U.S. and the rest of the world must cooperate for the benefit of all

Tuesday, May 30, 2017

[mpen-dayton] FW: Constitutional Amendment & FW: Invitation: Conversation with Sen. Elizabeth Warren & FW: Drug Companies to Launch Deceitful TV Ad Campaign

FYI. Best, Munsup

P.S. Please reply back to me with 'unsubscribe' added to the subject line if you no longer want to receive my e-Newsletters. The convenient link to unsubscribe is no longer available due to security reasons to protect my email servers.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  • FW: Constitutional Amendment
  • FW: Invitation: Conversation with Sen. Elizabeth Warren
  • FW: Drug Companies to Launch Deceitful TV Ad Campaign

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From: AlterNet
Subject: Constitutional Amendment → open right away


The following sponsored email was sent to you by AlterNet on behalf of Fight for Reform:

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JOIN PROGRESSIVE LEADERS: Sign to DEMAND a Constitutional Amendment to end Citizens United >>


We are so close to ending the terrible Citizens United decision that let Big Money take over our elections.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren knows how critical it is to pass a Constitutional Amendment:

'We must pass a Constitutional Amendment that will allow us to shut off the spigot of cash that is drowning our government' - Elizabeth Warren

President Obama spent his time in office urging for an end to Big Money's power:

'The Citizens United decision was wrong, and it has caused real harm to our Democracy.' - President Obama

And Sen. Bernie Sanders made ending Citizens United a central part of his presidential campaign:

'That us why we must overturn, through a Constitutional Amendment, the disastrous Citizens United Supreme Court decision.' - Bernie Sanders

We need to know which of our supporters are standing with them. If you support a Constitutional Amendment to end Citizens United, sign your name:

http:// go.fightforreform.org/Join-Progressive-Leaders

-FightForReform.org

Paid political advertisement paid for and provided in kind by End Citizens United Nonfederal, 1050 17th Street, NW Suite 590, Washington, DC 20036.

 

 

From: Munsup @SISCOM
Subject: RSVP: Conversation with Sen. Warren on May 31 (Today)

I just RSVPed for a special conversation with Sen. Elizabeth Warren about the massive opposition to Donald Trump and where we go from here.

Here's the link to join me:
https://act.credoaction.com/sign/elizabeth-warren-conversation/?sp_ref=307655643.4.181102.e.577031.2&referring_akid=.1004336.ZUBkje&source=mailto_sp

Would you do the same? Thanks!

--------------------------------------------
From: Murshed Zaheed; Political Director, CREDO Action from Working Assets
Subject: Invitation: Conversation with Sen. Elizabeth Warren

Persisting with our resistance: Conversation with Sen. Warren

Join us for a special conversation with Sen. Elizabeth Warren at 2:15 p.m. PT /5:15 p.m. ET on Wednesday, May 31.

Click below to RSVP:
   

RSVP ►


We have some awesome news. Progressive champion Sen. Elizabeth Warren is planning to come by and visit the CREDO team tomorrow to engage with our community.  

That is right. Mark this down on your calendar now. On Wednesday, May 31, Sen. Warren is joining us for a special conversation with the CREDO team about progressives' ongoing resistance to Donald Trump. We are going to stream the conversation on Facebook Live, and we hope you can join us.  

Click here to RSVP. We'll send you an email linking to the conversation right when it starts.



The CREDO community has been relentless in our opposition to Trump.
We are fighting his attacks on Muslims, immigrants, women and LGBTQ people. We are demanding an independent investigation into his Russia ties and reported attempts to obstruct justice. We are pushing back on his attempts to shred our social safety net, take away health care from millions of people, suppress the vote and destroy the free internet.

Thanks to our tenacious and persistent activism, the resistance has been working. We have been able to stop or slow down the advancement of the Trump administration's hateful and destructive right-wing agenda on a number of fronts.


Join us tomorrow to hear from Sen. Warren about where we go from here. Click here to RSVP.

Click below to RSVP:
   

RSVP ►


 

From: David P. Little; Southern Regional Director, Ohio Taxpayers for Lower Drug Prices
Subject: Drug Companies to Launch Deceitful TV Ad Campaign

Please review this recent release from the Ohio Taxpayers for Lower Drug Prices. Clearly the major drug companies intend to confuse Ohio voters so that they can maintain an outrageous pricing system. This issue will be on the November ballot.

