How bosses are (literally) like dictators

Americans think they live in a democracy. But their workplaces are small tyrannies.

Some Amazon warehouse workers have complained about being pushed beyond their abilities by their bosses. Boston Globe / Getty

Updated by  Jul 17, 2017, 8:20am EDT

Consider some facts about how American employers control their workers. Amazon prohibits employees from exchanging casual remarks while on duty, calling this “time theft.” Apple inspects the personal belongings of its retail workers, some of whom lose up to a half-hour of unpaid time every day as they wait in line to be searched. Tyson prevents its poultry workers from using the bathroom. Some have been forced to urinate on themselves while their supervisors mock them.

About half of US employees have been subject to suspicionless drug screening by their employers. Millions are pressured by their employers to support particular political causes or candidates. Soon employers will be empowered to withhold contraception coveragefrom their employees’ health insurance. They already have the right to penalize workers for failure to exercise and diet, by charging them higher health insurance premiums.

How should we understand these sweeping powers that employers have to regulate their employees’ lives, both on and off duty? Most people don’t use the term in this context, but wherever some have the authority to issue orders to others, backed by sanctions, in some domain of life, that authority is a government

We usually assume that “government” refers to state authorities. Yet the state is only one kind of government. Every organization needs some way to govern itself — to designate who has authority to make decisions concerning its affairs, what their powers are, and what consequences they may mete out to those beneath them in the organizational chart who fail to do their part in carrying out the organization’s decisions.

Managers in private firms can impose, for almost any reason, sanctions including job loss, demotion, pay cuts, worse hours, worse conditions, and harassment. The top managers of firms are therefore the heads of little governments, who rule their workers while they are at work — and often even when they are off duty.

Every government has a constitution, which determines whether it is a democracy, a dictatorship, or something else. In a democracy like the United States, the government is “public.” This means it is properly the business of the governed: transparent to them and servant to their interests. They have a voice and the power to hold rulers accountable.

Not every government is public in this way. When King Louis XIV of France said, “L’etat, c’est moi,” he meant that his government was his business alone, something he kept private from those he governed. They weren’t entitled to know how he operated it, had no standing to insist he take their interests into account in his decisions, and no right to hold him accountable for his actions.

Over time, national governments have become “public,” but in the US workplace governments remain resolutely “private”

Like Louis XIV’s government, the typical American workplace is kept private from those it governs. Managers often conceal decisions of vital interest to their workers. Often, they don’t even give advance notice of firm closures and layoffs. They are free to sacrifice workers’ dignity in dominating and humiliating their subordinates. Most employer harassment of workers is perfectly legal, as long as bosses mete it out on an equal-opportunity basis. (Walmart and Amazon managers are notorious for berating and belittling their workers.) And workers have virtually no power to hold their bosses accountable for such abuses: They can’t fire their bosses, and can’t sue them for mistreatment except in a very narrow range of cases, mostly having to do with discrimination.

Why are workers subject to private government? The state has set the default terms of the constitution of workplace government through its employment laws. The most important source of employers’ power is the default rule of employment at will. Unless the parties have otherwise agreed, employers are free to fire workers for almost any or no reason. This amounts to an effective grant of power to employers to rule the lives of their employees in almost any respect — not just on the job but off duty as well. And they have exercised that power.

Scotts, the lawn care company, fired an employee for smoking off duty. After Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-NJ) notified Lakeland Bank that an employee had complained he wasn’t holding town hall meetings, the bank intimidated her into resigning. San Diego Christian College fired a teacher for having premarital sex — and hired her fiancé to fill her post. Bosses are dictators, and workers are their subjects.

American public discourse doesn’t give us helpful ways to talk about the dictatorial rule of employers. Instead, we talk as if workers aren’t ruled by their bosses. We are told that unregulated markets make us free, and that the only threat to our liberties is the state. We are told that in the market, all transactions are voluntary. We are told that since workers freely enter and exit the labor contract, they are perfectly free under it. We prize our skepticism about “government,” without extending our critique to workplace dictatorship.

The earliest champions of free markets envisioned a world of self-employment

Why do we talk like this? The answer takes us back to free market ideas developed before the Industrial Revolution. In 17th- and 18th-century Britain, big merchants got the state to grant them monopolies over trade in particular goods, forcing small craftsmen to submit to their regulations. A handful of aristocratic families enjoyed a monopoly on land, due to primogeniture and entail, which barred the breakup and sale of any part of large estates. Farmers could rent their land only on short-term leases, which forced them to bow and scrape before their landlords, in a condition of subordination not much different from servants, who lived in their masters’ households and had to obey their rules.

The problem was that the state had rigged the rules of the market in favor of the rich. Confronted with this economic situation, many people argued that free markets would promote equality and workers’ interests by enabling them to go into business for themselves and thereby escapesubordination to the owners of capital.

