'A Day With HIV 2014' Photo Campaign Fights Stigma Of HIV

One of the greatest acts of resistance is to live visibly and openly — even in the face of massive cultural stigma.

Earlier this year, HuffPost Gay Voices published a piece encouraging readers to submit a photo from their lives at some point during the day on Sept. 9 in order to raise awareness about what it means to live in a world with HIV. Called “A Day With HIV” and sponsored by Positively Aware and TPAN, this photo campaign invited people from all around the world to share with their public their own story of what it means to be affected by HIV.

Now, in honor of World AIDS Day, we’re sharing some of the photos that were sent in to the campaign.

“I was confirmed positive just one week ago,” Jason Daisey shares in his Day With HIV 2014 photo. “It was a scary week, but I won’t let it change my life for the worse. My center and balance point is being in the barn with my horses. I’m a professional guy, the kind that no one ever would think would get diagnosed with HIV. Now’s my time to use my uniqueness to educate other gay men about how real this really is.”

Check out the photos from “A Day With HIV 2014” below or head here to view the gallery in full.

The Muppet Version Of Naughty By Nature's 'Hip Hop Hooray' Is Possibly The Best Version

Throw your hands in the air, and wave them around like they’re being controlled by a puppeteer.

Kermit the frog, Fozzie Bear and the muppets are back for another wonderful muppet rendition of your favorite rap and pop songs. You’ve probably already seen them doing the Beastie Boys’ “So What’cha Want” or Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky.” Now, with the help of YouTube user Adam Schleichkorn, they’re taking on Naughty by Nature’s “Hip Hop Hooray.” It’s already perhaps the crowd-friendliest song in existence, and now there are muppets.

(Warning: We’re not responsible for getting the images/song out of your head.)

Star of 'The Good Lie' Has a Holiday Message of Hope (and a Hot New Song with Nile Rodgers)

Emmanuel Jal‘s story is an inspiring personal journey of survival: During the second Sudanese civil war in the 1980s, his mother was killed when government sympathizers raided their village. At seven, he was recruited as a child soldier and held at a training camp disguised as a school. He and others escaped and traveled on foot for months before reaching a safe haven. At age 11, he was adopted by a British aid worker named Emma McCune and taken to Kenya. After she passed away, Jal lived in the slums. He fell in love with the hip hop sounds he heard on the street and discovered that music enabled him to talk about his feelings and experiences and relate his story to everyone he met. Next, he traveled the world singing his songs.

Today, Jal has several albums as well as an autobiography, a documentary and a TED Talk (all called War Child) to his credit. Yet, it wasn’t until he was asked to star in The Good Lie, this fall’s hit film about Sudanese refugees starring Reese Witherspoon, that he felt like his story had come full circle. Jal’s character, Paul, struggles to find his place in America after leaving a refugee camp in Africa, but realizes he has the strength to endure anything. Jal’s latest album, The Key (which contains the track, “My Power,” featuring Nile Rodgers and Chic), was released a few weeks prior to the movie and shares its themes of power over oppression and faith before fear.

Below, Jal tells me how both working on the film and writing new music helped him share his story of hope:

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Movie still courtesy of Alcon Entertainment / Facebook

On making the film:

“In some ways, it was difficult, because we were trying to replay our lives. It brought back painful memories. The director did a good job and told me to play it like poetry. Reese [Witherspoon] told me to immerse myself in my character. ‘This is for your people,’ she said. We collected advice and watched the other actors. My crying scene was the most difficult part for me. They put those drops in my eyes to make me cry but they did not work. So, we kept trying. I had to be frustrated and remind myself of the difficult times of my childhood and channel those memories. And that’s what actually made me cry.”

On how the film translates the plight of the Sudanese refugees:

“The whole movie is entertaining. It’s my story and the story of my brothers and sisters, the story of my country. It’s the voice of the dead. It’s no longer just our story anymore because there are other people involved in it. Now, it’s the story of humanity.”

