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Senate Passes Measure Rejecting Containment Of A ‘Nuclear Weapons Capable’ Iran

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) sponsored the Iran resolution (Photo: Getty)

The Senate passed a resolution early on Saturday by a vote of 90-1 “joining” President Obama in rejecting any policy that would seek to contain Iran “as an option in response to the Iranian nuclear threat.” However the non-binding measure — which all but two Democrats voted for — breaks significantly with the president’s policy on containment’s threshold.

In passing the resolution, the Senate is now on record as “reject[ing] any United States policy that would rely on efforts to contain a nuclear weapons-capable Iran.” The wording of “nuclear-weapons capable” is important because many non-proliferation and nuclear experts have said that Iran is currently capable of building a bomb.

President Obama, however, has said his policy is to not contain an Iran with a nuclear weapon:

And what I have said is, is that we will not countenance Iran getting a nuclear weapon. My policy is not containment; my policy is to prevent them from getting a nuclear weapon — because if they get a nuclear weapon that could trigger an arms race in the region, it would undermine our non-proliferation goals, it could potentially fall into the hands of terrorists.

What’s more, the Senate resolution did not define “capable” and various lawmakers in favor of this language have offered a wide array of meanings.

Therefore, the Senate’s threshold for military action to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons (experts and U.S. and Israeli officials have argued that a military strike would only delay, not prevent, an Iranian bomb) is more immediate than Obama’s and dangerously vague.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said recently that the United States would know if Iran decides to push for a nuclear weapon and in that case, there would be time for an appropriate response. The Obama administration has indicated that it takes no option off the table in its effort to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, including military force.

As Ali Gharib noted over at the Daily Beast, passing the measure puts the Senate in league with Mitt Romney and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — who lost his a recent public relations battle on Iran to the Obama administration — over the president.
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Health

Paul Ryan Tells Florida Seniors That Obamacare Includes Death Panels

Paul Ryan likened a mechanism to control health care spending to “death panels,” during a town hall at the University of Central Florida in Orlando on Saturday.

After listening to Ryan repeatedly call for the repeal of the Affordable Care Act, an elderly man asked the Republican vice presidential nominee about “the death panels.” Rather than dissuading the man from what PolitiFact named 2009′s Lie of the Year, Ryan laughed and responded, “that’s not the word I’d choose to use to describe it. It’s actually called….the Independent Payment Advisory Board”:

QUESTION: We love you Paul. But I’m getting long in years. Will you address the death panels that we’re going to have?

RYAN: The death panels, well! That’s not the word I’d choose to use to describe it. It’s actually called. It’s actually called, so in Medicare, what I refer to as this board of 15 bureaucrats. It’s called the Independent Payment Advisory Board. It sounds fairly innocuous.

Watch it:

The Board, or IPAB — a provision included in the Affordable Care Act — is tasked with making binding recommendations to Congress for lowering health care spending, should Medicare costs exceed a target growth rate. Congress can accept the savings proposal or implement its own ideas through a super majority.

The panel’s plan will modify payments to providers but despite Ryan’s claims, it cannot “include any recommendation to ration health care, raise revenues or Medicare beneficiary premiums…increase Medicare beneficiary cost-sharing (including deductibles, coinsurance, and co- payments), or otherwise restrict benefits or modify eligibility criteria” (Section 3403 of the ACA). The IPAB will consist of 15 members appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, and will include a broad spectrum of experts and consumer advocates, like physicians, employers, economists, representatives of consumers and the elderly. In fact, relying on health care experts rather than politicians to control health care costs has previously attracted bipartisan support and even Ryan himself proposed two IPAB-like structures in a 2009 health plan.

Climate Progress

Record Ocean Temperatures Recorded Off New England Coast

by Bob Berwyn, via Summit County Citizens Voice

Federal ocean scientists said this year’s sea surface temperatures along the northeast coast of the U.S. set all-time records, with as-yet unknown consequences for marine ecosystems.

Above-average temperatures were found in all parts of the ecosystem, from the ocean bottom to the sea surface and across the region, and the above average temperatures extended beyond the shelf break front to the Gulf Stream, according to an ecosystem advisory issued by NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center.

The warm waters led to the earliest, most intense and longest-lasting plankton bloom on record, with  implications for marine life, from the smallest creatures to the largest marine mammals like whales. Atlantic cod continued to shift northeastward from its historic distribution center.

“A pronounced warming event occurred on the Northeast Shelf this spring, and this will have a profound impact throughout the ecosystem,” said Kevin Friedland, a scientist in the NEFSC’s Ecosystem Assessment Program. “Changes in ocean temperatures and the timing of the spring plankton bloom could affect the biological clocks of many marine species, which spawn at specific times of the year based on environmental cues like water temperature.”

Friedland said the average sea surface temperature exceeded 51 degrees during the first half of 2012, topping the previous record high set in 1951.The average sea surface temperature the past three decades has ranged around 48 degrees.

