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California gives Medi-Cal enrollees something to smile about

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Susan Inglett’s dental coverage changed just after she got a root canal on one of her top teeth.

It was 2009, and California was in the midst of a budget crisis. To cut costs, Medi-Cal, the state health insurance program for low-income residents, eliminated non-emergency dental benefits for adults.

... Reported by L.A. Times 2 days ago.

Lawmakers OK emergency funding for kids’ health insurance

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DENVER (AP) — Colorado lawmakers have approved emergency funds for a health insurance program covering children and pregnant women. The legislature’s Joint Budget Committee on Thursday unanimously backed spending $9.6 million of state funds to run the program for another month if necessary. The Denver Post reports that the vote comes amid certainty about whether […] Reported by Seattle Times 2 days ago.

Companies like Facebook and LinkedIn are paying for employees to get on-the-clock 'life coaching'

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Companies like Facebook and LinkedIn are paying for employees to get on-the-clock 'life coaching' · *A startup called BetterUp is providing a hybrid of therapy and executive coaching to employees of tech companies in Silicon Valley.*
· *The coaching aims to develop soft skills like stress management and collaboration that help employees be happier and more effective in and out of the office.*
· *Millennials spend more time working than previous generations, so finding fulfillment at work is a crucial part of their job satisfaction.*

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Millennials make less money than their parents did at the same age, yet they work more hours, forfeit more vacation days, and retire much later than previous generations.

In an effort to keep employees feeling (and performing) their best in those conditions, companies like Facebook and LinkedIn have started to pay for on-the-clock "coaching" through a startup called BetterUp. Employees meet virtually with licensed therapists and executive coaches to work on skills related to collaboration, stress management, and goal-setting.

They're also welcome to vent as needed about burnout, relationship troubles, crummy managers, and everything in between.

"It's about moving the needle in their personal life and their work life," Alexi Robichaux, cofounder and CEO of BetterUp, told Business Insider.

Founded in 2013, BetterUp sells its services exclusively to large organizations with over 10,000 employees. Its clients include Salesforce, Capital One, Square, Logitech, and even Buffalo Wild Wings. Chief executives, mid-level managers, and even lower-level employees who show high potential can all opt into the service, which honors a strict confidentiality code. 

Traditionally, therapy and executive coaching have been siloed, with separate providers. BetterUp's approach is to coach "the whole person"— and have their employer pay for it. The company hopes to challenge the reputation of coaching as a hippy-dippy practice wherein "life coaches" (some with dubious qualifications) dole out advice online and charge a premium.

"Most of working America thinks that the only coaching is life-coaching, which is like some dude in Alabama on Skype and you have no idea if he's wearing pants," Robichaux said.

When an employee signs up for BetterUp, they find a coach by swiping through profiles on an app. (Sound familiar?) The coaches' profiles describe their training and areas of expertise. They range from therapists and psychologists to coaches certified by the International Coach Federation. Employees video-chat with their coach through the app on a weekly or monthly schedule and follow up by text between sessions.

BetterUp aims to develop soft skills such as regulating your emotions, finding your flow, communicating a clear vision, and fostering collaboration, which are all arguably skills that are as useful at home as at work. The slogan reads, "Thrive Personally, Inspire Professionally."

Someone who comes to gripe about a micro-managing manager has an opportunity to complain, but is also prompted to think about why it bothers them so much, and to develop behaviors that support the manager's needs. A person who struggles with anxiety in the workplace might be prescribed a meditation regime through an app like Headspace.

Every three months, BetterUp sends employees a questionnaire so the startup can track specific data points, like employees' assessments of their focus, problem solving, influence, "mental agility," and "presence," over time.

BetterUp says that 95% of members report being highly satisfied with the service (though Business Insider could not independently verify that number). The company also says that most companies using the service opt to increase their payment in the first year in order to double the number of employees who can participate. (Pricing is based on the number of users.)

Robichaux imagines that someday, BetterUp could be more than a tech company perk. If the model takes off as he hopes, coaching could become part of an employer-provided benefits package, along with health insurance.