On the strength the children in the film find from carrying their Bible hundreds of miles:

“It’s about hope. Those who have nothing to hold onto really find it hard to wake up the next day. Faith gives people hope to want to see tomorrow. There’s always something humans will believe in when they are facing atrocities.”

On the importance of having the refugees’ story told in a mainstream movie:

“What I find exciting is the complete story that’s been told. I’ve been trying to tell it through music, to put a spotlight on South Sudan. I have a book and a [documentary] and an album called War Child, and I go sing at schools. But with The Good Lie, this story is now complete and it’s going to create a conscious global awareness about South Sudan. This story is going to ignite hope. Those who are going to see their stories heard, they have hope. It’s a story that keeps hope alive for so many people.”

On the meaning of hope:

“What is hope? Hope is faith that tomorrow is going to come. Hope is what makes you believe that things are going to be better. When you let hope die, then your body begins to poison you. That’s when depression gets a hold on you and you become enslaved internally and lose the will to believe that a better day will come. The Good Lie is a story of hope.”

On the current situation in South Sudan:

“It’s happening all over all again. The people who are outside in the bush don’t trust the government. The government is silencing the voice – the cry for freedom, justice, equality for all. The last time I was there (a couple of years ago) to do a peace concert, I was beaten. I was warned, ‘We don’t like activists here.’ They basically were telling me not to open my mouth.”


On working with super producer and guitarist Nile Rodgers on his new song, “My Power”:

“I met him before at the United Nations and again for the We Are Family Foundation. I was given a peace award there. Then I got word that he wanted to do a hit song with me. We had time to talk about music and he gave me a few tips. It was an amazing experience to talk with a legend. We spent more time talking about music than actually doing the song. We went into the studio together. It was great. We worked on it overnight and the next day I flew out. He’s amazing. He told me four things: He told me to think about your flow, your hook, your rhythm and then your lyrics. We have a lot of young kids who just don’t care about the lyrics. They want to see the talent first and they like the way you’re going to deliver the song. Then focus on the beat and you’ll get them hooked in. He said don’t forget your village, always bring it to the hip hop.”

The Good Lie movie is released on digital HD format December 9 and comes out on DVD/Blu-Ray Dec. 23. The Key album is available on iTunes.

If She Runs Hillary Rodham Clinton Determines the 2016 Democratic Message

Lack of an overriding message in 2014 speeded the Democratic Party down the path to their losses. Now Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) Chair of the DNC is asking people what they think went wrong. The question could be taken more seriously if she wasn’t asking for more money at the same time. Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) suggests the fight for the Affordable Care Act came at the wrong time and we should have done more for the middle-class when Democrats controlled the Congress. This is humorous coming from one of the biggest advocates for banks and hedge fund CEOs in Congress.

The after-the-fact criticisms and recriminations are coming fast and furious from those who could have made a difference if they spoke up and did something earlier. The President didn’t help by delaying his immigration Executive Order (EO) until after the election because some Democrats were afraid it would hurt Southern Democratic Senators up for reelection. Turned out they all lost anyway and so did the candidates who could have benefited from an EO like Charlie Christ in Florida and Senator Mark Udall in his Colorado reelection campaign.

While Democrats debate the lack of a message and fight over what it should have been they forget one major point; it is the Presidential candidate who sets the Party message in Presidential election years. For Democrats in 2016 most are betting that will be Hillary Rodham Clinton. Republicans control Congress for the next two years so Democrats there will be playing defense. It will be up to the Presidential candidate to enunciate for the electorate what will be different beginning on January 20, 2017. In the interim a strong President Obama can continue to make bold moves like his EO on immigration which was recently compared to Lincoln issuing the Emancipation Proclamation in a well written Huffington Post piece by Lincoln scholar Harold Holzer.

