Should Obama's Health Care Be Opposed?: An … – Health and Fitness

President Obama with Supreme Court Justices John Roberts, Anthony Kennedy, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, and Sonia Sotomayor before his State of the Union address on Capitol Hill, January 24, 2012

To the Editors:

I admire Ronald Dworkin greatly, and I certainly defer to him on most legal matters, so it is with some reluctance that I take issue with his essay ?Why the Mandate Is Constitutional: The Real Argument? [NYR, May 10]. I have several objections, most of which concern not the legal matters, but his more general comments about the virtues of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

Dworkin exaggerates the benefits of the ACA. For example, he writes that ?the act provides, among other benefits, health care insurance for the 16 percent of citizens who now lack it?.? It does not. Of the 50 million uninsured Americans at the time the ACA was enacted, the law was designed to cover just 32 million, leaving 18 million still uninsured. Half of the 32 million would gain coverage simply by virtue of expanding Medicaid eligibility?something that did not require the whole apparatus of the ACA. So the mandate that requires uninsured people to buy private insurance, which is at the heart of the Supreme Court challenge, would cover only 16 million people, a mere 5 percent of the population.

He also refers to the Massachusetts mandate as the core of ?that state?s apparently successful health care program, on which the national act was partly based.? But the Massachusetts plan, which has been in effect for five years, is rapidly becoming unsustainable. Health care now consumes 43 percent of the state budget, a percentage that has been growing, while expenditures on every other budgetary category?including education, human services, infrastructure, law, and public safety?have been shrinking. Although Massachusetts began with advantages the rest of the country doesn?t have?an already high rate of insurance and a large ?free care pool,? provided by hospital and insurance fees, that was tapped to subsidize the new plan?it is still unable to afford it.

The legislature is now trying to contain costs by devising new payment methods for providers, while insurers are raising premiums, deductibles, and copayments. The problem in Massachusetts is that there was no way to control the costs of an inherently inflationary reform, just as there isn?t in the ACA. Massachusetts should be seen not as an inspiration, but as a warning.

Dworkin argues that there are national precedents for the ACA mandate to purchase health insurance. But is that true? The mandate is not like the requirement to pay for Medicare and Social Security through payroll taxes. Instead, it requires people to buy a commercial product from investor-owned companies at whatever price the companies choose to charge. In short, people are required to contribute to the profits and corporate salaries and marketing costs of companies like WellPoint and UnitedHealthCare. I don?t believe there is any precedent for that.

My objection to the mandate is not that it requires people to purchase insurance, but that it specifies they buy it from investor-owned companies, whose practices have done much to make our health care system the ?unjust and expensive shambles? Dworkin accurately describes it as being. No one should be required to enter this treacherous market; it is not the same as paying for publicly administered services, like Medicare or police and fire protection.

Dworkin dismisses concerns that if Congress can make us buy private health insurance, then it can make us buy any other commercial product, arguing that public opinion would prevent Congress from unreasonably extending its power in that way (?politics supplies the appropriate check?). That?s a mighty thin reed to hold on to, given the recent record of Congress and its capture by corporate interests. I would feel better if we didn?t provide the precedent.

He is also too sanguine about the ability of regulations to stop the worst abuses of the private insurance industry, such as denying coverage for people with pre-existing conditions. The fact remains that these companies will profit by avoiding high-risk patients if they possibly can, and they will probably find ways to do so. The ACA does some of that work for them, by allowing them to charge up to three times as much for older patients as for younger ones, age being a good proxy for a higher risk of chronic illness. A few years ago, in a private discussion with a senior executive of America?s Health Insurance Plans, the industry?s trade association, I was told that if the regulations did squeeze the profits of the insurers, they would simply raise the premiums. There is nothing in the ACA to prevent that.

