Archive for the ‘Economic Justice’ Category

fear, loathing, health care and Labor Day

Monday, September 7th, 2009

[IMPT NOTE from Traction: This Wed eve, Pres. Obama delivers one of the most important speeches of his administration: a talk on health insurance reform to a joint session of Congress.  We've postponed our Socially Responsible Investing workshop and we're headed over to the Pinhook to watch the speech (time TBA).  Come early to talk with health care advocates who will help us make sense of this complex issue.  RSVP to health@getTraction.org]

Fear is a powerful thing.

Today, on Labor Day, I’m thinking about health care and job insecurity.  When my daughter was born 7 years ago, she was 2 months premature and spent over a month in the hospital.  It cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to care for her, make her safe and ensure she could become the smart, beautiful and strong little girl she is today.  Because I was insured through my employer at the time, I never paid anything beyond my monthly premiums.  Within the last year, however, I’ve lost my job twice — the first time, I lost my group plan, and the second time I lost the ability to pay for individual coverage.  I shudder to think what would happen if Chaya had been born this year, or what will happen if she gets seriously ill now.

Over the last few weeks, as I’ve watched the rhetoric on health insurance reform ratchet up and tempers flare higher, I used to wonder why health care would elicit such strong opposition.  Doesn’t every other Western democracy already have universal coverage?  Don’t we already provide government protection against fire, crime, natural disaster, starvation, invasion, and the like?  Shouldn’t this be a no-brainer?

But now I realize there may be a fairly deep, unspoken reason for the resistance: Health care is scary, scary stuff.  It’s about us at our weakest and most vulnerable.  It’s about the biggest bogeyman of all, the specter of debilitation and physical suffering for our loved ones and ourselves.

The idea of being able to go it alone successfully in the face of this threat is very appealing and comforting — and demonstrably, dangerously false.  The hard truth is that we, all of us, ARE susceptible to the ravages of injury and disease, and no amount of rugged individualism will ever make it otherwise.  In fact, as a nation and a species, the only thing that has ever gained us any ground against the bogeyman is our ability to hang together and look out for one another.

I’m scared too.  Not that government panels will make life-or-death decisions for us, or that the US government aims to destroy private industry, or that expanding the “welfare state” will result in Stalinist clampdowns on individual liberties, or that reform (as opposed to inaction) will bankrupt the nation — all those fly in the face of available evidence.  No, I’m scared that millions of uninsured Americans won’t be able to afford essential care.  That those with pre-existing conditions will be excluded.  That private insurance companies will maximize profit at the expense of their customers’ health.  I’m scared of all of these things because they are happening now.

But to hell with fear.  I would rather temporarily lose a principled fight for what we really need — truly better financial and medical outcomes for us all — than achieve only a half-measure now by trying to appease an opposition led by irrational arguments and invested in failure anyway.

We need what we need, and we’ll get it eventually — sooner, if we take a stand, later if we don’t, or now, if we fight tooth and nail.

Sasha Akhavi
job-seeker, hiker, Tractivist

P.S. Join Traction at the Pinhook this Wednesday evening to watch President Obama speak.  RSVP to health@getTraction.org for details as they unfold.

break the bank habit: join a credit union

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Dear Tractivists,

Long before the government committed nearly 1 TRILLION dollars to bailing out the financial system — a system that for years advocated for less regulation and less oversight so that it could make more money for shareholders at the expense of consumers — many progressives hoped to revolutionize that predatory system rather than just perpetuate it.

WHAT: (Un)Making Bank: what you should know about credit unions
WHEN: Wed. Sept. 2, 6:30-8 PM
WHERE: Traction HQ (1018 Broad St. in Durham)
RSVP: money@getTraction.org

But if not revolution, is remorse too much to ask?  Apparently so. Credit card rates are soaring before new reforms take effect, and many major banks are piling new debit card and overdraft fees on those who can least afford them.

The good news: YOU don’t have to participate in this predatory system!  There is an alternative:as not-for-profit member-owned cooperatives, credit unions focus on what is best for consumers, not investors.  CU’s are another opportunity to live your values.

On Wednesday, you’ll learn the answers to these questions and more:

- What is a credit union, and how is it different from a bank?
- Why are their customers called ‘members’?
- Who can join one?
- Does it really matter where I keep my money and take out loans?

I oversee political affairs for the NC Credit Union League, and I’m excited to answer all of your credit union questions and talk with you about options.  RSVP to money@getTraction.org if you can make it!

See you soon,

Mickey
beekeeper, advocate for the little guy, Tractivist

P.S. Upcoming Traction events…

Mad Money workshops (both with Greg Davis):

-Sept 9: Money Where Your Mouth Is: Green & Socially Responsible Investing
-Sept 16: Planning for the Long Haul: Real Estate and Retirement

And stay tuned for… ReelPolitik: Rethink Afghanistan, ‘how to be a good ally’, and Traction’s Pride festivities.

