Saturday, February 18, 2012

Should Rick Santorum Put An Aspirin Between His Lips ?

Maybe Rick Santorum Needs To Put Aspirin Between His Lips, So He Wouldn't Go Down On Phallic-Shaped Objects -- So Much.

Foster Friess, below, the scandalous billionaire fundraiser to former Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) for President, has advocated a return to old-fashioned uses of contraception.

Mr. Friess told Andrea Mitchell of MSNBC that, time was, women used to put an aspirin between their legs to discourage sexual intercourse.

Maybe Mr. Friess can advise Mr. Santorum, right, to put an aspirin between his lips, to discourage oral fixations.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

HHC $2 Million Consultant Contract

Maria del Carmen Arroyo, Chair of the New York City Council Health Committee, is silent about the $2 million consulting contract.

From The New York Times :

More than a year ago, the city’s public hospital system announced that it would create a management structure for its medical staff that would centralize a fragmented system and save millions of dollars.

As part of that plan, the hospital system agreed to pay Navigant, a consulting company, nearly $2 million a year for the services of two consultants, one of them part time, according to a copy of a contract obtained this week by The New York Times.

The contract says that Navigant would be paid $1.95 million to cover “professional fees, travel and living expenses” for the services of two people: Dr. Marc A. Bard, a Boston-based physician and health care management consultant, who was required to be in New York four and a half to five days a week, and Martin Rosenberg, a consultant based in Atlanta, who was required to be in New York one day a week.

Dr. Bard resigned this week, though it was not immediately clear why. Some doctors had privately complained about the high level of compensation being drawn from a financially strained system serving the city’s poor. Dr. Bard and Mr. Rosenberg did not respond to phone and e-mail requests for comment. It was not clear if Mr. Rosenberg was still consulting for the city’s hospital system.

A spokesman for Navigant said he would defer to the city’s Health and Hospitals Corporation. Ana Marengo, a spokeswoman for the corporation, said in an e-mail that Dr. Bard and the management “came to a mutual understanding that this is a good time to transition to new, permanent leadership.”

The consultants’ job was to manage doctors for a newly created professional corporation, the Physician Affiliate Group of New York, known as Pagny.

It employs about 2,000 doctors and other professional staff members at six city hospitals and negotiates their salaries and benefits.

The detailed 17-page contract promises to create a professional corporation that would “influence the market,” and it promises to do this “while forming a culture that is open, entrepreneurial and fun.” The contract also says that Navigant “cannot guarantee or assure the achievement of any particular performance objective.”

When the hospitals corporation announced the formation of Pagny, in September 2010, Alan Aviles, the system’s chief, said it was part of a long-term plan to gain more control over the running of the hospitals.

Many hospital networks have been planning for a shift toward so-called accountable-care organizations, a new system in which hospitals’ insurance payments will be tied to patient outcomes.

Traditionally, many of the city’s public hospitals have had contracts with medical schools allowing the schools to hire and fire doctors, and imposing a buffer between the corporation and its employees.

Pagny now employs the doctors at Coney Island Hospital in Brooklyn, Metropolitan and Harlem hospitals in Manhattan, and Jacobi, North Central Bronx and Lincoln hospitals in the Bronx.

Dr. Bard’s role was to run Pagny.

“We were fortunate to secure a founding C.E.O. with a leading reputation in A.C.O.’s and the support of the Navigant organization to build a new organization infrastructure from the ground up,” Ms. Marengo said.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Whitney Houston dead at 48

On eve of Grammy Awards, singer Whitney Houston has died. The cause of death and location are not yet known.

From CBS News : (AP) LOS ANGELES - Whitney Houston, who ruled as pop music's queen until her majestic voice and regal image were ravaged by drug use, erratic behavior and a tumultuous marriage to singer Bobby Brown, has died. She was 48.


Houston's publicist, Kristen Foster, said Saturday that the singer had died, but the cause and the location of her death were unknown.

News of Houston's death came on the eve of music's biggest night — the Grammy Awards. It's a showcase where she once reigned, and her death was sure to case a heavy pall on Sunday's ceremony. Houston's longtime mentor Clive Davis was to hold his annual concert and dinner Saturday; it was unclear if it was going to go forward.

At her peak, Houston was the golden girl of the music industry. From the middle 1980s to the late 1990s, she was one of the world's best-selling artists. She wowed audiences with effortless, powerful, and peerless vocals that were rooted in the black church but made palatable to the masses with a pop sheen.