Clinton said her decision on whether to run will be made in the beginning of 2015. She has repeatedly said it is dependent on her determining what her message to the voters will be and what she believes she can accomplish as President. If and when she announces we will hear the message of the Party for 2016. It may be refined in primary debates but Hillary has a record on which to run and it includes fighting for equality, both political and economic; and advocating for a strong defense of democracy around the world. We can be fairly certain that won’t change. Her message in 2016 will include how she believes a Clinton presidency will move the nation forward and accomplish the goals she has fought for all her life.

People tend to forget her life’s work has been focused on the issues that all people care about. She worked for the Children’s Defense Fund. In 1977 Hillary co-founded Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families and in 1978 she became the first female chair of the Legal Services Corporation. In 1983, then Governor Bill Clinton named Hillary to lead the Arkansas Education Standards Committee which improved the state’s education system. As First Lady she courageously spoke out for women during the Beijing Woman’s Conference criticizing the leadership of China. Hillary Clinton is not new to issues that speak to the needs of people including women, minorities, the middle-class, and millennials; the constituencies that Democrats will need to get to the polls. Her message, suggested in a previous column, will be broad based and speak to new economic opportunities for all. It is a message of fairness diametrically opposite to that being enunciated by the current Republican Party.

My advice to the Democratic Party is that they stop the recriminations and don’t settle on a new message just yet. They need to stop eviscerating each other for the failures of 2014. Most Party leaders are actually on the same page and simply fighting around the edges. Schumer is a good guy and Bernie Sanders (I-NH) adds some good ideas. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) recently became a member of the Senate leadership and speaks for the consumer with a message we should heed.

Yet none will be able to develop a complete message as ably as Hillary. A message that will resonate with the broad swath of voters the Party will need to win back the Senate and keep the Presidency. If the message is clear enough it could even help take back the House of Representatives though gerrymandering makes that hard to do. But let’s not jump the gun on defining the message because we didn’t have one in 2014 until we have our candidate for 2016.

Robin Leach Recalls The Confrontation That Sparked 'Lifestyles Of The Rich And Famous' (VIDEO)

Before there were celebrity-centered blogs and stars’ social media accounts full of personal photos and videos, there was “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.” For a full decade, host Robin Leach gave viewers an unprecedented look inside the lavish homes and indulgent activities of wealthy celebrities. The groundbreaking show captivated its audience and helped Leach make a fortune himself, but the veteran reporter says that not everyone in his industry believed that the concept of “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” would yield any kind of success.

As he explains to “Oprah: Where Are They Now?,” Leach began his television career at CNN before shooting the pilot for “Entertainment Tonight.” After a few years, Leach had a particularly fateful confrontation with a new producer over the way they had been covering stories.

“We had a new producer who wanted to get more in-depth with people about their careers in show business,” Leach recalls in the above video. “I said to him, ‘Hate to tell you, nobody is interested in listening to Suzanne Somers stretching with Shakespeare in Central Park. They want to see Suzanne Somers at home, in her bathtub with lots of bubbles and froth.'”

The producer disagreed. “He said, ‘You’re out of your mind,'” Leach says. “So, the idea for ‘Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous’ came out of a confrontation over how we covered stories on ‘Entertainment Tonight.'”

Over the years, the 73-year-old multimillionaire has had the pleasure of interviewing countless celebrities and learning intimate details about their glamorous lives, but one of his more memorable conversations was with the iconic Sophia Loren.

“As we went through the rooms of her villa, I had made some innocent remark about the bed,” Leach says. “I said, ‘This is the bedroom where you and Mr. Ponti,’ — her husband — ‘retire to every night.'”

Loren turned to Leach and gave an answer that he didn’t expect.

“She looked at me and she said, ‘No, but it’s where Carlo Ponti, Jr. was conceived,'” he says. “I just howled. I mean, here was this great actress pointing out where her family came from! It was lovely.”

“Oprah: Where Are They Now” airs Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on OWN. Find OWN on your TV.

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Reporter Shot At While Covering Shooting, Captures Terrifying Moment On Camera

Footage captured this weekend shows the terrifying moment a local TV reporter in Charleston, West Virginia, was shot at while conducting an interview about a shooting that had happened the night before.