No wonder some of the early advocates of free markets in 17th-century England were called “Levellers.” These radicals, who emerged during the English civil war, wanted to abolish the monopolies held by the big merchants and aristocrats. They saw the prospects of greater equality that might come from opening up to ordinary workers opportunities for manufacture, trade, and farming one’s own land.

Marchers in Burford, England, celebrate the “levellers,” who sought to overthrow monopolies in the 17th century. Tim Graham / Getty

In the 18th century, Adam Smith was the greatest advocate for the view that replacing monopolies, primogeniture, entail, and involuntary servitude with free markets would enable laborers to work on their own behalf. His key assumption was that incentives were more powerful than economies of scale. When workers get to keep all of the fruits of their labor, as they do when self-employed, they will work much harder and more efficiently than if they are employed by a master, who takes a cut of what they produce. Indolent aristocratic landowners can’t compete with yeoman farmers without laws preventing land sales. Free markets in land, labor, and commerce will therefore lead to the triumph of the most efficient producer, the self-employed worker, and the demise of the idle, stupid, rent-seeking rentier.

Smith and his contemporaries looked across the Atlantic and saw that America appeared to be realizing these hopes — although only for white men. The great majority of the free population in the Revolutionary period was self-employed, as either a yeoman farmer or an independent artisan or merchant.

In the United States, Thomas Paine was the great promoter of this vision. Indeed, his views on political economy sound as if they could have been ripped out of the GOP Freedom Caucus playbook. Paine argued that individuals can solve nearly all of their problems on their own, without state meddling. A good government does nothing more than secure individuals in “peace and safety” in the free pursuit of their occupations, with the lowest possible tax burden. Taxation is theft. People living off government pay are social parasites. Government is the chief cause of poverty. Paine was a lifelong advocate of commerce, free trade, and free markets. He called for hard money and fiscal responsibility.

Paine was the hero of labor radicals for decades after his death in 1809, because they shared his hope that free markets would yield an economy almost entirely composed of small proprietors. An economy of small proprietors offers a plausible model of a free society of equals: each individual personally independent, none taking orders from anyone else, everyone middle class.

Abraham Lincoln built on the vision of Smith and Paine, which helped to shape the two key planks of the Republican Party platform: opposition to the extension of slavery in the territories, and the Homestead Act. Slavery, after all, enabled masters to accumulate vast tracts of land, squeezing out small farmers and forcing them into wage labor. Prohibiting the extension of slavery into the territories and giving away small plots of land to anyone who would work it would realize a society of equals in which no one is ever consigned to wage labor for life. Lincoln, who helped create the political party that now defends the interests of business, never wavered from the proposition that true free labor meant freedom from wage labor.

The Industrial Revolution, however — well underway by Lincoln’s time — ultimately dashed the hopes of joining free markets with independent labor in a society of equals. Smith’s prediction — that economies of scale would be less important than the incentive effects of enabling workers to reap all the fruits of their labor — was defeated by industrial technologies that required massive accumulations of capital. The US, with its access to territories seized from Native Americans, was able to stave off the bankruptcy of self-employed farmers and other small proprietors for far longer than Europe. But industrialization, population growth, the closure of the frontier, and railroad monopolies doomed the sole proprietorship to the margins of the economy, even in North America.

The Industrial Revolution gave employers new powers over workers, but economists failed to adjust their vocabulary — or their analyses

The Smith-Paine-Lincoln libertarian vision was rendered largely irrelevant by industrialization, which created a new model of wage labor, with large companies taking the place of large landowners. Yet strangely, many people persist in using Smith’s and Paine’s rhetoric to describe the world we live in today. We are told that our choice is between free markets and state control — but most adults live their working lives under a third thing entirely: private government. A vision of what egalitarians hoped market society would deliver before the Industrial Revolution — a world without private workplace government, with producers interacting only through markets and the state — has been blindly carried over to the modern economy by libertarians and their pro-business fellow travelers.

There is a condition called hemiagnosia, whose sufferers cannot perceive one half of their bodies. A large class of libertarian-leaning thinkers and politicians, with considerable public following, resemble patients with this condition: They cannot perceive half of the economy — the half that takes place beyond the market, after the employment contract is accepted, where workers are subject to private, arbitrary, unaccountable government.

What can we do about this? Americans are used to complaining about how government regulation restricts our freedom. So we should recognize that such complaints apply, with at least as much force, to private governments of the workplace. For while the punishments employers can impose for disobedience aren’t as severe as those available to the state, the scope of employers’ authority over workers is more sweeping and exacting, its power more arbitrary and unaccountable. Therefore, it is high time we considered remedies for reining in the private government of the workplace similar to those we have long insisted should apply to the state.

