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Publication Archive |
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Breaking the Rules for Their Paymasters
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D., Xiaochin Claire Yan
10.26.2005
SACRAMENTO, CA - According to the state Senate's Guide to Laws on Official Conduct for Legislators and Legislative Staff, California law prohibits the use of public funds or resources to advocate the passage or defeat of a ballot initiative. At a recent hearing on Proposition 75, the paycheck protection initiative, two legislators totally disregarded that prohibition.
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PRI Pamphlet: Giving A Voice To Workers: Why California Needs Paycheck Protection
Pamphlet
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D.
10.20.2005
Currently, public-employee unions are free to use member dues to support political campaigns without obtaining approval from union members. Proposition 75, or the paycheck protection initiative, will require California public unions to get annual permission from members before member dues are spent for political purposes. The opt-in mechanism of paycheck protection ensures that every union member is able to choose how their money is spent.
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Feminist Student Abuse
The Contrarian
By: Sally C. Pipes
10.18.2005
If recent presidents are any indication, the path to the elite echelons runs through places like Yale University. Those selecting that path, however, seem to have goals somewhat at odds with elite expectations and feminist stereotypes.
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Governor's Veto Will Help Education Reform - But Much Work Remains
By: K. Lloyd Billingsley
10.12.2005
SACRAMENTO, CA - Last Thursday, PRI's Xiaochin Claire Yan called for Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to veto AB 1531, which would have allowed school districts to bypass California's high-school exit exam. The next day, Governor Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill. It was the right thing to do, but neither this action nor a measure on the November ballot will fix all that is wrong in California education.
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Wide-Body, Ourselves
The Contrarian
By: Sally C. Pipes
10.5.2005
Our Bodies Ourselves was first published in 1970 by the Boston Women's Health Collective and is now available in a 600-page edition published by Simon and Schuster. In the October Atlantic Monthly, feminist writer Christina Nehring takes on the new version.
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Socialized Health Care Violates Fundamental Rights
By: Diana M. Ernst
10.1.2005
Supporters of newly proposed California bill SB 840, entitled “The Health Insurance Reliability Act,” believe that government-run health care will solve America’s health care problems. Last July, the California Democratic Committee Executive Board announced, “a universal, single-payer health insurance system… has been predicted in numerous American studies and demonstrated in other countries to result in greater efficiency, lower costs to businesses, individuals, and government.”1 Certainly, uninsured patients, rising costs of medical care, and emergency rooms flooded with patients for non-urgent care are evidence of a broken health care system. But socialized medicine is not the answer. Californians should seriously consider the Constitutional consequences of a completely government-run system.
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