Bredesen Could be HHS Secretary – CORRECTED

Updated 2/11/09

The rumor mill is circulating with possible names for the new Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS). Among those names is Tennessee’s Democratic governor, Phil Bredesen. Despite what Republican opponents and MoveOn.org say about the matter, he would be an excellent choice.

Bredesen knows what it’s like to insure a large population of unhealthy people who have low incomes. He understands the needs, and he has found a way to provide coverage with little support from the federal government and much opposition from state Republicans and idealistic health advocates.

When faced with cutting scores of chronically-ill patients from the rolls of TennCare, the state plan for the poor and uninsurable, Bredesen flew to Washington more than once. The past administration denied his repeated requests for changes to the Medicaid waiver that covered the plan.

Around that time, some Republican candidates for the state legislature openly campaigned and won seats on a platform of reforming the plan. They claimed it was rife with fraud and blocked Bredesen’s efforts to change and save it. The office that investigates such matters has since found little evidence to support those claims.

Republicans and health care advocates, who didn’t understand the big picture and refused to compromise, then smeared Bredesen’s name in the press and blamed him for the cuts when voters who lost their coverage became angry. But Bredesen was faced with competing challenges. He faced those challenges as total federal contributions to the state budget decreased.

Health care costs in Tennessee were taking money that was needed for education and other priorities. Bredesen understood that a person with a good education could afford private insurance or get one of the few jobs that still offered a group plan. He used the money he saved to expand pre-kindergarten programs in the state.

He also understands that education is important because the good jobs of today require highly-skilled workers. Having more workers with good jobs expands the tax base that is needed to support vital services and lowers the tax burden for all.

Tennessee has lost many of the manufacturing jobs that supported middle class families in the last few decades. Most of those jobs have been replaced with low-paying jobs in the service and retail sectors that don’t offer health insurance.

Governor Bredesen has personally experienced the high cost of not having insurance. His own brother died because he was uninsured. Since then, Bredesen has created a plan to cover the people who were cut from TennCare with a combination of public and private funds. Additional plans cover small businesses, children, and those who have lost their jobs.

Before the current economic crisis, Bredesen did all these things with a balanced budget and without raising taxes. Like everywhere else, sales and property tax revenues have plummeted.

Tennessee also doesn’t have a state income tax. Republicans almost incited a riot the last time Democrats tried to enact one.

Republicans once again distorted these and other facts and took advantage of low information voters (LIVs) to gain control of the state Senate in the last election. They are one vote short of controlling the House. Republican Deputy Speaker of the House Steve McDaniel has openly admitted that funding services in the current situation will be the most challenging task he has faced in his entire tenure in the legislature, and he doesn’t know where to start.

Governor Bredesen deserves the nomination. He’s a big boy who knows how to get the job done in a hostile political climate like the one in Washington.

An earlier report stated that Republican Tennessee State Senator Steve McDaniel was Speaker Pro Tem. He is Deputy Speaker of the House, and soon may be named temporary speaker. The speaker, Independent Kent Williams, is away tending to his sick mother, and the Speaker Pro Tem, Democrat Lois DeBerry, is recovering from an unspecified illness.

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

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Daschle Withdrawal Won’t Stop Health Reform

Tom Daschle’s withdrawal from the process to become Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) won’t stop the health care reform train. That train left the station long before President Obama tapped the former senator to become the conductor.

The feedback Daschle received as he met with concerned citizens across the country underscores the urgency of the situation. Everyone is tired of supporting a system that doesn’t work.

The system doesn’t work because the way we live doesn’t support good health. Stress-filled lives that limit time for healthy practices are causing an epidemic of chronic illnesses that is bankrupting the system and those who depend upon it.

Spiraling costs will undermine the effects of the stimulus if we don’t implement a practical plan for addressing these issues. The head of HHS and/or the White House Office of Health Care Reform must understand what practical steps we need to take.

Joseph E. Pizzorno, Jr., founding president of Bastyr University, is uniquely qualified to develop such a plan. Students at Bastyr receive training to address the whole person, not the just the disease.

