From: Gregory Brown
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Bee: jeevacation@gmail.com
Subject: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.. 3/27/2016
Date: Sun, 27 Mar 2016 08:01:03 +0000
Attachments: Fleetwood_Mac_bio.docx; President_Obama_Speech_At_Gran_Teatro_In_Havana_-
transcript_March_22,_2016.docx
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DEAR FRIEND
Terrorism Didn't Just Start With ISIS or Al Qaeda
Ask Native Americans or African Americans my Mother's Age
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A history most Americans were never taught, so they can act as if it didn't happen. More than 400
years of domestic terrorism and it didn't stop with the lynching of Mary Turners of 14 year-old Emmitt
Till on August 28, 1955.
Smith's death was followed by a week-long mob-driven manhunt in which at least 13 people were
killed. Among those whom the mob killed was another black man, Hayes Turner, who was seized from
custody after his arrest on the morning of 18 May 1918 and lynched. Distraught, his eight-month
pregnant wife Mary denied that her husband had been involved in Smith's killing, publicly opposed her
husband's murder, and threatened to have members of the mob arrested. The mob then turned
against her, determined to "teach her a lesson".
Although she fled when she learned of the mob's intent, she was nevertheless captured at noon on 19
May. The mob of several hundred brought her to Folsom Bridge over the Little River, which separates
Brooks and Lowndes counties. The mob then tied her ankles, hung her upside down from a tree,
doused her in gasoline and motor oil and set her on fire.
While Turner was still alive, a member of the mob split her abdomen open with a knife. Her unborn
child fell on the ground, where it gave a cry before it was stomped on and crushed. Finally, Turner's
body was riddled with hundreds of bullets. Mary Turner and her child were cut down and buried near
the tree, with a whiskey bottle marking the grave.
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According to Philip Dray, "There, before a crowd that included women and children, Maw was
stripped, hung upside down by the ankles, soaked with gasoline, and roasted to death. In the midst of
this torment, a white man opened her swollen belly with a hunting knife and her infant fell to the
ground, gave a cry, and was stomped to death. The Constitution's coverage of the killing was
subheaded-lined: `Fury of the People Is Unrestrained."'
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Emmitt Till
14 year-old Emmitt Till was killed for allegedly having wolf-whistled at a white woman. Till had been
badly beaten, one of his eyes was gouged out, and he was shot in the head before being thrown into the
Tallahatchie River, his body weighed down with a 70-pound (32 kg) cotton gin fan tied around his neck
with barbed wire. His mother insisted on a public funeral with an open casket, to show people how
badly Till's body had been disfigured. News photographs circulated around the country, and drew
intense public reaction. People in the nation were horrified that a boy could have been killed for such
an incident. The state of Mississippi tried two defendants, but they were speedily acquitted.
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September IS. 1963 • Birmingham. Alabama
Addle Mae Collins. Denise McNair. Carole Robertson and Cynthia Wesley were getting ready for church services when a bomb exploded at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church.
killing all four of the school-age girls. The church had been a center for civil rights meetings and marches.
Researchers said they determined that at least 4,000 to 5,000 black people were killed in "racial
terror lynching" in the United States from the end of the Civil War to the end of the 1960s, including
hundreds of women. This number doesn't include the dozens of men, women and children killed
during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1940s, 5os and 6os or the thousands of senseless killings of
people of color that even continues today. Let us not forget....
Researchers said they determined that at least 4,000 to 5,000 black people were killed in "racial terror
lynching" in the United States from the end of the Civil War to the end of the 1960s, including
hundreds of women. This number doesn't include the dozens of men, women and children killed
during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1940s, 5os and 6os or the thousands of senseless killings of
people of color that even continues today. Let us not forget....
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This is not to disrespect those innocent civilians who recent where hurt and killed in Brussels and
Paris, as well as those who senselessly have been casualties in terrorist attacks elsewhere around the
world, but terrorism didn't start with ISIS, al Qaeda, The Red Brigade, IRA, FARC, Boko Aaram and
Carlos The Jackal... nor did it start in America with are own homegrown Islamic terrorist.... Our
country which consider itself "the home of thefree and the brave" has a rich history in terrorism
starting with the first European explorers that continues today, which is why Black Live Matter so
again.... Lets Never Forget....
******
So True
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Bravo President Obaina....
Supply-Side Promises Gone Wrong
Kansas and Louisiana
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Over the course of 12 debates, the Republican presidential candidates were never asked to address the
budget problems in Kansas. In 2010, the tea-party wave put Sam Brownback into the Sunflower
State's governor's mansion and Republican majorities in both houses of its legislature. Together, they
implemented the conservative movement's blueprintfor Utopia: They passed massive tax breaks for
the wealthy and repealed all income taxes on more than 100,000 businesses. They tightened welfare
requirements, privatized the delivery of Medicaid, cut $200 million from the education budget,
eliminated four state agencies and 2,000 government employees. In 2012, Brownback helped replace
the few remaining moderate Republicans in the legislature with conservative true believers. The
following January, after signing the largest tax cut in Kansas history, Brownback told the Wall Street
Journal, "Myfocus is to create a red-state model that allows the Republican ticket to say, 'See, we've
got a different way, and it works."
As you've probably guessed, that model collapsed. Like the budget plans of every Republican
presidential candidate, Brownback's "real live experiment" proceeded from the hypothesis that tax
cuts for the wealthy are such a boon to economic growth, they actually end up paying for themselves
(so long as you kick the undeserving poor out of their welfare hammocks). The Koch-backed Kansas
Policy Institute predicted that Brownback's 2013 tax plan would generate $323 million in new
revenue. During its first full year in operation, the plan produced a $688 million loss. Meanwhile,
Kansas's job growth actually trailed that of its neighboring states. With that nearly $700 million
deficit, the state had bought itself a 1.1 percent increase in jobs, just below Missouri's 1.5 percent and
Colorado's 3.3.
Those numbers have hardly improved in the intervening years. In 2015, job growth in Kansas was a
mere 0.1 percent, even as the nation's economy grew 1.9 percent. Brownback pledged to bring
100,000 new jobs to the state in his second term; as of January, he has brought 700. What's more,
personal income growth slowed dramatically since the tax cuts went into effect. Between 2010 and
2012, Kansas saw income growth of 6.1 percent, good for 12th in the nation; from 2013 to 2015, that
rate was 3.6 percent, good for 41st.
Meanwhile, revenue shortfalls have devastated the state's public sector along with its most vulnerable
citizens. Since Brownback's inauguration, 1,414 Kansans with disabilities have been thrown off
Medicaid. In 2015, six school districts in the state were forced to end their years early for lack of
funding. Cuts to health and human services are expected to cause 65 preventable deaths this year in
Sedgwick County alone. In February, tax receipts came in $53 million below estimates; Brownback
immediately cut $17 million from the state's university system. This data is not lost on the people of
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Kansas — as of November, Brownback's approval rating was 26 percent, the lowest of any governor in
the United States.
