May 17, 2012

Affordable Care Act to cover contraception

Here is one of the more effective emails from the Obama campaign, which shares some vital information: starting Aug 1, insurance companies will have to cover contraception without deductibles or premiums.

On Friday, the Obama administration announced that soon women won’t have to pay out of pocket for birth control: Starting August 1st, many insurance plans nationwide will be required to fully cover contraception without co-pays or deductibles. Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, more women can make health care decisions based on what’s best for them — not their insurance company — all while saving hundreds of dollars every year.

Think about how different that is from what the candidates on the other side would do. They’ve all vowed to repeal the Affordable Care Act, and Mitt Romney even said he would have signed a constitutional amendment in Massachusetts to define life as beginning at conception, similar to the notorious state-level ‘personhood’ amendment that could ban many forms of contraception, and even IVF.

This is exciting because friends of mine have found that when you switch insurance for whatever reason (you switch jobs, your partner switches jobs, you lose your job, your employer changes insurance plans, etc), the new employer may not cover the form of contraception that you’ve been using in their formulary. So you might have to get implants or an IUD instead of taking the pill or using a once a week patch or ring. Or vice versa. You might be allergic to one form or another, or it doesn’t work for your body somehow.

Instead of saying that your medical care is at the determination of an insurance company formulary, you get to take the decision-making power into your own hands. It’s something that I know my friends and I are looking forward to.

–Caroline

Romney: I Would Veto DREAM

In front of a Tea Party audience, GOP presidential candidate and presumptive nominee Mitt Romney recently stated that if Congress passed the DREAM Act, he would veto it.

The DREAM Act is the bipartisan plan that would let young immigrants who give back to the only country they’ve ever known by serving in the military or going to college the opportunity to earn a path to citizenship.

According to the Asian American Justice Center, approximately 1 million Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders out of the 15 million in this country are undocumented. I bring up this point to illustrate that although we as APAs don’t think this issue matters to us, it does. It is entirely possible that we know someone in the APA community who is undocumented – a friend or a neighbor, or a child’s playmate.

I personally know a few students who would benefit from passage of the DREAM Act, and they are some of the hardest working people I know. One girl works three jobs to pay for college. Because she is undocumented, she has suffered wage theft, sexual harassment, and all the workplace injustices you can think of. Another is part of his college’s student government and actively working to improve his community.

These aren’t children who you want to deny a future in America. They aren’t children you want to deny a future.

Romney’s kneejerk pandering is short-sighted. Immigration is one of the strongest growth engines for new businesses, and lord knows immigrant businesses have built Massachusetts’ economy especially in fast growing sectors like biopharmaceuticals and tech.

And it’s important to note that Romeny has flip flopped on the issue of immigration. He once thought the bipartisan McCain/Kennedy comprehensive immigration reform bill was ‘reasonable,’ now he advocates kicking immigrants out of America – even families who’ve lived here for a generation and those who have raised children and grandchildren here, pay their taxes, obey the law, are members of their churches and communities, and even volunteer to serve in the military and in harm’s way.

Unlike Mitt Romney, President Obama believes that young immigrants that work hard, follow the rules, where brought here through no fault of their own and know no other home should have an opportunity to earn a path to citizenship and fully contribute to American society.

It’s a stark choice – between a profit-chasing consultant who slashed jobs and is in the high 1% but pays a smaller percent of his income in taxes than the lowest income Americans, and a multicultural, multiracial President who understands diversity, inclusion and opportunity, particularly having grown up in the APA heavy state of Hawaii. I think it’s an easy decision.

–Caroline

Help Mark Takano Make DCCC’s Red to Blue

You can help make history* – please give and encourage others to give to Mark Takano‘s campaign by Monday, and help him make DCCC Red to Blue status. red to Blue is one of the signature programs of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and provides top tier candidates wit matched funds and technical support.

The can be donations of any size. We, of course, want to exceed the 100 person goal and prove to the DCCC that we have the will to win.

