/ gas industry  lobbying goes to Republicans. As unbalanced  as that seems, it pales next to mining (coal) interests, in which case over  90% of lobbying donations ("bribes" carries such an unpleasant connotation, doesn't it?) go to Republicans.  If you still believe "being an energy voter" isn't partisan, I can't help you.


        In a somewhat related vein, at least conceptually, candidates Clinton and Sanders both have made repeated calls for modifying a  2006 Bush administration "gift" to the Pharma industry. To get the Medicare part D act passed, over rather strenuous objection  by the Big Pharma industry, the  bill was altered to include a provision that Medicare would never negotiate drug prices. Understand, this means that while Insurance companies and The Veteran's Administration can, and do, pay less for drugs by negotiating with suppliers, Medicare costs (and the co-pays of recipients) are set by Big Pharma with zero regard for anything but profit.

        Let's reiterate, using a current example: Mylan Pharmaceuticals' recent 500% price hike to ($600) of its patented "Epi-pen" was met with significant outrage, to the point that Mylan lowered the price (with a coupon issued by them) to "only" $300.  Of course in the UK, Mylan sells the identical item (at a profit) for about $69. The Veteran's administration also pays less, because they are able to negotiate price, as do major US  health insurers - except Medicare. So who gets hurt? To some degree, all users do, since the actual value of the drug in an Epi-pen is less than $2.00!   The sad part is that those hurt worst are those least able to afford it. Those with health insurance will undoubtedly see an increase in their co-pay but, if they can afford insurance in the first place, will probably be all right. However, those without insurance or on Medicare will pay full price, and those with Part D will still pay a larger co-pay based on the full retail drug cost.

        Of course, as an industry, Big Pharma  fights to preserve their special status, which is:  As an industry which manufactures products which, for some consumers aren't "optional" but essential to survival, they remain largely unregulated in the marketplace. This is different from most other manufacturers and industries,  whose product consumers can choose to use (or not). Being unable to afford new Basketball shoes is, perhaps, annoying. Being unable to afford a drug which makes the difference between life and death is possibly fatal.

       How much does it cost to "buy" this protection and unique privilege by stopping adverse legislation?  Here's the situation  as it is today:  Large pharmaceutical firms are some of the most profitable companies in the world, and they spend a great deal  money on, besides advertising and hefty salaries for rich kid CEOs, lobbying Congress to stay that way.  While they would like for public perception to be that they reinvest most of these obscene profits on Research and Development, and  some profits are reinvested to fund research and clinical trials,  far more is now spent annually, by the biggest names in the business on media advertising. Hundreds of millions of dollars are also spent on political operations ("lobbying") every year. 

     The government has long provided  the pharmaceutical industry with  premium patent protections while leaving drug pricing up to the whims of the market. We, as  consumers in the United States, now pay some of the highest prices in the world for many life-saving drugs. Recent data  shows  that critical cancer medicines, for example, cost as much as 600 times more in the United States than other countries. The industry has a clear interest in maintaining the political status quo, and lobbying is the vehicle. In total, most recently compiled lobbying expenditures for the Pharma and medical supply  industries exceed $125 million  over  the last fiscal year!  That, however is relatively minor when compared to the $5 billion spent on advertising by Pharma alone.

        Although the pharmaceutical industry justifies routine overcharging by pointing to the huge, and, admittedly  uncertain, costs of research, the truth is that the government has historically taken, mainly through the efforts and auspices of the National Institute of Health, and continues to take, the greatest risks, and funds those risks with your and my tax dollars . Additional government grants flow to public and private  university efforts as well.

        Beginning in the 1930s, the NIH has invested close to $900 billion in the basic and applied research that formed both the pharmaceutical and biotechnology sectors, with private companies only getting seriously into the biotech game in the 1980s. Big Pharma, while of course contributing to innovation, has increasingly begun to back away  from the high-risk side of research and development, often letting small biotech companies and the NIH do most of the hard work. In fact, about  75% of so-called new molecular entities with priority rating (the most innovative drugs with the most promise) can be traced to NIH funding, while companies spend more on "me too" drugs (slight variations of existing ones.)

        Although the 1980 Bayh-Dole Act allowed publicly funded research to be patented, to facilitate commercialization, and in return allowed price caps,  successive administrations, worried about being seen to intervene in the free market, have never capped the price of even one drug!  