"Millennials are the first generation to unashamedly come to the conclusion, 'If work is taking more of my time, then it should be contributing more to my human fulfillment,'" Robichaux said. "It's only fair, right?"

*SEE ALSO: Millennials are tracking their kids' whereabouts and internet usage on their phones — here are the apps 'parennials' are obsessed with*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: How to deal with your emotions and take control of your life Reported by Business Insider 2 days ago.

Missouri health care enrollment nearly doubles in last week

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COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — More than 110,000 residents in Missouri enrolled in health insurance under the federal health care law between Dec. 10 and Dec. 15, putting the final number of those enrolled over last year’s. The Columbia Missourian previously reported that Missouri was falling behind last year’s numbers, with initial figures suggesting enrollment decreased […] Reported by Seattle Times 2 days ago.

Nevada health insurance exchange sign-ups break record

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — A record number of Nevada residents signed up for government-subsidized private health insurance this year. Figures released Thursday show nearly 91,000 people in Nevada picked a plan for 2018 during the open enrollment season using the federal HealthCare.gov website. That’s about 1,900 more compared to the previous season. The increase in […] Reported by Seattle Times 2 days ago.

As White House Declares Victory, Congress Is Bracing For A Legislative "Groundhog's Day"

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As White House Declares Victory, Congress Is Bracing For A Legislative Groundhog's Day After a difficult first half, Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan managed to score two major legislative victories this week just before the clock ran out on what has been one of the most contentious Congresses in recent memory.

By marshalling a fractious Republican caucus, the leadership averted a federal government shutdown on the day before Christmas Eve, and also passed the White House’s historic tax reform plan. With America’s lawmakers headed home for the holidays, Trump affixed his signature to the bill Friday morning.

But while Trump delivered on his promise to pass tax reform by year’s end, in the end, Republicans were forced to put off other pressing priorities –* like passing an $81 billion disaster aid bill *– until January.

Though the House managed to pass a disaster relief package, the Senate was forced to put it off because of procedural hurdles and opposition from Democrats. The battle to amend and pass the bill will probably dominate the political news cycle early next year, according to Bloomberg.

But it’s hardly the only legislative priority demanding immediate attention: Congress needs to raise the debt ceiling. And the continuing resolution passed late last night is set to expire on Jan. 19, meaning another funding bill must be adopted before then.

Back in October, President Trump cancelled protections for undocumented immigrants who were brought to the US as children. Democrats insist that those protections, which were first put in place by Trump’s predecessor, must now be enshrined in law. Trump has offered tepid support for America’s “Dreamers”, but it’s unclear at this point if Republicans will support a deal to keep the DACA protections in exchange for a suite of border-protection measures.

But important questions about *military *and *domestic spending caps,* the *future of Obamacare* and *the extension of a controversial warrantless surveillance program* - not to mention a long-term fix for CHIP, the children's health-insurance program, will need to be decided before lawmakers turn their attention to the 2018 midterms.

As the Wall Street Journal pointed out, these competing priorities could create headaches for Trump early next year as he pushes for a $1 trillion infrastructure spending plan – his administration’s next big legislative priority.

Republicans will also need to devise a long-term plan for the popular children’s health insurance program. The administration is also hoping to pass its welfare reform plan next year.

 



At some point, and for the good of the country, I predict we will start working with the Democrats in a Bipartisan fashion. Infrastructure would be a perfect place to start. After having foolishly spent $7 trillion in the Middle East, it is time to start rebuilding our country!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 22, 2017



 

Given the popularity surrounding infrastructure spending, Trump tweeted on Friday that his infrastructure plan helped break the partisan gridlock that has afflicted Washington since at least the beginning of the Obama administration.



All the unfinished business could impede President Donald Trump’s ability to rack up more legislative victories, including a large-scale infrastructure bill, before the 2018 midterm elections.

 

“At some point, and for the good of the country, I predict we will start working with the Democrats in a Bipartisan fashion. Infrastructure would be a perfect place to start,” Trump tweeted Friday morning.

