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Walter Reed Middle School in North Hollywood is one of nine schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District facing staff cuts and in turn larger class sizes because the percentage of nonwhite students has dipped below 70 percent. Following a
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Conservatives Urge Sessions to Clean Out Obama's Civil Rights Division
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Trump Agenda on Offense: 7 Stories in 24 Hours Give President's Base Hope
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Denmark has boasted that 98 percent of their Down Syndrome babies were aborted in 2014, and say they hope to be 'Down Syndrome free' in the next 10 years.
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The origin of the Obama administration’s investigation of imaginary Trump-Russia collusion remains murky, but this much is clear: John Brennan, Obama’s Trump-hating CIA director, stands at the center of it. Brennan pushed for a multi-agency investigation of the Trump campaign, using as his prete?
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"The left can make fun of Trump's hair every single day, but if Bill O'Reilly makes fun of Maxine Waters' hair ..."
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| by Helen Pluckrose | Postmodernism presents a threat not only to liberal democracy but to modernity itself. That may sound like a bold or even hyperbolic claim, but the reality is that the cluste…
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Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) appears …
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Listen to Ep. 277 - Real Controversies, and Fake Controversies by The Ben Shapiro Show #np on #SoundCloud
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Responding to the latest warnings by U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions that Department of Justice funds will be withheld from sanctuary cities, Mayor Eric Garcetti said Monday he will fight efforts by the Trump administration to take away federal fu
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The House committee on oversight and government reform passed legislation to let the General Accountability Office audit the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy decisions.
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Press Secretary Sean Spicer took time during Tuesday's press briefing to slam Washington Post's over...
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Robotics, AI, and the Macro-Economy | Jeffrey Sachs Despite setbacks that include successful judicial challenges to his immigration policies and the walking back of his promise to make Mexico pay for a border wall, President Trump is... #donaldtrumponeconomicpolicy #irobot #irobotinvasivespecies
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Parents that send their kids to the North Hollywood middle school are outraged after being told the school will be losing significant funding because it has “too many white students,” according to a Los Angeles ABC-affiliate. “Outrage has grown at Walter Reed Middle School in North Hollywood, as the school faces layoffs and increased class sizes due to a law limiting funds for schools with | Read More »
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House speaker Paul Ryan declared on Friday that “Obamacare is the law of the land . . . for the foreseeable future.” I foresee a different future, but only if conservatives learn the right lessons from the demise of the American Health Care Act.
Republican and conservative leaders failed the cause of free-market health reform in three principal ways. First, they failed to make a moral case for replacing Obamacare, as opposed to purely repealing it. As a result, they then failed to unite the hard-line and pragmatic wings of the GOP around a coherent health-care-reform proposal. And due to the ambitions of the 100-day legislative agenda, and the peculiar legislative calendar associated with the Senate’s reconciliation process, they chose not to invest the time in getting health-care reform right.
The moral case for replacement
Conservatives intuitively understand the moral case for repealing Obamacare. The law significantly expands the role and scope of the federal government in determining Americans’ personal health-care choices. Its individual mandate is a constitutional injury. And its Rube Goldberg-like maze of insurance regulations has made health insurance unaffordable for millions.
But when it came to replacing Obamacare, Republicans usually presented the case in exclusively political terms: Replacement was necessary because the alternative would be daily front-page stories of the millions thrown off of their health-care plans by the GOP Congress. Conservatives rarely attempted to make a moral case for replacing Obamacare. Indeed, if you believe that the federal government has no legitimate role in helping the uninsured afford health coverage, your intuition is that there isn’t a moral case for replacing Obamacare.
That intuition is understandable, but mistaken, because it is in fact the federal government that has made health insurance so costly through seven decades of unwise policies. Those policies include the exclusion from taxation of employer-sponsored health insurance, an outgrowth of World War II-era wage controls. They include the enactment of the Great Society entitlements, Medicare and Medicaid, in 1965. They include the EMTALA law, signed by President Reagan, that guaranteed free emergency-room coverage to everyone, including the uninsured and illegal immigrants. And they include Obamacare.
(To those who say that the employer tax exclusion is no big deal because “it’s your money,” I say this: If the government only deigns to give “your money” back to you when you elect to work in a W–2 job and hand a fifth of your income over to health-insurance companies, your money isn’t really being treated like it’s your money.)
