Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Hoyer: New Abortion Act Putting Lawmakers In Tough Spot

By Gabriella Landeros

As the House of Representatives considers the “Prenatal Nondiscrimination Act” to ban sex-selection abortions and require doctors to report a woman to authorities if they suspect her of doing so, House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) spoke for many Democrats by warning that it puts lawmakers in a sticky situation.
With most proponents of the bill being against abortion no matter what, Hoyer stated, “I think this has come up because someone has decided politically that it was a difficult place to put people in, because again, any interpretation in voting against this bill is therefore for abortions for the purpose of selecting gender would be wrong, period.”
Although Hoyer is against abortion based on gender, he feels that when it comes to abortion alone, “a woman and her doctor gotta have the choice of what alternatives she wants to choose.”
It puts medical personnel in a difficult position as well, Hoyer warned, with a five year penalty if they don’t report a sex-selection abortion. Hoyer explained that doctors have to base their assumptions on the woman’s reasoning for an abortion, but if found out later they were lying, doctors are the ones getting penalized.
Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

White House Unveils Multimillion Dollar Effort To Help Hard-Hit Manufacturers

By Gabriella Landeros


The Obama administration Tuesday unveiled a $26 million, multi-agency effort to spur job growth in the manufacturing sector.

14 various federal agencies and funding partners, such as the U.S. Department of Commerce Economic Development Administration, U.S. Small Business Administration, and U.S. Department of Agriculture, “will assist the development and implementation of regionally driven economic development strategies that will remove obstacles and/or promote advanced manufacturing growth, thereby helping to enhance the competitiveness of U.S. manufacturers in the global marketplace,” Acting Assistant Commerce Secretary for Economic Development, Matt Erskine said during a conference call with reporters.

The initiative is “designed to strengthen high potential regional clusters across the country that accelerate innovation, strengthen capacity in advanced manufacturing, and foster innovation fueled job creation through public-private partnerships,” added Erskine.

Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

Drug Prohibition Holds Hidden Dangers, Warns Harvard Economist

By Gabriella Landeros

Jeffrey Miron, Harvard University’s Department of Economics Undergraduate Studies Director, told the National Economists Club Thursday that drug prohibition is likely causing more harm than good.

“Opponents of drug prohibition would argue that it actually increases crime and corruption, rather than reducing crime, that it reduces the health and productivity of drug users, rather than making people who use drugs better off, and it has a bunch of other side effects unintended for consequences,” Miron said.

“In an underground market, people can’t resolve their disputes with courts, lawyers, ballot initiatives, and so on. They are likely to resort to violence instead, that’s the obvious substitute for non-violent dispute resolution mechanisms,” added Miron.

Having to find other sources for income, such as theft or prostitution, increases overall, Miron noted, pointing out that prohibition also reduces quality control.

Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

Coburn Calls For Tax Repatriation Holiday

By Gabriella Landeros

Sen. Tom Coburn M.D. (R-Okla), writer of “The Debt Bomb: A Bold Plan to Stop Washington from Bankrupting America,” spoke on his views that would steer politics in the right direction.

With the theme “principled leadership” as the core of his book, Coburn stated, “If you want to change Washington, you have to change who’s here. You have to have people here who actually have real world experience outside of politics.”

Coburn added, “It’s leadership individually, by making this sacrifice…leading by example, and we just do not have that today in our parties, and in our president, and in our country in the political level.”

Coburn believes in maintaining the independence of Americans by creating solutions to “fix our broken entitlement system…It needs to be spoken to the American people, Medicare has to change to save it, same with Medicaid, and same with Social Security.”

The second solution for Coburn involves tax reform. He said American companies should be encouraged to investing “200 trillion sitting on the sideline.” Doing so, he said, would prevent businesses here from spending their profits overseas.

“The way we tax it now is that the money is going to be invested over there, wherever that is, and not brought home because of our punitive tax system and the fact that we don’t have a territorial tax system,” he said.

Coburn also argued that the U.S. is not using its natural resources efficiently, causing slow economic growth and lack of jobs.

“We’re sending 300 billion dollars a year out of this country, for oil and gas that we can produce here, and yet we have a policy not to do that. So if you think about 300 billion not going out of the country, and 300 billion staying here and being invested here, you would see a large response.”

Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Marketing Strategy Or Offense To Some?

This quarter I have been doing a journalism internship with the Talk Radio News Service in Washington, D.C. for my last quarter as an undergraduate. With graduating early, I thought an internship in D.C. would give me the extra training I need to sharpen my journalism skills. These past few months I have been writing about politics, foreign affairs, and various issues like student debt. I have also been using my technical skills by creating video and audio packages for the company.