In a press conference on July 22, 2009, while the ACA was being crafted, President Obama said, ?Now, the truth is that unless you have what?s called a single-payer system in which everybody is automatically covered, then you?re probably not going to reach every single individual.? He was right. Moreover, a single-payer system is the only way to do so while containing costs. Polls have shown that most Americans favor it, and a Massachusetts survey showed that physicians there prefer it to the state?s current system. I?ve advocated extending Medicare to everyone by dropping the qualifying age one decade at a time, and delivering it in a nonprofit system, something I believe the public would enthusiastically accept.

Dworkin, like many others, dismisses a single-payer system as unrealistic, saying it would be ?politically impossible in the United States now, or in the foreseeable future.? But the fact that Congress lags behind public opinion is surely partly due to liberals accepting the premise that a single-payer system is off the table, while what is truly unrealistic is imagining that we can provide universal and affordable health care in a market-based system.

Marcia Angell
Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts

Ronald Dworkin replies:

Marcia Angell is an important expert on American health care. She has contributed excellent articles on that subject to The New York Review and I have learned much from her. My article was about the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, not about its merits, but I made plain my opinion that the act would make a considerable improvement in American health care and she disagrees. She apparently hopes that the Supreme Court will strike the act down and save the country from a precedent that allows Congress to force people to buy products from private companies. She thinks it reasonable to suppose that a new Congress would then pass a much more radical and effective scheme: a ?single-payer? national health service funded entirely by government out of federal taxes.

I agree that such a scheme would be better than what the act provides, but I also agree with the writer who said, in these pages, that ?such a system does not have the remotest chance of being legislated by our national government anytime soon.?* Liberal congressmen tried and failed to secure a ?public option? supplement to the act that would have allowed the government to offer insurance in competition with private insurers. A single-payer system would be much more radical than a public option: even Senator Edward Kennedy, who was among the most powerful advocates of a single-payer system, long ago abandoned all hope of achieving it, according to Jeff Madrick, a former economic adviser to the senator.

In any case, it seems a mistake to dismiss the act because something better might conceivably take its place in the future. Reducing the age of eligibility for Medicare to fifty-five, while requiring payment of a premium, was in fact considered and rejected. Perhaps a similar arrangement, or the extension of standard Medicare, remains possible. If so, such changes should be pursued. But I believe it wiser for influential experts like Angell to continue to work toward improvements of this kind, taking the act as a base, than to revert to a status quo in which so many millions of Americans couldn?t afford insurance or were denied it even though they could. Scorched earth is never good policy.

Angell offers more detailed criticism of my article. She says that I exaggerated the benefits of the act in saying that it provides health insurance for the 16 percent of Americans who are now uninsured. My statement was more simplification than exaggeration, however. The Congressional Budget Office reports that without the act, or something like it, the United States would have 54 million uninsured by 2019; with the act the CBO predicts 23 million. Of the latter, a third will be illegal aliens, who will nevertheless continue to be entitled to emergency care. Another third will be people eligible for Medicaid but who fail to enroll. The last third will be those, mostly younger and single, who choose to pay the penalty tax?a maximum rising to 2.5 percent of income or $695, whichever is greater, by 2016?instead of buying insurance, or those who for a variety of reasons are not required to pay a penalty at all if they remain uninsured. The number of Americans whom the act will leave involuntarily uninsured seems marginal.

The Massachusetts plan has indeed been successful in significantly expanding insurance coverage. I agree that it has not controlled health care costs, which continue to rise steeply and unsustainably, both in that state and nationally. However, Massachusetts legislators have now introduced a bill that would cap the rate of increase of overall health care costs in the state at the rate of increase in the state?s gross domestic product, or, after 2016, at half a percentage point below that rate, and it would grant regulators a variety of enforcement powers. That bill might serve as a model for other states as well.

Still, it remains unclear how far health care costs can be curtailed. Greed and bad politics are no doubt an important part of the problem, but by no means all of it. Populations are growing steadily older and medical technology steadily more sophisticated and expensive. Even single-payer systems have proved unable to reverse the trend. Costs in the most famous of these?the British NHS?rose from ?38 billion a year in 1997 to ?102 billion today, and are estimated to reach ?230 billion in 2030. Cost-cutting reform of the NHS remains a perennial challenge in British politics.

