Friday, January 26, 2007

Rumpelstiltskin Clinic


Remember the tale of Rumpelstiltskin.......

Pay up or we keep baby, Indonesian clinic tells poor parents

Anywhere else this would be considered kidnapping.
An Indonesian clinic is keeping a baby until her impoverished parents pay the escalating bill for her delivery and care.

Though it may become the norm in the United States if Bush's health care insurance plan goes through as it will deny funding to hospitals who cover services to the working poor who are uninsured, in order to supplement state funded health insurance plans.

SUSAN DENTZER: And, in effect, what this federal offer now is, is basically to take dollars that are currently channeled under Medicaid and Medicare to hospitals that have a so-called disproportionate share of the uninsured, take those dollars that now go to support those institutions that care for the uninsured, and channel them, instead, to help states expand coverage for the population.




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Thursday, January 25, 2007

RCMP Union


Scarlet tunics and union cards? Mounties press for bargaining rights
"Right now, it's like a dictatorship. When the commissioner decides something, nobody can argue, nobody can come up and explain that this thing here is not right," Tony Cannavino, president of the Canadian Police Association

Which is why the RCMP is so scandal ridden. It is a paramiltary organization that is run under a dictatorship. Unionization would actually democratize the RCMP. Shudder the thought, a democratic police force rather than a political arm of the Federal Government.

See:

RCMP Needs A Union

Love Me, I'm A Liberal

RCMP

Union


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Falacious Argument

$10 minimum wage would cost 66000 jobs: Sorbara Yet when he and other MPP's gave themselves a 25% raise there were no losses in jobs.

Meanwhile Sorbara has declared
Helping Ontario's poor and disadvantaged will likely be the focus of the next provincial budget, the province's finance minister says.

Well one way would be a living wage, which is what anti-poverty organizations continually call for.
End Welfare Create A Living Wage And a living wage is at least $10 an hour plus a benefits plan paid for by employers.

See;

Minimum Wage

Living Wage


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Time For A Guaranteed Annual Income

The New Canadian Government asked for it and now they have it but will they do anything about it?

No excuse for grinding poverty in Canada: advisory council report
Rich and poor Canadians want governments to better help almost five million people living below Statistics Canada's low-income cut-off, says a new council survey and report released Thursday. Voters support efforts ranging from guaranteed livable incomes to more affordable housing, child care, education and training, suggests the online poll.

The council's online survey was done last fall. Responses were drawn from 5,000 individuals and more than 400 organizations across Canada.

Almost three-quarters of respondents were women. More than one-third of participants said they are always or often worried about living in poverty, another third are sometimes concerned, and the rest said they rarely or never worry.

Most respondents, 73 per cent, described themselves as "regular Canadians" who play no voluntary or paid role in the fight against poverty.



See:

End Welfare Create A Living Wage

Guaranteed Annual Income

Minimum Wage

Living Wage



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Gender Parity


Today is not only Robbie Burns day but it is also the birthday of British author and feminist Virginia Wolfe who was born in 1882.

And she gets forgotten because of all the brouhaha around Burns Day.

Ironic that, if it wasn't another example of unconscious systemic sexism.

But, you may say, we asked you to speak about women and fiction—what, has that got to do with a room of one’s own? I will try to explain. When you asked me to speak about women and fiction I sat down on the banks of a river and began to wonder what the words meant. They might mean simply a few remarks about Fanny Burney; a few more about Jane Austen; a tribute to the Brontës and a sketch of Haworth Parsonage under snow; some witticisms if possible about Miss Mitford; a respectful allusion to George Eliot; a reference to Mrs Gaskell and one would have done. But at second sight the words seemed not so simple. The title women and fiction might mean, and you may have meant it to mean, women and what they are like, or it might mean women and the fiction that they write; or it might mean women and the fiction that is written about them, or it might mean that somehow all three are inextricably mixed together and you want me to consider them in that light. But when I began to consider the subject in this last way, which seemed the most interesting, I soon saw that it had one fatal drawback. I should never be able to come to a conclusion. I should never be able to fulfil what is, I understand, the first duty of a lecturer to hand you after an hour’s discourse a nugget of pure truth to wrap up between the pages of your notebooks and keep on the mantelpiece for ever. All I could do was to offer you an opinion upon one minor point—a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction; and that, as you will see, leaves the great problem of the true nature of woman and the true nature of fiction unsolved.

See

Feminism

Women

authors


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Steve Janke's Yellow Journalism


Stephen Janke, Angry In The Great White North, got twisted all out of shape over my Peter MacKay comment now goes and does it himself. People, glass houses, stones.


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Hand's In Your Pocket


This is good news for working folks who get ripped off everyday when you use the bank machines. It's a heck of a better political platform than another GST cut or a tax credit. A buck fifty a shot is a heck of alot more than the pennies saved on the GST or the one time tax credit, which is not cash in your pocket but a promise to pay.

TORONTO (CP) — NDP Leader Jack Layton is accusing Canada’s big banks of “gouging” clients by charging ATM fees to access their own cash.

Layton says he wants the practice outlawed.