        Finally, because I'm getting tired of typing, allow me one glaring example of just how bad we're being ripped off  while Pharma profits soar: 

        We've all seen the TV ads for the "new, breakthrough" drug Harvoni, which is the first to actually cure Hepatitis "C".  Gilead Science, which retails the drug, didn't actually develop  it! They purchased the rights to the drug  (actually generically named sofosbuvir) and patented it in the US.  Here is the even more amazing reality: sofosbuvir was developed under the leadership of Prof. Raymond Schinazi, a  professor of biochemistry at Emory University. The U.S. Government heavily funded Prof. Schinazi’s research, with major grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and support from the Veterans Administration.  Get this right. We (taxpayers) funded much of this drug's R&D cost. Gilead's cost was a combination of clinical trials expense and profit paid to the startup company that Dr. Schinazi formed to sell his brainchild. Gilead paid about  $11 billion to purchase the drug, of which $440 million went to the good doctor. In its first 10 months of  sales, Harvoni recovered Gilead's entire investment! Their patent protection will allow them to do so until 2028. Understand, this means somewhere around  50,000% profit annually on Harvoni for the next 12 years.

         According to researchers in the UK, the actual production costs of Sovaldi  (retail name in the UK and Europe) for the 12-week course is in the range of $68-$136. In fact, generic sofosbuvir is currently being marketed in India at $300 per treatment course, after India told Gilead to kiss their ass when they (Gilead) tried to patent it in India. In other words, the U.S. price-cost markup is roughly 1,000-to-1! So, how can Gilead Science charge $84,000 for a drug that costs less than $300 to produce? Well, for starters,  Gilead’s patent on sofosbuvir runs until 2028, giving it a monopoly in the U.S. market. Second, a range of Federal and state government programs  will cover the $84,000 for a sizeable number of patients. For those not covered by government programs, some will be covered by private insurance, a few will pay out of pocket, and still others will die because they lack coverage and can’t afford the treatment.  And of course that pesky law prohibiting Medicare from negotiating price.


Angry yet?

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Things in General

                                                               Things in general

        One thing (out of a long list) this election cycle has done is make me truly hate the term "double down." It's a Blackjack term as I'm sure all of you know, but has been hijacked by most media outlets for use such as "Trump doubled down on his comments regarding...."     when what  they actually mean is  "Trump said some really dumb/ sexist/offensive/Xenophobic  shit, and to compound the felony,  he reiterated it."

        Another observation is that there is a general lack of understanding among many of our citizens of even the most basic functions of the federal government. This covers anything related to amendments to the Constitution, confirmation of USSC Justices, how bills are introduced and who must do it, and the limits on what a President could actually accomplish  when the entire Congress hated him.

       This next is just an observation based on my keen insight into the two party system . Not all Republicans, by any means,  are Racist, Xenophobic, Evangelical Rednecks.  Then again, not all Republicans support Donald Trump either. What is almost equally certain, however, is that a huge majority of  Racist, Xenophobic, Evangelical  Rednecks are Republicans, and do.

       In another first, seldom (never) have I witnessed such a concerted effort to discredit and slander any person over a period of almost four years primarily because of the belief that this person might do something. The 2012 election night wake held at Faux News by Rove, Hannity, and a cast of sycophants was, beyond doubt, also the organizational  meeting of  "let's get Hillary" club. As the presumptive candidate, or at least the most likely one, the Far Right process of  lies, innuendo and slander commenced. The double standard exhibited in the process is nauseating. There are several; examples that stand out, although as Trump became the Republican nominee, the duplicity became far worse.