Louisiana has replicated these results. When Bobby Jindal moved into the governor's mansion in
2008, he inherited a $1 billion surplus. When he moved out last year, Louisiana faced a $1.6 billion
projected deficit. Part of that budgetary collapse can be put on the past year's plummeting oil prices.
The rest should be placed on Jindal passing the largest tax cut in the state's history and then refusing
to reverse course when the state's biggest industry started tanking. Jindal's giveaway to the wealthiest
citizens in the country's second-poorest state cost Louisiana roughly $800 million every year. To make
up that gap, Jindal slashed social services, raided the state's rainy-day funds, and papered over the rest
with reckless borrowing. Today, the state is scrambling to resolve a $940 million budget gap for this
fiscal year, with a $2 billion shortfall projected for 2017. Today, Louisiana can no longer afford to
provide public defenders for all its criminal defendants. Its Department of Children and Family
Services may soon be unable to investigate every reported instance of child abuse. Education funding
is down 44 percent since Jindal took office. The state's hospitals are likely to see at least $64 million in
funding cuts this year.
What has happened to these states should be a national story; because we are one election away from it
being our national story. Ted Cruz claims his tax plan will cost less than $1 trillion in lost revenue over
the next ten years. Leaving aside the low bar the Texas senator sets for himself — my giveaway to the
one percent will cost a bit less than the Iraq War! — Cruz only stays beneath $1 trillion when you
employ the kind of "dynamic scoring" that has consistently underestimated the costs of tax cuts in
Kansas. Under a conventional analysis, the bill runs well over $3 trillion, with 44 percent of that lost
money accruing to the one percent. John Kasich's tax plan includes cutting the top marginal rate by
more than ten percent along with a similar cut to the rates on capital gains and business taxes. Even
considering Kasich's appetite for Social Security cuts, his plan must rely on the same supply-side
voodoo that Kansas has so thoroughly discredited. As for the most likely GOP nominee, even with
dynamic scoring, his tax cuts would cost $to trillion over the next ten years, with 4o percent of that
gargantuan sum filling the pockets of Trump's economic peers.
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Governor Sam Thrnvnback
If any of these men are elected president, they will almost certainly take office with a House and Senate
eager to scale up the "red-state model." Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has said of
Brownback's Kansas, "This is exactly the sort of thing we (Republicans) want to do here, in
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Washington, but can't, at leastfor now." Speaker of the House Paul Ryan's celebrated budgets all
depend on the same magical growth that has somehow escaped the Sunflower State.
This campaign cycle has inspired an unusual amount of soul-searching in Republican circles. The rise
of Trump has forced many conservatives to reckon with the moral odiousness of Nixon's Southern
Strategy — a blueprint for GOP electoral success that relied on coded appeals to white racial animus.
Unfortunately, the fall of Kansas has failed to inspire a similar reckoning with the policies that those
ugly advertisements were designed to sell. The GOP front-runner's praise of mob violence and
religious discrimination has spurred much righteous outrage from the National Review. Kansas's
shortened school-years have spurred none.
When Donald Trump makes a gaffe, reporters confront Republican leaders and demand a response.
When the GOP's economic platform decimates two U.S. states, a similar confrontation is in order. If
you think yes, then you should demand that Donald Trump, John Kasich, and Ted Cruz explain why
their tax policies won't fail America in the same way they've failed the people of Kansas and Louisiana.
Extracts front a March It 2016 snide by Eric Levin in The Intelkenter
Seth Meyers takes a look a Closer Look at Kansas Tax Cuts
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Late Night with Seth Meyers: https://youtu.be/xliMwipXoiA
Bill Maher: Trump Is The White Kanye West,' and America's Self-
Esteem Movement Is to Blame
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On Friday night's 'Real Time with Bill Maher,' the host unloaded on modem-day parenting for creating
the 'spoiled five-year-old throwing a tantrum' that is Donald Trump.
Web Link: https://youtu.be/xSSExfcD2cM
In mid-January, in an interview with The Daily Beast, political satirist Bill Maher branded Senator Ted
Cruz (R-TX) "scarier than Donald Thump," explaining that whereas Cruz is "high intelligence in the
service of evil," the bombastic real estate heir/reality TV star "also says some things that a liberal can
love."
Not anymore. You see, that was January, before Trump required considerable public pressure to
distance himself from former KKK leader David Duke, his shady campaign manager allegedly
assaulted a female journalist (for a pro-Trump propaganda site, no less), and his rallies turned into
disturbing White Lives Matter summits, where aggrieved, racist whites get so worked up by Trump's
xenophobic blame it on them rhetoric — and his encouragement of violence as a means to silence those
opposed to him — that they regularly abuse black protesters exercising their First Amendment rights.
Oh, and he took it upon himself to defend the size of his penis during a nationally televised
presidential debate.
"Republicans are coming around to the idea that their only savior of Donald Trump is Ted Cruz,"
said Maher on Friday night's edition of Real Time. "It's like that horror movie where the guy runs up
to the policeman thinking he's saved, and the policeman is one of the zombies. Hey, life is about shitty
choices, and r I have to decide between Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, count me in for Ted Cruz."
"Donald Trump this week literally said the words, 'All I know is what's on the Internet,'" added a
bewildered Maher. "This guy's going to change America's symbolfrom the bald eagle to a turtle
fucking a shoe!"
During his "New Rules" segment closing out the HBO program, Maher blamed the rise of Trump, a
Vietnam draft-dodger who was born with the most shimmering of silver spoons in his mouth, on
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American parents' -coddling of children.
"New Rule: Stop trying to pin the rise of Trump on easy targets like racism, and put the blame where
it belongs: the self-esteem movement," Maher proclaimed.
"What Donald Trump really reminds me of is a spoiled five-year-old throwing a tantrum," he
continued. "Trump is the grown-up version of every pain-in-the-ass kid who ever sat behind you on a
plane, kicking the back of your seat."
Maher sought to rationalize Trump's perplexing rise by pointing to various studies showing that U.S.
children score "low in math and science, but off the charts in self-esteem."
It's an argument that was made during Davis Guggenheim's discredited 2010 documentary Waiting for
`Superman,' which cited a 2006 Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) study
stating that the U.S. ranked 25th in math and 21st in science among 3o developed countries, as well as
a 2003 PISA study concluding that U.S. kids ranked No.1 in confidence. Of course, these studies are
now over a decade old, but yes, American students are by and large overconfident and not performing
nearly as well as they should in math and science. In fact, according to the 2012 PISA study, the U.S.
ranked 35th out of 64 countries in math and 27th in science. Ouch. And point taken.
According to Maher, America ranks "number one in confidence in math skills, even though they suck
at it. Yes, we're number one in thinking we're number one. And when the numbers don't validate that
confidence, we know who the culprit is: the numbers. So we change them." The host then cited the
outrageous grade inflation at Yale, where in 2012, 62 percent of all grades at Yale College were an A or
A-minus, compared with ro percent in 1963 and 40 percent in 1974.
