Zomba Prison Project’s albums have been recorded in a maximum-security facility in Malawi. Marilena Delli/Courtesy of the artisthide caption
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Marilena Delli/Courtesy of the artist
“I Am Done With Evil”
“I Will Never Stop Grieving For You”
“AIDS Has No Cure”
In 2013, the Grammy-winning producer Ian Brennan and his wife, filmmaker Marilena Delli, traveled to the African country Malawi to record the music of inmates at the maximum-security Zomba Central Prison. They came back with a stunning collection of song-stories that made up the Grammy-nominated record I Have No Everything Here.
Brennan discusses producing the Zomba Prison Project on this episode of World Cafe, speaking to why he went back to Malawi this past year to record a new album, I Will Not Stop Singing, which came out in September. He describes the moment a prisoner sang for the recording that assured him that he was doing the right thing: “I was weeping and there were a number of war journalists there that are very hardened and had seen a lot of things in their lifetime — middle-aged war journalists. They were weeping … None of us even knew what the song had said, yet we were so affected by it.”
If the Trump administration decides to drop an appeal of a legal setback involving Obamacare subsidies, the insurance exchanges could be hobbled. Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Imageshide caption
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Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images
Republicans have been vowing for six years now to repeal the Affordable Care Act. They have voted to do so dozens of times, despite knowing any measures would be vetoed by President Obama.
But the election of Donald Trump as president means Republican lawmakers wouldn’t even have to pass repeal legislation to stop the health law from functioning. Instead, President Trump could do much of it with a stroke of a pen.
Trump “absolutely, through executive action, could have tremendous interference to the point of literally stopping a train on its tracks,” said Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of law and health policy at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.
Trump is set to take office at a tricky time for the health law, with many Americans in both parties complaining about rising premiums and other out-of-pocket costs. The Republican-led Congress has refused to make changes to the law that would help it work better — such as offering a fix when insurers cancelled policies that individuals thought they would be able to keep. As staunch opponents of the law, they, of course, have little incentive to improve it.
When problems have arisen, Obama has often used his executive authority to try to solve them. And it’s this very mechanism Trump could use to undermine the law. As president, the Republican “can just reverse” Obama’s actions in many cases, said Nicholas Bagley, a law professor at the University of Michigan who writes about health policy. A president “can’t undo the basic architecture of the law, but you can throw sand into the gears,” he said.
Formal regulations would take time to undo, because they must follow a lengthy process allowing for public comment. But there are several measures Trump could take on Day One of his presidency to cripple the law’s effectiveness.
Perhaps Trump’s easiest action — and the one that would produce the largest impact — would be to drop the administration’s appeal of a lawsuit filed by Republican House members in 2014. That suit, House v. Burwell, charged that the Obama administration was unconstitutionally spending money that Congress hadn’t formally appropriated, to reimburse health insurers who were providing coverage to working-poor policyholders — those earning between 100 and 250 percent of the federal poverty line.
More than half of people who purchase insurance in the health exchanges get the additional help, which reduces out-of-pocket health spending on deductibles and coinsurance. While that help for consumers is required under the law, the funding was not specifically included. (Tax credits for people with incomes up to four times the poverty level to help defray the cost of premiums are a separate program and were permanently funded in the ACA.)
In April, Federal District Court Judge Rosemary Collyer ruled in favor of the House Republicans. “Such an appropriation cannot be inferred,” she wrote of the payments, and insurer “reimbursements without an appropriation thus violates the Constitution.” However, Collyer declined to enforce her decision, pending an appeal to a higher court. That appeal was filed in July and is still months away from resolution.
If Trump wanted to seriously damage the ACA, he could simply order the appeal dropped, letting the lower court ruling stand, and stop reimbursing insurers who are giving deep discounts to half their customers. That move would wreak havoc, said Michael Cannon of the libertarian Cato Institute, a longtime opponent of the health law. The insurers would still have to provide the discounts, as required by law, he said, “but they’re no longer getting subsidies from the federal government to cover the cost. So they are going to be selling insurance to these people way below the cost of that coverage.”
Even those who support the law say that mismatch would effectively shut down the health exchanges, because insurers would simply drop out. A Trump administration “really could collapse the federal exchange marketplace and the state exchanges if they end cost-sharing” payments to insurers,” said Rosenbaum, who has been a strong backer of the health law. There is already some concern about the continuing viability of the exchanges after several large insurers, including Aetna and United HealthCare, announced they would be dropping out for 2017.