Temperatures climbed even higher than that in some near-shore locations like Delaware Bay and Chesapeake Bay, where sea surface temperature readings were more than 6 degrees above historical average and more than 5 degrees above average at the seafloor.

In deeper offshore waters to the north, bottom waters were 2 degrees warmer in the eastern Gulf of Maine and more than 3.6 degrees warmer in the western Gulf of Maine.

This year’s record-high ocean temperatures are a spike in a long-term trend that is push many commercial fish farther north and east in a response to ecosystem warming.

A 2009 study of data from 1968 to 2007 found that about half of the 36 fish stocks studied in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean have been shifting northward over the past four decades, with some disappearing from US waters as they move farther offshore.

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Election

Romney Threatened To Cancel Univision Forum If Organizers Didn’t Allow Him To Bus In Supporters

Mitt Romney packed the audience for a Univision forum earlier this week, BuzzFeed’s McKay Coppins reports, busing in local supporters “after exhausting the few conservative groups on campus.” The campaign threatened to “reschedule” the event if organizers did not allow the “rowdy activists from around southern Florida in order to fill the extra seats at their town hall.”

Romney also refused to come out on stage after the hosts introduced him by noting that he “had agreed to give the network 35 minutes, and that Obama had agreed to a full hour the next night.” Univision re-taped the introduction after Romney allegedly “threw a tantrum.”

During the event, Romney dodged four questions about whether he would maintain President Obama’s directive allowing young undocumented immigrants to stay in the United States on a temporary basis and said that he is happy to be known as “the grandfather of Obamacare.”

Romney has a history of padding the audience. During a speech before National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO) in June, the GOP presidential candidate also brought in his supporters to the address.

NEWS FLASH

Former Pittsburgh Pirates Owner Comes Out As Gay | The former owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates has come out as gay in the New York Times, telling the paper that “homophobic language during his days in baseball” convinced “him that keeping his sexual orientation hidden was best.” “I’ve got a birthday coming up where I’m turning old,” Kevin McClatchy, who owned the Pirates from 1996 to 2007, says. “I’ve spent 30 years — or whatever the number is specifically — not talking about my personal life, lying about my personal life… There’s no way I want to go into the rest of my existence and ever have to hide my personal life again.” McClatchy will turn 50 in January. No active player in baseball, or in the principal leagues of football, basketball or hockey has come out as gay.

Health

Will Electronic Health Records Increase Health Costs?

Health care reform advocates argue that encouraging providers to use electronic health records would reduce medical errors, lower administrative costs and improve patient care, but the transition could also lead doctors and hospitals to easily prescribe unnecessary care and bill more for services, increasing costs for Medicare and private insurers. From the New York Times:

Over all, hospitals that received government incentives to adopt electronic records showed a 47 percent rise in Medicare payments at higher levels from 2006 to 2010, the latest year for which data are available, compared with a 32 percent rise in hospitals that have not received any government incentives, according to the analysis by The Times.

The new health IT systems will allow providers “to better document the care they provide, justifying the higher payments they are receiving” and the Department of Health and Human Services tells the Times that the government “has strong protections in place to prevent fraud and abuse of this technology that we’re improving all the time.”

Moreover, the delivery reforms included in the Affordable Care Act, which are designed to transform the current fee-for-service system of rewarding volume and intensity of services into one that prioritizes quality and efficiency, may help discourage over billing. Offering providers a fixed payment that covers all services for a specific medical condition, for instance, or a global payment that is based on a global budget for a population under an Accountable Care Organization (ACO) could also slow costs and eliminate over treatment.

Ultimately, real world experiences and a multitude of research has concluded that health IT is essential to coordinating care and enabling doctors to access vital information in real time. As the Congressional Budget Office has concluded, the federal government will save $7 billion by 2014 as a result of health IT, which providers will benefit from $17 billion in savings.

Climate Progress

The Journey From High Schoolers To Climate Leaders In Two Semesters Or Less

by Amanda Peterson, via Climate Access

School is back in session for high schools all across the country and the one thing on every student’s mind is, of course, climate change. OK, maybe in most schools who’s dating whom, getting into college and the elections are getting a bit more play.  But as we, the Alliance for Climate Education (ACE), start back up, we’re getting climate change to top of mind, too.

Since 2009, we’ve been working with high schoolers – with an assembly, student action programs and leadership trainings – in climate science and solutions. We’ve reached more than a million high schoolers and seen the first of this generation of leaders step up to tackle some issues that people twice their age are intimidated by.

But since I’ve started at ACE, I’ve heard the question: “Why high schoolers?” or “Can we really wait for high school students to become tomorrow’s leaders, given the window of opportunity on climate change?” more than I ever would have expected.

Sometimes, I cite statistics on how influential high schoolers are on their peers, their family decisions and their schools.