 

Lawmakers have a limited amount of time until they turn their focus to campaigning for re-election. *"We need to get the leftovers done,"* said Ryan Costello, a Pennsylvania Republican. *"Until we deal with Groundhog Day, we can’t move on to our agenda."*

 

Leaders were able to corral rank-and-file lawmakers to vote for a bare-bones funding patchwork, and the government now has enough money to operate through Jan. 19.



However, despite Trump’s optimism, the two parties remain far apart on issues like raising the US borrowing limit.



Both parties are expected to return to the negotiating table in early January to try to hammer out a budget cap agreement, raising limits on domestic and defense spending imposed under the 2011 Budget Control Act.

 

They are far apart.

 

"We find ourselves no closer to an agreement than we were 11 months ago," Steny Hoyer, the second-ranking House Democrat, said Thursday.

 

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said that Republicans have sought to increase defense spending by $54 billion and non-defense spending by $37 billion. Democrats find that unacceptable because they want equal increases.



Lawmakers still need to flesh out many details about the debt ceiling, from the size of the increase to making changes to the process of allocating funds. Democrats and Republicans are reportedly far apart on these issues.



Tom Cole, an Oklahoma Republican and a member of the Appropriations Committee, *said that the Democratic formula of "parity" increases made more sense in the days of divided government* and less so now that Republicans control Congress and the White House. *He argued that increases should be based on demonstrated needs.*

 

In addition to agreeing on spending levels, both sides must resolve whether and how any of the budget cap increases will be paid for. In the past, Congress has tapped federal pensions, crop insurance and Medicare provider payments.

 

*If a budget deal is struck, that outline could clear the way for the House and Senate to flesh out the details of fiscal 2018 spending through a giant trillion-dollar omnibus bill.* Budget caps are just the first of many problems Congress faces in January.



As the WSJ points out, even with Republicans’ early stumbles on Obamacare repeal, Trump and his partners in Congress have accomplished a lot, considering that, one year ago, many Republican lawmakers opposed the idea of a Trump presidency, and the president had few relationships with lawmakers from which to draw on.

The defining irony of any new presidential administration, according to WSJ, is that, by the time it gets its bearings, it’s already time for the midterms. Historically, the president’s party loses an average of 32 seats in the House during the midterms. That would be enough for Democrats to regain control of the House. And with Alabama Democrat Doug Jones preparing to take his seat in January, Democrats would only need to pick up two seats to flip the Senate.



Skeptics counter that it will be more difficult to carry that momentum into next year. On Thursday, the House and Senate passed a stopgap spending bill that keeps the government funded through Jan. 19 and punts bigger debates over immigration and spending into January. Next year’s agenda is also expected to include an infrastructure bill and an attempt to overhaul the welfare system.

 

Action on most of those issues will require Democratic votes in order to pass and will occur in the historically difficult second year of a presidency.

 

*"The irony is during the first term, the president’s opportunity to get things done is earlier on, but by the time the president really figures out the legislative game and gets good at doing this, the window has passed by,"* said Lori Cox Han, a political science professor at Chapman University.

 

The Republicans’ challenges will also be complicated by the midterm elections in which they will be fighting to hold their majorities in the House and Senate. Strong Democratic turnout in the November Virginia governor’s race and this month’s special Senate election in Alabama, both of which the Republicans lost, is viewed by both parties as a major threat to the GOP.

 

*"I see a historical trend cutting against us—the average loss of seats is 32 for a president’s first midterm and that’s just the average,” *House Speaker Paul Ryan said in an interview this week. *“So what I keep telling people is we have the wind at our face, historically speaking."*



In a ploy to mitigate the influence of conservative Freedom Caucus Republicans, Trump has tried to forge ties with red-state Democrats. But despite a flurry of dinners and rides on air force one, Senators like Indiana’s Joe Donnelly and West Virginia’s Joe Manchin have refused to break ranks and side with a president who is exceedingly popular in their home states.

Of course, that calculus could change as the midterms draw nearer. Regardless, one thing is clear: Trump has another four months – possibly six  at the most – until lawmakers turn their attention to the midterms.

If lawmakers can pass even half of these priorities before then, that would be a major accomplishment in and of itself.
  Reported by Zero Hedge 2 days ago.