          Start with the attempts to smear the Sec State and the President in the case of the deaths at Benghazi. Without going into too much detail (and believe me I could)  previous recent  presidents all had more foreign service personnel die on their watches, skipping George H.W Bush. Hundreds died in Lebanon under Reagan, the last bunch after he had promised a Congressional committee to enhance security. 213 were killed in Kenya alone, during the Clinton administration.  Discounting 9/11, there were 13 attacks on Americans at embassies and more than 20 deaths under the George W. Bush administration. Why all the furor over 4 deaths at an annex, where there was no Marine Guard. Why the furor when the ambassador who died had refused offers of more security during the previous weeks? And most specifically why spend more time and money than the 9/11 commission, the JFK assassination  and Pearl Harbor combined  trying to create the fiction of some dire plot which would condemn the President and the SecState? We know why. It had f**k - all to do with the deaths and everything to do with the upcoming probable candidate status of the SecState. So we get the catchy bumper sticker "Hillary lied and 4 died" which implies essentially that she was responsible for their deaths rather than the terrorists who stormed the annex. What has also been lost in the fog of character assignation is that the annex was actually a front for the CIA's efforts to channel, arms to the "Good Libyans."  It had no Marine guard because it wasn't the embassy. No plot, no sinister plan. On the other hand after the third bombing and killing of Americans in 2 years in Lebanon in the 80s, a bi-partisan committee was convened to inquire about the incidents. The joint recommendation to President Reagan was to increase security, but not a word of criticism was leveled at anyone. Regardless  of that fact, the changes were not made, and about a year later another attack killed more Americans. Still no blame assigned. Imagine if that had been Benghazi. If Benghazi had happened in the Reagan years, it would be just a footnote. Yes, an ambassador was killed , actually died of smoke inhalation. In Beirut the CIA station chief was actually tortured to death on video which Reagan watched.

               One more: Last time. The Clinton foundation is legit. Several of the nation's  top charity watchdog groups give it the highest rating, yet, it's been a other source of Trump vitriol against the Clintons.  I assume it bothers him that they actually do great things for many different groups of people world wide. It also probably bothers him that they personally donated more (over a million each of the last three years ) to the Foundation than his charity gave out. It is worthy of note that no one named Clinton takes a dime from the charity, while Trump uses funds donated to his charity to pay bills, buy signed football helmets and have portraits of himself painted.


        Next issue: I dislike Marco Rubio. He is a grossly overpaid, religious zealot, homophobe and misogynist, who goes to work slightly fewer days than  I play golf  in a given year (twice weekly). Worse for Florida, Lake Okeechobee, the St. Lucie River, and the entire Indian River Lagoon, he is in the pocket of big sugar so deep that he could give Alfy Fanjul a handjob.  I say that to say this: I agree with a recent statement he made! Yeah, really. Rubio cautioned against the use of leaked e-mails because of the impossibility of verifying them (we already know several were faked) and actually being very wise, he said "today it's the Democrats, tomorrow it could be us." There I said it, from now on screw him.

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Alien and Sedition Redux?




This is an under reported story, but is reflective of much of the   anti-media rhetoric coming from the Far Right

Amy Goodman Turns Herself In To Cops After Reporting ILLEGAL Dog Attacks On DAPL Protesters — Vows To Fight “Clear Violation” of Press Freedom




http://countercurrentnews.com/2016/10/amy-goodman-turns-cops-reporting-illegal-dog-attacks-dapl-protesters-vows-fight-clear-violation-press-freedom/

       Want yet one more reason to vote for an anti-Trump? Consider Trump's numerous tirades against a free press, then consider his anti-First Amendment rants of recent days. There has been nothing even approaching this level of anti-truth propaganda in America since John Adams signed the Alien and Sedition Acts into law . (I don't have time, look them up yourself) in 1778.  Even those, which  were aimed at suppressing anti-government speech and activities, were allowed by Jefferson to expire, never to be considered again. The actions of the State of North Dakota against this reporter for simply reporting State and Local law enforcement's brutality against protesters are clearly in violation of the First Amendment, which, for you political naifs, extends to the states, courtesy of the Fourteenth Amendment.

        We may not like the truth, in fact, as Jack Nicholson once famously said, in the words of Aaron Sorkin and William Goldman, sometimes we "Can't handle the truth." This really means sometimes we find the truth..... "inconvenient?"  Having lived through the Joseph McCarthy era and being a relatively sentient person, I remember how many persons were damaged by the efforts of this one man to censure free speech and smear by innuendo while disallowing free exchange of ideas in the marketplace of public opinion.

