Sunday, September 27, 2020

Pandemic Response (2020 Presidential Election)

I would have never imagined in 2016, that when I was working on the 2020 blog, I would have a post about pandemic response.  In 2016, that was a game or a movie, certainly not a reality going on 6 months of a complete shift in our way of life.  And, we hear all the time, “Who would have ever seen this coming?”


Well, a lot of people actually.  Dr. Michael Osterholm, for one, literally wrote the book about it.  In 2018, an official from the White House office in charge of pandemic response was quoted as saying, “The threat of pandemic flu is the No. 1 health security concern.  Are we ready to respond? I fear the answer is no.”  He said that the day before his office was shut down.  


He was a part of the Global Health Security and Biodefense unit which was established in 2015 by Obama’s National Security Advisor, Susan Rice.  This was the unit responsible for pandemic preparedness and was created in response to the 2014 Ebola outbreak.  It was created to prepare for the next disease outbreak and prevent it from becoming an epidemic or a pandemic.  In May of 2018, the team was disbanded and some members were moved to other departments.



History will tell how Trump will be remembered in response to his coronavirus response.  If you want to see a timeline of incompetencies leading to the death of 200,000 Americans and counting, click here.  If you want justification on how the United States contributes 21% of the global death toll while representing only 4% of the population and how that’s a success story, click here.


But, for anyone saying, “Who’s to say Joe Biden would have done any better?”  I offer you the experience of other developed nations.  In the United States, a person is 8 times more likely to die from coronavirus than Europeans.  COVID is now the third-leading cause of death in the United States.  Given the complete lack of leadership at the federal level, the promotion of misinformation, and the rejection of science in favor of making a fickle economy look strong, people have needlessly died.  






 

So, what would Joe Biden have done differently?  Here are where the candidates stand.  If a candidate has a plan (spoiler alert: Joe Biden is the only one who ever has a plan), it is linked to their name.


Joe Biden:


Biden’s Record:

  • Led an effective response to the 2009 H1N1 epidemic

  • Led an effective response to the 2014 Ebola epidemic

  • Led the US out of the Great Recession

Biden’s Proposals:

  • Put scientists and public health officials front and center in the communication by immediately establishing daily, expert-led health briefings.

  • Ensure the public health decisions are made by public health professionals.

  • Restore the White House National Security Council Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense (on this point and writing about it)

  • Make coronavirus testing widely available and free, prioritizing first responders and health care workers

  • Establish at least 10 mobile testing sites and drive through facilities in each state to get testing per day in the millions

  • Provide a daily public White House report on how many tests have been done

  • Task all federal agencies to take immediate action to ensure that hospital capacity meets need

  • Protect health care workers, first responders, assisted living staff, and other frontline workers with proper PPE

  • Accelerate the development of treatment and vaccines

  • Work with businesses to expand development of PPE

  • Eliminating cost barriers for prevention and treatment of COVID-19

  • Provide guaranteed emergency paid sick leave and care-giving leave

  • Reimbursement to employers for sick leave

  • Federal assistance to hard hit families

  • Support for childcare and remote student learning

  • Mortgage and rental relief

  • Interest free loans for small businesses

  • Making the economy more resilient for future crises

  • Mobilizing an international response

  • Fully staff all federal agencies, task forces, and scientific and economic advisory groups focused on health security

Donald Trump:

Trump’s Record:  I can’t even.  See above.

 

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

LGBTQ+ Equality (2020 Presidential Election)


Our nation’s civil rights laws provide protections for people on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex,
disability, and religion.  But when it comes to sexual orientation and gender identity, it’s a patchwork of protections or absence thereof across the states.  The Obama-Biden administration affirmed that gender identity and sexual orientation were included under protections against discrimination on the basis of sex within employment under the 1964 Civil Rights Act.  The Trump-Pence administration reversed this position and argued to the Supreme Court that the Civil Rights Act does not offer those protections to people based on sexual orientation and gender identity and that it should be legal to fire people based on these characteristics.  The Supreme Court disagreed in a 6-3 decision written by Justice Neil Gorsuch that affirmed that the law does include protections for LGBTQ+ individuals and that an individual cannot be fired for being a member of the LGBTQ+ community.