For Immediate Release
May 22, 2017

Drug Companies to Launch Deceitful TV Ad Campaign
Pharma Has Long Track-Record of Lying


Columbus – Supporters of the Ohio Drug Price Relief Act are warning that the drug companies this week plan to launch a TV ad campaign to deceive and mislead Ohio voters about the Act's reform plan to put the brakes on the price-gouging practices of the drug industry that now hurt Ohio families, taxpayers and veterans. The Act will be on the statewide Ohio ballot this coming November.

"The drug industry's TV ads should come with a U.S. Surgeon General's warning: The lies being spread by the corporate drug cartel and by their CEOs are hazardous to the health of millions of Ohioans, including 164,000 children," said Dennis Willard, spokesman for Ohio Taxpayers for Lower Drug Prices. "A yes vote for the Relief Act will lower the cost of life-saving drugs for the sick and suffering, save Ohio taxpayers nearly $400 million a year and give Ohioans a chance to send a message nationwide that they are fed up with the drug industry ripoff."

"Time and again, drug companies have been accused by federal regulators and prosecutors of illegally fixing prices, defrauding taxpayers and misleading patients, doctors and the government about the safety and efficacy of their drugs," said Willard. "And those prosecutions have been successful. Twenty of the nation's biggest drug companies – the same drug companies who will be funding the campaign against the Ohio Drug Price Relief Act – have had to pay out almost $20 billion to settle allegations related to their deceptive practices." (See chart here).

Here are a few examples of the industry's record of deceit:

   

  • In 2013, Pfizer,Inc. and its subsidiary Pharmacia & Upjohn Co., agreed to pay $2.3 billion for fraudulently marketing some of their drugs and causing healthcare programs, including Medicare and Medicaid, to be over-billed by hundreds of millions of dollars. The settlement required Pfizer to repay nearly $1 billion to the programs that were overbilled. The U.S. Department of Justice at the time called the settlement a "landmark" in protecting "the public from those who seek to earn a profit through fraud."
  • In Oct. 2016, Mylan, Inc., which caused a huge public outcry when it jacked up the price of its EpiPen device by 500 percent, agreed to pay $465 million to settle a U.S. DOJ lawsuit that alleged the company had overcharged the Medicare and Medicaid programs by misclassifying the EpiPen device as a generic drug.
  • In 2013, Johnson & Johnson and its subsidiaries, including Janssen Pharmaceuticals, agreed to pay more than $2.2 billion to resolve criminal and civil cases that alleged the healthcare giants illegally promoted and marketed several of its prescription drugs, most notably the anti-psychotic drug Risperdal, to unwitting consumers for uses not approved by the Federal Drug Administration. "The conduct at issue in this case jeopardized the health and safety of patients," said then-Attorney General Eric Holder.


"We could go on and on about the deceitful activities of the drug industry," said Willard. "The record shows this industry will say anything and do anything to add to and protect its profits. Ohioans have every reason to doubt the truth of the industry's TV ads."

The Ohio Drug Price Relief Act requires Ohio's state government agencies to pay no more for the drugs they buy than what the Department of Veterans Affairs pays for the same drugs. The VA gets a 20-24 percent discount on its drug purchases. The affected Ohio agencies now buy hundreds of millions of dollars of drugs for nearly 4 million Ohioans, including those on Medicaid and retired and active state employees.


For more information
Contact:
Dennis Willard
; 614.209.8945, dennis@precisionnewmedia.com


 

End of MPEN e-Newsletter

[mpen-dayton] Greater Miami Valley Events & News

FYI. Best, Munsup

P.S. Please reply back to me with 'unsubscribe' added to the subject line if you no longer want to receive my e-Newsletters. The convenient link to unsubscribe is no longer available due to security reasons to protect my email servers.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  • (June 4) FW: Your personal invitation to the Interfaith of Greater Dayton's presentation
  • (June 10) FW: Teen Personal Safety Workshop
  • (June 10) FW: Race Unity Day Picnic
  • FW: [OFFICIAL-L] A message from interim President McCray (Wright State University)
  • FW: Add your signature to this letter about the (WSU) budget
           and related DDN articles:
    • Former administrator testifies in lawsuit against Wright State
    • UD Marriott says it's owed money for canceled WSU debate rooms
    • Recently announced layoffs, cuts won't be enough at WSU