This, Maher says, breeds huge hubris: "Have you noticed that according to Donald Trump,
nobody ever does anything better than Donald Trump? He's the white Kanye West!"
(Ed. Note: This comparison is wildly unfair to West, a self-made black man who grew up on the South
Side of Chicago.)
So, if America truly wants to be "great again," Maher thinks it can start by getting tougher on its kids.
No more Post-its on lunch bags reminding your child to have a good day—the food inside does the
trick. "Every time a parent takes the kid's side over the teacher's, you're creating the Donald Trumps
of tomorrow," Maher said, before adding, "Trump is the logical result of 40 years of
worshipping at the altar ofselfesteetn—where every kid gets a trophy wife."
Marlow Stern — The Daily Beast — March 19, 2016
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Please Tell Me He Didn't Say This
Mitch McConnell to Fox News: NRA Must Approve Of New Supreme Court Justice
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Web Link: Intps://voutu.be/ix71Q1pIA E
As much as I knew that there is a huge partisan divide my country (the USA), I couldn't believe the
headline - Mitch McConnell to Fox News: NRA Must Approve OfNew Supreme Court
Justice. In an interview with Fox News last Sunday this morning, McConnell told host Chris
Wallace that a new Supreme Court justice must have the approval of the National Rifle Association
(NRA). Mitch McConnell and the Republican leadership have done everything possible to make Barack
Obama a failed President. Despite President Obama moving forward and nominating Merrick Garland
to replace Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court, the Kentucky Senator is sticking to his guns, literally
in this case, and insisting on blocking Garland as the nominee.
Wallace specifically asked McConnell if, should Hillary Clinton become president, he would consider
the nomination of Merrick Garland. McConnell told Wallace: `I can't imagine that a Republican
majority in the United States Senate would want to confirm, in a lame duck session, a nominee
opposed by the National Rifle Association and the National Federation of Independent Businesses
[NFIBJ.' He continued, saying that he doesn't think the Senate "would want to confirm a judge that
would move the court dramatically to the left. That's not gonna happen."
Here's why McConnell thinks these two right-wing organizations should have control over approving
the Supreme Court nominees — The NFIB has fought hard against both the Affordable Care Act and
raising the minimum wage. The NRA is well-known for its opposition to gun safety laws. The group,
and therefore McConnell, oppose Garland's nomination because of two cases, Parker v. District of
Columbia and National Rifle Association v. Reno, in which Garland's decisions did not fall strongly in
favor of the NRA. Despite these two cases, Garland's gun record is still too small to make a truly
informed opinion. It consists of Garland's single vote to rehear a case that one of his court's most
conservative members also voted to rehear, along with a decision to allow the FBI to continue to
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perform audits on the background check system after lawmakers sympathetic to the NRA tried and
failed to shut those audits down."
McConnell is obviously grasping at straws trying to back up his position. He wants people to believe
he is justified, but, in reality, he's just acting like a child, offering flawed logic and tantrums in the
hopes of getting his way. And hopefully people will see through his childish behavior. But beyond the
flawed logic and partisan behaver, the big ugly about this is that Senator McConnell openly says that
he opposes even qualified candidates for the Supreme Court if they don't pass muster with two special
interest groups. What about the greater good of the country?
But to openly admit that the Leader of the U.S. Senate has abrogated his responsibility at the bequest
of two special interest groups is outrageous.... What Obama should do is tell the Republicans that if
they are willing to play thicken, should Hillary of Bernie win the election in November he will pull
Garland's nomination so that his successor can chose the replacement who most likely will be more
liberal And this is my rant of the week....
WEEK's READINGS
There Has to be a Better Way
Healthcare in America
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Bernie Is Right: the U.S. Needs a Health Care System More Like Those in Europe
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Although almost most people agree that healthcare in America is substandard if not broken, it appears
that we are paralyzed to make any meaningful changes, other than Republicans promising to get rid of
Obamacare and replace it with something "better". And giving the state of our dysfunctional Congress
that promise would result in doing nothing. If Bernie Sanders' candidacy has accomplished one thing
it has spotlighted the inequities between the haves and the have-nots in America.
He has pointed out that even though the U.S. is the only major country on Earth that doesn't guarantee
health care to all people as a right, we spend far more per capita than the UK, France and other
advanced countries. The U.S. ranks last in the fund's overall evaluation of health care, despite having
by far the largest per capita expenditures. Yet, even though he's right to think that we need a health
care system more like those in Europe, his platform is under attack, not just from the right, but also
from the left. Here is why his critics are wrong.
Sanders says he wants a health care system like those of other wealthy countries -- one that provides
better results at a lower cost than the one we have. Unfortunately, there is no generally accepted term
that covers all such systems as a class. Sanders calls his plan "Medicarefor All," but that is
misleading. Liberals tend to call Sanders' plan a "single-payer" system. That is correct, in that
Medicarefor All would in fact be a system under which a single agency would directly pay health care
providers with funds from the government budget. However, many of the best health care systems of
other wealthy countries are not single-payer systems in that sense.
As we will see, his proposal -- at least the brief version posted on his campaign web site -- differs from
Medicare in some important ways. It also differs from many of the systems in other countries that he
admires most. Their plans are surprisingly diverse. Some, like those of Germany and France, funnel
payments through multiple independent insurance funds. Others, including those of the UK and
Canada, are more decentralized than the "single payer" label suggests. None of them covers 100
percent of national health care expenditure.
Conservatives describe the health care systems of Scandinavia, Germany, France and other wealthy
countries as "socialized medicine," but that term doesn't uniformly fit, either. Socialized medicine
suggests something like the U.S. Veterans Administration health care in the U.S. -- a system that not
only features a single payer, but one in which doctors are salaried government employees and hospitals
are government-owned. That description, too, fails to capture the diversity of foreign health care
systems, where we find a kaleidoscopic mix of salaried and fee-for-service doctors; for-profit, private
not-for-profit, and state-owned clinics and hospitals; and both unified and decentralized payment
mechanisms.
First let's turn to Sanders' critics, starting with those on the right and then moving to critics on the left.
Conservative Myth #1: The U.S. already has the world's best health care
system.
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Many conservatives think, or at least pretend to think, that the U.S. already has the best health care
system in the world, or at least that it did before the advent of Obamacare. Senate leader Mitch
McConnell and former House Speaker John Boehner are both on record as having said so. A survey
from Harvard University, taken not long before the passage of the Affordable Care Act, found that 68
percent of Republicans (but only 32 percent of Democrats) thought the U.S. health care system was
the world's best. To support that belief, conservatives often note that world leaders like former Italian
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Jordan's late King Hussein and the Shah of Iran have all sought
health care in the U.S.