         What is salient in this particular instance  is that North Dakota, a Republican stronghold, has historically cared little for its Native population's rights.  In this case, while the proposed oil pipeline does not specifically cross ceded Lakota  lands, it does cross traditional burial sites, which have been declared by the state to be of no concern with a bit of hand waving and no real investigation. As much of a concern for the Lakota is that a spill near the Missouri River crossing could irreparably damage the river and its effluents into the Mississippi and on to the Gulf.
Their protests at the pipeline site have been met with attack dogs, tear gas and violence. As the article details, so have attempts to report these civil rights violations by the state.

        What has received little or no attention in all this is that it isn't only the Lakota who have issues with this pipeline. Farmers in Iowa have taken their own state government to court to prevent this pipeline's crossing of their lands, as well. They cite abusive and arbitrary non-compliance with the state's own rules of public domain, as their lands were condemned (or assigned to the pipeline builders) without due process.  Of course these farmers have the means to pursue legal remedies unavailable monetarily to the Lakota. The North Dakota state government's actions are a mirror of every treaty ever signed between the US government and Native tribes in that, in some way or another, every single agreement has been broken by the United States government.

        Agree or disagree, a reporter has every bit as much right to report on the demonstrations as the demonstrators do to protest. It is fundamental to a free society that we have a free press. We already know that Mr. Trump disagrees with that. The only media he cares for are those outlets which report favorably on his actions. This is typical behavior for a narcissistic sociopath. It seems to have spread northward.














Friday, October 14, 2016

Too Many Notes!


        Amadeus is one of my all time favorite flicks, and the plethora of news, near news and bullshit currently saturating all media reminds me of a line from that movie. At one point the Emperor, played, appropriately by Jeffrey Jones, the same actor who portrays principal Rooney on Ferris Bueller's Day Off, criticizes a Mozart composition as having "too many notes."  He then "explains" that the mind can only hear so many notes at one  time. As ludicrous as this seems and is meant to seem in the context of the film, it may just be true with the current flood of half truths,  lies, and damned lies flooding network news, social, and print media.

        I note with dismay, the blithering of, for example, the woman that almost tearfully proclaims that "If  she (Hillary) gets in, the country will be ruined in a month."  One has to assume that this poor beknighted soul has absolutely zero understanding of  how the government works. Of course she isn't alone. Louie Gohmert, Texas Congressman, who actually should know a little something about it, suffers from the same wave of sheer stupidity which is sweeping the Far Right of the GOP nation.


Really, I'm serious!
         Just as this woman fails to understand that there are constitutional limits regarding what a President can do, which is actually fairly  well restricted to signing bills sent to them by the Congress and then enforcing those new laws, Gohmert recently proclaimed,  “I don’t have any delusions that if we have a Republican majority the House and even if we had it in the Senate and Hillary’s elected, she changes the Supreme Court....."  His allegation,  ridiculous in intent and in fact, concludes that his people (Evangelicals) would somehow have their right to worship restricted by some Godless justices. Of course what he really fears is the buttressing  of the current provisions that  people like him (Gohmert) aren't allowed to treat people who are different from him (which thank goodness most of us are)  with disrespect and discrimination.

        What am I getting at here? Gohmert should understand that any  USSC nominee will first be vetted and, more than likely, subjected to the inquisition of, the Senate judiciary committee.  With a GOP Senate majority, that's about as far as it goes for a liberal candidate, except in Gohmert land. He just "makes shit up." Period.  Of course for  many who know little and suspect even less, if he says it, so be it. Some will decide how to vote based on a snippet of raving by this vacuous yahoo.

        In like manner, the person with the highest percentage of "Pants on Fire"  ratings by Politifact, Michele Bachmann has weighed in with a, perhaps, even more preposterous theory - that if Mrs. Clinton is elected "There will be an  increase in the number of sexual assaults on women!" Huh? Let's get this straight: it is vital to the safety of women in America to elect a , demeaner of women, body shaming,  groping, uncontrollable (by his own admission) lecher to the Presidency? Really, Michele? What the f**k is in the water where you live?  
God likes me best!

        Of course her justification is that she "knows" that Mrs. Clinton wouldn't  run a "Biblical" based administration. (I certainly hope that is correct, otherwise we will all be selling girls into slavery, killing anyone who works on Sunday, and all that old shit. It would also piss off the pig farmers and shrimpers.)  All that levity aside, here is her quote and the TV host's addendum : "She  will set a standard in this country that will lead to even more sexual assaults against women because she will be setting an anti-biblical agenda.” Rohrer (host) agreed, saying that "The effort to turn Christian women away from Trump is really a satanic effort to divide Christian evangelical homes.” as I let the sheer idiocy of this comment sink in, I wondered if  Ms. Bachmann considered the Bush 43, years,  with its foreign adventures orchestrated by Rove, Wolfowitz,  and Rumsfeld, as "biblically  based."