Another way Trump could undermine the health law would be by simply not enforcing its provisions, particularly the individual mandate that requires most people to have insurance. That requirement is supposed to ensure that healthy as well as sick people sign up, thus spreading the costs of people with high bills across a larger population. But “executive branch non-enforcement could make a real difference to the vitality of the exchanges going forward,” Bagley said. If healthy people don’t sign up, sick people would need to pay more money for their insurance.
Aside from inflicting damage to the exchanges, the administration could also affect the law’s operations by refusing to approve states’ changes to their Medicaid programs. States rely on federal regulators to sign off on changes large and small, including which citizens are eligible, to keep their Medicaid programs operating. “There are so many things that an administration that doesn’t want a program to work can do,” Rosenbaum said.
The bigger question, though, is not what Trump could do to cripple the health law — it’s what he would do. He has addressed the issue only rarely — characterizing the health law as, simply, “a disaster” — and his plans for it aren’t clear. “It’s one thing to talk about ripping insurance from 20 million people” who are newly covered, Bagley said. “It’s another to actually do it.”
Health policy analysts on both sides of the aisle also still question where health care fits on Trump’s priority list.
“A big unknown is how aggressive Trump would remain in going beyond rhetorically opposing Obamacare,” said Thomas Miller, a resident fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. “His report card as a presidential candidate reads, ‘Donald needs to improve his attention, effort, and study habits. He is easily distracted and seems to prefer just picking fights with others.’ “
Perhaps most important, Cato’s Cannon says, is not whether Trump could single-handedly undo the health law, but whether he could undermine it enough to force Congress to take action. If Trump were to do just enough to cause the insurance exchanges to fail, he said, “that would put pressure on Congress … to reopen the law.”
Editor’s note: A version of this story was first published by Kaiser Health News on Oct. 7.
Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent news service that is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can follow Julie Rovneron Twitter:@jrovner.
2016 is the year the Cleveland Cavaliers won the NBA title, and it’s the year the Indians made it into World Series action. Now, the Browns would like to win just one game. The NFL team is 0-9.
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
Good morning. I’m Steve Inskeep. 2016 is the year the Cleveland Cavaliers won the NBA title, the year the Cleveland Indians made the World Series. And now Cleveland has just one more goal. The Cleveland Browns would like to win just one game. The NFL team is 0-9. Week by week, they get closer to the Detroit Lions, who once lost every game in a season. Coach Hugh Jackson has set an ambitious goal – somehow, some way, we’re going to find a way not to be 0-16. It’s MORNING EDITION.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.
Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:
Superhero Battle of the Day:
In the latest fan-made superhero crossover battle mashup, DC’s Superman goes up against Marvel’s Hulk (via Geek Tyrant):
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Fan-Made Deleted Scene of the Day:
Some cosplayers did a photoshoot and video depicting what happened to Robin before the events of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. See the photos at at Fashionably Geek:
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Adorable Cosplay of the Day:
Waffles the Cat makes a great baby Groot in this Guardians of the Galaxy cosplay (via Fashionably Geek):
Money traders watched computer screens at a foreign exchange brokerage in Tokyo on Wednesday as U.S. presidential ballots were counted. Shizuo Kambayashi/APhide caption
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Shizuo Kambayashi/AP
Financial markets like certainty.
On Tuesday night, as the presidential election’s outcome headed towards a Trump victory, stock futures plunged. Investors had bet heavily Monday on Democrat Hillary Clinton. But as Republican Donald Trump picked up many more votes than polls had predicted, markets reacted violently to the change in expectations.
Across the board, it turned ugly for equities, currencies and Treasurys. The CBOE Volatility Index, a measure of investor fear, showed a 30 percent spike.
Japan’s Nikkei Index closed down more than 5 percent. Pre-opening trading in Dow futures was down 4.6 percent at one point but recovered somewhat as the night wore on, down 2.9 percent.
The shock of this presidential race is hitting markets just months after voters in Britain stunned the world with their Brexit vote to leave the European Union.
Throughout the summer and into the fall, U.S. markets were relatively quiet as investors became confident that Clinton would win. Then in late October, when it appeared the FBI would reopen an investigation into questions about Clinton’s email, stocks began a steady fall.
For nine straight days, the S&P 500 drifted down. But that sentiment turned around when the FBI said it had found nothing new that would trigger further action. On Monday, markets rebounded, with investors again becoming confident of a Clinton victory.
Investors generally saw her as a well-known figure whose economic policies would be similar to President Obama’s. In contrast, Trump’s positions are less clearly spelled out, and businesses generally oppose his key position — tearing up existing trade agreements.
