The health and climate consequences of the American food system cost three times as much as the food itself

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A new report provides a roadmap to creating a post-pandemic food system with greater fairness, fewer adverse climate impacts and better health outcomes. 

The true cost of food is even higher than you think, a new report out Thursday says.

The U.S. spends $1.1 trillion a year on food. But when the impacts of the food system on different parts of our society — including rising health care costs, climate change and biodiversity loss — are factored in, the bill is around three times that, according to a report by the Rockefeller Foundation, a private charity that funds medical and agricultural research.

Using government statistics, scientific literature and insights from experts across the food system, the researchers quantified things like the share of direct medical costs attributable to diet and food, as well as the productivity loss associated with those health problems. They also looked at how crop cultivation and ranching, and other aspects of U.S. food production impacted the environment. Focusing on the production, processing, distribution, retail and consumption stages of the food system (not including food service), they evaluated what it would cost to restore people’s health, wealth or environment back to an undamaged state, as well as the cost of preventing a recurrence of the problems. Continue reading.

Steve Schmidt rains hell on the ‘moral rot’ of Fox News and Rupert Murdoch for vaccine lies

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In a series of tweets posted early Friday morning, former Republican Party campaign consultant Steve Schmidt pointed an accusing finger at Fox News, various personalities on the conservative network and media mogul Rupert Murdoch for being responsible for thousands of deaths from COVID-19 and claimed they have “blood on their hands.”

Reacting to a report that Fox News star Tucker Carlson laughed off questions over whether he has been vaccinated despite his nightly questioning of whether vaccines are needed, Schmidt — who ran former Sen. John McCain’s presidential campaign against Barack Obama — fired off a volley of attacks that ended with him calling Fox News “one of the singularly most corrupt institutions that has ever existed in the history of the United States.”

Tagging Carlson and Fox News colleague Laura Ingraham in this his first tweet, Schmidt pointed out that they and their families have been vaccinated while encouraging their viewers to avoid in the name of freedom. Continue reading.

Phillips, Chabot Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Expand and Strengthen Telehealth Services

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The complications caused by the COVID-19 pandemic reveal urgent need for modern remote health access

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, Rep. Dean Phillips (D-MN) and Steve Chabot (R-OH) announced the introduction of the bipartisan Telehealth Coverage and Payment Parity Act (H.R. 4480) aimed at improving Americans’ access to health care whenever and wherever they need it. The bipartisan legislation pushes for permanent coverage and payment parity for telehealth services at the federal level.

With the country still grappling with the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, safe access to medical providers – especially for the sick and vulnerable – is more important now than it ever has been. Meaningful policy change is necessary to support the expansion of telehealth services to meet the demand for remote care.  

The bill will ensure the country continues telehealth payment parity past the pandemic, increasing Americans access to care. The bill will require payers to cover the same telehealth services as Medicare, establish parity between in-person and telehealth covered services, and eliminate burdensome and unnecessary regulations around location for providers.

“It’s time to build a 21st century health care system that utilizes new technology developed throughout the pandemic to keep people well,” said Rep. Phillips. “For many conditions, there is simply no reason for healthcare to be tied to brick-and-mortar institutions. Telehealth has allowed us to effectively deliver care during the COVID-19 pandemic, but some of the flexibilities put in place to ensure Americans have access to care will be reversed when the public health emergency expires unless Congress acts to preserve them. I’m on a mission to make our progress permanent.”

“In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the American people are discovering new ways to address issues we face in our daily lives,” said Rep. Chabot. “One of those innovations has been the widespread adoption of telehealth options by health care providers.  Telehealth gives patients an efficient and safe method to access routine medical services without unnecessary office visits.  The important, bipartisan legislation we’re introducing today will make sure that more Americans have access to the safety and convenience that telehealth provides.”

Since the outbreak of COVID-19, telehealth has seen a dramatic expansion as providers have looked for ways to offer services without increasing the risk of exposure to COVID-19. It’s necessary for Congress to act on making telehealth services efficient and accessible, even after the pandemic. The Telehealth Coverage and Payment Parity Act will:

  • Prohibit restrictions on which conditions can be managed remotely
  • Establish parity between telehealth and in-person visits
  • Guarantee all medically necessary benefits in ERISA plans are covered via telehealth
  • Remove location-based regulations for providers

Two men charged in alleged plot to firebomb California Democratic Party headquarters

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Two men have been charged in an alleged plot to firebomb the California Democratic Party’s headquarters in Sacramento, according to an indictment unsealed Thursday.

Ian Benjamin Rogers and Jarrod Copeland were “prompted by the outcome of the 2020 Presidential election” and believed their attack would spark a “movement,” according to federal prosecutors, who said the men were members of a militia group.

Law enforcement officers seized five pipe bombs, thousands of rounds of ammunition and “between 45 and 50 firearms, including at least three fully-automatic weapons” during a January search of Rogers’s home and business, according to the indictment. Continue reading.