During Pizzorno’s tenure as president of Bastyr, the university received funds for alternative medicine research from the National Institutes of Health. He was appointed to the White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Policy by President Clinton and to the Medicare Coverage Advisory Committee by President Bush.

Pizzorno’s experience makes him uniquely qualified to work in an administration committed to major changes in public policy. If he is not willing or able to serve, he may know a colleague who is. Click here to read more about his accomplishments.

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

Bill Promotes Economic, Physical Health for All

I never knew public policy could be so much fun. The summary of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Bill of 2009 that passed the House of Representatives is more exciting than any of my favorite movies.

This bill shows an amazing grasp of the complexities of the current economic crisis. It addresses immediate needs and makes a down payment on long term goals while reducing the stresses that can lead to chronic illness and higher health care costs in the future.

Implementation of this bill could substantially reduce entitlement spending in several areas and reduce the burden for all taxpayers by addressing the following issues:

  • The increases in food stamps and food services for the elderly will promote better nutrition to reduce health care costs
  • Vocational rehabilitation and public service opportunities will allow the disabled and the able seniors to reduce their reliance on public aid
  • Increases in unemployment insurance, Medicaid, and COBRA insurance for those who have lost their jobs will help them meet basic needs, maintain their health, reduce costs associated with advanced stages of disease that result from lack of treatment, and preserve some jobs in the retail and health care sectors
  • Funds for job retraining, work study, Pell grants, and research will prepare the country and its citizens for the jobs of the future
  • Infrastructure projects and loans will create new businesses and help existing ones retain current employees and hire displaced workers from the housing and auto industries and other sectors who have transferable skills
  • Green jobs will create a healthier environment and reduce the pollution that contributes to chronic disease while reducing the need for assistance with energy bills
  • When basic opportunities are available and basic needs are met, expenses for the criminal justice system are reduced.
  • Funds to train primary care workers will avert the consequences of a shortage when they will be needed to provide care that reduces the cost of chronic diseases
  • When basic opportunities are available for the strong and basic needs are provided for the weak, fewer people enter the criminal justice system and related expenses are reduced

The bill reduces waste by utilizing public and non-profit organizations that are experienced in meeting the challenges we face and have accountability procedures in place. It also preserves jobs in those sectors and provides protection for whistleblowers who wish to report fraudulent use of taxpayer dollars.

By providing economic opportunities for a broader cross-section of society, this bill can broaden the tax base, help reduce chronic illness, and reduce dependence on entitlement programs. That can lower the tax burden for all if coupled with a more judicious use of military force. The financial sector will only return to health when the people can afford their services.

The Republican response to the bill is an example of why they don’t need to be in charge of the country’s business anytime soon. Their ideas are based on the myth that everyone can pull themselves up from their bootstraps. They don’t understand the impact of unfair public policy on average citizens. Unless they gain an understanding of the issues that face common people, they will remain the party of a vanishing breed: people who are actually thriving under their policies.

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

Health Care Changes are Within Our Grasp

Tears filled my eyes as I watched the inauguration of Barack Obama. At last there is a friend of the chronically ill in the White House.

If you’ve attempted to get help for a chronic illness through our dysfunctional health care system, you know that help can be hard to find. When you find it, you may not be able to afford it.

Those who doubt the new president’s ability to lead us toward reform have forgotten these important factors:

  • He understands the issues
  • He has proven his ability to communicate his vision for change to people with conflicting views
  • His choice to lead health reform, Tom Daschle, is a seasoned politician who understands the complex nature of the challenges ahead and has hit the ground running
  • Insurers, medical professionals, and consumers alike are aware that the system will collapse without radical change

The legislators who won this past election are well aware that they no longer have the luxury of taking our votes for granted. There are more voters in this country than lobbyists in Washington.

We can can see many of the changes we need in our lifetime. If we continue to pressure our leaders to work toward creating a system that works, and support those who have workable ideas and clear vision, we can see those changes sooner rather than later.

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

Economic Health Requires Revolutionary Change (Part 4)

Every day brings an announcement of more layoffs and business closings. Look in the mirror to see who is  responsible for this mess. We’ve allowed our leaders and the lobbyists to run the country off a cliff.