        Apparently Mrs. Clinton, lifelong United Methodist, who taught Sunday school in the 70s, worked with church based children's aid programs, and  was a regular at a DC UMC Church while First Lady, hasn't met the high level of religiosity expected by Bachmann.  Trump on the other hand, has not attended any church (other than for  several marriages) since adolescence, and has lived every day since in a most irreligious manner, but per Ms. Bachmann, "God chose Trump to lead America, to the point of tipping the primaries in his favor."  It makes  one's head hurt  

Monday, October 10, 2016

What debate?


                                       What debate?

Oh, you mean the alley fight on TV last night?

        I will not address any of Mrs. Clinton's comments, largely because they're categorically true in context. I do, however, as a teacher of History and Government  feel obligated to point out the fact that the Republican candidate has , apparently , little or no real comprehension of how our government under the Constitution actually works, and even less knowledge of history.   This, discourse of mine, assumes literacy and the ability to evaluate factual information on the part of those who, upon reading it, might learn something, and if they support the Republican candidate, I question their critical thinking skills anyway, but.....! 

       Let's start with Mrs. Clinton's reference to  Lincoln, in the context that some of her recent remarks, of which you know who was critical,  were a reflection of some of his (Lincoln's).  As stated, it was coherent and logical and the perfect expression  of "realpolitik", as Dr Kissinger might have said.  The Republican candidate, however, seemed to miss both the meaning and the contextual validity  of the statement and immediately launched into a rant about the fact that "Honest Abe" never lied, as prelude to implying that Mrs. Clinton just had  (she hadn't). This mini-tirade exhibited, yet again, this person's sixth grade mentality and absolute ignorance of the real world.

        Of course Lincoln lied. The whole quote was about his statement that there are times when a president  will have private opinions which contrast with the exigencies of public policy. Lincoln's position on slavery was a prime example. Lincoln's decision to abrogate the Constitution and suspend habeas corpus on his own authority  was another. For many more examples, I recommend the Republican candidate get a staffer  to read Doris Kearns Goodwin's Pulitzer Prize winning "Team Of Rivals" and have them explain it to him.       

       On the subject of taxes and the Republican candidate's lack of having paid them:
        First off, let's divest ourselves of any lingering sense that His tax status has anything to do with his knowledge of the tax code . His accountants have already blown the whistle on that canard, acknowledging that all he cared about was the bottom line. He isn't a "tax genius", as if that weren't already manifestly apparent.  Where this rant truly went off the rails was when he blamed Mrs. Clinton for not "fixing" the tax code while she was in the US Senate. Unfortunately, to the average sycophant who was on their feet cheering this barrage of  blather, this sounds like it might be a good argument. Not so, Timmy.

        To start with, let's get the easy one out of the way first. Per the Constitution, all bills for "raising revenue" (dealing with money) which I'm fairly sure includes bills re: tax codes, must originate in the US House of Representatives. I'm also pretty certain that the Republican candidate doesn't even know this.  While Mrs. Clinton was serving her 8 years in the US Senate, the House was firmly in the control of the Republican party. In the absence of a tax reform bill from the House reaching the  Senate, there was f***-all any Senator, Democrat or Republican, could have done to effect change to the tax code.  Of course that didn't stop you know who from calling Mrs. Clinton "ineffective" because she didn't "pass a bill" which she never even got to vote on. Like I said - the man is ignorant. Now ask yourself who would have screamed loudest if any such effort would have been made? Yeah, thought so.

        Finally, what Mrs. Clinton understands and the other guy obviously doesn't even suspect is that the President actually has very limited powers to "do" any of the things the other guy  keeps promising that " He will do." In the same way that the Republican candidate refers to someone as "doing away with the second amendment" , he shows his absolute lack of knowledge over and over. The only way any amendment can be "done away with" is by consent of 3/4 of the states' legislatures or special ratification conventions called for that specific purpose. Period! Anyone who believes otherwise has no business even thinking about the White House. Even if, as former USSC associate justice John Paul Stevens has suggested in his book  "Six amendments: How and Why we should Change the Constitution", it was desired to change the language (he proposes adding the words "when serving in the Militia" to the Second Amendment) it would require that same 3/4 of the states to ratify.



