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Cynthia McCune's Library tagged nytimes   View Popular

Editorial Notebook - Memphis - NYTimes.com

If I had to name the best short story in the form of a song lyric, I suspect the winner would be Chuck Berry’s “Memphis, Tennessee”

link to song for rnr class blog post

www.nytimes.com/...02mon4.html - Preview

music rock 'n' roll rocknroll lyrics nytimes

22 Oct 09

Safety Nets for the Rich - Columnist Bob Herbert - NYTimes.com

  • If some company is too big to fail, then it’s too big to exist. Break it up.
10 Oct 09

The Uneducated American - Paul Krugman - NYTimes.com

The decline of American education ... and America.

www.nytimes.com/...09krugman.html - Preview

education budget cuts nytimes krugman

  • laid-off teachers are only part of the story. Even more important is the way that we’re shutting off opportunities.
04 Oct 09

Cracks in the Future - Bob Herbert - NYTimes.com

The death of higher education in California ... and across the nation.

www.nytimes.com/...03herbert.html - Preview

education California budget cuts nytimes

27 Aug 09

Health Care Fit for Animals - Op-Ed Columnist Nicholas D. Kristof - NYTimes.com

A former health insurance exec repents his evil ways.

www.nytimes.com/...27kristof.html - Preview

health insurance healthcare policy politics nytimes

  • Mr. Potter argues that much tougher regulation is essential. He also believes that a robust public option is an essential part of any health reform, to compete with for-profit insurers and keep them honest.
  • All this is monstrous, and it negates the entire point of insurance, which is to spread risk.
  • 5 more annotations...
24 Aug 09

Study Finds That Online Education Beats the Classroom - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com

“On average, students in online learning conditions performed better than those receiving face-to-face instruction.”

bits.blogs.nytimes.com/...-education-beats-the-classroom - Preview

education online learning onlinelearning educational_technology teaching nytimes

  • Mr. Regier sees things evolving fairly rapidly, accelerated by the increasing use of social networking technology. More and more, students will help and teach each other, he said.
  • But Mr. Regier also thinks online education will continue to make further inroads in transforming college campuses as well.
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The Guns of August - Op-Ed Columnist Frank Rich - NYTimes.com

Scary right-wing gun nuts and the assault on American democracy.

www.nytimes.com/...23rich.html - Preview

obama protests guns Republicans radicals Rich nytimes

  • If the president insists that enemies like this are his friends — and that the nuts they represent can be placated by reason — he will waste his opportunity to effect real change and have no one to blame but himself.
  • if Republicans actually carried out their filibuster threats on health care, it would be a political bonanza for the Democrats.
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21 Aug 09

Op-Ed Columnist - Obama’s Trust Problem - NYTimes.com

  • It’s hard to avoid the sense that Mr. Obama has wasted months trying to appease people who can’t be appeased, and who take every concession as a sign that he can be rolled.

    Indeed, no sooner were there reports that the administration might accept co-ops as an alternative to the public option than G.O.P. leaders announced that co-ops, too, were unacceptable.

    So progressives are now in revolt. Mr. Obama took their trust for granted, and in the process lost it. And now he needs to win it back.

  • It seems as if there is nothing Republicans can do that will draw an administration rebuke: Senator Charles E. Grassley feeds the death panel smear, warning that reform will “pull the plug on grandma,” and two days later the White House declares that it’s still committed to working with him.
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19 Aug 09

This Is Reform? - Bob Herbert - NYTimes.com

If you can't make it better, then don't bother trying.

www.nytimes.com/...18herbert.html - Preview

health healthcare health insurance policy reform nytimes

  • The hope of a government-run insurance option is all but gone. So there will be no effective alternative for consumers in the market for health coverage, which means no competitive pressure for private insurers to rein in premiums and other charges.
  • Think of it: The government is planning to require most uninsured Americans to buy health coverage. Millions of young and healthy individuals will be herded into the industry’s welcoming arms. This is the population the insurers drool over.
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18 Aug 09

Op-Ed Contributor - Health Care’s Generation Gap - NYTimes.com

  • With so much evidence of wasteful and even harmful treatment, shouldn’t we instantly cut some of the money spent on exorbitant intensive-care medicine for dying, elderly people and redirect it to pediatricians and obstetricians offering preventive care for children and mothers?
  • One thing’s for sure: Our health care system has failed. Generational spending wars loom on the horizon. Rationing of health care is imminent. But given the political inertia, we could soon find ourselves in a triage situation in which there is no time or money to create medical-review boards to ponder cost-containment issues or rationing schemes. We’ll be forced to implement quick-and-dirty rules based on something simple, sensible and easily verifiable. Like age. As in: No federal funds to be spent on intensive-care medicine for anyone over 85.
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The Swiss Menace - Columnist Paul Krugman -NYTimes.com