This recession is the result of policies we all supported, fought, or ignored for selfish reasons. Some of us just gave up and let the bad guys win.

The last election showed us that we can make a difference. If we don’t use our new power to help each other and live what we know is right, we’ll never get out of this mess. Now is the time to demand policies that provide opportunity for those who are willing and able to work, support the weak, and protect the taxpayers. In addition to the obvious need for more regulation and oversight in the financial services industry, here are other ways to move forward:

Help cities build mixed income, green communities. Seattle’s High Point neighborhood is a good example. High Point is a 100-acre master planned community. Its energy efficient condos and townhomes are available for sale or for rent at market and subsidized rates. Members of the community mingle with each other in 20 acres of parks and playgrounds, on front porches, or along tree-lined sidewalks and trails. The library and community health center are already open for business. A community rec center and neighborhood shopping are in the works.

Place high quality public charter and magnet schools in each community. Parents often relocate to ensure that their children receive a good education. A return to neighborhood schools will increase parent involvement and student achievement. Students can walk to schools in their neighborhoods, which will reduce or eliminate the need for busing. Busing students across town produces obese children, wastes taxpayer dollars, and fragments communities. Most people want to surround themselves with people who have similar values, goals, and experiences. That may not be right or politically correct, but it’s human nature. Even those of us who think we’re open-minded like to surround ourselves with other open-minded people.

Increase funding for research. Our country is falling behind industrialized and some emerging nations because we don’t value deep thought. We’ll need deep thinkers to develop the technologies and processes that will help us get out of this mess.

Develop trade and foreign policies that benefit others without hurting ourselves. Foreign aid workers, missionaries, diplomats, and military commanders agree that world conflicts cannot be solved with military might alone. People around the world share many of our same concerns. Most of them want to earn a living, educate their children, gain and maintain health, and live in healthful surroundings. By exporting the technologies and teaching them the processes we develop to meet our own challenges in these areas, we can reduce conflicts and reduce the trade deficit without abusing workers in this country or others.

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

Economic Health Requires Revolutionary Change (Part 3)

Few suggestions for dealing with the recession are based in reality.  Just ignoring all the problems won’t make them go away, and throwing money at them without a long-term plan will increase the national debt without addressing the underlying causes.

The United States has lost more than 3.2 million factory jobs since 2000. That total excludes jobs that have been lost in other sectors and more than a million that have disappeared so far this year.

Experts predict that this downward trend will continue as 6100 retail stores close by the end of the year and another 14,000 in 2009. War veterans are returning home to find that they also have joined the ranks of the unemployed. Employers in every sector are announcing more job cuts daily. Many displaced workers have moved into lower paying jobs in the service sector, which also is beginning to shrink.

With or without government assistance, the auto industry will be forced to shed still more jobs as the rising unemployment rate decreases purchasing power throughout the country. Lenders will continue to limit access to the credit the industry needs to sell its products.

In light of these facts, recovery plans must focus on creating jobs that pay a living wage and leave room in household budgets to pay for emergencies and save for luxuries. Without those jobs, the economy will continue to collapse, and there won’t be enough tax revenues to repay the escalating debt.

We must also correct the imbalance in financial and human capital. The U.S. Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis says the financial services industry, including real estate, accounted for 21 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) in 2006. Businesses related to the auto industry currently account for another 4 percent and 1 in 10 American jobs. The housing crisis has reduced employment in financial services. Expansion of public transportation and competition from foreign automakers could further reduce auto sales

New policies should attempt to save as many jobs as possible without postponing inevitable contractions in certain areas. If those policies don’t point us toward the future, America will be left behind in the global economy.

Chinese officials are recruiting unemployed workers from the financial services industry to help them move forward. Even medical professionals are losing their jobs in this economy, and will surely join the exodus. Still more are voluntarily leaving patient care because the stress and expense of caring for chronically ill patients is destroying their personal lives. This talent pool cannot be replenished overnight.