What is at stake is earning Red to Blue status. We are very much in contention for being considered for this designation. By helping his campaign make Red to Blue, you will ensure that every dollar raised now will be matched when the DCCC makes the campaign a top target.

*Takano would be the first openly gay minority member of Congress. A Japanese American high school teacher for over two decades, he was born and raised in Riverside, where he has been a public servant since 1990.

–Caroline

Please support the following candidates by Dec 31

Happy holidays to you and yours.  The clock’s ticking down on 2012 but there’s still time to give to a deserving candidate!

The AAA Fund has had a stellar year that included electing the 1st Asian American city councilor in Chicago, who ran a shoestring campaign of $10,000 against a machine candidate, and re-electing Virginia State Rep. Mark Keam (a former AAAF board member turned elected!) We also supported grassroots citywide candidates in Boston and Philadelphia who pushed the boundaries (as a matter of fact the incumbent Boston city councilor who only won by 80 votes is trying to redistrict Chinatown in half so that he can’t lose the primary again!)

We are looking forward to a highly active and exciting 2012, and hope you will contribute to us so that we can endorse and work for stellar AAPI candidates (and candidates who care about AAPI issues) and develop young AAPI political leaders. You can also support us by donating to one of our endorsed candidates.

A number of AAA Fund candidates are in highly competitive races and need a quick boost before Jan 1st. Please consider giving to our candidates so that they can have even better showings this quarter:

-Mark Takano, Congressional candidate for Riverside, CA: would be first openly gay Congressman of color. By giving to Mark, you can help him meet his 4th quarter goals and help him make the DCCC’s Red to Blue program. This race certainly qualifies, as the district shifted from a +7 Republican registration advantage to a +7 Dem adv.

-Mazie  Hirono, Senate candidate and current US Rep from Hawaii: she was already endorsed by the DSCC as a woman leader to watch.This could be the seat that keeps the Senate in Democratic hands.

-Mike Honda, incumbent congressman from the Bay who was redistricted into Alameda County and will now represent even more APIs. AAA Fund Honorary Chair and Chair Emeritus of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, as well as Vice Chair of the DNC.

-Ami Bera, a public health physician in Sacramento and previous AAAF endorsee, Bera also has one of the most closely watched races in the country.As a physician and educator, Bera has in depth and firsthand knowledge about two of our nation’s most important issues.

-William Tong, a candidate for Senate in Connecticut and 1st Asian Am State Rep in CT: Tong’s historic run and meteoric rise sets the path for other APAs.

I’m looking forward to developing a number of progressive AAPI candidates and political leaders in 2012, and hope that this is our best year yet.

-Caroline

How the rightwing gets progressive money to tear down teachers

Former AAA Fund blogger Lee Fang has a great investigative article up in the Nation (“How Online Learning Companies Bought America’s Schools) on how the Gates Foundation is giving conservative think tank American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) nearly half a million – $400,000 – to sponsor education reform bills at the state level. ALEC is not a friendly organization – it doesn’t promote the health and welfare of underserved communities, or anything that you might associate with the good that the Gates Foundation does. It is the main policy organizing arm of the right wing that pushes the most heinous anti-immigrant (SB 1070 clones), anti-civil rights (they push all the restrictive voter bills), anti-worker, anti-health care reform bills at the state level, and they try to do it across all the states. Basically, if a large corporation like Blue Cross Blue Shield has a bill they want to promote, they give money to ALEC to help them get state legislators to sponsor and move their bills along. 85% of their funding comes from corporations.

I can say this from first hand experience – I spent more than a year fighting anti-immigrant, anti-worker policies across the states that ALEC was pushing. And now everyone knows the terrible impact that they can have, from Arizona to Alabama.</rant>

Going back to Gates funding an anti-teacher agenda. Crooks and Liars has additional analysis:

Education for profit is lucrative and alluring, especially to people with large sums of money parked and waiting for investment in big-profit items. So when Bill Gates claims to stand for education reform in this country, I place him squarely in the category of those who stand to profit from privatized education.