  • So where does Obamacare fit into all this? Basically, it’s a plan to Swissify America, using regulation and subsidies to ensure universal coverage.
  • the third route to universal coverage relies on private insurance companies, using a combination of regulation and subsidies to ensure that everyone is covered. Switzerland offers the clearest example: everyone is required to buy insurance, insurers can’t discriminate based on medical history or pre-existing conditions, and lower-income citizens get government help in paying for their policies.

    In this country, the Massachusetts health reform more or less follows the Swiss model; costs are running higher than expected, but the reform has greatly reduced the number of uninsured. And the most common form of health insurance in America, employment-based coverage, actually has some “Swiss” aspects: to avoid making benefits taxable, employers have to follow rules that effectively rule out discrimination based on medical history and subsidize care for lower-wage workers.

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16 Aug 09

Thousands Line Up for Promise of Free Health Care - NYTimes.com

  • The enormous response to the free care was a stark corollary to the hundreds of Americans who have filled town-hall-style meetings throughout the country, angrily expressing their fear of the Obama administration’s proposed changes to the nation’s health care system. The bleachers of patients also reflected the state’s high unemployment, recent reduction in its Medicaid services for the poor and high deductibles and co-payments that have come to define many employer-sponsored insurance programs.

    Many of those here said they lacked insurance, but many others said they had coverage but not enough to meet all their needs — or that they could afford. Some said they were well aware of the larger national health care debate, and were eager for changes.

  • Begun in 1985 as a mobile health clinic serving undeveloped countries and later rural America, Remote Area Medical provides various medical services through units to people who are largely unable to gain access to health care. Officials from the organization said they believed that this week’s event in Los Angeles constituted the largest free health care event in the country, with the arena and all supplies and services provided free to the group. Other expenses were covered by the group’s fund-raising.

While My Guitar Gently Beeps - The Beatles - Rock Band - NYTimes.com

  • The band that upended the cultural landscape of the 1960s is now hitching its legacy to the medium of a new generation: the video game.
  • games intensify people’s engagement with music.
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Op-Ed Contributor - Why We Need Health Care Reform - NYTimes.com

  • four main ways the reform we’re proposing will provide more stability and security to every American
  • what’s truly scary — truly risky — is the prospect of doing nothing. If we maintain the status quo, we will continue to see 14,000 Americans lose their health insurance every day. Premiums will continue to skyrocket. Our deficit will continue to grow. And insurance companies will continue to profit by discriminating against sick people.
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02 Aug 09

End-of-Life Decisions: Medicare Is Already in the Room

  • The bigger irony, one that encapsulates our national innocence of death, is the assumption behind the Medicare rumor -- that people can indeed decide how they wish to die
  • But the reality is that our last rite of passage is shaped by relinquishing control, over decision-making among other things.
  • 5 more annotations...

Health Care Realities - Op-Ed / Paul Krugman - NYTimes.com

  • getting the government involved in health care wouldn’t be a radical step: the government is already deeply involved, even in private insurance
  • private markets for health insurance, left to their own devices, work very badly: insurers deny as many claims as possible, and they also try to avoid covering people who are likely to need care.
  • 4 more annotations...
31 Jul 09

What’s Wrong With a Single-Payer System? - The Conversation Blog - NYTimes.com

  • Since something like a third of the cost of health care is in administration, and the problem with reorganizing health care has to do with all the multitudinous plans and policies, a single-payer system would be far and away the most cost effective answer.
  • The opponents of a public plan are afraid that people would all gradually migrate toward it, causing the insurance industry as we know it to wither away. Wouldn’t that be a good thing?
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27 Jul 09

Op-Ed Columnist - And That’s Not the Way It Is - NYTimes.com

  • his finest, and most discomforting, achievements are being sanitized or forgotten
  • What matters about Cronkite is that he knew when to stop being reassuring Uncle Walter and to challenge those who betrayed his audience’s trust. He had the guts to confront not only those in power but his own bosses. Given the American press’s catastrophe of our own day — its failure to unmask and often even to question the White House propaganda campaign that plunged us into Iraq — these attributes are as timely as ever.
  • 2 more annotations...
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