Radical imagination?and a political will that is hard now to anticipate?may be required effectively to confront the problem. But it would be a mistake to see the obvious justice of the act?s expanded insurance coverage as a step in the wrong direction. The act does contain provisions aimed at cost reduction (these are summarized at www.kaiseredu.org/issue-modules/us-health-care-costs/background-brief.aspx) though it is not clear that these will be particularly effective. I believe that more hope lies in the prospect that once voters realize?as someday they must?how much most of them have benefited from the act?s greatly improved coverage, it will become politically possible to add a public option provision that would indeed significantly reduce overall insurance costs.

Angell writes that the act forces people to buy insurance from private insurance companies ?at whatever price the companies choose to charge.? It does not. It imposes a 40 percent excise tax on expensive ?Cadillac? policies. It requires insurers to spend 80 percent of the premiums they receive?85 percent for large employer plans?on medical care (the average now is 70 percent) and to refund premiums if they do not. It imposes only a relatively low tax penalty on people who choose not to insure, and in that way provides an incentive for lower premiums. True, the act permits different premiums for different age groups. But that is defensible, and is in any case better protection against gouging than allowing insurers to ?cherry-pick? within each age group by demanding exorbitant premiums from those at greater risk.

She worries that if the Supreme Court does not strike down the act?s mandate, Congress will then force people to buy a raft of other commodities they do not want. I am naive, she says, in thinking that politics can prevent such corruption when government has proved so easily controlled by ?corporate interests.? I wish she had provided an example of what she has in mind. As I said, a statute forcing people to buy a particular industry?s product might well be unconstitutional for other reasons even if mandates are sometimes permitted. In any case, however, I continue to believe that the American public would be outraged by such coercion unless it was convinced that some emergency clearly required it. Angell fears that private companies have gained even more control over state legislatures than over Congress, but none of them, to my knowledge, has been able to secure a law forcing people to buy what they sell. When constitutional law does not stop them, politics does.

*
Arnold Relman, ?How Doctors Could Rescue Health Care,? The New York Review , October 27, 2011.??

Article source: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2012/jun/07/should-obamas-health-care-be-opposed-exchange/

brandon marshall iditarod nfl free agents 2012 encyclopedia brittanica nfl free agency jonbenet ramsey jason campbell

Family Activity: Treasures in the Sand : Ideas for Women Home and …

When the weather turns hot and the kids are out of school some days you are left unsure how to entertain them. One tried and true method around our house is Treasures in the Sand. It is a version of a game I played as a child.? It is very simple to play, you take a small child-sized pool, fill it up with sand and then put any sort of small treasures in it.

My kids love the archeologist version of it the best.? I bury pieces of pottery and other such toy items (sometimes dinosaurs) and then they hunt for them. They spend time cataloging each item,discussing it, and sorts of things. Since we live in Georgia and it gets pretty hot, they say it?s like being in Egypt.? Use your imagination and just go wild with it, although a word of caution; I put a screen and tarp over the sand to keep any creepy crawly things out and it allows us to use the sand all summer long.? When all of nieces and nephews are here we throw pennies in and they race to see who can find the most.

What do you think? Click here to leave a comment: Comments (0)


Leave a Reply

________________________________________

If you like this post please share or vote for it below:

Twitter: ? Stumble: ? delicious: ? reddit: ? Digg: ?

________________________________________

If you like this blog please subscribe to read updates in a feed reader (it’s free!) (what is a feed reader? ) or by email!

Thanks! We really appreciate all your support!