WCHS-TV reporter Sean Delancey had been speaking to a woman on Saturday about the shooting when several shots were fired in his direction.

“I go to hit record on the camera, and I say, ‘Can you tell me your full name and spell it,’ and pow-pow-pow,” Delancey was quoted in the station’s story about his experience. “When I heard the first shot, my whole body got stiff because I knew exactly what it was. It was only when I got behind the car that I realized how close it was, because you could hear that zip.”

Fortunately, neither Delancey nor the woman were injured.

A police investigation is reportedly underway.

They're Bringing the Plague! Not.

Warning: Denver talk-radio host Ken Clark tells me the following blog post is a “hit piece consisting of lies and deceit in order to continue to manipulate the public and your readers at the expense of an elected official who is simply trying to protect her constituents.” If only this were true….

The elected official Clark refers to is Republican State Sen. Vicki Marble. At issue is a searing falsehood Marble delivered to Clark on his nooner Freedom 560 show on KLZ 560-AM Nov. 19:

Marble: “Those illegals infiltrate into the system, of the United States, and they bring the disease. They bring whatever from across the border — things we haven’t seen in decades and thought we eradicated. Our whole country is at risk.”

A lengthy search for the factual basis of Marble’s statemenbt yielded nothing, and I asked Clark why he didn’t correct her on air:

Clark: The evidence is overwhelming that we are facing a health risk due to our administrations failure to protect our boarders and as a result are continuing to put our citizens at risk. Senator Marble is 100% correct when she states this fact and by failing to accept the truth and the evidence you are simply attempting to attack a public servant rather than seek the truth. She has been briefed by the Colorado Center for Disease Control as well and is privy to information that is not public, maybe you should try to get some information from them. [BigMedia emphasis]

I asked the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment if there was any evidence that undocumented immigrants are bringing any disease, much less ones that we thought were eradicated, into Colorado.

“CDPHE is not aware of any such evidence,” was the simple answer from Mark Salley, CDPHE spokesperson.

If there were an outbreak of a previously eradicated disease in the United States it would be “all over the news,” according to Dr. Michelle Barron in the infectious disease department of the University of Colorado School of Medicine. In other words, Tea-Party radio wouldn’t be leading the media coverage of a polio resurgence in the United States.

But, I asked Barron, how do we know for sure? Clark provided me with numerous links, some with assertions and unnamed sources saying diseases (new polio strains, tuberculosis, measles) are being brought to America by undocumented immigrants.

“You have to assume that if [undocumented immigrants] get sick they are going to get medical care or die,” Barron told me. “There is a long list of diseases that hospitals must report to the health department. Tuberculosis. Measles. Let’s say you came to the emergency room after traveling in Russia, and you have measles. That’s considered 24-hour-reportable. You would then be contacted by the health department and asked questions about vaccinations and where you’ve been. They would identify how big of a scope this would be.”

“Public health departments actually report these things,” Barron continued. “There’s public reporting. The information wouldn’t be hidden in the background because of a political agenda. It’s part of the reporting that has to happen. If there is a trend, that would be investigated.”

But what happens if we can’t find the immigrants, I asked.

“The public health department has lots of experience hunting people down,” she said. “They will go to your door. There are always the few people who won’t talk or answer the door, but they have their networks of people who will talk, even in homeless communities. Homeless people don’t want to get disease either. They will talk. The public health department is more savvy than people realize.”

How to convince skeptics like Clark and Marble?

“Really and truly, you have to trust that the health care workers are doing the right thing,” said Barron. “If you have already decided what you feel about this, no matter what evidence you are presented with, you are not going to believe it.”

You can find Marble’s comment at the 2:45 mark on this audio recording:

https://soundcloud.com/bigmedia-org/state-sen-vicki-marble-claims-immigrants-bring-eradicated-disease-to-us

Marble’s comment goes beyond the usual Tea-Party accusation that immigrants are bringing bed bugs and even measles. She’s accusing them of introducing eradicated diseases, raising the specter of lepers, etc., and reflecting attacks on immigrants throughout American history.

