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The Next Election

November 5, 2004
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Let’s face it. Most politicians use the mass media to obfuscate. Voters who don’t do their homework, who don’t study records of the politicians, and who can’t separate the words from the deeds will easily fall into traps laid by wily politicians.In 2002, Connecticut Governor John Rowland was running for re-election against his Democratic opponent,…

Making Votes Count on Medical Malpractice Issues

October 21, 2004
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The callous politics of profit over people are in play every fourth November, but on November 2nd 2004, voters in four states — Florida, Oregon, Nevada and Wyoming — will be voting on various measures of tort reform that would essentially limit the rights of those grossly injured by medical malpractice errors in those states.…

A Participation in Power

October 15, 2004
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“Freedom is participation in power,” said the Roman orator Cicero. By this deep definition, freedom is in short supply for tens of millions of Americans, a scarcity with serious consequences. This absence of freedom breeds apathy. Average citizens do not fight for change, even about the conditions and causes that mean the most to them.…

Environmental Protection

October 1, 2004
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During a stretch of years in the late 1960s and 1970s, the young environmental movement, rippling with exuberant grassroots power and loaded with powerful arguments, pushed through a series of bedrock federal laws: the National Environmental Policy Act, Clean Air and Clean Water Act amendments, the Environmental Protection Act, the Endangered Species Act, the Safe…

Fighting Corporate Crime

September 25, 2004
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In response to corporate crime waves, the government usually passes a series of meek reforms (like the Sarbanes Oxley law of 2002). Over the years, our citizen groups have introduced numerous proposals to crack down on corporate crime, including: the FBI creation of an annual Corporate Crime in the United States report; tripling the budgets…

Leave No Calories Behind

September 17, 2004
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For years, many school administrators, hard pressed to find extra funds to finance student activities and supplement needed classroom supplies, have allowed the installation of vending machines which dispense soft drinks, candy and a variety of junk foods. The machines may well be significant money makers, but it is a sad and ill thought out…

The Buddy-to-buddy Regulatory System

September 10, 2004
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Banks and their regulators have always enjoyed a cozy relationship. Regulators are notorious for going slow in clamping down hard on practices that might be unsafe and unsound. Cease and desist orders, a weapon available to all the regulators, are used sparingly and usually only in the most egregious cases. The hundreds of billions of…

The Plight of Labor

September 5, 2004
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Labor Day comes and goes — but Congress does little to improve the plight of workers in our country. In the last three decades our elected officials have too often chosen to side with big corporations rather than the working people in the United States. In the face of aggressive employer demands for concessions, the…

Risk of a Viral Pandemic

August 27, 2004
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The war in Iraq is doing more than wasting human lives and vast sums of money and goodwill for the United States around the world. As the quagmire of Iraq deepens, other issues affecting the vital health and economic well-being of our citizens are being ignored by the Bush Administration. The costs of this neglect…

Court Funding

August 22, 2004
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You won’t find the Judges’ Journal on any newstands, but the Summer 2004 issue headlined “Justice in Jeopardy: The State Court Funding Crisis” will affect you more than most of the magazines that are so posted. State court budgets all over the country are being cut, which means reduced services and longer delays for trials…