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Monday, October 22, 2012

Rallies for Elizabeth Warren's Senate Candidacy

Elizabeth Warren for Massachusetts


 More than a thousand people came to Elizabeth's rally in Worcester this weekend.
Click "Display images" in your inbox to see this amazing photo.
Incredible, right? But that's just the beginning.
Then our supporters filled a whole church for a rally in Beverly.
Click "Display images" in your inbox to see this amazing photo.
And a union hall in Hopkinton.
Click "Display images" in your inbox to see this amazing photo.
And a high school gym in Northampton.
Click "Display images" in your inbox to see this amazing photo.
I even think everyone in Shelburne Falls -- population 1700 -- showed up to watch the Pats game with Elizabeth at the pub. It was so packed with supporters, she could barely get in the bar!
Click "Display images" in your inbox to see this amazing photo.
I want you to know -- even if you can't meet Elizabeth at a campaign stop, your grassroots support is making a difference.

You're the reason why Elizabeth is able to speak to so many people across Massachusetts about what's at stake in this election -- on TV, radio, online and in person.


 Thank you for all you've done to make this possible.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Protect Social Security; We're All Going To Need It

Institute for America's Future Smart Talk
NUMBER 4 | October 10, 2012
Protect Social Security – We Are ALL Going To Need It
The ChallengeMost baby boomers will “retire” with no pension and very little in savings. Gen Xers and millennials will have even less, given the bad economy and long-term jobs shortage. Even more than seniors, today’s workers, especially women and people of color, will really need Social Security. And yet a multimillion-dollar campaign is being waged to get the president and Congress to cut Social Security benefits for everyone, with the worst cuts aimed at those under the age of 55. The people waging this campaign are the authors of the “Bowles-Simpson” deficit reduction plan – backed up by big money coming from billionaire private equity fund manager Peter G. Peterson and other Wall Street and corporate millionaires. Even though unemployment is the number one issue on the minds of most Americans, these elite activists say we must cut Social Security in order to reduce the federal deficit.
Make the CaseSocial Security is a critical system that serves us all, like the military or the Interstate Highway System. It is the foundation of American retirement security – more so today, now that pensions are disappearing and private savings, inherently risky, have been hit hard. It is basic protection for our families if we become disabled or die.
Each generation has done its part to maintain its foundations over the 77 years of its existence. During good times and bad, working Americans have paid into Social Security, and it is by far the safest, most efficient, most universal, and most reliable way for Americans to guarantee their retirement savings.
The case against the so-called “deficit hawks” is easy: Social Security doesn’t contribute one penny to the federal deficit. In fact, the program is legally forbidden from increasing the deficit. As we all know, the benefits our parents and grandparents receive each month are covered by the payroll taxes (or FICA, for Federal Insurance Contributions Act) they paid when they were working – and we pay today. This is Social Security’s dedicated stream of income. Moreover, people working today are paying extra in Social Security taxes to cover the benefits of baby-boom retirees.
Case in PointBlack diamond (cards) If the U.S. economy grows at a healthy rate, Social Security will be able to pay 100 percent of retirement benefits far into the future. Based on a scenario of slow economic growth and reduced immigration, those who want to cut Social Security benefits point to a possible imbalance between Social Security payouts and income that MIGHT affect the program around 20 years from now. The cutters use scary phrases like “Social Security will go bankrupt,” when, even under the worse-case scenario, the system would still be able to pay retirees 75% of their current benefits forever. That’s not exactly a crisis – it’s a possible shortfall that might not ever happen if we have a healthy economy.
Black diamond (cards) Deficit-cutters lump Social Security together with Medicare and Medicaid, calling them all “entitlements,” a word that implies the recipients didn’t work for their benefits. But these programs are part of a social contract Americans have built to make sure that people who have contributed to our country all their lives should have a decent standard of living. That’s why proposals to “privatize” Social Security were soundly defeated. That is also why we won’t let politicians reduce Social Security benefits – or Medicare or Medicaid.
Black diamond (cards) The case against cutting Social Security is a slam dunk. It doesn’t add to the deficit. But that doesn’t mean we should cut Medicare or Medicaid. Those who are worried about the costs of those programs should be calling for more thoroughgoing reform of the private health care system – including getting drug and insurance companies to compete on price, not on cutting benefits. If our health care system did as well at containing costs as European systems, the cost of Medicare and Medicaid would be cheaper and more stable, and the U.S. would not have a long-term deficit problem. (Watch for more on this in future Smart Talks.)