This summer, Tea Party activists were up in arms about diseases allegedly being brought by migrant children crossing the border into the U.S. These concerns were shown to be basesless.

The New York Times reported in July:

Carrie Williams, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of State Health Services, said there have been only three cases of tuberculosis reported among the undocumented children who have come into Texas. More than 1,000 cases are reported annually in Texas.

She also said that while there have been cases of scabies among the children, “it’s not outside the norm of what we would expect and not exotic to the United States.”

What does seem to spread in the United States is not diseases from immigrants but falsehoods from talk-radio hosts. KNUS host Peter Boyles broke the misinformation back in September that undocumented immigrants are spreading disease in Colorado. And now the rot has jumped to KLZ.

Maybe it’s time to fumigate over at the talk-radio stations?

For more information, including Clark’s full response, click here.

Dare to Be 100: Running Trumps Mutation

A number of decades ago, during my post doctoral training era while building my clinical practice, I harbored the pretense that I would do research as well as see patients. The attempt to live a double career combining practice with time in a research lab caused me to attend many meetings, locally, nationally, and even internationally. I sometimes presented papers but mostly I listened. I must have heard many thousands.

I returned from them with pages of notes. My father, a senior physician before me and veteran of many thousands of lectures himself, asked, “What did you learn that you didn’t know before?” This query was always chastening as I realized the meager value of the considerable expense of time and energy that was invested. I reflected however that it really was worth while, not so much from the lectures but from the collegial contacts that I made during the adventures.

Such was the case when I attended the annual meeting of the Gerontologic Society of America in Washington two weeks ago. Our session was centered on the effect of the Second Law of Thermodynamics on aging which is a recent preoccupation of mine. There were 10 of us who lectured of value. But the main benefit that I realized from this program was a re-meeting with Prof. George Martin of the University of Washington School of Medicine. George is one of the most esteemed masters of American medicine, a leading expert on the genetic aspects of aging, with a particular interest in the rare condition known as progeria an extraordinary genetic disease characterized by the precocity of age changes. George knew of my interests in the effects of exercise on aging, so we greeted enthusiastically, and almost immediately he referred a scientific paper that he knew would claim my interest. The title of the paper was “endurance exercise rescues progeroid aging and induces systemic mitochondrial rejuvenation in mtDNA mutated mice.” It was published in PNAS 2011, multiple authors mostly from McMaster University. The work derived from the lab of Mark Tarnopolsky. (1)

It is a truly elegant paper.

Its conclusions knocked my socks off:

5 months of endurance exercise induced systemic mitochondrial biogenesis, prevented mtDNA depletion and mutations, increased mitochondrial oxidative capacity and respiratory chain assembly, restored mitochondrial morphology, and blunted pathological levels of apoptosis in multiple tissues of mtDNA mutator mice. These adaptations conferred complete phenotypic protection, reduced multisystem pathology, and prevented premature mortality in these mice.

In simpler words: Exercise slowed aging and retarded mortality in these genetically otherwise predestined animals.

This is precisely the mantra that I have espoused for my career.

So I claim great benefit from this encounter, surely worthy of the time and energy expended. I will use this strong endorsement in my ongoing effort to reduce health illiteracy.

Reference:

Safdar A, Bourgeois J, Ogburn D.,Endurance Exercise Rescues Progeroid Aging and Induces Systemic Mitochondrial Rejuvenation in mtDNA Mutator Mice. 2011 PNAS; 108: 4135-4140.

In Our Own Backyard: The Sad Truths of Sex Trafficking

We live in a world where children are sold for sex. I live in a world where children are sold for sex. You live in a world where children are sold for sex. Tragically, sex trafficking isn’t limited to faraway places, but exists in our own backyards, schools, churches and communities. If you do not believe this is true then you haven’t been looking or listening.