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From: Katherine Cooper; Interfaith Forum of Greater Dayton Publicity Chair
Subject: Your personal invitation to the Interfaith of Greater Dayton's presentation

The Interfaith Forum of Greater Dayton would like to invite you to attend the following presentations:


Date: 4 June 2017
Time: 3 PM to 5:30 PM
Location: Foster Hall at Christ United Methodist Church; 3440 Shroyer Road; Kettering, Ohio
Topic: GLBTQ within Faith Communities


Speakers to be announced. The presenters will share their personal story and their religious tradition's perspective on this important topic.

Free and open to the public as always.

Some people like to bring a light refreshment to share -- no pork or shellfish please!
Ingredient lists on homemade products help those with food sensitivities make safe choices.

 

 

From: Shelly Diaz
Subject: Teen Personal Safety Workshop


 

 

From: Colette Harrison
Subject: Race Unity Day Picnic

My apologies to those who have previously received this - although please note the change of venue from what was on the Interfaith Events Calendar sent out a while back! - Colette


Race Unity Day Community Picnic
at
Sinclair Park    Shelter #2 (4 7 pm)




Please join us for a lively get together with food, fellowship and fun and hopefully lots of music as well!!!  The Park is located at the junction of Riverside [north] at 635 Shoup Mill Rd.

Sinclair Park is an outstanding recreational facility located in a lovely, wooded setting. It features a walking/running track, a volleyball court, playground equipment and open play area, grills and two open-air shelters.

We'll provide grilling stuff.

Everyone is free to bring "sides/desserts" and/or drinks to share - if you feel so inclined!

Feel free to bring instruments; games, etc.

Hosted by the Bahá'í communities of Harrison Township, Dayton, Vandalia, Trotwood, and Englewood.


There will be a brief program/discussion (at 5:00pm) on
"The Vision of Race Unity America's Most Challenging Issue"

For more information, contact:

Colette Harrison, Greater Dayton Unites! 937-949-7949 / 937-232-8313, UnityInDiversity_2015_Dayton@yahoo.com
or Liz Gordon, 937-415-0166, elizabet.gordon@att.net

 

 

From: owner-official_list@wright.edu On Behalf Of Curtis L. McCray; Interim President
Sent: Friday, May 26, 2017 8:54 AM
Subject: [OFFICIAL-L] A message from interim President McCray

Dear Campus Community,

I know last Friday was a difficult day for many on our campus. Our financial picture is grim. I know the prospect of our looming job cuts is stressful. Operational changes, spending decisions, and enrollment are among your concerns. The changes will be challenging, but we are creating the Wright State of the future with a sustainable funding model that will allow us to focus on the growth and mission of the university.

I also know students are concerned about their academic programs and whether the budget will interfere with plans to graduate on schedule. Although the university will stop offering three languages, we currently have no plans to eliminate majors or degree programs.

Our work is not done yet. We are finalizing the fiscal year 2018 budget in time for the Board of Trustees' annual budget workshop on June 8. We are also implementing controls so that this situation never happens again. Just as important, your board has changed; they are engaged in financial oversight in a way they were not just three months ago.

You still have time to provide feedback on our budget proposal. The board will accept comments sent from university community members using your Wright State email addresses until June 5. Please email your comments to commentonbudget@wright.edu

I will also remind you that we continue to accept comments about a proposal to change the classified reduction in force policy for non-bargaining unit classified employees. You can learn more about this proposed policy change and submit comments on it until June 4 at http://wright.edu/classifiedlayoffpolicy

I've met with many of you over the last two months and encourage you to share your input and ideas with me as well.

I also encourage you to take advantage of the numerous services our Human Resources department offers, including workshops on resilience, change management, and team building, as well as counseling services and activities to help deal with stress. Planning is also under way to provide support and resources to employees whose jobs are eliminated, including a career expo on June 27.

I will not write a letter next week but plan to communicate again around June 8 with more details about the FY18 budget.

I know it can be difficult to stay positive in such trying times. But I do believe the university is coming out of this challenge in a better position, and remains a prominent contributor to the Dayton region.