CDC director warns of ‘pandemic of the unvaccinated’ as cases rise

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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Rochelle Walensky warned of rising cases on Friday, stating that COVID-19 is “becoming a pandemic of the unvaccinated” and that vaccinated people are protected against severe disease.

The highly transmissible delta variant is fueling expanding outbreaks, but they are centered in parts of the country with lower vaccination rates.

“This is becoming a pandemic of the unvaccinated,” Walensky said during a White House press briefing. “We are seeing outbreaks of cases in parts of the country that have low vaccination coverage, because unvaccinated people are at risk.” Continue reading.

GOP lawmakers mad Biden fired Social Security head for damaging agency

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Social Security Commissioner Andrew Saul is refusing to accept his removal.

President Joe Biden fired former President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Social Security Administration on Friday, accusing him of damaging the agency. Congressional Republicans are livid, suggesting that his ouster will imperil Social Security.

Andrew Saul, who was appointed to a six-year term as Social Security commissioner in 2019, is a wealthy investor and longtime Republican megadonor. His deputy commissioner, David Black, resigned Friday at the request of the president; Saul refused to resign or to accept his firing.

“I consider myself the term-protected commissioner of Social Security,” Saul told the Washington Post on Monday. “I quite frankly feel I’m doing an excellent job there.” Continue reading.

Reformer Radio: Where the economy goes from here

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Unemployment in Minnesota has returned to near pre-pandemic lows and labor force participation continues to tick up, but recovery in the economy has been uneven and stunted by a persistent labor shortage.

On this week’s Reformer Radio, host Max Nesterak’s talks with Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development Commissioner Steve Grove about the state of the economy and its future.

Grove left an executive-level job at Google to head DEED under Gov. Tim Walz in his home state. About a year later, the pandemic led to massive unemployment and disruptions across the economy, requiring his agency to play a key role in the state’s COVID-19 response through distributing benefits to hundreds of thousands of Minnesotans. Continue reading.

In the Know: July 19, 2021

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Governor Tim Walz
As Minnesota’s drought worsens, Walz reaches out to the USDA for aid, KARE 11
Walz, DFL call on Rep. Thompson to resign amid domestic violence reports, Bring Me The News

Minnesota Legislature
Minnesota Senator David Tomassoni diagnosed with ALS, KARE 11
Nation’s only divided legislature passes bipartisan budget for Minnesota, St. Cloud Times
Next job for Minnesota lawmakers: Spend $250 million on front-line worker aid, Star Tribune

Minnesota News
Minneapolis Faces Possible Water Restrictions Amid Drought Conditions, CBS Minnesota
Hot, dry conditions show no sign of letting up in Minnesota, MPR
Minn. state Rep. John Thompson faces calls to resign over allegations of domestic violence, indecent exposure, The Washington Post

Continue reading “In the Know: July 19, 2021”

How ‘In God We Trust’ bills are helping advance a Christian nationalist agenda

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City vehicles in Chesapeake, Virginia, will soon be getting religion. 

At a meeting on July 13, 2021, city councilors unanimously voted in favor of a proposal that would see the official motto of the U.S., “In God We Trust,” emblazoned on every city-owned car and truck, at an estimated cost to taxpayers of US$87,000.

Meanwhile, the state of Mississippi is preparing to defend in court its insistence that all citizens, unless they pay a fee for an alternative, must display the same four-word phrase on their license plates. Gov. Tate Reeves vowed last month to take the issue “all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court should we have to.” Continue reading.

John McCain adviser explains why the Trumpified GOP has become ‘the greatest threat since 9/11’

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Although MSNBC has a liberal slant, some of its hosts have very conservative backgrounds — including “Morning Joe” host Joe Scarborough (a former GOP congressman) and Nicolle Wallace, who served as White House communications director under President George W. Bush and was a senior adviser to the late Sen. John McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign. But the 49-year-old Wallace is a scathing critic of former President Donald Trump, and she slams the modern-day GOP as a hotbed of Trumpist authoritarianism in an op-ed published by MSNBC’s website on July 16.

Wallace, who hosts MSNBC’s weekday afternoon show “Deadline: White House,” warns, “I never thought I’d cover the demise of democracy in my own country, but here we are…. The attack on our democracy, spearheaded by the ex-president and enabled by the GOP, represents the greatest threat since 9/11.”

The former Bush official and McCain adviser goes on to say that in one sense, the United States is facing a more perilous national security threat in 2021 than it did after al-Qaeda terrorists attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001. There were no prominent Republicans or Democrats defending al-Qaeda after 9/11, Wallace argues — whereas apologists for the bloody January 6, 2021 assault on the U.S. Capitol Building by Trump supporters are plentiful in the Republican Party. Continue reading.