With so much uncertainty, investors shifted money out of stock futures and into safe havens. The Japanese yen shot up against the U.S. dollar while the Mexican peso fell. Gold rose. Ten-year U.S. Treasurys fell.
A screen shows a Netflix series, The Killing.Stephane de Sakutin/AFP/Getty Imageshide caption
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Stephane de Sakutin/AFP/Getty Images
For decades, one company has pretty much had the monopoly on TV ratings: Nielsen. But, the way people watch TV is changing. A lot of fans are streaming shows from the Internet — not watching on cable TV.
Old-fashioned Nielsen ratings wouldn’t show the habits of a family like Kevin Seal’s.
“We do not follow the appointment viewing, wait-for-the-show-to-come-on-at-a-given-time schedule,” says Seal, who lives in San Francisco with his wife and six-year-old son. “We watch a lot of Netflix programming — recently Black Mirror was the one that we devoured in its entirety.”
The failure of Nielsen to reveal data about the habits of family’s like the Seals has opened the way for a startup called Symphony, which is tracking TV watching in all its forms.
It is actually easier to track what people stream over the Internet. But Amazon and Netflix don’t release those numbers. Those companies say the numbers aren’t important because they don’t sell ads — they sell subscriptions. As long as people can find shows they want to watch they will keep subscribing.
But media researcher Bill Harvey says for the people who actually produce the programming the number of viewers remains very important. The producers of a show like Black Mirror are at a disadvantage in price negotiations with Amazon or Netflix. “The price paid by a distributor to a program source is less, based on the assumption that the audience is smaller,” Harvey says.
And he says the companies that make the programming for TV also don’t look as good in the eyes of Wall Street. Harvey says that, according to Nielsen’s measurement system, overall TV viewership is down. But if you were really to measure how much TV is being watch on streaming, that may turn out to be false.
“Younger people are doing less and less of the old-fashioned TV viewing and much more of the newfangled TV viewing that Nielsen isn’t measuring,” Harvey says.
Symphony has developed a tracking system that uses a smartphone app, which so far is on the phones of more than 15,000 people. It works a little like Shazam, the app that can detect which song is playing. Symphony runs in the background all the time and participants promise to have their phone on and with them when they view. Charles Buchwalter, CEO of Symphony, says each TV program has a code that the app can identify from the audio.
I’m a fan of the sci-fi show Humans, which I watch on Amazon. If I had the app on my phone, Symphony would know I was a viewer, Buchwalter says. “The app knows that this is the audio code that Laura’s listening to,” he says, “and then we are matching that to a reference database of all programs out there and it says Laura is watching Humans.”
I usually watch Humans on my iPad, and Symphony knows that too. That’s very important information to NBC Universal, which uses Symphony, says Alan Wurtzel, NBC’s senior vice president of research.
“Folks have migrated to watching a great deal of video content on non-Nielsen-measured devices, like smartphones, like tablets,” he says. “And when you reaggregate all those numbers they basically come right back to where they’ve always been.”
Wurtzel says people are watching as much TV as ever, though he doesn’t have enough data to prove it.
NPR’s TV critic Eric Deggans says there’s some evidence that Nielsen may be setting itself up to publicly track non-traditional TV viewing. He notes that earlier this year Nielsen revealed that it has been collecting some data on streaming-only shows from Netflix including Orange is the New Black.
“But they’re only sharing that information with select clients,” he says. “So it’s hard for journalists and critics and the public to know exactly who’s watching what.”
And while this information is important to the producers of TV, Deggans says viewers like to know about it too. “If a bunch of other people are watching a show you might want to check it out,” he says.
Ultimately, Deggans says, TV producers have a stake in seeing a company like Symphony succeed. Nielsen has been a monopoly in the world of TV ratings. “If Nielsen is the only place that gives you the ratings … then they can charge you as much as they can charge you,” Deggans adds.
But Symphony might give producers a little negotiating power. And if Symphony’s technology turns out to be accurate, it may also put pressure on Nielsen to do a better job tracking how Americans are engaging in their decades-old pastime of watching TV.
A court has blocked a new rule created by the Department of Health and Human Services that would preserve the right of patients and families to sue nursing homes in court. Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Imageshide caption
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Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images
A federal district court in Mississippi has issued an injunction blocking a new rule that would preserve the right of patients and their families to sue nursing homes over quality-of-care disputes.
The rule, announced in September by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, would ban so-called pre-dispute binding arbitration clauses in nursing home contracts, which require patients and families to settle any dispute over care through arbitration, rather than the court system.