Her success carried her beyond music to movies, where she starred in hits like "The Bodyguard" and "Waiting to Exhale."

She had the he perfect voice, and the perfect image: a gorgeous singer who had sex appeal but was never overtly sexual, who maintained perfect poise.

She influenced a generation of younger singers, from Christina Aguilera to Mariah Carey, who when she first came out sounded so much like Houston that many thought it was Houston.

But by the end of her career, Houston became a stunning cautionary tale of the toll of drug use. Her album sales plummeted and the hits stopped coming; her once serene image was shattered by a wild demeanor and bizarre public appearances. She confessed to abusing cocaine, marijuana and pills, and her once pristine voice became raspy and hoarse, unable to hit the high notes as she had during her prime.

"The biggest devil is me. I'm either my best friend or my worst enemy," Houston told ABC's Diane Sawyer in an infamous 2002 interview with then-husband Brown by her side.

It was a tragic fall for a superstar who was one of the top-selling artists in pop music history, with more than 55 million records sold in the United States alone.

She seemed to be born into greatness. She was the daughter of gospel singer Cissy Houston, the cousin of 1960s pop diva Dionne Warwick and the goddaughter of Aretha Franklin.

Houston first started singing in the church as a child. In her teens, she sang backup for Chaka Khan, Jermaine Jackson and others, in addition to modeling. It was around that time when music mogul Clive Davis first heard Houston perform.

"The time that I first saw her singing in her mother's act in a club ... it was such a stunning impact," Davis told "Good Morning America."

"To hear this young girl breathe such fire into this song. I mean, it really sent the proverbial tingles up my spine," he added.

Before long, the rest of the country would feel it, too. Houston made her album debut in 1985 with "Whitney Houston," which sold millions and spawned hit after hit. "Saving All My Love for You" brought her her first Grammy, for best female pop vocal. "How Will I Know," "You Give Good Love" and "The Greatest Love of All" also became hit singles.

Another multiplatinum album, "Whitney," came out in 1987 and included hits like "Where Do Broken Hearts Go" and "I Wanna Dance With Somebody."

The New York Times wrote that Houston "possesses one of her generation's most powerful gospel-trained voices, but she eschews many of the churchier mannerisms of her forerunners. She uses ornamental gospel phrasing only sparingly, and instead of projecting an earthy, tearful vulnerability, communicates cool self-assurance and strength, building pop ballads to majestic, sustained peaks of intensity."

Her decision not to follow the more soulful inflections of singers like Franklin drew criticism by some who saw her as playing down her black roots to go pop and reach white audiences. The criticism would become a constant refrain through much of her career. She was even booed during the "Soul Train Awards" in 1989.

"Sometimes it gets down to that, you know?" she told Katie Couric in 1996. "You're not black enough for them. I don't know. You're not R&B enough. You're very pop. The white audience has taken you away from them."

Some saw her 1992 marriage to former New Edition member and soul crooner Bobby Brown as an attempt to refute those critics. It seemed to be an odd union; she was seen as pop's pure princess while he had a bad-boy image, and already had children of his own. (The couple had a daughter, Bobbi Kristina, in 1993.) Over the years, he would be arrested several times, on charges ranging from DUI to failure to pay child support.

But Houston said their true personalities were not as far apart as people may have believed.

"When you love, you love. I mean, do you stop loving somebody because you have different images? You know, Bobby and I basically come from the same place," she told Rolling Stone in 1993. "You see somebody, and you deal with their image, that's their image. It's part of them, it's not the whole picture. I am not always in a sequined gown. I am nobody's angel. I can get down and dirty. I can get raunchy."

It would take several years, however, for the public to see that side of Houston. Her moving 1991 rendition of "The Star Spangled Banner" at the Super Bowl, amid the first Gulf War, set a new standard and once again reaffirmed her as America's sweetheart.

In 1992, she became a star in the acting world with "The Bodyguard." Despite mixed reviews, the story of a singer (Houston) guarded by a former Secret Service agent (Kevin Costner) was an international success.

It also gave her perhaps her most memorable hit: a searing, stunning rendition of Dolly Parton's "I Will Always Love You," which sat atop the charts for weeks. It was Grammy's record of the year and best female pop vocal, and the "Bodyguard" soundtrack was named album of the year.

She returned to the big screen in 1995-96 with "Waiting to Exhale" and "The Preacher's Wife." Both spawned soundtrack albums, and another hit studio album, "My Love Is Your Love," in 1998, brought her a Grammy for best female R&B vocal for the cut "It's Not Right But It's Okay."

