We Still Have a Dream
Sixty years after Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, our racial economic divide is vast as ever. But it can still be closed — and quickly.
Sixty years after Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, our racial economic divide is vast as ever. But it can still be closed — and quickly.
Every other industrialized country has already made the transition and seen both improved health outcomes and reduced costs.
The main event in a week of meetings and events between Cuban and U.S. health care professionals about the impact of the blockade on health and how to end a policy that helps no one.
Infographic: The media calls Trump an outsider, but his presidency would have the one percent winning even bigger.
It didn’t have to be this way. We had the power to make things different. In fact, we still have the power to make things different.
Western Europe and Canada can learn a great deal from the examples of Cuba and Venezuela, where health care is a human and constitutional right and the well being of the people is central to the national mission.