Tuesday, September 30, 2008

What If Obama Loses?

What If Obama Loses?

African-Americans thought he had no chance—then they started to believe. Now they fear defeat.

Allison Samuels
NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Oct 6, 2008

If you had tuned in to "The Michael Baisden Show" early last year, you would probably have heard the host talking mostly about urgent issues such as "how to please your man in the bedroom" or "pimps in the pulpit." That's now changed. The new star of Baisden's four-hour syndicated radio program is Barack Obama. "It was a no-brainer," says Baisden, 45, whose freewheeling show reaches millions, primarily African-American listeners in urban markets. "The conversation had to change to 'How do we change our futures now that we have someone who might actually care about us in the race?' What amazed me was that the number of listeners for my show kept increasing even as the conversation became more serious."

In the African-American community, the thinking on Obama's candidacy has gone something like this: In the beginning, there was disbelief that a black man could become president. Then, when Obama became the Democratic nominee and soared in the polls, listeners were concerned for his safety. Now that the race with John McCain is as tight as Sarah Palin's smile, Baisden's audience has started to worry about Election Day itself. There is still a fair amount of optimism in the black community, but it's being tempered by two words: what if. What if Obama loses? How should people respond? What should they feel? It's a common election-season concern, but it's all the more acute in the African-American community, where more people are paying attention to the campaign—and planning to vote—than ever. Managing expectations and reactions has become Topic A in many black homes and on blogs such as Bossip, Stereohyped and Angry Black Male. "People that I know that have never cared about politics are registering to vote this time: gang members, ex-cons, you name it," says rapper Snoop Dogg. "I hate to see a lot of that hope go down the drain, and if he loses, it will."

Racism, naturally, plays a part in the conversation. "I've never forgotten that he is a smart, articulate black man with a smart, articulate black wife," says Linda Wright, 34, a nurse's assistant from Houston. "You think white people were just going to turn over the keys to the most important job in the land without a fight?" The overriding feeling is apprehension, a vague fear of losing something people thought was theirs to keep. "My kids love Obama and they think it's so obvious he should be the president," says actor D. L. Hughley. "I was just honest in saying life isn't always fair and certainly isn't always fair for African-Americans. But Obama has overcome so many obstacles, it's easy to forget reality."

There's not a lot of anger—yet—but you can start to sense the potential for it. "I'm going to be mad, real mad, if he doesn't win," says Daetwon Fisher, 21, a construction worker from Long Beach, Calif. "Because for him to come this far and lose will be just shady and a slap in black people's faces. I know there is already talk about protests and stuff if he loses, and I'm down for that." Baisden hears a lot of that incipient resentment on his show, but he tries to soothe people rather than incite them. "Look, if he loses we have no one to blame but ourselves because that meant we all didn't go out and vote in the numbers we should have," says Baisden. "Yes, people will be upset, but it will be in a productive way. There will be a rational reaction if things are fair."

There's that word again—if. As much as blacks are sorting through what they'll feel if Obama loses, they are also trying to figure out how to stop that from happening. Fisher's comment about something vaguely "shady" echoes a common concern that the election will somehow be stolen rather than won. "I know a lot of things can stop Obama from winning, and it's not just lack of votes," says Marilyn Higgins, 36, a mail carrier from Detroit. One caller to Baisden's show wanted to know how he could vote if he didn't have a permanent address. Another asked if someone could legally be turned away from the polls for wearing saggy pants or cornrows in your hair. Nothing is being taken for granted. Baisden is asking black lawyers to volunteer to patrol polling stations on Nov. 4. Several black talk-show hosts have started advising listeners with police records to double-check state laws to see if they are eligible to vote.

Jacon Richmond is one of those men. Richmond, 32, spent two years in prison for possession of marijuana and has never voted before. "I thought, 'What's the point?' But my mom started talking about Obama last year and getting so excited about him, I started paying attention." Now Richmond reads the paper and is talking to his buddies about the importance of the election. But since this is his first time voting, he has no idea what it feels like to lose, and he's not sure what he's going to feel. "I know it's crazy to go from not thinking a black man counts to thinking one should win the president of the United States for sure, but I'm not sure how I'll handle that if it doesn't happen."

URL: http://www.newsweek.com/id/161214

Egyptian editor jailed for ‘false information’

Egyptian editor jailed for ‘false information’

Nadia Abou el Magd, Foreign Correspondent

  • Last Updated: September 28. 2008 11:48PM UAE / September 28. 2008 7:48PM GMT

Ibrahim Eissa, the editor-in-chief of Al-Destour, is battling23 other ongoing cases against him. Victoria Hazou for The National

CAIRO // Ibrahim Eissa, the editor of the opposition newspaper Al Destour, was sentenced to two months in prison yesterday after an appeals court upheld a guilty verdict against him for publishing stories questioning the president’s health, which at the time triggered a national controversy over press freedom in Egypt.

Eissa, who was originally sentenced to six months by a lower court in March, was charged with spreading “false information …damaging the public interest and national stability”, and had faced up to three years in prison for the stories, which were published in August last year.

“This verdict has opened the doors of hell anew for Egyptian journalists,” Eissa said yesterday after the verdict. “Imprisoning journalists takes us back to square one, where the presidential institution is untouchable.

“They are taking us back to past taboos and robbing us of the freedom we gained since the 2005 presidential elections and the short [boost in] democracy [that followed].”

Rights groups were quick to condemn the verdict.

The Arabic Network for Human Rights Information said in a statement, “the prison sentence was expected to take revenge from Eissa, as one of the most important journalists who criticises the performance of the Egyptian government, its suppression, and the corruption that has proliferated it”.

The statement said the verdict “is an attempt to destroy press freedom in Egypt” and expressed its support for “the brave journalist who chose to pay with his personal freedom for the freedom of expression”.

Makram Mohammed Ahmed, the head of the press syndicate, appealed to the general prosecutor and the interior minister not to rescind Eissa’s conviction.

Eissa, 42, was not in the court yesterday when Judge Hazem Wagih, of Boulak Abu El Ela Appeals Court, ordered him to be jailed for two months for publishing rumours about the health of Hosni Mubarak, the president, last year.

Like other newspapers, Al Destour had published reports questioning the health of the president last August, even suggesting he was prone to falling in and out of comas.

Mr Wagih, the judge, said the articles, published over a series of days in August, caused investors to withdraw their money from the country, the stock market to collapse and the economy to lose US$350 million (Dh2.36 billion).

“[Eissa] reported false news, with malintent, about the president’s health, which he knew was fabricated,” Mr Wagih said.

This is not the first time Eissa has been prosecuted; he was one of four Egyptian editors sentenced to one year in jail and fined 20,000 Egyptian pounds (Dh13,500) last September for defaming Mr Mubarak and his ruling National Democratic Party. The editors avoided going to jail by paying the fine, though the trial will resume on Oct 4.

In 2006, Eissa was sentenced to a year in prison for libel against Mr Mubarak. An appeals court later reduced the sentence to a $4,000 fine.

His paper, Al Destour, which comprises views from across the political spectrum, only started publishing again in 2005 after being shut down in 1998 by the government for printing a statement by an Islamist group threatening Coptic Christian businessmen in Egypt.

“Two months is just the beginning,” Eissa said. “There are 23 cases ongoing cases against me. I’m sure they will make me serve time in prison in some of them.

“This is just the beginning of going back to imprisoning journalists.”

Gamal Fahmy, a columnist with the leftist weekly Al Arabi, who spent six months in prison in 1998 for defaming the then deputy of the upper house of Parliament, said the verdict was “a serious and new aggression on the freedom of the press and expression”.

He said it was ominous for other journalists facing restricted freedoms and referred to an upcoming case involving Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, the Grand Imam of Al Azhar, Islam’s highest Sunni institute.

Sheikh Tantawi is suing the editor of the independent weekly Al Fagr for publishing last year an animated picture of him wearing the Vatican Papal rope, with a cross hanging at his chest, after he had received an invitation to visit the Vatican.

Despite condemnations from journalists and appeals by others, including Mr Ahmed of the press syndicate, to drop the case, Sheikh Tantawi told a syndicate delegation: “If earth turns upside down, I won’t drop the case.”