CounterpointWhen they say: Social Security is fueling our debt crisis. It is like a Ponzi scheme: When Social Security began, we have 16 workers for every retiree. Now we have only 2 workers for each retiree. Something’s got to give.
You can say: If the U.S. had a full-employment economy, with the millions of currently unemployed people working and paying Social Security taxes, we would not have a shortfall in Social Security revenues – not now, not ever. So the future of Social Security, like lots of things in America, requires that we invest in jobs, not slash public spending, as most “deficit hawks” want to do. It would also help to solve our immigration problem, so millions of new Americans would be paying into the system.
When they say: It is true that Social Security has its own revenue stream, but those U.S. bonds in the so-called Trust Fund are just IOUs. To pay future benefits, we are going to pay off those bonds – a cost we can’t afford.
You can say: Hey, I worked hard, paying more taxes than needed to cover current retirees, to build up that Trust Fund, projected to grow to $4.3 trillion by 2023. My real dollars went into buying those bonds. Politicians ran up deficits paying for two wars and tax cuts for the wealthy. Now, conservatives want to raid the Social Security Trust Fund by cutting benefits and using the money to pay off the bills they ran up. When somebody tells you’re the trust fund isn’t real, they are getting ready to cut promised benefits. Social Security does not belong in the mix for reducing the federal deficit.
When they say: By ignoring the ticking time bombs of the Social Security trust fund, you are putting your head in the sand.
You can say: Social Security is NOT a ticking time bomb. The system has paid every penny of benefits owed for the last 77 years. The Social Security trustees carefully project future income and outlays based on predictions about demographics, economic growth, immigration and a host of other factors. Under one, rather pessimistic, prediction about future economic growth, there might be a shortfall in 2033 (20 years from now). But remember, even if slow growth causes that to happen, Social Security still has a revenue stream from working Americans, and we could still pay 75 percent of those projected future benefits far into the future.
Far from putting our heads in the sand, Social Security supporters have advanced lots of proposals for how to deal with this possible future shortfall – without cutting benefits. Here’s the best: make sure that millionaires and billionaires pay the same Social Security tax rate as regular people. Most of us – people making $30,000 or $50,000 per year, for example – pay Social Security taxes on 100 percent of our income. But people making $1 million per year pay taxes only on the first $110,100 of their income. If we get rid of this cap and make everyone pay the same rate, we’d have enough to fill any future benefit shortfalls – and we could increase benefits for women, the disabled, and poorer people.
When they say: We don’t want to cut Social Security benefits, we just want to “adjust” the cost of living formula – or we want to raise the retirement age because people are living longer.
You can say: Changing the consumer price index used to calculate the cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) to save money IS a benefit cut. It would cut benefits for current as well as future beneficiaries, disabled workers and widow(er)s as well as retirees. An average earner retiring at 65 would see her benefits reduced by about $600 a year after 10 years and $1,000 a year after 20 years, hitting beneficiaries hardest in late old age when they are often most vulnerable. And raising the retirement age IS a benefit cut. When the retirement age is raised, no matter when you retire, your benefits will be reduced by about 13 percent from what you are currently scheduled to receive.
The Public PulseBlack diamond (cards) By a 3 to 1 margin, voters in the swing states of Ohio, Florida and Virginia, don’t believe Social Security and Medicare need to be cut to reduce our deficits (The Washington Post-Kaiser Foundation).
Black diamond (cards) 53 percent of American adults would prefer to raise taxes than cut Social Security benefits for future generations (Associated Press-GfK).
Black diamond (cards) 66 percent of Americans, including 45 percent of Republicans and 64 percent of Independents, favor increasing income taxes for upper-income Americans, compared with 42 percent of Americans who support making “significant changes” to Social Security (Gallup).
Black diamond (cards) 66 percent of Americans said they were very worried about “not having enough money for retirement,” making it the issue that the largest number of Americans are concerned about (Gallup).
Tweet ThisTell Congress: Keep #SocialSecurity out of a debt deal—it doesn’t contribute a penny to the deficit! #smarttalk via @OurFuture
Raise retirement age? Easy to say if you sit at a desk all day & have a congressional pension. #NotSoGrandBargain #smarttalk via @OurFuture
Instead of cutting #SocialSecurity, make millionaires pay the same rate as the rest of us. #Fairness #smarttalk via @OurFuture
Learn More» Strengthen Social Security Campaign resources page: the Strengthen Social Security Campaign’s database of fact sheets and reports.
» Economic Policy Institute’s Retirement research page
» Center for Economic and Policy Research’s Social Security and retirement issue page