The return to a focus on providing necessary services is the solution. By enacting aggressive reforms in business, education, and health policy, the incoming administration can save jobs, create new ones, and save money at the same time. In addition to the suggestions in my first post on this subject, here are new ones that could move the country in the right direction:

Offer microcredit loans through the Small Business Administration (SBA). Large corporations will never be able to absorb all the displaced workers.

Enlist the help of Teach for America to prepare some displaced workers and business leaders to change America’s schools. This organization has an excellent reputation for quickly retraining people from a variety of backgrounds to teach America’s troubled youth, who are dropping out of school at an alarming rate. A well-trained workforce is essential to meet the demands of the 21st century. Our educational institutions prepare students for 20th century jobs that no longer exist. Teachers placed through Teach for America have a two year commitment, with the option of staying put if things go well. That will give them time to find other work if they discover teaching is not a good fit. With wisdom forged by real world experience, workers and leaders could help shape education programs that include courses in entrepreneurship, the backbone of the American economy. After school programs staffed by this new force could also provide relief for cash-strapped parents.

Increase funding for college work study programs. Displaced workers will need income as they develop new skills to reenter the work force. Overworked instructors could also use extra help from disciplined, motivated students who have real life experience.

Work with labor and business leaders to create policies that reduce stress, the main cause of chronic illness. Balance pay cuts and increased job security with frequent breaks, onsite adult and child care, onsite health care and fitness programs, flexible hours, increases in paid personal leave, continuing education, and other perks that increase productivity, reduce the need for higher wages, and make companies more competitive. Businesses that have adopted such polices have saved money on health care costs and increased productivity.

Dramatically increase payments for preventive health care. Treatments for advanced chronic illness are costly.

Pay family caregivers. According to Medical News Today, about 34 million caregivers provided about $375 billion in free services to family and friends last year. These caregivers often leave their jobs and neglect their own health to provide full-time care and delay or eliminate the need to place their loved ones in nursing homes.

Ask patients and leaders in medicine to suggest immediate practical changes for Medicaid and Medicare. Both programs spend more money trying to save money than it would cost to just cover some services. These ridiculous practices are driving many doctors to refuse patients serviced by these programs.

Incorporate natural medicine into mainstream care. Patients and professionals alike are finding that natural protocols often work best with chronic illnesses, especially in the early stages. Bastyr University in Seattle has received several research grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and operates a clinic that offers alternative medicine services to the public. Doctors of functional medicine also claim dramatic results with their holistic treatments for chronic diseases. When combined with preventive care and changes in Medicare and Medicaid, the savings could reduce the budget enough to pay for universal coverage and save millions of jobs.

Unless some new disaster rears its ugly head over the next week, my next post will address practical long-term solutions to domestic and foreign policy challenges.

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

Thank God for Everyday Blessings

Happy Thanksgiving! In spite of what’s wrong in the world right now, we have much to be thankful for.

We woke up this morning. Many people didn’t.

Most of us have food to eat. More people are going hungry every day in this country and around the world.

Most of us have a roof over our heads. More people in this country are moving into their cars or under bridges every day.

As we give thanks, let’s remember our less fortunate brothers and sisters and help them as much as we can.

If the Lord is willing and the creeks don’t rise, next week I’ll post more suggestions on how to alleviate the suffering in part 3 of “Economic Recovery Requires Revolutionary Change.”

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

Economic Health Requires Revolutionary Change (Part 2)

A new type of pollution is making the air unfit to breathe these days. Carbon-based fuel is no longer our biggest problem. Fear mixed with hate-filled language aimed at the people around us has turned into a toxic mix that is beginning to choke us all.

While everyone seems to be looking for someone else to blame, we’ve forgotten something important. We’ve all contributed to this economic crisis. The results seem like the remake of a bad movie that could have played in ancient times.