Teachers are up against a wide range and nexus of for-profit education corporations, companies that make money by performing measurements of No Child Left Behind (SchoolNet is one), venture capital firms (led by KleinerPerkins), hedge funds and finance types, elected officials, and foundations (Gates, Eli Broad, Dell, etc.) which are seeking to push anti-union and anti-teacher proposals. These groups hire high-priced lobbyists to promote their agenda:

Levesque noted that reform efforts had failed because the opposition had time to organize. Next year, Levesque advised, reformers should “spread” the unions thin “by playing offense” with decoy legislation. Levesque said she planned to sponsor a series of statewide reforms, like allowing taxpayer dollars to go to religious schools by overturning the so-called Blaine Amendment, “even if it doesn’t pass…to keep them busy on that front.” She also advised paycheck protection, a unionbusting scheme, as well as a state-provided insurance program to encourage teachers to leave the union and a transparency law to force teachers unions to show additional information to the public. Needling the labor unions with all these bills, Levesque said, allows certain charter bills to fly “under the radar.”

Public sector workers have been under attack this cycle, and there’s no doubt that teachers don’t have the clout to combat these bills on their own. 

Lobbyists like Levesque have made 2011 the year of virtual education reform, at last achieving sweeping legislative success by combining the financial firepower of their corporate clients with the seeming legitimacy of privatization-minded school-reform think tanks and foundations. Thanks to this synergistic pairing, policies designed to boost the bottom lines of education-technology companies are cast as mere attempts to improve education through technological enhancements, prompting little public debate or opposition. In addition to Florida, twelve states have expanded virtual school programs or online course requirements this year. This legislative juggernaut has coincided with a gold rush of investors clamoring to get a piece of the K-12 education market. It’s big business, and getting bigger: One study estimated that revenues from the K-12 online learning industry will grow by 43 percent between 2010 and 2015, with revenues reaching $24.4 billion.

Needless to say, I don’t think online education is the main solution to our education crisis. And I’m definitely opposed to companies profiting from replacing real live teachers with video teachers. That’s not a substitute teacher, that’s a virtual teacher, as in virtually no education.

Thirteen other states have enacted laws to expand or initiate so-called school choice programs this year.

Meanwhile, ALEC has continued to slip laws written by education-tech lobbyists onto the books. In Tennessee, Republican State Representative Harry Brooks didn’t even bother changing the name of ALEC’s Virtual Public Schools Act before introducing it as his own legislation. Asked by the Knoxville News Sentinel’s Tom Humphrey where he got the idea for the bill, Brooks readily admitted that a K12 Inc. lobbyist helped him draft it. Governor Bill Haslam signed Brooks’s bill into law in May. The statute allows parents to apply nearly every dollar the state typically spends per pupil, almost $6,000 in most areas, to virtual charter schools, as long as they are authorized by the state.

It’s worse than charter schools – it’s video schools. The onslaught is coming, be forewarned and arm yourself with knowledge.

– Caroline

Fmr Sen. George Allen makes up endorsements, pisses off Tea Party

Former VA Governor George Allen, who single-handedly made the word “macaca” famous, is running an inventive campaign for US Senate. So inventive, in fact, that he’s making up campaign endorsements (h/t Wonkette.)

And while Democrats will have a field day with the news, it’s Tea Party activists who are really pissed. Take Kerry Scott, a TP activist who was surprised to learn that she had endorsed Allen on a press release called “Virginia Tea Party Patriots Endorse George Allen for U.S. Senate.” The Richmond Times-Dispatch has the scoop:

“I don’t know where that list was generated or who put it together,” she said, noting that she immediately called Allen’s campaign and had her name removed from the list on Allen’s website.