The rule was supposed to take effect Nov. 28, but the American Health Care Association, an industry group that represents most nursing homes in the U.S., filed a lawsuit in October to block the rule, which it called “arbitrary and capricious.”
The acting administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services argued in a September blog post that the rule improved the “care and safety of the nearly 1.5 million residents in the more than 15,000 long-term care facilities that participate in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.”
As we have reported, the rule applies to facilities that receive money from Medicare or Medicaid — which is nearly all of them.
The lawsuit by the AHCA also contests the authority of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to regulate how nursing homes handle disputes, saying that authority lies solely with Congress.
On Monday, a federal district court granted the injunction, even as it acknowledged that “nursing home arbitration litigation suffers from fundamental defects.”
The reason for granting the injunction, the court explained in its order, is that it believes the new rule represents “incremental ‘creep’ of federal agency authority” — in this case the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services — “beyond that envisioned by the U.S. Constitution.”
Hanan Abu Qassem is the first female EMT to staff professional soccer games in Gaza. Lauren Frayer/NPRhide caption
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Lauren Frayer/NPR
Thousands of soccer fans chant and beat drums in the stands. An announcer narrates, on live radio, the start of the match.
Players from Gaza’s top soccer league sprint and dive for the ball. Going for a header, two players collide — and one lands on the leg of the other.
What happens next has never happened in Gaza before: A woman in a pink Muslim headscarf dashes out from the sidelines. She’s there to treat the player whose leg was injured.
In the West Bank and Gaza, female doctors, nurses and emergency medical technicians have worked pretty much everywhere their male counterparts do — except at soccer games. These are all-male events, often rowdy, which until now have used all-male medical teams — just as in much of the world. It’s rare to see a female sports trainer at La Liga matches in Spain, for example, or even in England’s Premier League.
But after another Arab country, Jordan, began employing female EMTs at its soccer games this year, Gaza followed suit.
“They have a problem that a female can touch the male [body] and do first aid,” says Hanan Abu Qassem, 28, who in October became the first female EMT to staff professional soccer games in Gaza. She was the one in the pink veil who sprinted onto the field to treat the player with the injured leg. “But it’s something ordinary for me.”
Hanan Abu Qassem motions from the sidelines of a top division professional soccer game in Gaza, poised to treat injured players. Abu Qassem is the first female EMT to staff such games in the Gaza Strip. Lauren Frayer/NPRhide caption
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Lauren Frayer/NPR
She’s an experienced EMT, having treated victims of Israeli bombs during the 2014 Gaza war. Compared to that, soccer sprains and scrapes were supposed to be straightforward — more pleasant work, she says.
But at her first game last month, she and a female colleague were booed by the crowd — and lambasted on social media. Male soccer fans, offended by their presence, took their complaints to Gaza’s soccer federation, which told Abu Qassem she might be locked out of future games because of the backlash, and for her own safety.
The backdrop of all this is an ongoing political struggle between the Islamist group Hamas, which governs Gaza, and Fatah, the party that runs the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and is seen as more liberal. Injured players are treated by municipal EMTs here, who aren’t required to be affiliated with any political party. They provide all medical care at soccer games, unlike in America or Europe, where private sports trainers, employed by individual teams, are often the first responders.
Hanan Abu Qassem (left) treats Kamal Bahoum (right), a soccer fan injured during scuffles at the gate to Gaza’s main soccer stadium. The presence of female EMTs at the soccer games has stirred controversy, and Abu Qassem has been warned she may be barred from future games. Lauren Frayer/NPRhide caption
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Lauren Frayer/NPR
“If I cannot enter the field, I may be crying,” Abu Qassem says. “Because I have ambition. I’m anxious to be a very famous EMT.”
She is already, because of this controversy. Before one recent match, as NPR accompanied her, guards initially prevented the ambulance Abu Qassem was riding in from entering Gaza’s main soccer stadium. Amid scuffles and yelling, they acquiesced after the head of the Palestinian EMT Association intervened.
“I’m surprised to see a woman doing this job!” says soccer fan Kamal Bahoum, 59, with a white beard. He was injured during the chaos at the stadium gate as he tried to get in, and went to Abu Qassem in search of a bandage for his bleeding hand. In the end, he had no qualms about getting medical treatment from a woman, he said.
At the game NPR attended, there were no boos directed toward Abu Qassem — but there were stares. She says she dressed more conservatively than she does most other days, wearing a pink headscarf and a long, loose-fitting black robe with a reflective vest over it.