        It pains me to see and hear the level of ignorance exhibited by this man displayed in the public spotlight by a would be candidate for the highest office in the US who has lost the respect and support of many of his own party. Jeff Foxworthy famously asks: "Are you smarter than a fifth grader?" In the case of the Republican candidate, the response should be "Not most  of them."  

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Everything Old is New Again

        You know you've jumped the shark when you run a campaign ad using your daughter to promise to do what the other party has tried to do for decades and your own party has opposed for those same decades. In this case it's Ms. Trump promising that daddy will enact mandatory maternity leave and child care credits for working moms. Wow!  Okay we've seen the bullshit, now for the history!

        No developed country on earth has a worse record on this issue than the USA. The current legislation (mandating up to 12 weeks UNPAID leave) was the best the Clinton administration could get out of  GOP controlled Congress in 1993. So let's establish this right off the bat; Trump is promising exactly what his own party refused to do over 20 years ago. Wow, what a progressive guy -allowing those "fat slob pigs" to have maternity leave. Regarding child care credit - the legislation already exists, passed in 1973, and while Democrats have periodically proposed increasing the amount allowed ($3,000 per child annually), they have been stymied by GOP objections.  

        It took the United States until 1993 to mandate unpaid leave for new parents and other family and medical reasons. There is little doubt that  unpaid leave has helped, because it "protects hourly workers from being fired when they have a baby or need to care for a child or elder with a serious health condition." But that doesn't change the fact that "we need paid leave," progressives  say. (and I agree, as does Mrs Clinton.)

       According to the National Women's Law Center (NWLC), only 16 percent of workers get paid family leave through their employers. The idea that U.S. companies are driven by the world market to offer competitive leave benefits is "definitely a misconception," says Emily Martin, vice president and general counsel at NWLC. In fact, the only nations other than the USA which do not mandate maternal leave with pay are  - are you ready for this? - Swaziland, Lesotho, and Papua New Guinea! I guess this is simply another example of  "American Exceptionalism?"

       Among our global economic competitors, the length of leave and percentage of full pay are: Russia - 140 days, 100%, China - 90 days. 100%, Indonesia - 84 days, 100%.  In Indonesia, Brazil, the UK, Netherlands and others, even including Saudi Arabia, this is actually  maternity/paternal leave. That's right family leave - paid.

       Democrats have historically pushed several  proposals, the most recent  beginning in 2014 and stymied by the GOP in Congress, the Family and Medical Insurance Leave Act, that would provide employees 12 weeks of paid leave, during which they would receive 66 percent of their monthly wages, capped at $1,000 a week. It is worthy of note that this is still worse than, say, Turkey (112 days, 67%) or India (84 days, 100%). The program would be paid for through small payroll contributions made by employees and employers. The bill had no Republican co-sponsors, even though apparently "plenty of Republicans support the idea" in public opinion polls.


       So summarizing: Trump allegedly wants to do what Democrats and some progressive Republicans, and yes there are some, have tried to do periodically since 1973 (child care credit) and 1993 (paid maternity leave). So this is  a platform?  "I want to do what my own party has opposed for decades."  What a whore. 

Monday, October 3, 2016

Yet Another Monday

Monday, yet again.

      Good Morning America, as always, provided ample subject matter for the first rant of the week.

       Let's start with the phoniest.  A new Trump commercial has daughter Ivana, shilling for her father. Apparently oblivious to the train wrecks of her father's three marriages and numerous adulterous dalliances,  she attempts to portray him as a gentle man concerned with family and in tune with "working class values,"  whatever in the world they may be. Of the several things Trump promises, the bulk  are issues that progressives have lobbied for over the years only to be thwarted by GOP resistance, such as guaranteed maternity leave, etc. The one which stood out to me was the proposal to allow "Child care savings accounts" for parents. 

        Most families with two working parents already pay childcare expenses directly, if they can afford to, and for those with more limited means the term "savings account" is a foreign term, whether for child care, medical expense or general savings, such as retirement. This sop, proffered to the working poor is meaningless in reality. But then, as I reflect, so is the entire Trump campaign.

