Did MLK Argue For A $15 Minimum Wage?

Kyle Kulinski

It could be argued that – taking yearly inflation into account – Martin Luther King argued for a $15.27 minimum wage, according to Kyle Kulinski.  King argued for a $2.00 minimum wage in 1963, which would be $15.27 today if one takes inflation into account.

Kulinski also states MLK was also pro-union, and was pro-healthcare.

More on MLK’s views on health care:

http://dailycaller.com/2012/01/13/sebelius-invokes-dr-martin-luther-king-in-justifying-obamacare/

An article on MLK’s union views can be found here:

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/09/03/1126088/-Martin-Luther-King-Jr-spoke-for-workers-and-unions-His-last-campaign-was-a-labor-fight#

Vermont ‘Canadian-Style’ Single-Payer Health Care

According to ThinkProgress, proponents of single-payer health care in Vermont aren’t pleased with their governor’s recent decision to stop the state’s plans to create a single-payer system.  More than 100 activists gathered at the statehouse to burn their medical bills.

The governor of Vermont, Peter Shumlin, was previously a big supporter of single-payer, and he even campaigned on the issue in 2010.

However, his most recent re-election was an unexpectedly close one, and he has been dragging his feet on pushing through the dramatic reforms.

Kyle Kulinski video.

More:

http://thinkprogress.org/health/2014/12/19/3605717/vermont-single-payer-protest/

75 Dallas Health Care Workers Banned From Public Transportation, Put On No-Fly List

635490863822080024-1016-nina-pham-transported-3According to KERA TV news, a Dallas PBS station, 75 health care workers have been asked to sign legal documents in which they agree to stay home, not ride public transportation, and not go to public places.

A local CBS affiliate claims they were also placed on a no-fly list.

The documents ask 75 health care workers to agree not to go to public places or use mass transit. Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins says the agreements are binding legal documents that can be enforced with a variety of remedies, though he declined to elaborate to the Associated Press.

WFAA reports that Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins has confirmed that 75 employees who took care of Thomas Eric Duncan at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital were put on the no-fly list.  The workers reportedly had contact with the Ebola patient.

In a Texas Department of State Health Services memo obtained by KXAS-TV, the state mandate says that “no individual who entered the first Ebola patient’s room can travel by commercial transportation until 21 days after that individual’s last exposure.”

It continues: “These individuals should not travel by commercial conveyances (e.g. airplane, ship, long-distance bus, or train). Local use of public transportation (e.g. taxi, bus) by asymptomatic individuals should be discussed with the public health authority.”

On Thursday, Nina Pham, the first nurse to contract Ebola in the U.S., boarded a CDC plane at Dallas Love Field to Frederick, Maryland.  She is to be treated at the National Institutes of Health.  The plane departed at 7:09 p.m. CT and arrived at an airport at Frederick less than three hours later.

She walked off the plane in Maryland with assistance while wearing a protective suit. She climbed into an ambulance for transport to the National Institutes of Health’s state-of-the-art facility in Bethesda, Md.

Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital has reported that she is in good condition.

Pham, who said “I’m doing really well,” left Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in an ambulance.  Friends and coworkers told her goodbye.