The verdict in this case is expected on Oct 11.

Mr Fahmy said such restrictions on the press were “proof and [a] reminder of the police dictator state we’re living in”.

“I wonder how jailing journalists will help the government who failed in everything,” he said.

“The rash regime is abusing the judiciary to chase and settle accounts with its opposition, its pathetic.

“The irony, is that Mubarak himself promised four years ago to repeal the law that allows sending journalists to prison, another evidence of the false promises of this regime.”

Mr Mubarak, has ruled Egypt since Oct 1981. He has no vice- president or successor, but it is widely believed his son, Gamal, 44, is being groomed for power, which the opposition opposes. Both Mr Mubarak and his son deny any plans for the inheritance of power.

Eissa said he has “no regrets” about what he has published and said he would continue to rely on his family for support.

“My family are heroes, and my wife is a great woman,” he said.

nmagd@thenational.ae

source: http://www.thenational.ae/article/20080928/FOREIGN/97240806/1017/NEWS


US Bishops Offer 5 Keys to End Financial Crisis

It seems that everyone has a path for the American government to follow in solving the current economic crisis. Now the U.S. Catholic bishops have issued a statement urging responsibility for what ever choices are made. Perhaps the call for the higher moral ground the bishops call for should have been called for a long time ago. One wonders how many of these bishops would suggest that any of this counties financial leaders and elected officals who fail to walk this higher ground should be denied communion. It is also interesting that this statement from the bishop received little or no coverage from the American media. Here is what the bishops said.

US Bishops Offer 5 Keys to End Financial Crisis


Urge Responsibility for Choices Made


WASHINGTON, D.C., SEPT. 29, 2008 (Zenit.org).- As Congress goes back to the drawing board to consider the nation's finances after today's failed bailout vote, the country's bishops have their own list of principles they hope will be taken into account.

In a letter sent to government leaders Friday, Bishop William Murphy of Rockville Centre, New York, chairman of the episcopal conference's Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, urged a consideration of five key principles when considering how to bail out the nation's failing economy.

He first promised that the bishops are praying for the situation, which he called "both terribly disturbing and enormously complicated." Then, acknowledging that "my brother bishops and I do not bring technical expertise to these complicated matters," he affirmed that "our faith and moral principles can help guide the search for just and effective responses to the economic turmoil threatening our people."

The first key Bishop Murphy encouraged was taking into account the "human and moral dimensions" of the crisis.

"Economic arrangements, structures and remedies should have as a fundamental purpose safeguarding human life and dignity," he affirmed. The prelate said a "scandalous search for excessive economic rewards," which gets to the point of exacerbating the vulnerable, is an example of "an economic ethic that places economic gain above all other values."

"This ignores the impact of economic decisions on the lives of real people as well as the ethical dimension of the choices we make and the moral responsibility we have for their effect on people," Bishop Murphy wrote.

Second, the New York bishop called for "responsibility and accountability."

"Clearly, effective measures are required which address and alter the behaviors, practices and misjudgments that led to this crisis. […] Those who directly contributed to this crisis or profited from it should not be rewarded or escape accountability for the harm they have done," he said.

Meeting needs

The prelate next recalled that in any case, the market will always have "advantages and limitations."

"[T]here are human needs which find no place on the market," Bishop Murphy said. "It is a strict duty of justice and truth not to allow fundamental human needs to remain unsatisfied." In this regard, he called for a "renewal of instruments of monitoring and correction within economic institutions and the financial industry as well as effective public regulation and protection to the extent this may be clearly necessary."

"Solidarity and the common good" is the fourth principle the prelate encouraged.

"The principle of solidarity reminds us that we are in this together and warns us that concern for narrow interests alone can make things worse," he explained. "The principle of solidarity commits us to the pursuit of the common good, not the search for partisan gain or economic advantage."

Finally, Bishop Murphy recommended recalling the principle of subsidiarity.

"Subsidiarity places a responsibility on the private actors and institutions to accept their own obligations," he said. "If they do not do so, then the larger entities, including the government, will have to step in to do what private institutions will have failed to do."

The bishop concluded recalling words from the encyclical "Centesimus Annus": "Our Catholic tradition calls for a society of work, enterprise and participation which is not directed against the market, but demands that the market be appropriately controlled by the forces of society and by the state to assure that the basic needs of the whole society are satisfied.

"These words of John Paul II should be adopted as a standard for all those who carry this responsibility for our nation, the world and the common good of all."

source: http://www.zenit.org/article-23752?l=english


The American Ream

'The consequences get worse every day if we do not act,' Bush said

FTSE 100 edges higher but banks still under cosh

'The consequences get worse every day if we do not act,' Bush said

The London stockmarket staged a remarkable rally today amid optimism that the rescue plan for the US banking sector could be revived following last night's shock rejection by Congress.

Having plunged 147 points in early trading, the FTSE 100 index surged back into positive territory and was up 24.6 points by 1.30pm at 4843.3.

Britain's battered banks bucked the trend, though, with HBOS down more than 16% at one stage — putting its takeover by Lloyds TSB in doubt. As fears continue to stalk the financial sector, Bank of England governor Mervyn King met Gordon Brown this morning to discuss the crisis.

Shares had been expected to plunge sharply today, on the back of the massive losses on Wall Street last night, where the Dow Jones industrial average shed 777.7 points. It is now tipped to come roaring back when trading begins at 2.30pm BST.

In a sombre address this afternoon, the US president, George Bush, said Congress must reach agreement on the bail-out.

"The consequences get worse every day if we do not act."

Analysts said there were hopes that the deadlock over the US government's proposed $700bn (£380bn) bailout of Wall Street could be resolved.

"I think that a huge amount of pressure is going to be put on leaders. I think that they will eventually come to their senses," said Mike Lenhoff, chief strategist at Brewin Dolphin.

City commentator David Buik agreed. "The reason for the turnaround is that we headless chickens are facing across the pond and we note that the Dow futures have rallied... which ventures to suggest that the self-indulgent hillbilly behaviour of Congress will eventually see an agreement to the Hank Paulson plan on Thursday or Friday," he said.

Another factor behind the turnaround was speculation over possible interest rate cuts in the US and Europe.

Politicians worldwide reacted with disappointment to the rejection of treasury secretary Hank Paulson's plan, in a gripping vote in the House of Representatives. Brown said he had lobbied Bush to urge him to find an agreement fast.

"We've obviously sent a message to the White House about the importance that we attach to taking decisive action in America," Brown said today.

Today's breakfast meeting between Brown, King and chancellor Alistair Darling came a day after the nationalisation of Bradford & Bingley.

Treasury minister Yvette Cooper said the government was keeping close contacts with the Bank of England as the financial crisis developed.

"We obviously need to monitor events very closely. We're disappointed really with the events in the US, the fact that they didn't get a deal," Cooper told Sky News.

David Cameron today announced that he will drop his objections to the government's proposed reforms to the banking sector, and urged Brown to introduce the legislation in parliament next week.

"Our focus must be on protecting the financial system," Cameron told the Conservative party conference, adding that it was vital to not repeat the political wrangling seen in America.

Other stock markets around the world tumbled earlier today, with Japan's Nikkei index closing at its lowest level for more than three year. Trading in Russia was suspended amid fears of panic selling.

Bailout misery

The bailout plan was voted down by 228 votes to 205 last night in the House of Representatives, where Republicans refused to support the rescue scheme.

Following the drama, which prompted groans on the trading floor on Wall Street, US shares plunged as uncertainty sent investors fleeing for safety. The Dow Jones industrial average suffered its worst one-day decline since the 1987 crash.

Congress's refusal to support the bailout is expected to force more banks to fail, both in the US and Europe.

Belgium-France firm Dexia was an early victim, with the Belgium government leading a rescue bid today. And the Irish government has guaranteed all banks deposits at the country's six main banks for the next two years — just days after the country became the first member of the eurozone to fall into recession.

"The government's objective in taking this decisive action is to maintain financial stability for the benefit of depositors and businesses and is in the best interests of the Irish economy," said a spokesman.