This seven-decade pileup of federal intervention in the health-care system is directly — and exclusively — responsible for the astronomical costs of the present-day American health-care system. It is not right, when confronted with such a state of affairs, to shrug our shoulders and say “tough luck” to those who can’t afford insurance. Indeed, we have an affirmative duty to reform federal policies so as to make health insurance once again affordable for the working poor.
In America today, we spend hundreds of billions of dollars a year subsidizing health coverage for wealthy Americans through the employer tax exclusion — which disproportionately helps those in high tax brackets — and Medicare, a universal entitlement under which taxpayers are forced to fund generously subsidized government insurance for Warren Buffett, Mitt Romney, and Hillary Clinton. Those federal policies have, for seven and five decades respectively, divorced 200 million Americans from the cost and value of the care they consume.
Put simply, the U.S. health-care system does not reflect the principles of a free market, but rather those of crony capitalism.
Large, incumbent companies are addicted to the employer tax exclusion because it makes it harder for employees to leave them for start-up competitors or freelance work.
Put simply, the U.S. health-care system does not reflect the principles of a free market, but rather those of crony capitalism. It is a system designed to benefit C-suite executives and multinational corporations at the expense of hourly wage workers and mom-and-pop businesses.
To advocate for a fiscally fairer system — in which we subsidize the wealthy far less while covering more of the uninsured, with less total federal spending as a result — ought to be in the wheelhouse of a conservative movement that aspires to support opportunity for all and favoritism to none.
But unfortunately, it is often the case that the loudest opponents of replacing Obamacare are the loudest defenders of the crony capitalist status quo ante, fighting to preserve the health-care interests of the Fortune 500, and expressing outrage over Obamacare’s federal mandates while saying nary a peep about Medicare’s.
A freer, fairer health-care system — one that is more affordable and more conservative — would move away from entitlements favoring the wealthy, such as Medicare and the employer tax exclusion, and toward a market-based safety net that helps blue-collar Americans get through rough patches and back on their feet.
Toward a real conservative health-policy consensus
Was the AHCA the ideal bill to achieve those goals? Not really, though that was not entirely the fault of its drafters; President Trump opposes Medicare reform, and even if he didn’t, the reconciliation process would prohibit the consideration of Medicare-related legislation.
But there were other features of the AHCA that got less attractive over time. A leaked draft version of the bill from February contained an important and robust reform of the employer tax exclusion, one that was eliminated by the time the official version of the AHCA came out in March. The final bill pushed the implementation of Obamacare’s Cadillac Tax — Democrats’ ham-handed attempt at reforming the exclusion — back from 2018 to 2026.
The AHCA’s original flat tax credit — a new, universal entitlement — would have moved us farther away from a health-care system in which federal involvement is limited to those who truly need the help. While the final bill contained some reductions of that new tax credit for the highest earners, its structure was not designed to benefit the working poor; indeed, the AHCA would have made premiums unaffordable for millions of blue-collar Americans.
That gets us to the AHCA’s failure to roll back Obamacare’s insurance regulations. Prior to Obamacare, the federal government had no involvement in regulating health insurance for those on the individual market; i.e., those who buy insurance for themselves and don’t receive coverage from their employers or the government. Those new federal regulations — along with the individual mandate — are the two key ways in which Obamacare expanded the involvement of the federal government in the health-care system.
There was never any consensus among rank-and-file congressional Republicans that ‘A Better Way’ was, in fact, the best way forward.
The AHCA didn’t do enough to roll back Obamacare’s insurance regulations, because the bill’s tax credits were designed to remain constant regardless of the regulatory environment, thereby making regulatory changes “incidental” to a reconciliation bill which must, by rule, solely concern taxing and spending.
Despite these flaws, before President Trump and Speaker Ryan issued their Friday ultimatum, the contours of a deal were emerging between hard-line Republicans and their pragmatic counterparts. Under such a deal, the AHCA’s tax credits would be restructured to use a means-tested formula that better served the working poor, a key consideration for pragmatists. That means-tested formula would, simultaneously, allow for the majority of Obamacare’s insurance regulations to be repealed via reconciliation.
The AHCA was a leadership-driven bill; its core policy planks were derived from conversations that Ryan had with the chairmen of key House health-care committees. There was never any consensus among rank-and-file congressional Republicans that “A Better Way” was, in fact, the best way forward.