Three types of remedy are of special importance. First, recall a key demand the United States made of communist dictatorships during the Cold War: Let dissenters leave. Although workers are formally free to leave their workplace dictatorships, they often pay a steep price. Nearly one-fifth of American workers labor under noncompete clauses. This means they can’t work in the same industry if they quit or are fired.

And it’s not just engineers and other “knowledge economy” workers who are restricted in this way: Even some minimum wage workers are forced to sign noncompetes. Workers who must leave their human capital behind are not truly free to quit. Every state should follow California’s example and ban noncompete clauses from work contracts.

We should clarify the rights that workers possess, and then defend them

Second, consider that if the state imposed surveillance and regulations on us in anything like the way that private employers do, we would rightly protest that our constitutional rights were being violated. American workers have few such rights against their bosses, and the rights they have are very weakly enforced. We should strengthen the constitutional rights that workers have against their employers, and rigorously enforce the ones the law already purports to recognize.

A Manchester clothes mill, 1909. This is not the world Adam Smith envisioned when he championed free markets. Topical Press Agency / Getty

Among the most important of these rights are to freedom of speech and association. This means employers shouldn’t be able to regulate workers’ off-duty speech and association, or informal non-harassing talk during breaks or on duty, if it does not unduly interfere with job performance. Nor should they be able to prevent workers from supporting the candidate of their choice.

Third, we should make the government of the workplace more public (in the sense that political scientists use the term). Workers need a real voice in how they are governed — not just the right to complain without getting fired, but an organized way to insist that their interests have weight in decisions about how work is organized.

One way to do this would be to strengthen the rights of labor unions to organize. Labor unions are a vital tool for checking abusive and exploitative employers. However, due to lax enforcement of laws protecting the right to organize and discuss workplace complaints, many workers are fired for these activities. And many workers shy away from unionization, because they prefer a collaborative to an adversarial relationship to their employer.

Yet even when employers are decent, workers could still use a voice. In many of the rich states of Europe, they already have one, even if they don’t belong to a union. It’s called “co-determination” — a system of joint workplace governance by workers and managers, which automatically applies to firms with more than a few dozen employees. Under co-determination, workers elect representatives to a works council, which participates in decision-making concerning hours, layoffs, plant closures, workplace conditions, and processes. Workers in publicly traded firms also elect some members of the board of directors of the firm.

Against these proposals, libertarian and neoliberal economists theorize that workers somehow suffer from provisions that would secure their dignity, autonomy, and voice at work. That’s because the efficiency of firms would, in theory, drop — along with profits, and therefore wages — if managers did not have maximum control of their workforce. These thinkers insist that employers already compensate workers for any “oppressive” conditions that may exist by offering higher wages. Workers are therefore free to make the trade-off between wages and workplace freedom when they seek a job.

This theory supposes, unrealistically, that entry-level workers already know how well they will be treated when they apply for jobs at different workplaces, and that low-paid workers have ready access to decent working conditions in the first place. It’s telling that the same workers who suffer the worst working conditions also suffer from massive wage theft. One study estimates that employers failed to pay $50 billion in legally mandated wages in one year. Two-thirds of workers in low-wage industries suffered wage theft, costing them nearly 15 percent of their total earnings. This is three times the amount of all other thefts in the United States.

If employers have such contempt for their employees that they steal their wages, how likely is it that they are making it up to them with better working conditions?

It’s also easy to theorize that workers are better off under employer dictatorship, because managers supposedly know best to govern the workplace efficiently. But if efficiency means that workers are forced to pee in their pants, why shouldn’t they have a say in whether such “efficiency” is worthwhile? The long history of American workers’ struggles to get the right to use the bathroom at work — something long enjoyed by our European counterparts — says enough about economists’ stunted notion of efficiency.

Meanwhile, our false rhetoric of workers’ “choice” continues to obscure the ways the state is handing ever more power to workplace dictators. The Trump administration’s Labor Department is working to roll back the Obama administration’s expansion of overtime pay. It is giving a free pass to federal contractors who have violated workplace safety and federal wage and hours laws. It has canceled the paycheck transparency rule, making it harder for women to know when they are being paid less for the same work as men.

Private government is arbitrary, unaccountable government. That’s what most Americans are subject to at work. The history of democracy is the history of turning governance from a private matter into a public one. It has been about making government public — answerable to the interests of citizens and not just the interests of their rulers. It’s time to apply the lessons we have learned from this history to the private government of the workplace. Workers deserve a voice not just on Capitol Hill but in Amazon warehouses, Silicon Valley technology companies, and meat-processing plants as well.

Elizabeth Anderson is the Arthur F. Thurnau Professor and John Dewey Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy and Women’s studies at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why We Don’t Talk About It) (Princeton University Press, 2017).

In: vox

Law prof’s exam question on Brazilian wax is deemed harassment; is academic freedom threatened?