       Medical savings accounts and child care savings accounts are  only of use if a family can afford to save. Latest figures show that the "average" American saves less than 4%  of their income  annually. The problem with that is that it is derived from averaging the destitute with the fabulously wealthy. In truth, the lowest third of Americans save zero per cent annually!  This same third will have no retirement savings whatsoever. An equally sobering statistic reveals that the average American family has only about $5,000 saved for retirement at age 65!  You want to make this better?  The hell with child care savings accounts - provide it free. Do the same with universal health care. Oh never mind; Big Pharma would never allow that to happen.    

        Another emerging issue was Ginger Zee's weather report detailing the impending impact of Hurricane Matthew in Haiti, followed by Robin Robert's (accurate) statement regarding the thousands of Haitians still living in makeshift tent cities as a result of the earthquake of  2010. What is as troubling in some ways as the continued human  suffering as a result of the quake itself, is the deceptive  efforts of the American Red Cross to portray themselves as great humanitarians who simply need more money to do their good works.

       When the  devastating earthquake leveled Haiti in 2010, millions of people donated to the American Red Cross. The charity raised almost half a billion dollars. It was one of its most successful fundraising efforts ever. The problem is that in the face of claims to have provided far  more  permanent residences than are to be found there today, the Red Cross says it has provided homes to more than 130,000 people, but the number of permanent homes the charity has built is six. I reiterate - 6! Meanwhile temporary housing facilities with an planned three year lifespan are, predictably, 6 years out - failing. Where did the money go? It's extremely hard to tell, largely due to  Red Cross obfuscation and general unwillingness to open the books. What is known however, is that as much as a third or more of the funds were diverted to "administrative" costs, including generous compensation to expatriate Haitians hired to "coordinate" on the ground.  

        According to an internal Red Cross budgeting document for the project in Campeche, the project manager — a position reserved for an expatriate – was entitled to allowances for housing, food and other expenses, home leave trips, R&R four times a year, and relocation expenses. In all, including salary, it added up to $140,000.

        The American Red Cross has a rating of 3 of 4 stars, largely based on average financial transparency, which includes detailing what percentage of funds collected actually goes to Program needs. Organizations like Doctors Without Borders, United Methodist Committee on relief, The Clinton Foundation,  Direct Aid International and others are more highly rated and far more financially transparent.   

       And, just because it's election season, the Trump Foundation, while not rated by Charity Navigator, based solely on what I can prove that they donated to, has done much worse than most "charities" in America.  Another Post report earlier this week claimed Trump spent $258,000 from his foundation to settle lawsuits that involved his businesses – an apparent violation of laws against “self-dealing,” which prohibit nonprofit leaders from using charity money to benefit themselves.

       Of course, the Trump Foundation has adopted a very charitable definition for its charitable giving, which included a $25,000 campaign donation to Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi just four days before her office decided not to participate in a lawsuit against Trump University, two portraits of Trump, and a signed Manning football helmet.  In 2010, the Trump Foundation gave $10,000 to Jenny McCarthy’s Generation Rescue, a nonprofit group whose primary goal is to promote false links between vaccinations and autism.

        Next up, a short piece on developments in the fight against breast cancer. This is a worthy cause, but what left me curious was the lead in to the article trumpeting that the expert weighing in would be "Angelina Jolie's breast cancer doctor."  Now, I'm relatively sure that he's a pretty good  specialist, but is it the fact that he's experienced with a star's mammaries that makes him newsworthy?  Would he be any less credible if he was merely a cutting edge medical researcher than boob fondler to the stars?


        And, finally, how stupid does one have to be to take $10 million in diamonds on vacation? Apparently the poster child for "big butt, empty head" - Kim Kardashian-West did just this for a trip to Paris. Unfortunately the five masked robbers who took the jewelry, and held her at gunpoint while doing so, knew just precisely how stupid one would have to be and correctly decided she was "that stupid." Never fear, hubby Kanye  left in the middle of a concert  in the US, hopped a plane  to Paris, but apparently the robbers had decided that 7 hours was just too f*****g long to wait to hear what would surely be just another mindless rant from the self proclaimed master of the genre.