I hope the long Memorial Day weekend will provide you with a relaxing break; but also please take a moment to think of family and friends you have lost and honor our veterans.

This mailing list is maintained by the WSU Office of Communications and is used ONLY for official university announcements.

 

 

From: Munsup @SISCOM On Behalf of AAUP-WSU
Subject: FW: Add your signature to this letter about the budget

FYI.    Best, Munsup
-------------------------------------------
To all Bargaining Unit Faculty:

We invite you to be a signatory of the letter below, which will be sent shortly to the WSU Board of Trustees, Interim President Curtis McCray, and incoming President Cheryl Schrader. To sign, simply reply to this e-mail with the word YES.

Thank you for your attention to this message, and thank you for supporting AAUP-WSU!

Best regards,

Marty Kich, President, AAUP-WSU

-----------------------------------------------

To the WSU Board of Trustees, Interim President Curtis McCray, and incoming President Cheryl Schrader:

We, the undersigned faculty, are writing to express our objection to the proposed FY18 budget announced on May 19. It calls for a $1.6 million increase in budgeted spending for intercollegiate athletics but cuts to every other major spending unit, including $9.5 million in cuts to the seven core colleges and $1 million in cuts to the library (not to mention $3.9 million additional cuts to BSoM and SoPP).


Indeed, when the Board of Trustees hired Dr. McCray as interim President, "maintaining [WSU's] core athletics programs at a NCAA Division I level" appeared in the first sentence of the first item in the list of his duties specified in his contract.

Putting athletics on a par with academics and thus before the needs of our students is disgraceful and a gross strategic blunder! It continues the misplaced priorities that have characterized WSU spending in recent years and, along with gross mismanagement, led to the present fiscal crisis.

Under normal circumstances, it would be rational to give intercollegiate athletics a realistic budget, in line with the overspending that annually has occurred. But, in this fiscal crisis, it is inexplicable—even absurd. Spending on intercollegiate athletics has typically totaled about $10 million per year; in contrast, ticket sales have generated about $300 thousand per year. Even if one includes donations and other sources, the revenue generated by athletics has been about $2 million per year—most of which is offset by the subsidies that the university must provide to the Nutter Center because athletic events generate such little revenue.

There is no evidence that intercollegiate athletics is of much interest to most of our students. After all, through their fees, they pay for two "free" tickets to each basketball game, but student attendance is chronically and woefully low. Likewise, all the empty seats at athletic events and the minuscule revenue generated by athletics demonstrate that there is little community support for our teams either.

Students come to Wright State looking for a quality education at an affordable price so that they can have rewarding careers rather than McJobs. Taxpayers expect and need the research of our faculty and students to benefit our communities and foster economic development. None of these objectives are advanced by increasing spending on intercollegiate athletics.

In closing, then, we call upon you to totally eliminate the increase budgeted for intercollegiate athletics. Instead, we propose that this $1.6 million be devoted to scholarships. That change in the proposed budget would help to stabilize enrollments and to restore our badly tarnished reputation in the community.

------------------------------------------------------


http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/former-administrator-testifies-lawsuit-against-wright-state/AQFORJbQGVZ65Ygex7E5jO/

Former administrator testifies in lawsuit against Wright State
Monday, May 22, 2017 News


Former Wright State University administrator Ryan Fendley testified today in his lawsuit against the school seeking $249,000 in back pay and benefits he claims he is owed after his termination amid an ongoing federal investigation.

Fendley's attorney, Theodore Copetas, opened the hearing in the Ohio Court of Claims in Columbus admitting the university had every right to terminate him, but university policy required nine months paid notice.

WSU attorneys argued former president David Hopkins, who was sitting at the defense table, was lead to believe Fendley was about to be indicted for allegedly violating federal immigration law in the university's use of the H-1B visa program.

Fendley countered that.

"Did you ever violate any laws in connection with your employment with Wright State?" Copetas asked him.

"No," Fendley responded, answering the same to whether he ever violated any rules or regulations.

Fendley also said the damages he was seeking would never replace all he lost when the university fired him.

"My reputation is in tatters in the community," he said, his voice cracking. "And it's been almost two years now and I haven't been able to get a job."