________________________________________

Related Posts:



Leave a Reply

kentucky jayhawks wwe wrestlemania oakland shooting mega millions mega millions winning numbers autism speaks

'Dan Dunn's Happy Hour' Launches on Sirius XM Radio | A&E …

Sirius XM Radio (NASDAQ:SIRI) - Dan Dunn - Dan Dunn's Happy Hour

Dan Dunn on Sirius XM Radio

Dan Dunn?s Happy Hour, a weekly, call-in show dedicated to the art and entertainment of mixology, launches on Sirius XM Radio (NASDAQ:SIRI) on it?s SiriusXM Stars Too satellite radio channel (Sirius Radio and XM Radio channel 104) on Thursday, May 17th, 2012, at 7:00 pm ET. The one-hour interview show will air live from food & wine festivals, bars and lounges, with the host sharing his secrets on how to make cocktails and choosing liquors.?Dan Dunn?s Happy Hour will also feature interviews with celebrity guests.?Time magazine columnist Joel Stein, author of the new book?Man Man: A Stupid Quest for Masculinity, will be the new show?s first guest.

Dan Dunn penned?Playboy?s Imbiber column and writes for?Mutineer, the?Tasting Panel and?FoodRepublic.com. His work has appeared in?GQ,?USA Today,?Maxim and the?Los Angeles Times. His website,?www.theimbiber.net, is a popular destination for adult beverage enthusiasts everywhere. Dan is the author of two books,?Nobody Likes a Quitter? and other reasons to avoid rehab (Running Press, 2007) and?Living Loaded: Tales of Sex, Salvation and the Pursuit of the Never-Ending Happy Hour (Random House, 2011).

Upcoming guests for?Dan Dunn?s Happy Hour include Jonathan Goldsmith (aka ?The Most Interesting Man in the World? from the Dos Equis commercials) and award-winning actor Ray Romano.

Encore presentations of Dan Dunn?s Happy Hour will air Fridays at 10:00 pm ET and Saturdays at 5:00 pm ET on SiriusXM Stars Too.

Contact the author:?DemianRussian@SatelliteRadioPlayground.com

Tags: actor, art, author, award, book, books, celebrity, channel, cocktails, column, commercials, Dan Dunn, Dan Dunn?s Happy Hour, Demian Russian, Dos Equis, Entertainment, Food Republic, FoodRepublic.com, GQ, Happy Hour, Imbiber, interview, interviews, Joel Stein, Jonathan Goldsmith, launch, liquors, Living Loaded, Living Loaded: Tales of Sex, Los Angeles Times, Man Man: A Stupid Quest for Masculinity, Maxim, Mutineer, NASDAQ, NASDAQ: SIRI, NASDAQ:SIRI, new show, Nobody Likes a Quitter, Nobody Likes a Quitter? and other reasons to avoid rehab, Playboy, presentation, radio, radio show, Random House, Ray Romano, Running Press, Salvation and the Pursuit of the Never-Ending Happy Hour, Satellite Radio, show, SIRI, Sirius, Sirius Radio, Sirius XM, Sirius XM Radio, SiriusXM, SiriusXM Radio, SiriusXM Stars Too, Stars Too, Tasting Panel, The Most Interesting Man in the World, the Tasting Panel, USA Today, www.theimbiber.net, XM, XM Radio

ncaa bracket 2012 2012 ncaa bracket john carlson greg smith catamount mike dantoni bulls heat

Jason Biggs, Wife Parody Time Breastfeeding Cover


The already-infamous Time Magazine breastfeeding cover has sparked controversy, worldwide debate, and now this ridiculous photo from Jason Biggs.

The American Reunion star and his wife, Jenny Mollen, posed up for a picture to parody the shot, with Biggs sharing the image on his Twitter page.

Mollen emulated the pose of Time cover model Jamie Lynne Grumet. The Time cover story, on attachment parenting, asked: Are you mom enough?

Biggs shared the picture with the caption: “Are you wife enough?”

Jason Biggs and Jenny Mollen

Biggs’ parody, while by far the most absurd, isn’t the only celebrity reaction to the cover story and subject everybody seems to be talking about.

Actress Alyssa Milano, who’s been very vocal in the past about her beliefs surrounding breastfeeding, wrote on her Twitter page: “@Time, no! You missed the mark! You’re supposed to be making it easier for breastfeeding moms.”

“Your cover is exploitive & extreme.”

Model Joanne Krupa, never one to mince words, added: ‘Time magazine cover is disturbing! Breast feeding a 3yr old is wrong! What’s wrong w ppl!’