But during these career and personal highs, Houston was using drugs. In an interview with Oprah Winfrey in 2010, she said by the time "The Preacher's Wife" was released, "(doing drugs) was an everyday thing. ... I would do my work, but after I did my work, for a whole year or two, it was every day. ... I wasn't happy by that point in time. I was losing myself."

In the interview, Houston blamed her rocky marriage to Brown, which included a charge of domestic abuse against Brown in 1993. They divorced in 2007.

Houston would go to rehab twice before she would declare herself drug-free to Winfrey in 2010. But in the interim, there were missed concert dates, a stop at an airport due to drugs, and public meltdowns.

She was so startlingly thin during a 2001 Michael Jackson tribute concert that rumors spread she had died the next day. Her crude behavior and jittery appearance on Brown's reality show, "Being Bobby Brown," was an example of her sad decline. Her Sawyer interview, where she declared "crack is whack," was often parodied. She dropped out of the spotlight for a few years.

Houston staged what seemed to be a successful comeback with the 2009 album "I Look To You." The album debuted on the top of the charts, and would eventually go platinum.

Things soon fell apart. A concert to promote the album on "Good Morning America" went awry as Houston's voice sounded ragged and off-key. She blamed an interview with Winfrey for straining her voice.

A world tour launched overseas, however, only confirmed suspicions that Houston had lost her treasured gift, as she failed to hit notes and left many fans unimpressed; some walked out. Canceled concert dates raised speculation that she may have been abusing drugs, but she denied those claims and said she was in great shape, blaming illness for cancellations.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Ramarley Graham Murdered By NYPD

NYPD Undercover Police Kill An Unarmed Teen -- Sparks Outrage In New York City

Ramarley Graham, 18, was shot and killed in his grandmother's Bronx apartment in yet another example of NYPD's aggressive police tactics that targets and murders innocent men of colour. The police officer responsible for this latest murder has been identified as Richard Haste. Video by Gary Anthony Ramsay from PressTV.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Monday, February 6, 2012

Rudin Luxury Condos Anger Activists

The Rudin Family : The New Robber Barons ?

Jason Sheftell, a real estate promoter, published an editorial in The New York Daily News, in which he reported some facts and some half-truths about the controversial closing of St. Vincent's Hospital and the Rudin family's luxury condo conversion of the hospital's real estate properties.

"Local activists, who blame the pro-development city forces for the loss of the hospital, hold vigils outside the building," wrote Mr. Sheftell, in his real estate column about the dangers of the Rudin luxury condo conversion plan.

Mr. Sheftell noted that with the closing of St. Vincent's Hospital, the response and transport times by ambulance or EMS will put people's lives in jeopardy. "It’ll take 12 minutes longer to get to a hospital in an emergency. That could spell death for heart attack or stroke victims."

But Mr. Sheftell claims that activists are not targeting the Rudin family, which is false. Activists have been bird-dogging the figurehead of the Rudin family : Bill Rudin, and other activists have launched entire Facebook pages and events around the tarnished Rudin family name.

Not only that, but it was reported that the Manhattan District Attorney was investigating whether the Rudin family was criminally involved in St. Vincent's Hospital's demise, so that the Family could make hundreds of millions of dollars from the luxury condo conversion. At some point, if it hasn't yet already, the Rudin family name will become synonymous with the pejorative : "robber baron."

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Rudin Asbestos Kills

Do Protesters Have To Leave A Coffin Outside St. Vincent's, To Demonstrate How Deadly The Rudin Luxury Condo Plan Really Is ?

Bill-Rudin-Asbestos-Kills-Coffin-Luxury-Condos, Bill-Rudin-Asbestos-Kills-Coffin-Luxury-Condos-Protests

The people, who live around the Rudin Luxury Condo Conversion Project at St. Vincent's Hospital, will live a life of a nightmare for years : they will be living next to a major construction project that will stir up asbestos, rodents, noise, and other construction-related pollution. And this is not even taking into consideration the fact that the luxury condominiums and townhouses are replacing a full-service hospital, meaning, that there is no no where to go if residents (including the luxury condo buyers) have asthma attacks, heart attacks, strokes, or trauma. All this courtesy of Seventh Avenue Socialite Amanda Burden and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Hounded to Death

"Soap actor commits suicide after pup's 'forced' euthanasia," reported The New York Post

Nick Santino overdosed on pills on the evening of Tuesday, January 24, hours after he was ''forced'' to euthanise his beloved dog, Rocco, on account of because of relentless pressure from residents and board members of his Upper West Side condo.

