reality tv


As politics and pop culture collided … while twitter and face book joined in as seeds of change …

The White House Correspondent Dinner, otherwise called the #NerdProm …and another Prom night in rural Georgia, its first integrated one was also being held.

My first thought was outrage and sadness as we see certain states in the south regressing on so many levels, then the story about how these young kids made a choice to close the racial divide, organized raised money for a prom apparently open to all and helped by many outside the rural community. It also led to Leaders of the Georgia N.A.A.C.P. calling for the state to ban segregated proms and brought back memories of 2009, when Morgan Freeman funded the first racially integrated prom in Charleston, MI.

Anyway, the highlight of my night started out with PBO stepping onto the stage with a new Presidential intro to DJ Khalid’s, All I do is Win and his dance while WHCD president, Ed henry and fellow FOX employees watched on. Then again, PBO’s whole dialogue was hilarious got a huge bounce with a lot of photos; except c-span.org decided NOT to show his magazine cover.  We all wait for that to be leaked.

Apparently, the White House Correspondent Dinner has been going on for years but its popularity only started in 1993 and from then on, sold out. The crowd of 2700 came to see Mrs. and President Obama, Conan and raise a whole lot of money for future Journalists.  The main complaint was that Hollywood seemed to outnumber the Correspondents on the Red Carpet. I have to say watching them eat for 2 hours before the good stuff started was odd and ok you got a ticket to the #NerdProm, but there is a whole lot more room for improvement. If you were on your couch watching, something definitely was upsetting Gov. Chris Christie because cameras kept panning over to his table, maybe he didn’t know that it was supposed to be a night of jabs, juicy comments and lots of money donated for student scholarships … who knows exactly why Gov. Christie had that look. I don’t know about you but the WHCD was a good time of funny. Those of us who not only support PBO see a funnier, more confident, less stressed out President working his 2nd term who says what’s on his mind more and the #NerdProm was just one example .

As for the integrated Prom night in Georgia, let’s face it; proms in the future are questionable but things are looking up in some parts of the rural south… at least in Wilcox County. In response to requests to desegregate, the Wilcox County school board plans to vote this spring on making future proms official school events, which would prohibit racial segregation.

The White House Correspondent Dinner, was a night when entertainers and politicians switched places…  where the red carpet became a place to pose with various people… clearly stars in their own worlds each seeing someone from the others life and wanting photos.

Life and Death


By  ThinkProgress War Room

Why Governors Should Expand Medicaid

One of the ways that Obamacare seeks to extend health coverage to the more than 30 MILLION uninsured Americans is through a significant expansion of the Medicaid program, which is jointly funded and administered by the federal government and state governments. Under the law, the federal government will pick up 100 percent of the tab for the expansion for the first three years and no less than 90 percent in all subsequent years. Nearly 17 MILLION people were expected to gain coverage this way.

This is apparently such a good deal for the states that the Supreme Court ruled last year that it was “coercive” for the federal government to require states to accept the money to expand Medicaid or risk losing all of their Medicaid funding, so the expansion then became voluntary. Eight Republican governors including grassroots favorites like Govs. Jan Brewer (AZ) and Chris Christie (NJ) are bucking pressure from within their own party and want to take the deal, but others like Govs. Rick Perry (TX) and Nikki Haley (SC) are steadfastly refusing to do so.

This dispute isn’t just a matter of politics, it’s actually a matter of life and death for low-income Americans. A new analysis of a 2012 study underscores the stakes:

Click HERE for a much deeper, wonkier look at this and other data.

BOTTOM LINE: Instead of playing politics with peoples’ lives, it’s time for all governors to agree to Obamacare’s expansion of the Medicaid program.

Evening Brief: Important Stories That You Might’ve Missed

Sen. Bob Casey (D-PA) becomes the latest senator to come out for marriage equality.

The white supremacist group that may be targeting law enforcement for revenge.

Top Catholic cardinal says gays are only “entitled to friendship.”

Marijuana decriminalization goes into effect in Rhode Island.

A deal on comprehensive immigration reform is close at hand.

Tennessee’s mean-spirited plan to link welfare to children’s grades.

GOP state chair says marriage equality will cause straight people to enter into sham gay marriages.

Montana governor vetoes unconstitutional bill to block new gun violence prevention rules.