195K Utah residents get insurance through Healthcare.gov

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The number of Utah residents who signed up for government-subsidized health insurance this year using the federal HealthCare.gov marketplace shrank slightly. Government figures released Thursday show more than 195,000 Utah residents selected a plan during the open enrollment season. That’s about 2,000 fewer enrollees compared to the previous season. The […] Reported by Seattle Times 2 days ago.

ACA enrollment down 10 percent in Delaware

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DOVER, Del. (AP) — State health officials say the number of Delawareans signing up for health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act next year is down 10 percent compared to this year. Officials said Friday that figures released by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services show 24,860 Delawareans have enrolled for ACA coverage […] Reported by Seattle Times 2 days ago.

Children’s insurance program to end in Alabama on Jan. 1

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — A program providing insurance for the children of low-income families in Alabama will stop enrollment on New Year’s Day. The Children’s Health Insurance Program will end a month after enrollment is halted, Al.com reported. About 84,000 children in the state are at risk of losing health insurance if Congress does not […] Reported by Seattle Times 23 hours ago.

Parliament approves comprehensive health insurance bill

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(MENAFN - Daily News Egypt) The Egyptian parliament approved on Monday the controversial and long-awaited Comprehensive Health Insurance Law which is expected to be implemented in ... Reported by MENAFN.com 3 hours ago.

Dubai clinics, pharmacies fined for misusing health insurance

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DHA has called on individual sponsors and company owners in Dubai to renew the health insurance of their employees Reported by Khaleej Times 2 hours ago.

3 Top Health Insurance Stocks to Buy

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The health insurance market is complex and under fire in Washington, but there are stocks that are worth including in portfolios. Reported by Motley Fool 42 minutes ago.

Deadline nears to purchase health insurance from the state

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Rhode Island’s health insurance exchange says the deadline is nearing to purchase coverage for 2018. HealthSource RI says residents who don’t get affordable health coverage through an employer have until Dec. 31 to choose and pay for a 2018 health plan through the exchange. It recently extended service hours. The office […] Reported by Seattle Times 18 minutes ago.

Health insurance program for 18,000 Central New York kids gets last-minute reprieve

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Reported by syracuse.com 3 days ago.

Robust Health Insurance Sign-Ups Surprise Supporters And Opponents

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Despite an enrollment period that was half as long, nearly 9 million people have signed up for Affordable Care Act insurance for 2018 so far, about the same as least year. Reported by NPR 3 days ago.

Long-Term Deal for Children's Health Again Eludes Congress

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Congress has again failed to approve long-term funds for a popular program that provides health insurance for nearly 9 million low-income children, leaving each party blaming the other for Christmas-season gridlock and states scrambling to decide how to parcel out dwindling money. Reported by Newsmax 3 days ago.

At least 23K confirm coverage during open enrollment

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MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — At least 23,000 Vermonters confirmed their health insurance coverage during the just-completed open enrollment period while also qualifying for financial help to make their coverage more affordable, statistics show. The total enrollment through the Vermont Health Connect insurance marketplace is now estimated to be above 80,000, a figure which includes 46,000 […] Reported by Seattle Times 15 hours ago.

Medicaid up for big debates at Mississippi Capitol in 2018

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JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi legislators in 2018 are expected to bicker over Medicaid, a government health insurance program that consumes a large portion of the state budget and covers about 1 in every 4 residents. The program comes up for a thorough review every few years, and 2018 is one of them. Legislators could […] Reported by Seattle Times 12 hours ago.

Ron Paul Blasts Congress' Political And Personal Immorality

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Ron Paul Blasts Congress' Political And Personal Immorality Authored by Ron Paul via The Ron Paul Institute for Peace & Prosperity,

*Many Americans have been shocked by recent revelations of the extent of sexual harassment in Congress. *

*However, no one should be too surprised that those who spend their lives defending and expanding the welfare-warfare state engage in immoral personal conduct.*

It is only natural that an immoral system, like the welfare-warfare state, tends to attract individuals likely to practice personal immorality.

