Thứ Ba, 6 tháng 6, 2017

Waching daily Jun 6 2017

A MILLION DOLLARS.SHANNON:A

MAN CONVICTED OF SEXUALLY

ASSAULTING A BOY BACK IN

2014-- IS BACK IN THE

WILLIAMSON COUNTY JAIL, HOPING

FOR RELEASE.GREG KELLEY

RETURNED FROM STATE PRISON

ABOUT AN HOUR AGO WITH FRIENDS

AND FAMILY WAITING INSIDE TO

SEE HIM..KXAN'S ALICIA INNS IS

THERE NOW TO TELL US ABOUT THE

MOVE.WE JUST TALKED TO THE

WILLIAMSON COUNTY SHERIFF WHO

SAYS KELLEY IS OFFICIALLY

BOOKED IN THE JAIL --HE SAYS

KELLEY WILL NOT BE GETTING ANY

SPECIAL TREATMENT, BUT HE

CALLED IT DIFFERENT TREATMENT

AND WOULDN'T ELABORATE..TAKE A

LOOK..THIS IS THE FIRST TIME

WE ARE SEEING KELLEY SINCE HE

WAS CONVICTED AND TAKEN TO

PRISON...HE WALKED IN WITH HIS

HEAD STRAIGHT FORWARD..KELLEY

HAS SPENT THE LAST 3 YEARS IN

HUNTSVILLE SERVING A 25 YEAR

SENTENCE FOR THE ASSAULT.HE

WAS CONVICTED OF MOLESTING A 4-

YEAR-OLD BOY AT AN IN-HOME DAY

CARE RUN BY HIS FRIEND'S

FAMILY.THAT FRIEND, JOHNATHAN

MCCARTY IS NOW THE FOCUS OF

THE NEW INVESTIGATION.BUT HE

HAS NOT BEEN CHARGED AND IS IN

THE WILLIAMSON COUNTY JAIL ON

A SERIES OF UNRELATED DRUG

CHARGES.KELLEY'S ATTORNEY

TALKED TO US OUTSIDE THE JAIL

ABOUT THE NEXT STEP IN THE CASE

ATTORNEY KEITH HAMPTON: "THE

MINUTE HE IS PUT INTO THE

WILLIAMSON COUNTY JAIL AS HE

JUST WAS, HE IS SUBJECT TO

BEING RELEASED ON BOND AND SO

BESIDES THE OTHER THINGS THAT

ARE HAPPENING IN THIS CASE,

BOND, DISCUSSIONS ABOUT HIS

RELEASE IS ONE OF THEM."A

PUBLIC HEARING TO LOOK AT THE

NEW EVIDENCE IN THIS CASE IS

SET FOR AUGUST 3RD -- A DATE

MANY OF KELLEY'S SUPPORTERS

ARE TRYING TO HAVE EXPEDITED

AND HAPPEN EVEN SOONER.

KELLEY'S ATTORNEY HOWEVER SAYS

THAT IS VERY UNLIKELY. IT ALL

DEPENDS ON WHEN THE TEXAS

RANGERS FINISH THEIR

INVESTIGATION AND IF THERE'S

OPEN TIME IN THE COURT.LIVE AT

THE WILLIAMSON COUNTY JAIL,

For more infomation >> \Greg Kelley is back in Williamson County Jail after nearly 3 years in prison - Duration: 2:03.

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NSA Hacking Leak: Who is Reality Winner? - Duration: 3:31.

For more infomation >> NSA Hacking Leak: Who is Reality Winner? - Duration: 3:31.

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Trumpcare 2 0 is a death bill - Duration: 7:59.

Trumpcare 2.0 is a death bill

New figures from the Congressional Budget Office show that, if passed into law, the

so-called �Trumpcare� bill would spike the number of people without health insurance

by 23 million in 2026.

While the GOP pushes deadly healthcare rollbacks in Washington, communities from Pennsylvania

to Maine are ramping up their organizing for universal health care at the state level.

New York and California are celebrating major progress in their campaigns for state-based,

single-payer systems, setting the tone for grassroots campaigns sweeping the country.

The Healthy California Act and the New York Health Act would establish improved Medicare-for-all-style

systems in each state, eliminating out-of-pocket costs and guaranteeing comprehensive care

to all residents.

The California bill won approval from the Senate Health Committee in late April, and

the Appropriations Committee is expected to vote on Thursday.

Meanwhile, the New York Health Act has sailed through the Assembly and now awaits action

in the Senate.

According to Ursula Rozum, upstate campaign coordinator for the Campaign for New York

Health, the list of endorsing state senators has jumped from 20 to 31 since the start of

the legislative session, bringing it just one vote shy of a majority.