As Obama administration considers Keystone XL pipeline, two U.S. tar sands pipelines spilled thousands of barrels of dirty crude just in the past week

Another Reminder: Gov. Christie -did what to Seniors and the Disabled of NJ in 2010?


Hispanics say N.J. Gov. Christie’s proposed budget cuts would hit them hard
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Last updated: Sunday June 20, 2010, 10:27 AM

 BY ELIZABETH LLORENTE

The Record
STAFF WRITER

Hispanic leaders are warning that Governor Christie’s proposed budget cuts will devastate their communities by leaving little or no funding for programs that assist the unemployed, disabled and the destitute, among others.

Leaders are particularly concerned about the pending elimination of the Center for Hispanic Policy, Research and Development, which funnels funds to some 40 agencies that they say serve about 300,000 mostly low-income Latinos annually. The 35-year-old department, they note, is the only state agency that focuses on Hispanics.

The cuts are the latest source of frustration among Hispanics over Christie. They were angered by his decision to drop legal immigrants who are not naturalized U.S. citizens from NJ FamilyCare, a health insurance program for low-income parents, and by the possibility that he would eliminate the Commission on New Americans, a long-awaited initiative by his predecessor to address immigrant issues in New Jersey.

“This is not shared sacrifice,” said Guillermo Beytagh-Maldonado, executive director of the Hispanic Directors Association, an umbrella group, referring to the proposed cuts. “He’s cutting our head off. So many people in New Jersey are talking about how Hispanics are going be profiled in Arizona because of the new immigration law. But right here in New Jersey we’re being profiled, we’re being treated outrageously.”

Hispanics say Christie seems indifferent to the problems and needs of their communities, though Hispanics are now the state’s largest minority group, making up 16 percent of the population. Nearly 30 percent of the state’s Hispanics in New Jersey are uninsured and about 16 percent live in poverty.

Deborah Howlett, the head of New Jersey Policy Perspective, said that about 80 percent of residents will be affected by Christie’s cuts to varying degrees.

“The economic recession has hit minorities harder than other people,” Howlett said. “People in lower income brackets, which include a disproportionate share of Hispanics, are being asked to shoulder more of the burden because they’re more reliant on the social services being cut.”

A spokesman for Christie said the governor was not singling Hispanics out, or acting insensitively toward them.

“No one can possibly say they’re being singled out,” said Michael Drewniak, Christie’s spokesman. “That’s just ridiculous. It’s a wrong assumption. By that logic, we’re targeting every group of every kind.”

“The governor is trying to tackle an $11 billion deficit that he inherited,” Drewniak said. “The cuts must be deep and wide.”

Drewniak said the cuts were not made thoughtlessly.

“We tried to be as careful as we could,” he said. “Everyone is pretty much in the same boat.”

Hispanic leaders say they understand that the governor faces a tough job in trying to deal with the deficit.

“We’re all willing to tighten our belts,” said Lorenzo Hernandez, who heads the Hispanic Information Center of Passaic, one of the agencies that gets funding from the Center for Hispanic Policy, Research and Development.

But Hernandez and other leaders say it is a mistake to slash funding for Hispanic community organizations that serve a group that not only is one of the most needy in the state, but one whose language and cultural barriers make access to services difficult.

“When I lost my job, my employer did not pay me vacation or holiday pay that I was owed,” said Maria Cristina Caballero, a Passaic resident who came to this country from Colombia two years ago. “I tried going for help to public agencies but got nowhere, and I felt I was in a hopeless, dead-end situation.”

Caballero went to the Hispanic Information Center, which provides a wide range of services, including assistance to domestic violence victims, the unemployed and people who need shelter, food and medical attention. The center helped Caballero get the money owed to her by her former employer.

“I would not have gotten it on my own,” Caballero said. “I was truly lost and overwhelmed.”

Many people who turn to the Paramus-based Hispanic Institute for Research and Development, which offers classes such as word processing and English, have lost jobs and are trying to get back on their feet, said Emilio Fandino, the non-profit group’s executive director. Many of the clients of HIRD, which gets about $75,000 from the state, have taken free English and job skills classes elsewhere, but those usually cover only the basics, Fandino said. The institute offers classes in conjunction with Bergen Community College.