On March 17, 2019, the House of Representatives passed the Equality Act which would amend existing civil rights laws to include sexual orientation and gender identity as protected characteristics within employment, housing, credit, education, public spaces and services, federally funded programs, and jury service.  It would amend numerous existing laws including the Civil Rights Act, the Fair Housing Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and the Jury Selection and Services Act.   It was introduced in the House by Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) and passed with a bipartisan vote of 236-173 where 8 Republicans voted in its favor.  It was introduced in the Senate by Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Susan Collins (R-ME), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), and Cory Booker (D-NJ).  The GOP-led Senate has not taken up the bill.

The GOP has a solid history of dehumanizing and delegitimizing the existence of LGBTQ+ individuals.  I’m a member of an LGBTQ+ families Facebook group and this morning someone was asking for recommendations for safe dentists for their kids.  It got me to thinking about how often I see requests like this for everything you can imagine: doctors, communities to live in, schools, childcare, bakeries, stores, restaurants, wedding venues, resorts, adoption agencies, the list goes on and on and touches every aspect of living a quality life.  This daily strain of having to make sure an environment is safe before you enter is not a free way to live.

The truth is that many environments are unsafe for LGBTQ+ people.  Many states have laws that permit business owners to opt out of providing services to LGBTQ+ people.  Anti-LGBT hate crimes are rising.  Nearly 1 in 5 hate crimes are motivated by anti-LGBTQ+ bias.  At the beginning of August 2020, the number of people being murdered for being transgender in 2020 had already surpassed the total for 2019.  Those statistics speak to threats to physical safety, but are compounded by the mental and emotional safety that are also under frequent threat.  And, unfortunately, some people decide that living like that just isn’t worth living.  Lesbian, gay, and bisexual youth are 5 times more likely than their heterosexual peers to attempt suicide.  One third of transgender young people report attempting suicide.

The youth are particularly vulnerable.  Despite representing only 7% of the youth population, LGBTQ+ youth represent 40% of the youth homeless population as a result of the frequency of being disowned by their family due to coming out.  LGBTQ+ young people are more than twice as likely to become homeless compared with their heterosexual peers.  In addition to the Trump-Pence administration proposing a rule to allow federal adoption agencies to discriminate against LGBTQ+ parents, which is already the law in many states, LGBTQ+ youth are often put at further risk when they aren’t placed with safe and affirming families in the foster care or adoption system.

Here is where the candidates stand on LGBTQ+ rights.  If they have a full policy proposal on their webpage, I’ve linked it to their name.

Joe Biden:

Biden’s Record:

Under the Obama-Biden Administration:

  • the military program, “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” forbid LGBT service members to be out was repealed.
  • Biden publicly voiced support for marriage equality in 2012.
  • protected transgender individuals from discrimination in healthcare.
  • affirmed that the Civil Rights Act protected LGBTQ+ persons from employment discrimination.
  • prohibited discrimination by federal contactors against LGBTQ+ people via executive order.
  • ensured that federally funded homeless shelters provide services based on a person’s gender identity and made it so they couldn’t refuse service to a person based on gender identity or sexual orientation.

As a private citizen, Biden:

  • promoted understanding and acceptance among young LGBTQ+ people through the “As You Are” campaign through the Biden Foundation.

Biden’s Policy Proposals:

In his first 100 days he will:

  • make the enactment of the Equality Act a top legislative priority and reaffirm that LGBTQ+ individuals are protected under the Civil Rights Act.
  • reverse the discriminatory actions of the Trump-Pence administration via executive order.
  • direct federal resources to help prevent violence against transgender women.

