TomPaine.com

A Gift of Flexibility For Our Moms

This Sunday is Mother’s Day and many of us will be out this week buying gifts for our moms. That is the right thing for us to do. As a nation, one way for our country to say "thank you" to our moms is by giving them more flexibility to balance their work and family commitments through creative public policies that increase workplace flexibility.

The changing roles of mothers have been one of the most pronounced social trends seen in the… more

David Gray | TomPaine.com | May 10, 2007

Real Democracy... Or Dystopia?

Imagine that it is Election Day 2016. Imagine yet another presidential election that boils down to the same two battleground states -- Ohio and Florida -- which is not unrealistic, given demographic trends.

Candidates will spend most of their time in these two states and perhaps a handful of other swing states, ignoring all others. Visits to our largest states like California, Texas and New York will be kept to fund-raising zip codes. Florida and Ohio electorates will be sliced and… more

Steven Hill | TomPaine.com | February 16, 2007

Election Security 2006

Will your vote count on Tuesday? As we head into another election season -- with control of Congress potentially up for grabs -- ongoing concerns about voting equipment and election administration continue to worry fair elections advocates. Recent headlines have added to previous fears, but there are also signs that effective advocacy is paying off.

Last month, The New York Times and other news media reported on a new security glitch uncovered in election equipment manufacturer Diebold… more

Steven Hill | TomPaine.com | June 5, 2006

Roses, Relaxation And Real Reform

Being a mom is stressful. Who knew? And if this morning's toddler tantrum and missed conference call isn't proof enough, we have a chorus of writers, self-help gurus and well-intentioned neighbors to help remind us that we are not alone. From Judith Warner's Perfect Madness to a host of New Age strategies designed to help us find our "authentic" selves, there is finally universal acceptance that stress and motherhood are a bad combination. So while we would never… more

Fighting Poverty: Aspiring For Ownership

The onset of a debate over Social Security's future offers Democrats a chance to articulate what they're for -- not just what they're against. President Bush has provided them an opening. He's laid out a rhetorical message that works -- the Ownership Society -- but has failed to provide the means to make it happen. The reason it works is that it evokes the most promising path to security: being able to save, invest and build up a reserve of… more

Reid Cramer | TomPaine.com | February 7, 2005

Race And Social Security: Cynical Politics

You have to admire the Republican Party's nerve. There was George Bush in late January, surrounded by 22 black people, arguing for Social Security privatization on the grounds that the current system is unfair to blacks because we don't live long enough to collect much by way of benefits. A couple of days earlier, House Ways chair William Thomas, R-Calif., was suggesting that Social Security benefits might be adjusted so that people with short lifespans -- black people -- get… more

Marcellus Andrews | TomPaine.com | January 27, 2005

Beyond Latchkey Kids

Time is money, and these days there doesn't seem to be enough of either to go around. The new reality in today's 24/7 economy is that the demands on workers continue to grow, but compensation, benefits and flexibility fail to keep up. Unfortunately, it is not just workers that pay a high price. In this game of long hours, shrinking benefits and stagnating wages, the biggest losers are workers' children and families.

Let's get to the heart of the issue: Between… more

Shelley Waters Boots | TomPaine.com | January 26, 2005

Hope and Despair on King Day

A holiday in honor of Martin Luther King is a painful and bitter thing in these times of war and growing inequality. For some, King is a symbol of the nation's painful yet ultimately successful struggle to end segregation as public policy. For others, including a growing number of black Americans, King is a failed prophet whose movement for justice and equality has lost to the political heirs of those who were indifferent to racial oppression or fought to hold… more

Marcellus Andrews | TomPaine.com | January 17, 2005

Milton Friedman: Liberal Role Model

It is time for all good liberals and progressives to stop crying in their beer and raise a glass to Milton Friedman. That's right, Milton Friedman: Nobel laureate in economics, polemicist without peer among the academic scribblers, the real -- and only -- brains of the American right.

Why should we praise this guy? Because sly old Milton Friedman, unbeknownst to himself, perhaps, is about to make America safe for strong, self-confident liberalism.

How has Uncle Milton assured a liberal… more

Marcellus Andrews | TomPaine.com | January 11, 2005

America: Restoring Democracy

The day following Election 2004, retiring NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw indicated the need for strong national standards in how we count the votes. In an unusually serious interview with David Letterman, Brokaw said point blank, "We've gotta fix the election system in this country."

In a message to supporters, former presidential candidate John Kerry echoed this sentiment, calling for new "national standards" for elections and saying "It's unacceptable that people still don't have full confidence in the integrity of… more

Steven Hill | TomPaine.com | December 21, 2004