Economy got you down? Don’t get mad, get educated!

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Do you feel your blood pressure rise every time you hear the words “tough economic times”? Feel like you don’t know who to turn to for advice on the stock market and retirement planning? Are you avoiding looking your bank account in the face because you don’t want it to see you cry?

If the economy’s got you down, don’t get mad , get educated! But where can money-conscious progressives turn for good information? Never fear: Traction’s got your back!

WHAT: Mad Money: a workshop series with financial guru Tractivists
WHEN: Every Wed. starting Aug. 5th, 6:30-8 PM
WHERE: Traction HQ, 1018 Broad St.
RSVP: money@getTraction.org

WHY: Because the economic crisis is hitting Gen X and Gen Y hard. Now, more than ever before, young people need to figure out how to navigate our local, national, and global economies to put our dollars to work—for us and for the causes we care about.  That’s right, sound money management doesn’t just benefit you personally, it’s also a way to work toward a more progressive future. Funding causes and organizations you believe in, contributing to political campaigns, and voting with your dollars is more do-able (and more fun) when your finances are in order!

Each Wednesday starting next week (August 5th), Traction’s very own financial gurus will dispense their knowledge and work with us to upgrade our economic know-how. You’ll not only gain serious skills, you’ll get to blow off some steam with folks who share your values and have the same questions you do – and maybe you’ll even forget about the “R-word” for a couple of hours.

Every week, we’ll have a Tractivist financial expert, info on the topic of the night, take-home materials, and drinks for sale at economic meltdown prices. You bring your questions and your friends. Come for all the workshops and become a financial guru yourself, or pick and choose amongst the topics.  RSVP to money@getTraction.org before each event for exclusive early access to workshop materials.

Mad Money Workshop Schedule:
1. Mapping Your Money: Budgeting for Financial Freedom (Patrick Lyons of Lyons Den Capital) Aug. 5
2. Your Personal Stimulus Package: Investment Strategies 101 (Greg Davis of G. Davis Capital) – Aug. 12
3. Let’s Get it Started: Investment Basics and How to Begin Investing (Greg Davis) – Aug. 19
4. Stretching Your Dollars: A Skillshare – Aug. 26
5. Making Bank: What You Should Know About Credit Unions (Mickey Fanney and Lauren Whaley of the NC Credit Union League) – Sept. 2
6. Money Where Your Mouth Is: Green & Socially Responsible Investing (Greg Davis) – Sept. 9
7. Planning for the Long Haul: Real Estate and Retirement (Greg Davis) – Sept. 16

And don’t forget: The workshop on August 26th will be a skillshare—lots of Tractivists trading knowledge on how to stretch your dollars and survive the recession. If you know where to find the hottest deals, how to whip up home remedies, how to cook on a tight budget, we want to hear from you! Email money@getTraction.or g with your area of expertise so we know what you’ll bring to the table on the 26th.

We’ll get through the madness together!

Cara
spender, saver, Tractivist

Local Fruit Trifecta, Part 2: Great Blueberry Pickstravaganza

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

It’s hard to believe it’s been a whole year since a passel of Tractivists descended on Orange County to denude a bountiful patch of local, organic blueberries. Or maybe not so hard to believe if, like me, you’re looking at your freezer and finding blueberries conspicuously missing next to the strawberries you picked in May.

In any case, our course of action is clear — we must make another foray deep into the den of the savage wild blueberry. That’s right, grab your sun hat and a bucket, and come on out for the Second Annual Great Blueberry Pickstravaganza!

What: 2nd Annual Great Blueberry Pickstravaganza: an organic U-pick adventure
When: Saturday morning, July 18th, 8:30 AM
Where: Carpool from Durham Farmers’ Market; or meet at Cedar Grove Blueberry Farm
RSVP: blueberry@getTraction.org

Cost: $2.00 / lb.

http://kelliejones.files.wordpress.com/2009/04/blueberries_earlyblue.jpg

Why:

1. Because picking local blueberries is a finger in the eye of the agricultural-industrial complex.
2. Because blueberries are insanely good for you and taste insanely good.
3. Because picking local blueberries is a win-win-win situation:
- You win because your blueberries are cheaper, fresher, tastier, and longer-lasting.
- Local farmers win because your money goes directly to the farmer instead of through distributors.
- Your local environment wins because you’re supporting the growth of a native plant with an important place in the existing local ecosystem; native crops like blueberries require fewer chemicals than highly industrialized and subsidized crops like feed corn.
4. Because local and organic berries require less energy to get to your table than conventional berries from far away; you can gorge on berries with little contribution to climate change.
5. Because right now $5 could buy you one pint of blueberries at the local farmer’s market or TWO AND A HALF POUNDS if you pick them yourself!
6. Because Traction will hand out tips on how to pick, preserve, and prepare blueberries.
7. Because last year you picked four pounds and your best friend picked seven, and this year it’s war!
8. Because your freezer is empty.
9. Because your freezer is full, and you need an excuse to cook the package of shrimp you bought in December.
10. Because, as we all know, going to a Traction event is like emptying a bottle of delirious joy goo all over your head.