However, The Big Bang Theory star Mayim Bialik said that while she disagreed with the photo itself, Jamie Lynne Grumet’s story was inspiring.

Attachment Parenting Time Cover

What do you think of “attachment parenting”?

taco bell breakfast menu ener1 national chocolate cake day epstein joshua komisarjevsky barney frank barney frank

The Starting Point for Self Improvement – The Network of Useful …

Rocket science is not required in self improvement and development. It just requires simple steps to see positive results in your life when you are set to make positive changes in the way you perceive yourself.

Your first step to improving yourself is to visit with someone you can trust to talk about what you?d like to do. However, remember to listen to what they say when you consult them on how to go about improving your life. Keep in mind that your friend may also be searching for some good feedback to help them too.

Ask these questions:

Do I spend too much time arguing?

Am I ill-mannered?

Do I prevent others from getting a word in?

Am I smelly?

Do I bore you?

This type of question is sure to demonstrate to your friend that you are serious about learning self improvement efforts. Plan ahead not to be offended when your friend tells it like it is. Your friend may have be pleased with a chance to assist you in seeing yourself as you really are. They might even tell you that you are pretty good the way you are.

The simple act of asking the appropriate questions you will be letting your trusted friend see that you are really interested in improving yourself. Here, they are more likely than not to help you figure out your efforts. Listen to what they are telling you, and don?t make negative statements that send incorrect message. Statements such as, ?That is just who I am!? or ?You said too much? will send a wrong message that you may not be ready to change.

More tips:

Set aside negative thoughts when it looking at self improvement. Think positive thoughts about yourself. This will build yourself up rather than beating you down which is tremendously helpful as you try to improve.

Understand that beauty comes from the inside even when the outward appearance may be something less attractive. Outer beauty fades from view, but inner beauty is a lifelong experience.

Do not down and dirty as some may do, do what you must to pick them up and out of their circumstances. Doing so will have you feeling more content with yourself and increasing your self improvement efforts.

Mistakes should not pull you under. Take them to be teachable moments and learn from the experience. There?s not a anyone that doesn?t make mistakes, however, they should not be allowed to bring us to a point of giving up attempting to improve ourselves.

Live life one step at a time. That is what setting up goals is all about. Decide what you want and go after it with small steps. Improving yourself takes place with consistent forward motion.

Make up your mind to set measurable and achievable goals for you. Your goals will point you to achieving your purposes. Everything important takes time to achieve and it?s the same with self improvement.

Do things for others the way you?d like them to treat you. This is an old adage, but it remains true today and when you practice these principles you will be headed toward self improvement. Little things mean a lot to most people, and that pays rich rewards when it comes to your self esteem.

While you may be headed toward self improvement, friends may not be up to the task. It could be that they don?t recognize that they can get something from self improvement. This should not prevent you from getting involved in self improvement exercises. Once they see the results at self improvement, they may decide to do the same.

No, perfection is not what you are after. No one is able to get there. What must be said though is that you should try.. You may be considering taking that beginning step. If so, get up and get going?

See the new life coaching phenomena from a very known motivational speaker, David Cameron Gikandi. Known as The Merlin School of Mind Power, it contains great materials on goal setting, inspirational wallpapers, real life legends interviews, articles, motivational videos and motivational quotes analyzed. Truly change your life to a much better experience.

ryan o neal dark knight rises trailer dark knight rises trailer vince young vince young evan longoria mothers day 2012

Brees critical of Saints in radio interview

NEW ORLEANS (AP) ? Drew Brees said in a radio interview Wednesday night that he is frustrated by what he views as a lack of communication with the New Orleans Saints in his ongoing contract negotiations, adding the club should have shown more urgency to get a long-term deal done.

“It’s been extremely frustrating for me. I don’t think the negotiations should have been this difficult,” Brees said on WWL radio in New Orleans. “What’s been a little frustrating on my end, or disappointing, is the lack of communication. We’ve reached out on quite a few occasions and at times I know I’ve been frustrated with the lack of response.”

