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What really happened in Ohio?

There are some things we can say for certain happened in Ohio and the U.S. in November 2004.

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Schiavo case and separation of powers

The following is a response to the Republican ramrodding of a bill giving a federal court jurisdiction over the case of brain-damaged Terri Schiavo. The Senate, operating under unanimous-consent rules, passed the legislation March 19 with no debate and with only three members present. The House voted 203-58 at 12:42 a.m. March 20 to approve the measure, and rushed it to President Bush. He signed the bill into law at 1:11 a.m.

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Jeb Bushs cuts target disabled

Marisselle Quinones, 11, who has spina bifida, testifies before a Florida Legislative committee on Medicaid reform, March 14 in Jacksonville.

Drug industry desecrates public interest

Review: 'The Truth about the Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do About It.' The U.S. health care system means misery for many, abundance for others. Parts of the story are easily told: low life expectancy and high infant mortality for the poor and racially oppressed, and millions who are uninsured or have poor coverage...

Missourians fight to blunt health cuts

ST. LOUIS — “Hurting Missouri’s most vulnerable citizens is not the way to fix our state’s budget problems,” said Cathy Martarella at a March 21 press conference announcing the formation of Missourians for Health. The new coalition includes health care providers, mental health advocates, Medicaid recipients, trade unionists and parents of children in the state’s First Steps program, which serves developmentally disabled toddlers.

Union rights for North Carolina farm workers

Mexican workers headed to the fields of North Carolina under the H-2A visa program can now stop by the Farm Labor Organizing Committee’s office in Monterrey, Mexico, to find out about their newly won rights. Opening the office was the first concrete step in implementing a groundbreaking agreement signed last fall between FLOC and the North Carolina Growers Association. The agreement covers 7,500 Mexican guest workers who cultivate and harvest cucumbers and other crops in North Carolina. This is the first time immigrant farm workers in the U.S. government’s existing H-2A guest worker program have been unionized.

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Protesting 12-hour days

Garment industry workers in Dhaka, Bangladesh, March 18th, protest a government edict adding four hours to their eight-hour shifts.

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African American laundry womens strike of 1881

With slavery less than two decades behind them, thousands of African American home laundry workers went on strike for higher wages, respect for their work and control over how their work was organized. In the summer of 1881, the home laundry workers took on Atlanta’s business and political establishment, and gained so much support that they threatened to call a general strike, which would have shut the city down.

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WORLD NOTES

Japan: Peace committee says, ban the Marines. Colombia: Reveal plot to kill unionists. Tanzania: Teachers need respect, support. Britain: Union wins historic equal pay award. Afghanistan: Bitter winter kills children.

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Israeli land grab continues in West Bank

On March 21 the Israeli government confirmed its approval of plans to build 3,500 new housing units in two new neighborhoods in Ma’ale Adumim, an illegal West Bank settlement. The construction would significantly expand the settlement toward the northeast and around east Jerusalem, a move that will tighten the Israeli stranglehold on Jerusalem and its Palestinian residents even further.

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