US crude oil fell again to around $95 a barrel today, having plunged by $10 to $96 a barrel last night as traders bet on a slump reducing the need for fuel. Gold also surged yesterday to $915 an ounce, but fell back slightly to $895 an ounce.

US politicians have blamed each other for the rejection of Paulson's plan to buy toxic assets from America's banks. Democrats rejected claims that speaker Nancy Pelosi had alienated Republicans by blaming the recklessness of the Bush administration.

"The speaker had to give a partisan voice that poisoned our conference," said Republican leader John Boehner. This drew ridicule from Democrats. Barney Frank, chairman of the House financial services committee, said: "Somebody hurt my feelings so I'll punish the country? That's hardly plausible."

Most Democrats in the House supported the plan, while two-thirds of Republicans opposed it.

Critics of the bailout said they were not prepared to write a blank cheque to the highly paid bankers who had caused the credit crunch. The plan was unpopular with the US voters, and it appears that those politicians whose seats are most at risk in November's elections had generally voted against the plan.

It is now unclear what steps the US government will take. Paulson has said he will continue negotiating to find a plan that can be passed.

"This is much too important to simply let fail," he said.

Peter Morici, professor of business at the University of Maryland, said: "Things are going to get so bad something will have to be done in the next few weeks. Banks will sink, credit markets will seize, the economy will go into something much worse than a recession."

In a Gallup poll for USA Today, 33% of Americans said they believed the country was in a depression.

The Mortgage Bankers' Association reacted by warning of job losses as banks curtail credit to small businesses. Larry Fink, chairman of a leading US investment management firm BlackRock, said critics had been wrong to characterise the plan as a bailout of Wall Street. "This is a bailout of Main Street," he said. "Banks have no ability to lend at the moment because their balance sheets are so gummed up."

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008

source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/sep/30/marketturmoil.globaleconomy/print

Monday, September 29, 2008

Bail-Out: US To Prop Up Brit Banks?

Michael Wilson, Business editor

As debate rages over a possible $700bn (£378bn) package to bail out the US economy, there is a chance that UK high street banks could be eligible for a quarter of the rescue fund, courtesy of the American taxpayer.

Wall Street protesters

Many don't want to prop up US banks - so what if the UK sucks up funds?

Britain's five leading high street banks hold £95bn of distressed assets on their books that could qualify for the rescue package, with HSBC - which today announced job losses of over 500 in the UK - the main beneficiary.

Under the terms of an agreement reportedly reached 'in principle' last night, lenders on this side of the Atlantic would be able to use the facility - a prospect likely to infuriate US taxpayers already baulking at the idea of hauling up its own fallen giants.

This said, the scope and detail of the plan hangs very much in the balance.

President Bush's pleas to put rivalry aside have only served to pour high octane on the heated debate over the proposal.

How Much Could They Sell To The Fed?

    HSBC: £45bn

    Barclays: £17.4bn

    RBS: £16.2bn

    HBOS: £13.3bn

    Lloyds TSB: £3.4bn


Pound and American flag

Last night there were big hints that an outline had been given the thumbs up by all parties, only for it to emerge that the political choreography of Barack Obama and John McCain's campaigns will keep the quibbling going for at least another day.

Neither side wants to be seen to kill the deal, but nor do they want to be seen to be bailing out the bad bankers, or their greedy (but now wounded) shareholders.

The concessions - from capping executive pay to taking a stake in the banks which benefit from the bail-out - are beginning to run to many pages. But that is democracy.

And then what of the British question?

The idea that overseas banks which had been exposed to the mortgage crisis could dip into the rescue fund was slightly lost among the emergency rhetoric.

HSBC 's exposure to US toxic debt ran to £45bn, while Barclays, RBS, HBOS and Lloyds TSB also have smaller amounts of structured mortgage debt and other soured assets.

All in all, the damage incurred by the firms would account for a sizeable chunk of the total package.

But it is not clear exactly how they would qualify and how much they would be able to sell their distressed assets for.

It may be that some of the banks will find the price offered by the fund is much less than they are prepared to take.

Either way it is likely to add more controversy to the whole process, as US politicians and taxpayers flinch at the thought of not just bailing out their own badly behaved bankers, but even worse, the limeys in London.

source: http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/Business/US-Financial-Rescue-Plan-Will-UK-Banks-Benefit-From-Bail-Out-Fund-Asks-Michael-Wils/Article/200809415107747?lpos=Business_Article_Body_Copy_Region_0=ARTICLE_15107747_US_Financial_Rescue_Plan%3A_Will_UK_Banks_Benefit_From_Bail-Out_Fund%2C_Asks_Michael_Wils


A Question For You to Answer

Our church has started a Peace and Justice ministry. The question is what should it look like and what should it do. So far we have only been posting articles we have discovered on the internet and found of interest.

So what is your opinion? So may comment that a church should not be engaged in peace and justice. If so, say so and why you think that. Your opionin is important.

Please post your comments. Have an effect in the direction of this ministry.

Child and Maternal Health

Child and Maternal Health

Across the world, young children and pregnant women are bearing the brunt of deteriorating health systems. Every year, nearly 10 million children die before their fifth birthday, most of them from preventable or treatable causes such as measles, diarrhea, malnutrition and other ailments that more affluent countries no longer worry about. Approximately 500,000 mothers die each year from complications during child birth, and tens of millions more suffer from pregnancy related illnesses and injuries. Africa’s child mortality rate is 20 times that of the United States and its maternal mortality rate is 65 times that of the United States.

The challenge here is not a lack of technology, but a lack of access to technology. There is a shortage of health care workers, basic equipment, predictable financing and infrastructure, and a growing recognition among policymakers that global health programs must be designed in a way that strengthens access to basic neo-natal care and prevention measures like vaccines.

Evidence for Action

  • Simple, cost-effective solutions exist: Proven effective solutions such as access to clean water, vaccinations and a basic healthcare package can lower the risk of childhood death by two-thirds. Most of these interventions are extremely affordable - for example, oral rehydration therapy to treat dehydrating diarrhea costs only 42 cents per dose. Investments in these prevention and treatment measures also yield high returns through economic savings. For example, every dollar spent on the diphtheria/tetanus/pertussis vaccine generates savings of $29, and $21 is generated for every dollar spent the measles/mumps/rubella vaccine.
  • Previous successes demonstrate possibilities: Each year, vitamin A supplementation saves over 250,000 young lives by reducing the risk and severity of diarrhea and infections. Simple interventions for diarrhea such as oral rehydration therapy contribute annually to saving the lives of one million children. Both Bangladesh and Mexico have achieved dramatic improvements in their child survival rates and have shown that success is achievable.
  • Widespread development returns gained from improving child health: Healthy children are better educated and more productive adults. For example, a 35% decrease in under-5 mortality in Bolivia was shown to increase primary school enrollment among eligible children by 30%.

When they signed on to the Millennium Development Goals in 2000, 189 countries committed to reducing child mortality rates by two-thirds and maternal mortality rates by three-quarters by 2015. Global resources have not been leveraged to reach these goals and midway to 2015, the world remains dangerously off track. This is especially true in sub-Saharan Africa, where the majority of child and maternal deaths still occur. The attention and resources mobilized around AIDS, TB and malaria in recent years, while crucial, has exacerbated the strain on health systems in Africa by redirecting scarce funding, supplies and human resources away from primary care and maternal health services. However, there is a growing consensus among policymakers that global health programs must be designed in a way that strengthens overall health systems. With leadership and commitment from developing countries and the donor community, the prognosis for mothers and young children in the developing world can be a much more hopeful one.

More Info

source: http://www.one.org/international/issues/child.html
Lost in America. Greek Orthodox Christians doing what they can by venturing into the inner cities and giving out food, clothing, and hugs.

Fueling the Fire of Real Change

Fueling the Fire of Real Change
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080928_fueling_the_fire_of_real_change/
Posted on Sep 28, 2008

By Chris Hedges

Turn your back on Wall Street. Walk a few blocks up from the gleaming and soulless towers of disintegrating capitalism to the shabby, brick Catholic Worker house at 55 E. Third St. Sit, as I did recently, in one of the chairs in the basement dining room with its cracked linoleum and steel utility tables.