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Defeat the Reactionary White Elite; Obama, the Much Lesser of Two Evils. | The Nation

Will Tar Sands Pipeline Get a Chance To Ruin Drinking Water for 30 Million People | NationofChange

As Texas Pipeline Blockade Continues, Activists Challenge First U.S. Tar Sands Mine in Utah | NationofChange

The Maimed; Why Put Our ChildrenThrough This? Remember Viet Nam?!| NationofChange

The Pentagon Spending Cuts Myth!

Project On Government Oversight
Project On Government Oversight.PNG
Dear James,

Spending more on the Pentagon does not create more jobs. For example, Lockheed Martin actually cut 17,000 jobs from 2006 to 2011 while receiving $10 billion more than it did just 5 years ago. However, it does help increase CEO paychecks. According to a POGO analysis, the average compensation package of the CEOs of the top five Pentagon contractors in 2011 was roughly $21.5 million a year. With the average worker in the U.S. earning $45,230 last year, this means these CEO’s were paid more in an average day than the typical American worker was paid all of last year.And you and I helped pay for some of that. Consider supporting POGO’s work to dispel the myth that more Pentagon spending means more jobs. And share our information with friends.
myth_graphic_pink_short3.jpg
Thank you,
Danielle-sig-2.jpg
Danielle Brian

Doctors Being Paid By Piecework; They Need To Earn A Salary (VIDEO)

Joe Graedon: Medical Mistakes Killed My Mother, Doctors Need To Earn A Salary (VIDEO)

Monday, October 1, 2012

Will AARP Be For Seniors Or the Insurance Companies This Time?!

AARP Experts: Entitlements Critical for Nation’s Aging Majority Minority

The Choice; Military-industrial Complex Or Welfare of Our Citizens, The Time Has Cone!

Time for Major Cuts in Defense Spending

Hold Incumbents Accountable (Republican AND Democrats) Or Vote Them Out| NationofChange

Spain and Greece Are Being Forced to Suffer to Save Germany From High Inflation

Spain and Greece Are Being Forced to Suffer to Save Germany From High Inflation

Austerity NOT the Solution To America's Problems!