*The welfare-warfare state is built on a foundation of taxation and fiat currency controlled by a secretive central bank.* While some type of taxation may be necessary to fund the few legitimate functions of government, taking people’s money to fund a redistributive welfare state at home and a global empire abroad is nothing more than theft. The Federal Reserve’s erosion of purchasing power is also a form of theft.

*The welfare-warfare state relies on violence.* Every law preventing us from living our lives as we choose — whether forbidding us from working for below minimum wage, preventing us from smoking marijuana or drinking raw milk, telling private business owners who can and cannot use what restroom, or requiring us to purchase government-approved health insurance — rests on the threat of force being used against those who refuse to obey.

*The warfare side of the welfare-warfare state is obviously rooted in violence. *War inevitably leads to deaths, including the deaths of innocents. A permanent warfare state is also the quickest way to lose our liberties. This is why the Founding Fathers counseled against standing armies and foreign entanglements.

*The neocons and “humanitarian interventionists” who control our foreign policy have disregarded the wisdom of the Founders. *They actually promote endless wars not to protect our security but to promote “democracy” and “universal human rights.” They are impervious to evidence of the failure of military interventions to achieve these goals and indifferent to the human and fiscal costs of endless war. They dismiss the loss of innocent lives — including the deaths of children — as unavoidable “collateral damage,” while using their influence in the media to spread pro-war propaganda. They also smear their opponents as aiding America’s enemies and sympathizing with terrorists.

*No one holding political power wants to admit the system he supports is immoral and a failure.* Therefore, defenders of the welfare-warfare state rely on lies and deceptions. They ignore all evidence of the failure of big government to accomplish its ends, instead pretending they can fix the system with a few reforms. They also work with allies in the media to promulgate the lie that without the welfare state the masses would remain poor and uneducated, and without the warfare state we would be overwhelmed by those who hate us for our freedoms. They never mention that many foreigners hate America because of the suffering caused by our hyper-interventionist foreign policy.

*The welfare-warfare state is built on violence and deceit.*

It is thus inevitable that many of those participating in this immoral system will combine their immoral politics with immoral personal conduct. *Hopefully the revelations of sexual misconduct among the welfare-warfare state’s Capitol Hill and media defenders will lead more Americans to question the morality and the wisdom of allowing the federal government to run the world, run the economy, and run our lives.* Reported by Zero Hedge 6 hours ago.

Millionaire Heiress Crusades Against Freedom to Spend Your Own Money

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Via The Daily Bell

In response to the tax bill which will lead to a lot more money in her pocket, Abigail Disney, heiress to the Walt Disney Company fortune, said she would be donating that tax break to a worthy cause of her choosing.

No, wait. That’s not it at all. She got in front of a camera and made a video complaining that other wealthy people and corporations won’t be forced to keep handing over quite as much of their money to the government now.

The video by Now This, which has 29 million views on Facebook as of today, features Disney trying to rile everyone up about how she and her private jet-owning friends will be taxed at a lower rate, how she can pass on assets tax-free to her children, and that health insurance won’t be forced on people when the individual mandate goes away in 2019.

“I know that we heard that the swamp was getting drained,” she says, “but given how this bill was written, I think it’s looking a lot like a nightmare from ‘Pirates of the Caribbean.’”

Even more telling than Disney’s cringe-worthy product placement jokes are the comments by viewers, arguing the merits or downsides of the particular tax plan, and engaging in ad hominem attacks, economic projections, and general complaints about “the wealthy.”

Sure, we could bicker about the exact way and amount we are taxed, picking apart the arguments Disney made in her video. For example, can she really say she is getting a “huge handout from Congress” if it was her money to begin with?

Can we conclude that “we know that wealth does not trickle down,” or should we ask one of the Walt Disney Company’s 195,000 employees, none of whom were earning a living off of Walt and Roy when the brothers were in “near-total poverty in the rural midwest”?

What exactly does Disney think is the right percentage to be taxed?