Unfortunately, hard data do not support that optimistic view. One of the most detailed recent
comparative studies of health care systems in wealthy countries comes from the Commonwealth
Fund. The following figure shows it's ranking of eleven health care systems along with data on
expenditures per capita (evaluated at purchasing power parity to avoid exchange rate distortions):
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The U.S. ranks last in the fund's overall evaluation of health care, despite having by far the largest per
capita expenditures. The Commonwealth study is not the only one to have reached that conclusion.
This earlier post discussed other rankings that agree.
Conservative Myth #2: European health care saves costs only by severely
rationing care.
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The second conservative myth is that Euro-style health care achieves lower costs only by employing a
degree of rationing that would be unacceptable to Americans. Here, for example, is David Brooks,
writing the New York Times:
Sanders would create a centralized and streamlined system. His approach would also, as in
Europe, reduce the rate of medical progress, increase the rationing of care, increase the wait
timesfor patients, induce many doctors to retire, and centralize decision-making.
In a recent televised debate, Presidential candidate Ted Cruz put it even more bluntly:
Socialized medicine is a disaster. It does not work. If you look at the countries that have
imposed socialized medicine, that have put the government in charge ofproviding medicine,
what inevitably happens is rationing.
Canada is Exhibit A for many who make the rationing argument. Consider, for example, this
"explainer video" from Vox, titled "What is Single-Payer Health care?" After noting that such a
system could save administrative costs, the narrator says, "But there's a catch." The catch is said to be
longer waiting times and other limits on services, illustrated by a graphic showing that waiting times
for health services are longer in Canada than in the U.S.
Most wealthy European countries do better than either of their North American
peers when it comes to rationing by waiting and still manage to spend less.
Detailed data from the Commonwealth Fund report show how unfair the charge of rationing is,
especially when based on a comparison with Canada. Of the eleven countries covered in the survey,
the U.S. ranks last overall, and Canada is next to last. One of the main reasons for Canada's poor
performance is its poor record on measures of rationing, where it has the lowest ratings of the
countries surveyed.
• 48 percent of Canadians reported an emergency room waiting time of over two hours
(nth place) compared with 28 percent in the U.S. (7th place) and 14 percent in New
Zealand (1st place).
• 38 percent of Canadian doctors reported that patients had difficulty getting
specialized tests like MRIs (loth place) compared to 23 percent in the U.S. (7th place)
and 3 percent in Switzerland (1st place).
• 18 percent of Canadian doctors reported a wait of four months of more for elective
surgery (9th place) compared to 7 percent in the U.S. (6th place) and 1 percent in the
Netherlands (1st place).
To compare the U.S. with Canada in terms of rationing by waiting, then, is to make a sub-par system
look better by comparing it with one that is truly terrible. Most wealthy European countries do better
than either of their North American peers when it comes to rationing by waiting and still manage to
spend less.
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Instead of rationing by waiting, the American system practices rationing by cost. Relatively few private
plans, whether employer-provided or individual, give free access to a full range of providers, drugs and
services. Most middle-class insurance plans steer their members toward hospitals and doctors who are
in a preferred provider network and drugs that are on the company's preferred list. The uninsured
often find themselves rationed out of anything but emergency services by high prices.
The burden of rationing by cost shows up clearly in the Commonwealth study:
• 37 percent of Americans reported that they did not fill a prescription, skipped a test
or treatment, or failed to visit a doctor when ill--the worst of all countries. In Canada,
the figure was 13 percent, a respectable 4th
• 28 percent of Americans reported that their insurance company denied payment or
paid less than expected for treatments they received, the worst of all countries. In the top
ranked countries, Norway and Sweden, the figure was 3 percent.
What is more, the pressure toward rationing by cost is intensifying. A recent New York Times article
describes the situation in these terms:
Once emblematic of everything wrong with health insurance, the health maintenance
organization is making a grudging, if somewhat successful, comeback. But its reputation for
skimping on care has so tainted the plans that the insurers and companies resurrecting them
have gone through innumerable steps to try to avoid using the term H.M.O.... Despite the
stigma and many failed efforts, insurers say they are eager to push a revamped version that
revives many of the same features that restrict choices as a way of lowering costs.
In short, far from achieving their cost savings through rationing, European systems provide more
timely care with fewer people skipping needed services for economic reasons.
Liberal critics focus on cost
Unlike conservatives, liberal critics, by and large, approve of Sanders' Medicare for All plan in
principle. They instead focus their criticisms on its cost.
The most widely publicized critique comes from Kenneth Thorpe of Emory University. As this
discussion explains, Thorpe estimates that Sanders' plan would be almost twice as expensive as the
candidate claims. Instead of leaving most middle class households better off, Thorpe claims the
Sanders plan would make 71 percent of households worse off, when the taxes needed to fund it fully
are set against savings in health care costs.
I find Thorpe's analysis disingenuous. The problem is that he construes Sanders' plan in a naively
literal way that makes it very different from the health care systems of Europe as they actually operate.
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European systems provide more timely care with fewer people skipping needed services for
economic reasons.
The first difference concerns just who pays for what under high quality, low-cost Euro-style systems.
When many Americans think of European health care, they assume that the government pays for
everything, providing a broad range of services at no charge to the consumer. That is not strictly true.
The following chart, reproduced from a 2015 report from the Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development, shows that in other wealthy democratic countries, governments do pay a larger
share of health care costs than in the U.S., but they do not by any means pay for everything. The
government share of total health care expenditures ranges from nearly 90 percent in Sweden and the
UK to around 75 percent in Switzerland, compared with a little under 5o percent in the U.S.
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The reasons for the substantial private health care expenditures vary from one country to another.
Most countries expect copayments for some, if not all, services and medications. In many, people
purchase private insurance to cover services not provided in the government's basic package, for
example, private hospital rooms. Some countries do not fully cover dental and vision services.
(However, most Euro-style systems have special mechanisms in place to shield low-incomefamilies
from some of these cost-saving measures.)
One of the reasons that critics like Thorpe come up with such high cost estimates is that they take at
face value the version of the Sanders plan that is found on his campaign Web site. That version
promises to "cover the entire continuum of health care, from inpatient to outpatient care; preventive to
emergency care; primary care to specialty care, including long-term and palliative care; vision, hearing
and oral health care; mental health and substance abuse services; as well as prescription medications,
medical equipment, supplies, diagnostics and treatments."
I do not think we have to take that language literally in estimating the cost of translating Sanders'
political aspirations into a specific program for implementation in the real world. The very fact that
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Sanders de-scribes his plan as "Medicarefor All" suggests that a final version is likely to include
deductibles and co-payments similar to those in Medicare as it now exists for seniors. Nor would we
need all of the features of the Web site version of the plan in order to meet Sanders' often-repeated
goal of equaling the quality and cost performance of other countries.
