Your Support Today is Worth TWICE as Much


National Women's Law Center
I know you agree it’s been a busy time in Washington. With your support we’ve won some big victories for women, girls and families in 2010 — but with a far more hostile Congress convening in January, some of these gains are in peril. And we have so much more to do. 

Please make an urgent contribution to the Center’s year-end campaign — every dollar you donate will be matched dollar for dollar by our Board of Directors, up to a total of $60,000.

Just consider:

In the last year, Congress debated ways to fix our broken health care system. The Center went to work. We sought to stop insurers from charging women higher premiums than men. We sought to provide insurance for 32 million Americans who had none. And we sought to end the trauma of women being denied coverage by insurance companies who consider Cesareans and domestic violence to be “preexisting conditions.”

We documented the discrimination women face. We put women’s health needs front and center through our “Being a Woman Is Not a Pre-existing Condition” campaign.

With your help, we were a leader in the coalition that got health care done.

In the last year, the recession continued to be devastating. We knew that funding child care helped women keep their jobs and support their families. We worked with advocates and policymakers to help states use new funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to stave off child care cuts — and improve the quality of care.

With your help we’ll continue to protect these most vulnerable Americans.

This year, President Obama nominated Elena Kagan for the Supreme Court. We went to work. We researched her superb record. We testified at her Senate confirmation hearings. We explained why having three women sitting together on the Supreme Court matters. She’s now on the Court.

With your help we got that done.

But now we’re up against what will certainly be one of the most challenging sessions of Congress in recent years, with many more Members hostile to core rights and programs critical to women’s lives. But if we’ve learned one thing in our 38 years, it’s this — that victories are possible even in the toughest of times.

Your support will never make a bigger difference. And between now and December 31st, the Board will match your gift dollar for dollar, up to a total of $60,000.

Please give generously. For women and families everywhere, you have our deepest thanks.

Sincerely,

Nancy Duff Campbell Nancy Duff Campbell
Co-President
National Women’s Law Center
Marcia Greenberger Marcia Greenberger
Co-President
National Women’s Law Center

Stop the Slaughter


Save whales - donate now

The Japanese fleet is planning to slaughter more than 1,000 whales this season. 

Whale tail, whaling, oceans, whales

Please donate

As you read this e-mail, the Japanese whaling fleet is steaming towards the Southern Ocean to begin their annual whale slaughter. Their planned death “quota” this season: nearly 1,000 minke whales, 50 humpback whales, and 50 endangered fin whales.

We must stop this massacre now.

During the 2008 campaign, then-Senator Obama said, “As president, I will ensure that the U.S. provides leadership in enforcing international wildlife protection agreements, including the international moratorium on commercial whaling.” Three more whaling seasons have come and gone since Obama spoke those words, and no change has been made.

Please rush your most generous contribution as we put pressure on President Obama to fulfill his campaign promise!

“Allowing Japan to continue commercial whaling is unacceptable,” as President Obama himself has stated, and Greenpeace is rallying support to put a stop to the slaughter, once and for all.

Commercial whaling is not only unacceptable—it’s a violation of international law.

Picture a Japanese harpoon ship speeding through the Southern Ocean. Suddenly, the harpooner spots a mother whale and her calf. The sounds of the ocean are drowned out by the blasts of exploding-tip harpoons being fired at the whales.

The pair struggles to free themselves from the harpoon lines for nearly an hour, desperately thrashing their tails in the water, before a gunman finally steps onto the deck and shoots them dead. The mother whale and her baby are dragged up the ship’s slipway, leaving a long trail of blood behind them.

Much to our frustration, in a few days time this tragic scene will play out in the Southern Ocean over and over again. Greenpeace needs your help, and the help of President Obama, to put an end to the slaughter of our oceans’ most  unique, intelligent, and emotional creatures.

Please help us stop this terrible massacre and save the lives of these whales with your most generous donation NOW.

Together, we can let Japan know that commercial whaling has no place in the 21st Century.

For the whales,
John
John Hocevar
Ocean Campaigns Director

PS: Greenpeace cannot save the lives of these whales—or continue our campaigns to stop global warming, protect our forests, and defend our oceans—without your support. Please rush your emergency contribution today!