“Works of mercy and contact with the destitute sustain the spark in the ashes,” William Griffin, who has been with the Catholic Worker for 34 years and writes for the newspaper, told me. “It is with the poor and the indigent that you sense the imbalance and injustice. It is this imbalance that inspires action. Generations come in waves. One generation is inspired by these sparks, as Martin Luther King was during the civil rights movement. These fires often fall away and smolder until another generation.”

The coals of radical social change smolder here among the poor, the homeless and the destitute. As the numbers of disenfranchised dramatically increase, our hope, our only hope, is to connect intimately with the daily injustices visited upon them. Out of this contact we can resurrect, from the ground up, a social ethic, a new movement. Hand out bowls of soup. Coax the homeless into a shower. Make sure those who are mentally ill, cruelly cast out on city sidewalks, take their medications. Put your muscle behind organizing service workers. Go back into America’s resegregated schools. Protest. Live simply. It is in the tangible, mundane and difficult work of forming groups and communities to care for others and defy authority that we will kindle the outrage and the moral vision to fight back. It is not Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson who will save us. It is Dorothy Day.

Day, who died in 1980, founded the Catholic Worker in the midst of the Great Depression with Peter Maurin. The two Catholic anarchists published the first issue of the Catholic Worker newspaper in 1933. They handed out 2,500 copies in Union Square for a penny a copy. The price remains unchanged. Two Catholic Worker houses of hospitality in the Lower East Side soon followed. Day and Maurin preached a radical ethic that included an unwavering pacifism as well as a hatred of unfettered capitalism. They condemned private and state capitalism for its unjust distribution of wealth. They branded the profit motive as immoral. They were fervent supporters of the labor movement, the civil rights movement and all anti-war movements. They called on followers to take up lives of voluntary poverty. The Catholic Worker refused to identify itself as a not-for-profit organization and has never accepted grants. It does not pay taxes. It operates its soup kitchen in New York without a city permit. The food it provides to the homeless is donated by people in the neighborhood. There are some 150 Catholic Worker houses around the country and abroad, although there is no central authority. Some houses are run by Buddhists, others by Presbyterians. Religious and denominational lines mean little.

Day cautioned that none of these radical stances, which she said came out of the Gospels, ensured temporal success. She wrote that sacrifice and suffering were an expected part of the religious life. Success as the world judges it should never be the final criterion for the religious and moral life. Spirituality, she said, was rooted in the constant struggle to fight for justice and be compassionate, especially to those in need. And that commitment was hard enough without worrying about its ultimate effect. One was saved in the end by faith, faith that acts of compassion and justice had intrinsic worth.

Many of the old stalwarts of the movement do not place their hopes in Barack Obama or the Democratic Party. They see their task as sustaining the embers of social and religious radicalism. They hope that this radical ethic can once again ignite a generation shunted aside by a bankrupt capitalism.

“If you lived through the civil rights movement as I did, you would want very much to vote for Obama,” said Tom Cornell, who first came to the Worker in 1953, “but I don’t think I will be able to, given Obama’s foreign policy and his failure to promote a health care system for all Americans. I can’t vote for someone who leaves an attack on Iran on the table.”

Those within the Worker, however, worry that the looming economic dislocation will empower right-wing, nationalist movements and the apocalyptic fringe of the Christian right. This time around, they say, the country does not have the networks of labor unions, independent press, community groups and church and social organizations that supported them when Day and Maurin began the movement. They note that there are fewer and fewer young volunteers at the Worker. The two houses on the Lower East Side depend as much on men and women in their 50s and 60s as they do on recent college graduates.

“Our society is more brutal than it was,” said Martha Hennessy, Day’s granddaughter. “The heartlessness was introduced by Reagan. Clinton put it into place. The ruthlessness is backed up by technology. Americans have retreated into collective narcissism. They are disconnected from themselves and others. If we face economic collapse there are many factors that could see the wrong response. There are more elements of fascism in place than there were in the 1930s. We not only lack community, we lack information.”

I do not know if our hope lies with the Catholic Worker. Institutions, even good ones, ossify. They can become trapped in the deification of their own past and the rigid canonization of the views of those who began the movements. But as our society begins to feel the disastrous ripple effects from the looting of our financial system, the unraveling of our empire and the accelerated rape of the working and middle class by our corporate state, hope will come only through direct contact with the destitute. The ethic born out of this contact will be grounded in the real and the possible. This ethic will, because it forces us to witness suffering and pain, be uncompromising in its commitment to the sanctity of life.

“There are several families with us, destitute families, destitute to an unbelievable extent, and there, too, is nothing to do but to love,” Day wrote of those she had taken into the Catholic Worker House. “What I mean is that there is no chance of rehabilitation, no chance, so far as we see, of changing them; certainly no chance of adjusting them to this abominable world about them—and who wants them adjusted, anyway?

“What we would like to do is change the world—make it a little simpler for people to feed, clothe, and shelter themselves as God intended them to do. And to a certain extent, by fighting for better conditions, by crying out unceasingly for the rights of the workers, of the poor, of the destitute—the rights of the worthy and the unworthy poor, in other words—we can to a certain extent change the world; we can work for the oasis, the little cell of joy and peace in a harried world.”

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Theology of a Classless Society


While new copies of this book are not available, several used copies in almost new condition are available. It is am important read by an Indian Orthodox Bishop. Don't miss this one.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

The Good Earth

I read the following on a Yahoo list today.

Dear brethren,
SHALOM

I happened to be with Mr. Neil Armstrong, the famous astronaut in a
dinner hosted to honor him in Mumbai in 1995 by the company I was
working with then.

Among other things, I casually asked him about his reminiscence of
the moon landing and how he feels about it now. His reply touched my
heart.  

He said, "From far away on the return trip, when I saw the Earth,
beautiful in its glorious mixture of bluish green and silver color, I
was filled with so much passion and great gratitude and always
continued to praise the Lord for gifting us such a marvellous place
to live"

Is it not unfortunate that we refuse to realize this and relentlessly
vie each other in destroying all the wonderful things in this
marvelous gift of God, the only such place in the entire universe?
The irony is that most of the destructions are in the name of God, by
the representatives of God as if God need protection of these puny
mortals.

P. Abraham Paul, Karottuveetil, Trivandrum..
SOCM #3321       

 
  

Friday, September 26, 2008

Millennium Development Goals

Millennium Development Goals

In 2000, leaders from 189 nations signed on to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a set of eight ambitious targets designed to significantly reduce global poverty and disease by 2015. By setting time-bound, measurable targets for achieving results in areas like child and maternal health, education and access to water and sanitation, they injected new momentum into the fight against global poverty.

Achieving these important development goals depends on a partnership between developing countries and donor governments. Much like the partnership envisioned by the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD), the MDGs and the Gleneagles Communique, there are critical roles that must be played by all in order to achieve real results in the fight against global poverty. Recipient countries must lead the way by prioritizing good governance, investing in the well-being of their people and devising transparent and accountable development plans alongside civil society. Developed countries must be supportive of these policy decisions and should reinforce the choices and priorities that are made by countries in the best interest of their people. Developed countries should also lead in ensuring that developing countries have a sustainable, accountable system for financing development.

Since 2000, tangible results prove that dramatic progress is possible when developing countries and donor governments fulfill their ends of the bargain: debt cancellation has saved African countries $70 billion, which along with targeted aid for education helped send an additional 29 million more African children to school for the first time; increased global resources for health has helped almost three million HIV-positive people receive life-saving ARV medicine and delivered over 59 million bed nets to protect families from malaria.