Sometimes, I show videos of students we’ve worked with speaking at Power Shift, taking meetings at the White House, speaking at school board meetings and state assemblies about local environmental issues.

And sometimes I even show the findings that most high school students would fail a test on basic climate science without ACE.

Why we focus on high schoolers is simple.

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Economy

Romney’s Housing ‘White Paper’: No Plans For Foreclosure Prevention, Just Debunked Right-Wing Rhetoric

Our guest blogger is John Griffith, a Policy Analyst with the Economic Policy team at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

There’s an old rule of thumb in politics: if you have rotten news to drop, do it late on a Friday afternoon. Mitt Romney tweaked that rule yesterday: if you have a rotten policy to announce, do it at 4:00 on a Friday afternoon.

The campaign at 4:16 p.m. yesterday released a white paper laying out the Romney-Ryan housing plan, about an hour after dumping 1,200 pages of the candidate’s highly-anticipated tax returns. The paper expands on a 700-word blog post on housing from earlier this month.

Similar to Romney’s previous statements on the topic, the white paper is short on specific ways a Romney-Ryan White House would support a housing recovery, the early stages of which already appears to be underway. The plan makes broad statements about ending the housing crisis, helping families avoid foreclosure, reforming the government-controlled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and enacting sensible Wall Street regulations. But it offers little to no details on how to actually accomplish any of it.

For example, here’s everything the plan says about foreclosure prevention:

Foot-dragging by the Obama Administration has made it harder for homeowners to get alternatives to foreclosure, such as short sales, deed-in-lieu-of foreclosure and shared appreciation. A Romney-Ryan Administration will bring clarity in this area, reduce the inventory of foreclosed homes that is clogging the market, and more importantly, spare thousands of families from going through the foreclosure process.

Set aside for the moment that Romney last October vowed to let the foreclosure process “run its course and hit the bottom,” and that the president’s policies have so far helped millions of struggling families avoid foreclosure by refinancing or modifying their home loans. The paragraph above isn’t really a policy statement, but more a string of platitudes. The paper gives no details on how Romney will “give clarity” to current foreclosure prevention efforts – or even what that phrase means.

Similarly, the white paper chides the Obama administration for not moving quicker on reforming Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage financiers that the Bush administration placed under government conservatorship four years ago. “Rather than just talk about reform,” the paper says, “a Romney-Ryan Administration will protect taxpayers from additional risk in the future by reforming Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and provide a long-term, sustainable solution for the future of housing finance reform in our country.”

Sounds great. But just about everyone — including the Obama administration — agrees that Fannie and Freddie cannot continue to exist in their current form. The key questions before policymakers today are how you wind them down, how you structure the housing finance system of the future, and how you get there from here — to which Romney offers no answers.

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Health

How Less Education Leads To Lower Life Expectancy

White Americans without high school diplomas have seen their life expectancy fall by four years since 1990, according to results from a recent Health Affairs study. The New York Times reports that the drop was sharpest among less-educated white women, whose life expectancy dropped by five years, as opposed to a three year decline for less-educated men.

And the chasm between the most-educated and least-educated whites’ life expectancy is particularly striking. White men and women without high school diplomas now live an average of 67.5 years and 73.5 years respectively, while the most-educated white men and women — those with a college degree or more — live 80.4 years and 83.9 years respectively, a difference of over a decade for both genders.

Although the study does not provide definitive answers as to the cause for the decline, researchers believe that broad health trends and a general lack of access to health insurance are crucial underlying factors:

The reasons for the decline remain unclear, but researchers offered possible explanations, including a spike in prescription drug overdoses among young whites, higher rates of smoking among less educated white women, rising obesity, and a steady increase in the number of the least educated Americans who lack health insurance. [...]

The share of working-age adults with less than a high school diploma who did not have health insurance rose to 43 percent in 2006, up from 35 percent in 1993, according to Mr. Jemal at the American Cancer Society. Just 10 percent of those with a college degree were uninsured last year, the Census Bureau reported.

It is unsurprising that America’s least-educated populations struggle to find health coverage. The vast majority of Americans access health insurance through employer-provided plans, while Medicaid and other public programs provide for most of the remaining insured population. But according to the Department of Labor, the unemployment rate among Americans without high school diplomas was 14.1 percent in 2011, and their median incomes were $451 per week. Taken side-by-side, these statistics imply that less-educated populations are either unemployed, or working jobs that do not offer health benefits but pay just enough to make them ineligible for Medicaid.

“We’re used to looking at groups and complaining that their mortality rates haven’t improved fast enough, but to actually go backward is deeply troubling,” John G. Haaga, a researcher at the National Institute on Aging, remarked. Fortunately, President Obama’s health care reform law — which emphasizes preventative care measures, insurance subsidies, and an expansion of the Medicaid program — could help improve public health among the country’s poorest and least-educated populations to help reverse this trend.

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