Robert Reich | Hillary's Plan to Crack Down on Runaway Drug Prices Doesn't Go Far Enough
Robert Reich, Robert Reich Facebook
Reich writes: "Today Hillary Clinton unveiled a plan to crack down on unwarranted increases in prescription drug prices, such as the steep increase in the cost of the EpiPen (a lifesaving injection device for people with severe allergies) by, among other things, fining drug companies found to have unduly increased prices."
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Robert Reich, Robert Reich Facebook
Reich writes: "Today Hillary Clinton unveiled a plan to crack down on unwarranted increases in prescription drug prices, such as the steep increase in the cost of the EpiPen (a lifesaving injection device for people with severe allergies) by, among other things, fining drug companies found to have unduly increased prices."
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Trump Hasn't Paid Many of His Top Staffers
Harper Neidig, The Hill
Neidig writes: "At least 10 staffers in Donald Trump’s campaign have been working for free, according to a Reuters review of campaign finance filings."
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Harper Neidig, The Hill
Neidig writes: "At least 10 staffers in Donald Trump’s campaign have been working for free, according to a Reuters review of campaign finance filings."
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The Koch Brothers Will Spend Anything to Get Revenge on Harry Reid
Josh Israel and Erica Hellerstein, Think Progress
Israel writes: "A new advertisement targeting Nevada Senate hopeful Catherine Cortez Masto opens with an ominous, slow chord."
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Josh Israel and Erica Hellerstein, Think Progress
Israel writes: "A new advertisement targeting Nevada Senate hopeful Catherine Cortez Masto opens with an ominous, slow chord."
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Tribal Dakota Pipeline Resistance the Start of Something Bigger
Jacqueline Keeler, TeleSUR
Keeler writes: "The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe announced via its Facebook page on Sept. 1 that 188 Tribes, or Native Nations, from across the United States and Canada have declared their support for the Lakota/Dakota Tribes’ fight to stop the $3.8 billion Dakota Access Pipeline carrying heavy Bakken crude oil from crossing the Missouri River and threatening the sovereign nations’ main water source."
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Jacqueline Keeler, TeleSUR
Keeler writes: "The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe announced via its Facebook page on Sept. 1 that 188 Tribes, or Native Nations, from across the United States and Canada have declared their support for the Lakota/Dakota Tribes’ fight to stop the $3.8 billion Dakota Access Pipeline carrying heavy Bakken crude oil from crossing the Missouri River and threatening the sovereign nations’ main water source."
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Media Continues to Refer to Brock Turner as a “Stanford Swimmer” Rather Than a Rapist
Naomi LaChance, The Intercept
LaChance writes: "When Brock Turner was released from jail today after serving half of his six-month sentence for the sexual assault of an unconscious woman, headlines referring to him as a Stanford swimmer sparked renewed controversy."
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Naomi LaChance, The Intercept
LaChance writes: "When Brock Turner was released from jail today after serving half of his six-month sentence for the sexual assault of an unconscious woman, headlines referring to him as a Stanford swimmer sparked renewed controversy."
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America Has Accepted 10,000 Syrian Refugees. That’s Still Too Few.
Washington Post
Excerpt: "In the face of the most calamitous refugee crisis since World War II, the United States has finally begun granting refuge to displaced Syrians on a pace that, while still unequal to the problem’s scale and the United States’ capacity, at least starts to acknowledge that a crisis exists."
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Washington Post
Excerpt: "In the face of the most calamitous refugee crisis since World War II, the United States has finally begun granting refuge to displaced Syrians on a pace that, while still unequal to the problem’s scale and the United States’ capacity, at least starts to acknowledge that a crisis exists."
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Sticks and Stones and Dead Wolves
Stephen Miller, Yes Magazine
Miller writes: "Insults. Name-calling. Death threats. Sound like a Trump rally? Actually, it’s all part of the dialogue among conservation-minded folks in response to a recent Washington state decision to kill a wolf pack that had been preying on livestock on public land."
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Stephen Miller, Yes Magazine
Miller writes: "Insults. Name-calling. Death threats. Sound like a Trump rally? Actually, it’s all part of the dialogue among conservation-minded folks in response to a recent Washington state decision to kill a wolf pack that had been preying on livestock on public land."
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