So if you think you’ve got what it takes to pick up a spear, or just a bucket, and join the ancient hunt for the dangerous wild blueberry, or if you just want to spend a couple of hours in good company and eating more or less everything you see, then send an RSVP right now to blueberry@getTraction.org for more information. We’ll head off early so we don’t get sunstroke. Bring yourself, your kids (there’s a swingset), your dog (we checked; dogs are OK), your neighbor… Invite ‘em all.

Please include in your RSVP:
a. How many people you’ll bring (best guess)
b. Whether you’d rather carpool with us from the Market or meet us at the farm

I will reply to RSVPs with detailed information on the meeting point, directions to the farm, a list of what to bring, copies of handouts, etc.

Stay tuned for our fall outing to pick apples and complete Traction’s 2009 local fruit trifecta. I look forward to once again plundering the berry harvest in your company!

Colin Cannell
Smuggler, libertine, Tractiberry

P.S. Quinton, Traction’s bike-riding, Locopop-loving, YouTube-lobbying intern, says:
"I need your recommendations for progressive fun — as weird as pig wrasslin’, as flexible as improv at DSI Comedy, as funny as "Yoga in the Hood". Tell me your favorite hang-out or restaurant/coffee bar/pastry shop. Where can I go for a live performance, a good book, or an open mic night? What about salsa or music lessons? Which progressive and locally-owned businesses do you support? Email me at quinton@getTraction.org !"

P.P.S. Upcoming Traction events:
7/9 Drinking Liberally: Tonight and every Thursday. Bull McCabe’s, 8 PM – 10 PM
7/19 Outdoors group: Plant Stalkers. Write to outdoors@getTraction.org .
early Aug Reel Politik: King Corn. Write to corn@getTraction.org .
8/5 Improve your financial know-how: Series kick-off. Write to cara@getTraction.org .

The Employee Free Choice Act : Why You Should Care and What You Can Do

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

While at the America’s Future Now conference, I attended a very moving panel on the Employee Free Choice Act and workers’ rights generally.
Larry Cohen of the Communications Workers of America union said that U.S. laws contain the worst repressions of workers’ rights in the democratic world. He and other speakers referred to the fight for workers’ rights as the major civil rights battle of our time.

As a progressive movement we have lots of reasons to care about the outcome of the EFCA and other labor battles. Wade Henderson of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights spoke about the many strong links between labor and the civil rights movement since the beginning. Union members not only earn higher wages, are more likely to have health care, and enjoy greater well-being at work, they also vote more progressively than non-union members and are active allies in many other progressive movements.

At Traction’s spring happy hour, MaryBe McMillan of the NC AFL-CIO asked us to take action on the Employee Free Choice Act by thanking Sen. Kay Hagan for her initial support of the bill. The message I got from the panel was that we need to KEEP talking to Sen. Hagan as well as our Representatives in the House to ask them to support (or continue to support) the EFCA. The AFL-CIO has one way to get in touch with your legislators here , or you can call or send a hand-written letter. Any way you do it, it’s important that we speak up now for labor rights.

Are you going to take action? Have you done it already? Let me know in a comment or email to cara@getTraction.org!

Building the Progressive Majority : Blogging from the America’s Future Now Conference

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Talk at the first day of the America’s Future Now conference has centered on the issues of healthcare, the economy, and labor rights.  Highlights for me included speeches by Gov. Howard Dean, Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis and William McNary calling for healthcare reform, and an innovative presentation about the need for public funding of elections.  

I want to share some hopeful news from a session I attended called “A New and Enduring Progressive Majority?” which featured speakers from Progressive Majority, Women’s Voices Women’s Vote, the Center for American Progress, Working America, and Democracia USA.  All the speakers agreed that the changes in the American voting population in the past decade have worked in favor of progressive change, and this trend is likely to continue–good news.  

Every speaker also talked about the role of young people in the future of the progressive movement.  Young people are overwhelmingly more progressive than older folks, so it’s going to be vital that we stay active and keep working to engage our peers–even better news!  I was proud to be representing an organization that’s working to do just that.   

One last stunning factoid from the session: by the year 2016 (not that far off!), the majority of voters will no longer be white Christians.  

More to come tomorrow about the progressive plan to move America forward and what Tractivists are going to need to do to help shape our future!