Americans Overwhelmingly Favor Increasing the Overtime Threshold

Americans Overwhelmingly Favor Increasing the Overtime Threshold

Are you ready for an astounding number? Good because here it comes: a new Gallup poll found that 67 percent of all Americans support expanding the overtime rule . Possibly even more astounding? Only 14 percent disapprove of expanding overtime. These are powerful numbers, because they indicate that America knows the overtime threshold has been stagnant for decades , and that the middle class is ready for a raise. The conservative politicians who are fighting overtime are arguing with their own constituents. But what about secondary education? One of the loudest protesters of the overtime argument has been America’s universities. They argue that if they’re forced to pay their employees overtime for the hours they work over a full 40-hour workweek, they’ll have to raise tuition. Are these predictions correct? Not according to a new snapshot from the Economic Policy Institute : The majority of workers at universities, including faculty, graduate student assistants, and adjuncts, are exempt from the overtime rules. Claims that paying more overtime will cause tuition to rise strains credulity because, as the figure [above] shows, as overtime protections eroded over the last 40 years and removed the guarantee of overtime pay from millions of salaried employees, tuition soared. Tuition has risen dramatically without any contribution from overtime regulation. In fact, tuition has gone up nearly 300 percent in that time. The EPI also cites several other pertinent points, including the fact that the National Institutes of Health, which offers grants to postdoc workers, has pledged to increase its grants to pay for the overtime rule. Adjusting to change is rarely fun, and it’s true that employers will have to adjust to the overtime rule. But when colleges hold tuition increases over the heads of Americans, knowing full well that skyrocketing tuitions are already a concern for everyone, that feels more like a threat than anything else. And if it is a threat, it’s one that has failed to move nearly 70 percent of Americans. It’s time for
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Daily Clips: June 22nd, 2016

Daily Clips: June 22nd, 2016

House GOP offers an alternative health care plan: No more empty rhetoric of “repeal and replace Obamacare”! They’re actually putting forward a policy! This is actually happening! According to the Atlantic, the GOP plan would: Expand health savings accounts Offer refundable tax credits to subsidize the purchase of private health insurance and decrease dependence on employer-sponsored plans Cap the tax exclusion for employer-provided health insurance Allow people to purchase insurance across state lines Provide $25 billion in funding for high-risk pools over 10 years Devolve Medicaid to the states, either through a block grant or a “per capita allotment” Partially privatize Medicare beginning in 2024 through a “premium support” option House Democrats are staging a sit-in to force a vote on gun control: Normally, according to Vox, “you could watch the sit-in live on HouseLive.gov , although the cameras, controlled by House Speaker Paul Ryan, have currently been turned off.” Regardless, it’s so refreshing to see Democrats on the offensive when it comes to…well anything in politics. But especially guns. The subtle force of Tom Perez: The Secretary of Labor has many fans at the moment and some progressives want him to be HRC’s VP choice. This piece gives an incredibly in-depth overview of the man and his career. Tweet of the day: House Democrats are staging a sit-in today to force a vote on gun safety measures. A vote – is that too much to ask? pic.twitter.com/AuxdMjXMil — Mike McLively (@mrmclively) June 22, 2016

Finally, We See Donald Trump for What He Is

Finally, We See Donald Trump for What He Is

So. I can’t stop thinking about Donald Trump. Last night, after a day spent dealing with the messy blowback of firing a campaign manager at the absolute worst time to fire a campaign manager, he announced his campaign fundraising totals, and they are apocalyptically bad : Trump raised just over $3 million in May — the month he secured enough delegates to win the Republican nomination — while Clinton raked in more than $26 million, according to the latest filings from the Federal Election Commission ….Clinton didn’t just out-raise Trump 9-1: She also entered June with much more cash in her coffers. Trump started the month of June with just $1.29 million cash on hand — compared with Clinton’s $42 million. Reporters are digging through the reports and finding all sorts of interesting facts: Trump paid $35,000 to a sketchy firm apparently named after characters from Mad Men ; Trump paid over one million dollars to Trump-owned companies in May ; Trump paid himself and members of his family a salary . Even a head of a Trump Super PAC admits that Trump’s campaign is in “big trouble.” A moment like this is unprecedented in presidential politics. We’ve never seen such a disparity in campaign income before, and while Sarah Palin certainly got some fringe benefits out of the VP candidacy, no other major party presidential candidate has cashed in so publicly in the heat of a campaign. The New York Times is reporting that Trump may get reporters to pay for a business trip to Scotland next week, for crying out loud. It’s hard to look at all these facts and not conclude that Trump is running a very elaborate grift on the Republican Party. How bad are things for Trump right now? Speculation is very high that he  will drop out . Of course, you wouldn’t know that by looking at Trump’s Twitter feed. The presumptive GOP nominee has gone on the offensive today, attacking Hillary Clinton repeatedly and making the case for a Trump presidency. (In fact, you might say he’s protesting a little too much in an effort to change the narrative.) Here’s one of Trump’s main arguments for a Trump presidency:   FASCINATING. This is absolutely fascinating.
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Daily Clips: June 21st, 2016