 


http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/wright-state-consultant-sued-for-canceled-debate-hotel-rooms/OdBEVV7kkwMdsKOJzyGMFI/
UD Marriott says it's owed money for canceled WSU debate rooms


Fallout from Wright State University's lost presidential debate is surfacing again as a local hotel seeks at least $170,000 in damages for canceled rooms.

Attorneys representing Concord Hospitality Enterprises Co., the management company that runs and is partial owner of the Marriott at the University of Dayton, filed a lawsuit today against Wright State in Greene County Common Pleas Court.

 

 

http://www.daytondailynews.com/news/recently-announced-layoffs-cuts-won-enough-wsu/O4U3eiJ6n5YahIif9dcfAI/

Recently announced layoffs, cuts won't be enough at WSU
Max Filby; Staff Writer ON Monday, May 29, 2017 News


Wright State University's $30 million in proposed budget cuts will not be enough to stabilize the school's future finances if a new revenue source is not found or enrollment does not grow.

Wright State will almost certainly be placed on state fiscal watch by 2019 and to be removed from it, WSU must add around $45 million to its reserve fund over the next three years, school and state officials both said.

There are just a few ways that money could be generated, the most obvious being even more cuts and layoffs.

RELATED: Wright State hits its 'low point' with announcement of 71 layoffs

Wright State announced on May 19 that it will likely lay off 71 employees and eliminate 107 already vacant positions, as part of a 2018 budget proposal. Trustees are expected to vote on a finalized budget on June 8 and layoff notices could go out the week of June 12.

While future layoffs and cuts are already being called last resort, more could be made in the coming years, said Doug Fecher, chairman of the WSU board's finance committee.

"They'd almost have to be made," Fecher said. "That's what the community needs to understand. If revenue doesn't come in (as projected) we will have to cut."

Nothing is "off the table" including taking WSU athletics back to a Division II status, though no serious discussions on that topic have occurred yet, Fecher said.

RELATED: WSU interim president: 'Our financial picture is grim'

To minimize future cuts and layoffs, the university could consider selling off some of its assets and operations, Fecher said. Last year, WSU leaders discussed outsourcing the college's parking operation and in October trustees sold 11 unused lots in Yellow Springs for $350,000.

Tuition is WSU's biggest single source of revenue but enrollment has dropped by 1.2 percent this spring and it is expected to decline again next year. To combat that trend, an enrollment and retention task force is being formed, said Provost Tom Sudkamp.

"Enrollment is our best weapon," said Jeff Ulliman, WSU's vice president of business and finance. "We've all got to do everything we can to bring students to this university and to keep students at this university."

Wright State is expected to end this year with around $29 million in reserves, about $2 million more than more than what was originally expected, officials have said. It's a sign that the austerity measures WSU has taken, such as axing catering and overnight travel, are working, Fecher said.

"We're just going to have to be hyper-vigilant," Fecher said.

RELATED: UD Marriott says it's owed money for canceled WSU debate rooms

Boosting reserves by $45 million would allow the university to swiftly enter and exit fiscal watch in the three years required by the state. But, getting to that point will be challenging, said Jim Bennett, vice chancellor of finance at the Ohio Department of Higher education

"It takes commitment and discipline and acknowledgement that this is going to be a multi-year (effort)," Bennett said.

To completely avoid fiscal watch, Wright State would have needed to add another $25 million to its reserve funds in 2018, Ulliman told trustees during the May 19 layoff announcement.

The state measures every public college's fiscal health with something called a "Senate Bill 6 score," an annual rating of 0 to 5. Any school that falls below a 1.75 two years in a row is put on notice.

Ulliman told trustees that he fully expects WSU to fall below that threshold in fiscal years 2018 and 2019. The level of reserves a university has are the biggest factor in gauging a "Senate Bill 6 score," both WSU and state officials said.

Once on fiscal watch, WSU will have three years to recoup its finances and boost its score back to a 2.4 for at least a year. If the school doesn't increase its score, the state could take over by appointing a "conservator" to oversee budget remediation.

The university has the option of going even one step further by declaring "financial exigency."

In doing so, Wright State would be granted the authority to issue budget cuts and lay off virtually anyone, officials said. But, by declaring "exigency," WSU would also concede that it is risk of closing.

Despite the university's struggles, Fecher said said it won't come to that because Wright State won't come close to running out of money.

"It hasn't even been discussed," Fecher said. "I don't think that's a possibility."