IMMIGRATION: Obstructing Dreams


IN MEMORIAM: Yesterday, our dear friend and colleague Elizabeth Edwards passed away, after waging a courageous struggle against breast cancer. With her trademark courage, activism, and strong sense of justice, Elizabeth directly confronted the inequalities of the American health care system and the politicians who perpetuated them. Writing on our ThinkProgress blog in 2008, Elizabeth — who was a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress —  challenged conservatives for releasing a health care plan that would have excluded millions of Americans who suffered from pre-existing or chronic conditions. “Why are people like me left out of your health care proposal,” Elizabeth asked Republicans. Through congressional testimonies, public speeches, blog posts, and countless television appearances, Elizabeth emphasized the human and moral dimension of the health care debate. We’ll miss her greatly, but we won’t forget her wonderful legacy. CAP President and CEO John Podesta said, “Her legacy is the passion, resolve, and optimism that she brought to her work, and it will give us the sense of renewed purpose to keep fighting for fairness.”
On Monday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV)  filed cloture on the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act, setting the stage for a vote to take place as early as today. Last Thursday, Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) announced that the House of Representatives would  be moving on the DREAM Act later this week. The House is also expected to vote today. Gutierrez went as far to say that “the bill has enough support to pass through the lower chamber,” according to  The Hill. However, getting the 60 votes needed in the Senate is proving to be an uphill battle. Politico predicts that “[w]hen the Senate roll-call vote comes up Wednesday, there may be few, if any, GOP supporters.” Rather than debating the DREAM Act on its merits, many Republicans are resorting to lies and misinformation to justify their opposition to a bill that would allow young undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. by their parents from becoming productive members of society. As Michael Gerson, a former Bush aide,  explained in the Washington Post, “The Dream Act would be a potent incentive for assimilation. But for some, assimilation clearly is not the goal. They have no intention of sharing the honor of citizenship with anyone called illegal — even those who came as children, have grown up as neighbors and would be willing to give their lives in the nation’s cause.”

POLITICS OF FEAR: Ever since Reid indicated that he would introduce the DREAM Act, Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL), together with Reps. Steve King (R-IA) and Lamar Smith (R-TX), have been leading the GOP’s attack against it. According to  Sessions and many of his Republican colleagues, the DREAM Act would give preference to “illegal aliens,” create loopholes for terrorists, destroy the economy, and encourage more illegal immigration. “The arguments mustered in opposition to the DREAM Act have never been particularly persuasive,”   writes the Center for American Progress’ Marshall Fitz in a piece exposing the flaws in DREAM Act opponents’ most common arguments. Now that Reid recently introduced a modified version of the DREAM Act that specifically addresses just about every criticism of the original bill, these arguments simply don’t hold any water. DREAM Act applicants must go through a rigorous process of background checks, in addition to paying taxes, learning English, and either serving in the military or attending college. The new version does not confer permanent immigrant status to anyone for at least ten years. Instead, it grants “conditional nonimmigrant status” and specifically excludes nonimmigrants from the health insurance exchanges, Medicaid, food stamps, in-state tuition or Pell and other federal grants. DREAM Act individuals would have very limited ability to sponsor family members for a U.S. visa and would have to wait at least a decade before they would even be able to do so. The new bill also lowers the age cap for eligibility from 35 to 29 on the date of enactment.

ECONOMIC BOON: Even after Reid introduced a modified DREAM Act last week, Sessions and his fellow Republicans continued  demanding that it be put on hold because lawmakers haven’t been given the opportunity to “properly review and consider the legislation prior to a vote.” One of his primary complaints was that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) had not yet scored the costs associated with enacting the legislation. On Friday, the CBO released its  results. The CBO found that putting thousands of young, undocumented immigrants on a path to legalization would increase revenues by $2.3 billion over ten years and reduce the deficit by $1.4 billion over the same time period. The CBO score didn’t come as a surprise to those who had already studied the issue. Rather than working in the underground economy, DREAM Act students who receive a bachelor’s degree would have the opportunity to actually use their college education to boost their income which results in increased tax revenue. A recent   study by the UCLA North American Integration and Development Center showed that the total earnings of DREAM Act beneficiaries over the course of their working lives would generate approximately $1.4 trillion to $3.6 trillion over a 40-year period. Arizona State University   found that people who obtain a bachelor’s degree earn approximately $750,000 more over the course of their lifetime than those who only have high-school diploma. Though the CBO did note that “the bill would increase projected deficits by more than $5 billion in at least one of the four consecutive 10-year periods starting in 2021,” it did not provide a complementary estimate of how much money legalized youth would continue to pay into the system after 2020. It’s reasonable to expect that if they contribute $2.8 billion during their first ten years working in the U.S. with a “conditional nonimmigrant” status, this number will continue to grow as they progress in their careers and eventually qualify for legal permanent residency and, ultimately, citizenship.