He says it’s just not fair to force someone to pay $1.50 for withdrawing or depositing $20 or $30 from a bank machine.

Banks had $19 billion in profits last year and Layton says they don’t need the cash.

Layton says bank fees have simply gone too far.

The banks called Layton’s comments “nothing more than political rhetoric” and “bank bashing.”


Bank bashing, I think not. Ask why ING does not charge service charges or ATM charges. It's a bank.

While disgruntled shareholders can sell their stock if they believe their CEO is making too much money, few of us can avoid forking out interest payments and service charges to the big five banks - which in 2005 paid their CEOs an average of nearly $14.9-million, according to a Globe and Mail survey. Cue the NDP leader once more.

"We're working to protect families from outrageous bank service fees and credit card interest rates," Layton told his caucus. "As families open their bank and credit card statements this month, the unfairness of this can't be missed. I want to say very specifically that we will continue to fight for changes that will mean affordability and fairness for the average bank customer."


ATM service charges are the biggest cost you pay over and above monthly service fees the banks charge you.

Wait a minute what the heck are they charging you monthly fees for when they use your money to make more money.

You get charged twice, once at the machine and then again by your own bank! Bank bashing indeed.

And why are they charging you a bank fee for using the ATM which they own jointly as an oligopoly.

Just like they own the Credit Card companies Visa and MasterCard which charge an interest rate only just below what would be called criminal usury.

Why do Hands in My Pocket ads make so much sense in Canada? In Canada, the credit card market is dominated by a powerful oligopoly of 5 major banks. These banks, known as the Big 5, typically price their cards at rates around 20% (much higher than rates seen in the U.S.). As a result, resentment is driving Canadians towards Capital One’s low rate credit cards. In 2004, Capital One launched a 5.99% low rate credit card that was the lowest rate in the country. More interestingly, the rate was 14 percentage points BELOW the typical rate of a Canadian credit card. Accordingly, the Hands in My Pocket campaign is very effective.

And some privatized ATM's are charging as high as $3 in service charges to get your money out.

Luckily that one is at Hudson's on Whyte and the folks that drink there are local business types and Conservative MP's so they get what they deserve, but they probably use their credit cards so they can put it on their expense accounts.



hands in my pockets




See

Service Charges

ATM

Bank Profits





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Trotskyist Cults


The Trotskyist movement is one of full of sectarian splinter groups of all kinds and it has given rise to a prolific number of political movements of both the left and the right.

The movement itself once centred around a broad based left opposition to Stalin called the Fourth International, which soon after being founded became a cult of the Old Man himself, not unlike other Bolshevik Cult of Personalities.

It did so by Trotsky ousting and denouncing other members of the Anti-Stalinist Left like the Spanish POUM and the libertarian-socialist Victor Serge.

Post WWII Trotskyism further dissolved into various political tendencies, icnluding lots of little cults of personalities. It also fragmented because many post WWII leftists included a wide assortment of those who saw the Soviet Union as state capitalist, or as being ruled by a new bueraucratic elite.

The later became hardbitten anti-Soviet liberals during the long cold war, and founding fathers of the neo conservative movement.

And some Trotskyists went even further right as we can see with Lyndon LaRouche. He would feel right at home with these guys.

TROTSKYISTS IN SPACE




Juan R Posadas was no ordinary Trotskyite; socialists from outer space, the benefits of nuclear war and communication with dolphins were all part of his revolutionary programme. Matt Salusbury tells the story of one of the World’s strangest political thinkers.

The word ‘bizarre’ does no justice to the Posadist belief system. While writing this article, I joked to a friend that the Posadists had everything except a Kennedy assassination conspiracy theory. Then I came across the January 1964 edition of Red Flag with four pages of closely printed, incomprehensible rant on Why The Pentagon Killed Kennedy, by J Posadas.

Of course Posadas was right about one thing, in order to really achieve colonisation of space we need socialism, as Star Trek proves.

See

UFO


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Air Canada Screws Workers, Again


So much for all those worker claw backs in wages, benefits, pension funds, and give backs that allowed Robert Milton to get privatized Air Canada out of bankruptcy. Now that it is making a profit, and has for two years, well time to cut Canadian jobs to make even more filthy lucre.

Air Canada looking to move 700 jobs

The subsidiary of Air Canada does maintenance work for the airline, and 100 other customers. The airline is expected to transfer the work to a newly-purchased firm in El Salvador, where labour costs are cheaper.

Proving once again that when unions concession bargain they screw their members forever.

See

All That Jazz


Criminal Capitalism-WestJet


Globalization=Contracting Out


Privatization Canada's National Rail Disaster



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Star Dust Dreaming

Variable star V838 Monocerotis

Variable star V838 Monocerotis lies near the edge of the Milky Way Galaxy, about 20,000 light-years from our sun. Still, ever since a sudden outburst was detected in January 2002, this enigmatic star has taken the center of an astronomical stage. As astronomers watch, light from the outburst echoes across pre-existing dust shells around V838 Mon, progressively illuminating ever more distant regions.

See

Space

NASA

Hubble



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