During his presidency he will:

  • nominate and appoint federal judges and officials who represent the diversity of the American people, including LGBTQ+ people.
  • reverse the transgender militarty ban.
  • ensure all transgender individuals have access to identification documents that accurately reflect their gender identity.
  • guarantee transgender students have access to facilities based on their gender identity.
  • work to enact the Tyler Clementi Higher Education Anti-Harassment Act named for a student who jumped to his death after being outed to his campus by his roommate’s webcam.  The act would require higher education receiving student aid funding to enact anti-harassment policies.
  • invest in programs such as the LGBTQ+ Youth Homelessness Prevention Initiative and the 3/40 Blueprint to prevent and reduce LGBTQ+ youth homelessness.  He will also increase funding for the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act which provides access to transitional living programs.
  • make sure LGBTQ+ refugees and asylum seekers have access to necessary services and protections.
  • guarantee the Affordable Care Act’s nondiscrimination protections for the LGBTQ+ community.
  • ensure comprehensive health care coverage for LGBTQ+ Americans.
  • ban conversion therapy.
  • expand mental health and suicide prevention services for LGBTQ+ individuals.

Donald Trump:

Trump’s Record:

The Trump-Pence Administration:

  • blocked transgender military service members from serving openly.
  • rolled back sex discrimination protections in healthcare for transgender people.
  • proposed policies to allow federally funded homeless shelters to turn away transgender people.
  • proposed policies to allow federally funded adoption agencies to reject same sex-sex couples.
  • and the Department of Justice argued in favor of people being able to be fired from their jobs for being a member of the LGBT community.
  • and the State Department rolled out a report that argued that property rights and religious liberty rights superseded all other human rights and should guide our domestic and foreign policy. 
  • recalled the Education Department’s order that public schools allow “gender-confused males access to girls’ restrooms and lockers.”


Monday, September 7, 2020

Law & Order (2020 Presidential Election)

Source: https://lybio.net/president-trump-i-am-your-president-of-law-and-order/people/

President Donald Trump often touts himself as the
law and order president.  So, what does that actually mean?  For most it conjures up images of someone who is tough on crime or a country with a strict criminal justice system with tougher criminal penalties.  The idea here is that, the tougher the consequences, the less crime there will be.  What it neglects to consider is the causes of crime in the first place.

When I hear words about law and order, the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr come to mind.  He wrote, “A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.”  Here, he is talking about war and the military more than crime and the criminal justice system, but it seems the same message applies.  A “might is right” mentality does nothing to keep actual order.  Submission is not the same as loyalty and allowing the root causes that perpetuate crime to fester leads society to a spiritual death.

It also makes me think of my own parents.  My mother told me once that when we were little we would ask “Why?” all the time and my dad wanted her to just say, “Because I said so.”  But, she says she always stopped and explained why because she wanted us to understand why certain rules were in place, and not just blindly follow them.  She had the wisdom to understand that merely keeping us in check or keeping us afraid of the consequences, was not going to truly raise quality citizens and the moment we were out from under their watch, we would break free because we wouldn’t understand why the structures of society were in place as they were.

Now, Donald Trump talks a lot about “bad people.”  He tends to paint people as good or bad and they tend to fall into those groups based on whether they are loyal to him or not.  There isn’t a lot of nuance.  However, who are the people that we call criminals?  

80-90% of women and girls in the criminal justice system have a history of physical or sexual abuse.  1 in 4 children in foster care will interact with the criminal justice system just 2 years after their release from the foster care system.  Incarcerated individuals have a lower literacy rate than the general population.  Many people with mental illness or substance abuse issues end up in prison.  So, are they failing society or is society failing them?  Has our society already reached the point of spiritual death?

Another question I have is, should everyone that is in prison actually be in prison?  Are these tough on crime laws actually deterring crime?  The United States represents less than 5% of the global population and almost 25% of the global prison population.  The United States has the highest prison population rate in the world.  About 50% of prisoners are there for drug offenses.  Much of this is a result of the “War on Drugs” that instituted mandatory minimum drug sentences.  The prison population has increased 790% since 1980 but funding and space hasn’t kept up which has led to overcrowding. 