“If we stopped getting the funding from the state, maybe about 200 people wouldn’t get the scholarships we give them, and couldn’t take the classes because they can’t afford it,” Fandino said.

Beytagh-Maldonado has met with legislators to drum up support for restoring funds for programs on which many Hispanics depend. Hispanics in New Jersey typically have received inadequate resources from the state government, he said.

“I don’t think the state has ever really adjusted to the reality that Hispanics are the group with the most needs,” he said. “We have the highest dropout rates, highest uninsured, high poverty rate, and the community is growing in New Jersey.”

Of the community-based agencies, he said: “They go with the people to the schools, talk with the teachers, with social workers. These are the people on the front lines who provide preventative services so that problems don’t get bigger and become crises.”

Many of the agencies and programs were set up in the 1970s and 1980s in response to the growth of immigrant residents who lacked the linguistic skills and knowledge about U.S. public agencies to access services on their own.

“So the idea was to have people from the community, who knew the language and culture, to guide these immigrants,” said Frank Argote-Freyre, a professor at Kean University and head of the state Commission on New Americans, an advisory group that has expressed concerns about Christie’s willingness to keep it alive.

Like other Latino leaders, Argote-Freyre and Beytagh-Maldonado called Christie’s decision to drop legal immigrants from the state’s insurance program for the poor a harsh move.

Nearly 12,000 legal immigrant parents are being removed from the program. U.S. citizen parents are also to be denied coverage if their annual family income exceeds $24,000 a year for a family of three.

“They’re taking people from FamilyCare and are going to force them into charity care,” Beytagh-Maldonado said. “When immigrants can’t get access to health care, everyone is affected, everyone’s health is at risk. All these cuts are just going to end up being more expensive for New Jersey in the long run.”

E-mail: llorente@northjersey.com

********************************************************


N.J. Assembly fails to override Christie veto of millionaires tax
Monday, June 21, 2010
Last updated: Monday June 21, 2010, 5:01 PM

 

BY MATT FRIEDMAN
State House Bureau
STATE HOUSE BUREAU

 

TRENTON — Democrats have failed to override Governor Christie’s veto of a tax that would increase taxes on income more than $1 million.The bills, which would devote the proceeds to restoring property tax rebates for seniors and the disabled, died on the Assembly floor Monday when Democrats could not convert any Republicans who voted against it last month, when it passed strictly along partisan lines.Although a majority of Assembly members (47 to 33) voted for the bill, Democrats did not reach the two-thirds majority needed to override it. The override would have required flipping seven Republican votes. Because the override attempt failed in the Assembly, where the bill originated, the Senate will not attempt it.

The Assembly and Senate both passed the millionaires tax last month strictly along partisan lines, only to see it vetoed by Christie minutes later.

The bill would have raised the tax rate on income over $1 million for approximately 16,000 households. A companion bill, also vetoed by Christie, would have devoted the funds to restoring property tax rebates for the seniors and disabled as well as cuts to state-supplemented senior drug programs that have since been reversed.

The Assembly first took up the companion bill, which Assemblywoman Amy Handlin (R-Monmouth) said would not help seniors because there is no money to restore rebates.

“What can help (seniors) is a hard 2.5 percent cap on property taxes,” she said.

*****************************************************

 

N.J. Senate resolution urges Christie not to join health care reform lawsuit
Monday, June 21, 2010

 

BY MATT FRIEDMAN
State House Bureau
STATE HOUSE BUREAU

 

The state Senate Monday approved a resolution urging Governor Christie not to join 20 other states in a lawsuit against the federal health care reform law.Christie has faced pressure from conservative activists to join the suit, which argues the law’s penalty on individuals for not buying insurance is unconstitutional. Senate Democrats, in turn, responded with the resolution, which points out that Christie was able to restore proposed cuts to subsidized senior drug programs in part with money allocated from the law.Christie has not said whether he plans to join the suit. Most of the states challenging the law have either Republican governors or elected Republican attorneys general.

“You can’t have it both ways. You can’t be for the senior citizens and use the Obama health care plan to fund their programs and then challenge it in court,” said state Sen. Raymond Lesniak (D-Union), a sponsor.

The state Senate Monday approved a resolution urging Governor Christie not to join 20 other states in a lawsuit against the federal health care reform law.