Daily Clips: June 21st, 2016

Stranger than fiction:  Donald Trump gave $35,000 to a “web advertising” firm called “Draper Sterling” – yes, just like in Mad Men. And it gets weirder. Draper Sterling’s headquarters is just a home in residential New Hampshire. Trump’s $1.3 million war chest is eclipsed by Clinton’s $42 million:  I thought he was really rich though? Gun regulation goes 0 for 4:  Swing and a miss, America. Castro for VP: An excellent piece that delves into Julian Castro and answers many of the questions you probably have about the former San Antonio mayor. Tweet of the day: . @HillaryClinton hits Trump for not releasing tax returns: "Maybe he isn't as rich as he claims." https://t.co/RQZth8ECcj — ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) June 21, 2016  

Everyone’s Ignoring Paul Ryan’s New Republican Agenda. Good.

Everyone’s Ignoring Paul Ryan’s New Republican Agenda. Good.

As I previously mentioned , Paul Ryan is rolling out this year’s Republican agenda throughout the month of June. Under the headline “ A Better Way, ” Ryan’s plan is supposed to be a reclamation of Republican ideals, reimagined for the future. Too bad  nobody’s paying any attention to Ryan right now because of the giant sweaty orange elephant in the room. Michelle Cottle at The Atlantic writes : Just look at what happened at the rollout of the agenda’s first plank: Ryan’s pet  anti-poverty plan . The speaker and seven colleagues crossed the Anacostia River to commune with the impoverished, overwhelmingly minority residents from the “bad” side of Washington. But after all the speechifying, the only thing reporters wanted to talk about was Donald Trump’s latest outrage, regarding the Mexican heritage of Judge Gonzalo Curiel. And so the big news to come rolling out of the event was Ryan’s “ textbook ” racism comment. “The first six questions were about Trump,” AshLee Strong, Ryan’s spokesman recalled to me. Poor Paul Ryan. Nobody’s paying attention to his big new ideas because they’re more concerned with the bigoted tyrant at the forefront of his party who could conceivably destroy America’s economy for a generation . It’s a real tragedy for Ryan. Except it’s fine to ignore Ryan’s policy proposals because there’s nothing new about them. As I pointed out, he’s been propping up the same tired and ineffectual poverty plan for most of his career . And the more of A Better Way that I see, the more I realize that it’s not new at all. What Ryan is proposing here is more trickle down economics for the masses. The conservative trickle-down ideology promotes a wide array of policies which promote three basic goals in order to make the rich richer and the poor poorer: Tax cuts for the wealthy. Deregulation for the powerful. Wage suppression for the 99 percent. And so with these three policies in mind, let’s look at the plan that Ryan is unveiling to an audience
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Daily Clips: June 20th, 2016

Daily Clips: June 20th, 2016

Donald Trump’s campaign manager leaves: This is a major shake up in the 2016 political scene. Corey Lewandowski has been working with Trump since the beginning of his campaign. It appears like Trump fired Lewandowski—just another sign that Donald Trump has loyalty to no one but himself. Paul Ryan’s regulatory-reform plan should be *almost* entirely dismissed: The trickle-down clown is at it again. This time, he’s released a plan which “contains more dubious ideas”, according to Bloomberg View’s editorial board. Because deregulation is one of the three pillars of trickle-down economics, it makes sense that his plan has endorsed the notion of “capping the number of regulations any agency could issue.” Why America’s men aren’t working:  The US “now has the the third-lowest participation rate for ‘prime-age men’ among the world’s developed countries.” Tweet of the day: When I said that if, within the Orlando club, you had some people with guns, I was obviously talking about additional guards or employees — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 20, 2016    

When Fact-Checkers Go Bad

When Fact-Checkers Go Bad

Glenn Kessler wrote a “Fact Checker” column for the Washington Post about “three Democratic claims on assault weapons and guns.” It’s just about the biggest bullshit I’ve read on the internet this week—which is really saying something, considering the fact that Donald Trump continues to exist. Kessler sifted through the 14-hour Democratic filibuster led by Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy on June 15th, applying fact-checks, in the form of a number-system of “Pinocchios,” to every claim. The number of Pinocchios is based on how true Kessler determines the claim to be—the higher the number of Pinocchios, supposedly, the more untrue the statement is. If the three quotes Kessler highlights are the most questionable statements he can find in all 14 hours of the filibuster, the Democrats did a remarkable job of keeping their facts in line, because the issues that Kessler has found are most definitely in the “pedantic” category. Let’s look at them in order. First, Kessler gives Murphy three Pinocchios for this statement: “What we know is that in states that have imposed those reasonable limitations, there are less gun crimes. There are less homicides.” What’s the problem? Apparently, “One would need to specifically determine whether certain laws had an effect, over time, on the gun-death rate in a state.” What’s wrong with the study that Murphy (and, earlier, President Obama) cited to make this claim? Turns out, according to Kessler, “most gun deaths — more than 60 percent in 2013 — are actually suicides.” (Emphasis mine.) This claim has always chafed somewhere deep in my soul. The argument that people who commit suicide due to easy access to guns shouldn’t count in gun death totals is entirely heartless. Here’s the thing: Guns make it easy to kill, which means that guns make it easy to kill yourself. Without easy access to guns, a suicidal person might be
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Daily Clips: June 17th, 2016