During a Target trip with a couple of friends, I bumped into the "Hispanic Products" aisle. While being perplexed, and sparking my curiosity at the same time, I investigate these Hispanic foods. And what do they consist of? What I expected- tortillas, salsa, refried beans in a can. I was not too sure what was the purpose of having "Hispanic Products" taking over one aisle. People I know have commented on this before, but it's a different feeling when you see it with your own eyes and realize it's not a joke. Why couldn't the salsa be with the other condiments? Why couldn't the canned refried beans be with the garbanzo beans? or Why couldn't the tortillas be with the bread and bagels? I didn't see an aisle with "Asian Products," but apparently my friend said there was an aisle of "Ethnic Hair Products."

The reason I didn't see an aisle with "Asian Products," but did see an aisle with "Hispanic Products," is because it is a marketing strategy to grab the Latino consumers. The area I was in was Columbia Heights, an area in Washington D.C. with 58% African Americans and 34% Hispanic. How clever of companies, like Target! Although this may be racist to some, marketing is marketing, and it will for sure surpass any social constraint to get its product across. A friend from San Diego, CA said their Target has the same thing, makes sense if San Diego is just minutes from the Mexico-United States border.

Is this becoming a new trend for companies? One may think it's a marketing strategy since people love Latin food and want everything in one place, while some may actually take offense to it. Whatever it is, it will not stop companies from conforming to the majority of their shoppers. With Hispanics counting 16.3% of the U.S. population and increasing every year, creating a new age of a "Hispanic boom," manufacturers will continue to target Hispanic consumers in the most evident areas.


Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Van Hollen: Dems Wanted “Balanced” Approach To Thwarting Sequestration

By Gabriella Landeros

Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) told reporters Monday that Democrats had a plan to dodge sequestration with a “balanced” approach but ultimately saw the Republican effort to avoid Defense cuts steal the stage.

“It combined cuts with cuts to tax breaks for special interest, and very wealthy Americans very specifically,” Van Hollen said during on a conference call. “Our plan would have ended the add subsidies that take the form of direct payments, these are payments that go to agribusinesses in good times and bad…The Democratic plan also would have ended many of the taxpayer subsidies for the big oil companies, the big five.”

Van Hollen noted that the Republican plan, which is considered Dead on Arrival in the Senate, “cut deeply into food and nutrition programs for kids and struggling families.”

The Republican plan aimed at staving off $98 billion in automatic defense cuts instead promised $242 billion over the next decade in cuts among entitlement programs and financial reforms.

Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Boehner: Focus On Jobs, Not Same-Sex Marriage

By Gabriella Landeros
House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) Thursday signaled that he would much rather talk about the Republican agenda than the President’s recent endorsement of same-sex marriages.
“The President can take about it all he wants, I’m going to stay focused on what the American people want us to stay focused on, and that’s jobs” Boehner said during a press conference.
When pressed on his take over whether or not same-sex marriage is a civil rights issue, Boehner delivered a similar response, saying “I believe marriage is the union between one man and one woman. The President and the Democrats can talk about this all they want, but the he fact is that the American people are focused on our economy, and are asking the question ‘Where are the jobs’?”
Added Boehner, “Today, half of new college grads are not going to be able to find a job. In between a weak job market, fallen home prices, and the rising costs of living, the American people are getting squeezed. They are getting squeezed because President Obama’s economic policies have failed.”
Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

House Republican Defends Planned Parenthood Funding

By Gabriella Landeros

Rep. Robert Dold (R-IL.) broke with his party Wednesday by introducing legislation to ensure that Title X funding continues to include funding for family planning, including the organization Planned Parenthood.

The Protecting Women’s Health Care Act “ensures non-discrimination within federal Title X family planning program” Dold told reporters, explaining that it would prevent states from taking action within their legislatures to block funds from going toward Planned Parenthood.

“Access to care shouldn’t be jeopardized, simply due to discrimination against hospitals and health care entities based upon separate services that they choose to offer,” Dold said, noting that for some patients, Title X funding which supports Planned Parenthood, is the only thing women can rely on to access services such as HIV testing and contraception.

“For over 40 years, Title X has provided access to contraception and health education to women. This funding also provides preventive health care, HIV testing, annual exams, cancer screenings, and so much more,” Dold added.

Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

Sebelius Unveils New Grants To Improve Access To Health Care

By Gabriella Landeros

Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius unveiled 26 new grants that she said will fund innovative projects to improve health care across the country.