Christie has faced pressure from conservative activists to join the suit, which argues the law’s penalty on individuals for not buying insurance is unconstitutional. Senate Democrats, in turn, responded with the resolution, which points out that Christie was able to restore proposed cuts to subsidized senior drug programs in part with money allocated from the law.

Christie has not said whether he plans to join the suit. Most of the states challenging the law have either Republican governors or elected Republican attorneys general.

“You can’t have it both ways. You can’t be for the senior citizens and use the Obama health care plan to fund their programs and then challenge it in court,” said state Sen. Raymond Lesniak (D-Union), a sponsor.

Gov. Chris Christie … on 3/2011


SealofNJ– NEW JERSEY: Gov. Chris Christie’s (R) budget raised taxes on the working poor and middle-class by cutting the state’s Earned Income Tax Credit and homestead rebates — yet still found money for lucrative corporate tax cuts. This year, Christie has called for $200 million in business tax cuts, while proposing to cut mental health services, cut $540 million from Medicaid, and withhold property tax rebates for seniors until public workers give up many of their health and pension benefits. Many New Jerseyans have said they prefer a tax on millionaires to Christie’s draconian cuts.

a Reminder -Gov. Christie Thinks A Family Making $6,000 A Year Is Too Rich To Qualify For Medicaid-does he still feel this way?


 

By Marie Diamond on Jun 2, 2011 at 10:00 am

Despite recent polls that show Americans are just as protective of Medicaid as they are of Medicare, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) is trying to gut the popular program in his state and prevent 23,000 people from receiving benefits. Christie has proposed cutting Medicaid eligibility to absurdly low levels: from the current maximum income of $24,645 to $5,317 a year for a family of three. Apparently, the governor believes a family of three making $6,000 a year is simply too rich to receive Medicaid.

The New Jersey press has reported that the main effect of his proposal would be to slash help for the working poor, tearing a huge hole in the state’s social safety net:

Adults in a family of three that makes as little as $103 a week would earn too much to qualify for health care provided by Medicaid under a sharply curtailed program Gov. Chris Christie wants the federal government to approve this year, according to state officials and advocates briefed on the proposal.[...]

The Christie administration is expected to propose cutting the maximum income level of Medicaid from $24,645 to $5,317 a year for a family of three [...]

“That is about a third of the poverty level,” Castro said. “That means that an uninsured parent working full time at a minimum-wage job wouldn’t be eligible. … A parent who works half-time for minimum wage wouldn’t even qualify.

“Unfortunately, the only way these parents can become eligible for health coverage in the future is if the parent applies for and is eligible for welfare,” Castro added. “That sends the wrong message.”

Democratic lawmakers are furious that Christie is insisting on making $300 million in cuts on the backs of poor and disabled residents. They point out that apart from the morally bankrupt idea of denying care to the neediest population, having more people uninsured will ultimately be more costly for New Jersey.

“Those 23,000 people are going to get sick this year,” said Louis Greenwald (D), a committee chairman. “Where are you suggesting they’re going to go?”

State Sen. Joseph Vitale (D), who sponsored the legislation creating FamilyCare in 1998, explained, “This completely dismantles the progress made over the last 12 years, and then some…I can’t imagine how it could be any worse.”

Since Medicaid — which provides health care services to at-risk populations including the indigent, blind and disabled — is jointly funded by the federal government, states must apply for a waiver before making major changes. That means Obama administration officials can still block Christie’s radical attempts to curtail enrollment.

Watch the State of the Union … Tuesday 9pmET


 

 
The Best Way to Watch the State of the Union
 
The White House has been hard at work on the 2013 State of the Union address and when President Obama addresses the nation, we’ll broadcast an online-only enhanced version of the address with graphics, data, and useful stats that will help you go deeper — and see the information that informed the President’s policy decisions. You can watch the speech on whitehouse.gov or with the white house app on iphone, ipad and android devices. To be part of the discussion during the speech, use the hashtag #SOTU on Twitter. Immediately after the speech, we’ve asked a group of policy experts and advisors to the President to sit down for a live panel and answer your questions. Ask yours on Twitter using the hashtag #WHchat, or post it to the White House Facebook or Google + page. So tune in, Tuesday night at 9 PM Eastern and see the President’s Enhanced State of the Union Address, and learn more about the important issues facing our nation. http://whitehouse.gov/sotu

Weekly Address: Averting the Sequester and Finding a Balanced Approach to Deficit Reduction


Weekly Address: Averting the Sequester and Finding a Balanced Approach to Deficit Reduction

President Obama urges Congress to act to avoid a series of harmful and automatic cuts — called a sequester — from going into effect that would hurt our economy and the middle class and threaten thousands of American jobs. The President urges Congress to find a balanced approach to deficit reduction that makes investments in areas that help us grow and cuts what we don’t need.