Daily Clips: June 17th, 2016

David Brooks gets it right on discussing Islam : Every once and awhile Brooks gets it right. This is one of those occasions. I’d highly recommend this read. The best quote from the column came from the American journalist, Peter Bergen, who claims: Assertions that Islamist terrorism has nothing to do with Islam are as nonsensical as claims that the Crusades had nothing to do with Christian beliefs about the sanctity of Jerusalem. Gun violence is a national crisis: According to the New York Times, “from 2001 to 2010, 119,246 Americans were murdered with guns, 18 times all American combat deaths in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.” Imprisoning women for having abortions:  Is this actually true? Yep – you bet. “In a growing number of states, the criminalization of abortion is well under way.” The article goes onto provide “a handful of the many pending cases that criminalize women for a procedure that, in theory at least, was legalized by the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade ruling in 1973.” Evolution of social and cultural norms making society more tolerant and safer: Follow the trendlines, not the headlines.

Daily Clips: June 16th, 2016

Daily Clips: June 16th, 2016

As a gay woman, I don’t feel safe in America right now. So I bought a gun:  There is a difference between feeling safer and actually being safer. This gay woman, who pens a column in Vox, doesn’t seem to understand this vital distinction. She writes: For me, part of that fight is now carrying a gun. If someone were to attack me, I might brandish it in their general direction in a mildly threatening manner, but that’s about it. In the grand scheme of things, I don’t think shooting another to save just my life is worth it. But were I in a position to do something that would prevent an occurrence like the Orlando massacre with my tiny gun, I think I would take one life if it meant saving many more. I don’t quite know how to make the decision to kill another human being, but I hope I could in the moment. What a nonsensical response to a national tragedy. It’s a shame this is how she responded. Clinton is considering Warren for VP: So reports the Wall Street Journal. Warren also happens to be the top VP pick for Democratic voters, as Bloomberg reported yesterday . Cory Booker, the New Jersey Senator, was voters’ second choice. Toxic masculinity and murder:   Stemming the violence, then, means deconstructing hate. It means considering every element in the creation and enabling of so many psychopaths. And one that tends to be overlooked— widely known but narrowly considered— is the simple fact that almost all mass murderers are men. As of 2014, Time cited the number at 98 percent . That makes masculinity a more common feature than any of the elements that tend to dominate discourse—religion, race, nationality, political affiliation, or any history of mental illness. Tweet of the day: I am proud to announce that after 14+ hours on the floor, we will have a vote on closing the terror gap & universal background checks — Chris Murphy (@ChrisMurphyCT)
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Donald Trump Just Created an Amazing Opportunity in the Fight for Sane Gun Laws

Donald Trump Just Created an Amazing Opportunity in the Fight for Sane Gun Laws

I can’t stop thinking about this morning’s tweet from Donald Trump:   Note that Trump is not going to his party’s leadership to argue this, or to Congressional Republicans. Nope! He’s going, instead, to the NRA. Presumably because the NRA are the real bosses, the real leaders, the people who can create real change within the party. Trump understands that if the NRA were to tell Republicans to stop fighting the terrorist watchlist law, they’d stop fighting immediately. So, in true Art of the Deal fashion, Trump’s going to the place where his words will have the most impact. But let’s take a moment to reflect on how truly horrific this whole scenario truly is. Donald Trump is the voice of reason here. He is fighting for a law that will allow the government to keep guns out of the hands of suspected terrorists.  And his own party is not supporting him on this. So he’s going to the gun lobby—an organization that is funded in large part by gun manufacturers, and which dumps millions of dollars in the pockets of elected officials —to beg them to allow this to happen. Trump often says democracy is broken, and he’s absolutely right in this case. But the problem is that he’s part of the broken system. Of course, it should be noted that Trump posted his little tweet before Senate Democrats began their filibuster for gun responsibility , which is making every Republican, Trump included, look like weak-kneed gun-worshippers. Democrats aren’t taking their argument to the NRA, an organization which has no power to make laws. They’re taking their argument to the American people because they’ve had enough. This is how democracy is supposed to work. No matter how the Democratic filibuster ends, this is a watershed moment in the fight against gun violence in America. Trump has, possibly accidentally, proven how ghastly the Republican defense of the NRA agenda truly
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