In fact, Scott was already spoken for – by one of Allen’s rivals for the GOP nomination. For months, Scott has been on an endorsement list for Jamie Radtke, a Chesterfield County tea party activist.

She noted that Allen’s release also had the name of her tea party organization wrong.

“They aligned me with NOVA Tea Party, which doesn’t even exist,” she said. “To me, it was just very sloppy, and that made me a little suspicious.”

This isn’t the only incident of “creative endorsement enhancement” though – the campaign has had to scrub 3 other names off the website since they put out the release.

Allen has pissed off local Tea Partiers, far and abroad.

The Roanoke Tea Party posted a scathing blog post on the endorsements, noting that the original list included someone listed as a member of its group named Jim Fields.

“That was a bit of a surprise,” a post on the group’s page says, explaining that Jim Fields isn’t a member of the organization, just a “friendly and gregarious man who loves to hand out U.S. flags at public events.”

… The Northern Virginia Tea Party has also called for an apology from Allen, saying that the endorsement announcement was “misleading at best, dishonest at worst” and calling it a “deplorable campaign tactic.”

The weirdest part is that Allen is the frontrunner for the GOP primary. But hey, that wouldn’t be the first time he’s snatched defeat from the jaws of victory. At least this time he didn’t use an obscure racist slur that immediately captivated the nation’s attention. He just managed to piss off his base in an extremely important race during a presidential cycle. Good work!

-Caroline

Asian American Arts Alliance panel on producing and distributing your own film

The Asian American Arts Alliance (a4) invites you to:

PRODUCE & DISTRIBUTE YOUR OWN FILM

Thursday, December 1
6:30 – 8:00pm

New York Film Academy
100 East 17th Street
(17th Street & Union Square East)

Tickets: $10 General Admission, Free for Alliance+ members and NY Film Academy Students

Purchase tickets here

You’ve spent hundreds of hours, and maxed out your credit cards, to make your great movie. Now what? Join a creative conversation with experienced filmmakers and producers on what it takes to distribute your film today.

Based on the case study of “Scalp” by director and producer Paul Chau. With discussants Fay Ann Lee (director & producer, “Falling for Grace”), Henry Fernaine (executive producer, “Revolutionary Road”), and Socheata Pouev (director, “New Year Baby”). Moderated by Mridu Chandra (coordinating producer & post-production supervisor, “Women, War & Peace”, and Adjunct Professor at NYU’s SCPS Film, Video & Broadcasting Department).

co-produced with New York Film Academy

Herman Cain biased against non-Christian doctors

Herman Cain has some real problems with foreign doctors, and doctors with funny last names.

He did have a slight worry at one point during the chemotherapy process when he discovered that one of the surgeon’s name was “Dr. Abdallah.”

“I said to his physician assistant, I said, ‘That sounds foreign — not that I had anything against foreign doctors — but it sounded too foreign,” Cain tells the audience. “She said, ‘He’s from Lebanon.’ Oh, Lebanon! My mind immediately started thinking, wait a minute, maybe his religious persuasion is different than mine! She could see the look on my face and she said, ‘Don’t worry, Mr. Cain, he’s a Christian from Lebanon.’”

“Hallelujah!” Cain says. “Thank God!”

The crowd laughs uneasily.

N Magazine writer Dan Amira writes, “We’re almost shell-shocked by how unbelievably bigoted that story is. Apparently, in addition to being terrorist sympathizers who want to replace the Constitution with Sharia, Muslim-Americans are supposed to be pro-cancer now, too.”

That whole anecdote is just so loaded. Allow me to unpack and vent here:

1) What constitutes too foreign, and how do you know when your name has crossed the line? Is it determined by radius – like Dr. Tavarez has a foreign name but that name sounds like it comes from somewhere close to the equator in Southern Hemisphere. But Dr. Abdallah – that name sounds like it comes from somewhere further than the International DateLine, that’s too much?!?