Despite these successes, much more needs to be done to ensure that development goals are met by 2015, especially in Africa, which is the region farthest off-track from reaching the goals:

  1. Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger: Around the world, over one billion people survive on less than a dollar a day and one person in seven goes to bed hungry each night.
  2. Provide universal primary education: Expanded access to education generates widespread development returns in areas like health and economic and political development, yet 72 million children are currently out of school across the world.
  3. Promote gender equality: Although gender empowerment is a critical component of development, women still bear the brunt of global poverty and disease. Women work longer hours earning less money, face fewer educational and political opportunities and are more vulnerable to failures of weak health systems and diseases like HIV/AIDS than their male counterparts.
  4. Reduce child mortality: Every year, nearly 10 million children die before their fifth birthday - that's one every three seconds - nearly all of them from preventable or treatable diseases like diarrhea, pneumonia and measles.
  5. Improve the health of mothers: Every year, over half a million mothers die from complications during child birth, and tens of millions more suffer from pregnancy related illnesses and injuries.
  6. Combat HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria: Although HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis (TB) and malaria are entirely preventable and treatable, they are three of the world's most devastating diseases: in 2007, HIV/AIDS killed more than 2 million people, tuberculosis killed 1.7 million and at least one million people died of malaria.
  7. Ensure environmental sustainability: Over one billion people across the world lack access to clean water and 2.6 billion do not have access to basic sanitation, deficits that are projected to widen with emerging threats such as climate change and population growth.
  8. Build a global partnership for development: Success in achieving the first seven goals requires a new compact of global cooperation through which developing countries and donor governments prioritize development and build a sustainable and accountable system to finance it.

Midway to 2015, world leaders face an historic opportunity to renew the fight against extreme poverty by reaffirming their commitment to development and leveraging new resources to achieve their agreed-upon goals. Along with leaders, campaigns and citizens across the world, ONE is working to mobilize broad-based support for achieving the MDGs and holding world leaders to account for the targets and commitments they set to reach them.

source: http://www.one.org/international/issues/


Healing hate

Healing hate

‘For an Israeli to think about coming to the West Bank is seen as a death wish,’ says Carmel Dekel, a 36-year-old chiropractor and member of Christian Aid partner, Israeli Physicians for Human Rights (PHR).

‘My friends think I’m crazy. But I’ve never experienced any fear.’

It’s a warm autumn day and Carmel is in a van with other PHR volunteers, heading for a village in the northern West Bank. The road is rough and unpaved, and concrete blocks and earth mounds laid in the road by the Israeli army are forcing a detour.

Carmel thinks her friends’ fear comes from not knowing what lies on the other side of the border. Israelis are not legally allowed to travel into the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) by their own government and few have ventured across.

‘It shows them that we are not all big monsters'

But inspired by her Hippocratic oath and belief in breaking down boundaries, Carmel simply tells them: ‘try it once, and you will see.’

Every weekend, volunteer Israeli doctors, physicians and nurses like Carmel travel to the OPT as members of PHR to provide medical care to communities with little access to health services.

On this particular weekend PHR are travelling to Kafr Zibad. In order to reach isolated communities, they use mobile clinics – vans carrying doctors, nurses and medicine supplies.

They often run joint clinics with the Palestinian Medical Relief Society, also a Christian Aid partner. Kafr Zibad is just 15 minutes from the town of Tulkarem, but Israeli military checkpoints and closures mean the journey for Palestinians seeking healthcare can take up to three hours.

If you’re ill in the West Bank, you are out of luck. Checkpoints, road blocks and restrictions on movement – of which there are over 500 in the West Bank – have cut many Palestinians off from healthcare.

Israel’s separation barrier, now nearing completion, also makes it almost impossible for Palestinians to visit the six main Palestinian hospitals in Jerusalem. On top of this, the victory of Hamas in last year’s election saw foreign aid to the Palestinian Authority (PA) stopped. This left 165,000 PA employees, including government doctors, without salaries.

Breaking barriers

‘Today I am treating Hassan, who is eight years old,’ says Carmel. Hassan has a form of cerebral palsy which means he cannot walk unaided and requires specialist treatment, available in neighbouring Israel. But for this he requires a permit from the Israeli authorities.

‘He may get permission to travel for physiotherapy once, but the question is: will he be able to get it again?’ says Carmel.

The clinics are also a chance for first-hand encounters between Israelis and Palestinians in a context far removed from the violence and conflict portrayed in the world’s media.

‘As well as the medical work, it’s about showing Palestinians that Israelis are not all like the ones they meet every day at checkpoints,’ says Naomi Stockwell, a physician who was born in the UK but moved to Jerusalem 30 years ago.

‘It shows them that we are not all big monsters. The most terrifying thing [about the conflict] is that children on both sides are growing up with hatred bred out of ignorance.’

Carmel and Naomi believe in breaking down barriers. They see that the seemingly simple act of an Israeli doctor taking the blood pressure of an elderly Palestinian has a deeper significance.

‘For me, it is a form of non-violent resistance to the occupation,’ says Carmel. ‘It’s about people saying “how can we stand as one voice and lead the leaders?” rather than waiting for them to lead us.’

‘I want to create a generation of children with healthy spines,’ she says matter-of-factly. ‘Healthy bodies, and healthy spines.’

  • Access to healthcare is a basic human right. As an occupying power, Israel has an obligation under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights to ‘refrain from denying or limiting equal access for all persons…to health services.’ Christian Aid and its partners, including PHR, are calling for an end to restrictions on free movement within the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Israel’s 500 checkpoints and roadblocks are denying Palestinians their rights to healthcare.

source: http://www.christianaid.org.uk/issues/conflict/middleeast/livesinconflict/Healing_hate.aspx

Thursday, September 25, 2008


Fair-minded and sympathetic to Jewish, Muslim, and Christian concerns, Lutz and Smith provide a clear account of the Israeli-Palestinian situation and a compelling plea for Christian involvement in the area. Carefully sorting out the tangled historical and religious roots of the problems, they reveal the strong forces at work in the conflict and lay out the driving biblical notions of election and covenant, the historical causes of the bitter and divisive clashes of the last 50 years, the complex demographic and political issues today, how Palestinians (particularly Christians) have been affected by the turmoil, and how, finally, Christians must engage the future of justice and peace. Includes maps and twelve black and white photos.

From the Publisher
Endorsements: "Welcome to a land called 'holy.' That's a succinct summary of this new engaging enterprise by the Lutz-Smith team. The sub-title, 'Fostering, peace, justice, and hope' says it even more directly — this journey to the holy land is a pragmatic and promise-filled venture with stimulating stories, helpful 'how to's', and ready resources.

I commend the authors for telling their stories of the holy land through their eyes and ears and perceptions. Their views challenge the reader to learn more about this place called Holy!

Thanks to Augsburg for the opportunity to take this pilgrimage to the land called holy. Now it is up to us readers to take the next steps toward peace, justice and hope! And bring this book along on your journey!

May we all be lead to Be Hope and Do Hope in our own personal holy lands of life!"

— Dr. Richard Bimler, President, Wheat Ridge Ministries

About the Author
Charles P. Lutz is a retired journalist and is coordinator in Minnesota of Churches for Middle East Peace, a coalition of 20 national church policy agencies. He writes and speaks frequently on matters of faith and politics involving Israel and Palestine and has frequently visited the Holy Land with groups of concerned Christians. He lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Robert O. Smith is a Doctoral Fellow at the J.M. Dawson Institute for Church-State Studies, Baylor University, and Pastor at St. John Lutheran Church (ELCA), Coryell City, Texas.

Faith in Sustainability through Science’

Faith in Sustainability through Science’, a talk by Professor J Michael Davies in the Lady Chapel.

What do we mean by sustainability? Is it sufficient for individual industries or enterprises to be sustainable? Can a sustainable planet be quantified or controlled? Is "sustainable growth" possible or desirable?


What can we say about the current situation? Major sustainability problems started with the industrial revolution and all relevant graphs, including population, started to rise exponentially about 200 years ago. As a result of population growth coupled to unconstrained consumerism, our market/growth-driven society is now unsustainable on a massive scale. The use of fossil fuels leading to climate change is clearly a major driver and aggravates related problems e.g. water and food shortages. However, there are so many others that it is impossible to give a comprehensive list (platinum[electronic circuits] and phosphorus [fertiliser] shortages have recently hit the headlines) . However, our use of fresh water (particularly in power production and irrigation), deforestation, our eating habits (over-fishing, over-grazing, intensive farming, consumption of meat) and the fact that most of what the developed world consumes (both food and other commodities) is produced much too far from the point of consumption are at least some of the major issues worthy of mention. What is likely to happen if we continue to get it wrong?