A COSTLY ALTERNATIVE: Unfortunately, neither the revised version of the DREAM Act nor the positive CBO score seem to have had a significant impact on the Republican mindset. In fact, even Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN) — who co-sponsored the DREAM Act in 2009 — is  saying he “doesn’t like the political games being played” and is exploring his options. Yet, the alternatives the GOP proposes would cost billions more than even the most  far-fetched estimates put forth on the DREAM Act so far. The Center for American Progress recently found that a successful policy of mass deportation would total approximately  $285 billion within five years alone. It would also cost each American man, woman, and child $922 in new taxes. Mass deportation would amount to a $2.6 trillion in cumulative lost GDP over ten years, not including the actual cost of deportation. Since it costs approximately $23,148 for each person to be apprehended, detained, legally processed, and finally transported it would cost about $25.5 billion to deport the 1.1 million undocumented immigrants who would actually receive legal permanent resident status as a result of the DREAM Act. Of course, these costs don’t even take into account the lives enforcement-only immigration policies destroys and the communities it tears apart. Meanwhile, it is projected that by 2025, our nation will be short  16 million college-educated workers. To retake that top spot in educational attainment, the U.S. would have to add 1 million college degrees per year through 2025. Put simply, passing the DREAM Act could help abate a national crisis. Deporting talent will only make a bad situation worse.

Bankrate.com


Here are stories published today
5 car-buying tips for Frosty the Snowman | 2010-12-07
If you’re willing to brave the elements to car shop, these tips will help you get the best deal.

to Senate: Vacation can wait


Human Rights Campaign

Tell your senators: Our troops are more important than a holiday vacation.

It takes two minutes. It’s their job to take your call – and you could help make history.

Unless we speak out right now, the Senate could put their holiday vacations before fairness and national security.

A group of pro-equality senators is calling on the Senate to stay in session until “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” is repealed. But too many others want to go home before the holidays instead of staying to finish the job.

So now, it’s up to us. We’ve got to pressure wavering senators and give those supporting repeal the public backing they need to keep the Senate in business.

We can’t let the Senate close up shop without repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” But we’re running out of time – please call your senators now.

It only takes two minutes to call your senator‘s office and every senator has staff on hand to answer the phones and speak to constituents. Call your senators now:

Sen. Patty Murray at (202) 224-2621 and Sen. Maria Cantwell at (202) 224-3441.

If you don’t get through right away, try again – the phones may be overwhelmed by hateful calls from right-wing activists, but it’s crucial that your voice is heard.

  1. Call one senator’s office, and tell the staff person who answers where you live so they know you’re a real constituent.
  2. Tell them you want the senator to support staying in session for as long as it takes to pass the defense bill, which includes repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” this year – and that you’ll remember how they vote when they’re next up for election.
       

    • If your senator is opposed to repeal, remind them that the Secretary of Defense and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff believe that if the Senate fails to repeal “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” it would leave the military at the mercy of the courts – and potentially in a state of great confusion from the law being suddenly struck down.
    •  

  • Thank them, hang up, and make your second call to the other senator.
  • Click here to let us know you made a call – we use this information to guide our lobbying efforts, so please don’t skip it.
  • You’re not done: Save the Congressional Switchboard number – (202) 224-3121 – in your cell phone right now. Then hand it to a friend, then a co-worker, and ask them to make two calls. While you’re at it, tell your family and your Facebook friends to call as well.

    We need as many calls as possible in order to make repeal happen in 2010.

    The time for debate is over. Let’s end the discrimination and prejudice once and for all.

    I’ll be making calls too,

    Eric Alva
    Joe Solmonese
    President

    P.S. Years of work, thousands of volunteer hours, hundreds of thousands of phone calls, emails, lobby visits and town halls come down to this. Please call now, and tell everyone you know to call!