The hard part lies ahead
It is easy to criticize a campaign slogan and to inflate the cost of ambitious aspirations. Liberal critics,
who ostensibly share Sanders' aspirations, ought to put their energies into the hard part -- filling in the
details that would allow the U.S. to equal the cost performance of the best Euro-style health care
systems without loss of quality.
Including Medicare-style deductibles and co-payments would go a long way toward dosing the gap
between Thorpe's estimates of the costs of Sanders' health care plan and the candidate's own
estimates, but it would not entirely close it. There are many other problems to deal with.
To date, Sanders has focused on two sources of potential cost savings. Administrative costs are one.
Sanders' campaign website does not give an exact estimate of savings, but Sanders' policy director
Warren Gunnels reportedly estimates that administrative savings from his plan would reduce total
health care spending by 13 percent. Thorpe says it would save 4.7 percent. If we split the difference,
the savings would be a little under 9 percent.
But reducing per capita health care spending to the level of the Netherlands (the most expensive after
the U.S. among the eleven covered in the Commonwealth study) would require U.S. spending to fall by
33 percent. To get to the level of the UK (the least expensive of the eleven) would require a 6o percent
cut. So, even viewed optimistically, administrative savings are just a start.
A single government payer would have more bargaining power.
The second major saving claimed by the Sanders team comes from lowering the price of prescription
drugs. Total prescription drug expenditures in 2014 came to an estimated $297 billion, a fraction less
than 10 percent of total health care costs, on prescription drugs. Cutting that in half -- a truly heroic
accomplishment -- would still save only another 5 percent of total health care costs.
So, beyond prescription drugs and administrative costs, where would the additional 20 to 40 percent
saving come from that would be needed to bring U.S. health care costs down to the level of the best
performing Euro-style systems? There are only two possible sources: cuts in quantity of services or
cuts in prices.
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Cutting quantifies is not as easy as it sounds. To be sure, there are some areas where the U.S. does
seem to provide excessive services or procedures. For example, the U.S. rate for Caesarian sections is
reportedly about 3o percent, more than double that of the Netherlands (13 percent) and nearly double
that of Finland, Sweden and Norway (all close to 17 percent).
On the whole, however, as health care economists like Princeton's Uwe Reinhart note, the quantity of
health care services provided in the U.S. is actually lower than in other advanced countries. It does not
seem realistically possible to cut service quantities further while extending health care coverage to the
13 percent of Americans who remain uninsured, even under the Affordable Care Act, and to do so
without any loss in quality of care.
Prices are the "elephant in the room," says Reinhart. Medical prices in the U.S. are reportedly 60
percent higher than in an average of 12 other high-income countries. For individual procedures, the
differences are often greater. For example, an appendectomy that cost $7,962 in the US cost $2,943 in
Germany and $3,739 in Finland. What is more, the prices of services like an MRI or colonoscopy, can
vary by a factor of two, three or more even with in a city.
Worst of all, says Reinhart, "Fees in the private health care sector have been jealously guarded trade
secrets among insurers and providers of health care." That makes it impossible for consumers to
shop around for the best price, as Forbes writer Kate Ashford found from personal experience when
she tried to find the best deal on an MM. In practice, it can be difficult or impossible for consumers to
shop for medical care the way they would for a set of snow tires.
The present trend toward mergers and consolidations demonstrably pushes up
prices.
Liberal critics don't even pretend to address the problem of health care prices. The widely cited
Thorpe study simply assumes that prices under the Sanders' plan would be an average of the prices
now paid by private insurers and the modestly lower prices now paid by Medicare.
The day after a Sanders inauguration, his health care team would have to set to work on tackling the
elephant in the room. Unfortunately, there is no single solution to the problem of high U.S. health care
prices. Instead, the problem would have to be approached one piece at a time.
• Coordinated bargaining for lower prescription drug prices is just a start.
• Lowering the prices charged by the most expensive hospitals to those charged by the most
effective ones would help -- and no, they are not necessarily the same hospitals. A single
government payer would have more bargaining power. Greater transparency in pricing would
help, too.
• So would greater competition among hospitals. The present trend toward mergers and
consolidations demonstrably pushes up prices.
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Another reason for the higher cost of U.S. health care services are higher earnings of physicians. U.S.
doctors earn considerably more than their European counterparts do, even when we adjust fees for
differences in expenses and cost of living. But changing compensation practices for American doctors
would not be easy without other, more far-reaching reforms. For example, making higher education
tuition-free, as Sanders has proposed, following the policies of many European countries, would
reduce the burden of student debt with which American doctors begin their careers. And less
adversarial systems to deal with malpractice claims free European doctors from a major cost item
while giving them less incentive to practice unproductive defensive medicine.
The bottom line
It is hard not to conclude that Sanders is right to think that America needs a health care system more
like those in Europe. True, his Medicarefor All plan is still more aspirational than operational, but
what do other candidates offer? Hillary Clinton proposes building on Obamacare, but there is nothing
in the byzantine complexity of the Affordable Care Act that makes it easier to solve any of the cost and
price problems we have discussed, and many things that make it harder. Republican candidates have a
field day enumerating the problems of the ACA, but offer only the vaguest suggestions of what they
would offer in its place.
Doug Bandow - Buffington Post - March 7, 2016
Whatever the case, to kill Obamacare without replacing it immediately would be a disaster and
Medicarefor All would require systemic changes, starting with the cost of educating our doctors,
nurses and healthcare professionals, reining in the pharmaceutical industry and stopping much of the
unnecessary litigation, with the understanding that affordable healthcare is basic right but it has limits
and requires both additional taxes and sacrifices, if we really want to have the best healthcare in the
world.
******
Bravo Again President Obama
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U.S. President Barack Obama and Cuba's President Raul Castro
U.S. President Barack Obama delivered a groundbreaking speech at the Gran Teatro de la Habana
Alicia Alonso in the historic Habana Vieja, or Old Havana, neighborhood March 22, 2016 in Havana,
Cuba. Described as a message to the Cuban people about his vision for the future of Cuba, Obama's
speech was nationally televised to the ii million people on the communist-controlled island. President
Obama spoke directly to the Cuban people in speech in Havana, outlining a path forward for the U.S.
and the island nation. Attached, please find a copy of the transcript of President Obama's speech.
And again — Bravo President Obama.... Your leadership is inspirational
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******
For You Immigrant Haters
Study: Immigrants Founded 51% of U.S. Billion-Dollar Startups
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Dynamics CEO and founder Jyoti Bansal says he had to wait seven years to for his green card
A new non-partisan study on entrepreneurship gives some credence to the tech industry's stance that
American innovation benefits from robust immigration. The study from the National Foundation for
American Policy, a non-partisan think tank based in Arlington, Va., shows that immigrants started
more than half of the current crop of U.S.-based startups valued at $1 billion or more.
These 44 companies, the study says, are collectively valued at $168 billion and create an average of
roughly 760 jobs per company in the U.S. The study also estimates that immigrants make up over 7096
of key management or product development positions at these companies.
