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21

Growing up in fields

July 20, 2023: I grew up in a small rural area named Center, Colorado which has a population of about 2,000 people. Growing up my parents were always working in the fields, I remember my father coming home from work, and I would feel how raspy his hands were on my face. I would always ask myself, “Why are his hands so rough?” Eventually, I realized it was because of the hard work he did every day.

22

Financing the healthcare of tomorrow playlist: Tracks for consumers and policymakers

July 12, 2023: My husband has advanced Lewy Body Dementia and one of the few things we can still enjoy together is listening to music.  We used to curate playlists for all kinds of music. We even put together playlists to mark special occasions (like our daughter’s wedding).  Really, any topic became fair game for a playlist. I was invited to speak at the Patients Rising Disrupting Healthcare Summit summer conference in Washington DC.  My panel topic was Financing the Healthcare of Tomorrow.

23

From class action to mass arbitration: Exposing corporate evasion in modern commerce

July 6, 2023: Several decades ago, clever lawyers for large corporations came up with a scheme to prevent their clients from being held accountable for wrongdoing. They did so by putting “forced arbitration clauses” in consumer and business contracts. The effect was to block consumers and others from getting access to the courts, and instead force them into arbitration, which is a private system for deciding legal cases that is controlled largely by the corporation itself.

27

What will happen to President Biden’s student debt forgiveness plan?

March 13, 2023: Last week, I attended the oral argument in the Supreme Court challenging student debt forgiveness initiative launched by the Biden Administration. The states of Missouri, Nebraska and four others, along with two students, are challenging Biden’s proposal to forgive student loan debt for 40 million Americans.

28

White House Competition Council announcement is a big deal

February 6, 2023: Ask almost any consumer and they will tell you that junk fees are one of the banes of their existence. Not only do these fees add often unexpected costs to the price of goods and services, but they also inhibit competition; contributing to higher prices, worse service, and poorer product quality.

29

Do children in America ever work in deplorable, dangerous, Dickensian conditions? The short answer is “yes.”

February 2, 2023: Most Americans are unaware that the U.S. still has child labor, but 2022 made it abundantly clear that we do, and stories in the news made it clear that conditions can be downright shocking. Here are 10 child labor stories or developments that indicate child labor in the U.S. is not something in the past.