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The GOPโ€™s Attack on LGBTQ Americans, Revealedย Republicans donโ€™t...



The GOPโ€™s Attack on LGBTQ Americans, Revealedย 

Republicans donโ€™t seem to care that Ronald Reagan once starred in a film that featured a prominent drag scene or that Rudy Giuliani did a skit in drag with Donald Trump.

Suddenly, theyโ€™re trying to ban or restrict drag performances in at least 15 states, with bills so broadly worded that advocates warn they could be used not only to prosecute drag performers, but also transgender people who dare to simply exist in public.

These bans are part of a cynical campaign to demonize the LGBTQ+ community. MAGA politicians are stoking fear over imaginary dangers to distract from how their policies only help themselves and their wealthy donors.

In the first half of 2023 alone, Republicans across the nation introduced a record number of bills to strip away freedoms and civil rights from LGBTQ+ Americans, largely targeting transgender and gender-nonconforming people.

By banning gender affirming care for minors, GOP lawmakers are effectively practicing medicine without a license โ€” overruling the guidance of doctors, the American Medical Association, and the American Academy of Pediatrics. And theyโ€™re lying about what gender affirming care even is.

Genital surgery, for instance, is rarely, if ever, done under the age of 18. Itโ€™s not even all that common for adults. Politicians like Ron DeSantis are lying about it to scare people.

And the Republican presidential frontrunner has made it clear that trans people have no place in his vision of America.

MAGA lawmakers and pundits falsely claim trans people and drag performers are a danger to children and the public at large, when there is no evidence at all to support that. None. Trans people are in fact four times more likely to be the victims of violent crime.

These scare tactics are dangerous. Recent analysis found a 70% increase in hate crimes against LGBTQ+ Americans between 2020 and 2021, as the surge of these bills began. And thatโ€™s only counting hate crimes that get reported. 2020 and 2021 each set a new record for the number of trans people murdered in America.

The cruelest irony is that these Republican bills pretending to protect children actually put some of the most vulnerable children at greater risk. LGBTQ+ kids are more than four times as likely to attempt suicide, especially transgender children. Gender-affirming care reduces that risk. That is why it is life-saving.

Donโ€™t Say Gay laws strip away potentially life-saving support. A teacher discussing sexual orientation and gender identity wonโ€™t turn a straight kid gay. But it will make an LGBTQ+ student 23% less likely to attempt suicide.

The tragic truth is that Donโ€™t Say Gay Laws and health care bans will cause more young lives to be needlessly lost.

If Republicans really cared about protecting kids, theyโ€™d focus on gun violence, now the leading cause of death for American children. If they were really worried about children undergoing life-altering medical procedures, they wouldnโ€™t pass abortion bans that force teens to give birth or risk back-alley procedures.

What the GOPโ€™s vendetta against the LGBTQ+ community really is, is a classic authoritarian tactic to vilify already marginalized people. Theyโ€™re trying to stoke so much paranoia and hatred that we donโ€™t notice how they are consolidating power and wealth into the hands of a ruling few.

We need to see this attack on LGBTQ+ Americans for what it is: a threat to all of our human rights.

We Need to Make Government Bigger (Itโ€™s Not What You Think)ย We...



We Need to Make Government Bigger (Itโ€™s Not What You Think)ย 

We need to make the House of Representativesย bigger!

Now I know what some might be thinking: โ€œMake the government bigger?โ€ Well, technically yes. But thatโ€™s missing the point. We need to expand the House to make the government work better, and be more responsive to our needs.

Put simply: The House of Representatives does not have enough members to adequately represent all 334 million of us.

Now, the House hasnโ€™t always had 435 members and it was never intended to stay the same size forever. For the first 140 years of Americaโ€™s existence, a growing House of Reps was actually the norm.

It wasnโ€™t until 1929 that Congress arbitrarily decided to cap the size of the House at 435 members. Back then, each House member represented roughly 200,000 people.

But since then, the population of the United States has more than tripled, bringing the average number of constituents up to roughly 760,000.

Compared to other democracies, we are one of the worst in terms of how many constituents a single legislator is supposed to represent. Only in India does the average representative have more constituents.

And as America continues to grow itโ€™s only going to get worse.

Think your representative doesnโ€™t listen to you now? Just wait.

Not surprisingly, research shows that representatives from more populous House districts tend to be less accessible to their constituents, and less popular.

Thankfully, the solution is simple: allow the House to grow.

Increasing the number of representatives should be a no brainer for at least four reasons:

First, logically, more representatives would mean fewer people in each congressional district โ€” improving the quality of representation.