The foundation examined 87 U.S. companies valued at $1 billion or more as of Jan. 1, as tracked by the
Journal's Billion Dollar Startup Club. The authors of the study used public data and information from
the companies to create biographies of the founders.
The three highest valued U.S. companies with immigrant founders include car-hailing service Uber
Technologies Inc., data-software company Palantir Technologies Inc. and rocket maker Space
Exploration Technologies Inc. Stuart Anderson, the study's author and the foundation's executive
director, says the findings show that the U.S. economy could benefit from the talents of foreign-born
entrepreneurs even more so if it were easier for them to obtain visas.
Tech leaders including Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates have called for increasing the number of H-1B
visas that let skilled foreign workers stay in the country. They argue that immigration greatly benefits
the tech community, and that it is difficult for companies to hire foreign-born workers and for
immigrant entrepreneurs to start businesses due to the visas' constraints.
Critics argue that tech executives are simply looking for cheaper labor, and some politicians, as well as
Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump, aim to curb the work visa program. A bill introduced
by Republican presidential candidate and Sen. Ted Cruz (R., Texas) and Sen. Jeff Sessions (R., Ala.) in
December that the lawmakers say aims to reform the visa program would require petitioners to
hold an advanced university degree, have worked at least 10 years overseas and not get paid materially
less than U.S. workers.
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Either way, the process to secure a visa is lengthy and cumbersome. The visas are capped at 85,000
per year — 65,000 are set aside for foreign workers applying for the first time and 2O,OOO are for
foreign students graduating from American universities. In 2O15, the lottery to obtain a visa hit
capacity within one week, according to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. The USCIS said
it received nearly 233,000 H-1B petitions during the filing period.
Mr. Anderson said the law makes it difficult for entrepreneurs to qualify because it is meant for
employers to petition on behalf of their employees. And the decision to start a company while waiting
for a Hl-B visa to come through is risky. Mr. Anderson said in most instances, immigrant
entrepreneurs are only able to get their businesses off the ground after first gaining permanent
residence, then obtaining a green card. "How would you ever raise money for it?" Mr. Anderson said.
"Who is going to invest in a company if the founder of the company may not be able to stay in the
U.S.?"
Jyoti Bansal said he had to wait seven years for his employment-based green card before he could start
AppDynamics Inc., a software company that helps companies monitor the performance of their
networked applications and that has been valued at $1.9 billion. According to the study, Mr. Bansal
couldn't leave his job to start a new company because it was unclear if MI be able to keep his H-1B
status. While bills to address these issues have been introduced — most recently in the form of the EB-
JOBS Act of 2O15 which was introduced in July — they have failed to gain traction due to the overall
standstill on immigration policy. The EB-JOBS Act of 2O15 would provide entrepreneurs with a two-
year green card that would be revoked if certain financial and job-creation requirements aren't met.
The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which funded the study, estimated the EB-JOBS Act
provision would create 1 million to 3.2 million jobs over 1O years. According to the study, founders of
billion-dollar startups most often hail from India (14), followed by Canada and the U.K., with eight
each, then Israel (7) and Germany (4). Two originated from France and the Collison brothers, the co-
founders of payments startup Stripe, make up the pair from Ireland.
Yoree Koh — Wall Street Journal — Mar 17, 2016
******
The Real Reasons Why You've Hit the Dreaded Weight Loss
Plateau
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By now for many people, that means halfway through winter, and most likely all the way through the
cessation of your well thought out New Year's weight loss plan. Yes, it happened again. You promised
yourself that this year, you'd finally lose the weight. That this year, you'd improve your eating habits
and that this year, you'd start training for that marathon you always dreamed about completing.
Yet here you are, just like last year, with only a few pounds to get excited about. Here's the scary truth.
Maybe you did all of those things, but the weight loss just stopped. For many of my patients, it's not
the big behavior changes that kept them from achieving their goals. In fact, many people make
significant changes on January 1st that impact their weight and their health, like adding more
vegetables to their diet and cutting down on snacking and eating out. But it's the little (and what many
people think insignificant) actions that actually make all the difference.
There's still hope! After all, it's only February, and recognizing these little, yet very impactful habits,
could get you back on track with your "healthy by summer" initiative. Here are the top 5 mistakes
that can halt even the most effective weight loss approaches.
1. Eating to Exercise
Regular exercise is one of the best things you can do to live longer and better. But when it comes to
weight loss, it turns out that cutting calories is actually much more important than adding reps.
Studies show that if you're using exercise, and only exercise to shed pounds; you may be disappointed
with the number on the scale. A 2015 study found that exercise alone didn't actually deliver weight
loss. Researchers discovered that as you increase activity, your appetite goes up as well, and you
consume more calories to satisfy that appetite. The "more" is important here because if you eat more
calories than you actually burn, then you may still struggle to shed pounds. Further, a 2016 study
found that as we exercise at even higher levels, our bodies adapt to this activity and don't necessarily
burn more calories. In fact, people that engaged in higher levels of physical activity to lose weight
often saw a decline in weight loss after a few months. The advice here is by no means to stop
exercising. The point is that you'll need to continue to control calorie intake despite this very healthy
habit. A daily run or a weight lifting session is not insurance to overindulge later on. Keep exercise in,
but don't add calories to compensate once you've started an exercise routine.
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2. Starting the Day off with Sugar
The sugary cereal, the syrupy coffee creamer, and that danish you chomp on in the car on the way to
work — they are all killing your diet. Sure, it's obvious that these foods are not on any "weight loss
miracle" lists. But it's more than that. Having a lot of sugar early on in the day means you're not
having something else — protein. Study after study has shown that starting your day with protein
makes it easier to lose weight, and then resist cravings later in the day. Protein and fat also have
minimal impact on blood sugar and insulin, two things that you don't want up first thing in the
morning. Try some eggs and avocado, a high protein shake, or a low fat plain yogurt with nuts a small
amount of low glycemic deeply hued berries instead of a bagel and jelly or even a big bowl of oatmeal.
3. Being too hungry to diet
Being hungry does not feel good. It's uncomfortable, it's scary for some, and for the majority of
individuals that have put themselves on restrictive diets where deprivation is the norm, hunger can be
downright detrimental. Hunger, on a day-to-day basis, works against you in terms of regulating
weight loss. In the end, you'll end up eating what you need, and then some, to compensate. A 2015
study that researched the "discomfort when hungry" phenomenon found that specific neurons that
fire during energy deficits lead individuals to search for, and consume, food. They found in mice that
eating was much more than a simple choice based solely on taste, but more driven by the desire to
offset the negative feelings associated hunger -- what we humans may refer to as "pangs." As more
and more weight is lost, these signals become stronger and, along with them, the desire to eat.
Eventually, the body's mission to fill the depleted calories is stronger than our quest to get into skinny
jeans.
Similar findings were demonstrated in a 2011 study as well.