2) Foreign born doctors (and let’s remember not all doctors with funny names are foreign-born. Plenty of them grew up and were born here.)  Cain’s bias isn’t just unfortunate, it’s also wrong. Too bad for him, the face of medicine is changing and foreign born doctors make up a increasing percentage of the doctor population, and more importantly, studies show that they are just as competent as US-trained doctors, and more competent than US born doctors who went to international medical schools.

3) This whole distrust of medical professionals who have a different religion than him is odd to me. I’ve never questioned if my doctor is Jewish, Buddhist, Atheist, fundamentalist or anything. I don’t believe it factors into how doctors practice modern medicine today, and my friends who are doctors don’t judge patients by their beliefs.

To close, Cain’s bias against “foreign” doctors is about as understandable as his rationale for running for president.

-Caroline

OWS is an opt-out movement

I have been struggling with how to define and explain Occupy Wall Street to people who ask. Is it the sunny park in front of Los Angeles City Hall where Tom Morrello played for an enthusiastic and diverse crowd of people willing to share food, materials, ideals? Is it the drum circle at Zuccotti Park (not really a park but just a patch of concrete as many such NYC parks are defined) in the shadow of 4 skyscrapers? Is it the hapa family with kids camping out at McPherson Square? Is it millions of Americans who are seeking work, from the recent college grad who has tends of thousands in loans but no way of paying them off, to the almost 60 year old small businessman who has to declare bankruptcy right before he was supposed to retire? I see Occupy Wall Street in the Asian American faces of the 99 percent, in my friends and family who have been looking for work for so long, ashamed of not being able to contribute to their families in a striving immigrant culture that doesn’t want to talk about unemployment.

Even friends who are likely to be sympathetic are frustrated by the lack of a cohesive message and goals. Broadly I think of OWS as being about addressing financial inequality. Matt Taibbi in “How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the OWS Protests” has a whole article about how he sees OWS as being essentially opt-out, seeking an exit from the grind: “We’re all born wanting the freedom to imagine a better and more beautiful future. But modern America has become a place so drearily confining and predictable that it chokes the life out of that built-in desire.”

He admits that he didn’t get it at first, “But now, I get it. People want to go someplace for at least five minutes where no one is trying to bleed you or sell you something. It may not be a real model for anything, but it’s at least a place where people are free to dream of some other way for human beings to get along, beyond auctioned “democracy,” tyrannical commerce and the bottom line.”

He addresses his ambivalence about the cops, who are a part of the 99% (and some cops do recognize this) as a target of the OWS movement, because they are working class too.But ultimately it’s not about the cops doing their job, it’s about the decisionmakers who prioritize what crimes get prosecuted:

This is a profound statement about who law enforcement works for in this country. What happened on Wall Street over the past decade was an unparalleled crime wave. Yet at most, maybe 1,500 federal agents were policing that beat – and that little group of financial cops barely made any cases at all.

. . . People want out of this fiendish system, rigged to inexorably circumvent every hope we have for a more balanced world. They want major changes. I think I understand now that this is what the Occupy movement is all about. It’s about dropping out, if only for a moment, and trying something new, the same way that the civil rights movement of the 1960s strived to create a “beloved community” free of racial segregation. Eventually the Occupy movement will need to be specific about how it wants to change the world. But for right now, it just needs to grow. And if it wants to sleep on the streets for a while and not structure itself into a traditional campaign of grassroots organizing, it should. It doesn’t need to tell the world what it wants. It is succeeding, for now, just by being something different.

This is what is moving about Occupy Wall Street – people want change, and they are taking the time to deliberate about what changes they want to see during General Assembly. Folks are participating in the dialogue of the commons again, and they are reclaiming the commons space. People are questioning again. I actually don’t know if OWS is permanently an opt-out movement, or if the whole can even be described as such – Occupy the Polls and caucuses is happening in Iowa and New Hampshire because people till see the importance of electoral participation. Not as a be all, end all, not as a “once we elect this woman or man, s/he will create the changes that we want” but as a longer term discourse about what kind of society we want to be. Communities across America are coming back together, picking up the pieces, and strengthening our neighborhoods. We see it in upstate New York, where a community decided to build their own department store and sold shares to local residents. We see it in the tent cities across America, where people are congregating because they care again, and they care enough to join others. So in a sense, I feel that OWS is not as much opt-out as it is the pause before these disillusioned Americans opt back in, and how.