 

End of MPEN e-Newsletter

Saturday, May 27, 2017

[mpen-dayton] Greater Miami Valley Events & News

FYI. Best, Munsup

P.S. Please reply back to me with 'unsubscribe' added to the subject line
if you no longer want to receive my e-Newsletters. The convenient link to
unsubscribe is no longer available due to security reasons to protect my
email servers.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------

* FW: Preparing for Memorial Day - keep it moving
* (June 1, 13 & 21) FW: Preschool Promise Tours and Possible Funding!
* (June 2) FW: HIDDEN FIGURES

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------

From: John Barnard

Subject: Preparing for Memorial Day - keep it moving


MEMORIAL DAY

Keep it moving, please, even if you've seen it before


* It is the VETERAN, not the preacher, who has given us freedom of
religion.

* It is the VETERAN, not the reporter, who has given us freedom of the
press.

* It is the VETERAN, not the poet, who has given us freedom of speech.

* It is the VETERAN, not the campus organizer, who has given us freedom to
assemble.

* It is the VETERAN, not the lawyer, who has given us the right to a fair
trial.

* It is the VETERAN, not the politician, Who has given us the right to
vote.

* It is the VETERAN who salutes the Flag, It is the VETERAN who serves
under the Flag, ETERNAL REST GRANT THEM O LORD, AND LET PERPETUAL LIGHT
SHINE UPON THEM.


I'd be EXTREMELY proud if this email reached as many as possible. We can be
very proud of our young men and women in the service no matter where they
serve. God Bless them all!

Makes you proud to be an AMERICAN!

A veteran is someone who, at one point in his or her Life, wrote a blank
check Made payable to "The United States of America" for an amount of "up to
and including his or her Life." If you don't stand behind our "Military
personnel" then feel free to stand in front of them!





From: Mary Tyler
Subject: Preschool Promise Tours and Possible Funding!

This is an invitation to the Preschool Tours. I serve as the Preschool
Promise Equity Advisor and I am helping to encourage parents to consider
Preschool for the new school year.

Funding is available for families who qualify and wish to ensure a quality
Preschool experience for their little one!

There are a few centers who have not selected a time yet; we will update
their information once they have confirmed a time.








From: David K. Greer
Subject: FW: HIDDEN FIGURES

HIDDEN FIGURES is the incredible untold story of Katherine Johnson (Taraji
P. Henson), Dorothy Vaughan (Octavia Spencer) and Mary Jackson (Janelle
Monáe)-brilliant African-American women working at NASA, who served as the
brains behind one of the greatest operations in history: the launch of
astronaut John Glenn into orbit, a stunning achievement that restored the
nation's confidence, turned around the Space Race, and galvanized the world.
The visionary trio crossed all gender and race lines to inspire generations
to dream big.

Join us to watch this historic film for free. Click
<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001RGxwAROKgM0IaX8gshrOGAmQqR1xf7Nl2z7VWCfr5Uqv
uGJ90nBSuZkU2opFcekTPsGXOyZCfpKbvKiZqTUXwP9jJfIDT-wgGkNolmlwZZyvIshiwSKALFJh

IPul_ISxTd1i8b2CClU0IT7aJY0WycFhKJ56nSVi5rC11iNbNPZjBO3ZFYznlQ==&c=yNvUkkuPg
7bl3fFTVoI0Odd3zRwG7dppBtCBU5bQGPElKDYFMMDdYw==&ch=2wL2vkkoV7YyDh62c1qq59jXO
OLGdbGw0BotwoK3c4iJ3iZ7RXyggg==> here to watch trailer!

Concessions will be available. In partnership with The Inspiration Center
all concession proceeds will be used to purchase The Inspire Me Learning
Academy playground.



<http://files.constantcontact.com/2f471434101/9ea6afae-f004-4e19-b6f1-841f3c
2f5072.png
>



End of MPEN e-Newsletter

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

[mpen-dayton] FW: "Double Duhhhh...." & "trickle-down-myths" & "AlterNet: Why we deserve your support" & "FW: Sign the petition: Block and resist the Trump budget" and more

FYI. Best, Munsup

P.S. Please reply back to me with 'unsubscribe' added to the subject line if you no longer want to receive my e-Newsletters. The convenient link to unsubscribe is no longer available due to security reasons to protect my email servers.