Governing is hard, as the Speaker rightly noted on Friday. But there remain reasons to be optimistic that the GOP’s hard-line and pragmatic factions can forge a deal that would result in better policy than the AHCA, a deal that makes health insurance more affordable for those who most need it to be so.
Take the time to get it right
The most galling aspect of the AHCA was the process itself, in which House GOP leaders recklessly put haste and politics above good policy. The official draft of the AHCA was posted on congressional websites on the evening of March 6. On March 24 — 18 days later — leaders pulled the bill after issuing a failed ultimatum to its opponents. Worse yet, had the bill actually passed the House, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was prepared to immediately take it to the Senate floor, without hearings and with limited opportunity for constructive amendment.
This rush to bad judgment about a bill that would have reshaped one-sixth of the economy was so terrible that it made Nancy Pelosi look like the standard-bearer of good governance. President Obama was sworn into office in January 2009. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was enacted in March 2010. The fact that Democrats spent 14 months debating health care did not prevent them from passing two other transformative pieces of legislation in the interim: the 2009 stimulus and the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act.
The contrast with the current GOP-controlled government is stark. Over the past month, I heard from numerous members of Congress who said that they couldn’t get consideration for their constructive amendments — and worse yet, that they couldn’t even design constructive amendments — because leadership’s fealty to the GOP’s legislative calendar meant that Republicans only had time for one or two more shots at getting the AHCA scored by the Congressional Budget Office.
It should go without saying that a bill affecting 67 million Americans on Medicaid, 24 million more on the individual insurance market, and 26 million uninsured ought to get more consideration than that. But apparently it doesn’t.
Republicans need to take the time to think health care through, and get it right. Those in leadership who believe they’ve done enough thinking are wrong. The American Health Care Act’s flat tax credits were poorly conceived. Its ad hoc policy giveaways had little economic rationale. Replacing Obamacare via reconciliation was a late change in strategy, and leadership’s ever-changing assessment of what could pass Senate muster reflected that.
Perfection should never be expected of federal legislation, but few believe that the AHCA was the best the GOP could do. Indeed, Republicans retain an opportunity to do far better, if they start afresh and take the time to craft health-care reform the right way.
The consequences of failure are too high to give up now.
— Avik Roy is President of the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity.
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Justice Department cited presidential communication privilege, but the move is likely to anger Democrats who say the House investigation is being damaged.
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60 Minutes admits that the audience for "fake news" tailored to the left is mostly "affluent and college educated."
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Municipal leaders nationwide vowed to defy any crackdown on sanctuary cities after a warning from Attorney General Jeff Sessions that they could lose federal money for refusing to cooperate with immigration authorities
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I have a friend who is a retired public school teacher. She is very likeable and in some areas an independent thinker. One day in conversation she brought up the terrible poverty and near-anarchy that prevails just on the other side of America’s southern border. It quickly became clear that she believed America was at ?
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According to Senator John Cornyn, the GOP will not try to repeal Obamacare via reconciliation again. Instead, they'll work with Democrats. Cornyn says flatly that health care will not be attempted again via reconciliation. "It's clear it needs to be done on a bipartisan basis."— Erica Werner (@ericawerner) March 27, 2017 They hung conservatives out to dry, blamed the House Freedom Caucus, and are now giving away the game. They never intended to repeal Obamacare in the first place. If they did, they'd try again via reconciliation instead of surrendering altogether. They were not serious, but they had to set…
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Three armed home invaders, all in their teens, are dead after choosing the wrong home in Oklahoma to rob this afternoon. They were met by the owner of the home's son who was armed with an AR-15 rifle.
Shortly after the men broke into the home, they were all dead from gunshot wounds from the
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Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., dragged out his pathetic effort to block Neil Gorsuch's confirmation to the Supreme Court and was not successful according to the Washington Examiner. From their article: He hoped to demonstrate that Gorsuch is hostile toward workers and cancer...
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A transgender athlete from Hawaii is on his way to the Olympics after switching over to the women's volleyball division. Tia Thompson, a 32-year-old biological male who believes he's a woman, competed in the men’s division for all USAV-sanctioned competitions up until January, when USA Volleyball declared him eligible to compete as a female. Unsurprisingly, Thompson is dominating biological women in Hawaii's most popular sport and has set his sights on the Olympics.