In 2020, you absolutely cannot talk about law and order or criminal justice without recognizing the racial inequity involved.  African American men are far more likely to be stopped, searched, charged, and sentenced than white men found guilty of the same offenses.  Black people receive 60% longer sentences than white people for the same crime.  5 times as many white people are using drugs as black people, but black people are sent to prison for drug offenses at a rate of 10 times the rate of white people.  African Americans serve nearly as much time in prison for non-violent drug offenses (58.7 months) as whites do for violent offenses (61.7 months).  

The 2014 shooting death of Michael Brown brought a lot of these inequities into the public spotlight.  Following his death and the resulting fallout, the Department of Justice investigated the Ferguson Police Department and found that “[Black people] accounted for 85 percent of traffic stops, 90 percent of tickets and 93 percent of arrests. In cases like jaywalking, which often hinge on police discretion, blacks accounted for 95 percent of all arrests.”  Maybe you’re thinking, black people just committed more crimes.  Wrong.  Officials were actually more likely to find contraband on white people.  Despite that, they continued to target black people.  

People living in poverty are also dispraportionately incarcerated.  Following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, donations to the Minnesota Freedom Fund went through the roof and enlightened a lot of people on the injustices of the cash bail system.  The United States and the Phillipines are the only two countries with a for-profit bail system.  The two primary types of bail are bail bonds which are paid to private companies and cash bail which is paid to the courts.  The Minnesota Freedom Fund fights the injustices prevented by the cash bail system by paying bail for those who cannot afford to.  On their website they explain that people who are arrested in Minnesota for any offense are brought before judges who determine their bail which is the amount of money that is to be paid to be released until their trial begins.  If they can’t afford to do so, they have to stay in jail for weeks, months, or even years awaiting trial.  In Minnesota, more than 60% of incarcerated individuals are being held in pre-trial detention.  This means that many people that may go on to be found innocent are stuck in jail because they can’t afford bail.  Not only does this affect a person mentally, it can result in job loss, housing loss, and loss of custody of children.

Now, I know a lot of people see this as not their problem.  They follow the law, follow the orders of police officers, so why should they care about people who broke the law?  They broke the law.  They knew the consequences.  I’m innocent, they’re guilty.  I don’t need to worry about any of this.  So, let’s talk about the issue that eventually gets everyone’s attention, money.  It costs the federal government about $100 a day to hold someone in prison.  If you want smaller government and lower taxes, the prison population is your concern.

Speaking of money, does Joe Biden want to defund the police?  A friend of mine was recently telling me about getting her haircut and how her stylist was saying she was voting for Donald Trump because Joe Biden wants to defund the police so there will be no police and just chaos in the streets.  There are three major problems with this statement.

The first problem is that it’s false.  Joe Biden does not want to defund the police.  In fact, he proposes a $300 million dollar investment in policing.  The second is that it misrepresents what defunding the police means.  Defunding the police does not mean getting rid of police all together.  It means reallocating some resources to other government agencies to address the root problems of crime such as mental health agencies and crisis centers.  And, the third problem is that it is under a Donald Trump presidency that we are experiencing chaos in the streets.  We did not have riots under the Obama-Biden administration like we are today.  And, to invoke Dr. King again, “riots are the language of the unheard.”  This is not to condone them, but to explain their cause.  That cause being racial inequality, which is a cause that is not being addressed by this current administration.

Finally, I can’t talk about Donald Trump being a law and order president without talking about all of the people around him who have been charged with and convicted of crimes.  To date, the following people in his orbit have served prison time or been charged with crimes and are awaiting trial.