Last November, healthcare providers, businesses, community groups and entrepreneurs were tasked with providing new ideas on how to spend health care dollars more effectively to benefit the communities they serve.

Turning an idea into an action, Sebelius announced that $122 million in grants would be awarded to some of those who rose to the occasion and developed some new innovative ideas to effectively improve health care in their communities. Some recipients have taken it upon themselves to create new ways to improve access to Medicare and Medicaid recipients in low access communities.

Dr. Timothy Buchman, the founding director of the Emery Center for Critical Care and recipient of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation Health Care Innovation Award, said the new funding would increase patients’ access to health care they need at a hospital closer to their homes. Buchman said that long distance travel for adequate care is a burden for many Medicare and Medicaid patients in his home state of Georgia.

Patti DePompei, interim president of the Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital at University Hospitals Case Medical Center from Cleveland, Ohio, also spoke on the impact new funding would have on rural communities in Ohio.

“We will develop a physician extension team that brings the clinical expertise of Rainbow and community physicians to patients, in order to reach the targets of better care and better health at lower cost.”

Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Panel Takes Deeper Look Into Arizona’s Anti-Immigration Law

By Gabriella Landeros

While the Supreme Court holds the fate of Arizona’s anti-immigration law, S.B. 1070, a panel of representatives joined at the the Congressional Immigration Solutions Conference to state their arguments regarding the immigration issue, which has stirred a heated debate for many.

Rev. Phil Reller from Los Angeles, Calif. said that, based on personal accounts, the Arizona immigration law and other similar laws have negatively impacted communities and the economy, specifically in cases where young children are separated from their parents.

“The current system is basically, it’s bad law,” said Norman Adams, President and Co-Founder of Texans for Sensible Immigration Policy, echoing Reller’s sentiment and expressing his belief that immigrant workers are an integral part of local economies.

Bill Montgomery, a local county attorney from Phoenix, Ariz. said that the only solution to the nation’s immigration problem is to implement a comprehensive immigration bill that reforms the nation’s current policies.

“Secure our sovereign borders, account for all those in our nation who have lawful authority, engage in necessary bureaucratic reform, and engage all levels of government for ongoing internal enforcement,” he said. “Our border must be operationally secured for several important reasons… There is an international security component to that. In the last five years we have had people detained at our borders, just detained from every single country that’s on our terror watch list [and] we also now have the problem with transnational criminal organizations.”

Montgomery suggested a “three year hiatus” solution that would tone down enforcement against individuals and employers, during which time undocumented immigrants would be able to come forward, declare where they’re working and what their skill set is.”

“If they committed a felony they are subject to deportation,” Montgomery said. “Employers also, they must pay the back taxes for those individuals. At the end of the three year time frame, if they pass the background check then they would be permitted to apply for permanent legal residency. But if they want to become a citizen they are going to have to go back to their country of origin to come back in the legal way.”

Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.

White House Counterterror Adviser Defends Drone Use

By Gabriella Landeros

John Brennan, the White House’s Chief Counterterrorism adviser, defended the U.S. reliance on drones Monday, stating that the use of the unmanned vehicles is not just legal, but also moral.

“Targeted strikes conform to the principle of humanity which requires us to use weapons that will not inflict unnecessary suffering,” Brennan said during remarks before the Woodrow Wilson Center, a Washington, D.C. based think-tank. “It is hard to imagine a tool that can better minimize the risk to civilians than remotely piloted aircraft.”

Brennan added that the scope of the threat also justified the pattern of targeted strikes.

“Despite the great progress we’ve made against al-Qa’ida, it would be a mistake to believe this threat has passed. Al-Qa’ida and its associated forces still have the intent to attack the United States,” Brennan said.

Brennan went on to address the most contested examples of drone use, the strike against American-born extremist Anwar al-Awlaki.

“We have seen lone individuals, including American citizens- often inspired by al-Qa’ida’s murderous ideology- kill innocent Americans and seek to do us harm.”

The use of drones, which has multiplied under the Obama administration, has proven to be controversial. In Pakistan particularly, where their presence is prevalent, the officials have become increasingly frustrated, citing inadvertent civilian deaths.

The issue has also riled some human rights activists on American soil, exemplified during Brennan’s speech by a “Code Pink” activist who disrupted the remarks.

While Brennan argued that their use was primarily just, he acknowledged that it was not necessarily a clear-cut issue.

“If anyone in government who works in this area tells you they haven’t struggled with this, then they haven’t spent much time thinking about it,” Brennan said. “I know I have, and I will continue to struggle with it as long as I remain involved in counterterrorism.”

Read the original article on the Talk Radio News Service site.