So, hunger is more powerful than just being hungry. It has a neurological aspect. The solution is to
essentially trick your body into not feeling hunger. First (and this one is obvious), don't eat when
you're not hungry. Less obvious strategies, include adding to your diet more fat and protein, two
macronutrients that fill you up without surges of insulin. Second, ditch any distractions (like the TV or
your phone) when eating, so that you can better sense when you've actually had enough. Finally, fill
yourself up with water, and other calorie free drinks, and focus on high volume, low calorie foods like
cruciferous vegetables. Starving yourself will backfire — the studies, your brain, and the scale have all
shown that to be true. I advise my patients to never have a moment in the day when they are hungry.
Rather, eat in a manner that provides moments where you can say "I think I need to refuel."
Keep in mind that 7 days a week of deprivation is not the same thing as intermittent fasting, a weight
loss approach that puts the body into a fasting state two days a week. Intermittent fasting has actually
been very effective for many of my patients due to its ability to "rewire" the brain to have less cravings
and hunger.
4. Ignoring Your Stress
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If you're human, you experience stress from time to time, and if you're diet savvy, you know you have
to find ways of dealing with that stress. An animal study found that stress not only increases cortisol (a
weight loss nightmare) but it also releases a protein called Betatrophin that inhibits a critical enzyme
needed for fat metabolism. In turn, it reduces your chances to break down fat, making you more of a
fat storer rather than a fat burner. Need more evidence of how impactful a lack of stress management
can be? Consider this: a study from Yale found that even normal weight individuals had increases in
abdominal fat when cortisol levels were high. High stress can also impact sleep. While getting a few
too little zzz's may seem like no big deal, it's a very big deal to your digestive hormones. Ghrelin and
leptin get confused when they're not rested enough, making you hungrier, and less likely to satisfy that
hunger. If you've ever had a ravenous appetite the day after an all-nighter, you know exactly what I
mean. To get back on track with weight loss, get plenty of sleep, and find a way to manage chronic
stress. This could be through yoga, meditation, guided imagery or simply taking a walk around the
block.
5. Too Happy About Happy Hour
For many of my patients, drinking alcohol can be one of the most difficult habits to break. Many can
cut down their drinking, but not enough to sustain weight loss. Moderate alcohol has benefits to your
health and most people know this. But when it comes to managing or losing weight, it has no
redeeming value. A glass of red wine sets you back about 12O calories, a can of regular beer is 150
calories and a shot of vodka about too.
That may not seem like a lot, but if you're pouring yourself, chances are you aren't staying within
what's considered a portion and the calories are more than you think. Further, once you start feeling
the effects of alcohol, you're more likely to throw the diet out the fast food window for the night. Five
nights of this at regular happy hours can lead to a major detour on your weight loss highway. So forget
about the French drinking and staying thin. You're probably drinking like an American, and throwing
the whole "alcohol canfit within my diet" way off course. Of course, if you're indulging in margaritas
or daiquiris, forget about it! Even "normal" portions of those drinks pack serious calories. The
solution, cut the happy hour that's making your weight very unhappy and stick to only 1-2 measured
drinks a week. That's 5 ounces of wine, 12 ounces of beer or 1.5 ounces of spirits.
Weight loss is not easy, and there are plenty of obstacles that can get in the way of our goals.
Hopefully, knowing some not-so-obvious ways to cut more weight can start today!
Kristin Kirkpatrick — Cleveland Clinic — February 16. 2016
THIS WEEK's QUOTE
On Why Bush Decided To Go To War in Iraq
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When he was told that we were going to war with Iraq: He asked, "Why?...." And was told, don't
know...." I guess that they don't know what else to do... With the answer, "I guess if the only tool
that you have is a hammer every problem has to look like a nail..."
General Wesley Clark
Web Link: https://www.facebook.comill 00009772429316/videos/237351756600570/
THIS IS BRILLIANT
The Difference
Between Your WHAT and Your WHY
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Web Link: https://www.facebook.com/Magirlz/posts/ 10153981464584771
THINK ABOUT THIS
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BEST VIDEO OF THE WEEK
In Honor of Herbie Hancock feat. Snoop Dogg.
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Web Link: https://awa.facebook.com/jusulibrotherskideos/529822533845239/
This is as good as it gets....
THIS WEEK's MUSIC
Fleetwood Mac
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This week you are invited to enjoy the music of one of the most iconic groups in Rock & Roll the
legendary British-American band Fleetwood Mac whom after researching the group for this piece has
to be one of the most dysfunctional musical groups in the history of modern music having had almost
4o current, former band and touring members and this does not include the fake Fleetwood Mac
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band"set up in 1974 by a former manager, Clifford Davis, who claimed that he owned the name
Fleetwood Mac, and recruited members of a band called Legs (which had recently issued one single
under Davis' management) to tour as Fleetwood Mac.
Fleetwood Mac formed in July 1967, in London. The band have sold more than too million records
worldwide, making them one of the best-selling bands of all time. In 1998, selected members of
Fleetwood Mac were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and received the Brit Award
for Outstanding Contribution to Music.
The two most successful periods for the band were during the late 1960s British blues boom, when
they were led by guitarist Peter Green and achieved a UK number one with "Albatross"; and from 1975
to 1987, as a more pop-oriented act, featuring Christine McVie, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks.
Fleetwood Mac's second album after the incorporation of Buckingham and Nicks, 197's Rumours,
produced four U.S. Top 10 singles (including Nicks' song "Dreams"), and remained at No. 1 on the
American albums chart for 31 weeks, as well as reaching the top spot in various countries around the
world. To date, the album has sold over 40 million copies worldwide, making it the eighth-highest-
selling album of all time.
The band achieved more modest success between 1971 and 1974, when the line-up included Bob
Welch, during the 1990s in between the departure and return of Nicks and Buckingham, and during
the 2000s between the departure and return of Christine McVie. Due to numerous lineup changes, the
only original member present in the band is drummer Mick Fleetwood. Although band founder Green
named the group by combining the surnames of two of his former bandmates drummer Mick
Fleetwood and bassist John McVie. Keyboardist Christine McVie, who joined the band in 1970 while
married to John McVie, has appeared on every album except the debut album, either as a member or
as a session musician. She left the band in 1998 but returned in 2014.
Fleetwood Mac were formed in July 1967 in London when Peter Green left the British blues band John
Mayan & the Bluesbreakers. Green had replaced guitarist Eric Clapton in the Bluesbreakers, and
received critical acclaim for his work on their album A Hard Road. After he had been in the
Bluesbreakers for some time, Green asked if drummer Mick Fleetwood (who he had been in two
previous groups) could replace Aynsley Dunbar. The Bluesbreakers now consisted of Green,
Fleetwood, John McVie and Mayall. Mayall gave Green free recording time as a gift, in which
Fleetwood, McVie and Green recorded five songs. The fifth song was an instrumental which Green
named after the rhythm section, "Fleetwood Mac".