Already, animal rights activists are spreading information about an action alert against the condo board and management company for One Lincoln Plaza.

A Facebook event entitled "Hounded to Death in New York City - Anti-Breed Discrimination Protest" began to be circulated on the Internet tonight by a group called No Kill New York.

Watch a 2010 news segment about the crackdown against dogs and their caregivers by the crazy condo board members of One Lincoln Plaza, at West 64th Street.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Amanda Burden Approves Rudin Luxury Condo Conversion Plan For St. Vincent's Hospital

Amanda-Burden-to-Westside-Drop-Dead-St-Vincents-Hospital, Amanda-Burden-to-Westside-Drop-Dead-St-Vincents-Hospital-NY1
The controversial and scandalous Rudin Luxury Condo Conversion Plan for St. Vincent's Hospital was unanimously approved the New York City Planning Commission. The Planning Commission Director Amanda Burden said that she was pleased to see more and more luxury condominiums replacing social safety net underpinnings, such as community hospitals. Word on the street is that, after the luxury condo conversion hearing, Bill Rudin asked if Ms. Burden would like any campaign contributions the way that the Rudin family have made campaign donations to New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn.
Christine Quinn,Rudin Family,Rudin Management,Mayor 2013 NYC,Campaign Donations,Real Estate Deals,Hospital Closings,St. Vincent's Hospital

Monday, January 23, 2012

St. Vincent's Candlelight Vigil

Candlelight Vigil at St. Vincent's Hospital on Nov. 7, 2011

Activists, who are fighting a hospital to replace St. Vincent's, ask these questions : (i) where is the community supposed to go when they are having a medical emergency, and (ii) is the Rudin family really a "benevolent" family ?

Link to Fox 5 News Report : Long Emergency Room Wait Times In NYC.

This video was made on 07 Nov 2011 on West 12th Street, outside the Rudin Luxury Condo sales office on the former site of St. Vincent's Hospital.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

St. Vincent's OWS Town Hall

Join us on Tuesday, Jan. 31, at 6 p.m. at the LGBT Community Center at 208 West 13th Street in the West Village.

With St. Vincent’s closed, the West Side still has no hospital beds below 57th Street. How can we bring a hospital back to our community ? How can we get true universal healthcare ? Come Join the Discussion ! RSVP at the Facebook page for the St. Vincent's Community Assembly.

This "town hall" is a consensus-based conversation facilitated by HEALTHCARE FOR THE 99%, an OCCUPY WALL STREET working group.

2012-01-31 St Vincents Community Assembly - Luxury Condos Cant Do CPR

After MegaUpload Crackdown By Government Authorities, Anonymous Responds To FBI With Internet Attacks


Today the Feds raided the website MegaUpload, which led to the arrests of seven people across the globe, according to some reports. Now the Hacktivist group, Anonymous, has come forth in retaliation to the crackdown and launched an attack on several websites including The Department of Justice, Universal Music Group, and the Recording Industry Association of America. The wave of attacks is just the beginning and Barrett Brown, founder of Project PM, joins us to discuss whats next for the groups.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Rudin Family Economic Injustice

Under the Rudin Family's logic, the have will have more, and the have nots will have even less. The Top 1% can close hospitals in order to convert them into luxury condos, or they can clear out maternity wards, so that they can give celebrity births. Either way, healthcare in the United States is becoming less and less equal.

Monday, January 16, 2012

St. Vincent's MLK Vigil Becomes A Medical Crisis

A man passed out on the sidewalk about 25 feet from a candlelight vigil outside of St. Vincent's Hospital tonight during a celebration of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In this video, the political commentator and artist Suzannah B. Troy describes to us the scene of the medical emergency.

St. Vincent's closed in 2010. On Jan. 23, the New York City Planning Commission, headed by Park Avenue socialite Amanda Burden, is expected to approve the luxury condo conversion of St. Vincent's Hospital, which will make billionaire real estate developer Bill Rudin over $1 billion in gross sales.

Earlier in the Day, activists for a single-payer healthcare system gathered at Union Square.

Activists advocating for a hospital to replace St. Vincent's, for example, joined in solidarity with the Physicians for a National Health Program, who held a speak-out on the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., Day.

2012-Martin-Luther-King-Day-Banner-Hospital-Closings-Union-Square, 2012-Martin-Luther-King-Day-Banner-Hospital-Closings-Union-Square