Institute for America's Future Smart Talk
NUMBER 3 | OCTOBER 1, 2012
Defeat the Austerity Threat
The ChallengeWe have a jobs crisis, but the media and political elite are focused on deficits and debt. How do we make the case that pursuing austerity only will deepen the jobs crisis and send us back into recession?
Make the CaseWith mass unemployment, declining wages and a sinking middle class, consumers are tightening their belts. Companies won’t create jobs without customers. We need the U.S. government to act. We have work to be done and people in need of work. And we can pay for it by insisting that the rich and corporations pay their fair share of taxes, bringing the soldiers home and investing the savings here at home, ending obscene subsidies to entrenched corporate lobbies like Big Oil, and borrowing at historically low interest rates.
Case In PointBlack diamond (cards) To address the global slowdown over the last three years, Europe cut deficits and America increased deficits. The result: Europe’s unemployment rate has gone up, and America’s unemployment rate has gone down.
Black diamond (cards) We learned this lesson 70 years ago in the Great Depression. President Franklin Roosevelt steadily reduced unemployment for five years in large part by investing in public projects. But when Roosevelt prematurely reversed course and cut spending in 1937, he sparked a new downturn. Only when Roosevelt really stepped on the gas during World War II, with massive public investment and the biggest budget deficits in American history, did the Depression truly end.
Counterpoint
When they say: We’re already in a debt crisis. If we keep racking up these deficits, we’ll turn into Greece, with soaring interest rates and inflation, a declining dollar and America’s credit ruined.
You can say: The U.S. becoming Greece? That’s a joke. Want a comparison? Think Great Britain. They inflicted austerity on a weak economy and sunk back into recession, with rising unemployment, spreading misery and a worsening debt burden. Right now we can borrow money at record low rates. Our basic infrastructure is decrepit and needs to be rebuilt. Our construction industry is flat on its back. Any business leader with a brain would leap at the opportunity to do work that we have to do at record low costs.
When they say: Government spending doesn’t create jobs.
You can say: Tell that to the teacher who gets hired at a newly built school, or the rail worker building a high-speed train line, or the steelworker making a wind turbine, or the veteran able to help restore our national parks or the teenager working at her first summer job.
When they say: By ignoring the ticking time bombs of the Social Security and Medicare trust funds, you are putting your head in the sand.
You can say: Conservatives pushing trillions in more taxes for the already rich aren’t worried about deficits. You want to cut spending, not deficits. And now you’re aiming at the core pillars of family security. Social Security is legally forbidden from increasing the deficit and Medicare has just been made more solvent thanks to the health care reforms in Obamacare. We don’t have to cut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid to get our books in order. Over the long haul, we need more reform to reduce costs in the overall health care economy – and that will lower the costs of Medicare and Medicaid. You just are using this economic crisis as an excuse to destroy programs you never supported.
The Public PulseBlack diamond (cards) Americans are deeply concerned about deficits and spending, but when asked what they are most concerned about, Americans overwhelmingly say jobs and the economy, not deficits (Multiple polls, including most recently Bloomberg National Poll and New York Times/CBS News).
Black diamond (cards) When asked in an August poll which is most important, increasing spending to improve the economy or avoiding a big increase in the deficit, respondents divided down the middle, 48 percent each (The Washington Post/Kaiser Foundation).
Black diamond (cards) By 52 to 33 percent, participants in a September poll said spending on infrastructure projects is a better way to create jobs than cutting taxes (ABC News/Washington Post).
Black diamond (cards) By a 3 to 1 margin, voters in the swing states of Ohio, Florida and Virginia, don’t believe Medicare and Social Security need to be cut to reduce our deficits (The Washington Post/Kaiser Foundation).
Tweet ThisLast 3 yrs. Europe cut deficits, US increased deficits. Europe: unemployment up. US: unemployment down #smarttalk via @OurFuture
Learn More» Austerity Watch: OurFuture.org's continuing analysis of austerity policies in the U.S. and abroad
» Snapshots of Austerity: A special series on the effects of austerity economics

More Tedious Attacks By FOX "News" on ‘Mainstream Media’ | NationofChange

Tedious Attacks on ‘Mainstream Media’ | NationofChange

Corporations Running Roughshod Over Citizens In America?! | NationofChange

What Fascism Looks Like: TransCanada and Brutality in East Texas | NationofChange

Republican Party Paid $3.1 Million to Firm Under Investigation for Voter Registration Fraud Then Tries To Clean It Up| NationofChange

Republican Party Paid $3.1 Million to Firm Under Investigation for Voter Registration Fraud | NationofChange

National Dedt Is NOT the Most Important Concern; JOBS ARE!

Actual Republican Voter Suppression vs. Imaginary Fraud

Actual Suppression vs. Imaginary Fraud

Time For Action To Get PAC and Super-PAC Money Out of Politics

 
 
From:John Sellers, Other 98% Action (info@o98action.com)
Sent:Mon 10/01/12 3:49 PM


It's time to remove the smirk from his face.
Dear James,
We've broken over 18,000 signatures to have the FEC enforce the law on Super PAC honchos like Karl Rove and Rahm Emanuel - now we just need to make it an even 25,000 before we can send it off.
We already made it to over 18,000 names - let's make it an even 25,000 to crack down on Karl.
We're emailing you about this a second time because we think it's so crucial to show that we can stand up to Big Money no matter how much dirty cash they throw into elections - and we know you've stood with us in the past.
It’s time to take a stand against Big Money wrecking our democracy. Join us.
Thank you for all you do to make this movement real.
Sincerely,
John Sellers, Other 98% Action