  • Steve Bannon, Trump’s White House Chief Strategist was charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering along with Air Force veteran Brian Kolfage, founder of the Build the Wall campaign.
  • Roger Stone, longtime Trump friend and advisor was convicted of lying under oath to lawmakers, obstruction of justice, and witness tampering.  The day before he was expected to report to prison, Trump commuted his sentence.
  • Paul Manafort, Trump’s presidential campaign chair, was convicted of tax fraud and bank fraud, and pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges related to money laundering, lobbying violations, and witness tampering.  He is currently serving his 7 ½ year prison sentence at home after being released in May due to the coronavirus.
  • Michael Cohen, Trump’s personal lawyer, was found guilty of orchestrating hush money payments to women who had sexual encounters with Trump and for lying to Congress about a proposed Trump Tower in Moscow.  He was also released from prison due to the coronavirus to serve the remainder of his 3 year prison sentence at home.
  • Michael Flynn, Trump’s National Security Advisor, pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his interactions with Russia’s ambassador.  Trump’s Attorney General William Barr has worked to have this case dismissed.
  • Rick Gates, the deputy chairman of the Trump campaign, pleaded guilty to conspiracy against the United States and lying to investigators.  He was sentenced to 45 days in jail after cooperating with the Mueller investigation and testifying against Paul Manafort and Roger Stone.
  • George Papadopolous, another Trump campaign advisor, was sentenced to 14 days in jail for lying to the FBI about his contacts with Russia.

Additionally, Trump has lost 38 lawsuits brought against him and settled with about 100 more plaintiffs in issues ranging from defamation to contract violations to sexual assault.  Likely, he most famously settled in the case of the fraud charges brought against Trump University where he agreed to pay $25 million to settle the lawsuit.  He has also settled when being sued for violations to the Fair Housing Act where he was charged with renting to white people over black people, 


So, is he really a law and order president?  You can decide for yourself.


But furthermore, what can be done about the criminal justice system?  Here are the candidates records and proposals.


Joe Biden


As president, Biden would

  • reduce the number of people incarcerated by sending those arrested for drug use to drug courts and treatment programs instead of incarceration thereby reducing federal spending on incarceration and reinvesting those saved funds into communities affected by mass incarceration.

  • call for the immediate passage of the SAFE Justice Act originally proposed by Rep. Bobby Scott (D-VA) and Rep. Jason Lewis (R-MN).

  • create a $20 billion competitive grant program to spur states to shift from incarceration to prevention.

  • invest in education for all by making pre-K available to all, tripling funding for Title 1 schools, and make community college free for qualified students.

  • expand federal funding for mental health and substance abuse research and services.

  • address systemic misconduct in police departments.

  • invest in public defenders’ offices.

  • eliminate mandatory minimum sentencing for non-violent crimes.

  • decriminalize the use of cannabis.

  • eliminate the death penalty.

  • use his clemency power for non-violent and drug crimes.

  • end cash bail.

  • end the federal government’s use of private for-profit prisons.

  • condition receipt of federal criminal justice grants on adequate care and gynecological care for incarcerated women and re-evaluate programs that allow non-violent offenders who are primary care providers for their children to serve their sentences at in-home monitoring.

  • invest $1 billion per year in juvenile justice reform.

  • incentivize states to stop incarcerating youth.

  • expand funding for after school programs, community centers, and summer jobs.

  • double the number of mental health professionals in our schools.

  • set a goal to ensure that 100% of incarcerated individuals have housing upon re-entry in order to reduce recidivism rates.

  • counter the rise in hate crimes through “moral leadership that makes clear that such vitriol has no place in the United States.”

Donald Trump:


During President Trump’s presidency he has:

  • announced $98 million in grant funding through the COPS funding program to allow 802 additional full-time law enforcement officers.

  • signed Executive Order 13809 to restore state and local law enforcement’s access to equipment from the Department of Defense such as armored vehicles.

  • announced the new National Public Safety Partnership, a cooperative initiative to reduce violent crime.

  • expanded the Project Safe Neighborhoods to encourage U.S. Attorneys to work with communities to develop customized crime reduction strategies.

  • directed prosecutors to take illegal guns off the street resulting in a 23 percent increase in criminals being charged with unlawful possession of a firearm.

  • signed 3 executive orders aimed at cracking down on international criminal organizations, including drug cartels and gangs, and preventing violence against law enforcement officers.

  • designated MS-13 as a priority for the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force.

  • appointed conservative judges Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court.

  • appointed more than 50 circuit or appeals court judges.

  • appointed more than 80 district court judges.

  • signed the STOP School Violence Act and the “Fix NICS Act.”

  • allocated $2 billion for school safety.