Watch this week’s Weekly Address.

Weekly Address: Averting the Sequester and Finding a Balanced Approach to Deficit Reduction

In Case You Missed It

Here’s a quick glimpse at what happened this week on WhiteHouse.gov:

Common-sense Reforms: On Monday, President Obama traveled Midwest to Minneapolis to speak with local police, community leaders and folks who have experienced gun violence in their family. The President firmly believes “law enforcement and other community leaders must have a seat at the table.”

With mounting support for universal background checks, President Obama is driving Congress to listen and take action. While pressing for background checks, the President did not let up.

“We shouldn’t stop there. We should restore the ban on military-style assault weapons and a 10-round limit for magazines,” said President Obama. “And that deserves a vote in Congress — because weapons of war have no place on our streets, or in our schools, or threatening our law enforcement officers.”

Watch the full speech here and read our blog post tracking the two weeks since President Obama released his plan for reducing gun violence.

Sequester Delay: On Tuesday, President Obama talked about the sequester and urged Congress to act before automatic spending cuts are put into place starting March 1. If a new deal is not struck by March 1, automatic spending cuts, which are known as the sequester will begin.

Billions of dollars in cuts would hinder education and research, along with defense spending to name a few. President Obama called for “a smaller package of spending cuts and tax reforms” as he is prepared to work with republicans to strike a deal for the American people.

Newest Cabinet Nominee: On Wednesday, President Obama nominated Sally Jewell to head the Interior Department. If the current CEO of the outdoor retail giant REI is confirmed, she will play a critical role in protecting our country’s land and natural resources. Along with an enthusiasm for the outdoors, she carries with her experience as a former oil engineer and commercial banker, which will be vital in dealing with our energy sector and creating jobs for Americans.

Jewell is very excited to work with the Interior and “sharing their hopes and their dreams for our public lands, our resources, our people — especially our first people — our history and our culture.”

Revamped Immigration Page: On Wednesday, the White House released a new issue section laying out what is at stake for comprehensive immigration reform. The President’s proposal calls for the strengthening of our borders, cracking down on companies that hire undocumented workers, creating a path to earned citizenship and streamlining our legal immigration system.

National Prayer Breakfast: On Thursday, President Obama attended the National Prayer Breakfast at the Washington Hilton. Citing the importance of faith in his life, the President discussed the comfort Scripture gave President Abraham Lincoln and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. “I thought about their humility, and how we don’t seem to live that out the way we should, every day, even when we give lip service to it,” said the President.

The biggest hope from the breakfast was Americans, especially our public servants, should embrace cooperation and humility to avoid the constant bipartisan rhetoric in Washington. Watch the full speech here.

SOTU Preparation: This Tuesday, the President will speak to the country through the annual State of the Union address. President Obama will discuss the most demanding issues facing our country and offer solutions to tackle these challenges. On February 12, at 9 pm ET head to our State of the Union page to watch a live enhanced version with charts, graphs, and data to coincide with his address. Before Tuesday, check out our page to view the 2012 enhanced version and discover new ways you can participate in this year’s State of the Union.

A President to stand with …


CFS Logo
Connect with the Campaign for a Fair SettlementThe stories we’ve been getting about how families are fighting back against Wall Street criminals trying to steal their homes are so powerful we wanted to share them with you. The Home Defenders League is collecting these stories as part of the 100 Days to Fix What Wall Street Broke campaign. You can see them here and if you or someone you know is going through something similar you can share it here. These stories help push the Obama Administration to take the steps necessary to finally hold Wall Street accountable.

–Brian, Campaign for a Fair Settlement

The Dunwell family standing up and speaking out to keep their home from being stolen by Wall Street bankers.

