David Hunt: Kenny Loggins Had It Right: Cards, Music, Farewells Revisited

A couple of exuberant people who have bettered my understanding of music passed away this April. One of them I got to know well and considered a friend: the pianist and arranger George Mesterhazy.
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Sanwa stereoscopic YouTube viewer turns your iPhone into a big-screen 3D TV

sanwa-stereoscopic-iphone-youtube-viewer

Japanese iPhone owners are being given the chance to bathe in the nostalgic glow of the old 3D View-Master — only now, the pictures will actually move. The Sanwa device works in a similar manner to its ancient mechanical counterpart, but magnifies side-by-side yt3D YouTube movies on an iPhone instead of the classic circular slides. On top of negating the need for custom content like similar products we’ve seen, this should also yield a brighter and larger 3D viewing area than red-green glasses — letting you get the most out of that retina display.

Sanwa stereoscopic YouTube viewer turns your iPhone into a big-screen 3D TV originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 14:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Melissa Sher: What Children Can Teach Us About Happiness

Books on happiness are almost as popular as ones about teenage vampires in love. Yet, for those of us with small children, it’s hard to find time to read an entire book (or rinse shampoo out of our hair).
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Stay Classy: Hedge Fund Manager Spent On Private Jet While Borrowing For Taxes

In early 2009, hedge-fund manager Philip Falcone was living the life of a newly made billionaire. He had started extensive renovations on a $49 million Manhattan mansion once owned by Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione. He traveled on a private jet, employed body guards and funded his wife Lisa’s new career as a film producer.

He was also behind an estimated $113 million in personal taxes.

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Jeremy Ben-Ami: The Right Question

The right question to ask isn’t whether all options are on the table with Iran — because clearly they are — but which is the most likely to achieve the right outcome with the least danger of making the region and the world even more dangerous.
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Jonathan Backer: From Inconsistency to Incoherence

By standing on the sidelines and criticizing all efforts toward greater disclosure, Mitch McConnell creates the impression that he seeks to allow wealthy and powerful individuals and corporations to wield great influence in election, without accountability.
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Aundaray Guess: Celebrating ‘Hidden in the Open: A Photographic Essay of Afro American Male Couples from the Distant Past’

I thank Mr. Kelly for assembling these photographs. Although they have existed for years, by assembling them together for easy viewing, he has done something that is very beneficial not only for the black community but for the gay community as a whole.
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Wendell Potter: ObamaCare a Blessing for Millions of Real Americans–Including My Mother, My Daughter, My Wife and Me–and You

By Wendell Potter

As I was waiting anxiously for todayâ•˙s Supreme Court decision, I knew there was a man in Colorado Iâ•˙d met on the first anniversary of the Affordable Care Act who was likely far more anxious than I was. 

I do not recall the manâ•˙s name, but I have kept him in mind in the months since he came up to the podium to tell me after I spoke to an audience in Denver that he knew he was alive that day because of the new law. To me, he came to represent the thousands of Americans whom I know can truthfully say that they probably would be in their graves if not for ObamaCare.

That man was among millions of people in this country who insurance companies have labeled ╲uninsurable,╡ meaning they could not buy insurance coverage at any price because of pre-existing conditions. One of the most important provisions of the law that was upheld by the Court today was the one that will take effect on January 1, 2014, the one that will at long last make it illegal for insurers to refuse to sell coverage to people who have been sick in the past.

Knowing that 2014 was too far in the future for people to wait, Congress included in the reform law funding to help states create or expand high-risk pools to cover millions of people whom insurance companies for years wouldnâ•˙t touch with a 10-foot pole. That man was among those millions who were finally able to buy coverage that gave them access to life-saving care.

While many political pundits and columnists will be focusing on how the decision will affect the political fortunes of Barack Obama and Mitt Romney and just about every candidate for Congress, I plan over the coming weeks to focus on the people who already are or will soon be benefiting from the law. That frankly includes members of my own family. My 25-year-old daughter, who has not been able to find a job that offers health benefits, was able to get back on our family policy because of the law. My mother, now 87, is not having to spend as much on her medicines because the law has already begun closing the hated doughnut hole in the Medicare prescription drug benefit. And the law even affects my wife and me and millions of other baby boomers like us. We both also have to take medications and, as a consequence, undoubtedly would be among the ranks of the ╲uninsurable╡ if we lost our employer-sponsored coverage.

The law is expected to bring 30 million of the 50 million uninsured Americans into coverage when it is fully implemented. It is not perfect by any means, but it represents the most comprehensive health care reform law in this countryâ•˙s history. What we will see in the coming months will be attempts to weaken the consumer protections in the law, and I know the industry I worked for over two decades will be at the center of those efforts. Advocates of reform will have to be on guard to make sure those consumer protections live on.

For Monday, I will write about what we can expect from the insurance industry in the months ahead. And I will write about other people, like that man in Colorado, who likely will be able to live a longer life, thanks to ObamaCare.

Continue this story and read more investigations at iWatch News

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The ‘Broccoli Horrible’: Obama Loses The Broccoli Battle, But Wins The War

The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate, but not before rejecting the government’s main argument — that it was valid under the Constitution’s Commerce Clause.

The majority opinion written by Chief Justice John Roberts bluntly insisted that the clause does not vest Congress with “police powers … to regulate an individual from cradle to grave.” It also explicitly embraced the conservative argument regarding health care and broccoli.

In oral arguments three months ago, Roberts and Justice Antonin Scalia famously demanded that Solicitor General Donald Verrilli explain why, if the government can compel someone to buy health insurance, it can’t also compel them to buy broccoli.

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Jill Donenfeld: Hummingbird Beats: Glynn Connolly

People are fascinated by the things Glynn hates. On the list? Oprah, pandas, slow walkers and the word “honkytonk.” Lady likes to take a stance!
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