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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Saturday, November 23, 2013

Inequality is (Literally) Killing America

The sad facts define the Moral Bankruptcy of a nation that accepts Welfare for the Wealthy and denies basic health care for the poor.


Inequality is (Literally) Killing America

By: Zoƫ Carpenter

Only a few miles separate the Baltimore neighborhoods of Roland Park and Upton Druid Heights. But residents of the two areas can measure the distance between them in years—twenty years, to be exact. That’s the difference in life expectancy between Roland Park, where people live to be 83 on average, and Upton Druid Heights, where they can expect to die at 63.

Underlying these gaps in life expectancy are vast economic disparities. Roland Park is an affluent neighborhood with an unemployment rate of 3.4 percent, and a median household income above $90,000. More than 17 percent of people in Upton Druid Heights are unemployed, and the median household income is just $13,388.

It’s no secret that this sort of economic inequality is increasing nationwide; the disparity between America’s richest and poorest is the widest it’s been since the Roaring Twenties. Less discussed are the gaps in life expectancy that have widened over the past twenty-five years between America’s counties, cities and neighborhoods. While the country as a whole has gotten richer and healthier, the poor have gotten poorer, the middle class has shrunk and Americans without high school diplomas have seen their life expectancy slide back to what it was in the 1950s. Economic inequalities manifest not in numbers, but in sick and dying bodies.

On Wednesday, Senator Bernie Sanders convened a hearing before the Primary Health and Aging subcommittee to examine the connections between material and physiological well-being, and the policy implications. With Congress fixed on historic reforms to the healthcare delivery system, the doctors and public health professionals who testified this morning made it clear that policies outside of the healthcare domain are equally vital for keeping people healthy—namely, those that target poverty and inequality.

Continue reading here.

http://www.sanders.senate.gov/newsroom/must-read/inequality-is-literally-killing-america?utm_source=berniebuzz&utm_medium=email&utm_content=Read+more+in+The+Nation+featuredlinkurl&utm_campaign=National+Bernie+Buzz+11-22




How McDonald's and Walmart Became Welfare Queens
Barry Ritholz for Bloomberg News










Paul Ryan Gets 700,000 ‘No' Votes on Social Security Cuts
Isaiah Poole for Common Dreams
















Read the rest:
http://sanders.enews.senate.gov/mail/util.cfm?gpiv=2100110447.803898.118&gen=1

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