Second, a larger House would be more diverse. Despite recent progress, todayโ€™s House is still overwhelmingly male, white, and middle-aged. More representatives means more opportunities for young people, people of color, and women to run for office โ€” and win.

Third, this reduces the power of Big Money. Running an election in a smaller district would be less expensive, increasing the likelihood that people elect representatives that respond to their interests rather than big corporations and the wealthy.

Fourth, this would help reduce the Electoral Collegeโ€™s bias toward small states in presidential elections. As more heavily populated states gain more representatives in Congress โ€” they also gain more electoral votes.

Now, some might say that a larger House of Representatives would be unwieldy and unmanageable.

Well, Japan, Germany, France, and the UK โ€” countries with smaller populations than us โ€” all have larger legislatures โ€” and they manage just fine.

Others might say that it would be too difficult โ€” or expensive โ€” to accommodate more representatives in the Capitol. โ€œAre there even enough chairs???โ€

Seriously?

Look, weโ€™ve done it before. The current Capitol has been expanded to accommodate more members several times โ€” and it can be again. A building should not be an obstacle to a more representative democracy.

Increasing the size of the House is an achievable goal.

We donโ€™t even need a constitutional amendment. Congress only needs to pass a law to expand the number of representatives, which itโ€™s done numerous times.

And as it happens, there is a bill โ€” two in fact!

Each would add more than 130 seats to the House and lower the number of constituents a typical representative serves from 761,000 to a little over 570,000. Plus, there is a mechanism for adding new members down the line.

These bills are our best chance to restore the tradition of a House that grows in representation as America grows.

Itโ€™s time for us to think big โ€” and make the Peopleโ€™s House live up to its name.

This One Thing Would Increase Wages By $300...



This One Thing Would Increase Wages By $300 Billionย 

Thereโ€™s a dirty trick many employers use to keep workers from getting a better job.

Some 30 million Americans are trapped by contracts that say if they leave their current job, they canโ€™t work for a rival company or start a new business of their own.

These are called non-compete agreements.

They block workers from seeing higher wages or better working conditions. And they enlarge corporate monopoly power by stifling competition.

But a sweeping new rule from the Federal Trade Commission would put a stop to these non-compete agreements.

The FTC estimates that banning them could increase wages by nearly $300 billion a year overall by allowing workers to pursue better job opportunities.

But non-competes arenโ€™t just bad for workers. They also harm the economy as a whole by depriving growing businesses of the talent and experience they need to build and expand.

Experts argue Californiaโ€™s ban on non-competes was a major reason for Silicon Valleyโ€™s boom.

For several decades, non-compete agreements have been cropping up all over the economy โ€” not just in high-paying fields like banking and tech but as standard boilerplate for employment contracts in many lower-wage sectors such as construction, hospitality, and retail.

A recent survey found that non-competes are used for workers in more than a quarter of jobs where the typical employee only has a high school diploma. Another found that they disproportionately impact women and people of color.

Employers say they need noncompete agreements to protect trade secrets and investments they put into growing their businesses, like training workers.

Rubbish. Employers in states that already ban these agreements (such as California) show no sign of being more reluctant to invest in their businesses or train workers.

The real purpose of noncompetes is to make it harder (or impossible) for workers to bargain with rival employers for better pay or working conditions. Workers in states that have banned non-compete agreements have seen larger wage increases and more job mobility than workers in states where they are still legal.

As we learn again and again, the economy needs guardrails โ€” and workers deserve protection. Otherwise, unfettered greed will lead to monopolies that charge high prices and suppress wages.

America once understood the importance of fighting monopolies. Woodrow Wilson created the Federal Trade Commission in 1914 to protect the public against the powerful corporate monopolies that fueled unprecedented inequality and political corruption.

In 1976, when I ran the policy planning staff at the FTC, it began cracking down on corporations under its then assertive chairman, Michael Pertschuk.

Corporate lobbyists and their allies in Congress were so unhappy they tried to choke off the agencyโ€™s funding, briefly closing it down. Pertschuk didnโ€™t relent, but eventually he (and I) were replaced by Ronald Reaganโ€™s appointees, who promptly defanged the agency.

Now, under its new Biden-appointed chair, Lina Khan, the FTC is back. Its ban on non-compete agreements nationwide marks the first time since Pertschuk that the agency has flexed its muscle to issue a rule prohibiting an unfair method of competition.

The rule is hardly a sure thing. I wouldnโ€™t be surprised if the radical-right Republicans, now in control of the House, tried to pull off a stunt similar to what the House tried in the late 70s. And corporations are sure to appeal the rule all the way up to the Supreme Court.

In the meantime, kudos to Lina Khan and the FTC for protecting American workers from the unfettered greed of corporate America.

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