 

From: Eric Kramer
Subject: Double Duhhhh....

And this emanates from the desk of a U Penn Wharton School of Business alum (after all, the buck does stop there....).
With geniuses such as this in charge, be afraid,....be very afraid.  -


http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/05/trump-budget-based-on-usd2-trillion-math-error.html


Trump Budget Based on $2 Trillion Math Error [Updated]

By Jonathan Chait


One of the ways Donald Trump's budget claims to balance the budget over a decade, without cutting defense or retirement spending, is to assume a $2 trillion increase in revenue through economic growth. This is the magic of the still-to-be-designed Trump tax cuts. But wait — if you recall, the magic of the Trump tax cuts is also supposed to pay for the Trump tax cuts. So the $2 trillion is a double-counting error.

Trump has promised to enact "the biggest tax cut in history." Trump's administration has insisted, however, that the largest tax cut in history will not reduce revenue, because it will unleash growth. That is itself a wildly fanciful assumption. But that assumption has already become a baseline of the administration's budget math. Trump's budget assumes the historically yuge tax cuts will not lose any revenue for this reason — the added growth it will supposedly generate will make up for all the lost revenue.




(Munsup's note: Please visit the original page to view the video!)
Here's how the White House attempted to explain all of this.


But then the budget assumes $2 trillion in higher revenue from growth in order to achieve balance after ten years. So the $2 trillion from higher growth is a double-count. It pays for the Trump cuts, and then it pays again for balancing the budget. Or, alternatively, Trump could be assuming that his tax cuts will not only pay for themselves but generate $2 trillion in higher revenue. But Trump has not claimed his tax cuts will recoup more than 100 percent of their lost revenue, so it's simply an embarrassing mistake.

It seems difficult to imagine how this administration could figure out how to design and pass a tax cut that could pay for itself when Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush failed to come anywhere close to doing so. If there is a group of economic minds with the special genius to accomplish this historically unprecedented feat, it is probably not the fiscal minds who just made a $2 trillion basic arithmetic error.

Update: Asked about this absurd mistake, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin's explanation does not inspire a great deal of confidence:

This is apparently the best defense they could come up with: Eh, we'll fix it later. It's only the budget for the federal government of the United States of America.

 

 

From: trickle-down-myths, team at Civic Action
Subject: lies, damn lies, and statistics

Sign if you agree:

"America's Middle Class are the REAL job creators -- NOT wealthy plutocrats"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


It's an age-old trickle-down myth: the rich are driving our economy's growth, so therefore they deserve to play by different rules than the rest of us.

Too bad that story's simply not true.

The real drivers of our economy are you, the middle class -- not the high-class plutocrats.
   


This is how the rich stay on top -- they convince everyone that it's in your interest to give them whatever they want: Tax cuts, deregulation, and wage suppression for their workers!

This is how we drive our economy to ruin -- not to growth.

The middle class is what truly drives this economy. NOT the 1%.
  


We're tired of seeing trickle-down lies drive the narrative of our economy. It's time for us to make sure the 1% knows that we see right through these trickle-down myths.

Are you with us?

http://go.civicaction.com/Save-Our-MiddleClass


Paid for by Civic Action

 

 

FW: Sign the petition: Block and resist the Trump budget

From: Don Hazen; Executive Editor, AlterNet
Subject: Robert Reich: AlterNet is 'one of the best'—Why we deserve your support
   

As the dark cloud of Trump descends on America, now more than ever, we need more strong, independent, and progressive media. AlterNet is one of the best. They provide high-quality articles, big reach, and rapid response. —Robert B. Reich


Trump is out to change or destroy so many thing we believe in—our environment, social security, immigration, freedom of choice, civil rights, and much more. We cannot let this happen. 


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From: Murshed Zaheed, Murshed Zaheed;  Political Director, CREDO Action from Working Assets
Subject: Sign the petition: Block and resist the Trump budget
    

CREDO action

Tell Congress: Stop Trump's cruel and heartless budget

Petition to members of Congress:

Block and resist Trump's cruel and heartless budget proposal, which would make devastating cuts to Medicaid, Social Security, the social safety net and countless programs that make America stronger and more prosperous, while giving tax cuts to the super-rich and handouts to international corporations and war profiteers.