While Brees said he wants to return to the team as soon as possible, he raised the possibility of missing minicamp and even training camp if he does not reach a long-term extension that he believes is appropriate. Brees has missed several weeks of voluntary offseason training with the club, and New Orleans holds its first offseason practices, called organized team activities, next week.

Brees said the Saints cannot pretend that the NFL‘s bounty investigation and resulting punishment ? including the suspension of head coach Sean Payton for the whole 2012 season ? has not been a huge distraction that makes the remainder of the Saints‘ offseason work “very important.”

“This is a big time for our team, especially when you look at what has happened this offseason,” he said.

Given his leadership role and his performance during his past six seasons, Brees said he would hope the Saints would make his next contract a top priority.

“There should be a sense of urgency and it just seems like there’s not,” Brees said.

The Saints did not immediately respond to Brees’ comments. However, general manager Mickey Loomis said last month he understands that he has never worked on a more important deal than Brees’ extension, and he wants to come up with a deal that makes his star quarterback happy.

The Saints this season will attempt to make the playoffs for a fourth straight time. If they do so, they’ll be in the running to become the first team to play the Super Bowl on its home field next February in the Superdome.

New Orleans has most of the top players back from an offense that set numerous NFL records last season, when Brees passed for an NFL single-season record 5,474 yards, smashing Dan Marino’s mark of 5,084, which had stood since 1984. The Saints have placed the exclusive franchise tag on Brees, meaning he won’t be playing anywhere else next season. However, Brees does not have to report and has said he has no intention of playing under a one-year franchise tag that does not give him any long-term security.

“I feel like our position is very reasonable and certainly appropriate for the situation that I’m in, which is having played the full extent of my (previous) six-year contract,” Brees said. “I knew exactly what I was signing up for and over the last few years I have not said a peep about wanting a new contract or not being happy with my current contract. … Certainly, I took on a lot of risk last year by playing the last year of my contract without anything guaranteed for the future.”

Brees said he still wants to finish his career in New Orleans and has a plan to be as prepared as possible when he does eventually report.

“If that means missing OTAs, minicamp, training camp, I will be as ready as can possibly be,” Brees said. “There’s no way you can simulate those things anywhere else other than being on the field with your team, but I have a plan, so I’ll execute that plan as I need to.”

annie annie zuccotti park leymah gbowee ows kindle fire review community

Breast Cancer: a coalition helping your neighbors | Young Island

An issue that hits very close to home for me and many Long Islanders is breast cancer. ?Breast Cancer has been projected to affect one out of every nine women. Here on Long Island there has been a history of abnormal increases in breast cancer cases, especially within Suffolk?s North Shore communities: St. James, East Setauket, Stony Brook, Mt. Sinai, Miller Place, Rocky Point, Shoreham and Wading River areas.

A study titled the Long Island Breast Cancer Study Project was commissioned back in 2002, sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, in collaboration with the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.? The main charge was to investigate Breast Cancer and the Environment in several Nassau and Suffolk communities to determine if certain environmental contaminants increased the risk of breast cancer.? Their study was inconclusive.

This terrible disease has inflicted so much heartache for countless Long Island families and many Young Islanders have lost mothers, sisters and grandmothers.? However, in the darkness came a shimmer of light to help those? women and men dealing with breast cancer.

A nonprofit group known as Long Island 2 Day was formed back in 2004 to support those struggling with breast cancer through raising funds to help families in need of emotional and financial support.? Through this group over a dozen smaller community based coalitions have been funded and 100% of those funds are distributed back to the people who need it the most.? To date, Long Island 2 Day has raised over $4 million, which has directly helped countless families.

As someone who has a close relative dealing with Breast Cancer I was introduced to one organization, whose altruism has been a source of hope and comfort for my family. I spoke with Patti Kozlowski of the North Shore Neighbors Breast Cancer Coalition, a volunteer who started a nonprofit to assist those in need.

How did your organization begin?

I co-founded NSNBCC about 10 years ago with Bindy Koontz after having participated in the Miller Place Avon walk for Cancer in which we raised over $64,000. I am the only person on staff and volunteer my time after work and on the weekends.