The acts that are performed against these already vulnerable individuals can only be called evil because they are incredibly inhumane. Daily, these children are raped, abused and tortured. They are held in captivity where their basic human rights and choices are withheld until compliance is achieved. They are violently beaten physically, but also endure mental and emotional abuse. They are told they have no value and that no one cares. They are constantly given evidence of this truth as their bodies are sold for the profit of one and the pleasure of another. If they wish to be fed, they must reach their daily quota of “dates,” which can total eight, ten, to twelve rapes a day. Their busiest hours are between 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. as their customers are traveling from home to work or from work to home before returning to have dinner with their wives and children.

jenny williamson

When I learned of this atrocity against children, my heart, my mother’s heart broke and I vowed I would do something about this evil. It is what I live for and it is what I will die for. Some days the issue feels so enormous that any small act of kindness I offer, or attempt to offer, is like throwing a pebble into the ocean — it hardly makes a difference and no one even notices.

Nevertheless, I still fight to speak for those who cannot speak for themselves. In my heart they are my daughters and my children. I do for them what I would do for the ones birthed from my body. I build them a home and call them family. I focus on the one precious life in front of me. I love them until they can love themselves. I believe in them until they can believe in themselves. I dream of their future until they can dream of one on their own.

Unfortunately, I cannot erase their horrific past, answer their gut wrenching questions or explain why this happen to them. But I can walk with them through the memories and nightmares of their past into the potential of their futures. I can equip, encourage and empower them to have the courage to be and do all that they were created for. I see who they are meant to be — who they were created to be. Before time began, they were created on purpose for a purpose and it is my heart’s desire to see them become that person. It takes an enormous amount of courage for them to leave the known for the unknown; for them to believe in their own destiny. Loving these kids is the most difficult thing I have ever attempted in my life, but they are worth it.

Cast a vote in support of noteworthy volunteers who will get to shine next week, when L’Oreal honors 10 Women of Worth — amazing volunteers combatting disease, poverty, sex trafficking and addiction — with $25,000 grants. You can vote for which honoree will get an additional $25,000 for her cause. Go to WomenofWorth.com to read for their stories, then vote! You can also vote on the L’Oréal Paris Facebook page or by re-tweeting news on the awardee from @LOrealParisUSA. The deadline for voting is Wednesday, November 26.

An Economic Agenda for America: Twelve Steps Forward

The American people must make a fundamental decision. Do we continue the 40-year decline of our middle class and the growing gap between the very rich and everyone else, or do we fight for a progressive economic agenda that creates jobs, raises wages, protects the environment and provides health care for all? Are we prepared to take on the enormous economic and political power of the billionaire class, or do we continue to slide into economic and political oligarchy? These are the most important questions of our time, and how we answer them will determine the future of our country.

The long-term deterioration of the middle class, accelerated by the Wall Street crash of 2008, has not been pretty. Today, we have more wealth and income inequality than any major country on earth. We have one of the highest childhood poverty rates and we are the only country in the industrialized world which does not guarantee health care for all. We once led the world in terms of the percentage of our people who graduated college, but we are now in 12th place. Our infrastructure, once the envy of the world, is collapsing.

Real unemployment today is not 5.8 percent, it is 11.5 percent if we include those who have given up looking for work or who are working part time when they want to work full time. Youth unemployment is 18.6 percent and African-American youth unemployment is 32.6 percent.

Today, millions of Americans are working longer hours for lower wages. In inflation-adjusted dollars, the median male worker earned $783 less last year than he made 41 years ago. The median woman worker made $1,337 less last year than she earned in 2007. Since 1999, the median middle-class family has seen its income go down by almost $5,000 after adjusting for inflation, now earning less than it did 25 years ago.

The American people must demand that Congress and the White House start protecting the interests of working families, not just wealthy campaign contributors. We need federal legislation to put the unemployed back to work, to raise wages and make certain that all Americans have the health care and education they need for healthy and productive lives.
As Vermont’s senator, here are twelve initiatives that I will be fighting for which can restore America’s middle class.