What can / should science do to help? An interesting argument (for an Engineer!) is that it is technology that is capable of helping us out of the mess, not science. If the science does not already exist, it is probably too late for the technology to be developed to make use of it on a sufficiently large scale. We do not have a good track record in developing technology to help the planet! "As technology has heightened human power over nature, modern humans are increasingly alienated from the earth and their fellow creatures" (Northcott) and therefore increasingly unaware of the terrible damage that technology is doing to the environment. Is a sustainable world possible (with the help of science/technology) - use climate change as a basis for this discussion (it is absolutely fundamantal to the problem and it is comparatively well documented). However, climate change is a symptom of a much deeper malaise, we humans have got our relationship with the planet totally wrong (Bookless).


Is there / should there be a distictively Christian position on sustainability? What does the Bible have to offer on the subject? How should Christians relate to the planet / creation in a 21st Century industrial society. Are we totally at the mercy of world governments or is there an imperitive to make a personal response? As Christians, our response should be part of our worship of the creator, not just a matter of ticking boxes


source: http://www.liverpoolcathedral.org.uk/content/musicandevents/whatson/detail/Faith_and_Sustainability_through_Science__a_lecture_by_Professor_Michael_Davies/246.aspx


Behind the crisis

Behind the crisis

Alex Cobham, Christian Aid's policy manager

Food riots in Haiti and Egypt, dire warnings about rocketing food prices – the world is in the midst of a food crisis. Why is this happening? Christian Aid policy manager Alex Cobham explains that much of the problem is of the West’s making.

The food crisis facing many poor countries does not come as a surprise.

Christian Aid has long warned that the doctrinaire imposition of market liberalisation on developing countries has left the poorest farmers without financial or marketing support, and this has seriously threatened staple food yields.

‘The poor are the first to suffer from climate change, and equally from soaring food prices.’

Vulnerable

The poorest people in developing countries have been increasingly forced to rely on imports, which are extremely vulnerable to fluctuating global economic conditions.

Much of recent debate over the food crisis has been polarised into a choice between saving the planet by growing biofuels and feeding the world’s people by growing food.

It is not that simple.

The poor are the first to suffer from climate change, and equally from soaring food prices. Both problems need to be tackled urgently, but more intelligently – and recognising that they are both human development issues above all.


Alex James hears about rising food prices in Burkina Faso. Click on image below and press play to watch video.

Speculation

There are indeed short-term reasons for prices nearing historic highs in staples such as rice, soybeans, corn and wheat. These include the commodity price boom, which may partly have been fuelled by futures speculation.

Rising consumption in some parts of the developing world, such as China and India, as well as more and more land being turned over to biofuels production, has also contributed to the problem.

But the key underlying factors are structural.

No protection

Aggressive market liberalisation policies imposed on poorer countries by rich countries, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, have left many of the world’s poorest men and women exposed to violent swings in market conditions.

And they face these swings without any of the institutional structures that protect food producers in richer countries.

The structures that were dismantled did not always function perfectly – from food marketing boards to keep agricultural producer prices stable, to state banks that supplied credit to small-scale rural farmers.

Stability

But when they were dismantled or privatised, nothing was left behind - except volatile market prices and little or no private credit facilities.

Christian Aid analysis shows that stable and secure markets are essential to increase staple food yields, and collective farmer organisations can help marginal producers get their goods to market.

Subsidised food production by rich countries that were immune from pressure to liberalise has undercut producers in the developing world and left them reliant on imports – despite potentially lower costs of domestic production.

The recent shift in subsidies to biofuel production has brought a sudden end to much of the related food dumping, at a time when domestic production in many countries is on its knees.

Climate change

Finally, a year of extreme weather events linked to El Nino and La Nina have made food production more volatile.

Prospery Raymond, Christian Aid’s representative in Haiti, where five people have died in food riots, notes that Hurricane Dean and Tropical Storm Noel destroyed much of the bean crop last year, leading to a shortage of seed this year.

At the same time, a cup of imported US rice – that previously undercut and decimated domestic production – now costs about one-and-a-half times what the average worker makes in a day. The majority who are unemployed are even more desperate.

Responsibility

Those who bear responsibility for, and have reaped the benefits of, the skewed version of globalisation that exists, must recognise that the structures they have imposed are ultimately responsible for this crisis.

There will be other crises to follow if they do not put human development and security at the heart of their agenda, recognising that free markets can sometimes be an instrument for this, but should never again be pursued as a goal in their own right.

source: http://www.christianaid.org.uk/issues/lifeonthemargins/stories/rising_food_prices.aspx


Wednesday, September 24, 2008

The Great African Scandal

The Great African Scandal

Dr Beckford thb

Broadcaster and theologian Robert Beckford on how the current trade system penalises the global poor.

As a theologian, justice and the ongoing fight for change are central to my writing, teaching and film-making.

In 2005, having made 'The Empire Pays Back' – a film about the cumulative financial benefit of the slave trade to UK PLC over 200 years – I realised I wanted to make a 'sister' film which would look at present day Africa's relationship to the rich world.

I wanted to know what it would be like to experience life on a 'dollar a day', which is around the average national daily income in Ghana and more, to dig deep and understand why so many are forced to live on so little.

So, this year, with Christian Aid's support, I travelled to Ghana to make a film for Channel 4 in this its 50th anniversary of independence.

Video: Beckford works with rice farmers

Potential riches

On paper, Ghana should be an African success story – rich in minerals, fertile, a stable democracy and free from conflict – so what would I find?

My journey began in the hot dry north of Ghana – in the small rice farming village of Gbirima.

I joined the men in their backbreaking effort to clear a new rice paddy. As we worked, they talked about how Ghana used to be nearly 50% sufficient in rice production, partly due to the help offered by government in the form of grants and subsidy.

Such was the success of the rice industry there was even a colloquial saying 'as rich as a rice farmer' that signified their prosperity.

But as I looked around me, 'rich as a rice farmer' was definitely not how it felt any more.

Enter the World Bank

And this was in no small thanks to more than 20 years of IMF and World Bank policies – macro-economic, free market driven – and in Ghana it meant a stop to state subsidies while at the same time opening its rice market to foreign competitors.

No surprise then that cheap rice flooded in, much of it subsidized by foreign governments, and Ghana's indigenous rice industry collapsed as it had no access to government protection or support. So, villages like Gbirima were left devastated and impoverished.

And there was more human tragedy as families lost their young daughters to the cities in search of work. Going in search of two girls from Gbirima I found them working in slum areas, at risk of their well being, somehow surviving in a place where no young woman should have to find herself trying to make a living.

Was this the net result of IMF and World Bank policies drawn up in Washington for Ghana's poor?

And foreign businesses are not setting a shining example of how to make trade work for the poorest either. Our film looks at Ghana's two prime commodities – gold and cocoa.

It seemed to me that those cocoa farmers included in the fair trade system see real benefits but for the rest it’s a very hard life.

Cocoa and gold

What’s more we discovered that even at a Fair Trade co-operative only 3% of the cocoa was purchased at the fair trade price. After 100 years of importing Ghana’s cocoa is that really the best that international companies can do? I was left thinking who is really profiting from the cocoa industry? In my opinion, it’s not the cocoa farmers.

Gold offered no better a story. We witnessed shocking conditions in the gold mining areas where people claim they are forced to live with dangerously high levels of pollution around the mines and where poverty drives men to mine illegally.

And in Accra, the former Ghanaian finance minister told me that the country received as little as 3 per cent of the profits from these mines.

I thought back to Bob Marley's assessment of the 'Babylon System’ – how economic systems work to quote Marley, 'suck the blood of the sufferers (poor) day by day.'

And so I wondered about 'independence'. I asked myself how – when bodies like the IMF and World Bank, or international businesses have such widespread influence and control – could Ghana exercise any economic independence at all?

Its need for loans – and aid – have meant their room for manoeuvre has been profoundly limited. I did wonder too, is it in the West's interest that we keep Ghana and many other nations like it, in economic dependency?

As someone who campaigned for the end of apartheid, I believe that a new African struggle is now needed – a new war of 'economic' independence.

And my experience made me understand – at first hand – why trade justice is so important in this effort. And it is why I will be working with Christian Aid over the coming year to engage more and more supporters who can work with us to see trade justice succeed.

