Saturday PM ~ TheFrontPageCover

TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~  
Is Harvard Racist?
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by Media Editors  
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Bringing Competitive Direct 
Primary Care to Medicare
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{realclearpolicy.com} ~ Direct primary care (DPC) is fast becoming an accepted alternative to fee-for-service payment in the private market, but it has yet to find its way into Medicare... That needs to change as soon as possible, and there is reason to hope that it will. DPC is growing because many physicians and patients prefer it to the traditional, and still dominant, piecemeal payment systems run by most insurance plans, including Medicare. Instead of billing for each service they provide, DPC doctors get paid a fixed sum per patient, usually in the form of a monthly membership-like fee from the patient or the patient’s health plan which is often sponsored by an employer. DPC began as a way of providing premium services — “concierge care” — to patients who wanted expedited services and an extra level of attention from physicians.  Concierge care is usually an add-on to the fee-for-service system. Concierge physicians bill insurance plans for the services they provide to their patients and also collect from their patients an additional annual or monthly membership fee. That additional payment entitles the patient to a higher level of service than other patients get, including more rapid scheduling of appointments. Concierge care is a niche service. There are some consumers willing to pay an additional fee, on top of their regular cost-sharing requirements, to be able to get a higher level of service from their physician, but it is a small percentage of the overall market. DPC has the potential to grow into something bigger and more transformative than concierge care by displacing, rather than supplementing, fee-for-service payments... https://www.realclearpolicy.com/articles/2019/02/25/bringing_competitive_direct_primary_care_to_medicare_111075.html?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWTJOaU1ERmlabVJtWXpRMiIsInQiOiJIc01yeGtPRUFWakIzbCt5ZUllcXlLb2w2R2FMZkJqYlV5bVlXdkVMQ0VOVllSSUYrUFE3T3R0aHR1cVRhbUU5ZlY3S1g2RU9CSk4wK3pBQW9EN2djam1OeFpkeGdwMTlQRTdTUzlKQzVsWFJ3SGpcL0d0dzJOa2NLTmVuMUJkbEoifQ%3D%3D
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Fight Over Progressive Income Tax
Starts in Illinois
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by Cole Lauterbach
{freebeacon.com} ~ Even though the issue would be decided at the ballot in November of 2020, Illinoisans are already getting a glimpse of what’s in store in the fight to change the state’s income tax structure... from a flat percentage to one that taxes higher earners more. Two nonprofits have formed with the missions of fighting for and against changing Illinois’ constitution to allow a higher percentage of income to be taxed from higher-earning residents. Ideas Illinois is an initiative of the Coalition for Jobs, Growth and Prosperity. That's a privately-funded nonprofit run by former Illinois Manufacturers Association President Greg Baise and businessman James Gidwitz, brother of President Donald Trump's former Illinois campaign finance head, Ron Gidwitz. In the past, the organization successfully fought back then Gov. Rod Blagojevich's push for a Gross Receipts Tax, the union-led "card check" campaign and Cook County President Toni Preckwinkle's tax on sugary drinks." "We will focus on policies that will create jobs and grow our economy," it says. "It’s going to take hard work and straight talk but together we can put Illinois on the right track." In the other corner is Think Big Illinois, a nonprofit partially funded by Gov. J.B. Pritzker and managed by members of his campaign staff. Think Big Illinois is advocating for a progressive tax...
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House Dems Fear Backlash of Allowing 
Public Testimony from Trump’s Kids
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by Griffin Connolly
{libertyheadlines.com} ~ After Chairman scumbag-Elijah Cummings suggested earlier this week that his House Committee on Oversight and Reform could try to schedule interviews with members of the Trump family... including the president’s sons Donald Jr. and Eric and daughter Ivanka, some Democrats urged caution about making such moves. The president’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen accused Trump’s family members of multiple crimes in his public testimony on Wednesday. Specifically, Cohen described Donald Jr. and Eric’s involvement in an illegal hush-money scheme to buy the silence of two women who allege they had sex with the president: former Playboy model Karen McDougal and porn star Stormy Daniels. But while some Democrats want to haul the rest of the family in front of congressional committees, some Democrats on the panel have cautioned that public hearings with Trump’s children might not be the optimal forum to follow up on Cohen’s claims. “I think the optics of that are very dangerous. … I think that could backfire,” Democratic Rep. Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia said on CNN Thursday...  https://www.libertyheadlines.com/dems-fear-backlash-trump-kids
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Blue Water Vets
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{sharylattkisson.com} ~ “Blue Water Vets” are Vietnam vets who served on ships in the waters off Vietnam. Like the ground troops, many were exposed to the dangerous defoliant Agent Orange... The chemical was carried onto the ships by planes that landed there. It drained into the ocean water that they used to make drinking water and to bathe in. Originally, these vets were compensated for their Agent Orange illnesses. But believe it or not, the Veterans Administration halted that compensation for the Blue Water vets in 2002. Ever since, the sailors have been fighting to get it back. We’ll also have findings of a report from the watchdog Project on Government Oversight. It looked into the trend of military officials making decisions that benefit certain defense contractors, then go on to work for those very same companies making lots of money. Critics say it raises questions about whose interests these officials are serving— those of the military and taxpaying Americans? Or their own– so they can get a high-paying job after the military?... U.S. soldiers in Vietnam... Vets are compensated for Agent Orange– but not the sailors who served off the coast.
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‘Alienated America’ Introduces Us To The 
‘Lena Dunham Fallacy’ Of Blaming 
Elites For Working-Class Sins
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{thefederalist.com} ~ Among the many important observations of “Alienated America,” Timothy P. Carney’s recently released book on the dissolution of working-class communities... is a phenomenon Carney refers to as the “Lena Dunham Fallacy.” Ben Domenech and I had a conversation with Tim about “Alienated America” on today’s Federalist Radio Hour. He talks about the Lena Dunham Fallacy at the 36:00-minute mark. It’s defined in the book as “the tendency to attribute to decadent elites social phenomena really located among the working class” and the inclination to “blame cultural shifts away from traditional norms on highly educated, wealthy, white liberals.” Where people on the right may ascribe, say, declining marriage rates, to the Dunhams and Hannah Horvaths roaming the streets of Manhattan, the marriage problem is not really with elites.  “Marriage has dropped across the board, but it has dropped more for the working class. College-educated women are surely getting married later than they were two generations ago, but that accounts for a tiny portion in the drop-off of marriage,” Carney notes, citing research from Brad Wilcox and Andrew Cherlin, who found, “In the affluent neighborhoods where many college-educated Americans live, marriage is alive and well and stable families are the rule.”...  http://thefederalist.com/2019/03/01/alienated-america-introduces-us-lena-dunham-fallacy-blaming-elites-working-class-sins/?utm_source=The+Federalist+List&utm_campaign=c3bd8ee94b-RSS_The_Federalist_Daily_Updates_w_Transom&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_cfcb868ceb-c3bd8ee94b-83771801
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Is Harvard Racist?
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by Media Editors:  Can you imagine, in this day and age, an educational institution discriminating against a racial minority? Can you imagine what the outcry would be?