At times where I felt weak, I sat and heard my daughter talk about, you know, ‘These banks need to do right by us,’ and my backbone kind of just straightened up.” – David Dunwell, Springfield, MA.

Jacqueline Barber. Grace Alexander. Debbie and Ron Austin. David and Yanick Dunwell.

These are four stories from the wave of foreclosures Wall Street unleashed when they broke our economy, wiped out our savings, and stole our homes. They are the real people directly affected by greedy Wall Street criminals. These are the people President Obama needs to keep in mind when he delivers his State of the Union address next Tuesday.

It’s been a year since the President announced a task force to hold banks accountable for their actions and the only thing many underwater homeowners and foreclosure victims have to show for it is a lot of press stories, a few small potatoes lawsuits, and the continuing stress of fighting to stay in their homes. It’s clear that the Administration knows the faces of Jaime Dimon at JPMorgan Chase, Brian Moynihan at Bank of America and John Stumpf at Wells Fargo a lot better than it knows those of the 14 million underwater homeowners and millions of foreclosure victims.

To help President Obama remember Wall Street’s many victims, our partners at the Home Defenders League have started to share their own stories of fighting back when bankers try to steal their homes on this website, 100 Stories of What Wall Street Broke.

“US Bank is the reason I’m no longer in remission for my cancer.” – Jacqueline Barber, Fayetteville, GA.

Jacqueline Barber, a retired Atlanta police detective and grandmother, is fighting GMAC, US Bank, and bone marrow cancer. Grace Alexander is fighting a Bank of America eviction despite evidence of fraud in her mortgage. The Austin family has been evicted by Fannie Mae, which claims they missed a payment despite a receipt proving otherwise. The Dunwell family is fighting Bank of America, which gave them a trial mortgage modification for a year but then decided to foreclose anyway – even though they had never missed a payment on the modification!

“It’s been a real humbling experience, first losing my job [in 2008 during the Great Recession], now losing my home. At times where I felt weak, I sat and heard my daughter talk about, you know, ‘These banks need to do right by us,’ and my backbone kind of just straightened up.” – David Dunwell, Springfield, MA.
There are a host of things the President can do right now -without waiting for Congress – to ease the continuing crisis in homeownership, beginning with holding accountable the Wall Street bankers who created it. They’re reporting record profits (again), while millions of us still own houses valued at less than our mortgages or are in some stage of foreclosure. Fixing the housing crisis by resetting mortgages to market value and finally forcing banks to treat our families fairly would be the best thing he could do both for us and for the nation’s economy.

That’s whyHome Defenders League members are stepping out of the shadows to tell their stories – so that the Administration can’t keep ignoring people like them and us even as Wall Street lobbyists swarm the Capitol and White House. You can see them here, at 100 Stories of What Wall Street Broke.

They aren’t alone, though, as Jacqueline, Grace, Debbie and Ron, and David and Yanick can attest. With millions of families affected, we know that you must know someone in a similar situation – it might even be you. So, they’ve set up a form so you can submit your own story as well. You can tell it here.

“We did everything right, yet our government allows these banks to steal our very homes out from under us.” – Debbie Austin, Portland OR.

We are a few weeks into the first 100 days of President Obama’s second term. Time is running out for him to take decisive action against the Wall Street criminals stealing our jobs, our savings, and our homes. Telling the stories of people directly affected by Wall Street bankers is one way we are bringing home the necessity of urgent action.Check them out here and take a moment to add yours here.

Many people have great local groups fighting alongside them: Jacqueline has Occupy Homes Atlanta, Grace has New Jersey Communities United, the Austins have We Are Oregon, the Dunwell’s have City Life/La Vida Urbana – and we also have all of you through the Campaign fighting alongside the Home Defenders League.

But we need a President to stand up for us too.

In solidarity,

Brian Kettenring, Executive Director, Action for the Common Good and Campaign Director, Campaign for a Fair Settlement
http://www.campaignforfairsettlement.org/100_days

-=-=-
Campaign for a Fair Settlement · 11 Dupont Cir, Suite 240, Washington, DC 20036, United States
CFS is a multi-sectoral coalition. Common Good and Action for the Common Good staff provide strategic and logistical support to the effort.

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