  • Dr Robert Beckford is the Reader in Black Theology and Popular Culture at Oxford Brookes University. He is also a regular broadcaster with Channel 4 Religion.

source: http://www.christianaid.org.uk/issues/trade/stories/african_scandal.aspx

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Overhauling health care: Two divergent visions

Overhauling health care: Two divergent visions
McCain stresses individuality, competition; Obama urges access for all
By JoNel Aleccia
Health writer
updated 5:56 p.m. ET, Mon., Sept. 22, 2008

Msnbc.com is presenting a weekly series, Briefing Book: Issues ’08, assessing the issues and controversies that the next president will confront.

This week, we look at the starkly different plans to reform the nation’s health care system put forth by John McCain and Barack Obama.

Will voters embrace McCain’s move to tax the health benefits employers provide, creating instead a tax credit they can use to buy private insurance in an increasingly competitive, deregulated market?

Or will they support Obama’s plan that requires employers to provide health insurance or pay taxes, and creates a new national system of private and public options that strictly regulates insurers and guarantees access to care — with the federal government footing the bill?

“There are lots of issues where candidates try to fudge their differences,” said Jonathan B. Oberlander, an associate professor social medicine and health policy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “This is not one of them. There is a clear contrast here and ordinary people can get a clear sense of what the candidates believe.”

Why it’s a problem
Health care costs in the United States have been rising exponentially for years, topping $2.2 trillion in 2007, about three times the $714 billion spent in 1990, according to federal estimates. That amounts to nearly $7,500 per person in the U.S. and accounts for 16 percent of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product, or GDP.

At the same time, nearly 46 million Americans remained uninsured last year, and many more struggled to keep up with the rising costs of insurance premiums, deductibles, co-payments and other out-of-pocket medical expenses.

Last spring, nearly three in 10 Americans reported that they or their families have had a tough time paying for health care and insurance after the recent downturn in the economy, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. And nearly four in 10 said difficulty paying medical bills was leading to serious financial problems, including not paying other bills, going without food or heat, or declaring bankruptcy.

Such forces have kept health care as one of the top five issues cited by voters in three out of four presidential elections since 1992. In July, 73 percent of 2,905 people in a telephone survey ranked health care as “very important” in determining how they’d vote, according to a poll by the Pew Research Center for People and the Press.

Where the candidates stand
Perhaps no other issue so sharply delineates the philosophical differences between the candidates and their parties, Oberlander said.

The McCain plan is based on classic conservative philosophy that focuses on market-driven solutions and strong individualism. “It emphasizes individual responsibility and promotes competition as the answer to high health costs,” Oberlander said.

The Obama plan, on the other hand, is rooted in the notion that the health care market cannot work without government regulation, that substantial federal oversight and investment are required. “The federal government has to take a strong role in making insurance accessible and affordable for Americans. It’s a shared responsibility between government and employers,” explained Oberlander.

Here’s how each candidate plans to achieve those goals, based on information from campaign speeches and Web sites, and from analysis by national health policy experts.

McCain: Tax credits will stimulate competition, choice
McCain wants to overhaul the existing system of employer-based health insurance that now covers more than 60 percent of the non-elderly population in the U.S.

The most revolutionary component of his plan, and possibly the most controversial, is a proposal to tax workers on the benefits their employers now pay for health insurance.

McCain proposes to eliminate the current tax exclusion for employer-paid premiums, and to use revenue generated — an estimated $3.6 trillion over 10 years — to create refundable tax credits of $2,500 for individuals and $5,000 for families.

People could use the credits either to offset the higher taxes from the employer benefits or to purchase private insurance on the open market.

At the same time, McCain wants to move Americans toward a less regulated private insurance market.

“Insurance companies would no longer take your business for granted, offering narrow plans with escalating costs,” McCain said in a speech earlier this year. “It would help change the whole dynamic of the current system, putting individuals and families back in charge and forcing companies to respond with better service at lower cost.”

He theorizes that Americans receiving a fixed credit would be more careful with their health dollars, seeking out lower-cost, less-comprehensive plans and forcing insurers to compete for their share.

McCain wants to eliminate existing restrictions of insurance sales across state lines, allowing people to buy policies nationwide. Currently, insurance is regulated on a state-by-state basis, with some states imposing strict coverage requirements.

McCain also proposes a “guaranteed access plan” to provide care for people unable to acquire insurance on the open market because of pre-existing conditions or catastrophic health problems. The campaign estimates costs at between $7 billion and $10 billion.

The Republican candidate also hopes to reform Medicare to require payments for entire episodes of care, not single procedures, and to pay on the basis of outcomes, not services provided. He wants to emphasize cost savings from prevention, improvements in medical technology, faster approval of generic drugs and medical malpractice reform.

Obama: Access for all and stricter rules for insurers
Obama, on the other hand, wants to build on the existing employer-based health insurance system, expanding it with a National Health Insurance Exchange that would provide a choice of vetted private insurance options and offering those without care access to a new federally funded National Health Plan, similar to the existing Medicare program.

Obama is calling for a mandate dubbed “play or pay” that requires employers to either offer health insurance to their workers or to pay a tax to help fund public care. He wants to require care for all children, and to provide subsidies to help low-income people afford coverage.

The Democrat wants to strictly regulate insurance companies to end policies that allow firms to charge higher premiums or deny insurance for certain problems.

“My plan begins by covering every American,” Obama said in a speech in May. “ . . . If you are one of 45 million Americans who don’t have health insurance, you will have it after this plan becomes law. No one will be turned away because of preexisting illness or condition.”

Obama proposes to establish a federal reinsurance program that would subsidize businesses for the cost of care for certain people facing catastrophic conditions, keeping premiums low for the rest of the healthier workers. And, like McCain, he hopes to save money by cutting administrative costs for private insurance, implementing technological improvements and promoting prevention and management of chronic diseases.

The campaign estimates the cost of the expanded programs at between $50 billion and $65 billion, paid for primarily through expiration of tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 for families that make more than $250,000 a year and in cost savings from improvements in prevention and treatment of chronic disease and medical records technology.

The Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center at the Brookings Institution, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit, nonpartisan policy center, notes that Obama has proposed raising the payroll tax for those earning more than $250,000. The center assumes that would include a 2 percent income tax surcharge on adjusted gross income above $250,000 for couples and $200,000 for others, and an additonal 2 percent payroll tax for employers on workers above those levels. That could increase taxes on high-paid workers by nearly $400 billion over a decade.

What the analysts say
First, analysts emphasize that the health reform plans offer citizens a general guide to the candidates’ views, but may be lacking in crucial details.

“Campaign documents should be thought of more like the watercolors of impressionists instead of photographs or blueprints,” said Len Nichols, director of the health policy program at the New America Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan public policy institute.

In McCain’s case, one key detail missing from the plan is whether the tax credits created by eliminating employer-based tax benefits would keep up with the cost of medical care, analysts said.

At first, many Americans would benefit from the shift, said Jennifer Tolbert, a principal policy analyst with the Kaiser Family Foundation. The $2,500 individual credit and the $5,000 family credit likely would offset the higher taxes from employee benefits — with money left over to deposit in a Health Savings Account to pay other expenses.

For example, $12,000 is the average benefit for health care for a family and employers pay taxes on about 75 percent of that, she said. People in the 35 percent income tax bracket would see an additional tax of about $3,150, but they’d receive $5,000 for family care.

“In that case, the family would come out ahead,” she said.

But the costs of health care are rising much faster than inflation, noted Oberlander and others. It’s not clear whether the McCain plan would accommodate that rise, or how. If it doesn’t, costs could soon eclipse the credit.

“The value of it seriously erodes over time,” Oberlander said. “All those people who were doing well in year one and two, in year nine and 10 they’re not doing so well.”

McCain plan helps the young and healthy
The McCain proposal primarily benefits the young and the healthy, who almost certainly would be able to use the tax credit to obtain cheaper coverage in the private insurance market, Nichols noted. Older people and those with medical problems would face much higher premiums.

“Me, I’m 54, slightly overweight, with a terrible family history of disasters, I’d have to pay a lot more,” he added.

Even people with mild existing problems such as asthma or allergies could have trouble obtaining affordable insurance, noted Tolbert.