But these small details about who should owe what are exactly what the powers in government want us to be quibbling about. What Disney should actually be infuriated about, what she should “hope I’m making you angry” about, is that the ruling elite gets to make decisions about how her money is spent. They get to take it from the person who has it and use it in ways they see fit, to fund their pet projects, reward their donors, buy votes, and pad their wallets.

“No one who votes for this tax bill will be voting with your life in mind,” Disney said. “But you will pay for it.”

Well, that is one thing you got right, Ms. Disney.

The other thing that should just baffle and enrage us is Abigail Disney’s complete lack of confidence in her own ability to do good with her wealth. If she feels she does not deserve to hold on to her money, can’t she just donate that huge chunk of cash she “didn’t earn” instead of asking the government not to give it to her? Then the money would be going directly to the people or organization she felt deserved it the most, without going through the government bureaucracy: an incompetent middleman at best — and a bloated, corrupt, tyrant at worst.

In fact, in a great twist of irony, I have heard anecdotally of many individuals who plan to use their tax break to donate to their favorite liberal causes, a sort of middle finger to the GOP for . . . allowing individuals the financial autonomy to support organizations they deem worthy?

Wait, you mean the sky is not falling? Individuals with extra money in their pockets can voluntarily give it away to causes that are important to them without forcing their will onto the population as a whole? You sure showed those Republicans.

Even if Disney decided that straight-out charity wasn’t her thing, her investment of her “extra” money in real estate, another private jet — heck, even the world’s largest collection of Mickey Mouse bobbleheads — could only help the economy.

“More than anything, without a thriving and healthy middle class, there are no consumers for what Disney creates,” Disney laments, yet she can’t think of a single way the middle class might be helped except by rich people getting less of a tax cut.

Disney praises her grandfather and great-uncle Roy and Walt Disney for their “gumption, guts, and brilliance,” which ultimately led to a thriving company that is worth $92 billion today. People wait in line to see its movies, buy up its merchandise, and gladly pay exorbitant prices to visit the Happiest Place on Earth. But to hear her talk about “the 1 percent,” all the CEOs must just be greedy idiots when it comes to personal spending and could never use their business expertise to build up a nonprofit or finance a startup.

Meanwhile, Disney bemoans the United States’ “suffocating education system, a dying infrastructure, and a national debt that will be at least $1.5 trillion bigger.” But sure, let’s go ahead and give more money to a ruling elite that has been unable to keep the roads paved and the education system properly financed, all the while grossly overspending its budget and passing on its debt to future generations.

Guess what roads are always perfectly paved? The private ones leading into Disney World.

I wouldn’t put so much stock into what one misguided person with a soapbox has to say, except that her view is obviously echoed by so many. And it’s worse than not being an economically sound position. It’s a violent and immoral one too.

Because Disney, and others like her, are trying to frame themselves as the good guys, the ones looking out for the poor and weak in our society. But if that were the case, they would be content with giving away their own wealth and promoting worthy causes. Think of how many people she could influence with a Now This video aimed at feeding hungry children or providing low-cost health care to the destitute.

But that’s not good enough for her. It’s not good enough unless other people are forced, under violence or the threat of violence, to pay for the things that she thinks are the most important.

And judging by the general attitude of almost everyone I encounter in person or online, this is a pervasive idea: people must team up and force other people to do the right thing — the right thing as defined by their team.

Disney says in the video, “if democracy is just a bunch of people advocating for their own self-interest, instead of the interest of the greater good, then we’re not a democracy, we’re anarchy.”

She is using the words “democracy” and “anarchy,” but I do not think she knows what they mean. Democracy IS just a bunch of people advocating for their own self-interest. It is two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for dinner. It is might makes right.

On the other hand, anarchy must look out for the interests of other people in order to coexist in society. Yes, each person can act in a self-interested way, but never to the point of coercion of another. There is nothing anarchical about using the government to force your will on others.

We have to turn the conversation away from the specifics of the tax bill and onto the elephant in the room: that most of the population approves of taking another person’s money at gunpoint in a manner and for an amount agreed upon by a majority. Filtered through government, most people are able to stomach this egregious act of violence.

That’s the real “Pirates” nightmare, Abigail. Reported by Zero Hedge 10 hours ago.
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