The Apostle Paul summed it up clearly in 1 Timothy 6:10: “But if it’s only money these leaders are after, they’ll self-destruct in no time. Lust for money brings trouble and nothing but trouble. Going down that path, some lose their footing in the faith completely and live to regret it bitterly ever after.” (The Message)

King Solomon, one of the wisest men who ever lived, also spoke the following words that were recorded in Ecclesiastes 5:10 and still apply to our situation today: “He who loves money will not be satisfied with money, nor he who loves abundance with its income. This too is vanity.” (New American Standard Version)

We’ve all bought things we didn’t need, sometimes with money we didn’t have. Now we’ve learned the hard way that life in “Never Never Land” isn’t quite what we expected. Because we were so willing to sacrifice the future to satisfy the desires of the present, we don’t know where to turn for help now that the future is staring us in the face.

Only God has all the answers. Those of us who believe in Him should pray for His forgiveness and direction and for our ability to hear Him clearly. Even if we hear Him, He won’t provide quick or easy solutions. He doesn’t operate that way when we’ve strayed. Like any good parent, He wants to make sure we’ve learned our lesson so we won’t forget what we’ve done wrong.

It’s time to accept that things will not be the same in the near future, if ever. With that fact in mind, let’s try to work together through the next steps.

After my last post, I had planned to suggest solutions to problems in domestic and foreign policy that affect our health. My previous list of short-term solutions proved too ambitious, and what once seemed intermediate now poses a very present danger. With that in mind, please allow me to revisit some issues from last week.

Several new plans are in the works to address the mortgage problem. Sheila Bair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) showed compassion for homeowners and empathy with lenders in the plan she proposed last Friday. Though Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is not in favor of the plan, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has publicly urged him to support it. On Wednesday the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) also announced changes to its Hope for Homeowners program. House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., applauded the announcement, but said further steps may be necessary. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac next threw their hats into the ring today, according to Reuters News. Their plan will halt foreclosures from November 26 through January 9, which will give lenders time to rework troubled loans.

No plan has yet been announced to deal with the glut of homes that are already on the market. Until leaders address that problem, credit may still be hard to come by, and the bailout plans under consideration for the auto industry will surely fail.

The bipartisan plan presented in the Senate today by two Democrats and two Republicans would allow automakers to divert the $25 billion that Congress has already allotted them for retooling their plants toward meeting the current crisis. Without retooling, the industry will die because it will fall farther behind foreign automakers who are already reaching the growing market for energy-efficient cars.

Democrats in both houses have demanded that the automakers present a survival plan before they will agree to loan them the additional $25 billion they say is needed to help them get by. Without access to credit, consumers still will not be able to buy the cars that will help automakers generate income to repay the loan.

Automakers say millions of jobs that depend on their survival will be lost if our country’s leaders don’t help them stave off bankruptcy. It’s not fair to penalize hard working people who have no control over any of this mess while we bail out the financial services industry that was at the center of this economic earthquake.

Until someone comes up with a plan to clear excess houses from the market, the automakers are doomed to fail with or without our help. While they develop overdue plans to move toward the future, Congress needs to finish cleaning up the problem that started this whole mess.

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

Economic Health Requires Revolutionary Change (Part 1)

Corrected 11/19/08

Most people in America understand that radical change is overdue in this country. The votes they cast in the last election signaled this basic understanding. Few people who cast those votes understand how much change is needed to save the U.S. economy and economies around the world.

Low wages don’t leave room in family budgets for health care expenses. Inflexible work schedules and long hours don’t leave time for workers to do what it takes to prevent disease. The resulting chronic illnesses make workers less productive and increase health care costs for employers.

Employers reduce expenses by slashing some jobs, moving others to foreign countries, and cutting work hours for remaining employees. That leaves employees without the means to pay for retraining programs that can prepare them to find better jobs. They stop making payments on second mortgages and credit cards that have helped them live beyond their means.

Unemployed and underemployed workers apply for public assistance as the tax base that pays for the assistance shrinks. People who once supported non-profit agencies that help the needy now seek help from those agencies. The agencies must turn people away.

Next add to the mix students who have borrowed heavily to prepare for jobs that aren’t there and now can’t repay their loans. This leaves lenders reluctant to lend money to anyone. Businesses that depend upon credit lay off more workers or close their doors. Tax revenues decrease even more, which leads government officials to slash budgets and lay off still more workers.