More concerning, analysts said, is the likelihood that many young, healthy people would choose the cheaper private options, leaving older, sicker people to be covered by the employee plans, said Paul Fronstin, director of health research programs for the nonprofit, non-partisan Employee Benefit Research Institute, or EBRI.

“At some point, employers will reevaluate why they’re still offering benefits,” he said. “We could see the end of employer-sponsored health care.”

That could shift more people into the ranks of the uninsured, though the numbers aren’t clear.

At the same time, the plan to allow cross-state insurance sales essentially would deregulate the private insurance market, Oberlander said. While the McCain camp emphasizes the virtues of competition, the move likely would prompt healthy people to buy cheaper, accessible policies in states with less regulation, leaving states with coverage mandates and other restrictions to serve sicker people.

Uninsured may stay the same
“If New York loses the healthy people to Pennsylvania, that can’t work,” he said.

The move to create guaranteed access plans to cover uninsurable people likely would face the hurdles already experienced by more than 30 states that have high-risk pools. And it almost certainly would cost more than the estimated $7 billion to $10 billion, Nichols said.

“When you get down to it, it probably would cost 10 times that,” he said.

Overall, the McCain plan offers a more flexible, portable insurance system that makes consumers more mindful of skyrocketing costs and provides a realistic funding source by repealing the tax exclusion. But it likely would do little to solve the crisis of the uninsured.

“Most people who are uninsured would remain uninsured,” Oberlander said.

The Brookings Institution estimates that the McCain plan would trim the uninsured by 1 million in 2009 and nearly 5 million by 2013. After that, the numbers would rise as the tax credit failed to keep pace with premiums. Obama would reduce the uninsured by 18 million in 2009 and 34 million by 2018, the center notes. Even under the Obama plan, however, 34 million Americans would still lack insurance in 2018.

McCain likely would face an uphill battle convincing Congress to accept his plan, analysts said.

"Is a Democratically-controlled Congress going to vote to tax people's health care benefits?" Oberlander said. "I don't think so."

Obama offers more coverage, but at what cost?
Cost is the key detail missing from the Obama health reform plan, critics say.

The campaign has not said how large the tax would be for businesses that opt not to offer insurance, or how small a business would have to be to be excluded from the requirement. If the payroll tax is too low, say 6 percent, many businesses will opt to pay it instead of offering insurance, sending their employees into the public program and boosting federal costs, he noted.

And although Obama repeatedly has said that he’ll offer Americans health benefits similar to those provided to members of Congress, the kind of comprehensive coverage provided by the most popular federal program has a price tag of more than $1,000 a month, according to an article in a just-released issue of the journal Health Affairs.

“I think the potential downside of the plan is the cost and the affordability,” said Tolbert.

The Obama plan would provide access to insurance to all, which would be “a revolution,” Oberlander said.

But the cost of covering the uninsured is likely $120 billion, far higher than the estimated $50 billion to $65 billion the campaign expects to spend, he noted. The taxes Obama hopes to gain by raising rates for people who make more than $250,000 a year were set to be absorbed into the nation's budget after 2010, anyway, Oberlander said.

Obama's proposal also could face fierce opposition from industries he hopes to regulate. There is some concern, for instance, that insurance companies facing stricter regulations would simply opt out of certain lines of business, just as property insurers are fleeing Florida and Mississippi after repeated hurricanes, Fronstin said.

However, Obama's plan to shift the some of the costs of catastrophic care to the government would help ease that issue, he added.

In addition, mandated employer coverage has faced fierce opposition in the past and likely will again, Nichols said.

Another issue that the campaign hasn't addressed is whether the nation's costly Medicare program, now topping $450 billion a year, could help pay for covering the poor. Critics contend that if Obama were to accept some degree of means testing for wealthier people enrolled in Medicare, he'd have the money he needs to pay for his new proposals. But cutting benefits for the vocal wealthy could be tough politically.

Overall, analysts said Obama’s plan would provide nearly universal access to health care and necessary regulation of quality, but at a far greater cost than anticipated.

“It depends on political will, my friend,” Nichols said.

Surprises for a new president
Whoever winds up in the Oval Office will not be able to dodge health care as a central issue, Nichols added.

If McCain wins, he will not be able to escape the realities of a confrontational Congress loaded with Democrats. If Obama wins, he'll have to grapple with many of the same issues and the inertia that has confounded health reform for decades.

But Nichols said growing desperation for reform may trump all of those hurdles.

“I just think we’ve waited so long that the middle class angst about cost is so great they can’t ignore it anymore,” Nichols said. “The next president, I believe, has to take it on because the forces that got to this point in the debate are not going away.”

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26761504/


An Interview with President Jimmy Carter

The crowning achievement of Jimmy Carter's presidency was the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt, and he has continued his public and private diplomacy ever since, winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 for his decades of work for peace, human rights, and international development. He has been a tireless author since then as well, writing bestselling books on his childhood, his faith, and American history and politics, but in Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid, he has returned to the Middle East and to the question of Israel's peace with its neighbors--in particular, how Israeli sovereignty and security can coexist permanently and peacefully with Palestinian nationhood.

It's a rare honor to ask questions of a former president, and we are grateful that President Carter was able to take the time in between his work with his wife, Rosalynn, for the Carter Center and Habitat for Humanity and his many writing projects to speak with us about his hopes for the region and his thoughts on the book.

A big thank you to President Carter for granting our request for an interview.


An Interview with President Jimmy Carter

Q: What has been the importance of your own faith in your continued interest in peace in the Middle East?
A: As a Christian, I worship the Prince of Peace. One of my preeminent commitments has been to bring peace to the people who live in the Holy Land. I made my best efforts as president and still have this as a high priority.

Q: A common theme in your years of Middle East diplomacy has been that leaders on both sides have often been more open to discussion and change in private than in public. Do you think that's still the case?
A: Yes. This is why private and intense negotiations can be successful. More accurately, however, my premise has been that the general public (Jewish, Christian, and Muslim) are more eager for peace than their political leaders. For instance, a recent poll done by the Hebrew University in Jerusalem showed that 58% of Israelis and 81% of the Palestinians favor a comprehensive settlement similar to the Roadmap for Peace or the Saudi proposal adopted by all 23 Arab nations and recently promoted by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. Tragically, there have been no substantive peace talks during the past six years.

Q: How have the war in Iraq and the increased strength of Iran (and the declarations of their leaders against Israel) changed the conditions of the Israel-Palestine question?
A: Other existing or threatened conflicts in the region greatly increase the importance of Israel's having peace agreements with its neighbors, to minimize overall Arab animosity toward both Israel and the United States and reduce the threat of a broader conflict.

Q: Your use of the term "apartheid" has been a lightning rod in the response to your book. Could you explain your choice? Were you surprised by the reaction?
A: The book is about Palestine, the occupied territories, and not about Israel. Forced segregation in the West Bank and terrible oppression of the Palestinians create a situation accurately described by the word. I made it plain in the text that this abuse is not based on racism, but on the desire of a minority of Israelis to confiscate and colonize Palestinian land. This violates the basic humanitarian premises on which the nation of Israel was founded. My surprise is that most critics of the book have ignored the facts about Palestinian persecution and its proposals for future peace and resorted to personal attacks on the author. No one could visit the occupied territories and deny that the book is accurate.

Q: You write in the book that "the peace process does not have a life of its own; it is not self-sustaining." What would you recommend that the next American president do to revive it?
A: I would not want to wait two more years. It is encouraging that President George W. Bush has announced that peace in the Holy Land will be a high priority for his administration during the next two years. On her January trip to the region, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has called for early U.S.-Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. She has recommended the 2002 offer of the Arab nations as a foundation for peace: full recognition of Israel based on a return to its internationally recognized borders. This offer is compatible with official U.S. Government policy, previous agreements approved by Israeli governments in 1978 and 1993, and with the International Quartet's "roadmap for peace." My book proposes that, through negotiated land swaps, this "green line" border be modified to permit a substantial number of Israelis settlers to remain in Palestine. With strong U.S. pressure, backed by the U.N., Russia, and the European Community, Israelis and Palestinians would have to come to the negotiating table.