Add your name:

Sign the petition ►


The first Trump budget has arrived, and it is as cruel and heartless as we expected.

Donald Trump's proposed budget would take an axe to the social safety net at a time when rampant economic inequality leaves too many struggling to get by. Trump wants to slash food stamps – and even cut Social Security, despite his repeated promises he would not do so. Perhaps worst of all are massive funding cuts for Medicaid, which would steal health care from about 10 million low-income Americans.1

This is the budgetary equivalent of Trumpcare: cruel, heartless and deeply unpopular. We need to insist that Democrats stay united in their resistance and show wavering Republicans that these proposals are toxic.

Tell Congress: Block and resist Trump's cruel and heartless budget. Click here to sign the petition.

The Trump-Republican budget hammers poor and middle-class Americans while delivering massive tax cuts to the wealthy and obscene handouts to war profiteers.

In addition to cutting Medicaid, it would give conservative governors and legislatures permission to impose harsh new requirements on people who are counting on a little bit of support to survive. It would repeal rules and regulations that keep Americans safe and healthy. Trump's plan would even cut Social Security – slashing Social Security Disability Insurance that millions of Americans rely on – in a betrayal of all his promises to protect Social Security.2

Other targets of Trump's crusade against everyday Americans include the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Violence Against Women grants, legal aid for poor Americans, energy efficiency, fossil fuel emissions reduction, civil rights enforcement, community policing, housing and food assistance.3

Instead, Trump's budget proposes to increase wasteful military spending by 10 percent, or $54 billion, even though Congress is already funding weapons projects the military does not want.4 It also includes massive tax cuts for the wealthiest few and international corporations that hide money overseas.5 This budget is not just cruel and heartless – it is a betrayal of all the people who believed Trump's promises. We need a sharp and fierce outcry to stiffen Democrats' spines and make sure Republicans feel pressure.

Tell Congress: Block and resist Trump's cruel and heartless budget. Click here to sign the petition.

We do not have a spending problem. We have a defense spending problem. We spend more on defense than we do on all other areas combined. More than half the discretionary budget goes to the military-industrial complex, and the "non-discretionary" budget – things like Social Security – is funded for decades, or longer with small fixes.6 Trump and his Republican backers are not serious about spending, they are simply declaring war on the poor as an excuse to pass massive tax breaks for their wealthy campaign donors and corporate pals.

Some Democrats will face the temptation to compromise in order to show their friends at Washington cocktail parties that they are "serious" about spending. If they do so, they will be complicit in making America sicker, poorer, less prosperous and less well-educated. We need to declare in no uncertain terms that Congress must resist the Trump cuts.


Tell Congress: Block and resist Trump's cruel and heartless budget. Click below to sign the petition.

https://act.credoaction.com/sign/stop_trump_budget?t=8&akid=23198.10312106.raL2XD

Add your name:

Sign the petition ►

References:

  1. Damien Paletta, "Trump to propose big cuts to safety net in new budget, slashing Medicaid and opening door to other limits," The Washington Post, May 21, 2017.
  2. Ibid.
  3. Bryce Covert, "Trump preparing budget with most extreme cut in government spending yet," ThinkProgress, Jan. 19, 2017.
  4. Alex Morash and Craig Harrington, "Economists And Experts Hammer Trump's Plan To Increase Military Spending At Expense Of Nearly Everything Else," Media Matters for America, Feb. 27, 2017.
  5. Paletta, "Trump to propose big cuts to safety net in new budget, slashing Medicaid and opening door to other limits."
  6. Charles Osterndorf, "Bernie Sanders is right—America spends too much money on its military," The Daily Dot, Aug. 26, 2015.

 

 

From: Judy Burnette
Subject: The Nation l "A Lynching on the University of Maryland Campus" + more


 

 

A Lynching on the University of Maryland Campus

 

Richard Collins III was killed Saturday night because of the color of his skin.

 

Dave Zirin

 

 

 


 

 

 

 


Our Embarrassment-in-Chief's International Trip Is No Laughing Matter

Let's not grade a guy holding the nuclear codes on a curve.
Joshua Holland

 

 

What Explains Trump's Sharp About-Face on Saudi Arabia?

It has more than a little to do with the power of the Saudi lobby—as well as the administration's deep hostility toward Iran.

James Carden

 

 

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