The list of people who have been reduced to buying just necessities, when they can afford them, is growing daily. When we stop buying, people in other countries who grow or manufacture many of the goods we used to buy make less money. They, in turn, purchase fewer products from us.

The country has not faced this many challenges since the American Revolution, says Nouriel Roubini, Associate Professor of Economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business and former adviser to the U.S. Treasury Department.

In a consumer-driven society, there can be no stability on Wall Street without stability on Main Street. In spite of this fact, most of the aid in this economic crisis has been directed toward the financial services industry. The new man in town promised to change all that, and the people voted to let him try.

Reports are circulating that President-elect Obama’s advisers are weighing the political consequences of pushing incremental versus rapid changes. In a democratic society, the people must be willing to come along for the ride, but they will only continue the journey if they see results.

Effective solutions will involve careful planning that addresses short-term, intermediate, and long-term needs. Here are my suggestions for the next phase of the new American Revolution:

Meet again with lenders to develop and enforce a mandatory plan for restructuring mortgages. The new loans should be closer to 30 percent of an applicant’s available income. That was the accepted standard before the housing crisis began. The plan announced earlier this week will allow buyers to pay up to 38 percent of income. It also reduces the lending rate for only five years before it begins to slowly climb again. Both Sheila Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and Bruce Marks, head of the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America (NACA), have said the new plan is not good enough.

Rewrite new mortgages to include penalties for anyone who abandons a home. Some mortgages include “no recourse” provisions. Many lenders are waiting for a government bailout, and more people are shirking their responsibilities every day. The government can’t continue to reward bad behavior.  City and state officials also need to know how much tax revenue they will have to meet their obligations.

Recognize that we have a housing crisis, not a mortgage crisis. Allan Meltzer, economist and professor of Political Economy at Carnegie Mellon University, says housing prices won’t stop falling and credit won’t ease until the excess supply of homes decreases and the balance sheets at financial institutions stop shrinking. Meltzer proposes a tax credit through the end of next year for those who purchase homes that have already been foreclosed. This move will kick start the slumping construction industry as well.

Merge General Motors with one of the other “big three” automakers, then allow the remaining companies to reorganize under bankruptcy protection. This idea came from both Bill Ackman, CEO of hedge fund management company Pershing Square Capital Management, and Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize winning economist and professor. U.S. automakers aren’t prepared to meet the challenges of today or those of tomorrow. Bankruptcy will force them to develop long-range strategies.

Recognize that we have a service-based economy. Our economy is imploding because we have forgotten a basic principle of good business–find a need and fill it. Low-, medium-, and high-skilled workers are needed in all areas. Craftsmen, accountants, educators, writers and editors, engineers, and people with other transferable skills are essential.

Move displaced workers into similar jobs rebuilding the infrastructure and building a “green economy.” Infrastructure projects can build and repair roads and bridges and expand public transportation. Overlap them with public and private “green” construction projects that rebuild communities affected by disasters. Retrofit buildings that don’t meet energy efficiency standards. By doubling our current rate of recycling, including waste from these construction projects, we could replace almost every job that has been lost this year. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, author, and columnist Thomas L. Friedman says “green” projects can employ workers with diverse skills.

Subsidize or give tax credits to organizations that hire displaced workers. Those who move into related positions may even be able to start immediately and train on the job. Workers who have good jobs are less dependent upon government assistance and can afford to stay healthy.

Without changing the policies that created this mess, we will not see the end of the downward spiral or avoid creating another one. My next post will address strategies for making intermediate and long-term changes that address both domestic and foreign policy issues.

The second sentence in the eighth paragraph has been corrected to end with financial services industry instead of businesses. The word occupants has been changed to anyone in the first sentence of the twelfth paragraph.

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.

Obama’s Vision Can Heal the Nation

I’ve spent more time doing research and listening to statements from all the candidates during this presidential campaign than any other. Like most voters this year, I’ve realized we can’t hold our leaders accountable for misguided policies if we don’t understand those policies. After carefully assessing the positions of each candidate, last week I voted for Barack Obama because John McCain just doesn’t see the big picture. Here are the reasons why I believe Obama is the superior candidate:

Obama understands the plight of the little guy because he’s been one. Don’t let the degrees from Columbia and Harvard fool you. He just recently finished paying his school loans. He knows from personal experience that not everyone who needs help is lazy or trying to game the system. His campaign is focused on giving everyone a voice in policies that affect their lives.