Rozum told In these Times that the bill�s success this session is at least partly a

response to Trump�s regressive policies, explaining that �in this time of attacks

on federal level, I think it helps to say look, we have something viable that could

protect New Yorkers from the harms of the federal cuts to health care funding.�

These victories constitute a positive sign that state-based campaigns for universal health

care ramping up across the country�and not just in states with progressive legislatures.

In Maine, where Republicans maintain control of the Senate and voters have twice elected

the far-right, proto-Trump governor Paul LePage, organizers are demonstrating non-partisan,

grassroots political unity on the issue of health care.

Such a system appears to have buy-in from ordinary Mainers.

I am a member of the Southern Maine Workers� Center (SMWC), a member-based grassroots organization.

We recently released a report entitled �Enough for All: A People�s Report on Health Care,�

which shows that the vast majority of people surveyed between February 2013 and March 2016

believe health care is a human right, and that it�s the job of the government to protect

that right.

�Committed to building a movement of working class and poor people,� the report states,

�SMWC sought out people most directly impacted by our system�s profit-driven model.�

Over 70 percent of those surveyed reported that their right to health care is not currently

protected.

Maine is one of the 19 states that rejected Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care

Act (ACA).

Maine is also the only state in the nation that has not seen a rise in the number of

residents with insurance since the implementation of the ACA.

The SMWC�s report points out that the gap of coverage in states that rejected Medicaid

expansion disproportionately impacts people of color, deepening racial disparities across

the healthcare system.

According to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation, black people are twice as likely

as white people to fall into that coverage gap.

Nationally, more than half of all nonelderly uninsured are people of color.

For the SMWC, a universal health system based in human rights would be one where all health

disparities are �actively and systematically addressed.�

And while the current system creates and exacerbates many health disparities, the SMWC points out

that it is also not working for the vast majority of people.

For organizations rallying around the human right to health care, both the failures of

the current system, and the attacks on health care coming from the right, constitute opportunities

to help people imagine a system that meets their needs.

Rozum explains, �if you want to resist Trump, we need to organize around universal social

programs that take care of everyone, that unite people as opposed to being means tested.�

This strategy is reflected in the SMWC�s approach to organizing.

In a recent interview, SMWC member Cait Vaughan explained the process of surveying people

for their report.

�What we were trying to do was engage people wherever they were at, whether they had lost

their Medicaid� were still on Medicaid, whether they got insurance with the ACA�

had no insurance at all, or even employer based insurance.

We were trying to engage all these folks to figure out, �What are the real roots of

the problem?��

The SMWC is just one organization in a multi-state collaborative of grassroots groups also hailing

from Vermont, Maryland, and Pennsylvania that are using the language of human rights to

build a base of grassroots support for universal health care.

Nijmie Dzurinko organizes with Put People First Pennsylvania (PPF), another member organization

of the Health Care is a Human Right (HCHR) Collaborative.

Dzurinko told In These Times that �it�s important to be working at a scale we can

influence.� Dzurinko agrees with Rozum that �state-based efforts are gaining traction

precisely because we�re going backward in Washington.

We have a strategic opportunity to push for a kind of healthcare sanctuary at the state

level that insulates our people from the attacks and rollbacks of care at the federal level.�

The Vermont Workers� Center (VWC), another member of the HCHR collaborative, won a historic

victory in 2011 with the passage of Act 48, establishing a path to publicly-funded, universal

health care in the state�the first of its kind in the country.

While still on the books, the act has yet to be fully implemented, in part because of

former governor Peter Shumlin put up roadblocks around equitable financing.

The VWC continues to organize for full implementation of the law, while pushing back against the

harmful impacts of the insurance-based system kept in place by the ACA.

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Vermont has recently requested a 12.7 percent premium increase

on exchange plans.

VWC member Ellen Schwartz explains, �we�ll be testifying in July about how these rate

increases affect us and our families and call for the full implementation of Act 48 as the

solution.

This is important because the rate hikes are a symptom of a sick healthcare system, and

it�s that system that we are challenging and proposing to transform.�

The 2011 victory of the Vermont Workers� Center inspired similar campaigns, like that

of the SMWC, to view healthcare organizing as a winnable strategy and unite people around

human rights.

Viewing state-based organizing as connected to the fight over federal policies, Dzurinko

points to the fact that �single payer system in Canada started in the province of Saskatchewan

before it was national policy.�

With successes like those in California and New York thrown into the mix, single-payer

supporters elsewhere in the country may be spurred towards state-based campaigns.

Approaching these campaigns with an eye towards building broad bases of support for human

rights has the potential to sow resistance against the larger trends of privatization

and deregulation, as well as racism and xenophobia, that mark the Trump administration.

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