–Caroline

 

Elections results

Here are the races I’m following and the sites I’m checking tonight:

1) AAA Fund-endorsed educator Suzanne Lee for City Council
Boston Unofficial Elections results

Update 1: With 52% in, Suzanne Lee is LEADING incumbent Bill Linehan 55%-45%. Very exciting!

Update 2: 70% of vote in, an Lee’s lead has shrunk to 51-49. It would be quite a feat to defeat a sitting councilman.

Update 3: Lee’s lead is now 10 votes. Who says local elections aren’t exciting?

Update 4: 85% in ans Suzanne is maintaining a narrow lead by 1%.

Update 5: Final results in for Boston district 2:

DISTRICT 2 COUNCILLOR
Total
Number of Precincts 27
Precincts Reporting 27 100.0 %
Vote For 1
Times Counted 10538/48182 21.9 %
Total Votes 10084
Number of Uncast Votes 454

BILL LINEHAN 5065 50.23%
SUZANNE LEE 4978 49.37%
Write-in Votes 41 0.41%

 

2) Ohio’s No on 2 initiative against SB 5, a heinously anti-worker bill that strips public employees like teachers, firefighters, and EMT workers of their right to bargain collectively.
Cleveland Plain Dealer

Update: Issue 2 looks like it is headed for solid defeat, a good day for unions and working families. GOP legislatures and Governors should read this as voters telling them that they have gone too far.

3) New Jersey state legislative races in LD 14 and LD 38. These districts should have a high APA turnout.
NJ Board of ElectionsNJ.com for news coverage

Update 1: In LD 38, Democratic incumbent Gordon is edging Driscoll. Can’t wait to see exit polls!

Update 2: in the tightest race in NJ, GOP state sen candidate Driscoll concedes to Gordon.

Update 3: Democratic incumbent Linda Greenstein keeps her state sen seat in SD 14.

4) Virginia state legislative races. APAs are a big part of the voter universe here, and can play a key role as the swing vote in several elections including that of Sen. Dave Marsden (SD 37) which covers APA dense areas like Centreville and AAAFund’s very own Mark Keam.
VA Board of Elections

Update 1: Early returns seem close in VA Sen 37 with Marsden just trailing Flannery by 211 votes and 12% reporting.

Update 2: Marsden within 5 votes with 14% in.

Update 3: Marsden takes lead, 52-48 with 28% reporting.

Update 4: Marsden widening lead to almost 700 votes.

Update 5: Mark Keam had no opposition, and thus over 99% of votes.

Update 6: Marsden up by 1300 votes.

Update 7: With 67% in, Marsden is at 54-46.

Update 8: All votes in and Mardsen has won by 2705 votes.

And if you haven’t gone to vote yet, it’s not too late – polls in most places close at 8pm. If you don’t know where your poll site is, go here to find out.

Overall, a good night for Dems and progressives, as Mississippi votes against personhood, and voters find the GOP has overreached. Republicans in Michigan and New Jersey should listen the way Ohio Gov. Kasich claims he is listening to the will of the voters.

A bonus two races: SF Mayoral & recall of AZ state senator Russell Pearce. thankfully, infamous anti-immigrant Republican Russell Pearce is trailing political novice Jerry Lewis in a recall election.

SF mayoral: With 14% of votes cast, Ed Lee holds a 40% advantage, not quite yet 50% + 1 which would avoid the ranked choice voting scenario. Now with 59% in, Ed Lee’s count has fallen to 33%.

-Caroline