Only three women appeared to be present in the entire stadium of thousands — Abu Qassem, a female sports journalist, and this NPR reporter.
Many of the crowds at the soccer games Abu Qassem staffs are all-male, like this one from a recent professional soccer match in Gaza City. Lauren Frayer/NPRhide caption
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Lauren Frayer/NPR
“As female journalists, we face the same problems that they face,” says Sabah Ahmed, a reporter for a Gaza sports website. “But day by day, the people start to deal with us. They are welcoming us. Actually, I’m surprised.”
Abu Qassem ends up riding in the ambulance to the hospital with the player who hurt his leg. Turns out it was broken. She says she sat by his hospital bedside as he cried — not out of pain, but out of fear his soccer career would be over.
Later that night, local TV stations in Gaza replay — over and over again — footage of the player’s injury, with his leg bent at an unnatural angle. It shows him being carried off the field on a stretcher. The report doesn’t say who treated him.
But if you pause and look closely, you can spot a hot pink hijab in the background.
Mary Keitany of Kenya crosses the finish line first in the women’s division of the 2016 New York City Marathon on Sunday, Nov. 6. Seth Wenig/APhide caption
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Seth Wenig/AP
Mary Keitany of Kenya won her third consecutive New York City Marathon on Sunday, finishing in 2 hours, 24 minutes, 26 seconds, and leaving her closest competitors in the dust.
Keitany pulled away from the elite women’s pack less than halfway into the race and ran most of the race alone, her No. 1 spot uncontested over more than a dozen miles.
The men’s race was more conventional, with a pack of elite runners sticking together for more than half of the 26.2 mile course before 20-year-old Eritrean runner Ghirmay Ghebreslassie pulled away. He crossed the finish line in 2 hours, 7 minutes, 51 seconds, becoming the youngest man ever to win.
Ghirmay Ghebreslassie of Eritrea (center) Lucas Rotich of Kenya (left) and Lelisa Desisa of Ethiopia, during the New York City Marathon. Jason DeCrow/APhide caption
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Jason DeCrow/AP
Lucas Rotich of Kenya finished second in the men’s field. Abdi Abdirahman, an American, finished third.
Ghebreslassie finished fourth at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro over the summer. But Keitany was cut from Kenya’s Olympic team — despite being the second fastest female marathoner ever. According to the International Association of Athletics Federations, only Paula Radcliffe has ever run a faster time than Keitany’s 2012 London marathon time of 2 hours 18 minutes 37 seconds.
Sunday was Keitany’s triumphant return, showing that she could not only win, but do so without the luxury of fellow elite runners to pace her throughout the race. Sally Kipyego of Kenya took second place in the women’s race with a time more than three minutes slower than Keitany’s. Molly Huddle of the United States was third.
In the women’s wheelchair race, the American Tatyana McFadden won her fourth New York City Marathon title in a row, and her fifth overall, according to the official race press release.
McFadden has dominated wheelchair racing since 2004, when she won her first Paralympic Games medal as a 15-year-old. In 2012, she described how she won the right to compete as a young athlete at Atholton High in Howard County, Md.
Tatyana McFadden of the United States celebrates winning the Professional Women’s Wheelchair Division for the fourth consecutive time during the 2016 New York City Marathon. Elsa/Getty Imageshide caption
“[McFadden] wanted to be part of the high school track team. But on the eve of the first track meet, the coach refused to give her a uniform. She wouldn’t be allowed to compete.
“After her mother complained, Tatyana was allowed to race, but not side-by-side with her teammates. At her first meet, her teammates and other competitors in the 400-meter race ran first. Then the track meet stopped and Tatyana was allowed to race — going around the track in her wheelchair, racing against no one. ‘That was the most humiliating, embarrassing thing I’ve ever done, ever,’ she says.
“She didn’t want to be the girl in the wheelchair; even then, she wanted to be seen as a top athlete. ‘People look at you and in their minds [they] see, ‘Oh, the girl with a disability in a wheelchair is running for a high school team. Congratulations.’ And for me as an elite athlete, it’s not what you want as an elite athlete.'”
On the men’s side, Marcel Hug of Switzerland narrowly won the wheelchair event, edging out Kurt Fearnley by six hundredths of a second, according to race regulators.
Marcel Hug of Switzerland, right, crosses the finish line first, just ahead of Kurt Fearnley of Australia, in the men’s wheelchair division of the 2016 New York City Marathon on Sunday. Seth Wenig/APhide caption