Obama understands that when a person has a vision and the means to fulfill that vision, he or she is less likely to need public funds. His vision for our citizens addresses disparities in education, employment, and health care. He knows that better educated people who receive fair wages, work in supportive environments, and have access to disease prevention and treatment services are healthier and more productive. Healthier people cost public and private insurers less money. Productive people purchase their own necessities as well as luxuries that generate tax revenues to fund the cost of government initiatives. They invest and save for the future, which strengthens our financial institutions. They also give to those who are in need.

Obama understands that a comprehensive energy policy can strengthen the world economy. He supports policies to help this country lead an energy revolution that can create good jobs for people around the world without sacrificing the futures of people in this country.

Obama is a Christian by choice, not by force. He was exposed to a variety of faiths in childhood but “was not raised in a religious household.” That helps him understand people of other faiths, who are citizens of every nation, including ours. Though we are electing a commander-in-chief, not an evangelist-in-chief, non-believers will be more likely to embrace Christianity if they see Christian principles in action without having those principles shoved down their throats. Jesus said, “he that is greatest among you shall be your servant,” not your master. Obama’s policies encourage servanthood.

Obama is better prepared to communicate with and address the needs of a multi-cultural world. He has lived among, worked with, and/or visited blacks, whites, Christians, Muslims, Americans, Indonesians, Africans, the poor, the working class, and the privileged. The policies of previous administrations often have favored a single demographic at the expense of all or most others.

Obama’s connection with other faiths can keep us safer. According to the New York Times, an Islamist website closely linked to Al Qaeda has endorsed John McCain because his positions and plans will make recruiting for the organization much easier. The site further stated that potential recruits will be reluctant to confront Obama, who has a Muslim grandfather.

Obama’s brand of Christianity embraces the needs of the living as well as the unborn. He believes that it is proper for states to restrict partial-birth abortion, but he voted against an Illinois bill because it didn’t include an exclusion for mothers whose lives would be jeopardized by giving birth. He also has said “we should be doing everything we can to avoid unwanted pregnancies that might even lead somebody to consider having an abortion.”

Obama is probably the most experienced candidate in U.S. history. His experiences include:

  1. Working to empower people as a community organizer and as an attorney for a firm that specializes in civil rights law and economic development
  2. Serving on the board of directors for several organizations dedicated to improving the lives of people
  3. Serving three terms in the Illinois State Senate, where he gained bipartisan support to reform ethics and health care laws and chaired the Health and Human Services Committee
  4. Teaching constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School
  5. Representing Illinois in the U.S. Senate
  6. Helping to create bipartisan legislation that addresses many of the most pressing issues of our time: greater public accountability in the use of federal funds, lobbying and electoral fraud, climate change, nuclear terrorism, and care for returning U.S. military personnel
  7. Serving on committees that address every area of government: Foreign Relations; Environment and Public Works; Veterans’ Affairs; Health, Education, Labor and Pensions; Homeland Security; and Governmental Affairs
  8. Traveling abroad to meet with leaders in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia, and Africa as a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee

Obama is not God or Superman. He didn’t create the world, and he can’t leap tall buildings in a single bound. His strength is listening. He understands that he doesn’t know everything. His campaign staff members praise him for listening to dissenting opinions before he makes decisions. The changes in his campaign seem less like calculated political moves and more like adjustments to newly discovered realities.

McCain obviously isn’t listening. The American people want a leader with real vision to address real problems. McCain has constantly misrepresented Obama’s views and focused on distractions rather than addressing the issues.

We cannot afford to elect a man who lacks vision. Where there is no vision, the people perish (Prov. 29:18).

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Jacqueline Laurette Jones is author of Unmasking a Diagnosis: How to get Help for a Confusing Chronic Illness Without Filing for Bankruptcy.