Soon after, Green contacted Fleetwood to form a new band. The pair so wanted McVie on bass guitar
and even named the band 'Fleetwood Mac' as a way to entice him. Fleetwood Mac's first album,
Fleetwood Mac, was a no-frills blues album and was released on the Blue Horizon label in February
1968. The album was successful in the UK, hitting No. 4, though it did not have any singles on it. The
band soon released two singles "Black Magic Woman" (later a big hit for Santana) and "Need Your
Love So Bad".
The band's second album, Mr. Wonderful, was released in August 1968. Like the first it was an all-
blues album, but this time they made a few changes. The album was recorded live in the studio with
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miked amplifiers and PA system, rather than plugged into the board. This method provided the ideal
environment for producing this style of music, and gave it an authentically vintage sound. They also
added horns and featured a friend of the band on keyboards, Christine Perfect of Chicken Shack prior
to her marriage to John McVie.
After enjoying moderate success in both Europe and America Fleetwood Mac didn't receive
mainstream success until Welch who had announced that he was leaving the band and was replaced by
Lindsey Buckingham and his musical partner and girlfriend, Stephanie "Stevie" Nicks. Buckingham
and Nicks joined the band on New Year's Eve 1974 (within 4 weeks of the previous incarnation
splitting). In 1975, the new line-up released the eponymous Fleetwood Mac. The album proved to be a
breakthrough for the band and became a huge hit, reaching No.1 in the US and selling over 5 million
copies. Among the hit singles from this album were Christine McVie's "Over My Head" and "Say You
Love Me", and Stevie Nicks' "Rhiannon" and "Landslide" (actually a hit twenty years later on The
Dance album).
Behind the scenes the band was fraying apart in 1976; with the success of the band also came the end
of John and Christine McVie's marriage, as well as Buckingham and Nicks' long term romantic
relationship. Even Fleetwood was in the midst of divorce proceedings from his wife, Jenny. The
pressure put on Fleetwood Mac to release a successful follow-up album, combined with their new-
found wealth, led to creative and personal tensions, fueled by high consumption of drugs and alcohol.
The follow-up album Rumours, (the band's first release on the main Warner's label after Reprise was
retired and all of its acts were reassigned to the parent label) was released in the spring of 1977, in
which the band members laid bare the emotional turmoil experienced at that time.
Critically acclaimed, it was the recipient of the Grammy Awardfor Album of the Year for 1977.
The album generated multiple Top Ten singles, including Buckingham's "Go Your Own Way", Nicks'
U.S. No.1 "Dreams", and Christine McVie's "Don't Stop" and "You Make Loving Fun". Buckingham's
"Second Hand News", Nicks' "Gold Dust Woman" and "The Chain" (the only song written by all five
bandmates) also received significant radio airplay. By 2003, Rumours had sold over 19 million copies
in the U.S. alone (certified as a diamond album by the RIAA), and a total of 40 million copies
worldwide, making it the second biggest selling album of all time. Fleetwood Mac supported the
album with a lucrative tour.
Buckingham was able to convince Fleetwood to allow his work on their next album to be more
experimental and to work on tracks at home, then bring them to the band in the studio. His expanded
creative role for the next album was influenced by an appreciation for new wave music. The result of
this was the quirky 20-track double album, Tusk, released in 1979. It spawned three hit singles;
Lindsey Buckingham's "Tusk" (U.S. No. 8), which featured the USC Trojan Marching Band; Christine
McVie's "Think About Me" (U.S. No. 20); and Stevie Nicks' 61/2 minute opus "Sara" (U.S. No. 7). The
last of those three was cut to 41/2 minutes for both the hit single and the first CD-release of the album,
but the unedited version has since been restored on the1988 Greatest Hits compilation and the 2004
reissue of Tusk as well as Fleetwood Mac's 2002 release of The Very Best of Fleetwood Mac. Original
guitarist Green also took part in the sessions of Tusk, but his playing for the Christine McVie track
"Brown Eyes" is not credited on the album.
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Tusk remains one of Fleetwood Mac's most ambitious albums to date, although selling only four
million copies worldwide. This, in comparison to the huge sales of Rumours, inclined the label to
deem the project a failure, laying the blame squarely on Buckingham. Fleetwood, however, blames the
album's relative failure on the RICO radio chain playing the album in its entirety prior to release, thus
allowing mass home taping. In addition, Tusk was a double album, with a high list price of $15.98
(equivalent to $52 in 2016). With this said, attached please find a full bio on the group and again
you are invited to enjoy the music of one of most influential bands in Rock & Roll....
Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac — Dreams -- https://youtu.be/462IDIULSBk
Fleetwood Mac — Gypsy -- https://youtu.be/c5j8ln4wu3g
Fleetwood Mac — Never Going Back -- https://youtu.be/GGyCx9WgGV8
Fleetwood Mac — Albatross -- https://youtu.beNiqr6KHwJjc?list=RDhRu7Pt42x6Y
Fleetwood Mac - The Dance -- https://youtu.be/MrRVW-p8SJ8
Fleetwood Mac - Landslide -- https://youtu.be/WM7-PYtXtJM
Fleetwood Mac - Go Your Own Way -- https://youtu.be/qNM6IuA87eM
Fleetwood Mac - World Turning -- https://youtu.beircsYa6jFRoY
Fleetwood Mac - Rhiannon https://youtu.be/K2162qNmScc
Fleetwood Mac - Don't Stop -- https://youtu.be/$jFmaICx9Lw4
Fleetwood Mac - Second Hand News -- https://youtu.be/h3
Fleetwood Mac - Stand Back -- https://youtu.be/voxAXO0aasY
Stevie Nicks — SARA -- Imps://youtu.be/-_vCeQ-rx5A
Stevie Nicks — Edge Of Seventeen -- https://youtu.be/S3DhXcQepbY
Stevie Nicks — Leather and Lace -- https://youtu.be/wjOkZUEeKc4
Fleetwood Mac with Peter Green - Black Magic Woman -- https://youtu.be/hRu7Pt42x6Y?
Iist=RDhRu7Pt42x6Y
Fleetwood Mac — Hypnotized -- https://youtu.be/6yOFh2DAP-g
Peter Green with Fleetwood Mac - Oh Well --
https://www.facebook.com/ForgottenGuitadvideos/799496950183299/
Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac — Need Your Love So Bad -- https://youtu.be/xWa2nHsOx7M
Fleetwood Mac — The Chain -- https://youtu.be/O6P2_10Y6ms
Stevie Nicks — How Still My Love -- https://youtu.be/mjsMV1eJa78
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I hope that you have enjoyed this week's offerings and wish you
and yours a happy Easter and a great week...
Sincerely,
Greg Brown
Gregory Blown
Chairman & CEO
GlobalCast Fanners. LLC
US
Id
EFTA00830766