1. We need a major investment to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure: roads, bridges, water systems, waste water plants, airports, railroads and schools. It has been estimated that the cost of the Bush-Cheney Iraq War, a war we should never have waged, will total $3 trillion by the time the last veteran receives needed care. A $1 trillion investment in infrastructure could create 13 million decent paying jobs and make this country more efficient and productive. We need to invest in infrastructure, not more war.

2. The United States must lead the world in reversing climate change and make certain that this planet is habitable for our children and grandchildren. We must transform our energy system away from fossil fuels and into energy efficiency and sustainable energies. Millions of homes and buildings need to be weatherized, our transportation system needs to be energy efficient and we need to greatly accelerate the progress we are already seeing in wind, solar, geothermal, biomass and other forms of sustainable energy. Transforming our energy system will not only protect the environment, it will create good paying jobs.

3. We need to develop new economic models to increase job creation and productivity. Instead of giving huge tax breaks to corporations which ship our jobs to China and other low-wage countries, we need to provide assistance to workers who want to purchase their own businesses by establishing worker-owned cooperatives. Study after study shows that when workers have an ownership stake in the businesses they work for, productivity goes up, absenteeism goes down and employees are much more satisfied with their jobs.

4. Union workers who are able to collectively bargain for higher wages and benefits earn substantially more than non-union workers. Today, corporate opposition to union organizing makes it extremely difficult for workers to join a union. We need legislation which makes it clear that when a majority of workers sign cards in support of a union, they can form a union.

5. The current federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour is a starvation wage. We need to raise the minimum wage to a living wage. No one in this country who works 40 hours a week should live in poverty.

6. Women workers today earn 78 percent of what their male counterparts make. We need pay equity in our country — equal pay for equal work.

7. Since 2001 we have lost more than 60,000 factories in this country, and more than 4.9 million decent-paying manufacturing jobs. We must end our disastrous trade policies (NAFTA, CAFTA, PNTR with China, etc.) which enable corporate America to shut down plants in this country and move to China and other low-wage countries. We need to end the race to the bottom and develop trade policies which demand that American corporations create jobs here, and not abroad.

8. In today’s highly competitive global economy, millions of Americans are unable to afford the higher education they need in order to get good-paying jobs. Further, with both parents now often at work, most working-class families can’t locate the high-quality and affordable child care they need for their kids. Quality education in America, from child care to higher education, must be affordable for all. Without a high-quality and affordable educational system, we will be unable to compete globally and our standard of living will continue to decline.

9. The function of banking is to facilitate the flow of capital into productive and job-creating activities. Financial institutions cannot be an island unto themselves, standing as huge profit centers outside of the real economy. Today, six huge Wall Street financial institutions have assets equivalent to 61 percent of our gross domestic product – over $9.8 trillion. These institutions underwrite more than half the mortgages in this country and more than two-thirds of the credit cards. The greed, recklessness and illegal behavior of major Wall Street firms plunged this country into the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. They are too powerful to be reformed. They must be broken up.

10. The United States must join the rest of the industrialized world and recognize that health care is a right of all, and not a privilege. Despite the fact that more than 40 million Americans have no health insurance, we spend almost twice as much per capita on health care as any other nation. We need to establish a Medicare-for-all, single-payer system.

11. Millions of seniors live in poverty and we have the highest rate of childhood poverty of any major country. We must strengthen the social safety net, not weaken it. Instead of cutting Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and nutrition programs, we should be expanding these programs.

12. At a time of massive wealth and income inequality, we need a progressive tax system in this country which is based on ability to pay. It is not acceptable that major profitable corporations have paid nothing in federal income taxes, and that corporate CEOs in this country often enjoy an effective tax rate which is lower than their secretaries. It is absurd that we lose over $100 billion a year in revenue because corporations and the wealthy stash their cash in offshore tax havens around the world. The time is long overdue for real tax reform.