Having participated in various cancer rallies, we learned some of the highest cancer rates in the country were right in our back yard. Another issue of concern to us was that little to no money was coming back to our community through those national breast cancer associations.

We formed an organization of our own to help people where we lived. NSNBCC was later approached by LI2Day to participate and receive a grant to operate.? Our organization later became part of a larger local network of non-profits whose mission was to help communicate services that are available to cancer patients in our communities.

What services does your organization provide and do you work with other breast cancer groups in your area?

One of the main programs we offer is the ?Lend a Helping Hand Program:? A nonmedical support service that provides meals, transportation and cleaning services for cancer patients and their families.

In addition we also offer financial assistance in emergency situations to help pay for utilities, oil delivery, some co-pays, wigs and other non medical supplies not covered by insurance.? Due to the state of the economy, during the past two years we have seen our largest request for financial assistance.? We have helped 30 to 40 families each year.

Our organization works very closely with the Carol M. Baldwin Breast Cancer Center at Stony Brook University whose social workers regularly refer people to us for assistance. We also receive referrals from the American Cancer Society.

What are your biggest challenges?

Raising awareness about our organization has been the biggest issue for us. We and other local groups compete for dollars with the American Cancer Society.? They have big national marketing campaigns, which creates name recognition causing us to compete for the same donors.? They do great work and raise money for worthy programs.? However, what most donors do not realize is that their money does not come back to their communities to help those neighbors that need it the most.

What can women do to be proactive about their health?

Women should check themselves through self-exam, trust their instincts and go for regular mammographies. They should also read the published guidelines for dietary, chemical exposure and hormones.? In other words education yourself.

North Shore Neighbors Breast Cancer Coalition has been working tirelessly for years to help those inflicted with cancer to cope with every day challenges.? They have relied solely on the generosity of people like you and me to keep it going.? They recently received a grant from Suffolk County Legislator Sarah Anker, an ardent supporter on this issue who has pushed for years to find a link to the increased breast cancer rates on Long Island.

Today, Patti will be honored as the Times Beacon Record Woman of the Year for her efforts to make each day a little more comfortable for those dealing with cancer.

If you would like to learn more about how you can help support the North Shore Neighbors Breast Cancer Coalition or other groups in your area, please visit www.li2daywalk.org and support the upcoming LI2Day Walk on June 9 and 10.

jason trawick jerry lewis tampa bay bucs cowboys cowboys slim dunkin slim dunkin

HTC One X and EVO 4G LTE delayed at customs due to ITC exclusion order

HTC One X and EVO 4G LTE delayed at customs due to ITC exclusion order

We’ve just received a statement from HTC indicating that two of its flagship devices — the One X for AT&T and the EVO 4G LTE for Sprint — have been delayed at customs due to an ITC exclusion order that was handed down last December at Apple’s behest. That order was set to go into effect on April 19th, and it looks like HTC’s two new stateside superphones are the first to feel Apple’s the government’s wrath. Here’s HTC’s take on the matter:

The US availability of the HTC One X and HTC EVO 4G LTE has been delayed due to a standard U.S. Customs review of shipments that is required after an ITC exclusion order. We believe we are in compliance with the ruling and HTC is working closely with Customs to secure approval. The HTC One X and HTC EVO 4G LTE have been received enthusiastically by customers and we appreciate their patience as we work to get these products into their hands as soon as possible.

We’ve reached out to HTC for clarification on the delay and to find out if this will affect the launch of the EVO 4G LTE, which is expected to hit the shelves this Friday, May 18th. Stay tuned for updates.

Update: While HTC doesn’t have any additional information to share at this time, we’ve also contacted AT&T and Sprint for comment. Let’s just hope that the issue can be resolved in a timely manner.

HTC One X and EVO 4G LTE delayed at customs due to ITC exclusion order originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 May 2012 20:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

winning numbers mega millions megamillions drawing olbermann mega millions march 30 lucky numbers odds of winning mega millions mary mary