“You mean, you’re preventing these qualified students from attending your college because of the color of their skin?!”

Well, you don’t have to imagine it. It’s happening. And at arguably the most prestigious college in America — my alma mater, Harvard.

The ethnic minority isn’t blacks or Jews, as it was in years past. The target this time is Asian Americans.

And it’s just as wrong.

After millions of dollars in legal fees, millions of records examined, and hundreds of hours of depositions and testimony, Harvard’s once purposely opaque admissions policies have been laid bare. It’s not a pretty picture.

Here’s what we now know:

Harvard Admissions rates student applicants in three main ways: 1) Academic performance; 2) Extra-curricular achievements; 3) “Personal qualities.” That’s fine, as far as it goes, if the criteria were applied fairly. But they’re not.

Asian American applicants consistently score higher in the first two criteria–academics and extra-curricular activities, which can be objectively assessed–than white students, Latinos and African Americans.

So how does Harvard justify its Asian American quota? With the help of category three — “personal qualities,” which include vague and largely subjective factors like “likability,” “maturity,” “integrity,” and “effervescence.”

According to Harvard’s own internal reports, Asian American applicants are routinely and systematically marked much lower on this personality scale by Harvard admissions officers who almost never meet or interview applicants. But here’s the kicker: the personality ratings given to Asian students by admissions officers are vastly different than the personality ratings Harvard gets from its own alumni interviewers, who actually meet the applicants in person. Alumni interviewers score Asian applicants as high as whites.

In other words, Harvard artificially and fraudulently downgrades Asians on “personality” to get the results it wants. And what Harvard wants is to suppress the number of Asian Americans admitted.

Based on the data that Harvard was forced to turn over, economist Peter Arcidiacono of Duke University concluded that with the same application profile in terms of test scores, extracurricular activities and personality factors, an Asian American male applicant would only have a 25% chance of admission–versus 32% if white, 77% if Hispanic, and 95% if black.

What’s the real-life result of all this?

In 2013, Asian Americans made up 19% of the incoming freshmen class. According to Harvard’s own Office of Institutional Research, if the personality factors had not been rigged, that percentage would have been 43%.

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 guarantees that “No person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color or national origin, be excluded from participation in, or be denied benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.”

Each year, Harvard takes hundreds of millions of dollars from the federal government.

In Grutter v. Bollinger, the Supreme Court upheld the University of Michigan Law School’s affirmative action policies, deciding that race could be used as a “plus factor” to achieve diversity, but never as a quota. Yet, by placing strict limits on the percentage of Asian American applicants it will admit, racial quotas are exactly what Harvard is using.

One strongly suspects this quota system isn’t limited to Harvard. In the last ten years, Asian American students have been limited to an 18-22% presence across the Ivy League. Or maybe that’s just a coincidence.

Writing for the majority in Grutter v. Bollinger in 2003, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote that the Court “expects that 25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to further the interest approved today.”

With less than a decade to go, the Ivy League shows no indication that it’s giving up on those racial preferences. Instead, these colleges have doubled down. Objective standards regarding admissions continue to be increasingly disfavored as the illegal goal of racial balancing is advanced. This racial balancing is justified by the left’s desire to achieve “racial diversity” — its insistence on seeing every person only through the prism of race, as if the most important thing any of us has to offer is the color of our skin.

Not long ago, that was called “racism.” It’s still called racism.

It needs to end, once and for all — for the sake of deserving Asian American students, for the sake of Harvard’s own integrity, and for the sake of the American principle that the rules must be the same for everyone.

Chief Justice of the Supreme Court John Roberts said it best: “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”

It’s time we did just that. I’m Lee Cheng, of the Asian American Legal Foundation, for Prager University.  ~The Patriot Post

VIDEO:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOuYN-Fz6tQ

https://patriotpost.us/articles/61448?mailing_id=4105&utm_medium=email&utm_source=pp.email.4105&utm_campaign=snapshot&utm_content=body
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