Image: http://pensamientocolombia.org/AllUploads/ExternalColumns/ExternalCol_6_2015-03-30.jpg

A Howard University law professor says academics everywhere should be concerned by his school’s response to a 2015 exam question about a Brazilian bikini wax.

The school determined in May that the question by Professor Reginald Robinson constituted sexual harassment under school policy, report Law.com (sub. req.) and Inside Higher Ed in a story noted by TaxProf Blog.

The school placed a letter of reprimand in Robinson’s file, ordered him to attend sensitivity training and required him to submit future exam questions for advance review, according to a letter written on Robinson’s behalf by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education.

The exam question, part of Robinson’s agency law course, asked whether the owner of a day spa would win a demurrer motion in a suit filed by a customer who claimed improper touching by the licensed aesthetician who performed the procedure. The exam question asserted that the customer had slept through the wax, but thought something improper had occurred upon awakening.

The aesthetician had warned the customer about touching that would take place during the procedure, and the customer acknowledged in writing having received the aesthetician’s information, according to the exam hypothetical. (The correct answer was that a court would not find in favor of the customer.)

After the exam, Robinson asked volunteers to discuss the test questions. One volunteer said the customer would not sleep through a Brazilian wax. Robinson switched focus, and when the volunteer declined to explain her answer choice, Robinson sought answers from another volunteer, according to FIRE’s letter.

Two students filed a complaint. An administrator who found the question constituted sexual harassment cited use of the word “genital,” the students’ suspicion that the question was crafted to reveal personal details about themselves, their belief the revelations had a negative impact on them, and the administrator’s belief that the exam scenario wasn’t necessary to teach the subject.

In its June 16 letter, FIRE asked Howard University to rescind the sanctions and to respond to its request by June 30. Howard did not respond by the deadline, according to a FIRE press release.

Howard’s punishment “does not comport with its own definition of sexual harassment or its promises of academic freedom,” FIRE wrote in its letter. “It poses a severe threat not only to professors’ rights but also to students’ ability to learn all areas of the law, including learning how to analyze situations that may make some students uncomfortable.”

Robinson released a statement about his case through FIRE.

“My case should worry every faculty member at Howard University, and perhaps elsewhere, who teaches in substantive areas like law, medicine, history, and literature,” Robinson stated. “Why? None of these academic areas can be taught without evaluating and discussing contextual facts, especially unsavory and emotionally charged ones.”

In: abajournal

John Oliver explains “the most influential media company that you’ve never heard of”

Sinclair Broadcast Group’s conservative bias, according to John Oliver.

John Oliver investigated the media company Sinclair Broadcast Group on the latest episode of Last Week Tonight, calling it “maybe the most influential media company that you’ve never heard of.”

The largest owner of local news stations in the country, Sinclair is finalizing a deal to acquire Tribune Media, making it an even larger force in local media. This is particularly important because of the company’s documented conservative lean.

As Vox’s Jeff Guo noted in his explainer on Sinclair, much of this conservative lean comes directly from company executives and not from a natural political environment in local areas:

For instance, over 80 Sinclair stations regularly air a 90-second segment called Behind the Headlines, where conservative commentator Mark Hyman gives his opinions on the news. In a recent spot, Hyman defended Trump’s first 100 days, claiming that the media was unfairly harsh on the president. In February, Hyman criticized the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit for ruling against Trump’s travel ban on people from seven Muslim countries.

The company also produces national news segments — often with a conservative tinge — that it requires stations to run during their local news broadcasts.

A Washington Post investigation revealed that during 2016 election, Sinclair executives often forced their stations to run pro-Trump or anti-Clinton segments during their evening or morning local news programs. One of the mandatory segments emphasized problems about Clinton’s health and questioned her trustworthiness.Another mandatory segment featured Ivanka Trump talking about her potential role in her father’s White House.

Oliver mentions these mandatory Sinclair-produced segments, noting Hyman’s commentary as well as the daily “Terrorism News Desk,” which features pieces that just sometimes generally concern Muslims.

If the company was biased toward Trump during the election, then the hiring of people like Boris Epshteyn, a former Trump surrogate and White House staffer, as its chief political analyst earlier this year would only further such questions.

To emphasize Sinclair’s reach in light of the company’s upcoming acquisition, Oliver did the math, saying, “when you combine the most watched nightly newscasts on Sinclair and Tribune stations in some of their largest markets, you get an average total viewership of 2.2 million households, and that is a lot. It’s more than any current primetime show on Fox News. …”

After Sinclair’s acquisition of Tribune Media, Oliver worries that in this new local media environment, “there’ll be even more unsuspecting audience members who’ll be getting a heaping dose of Sinclair’s content, possibly without realizing it.”

In: vox 

¿Cómo se interpretan los artículos 333 Y 350 de la Constitución?; por José Ignacio Hernández

Artículos de la Constitución de la República Bolivariana de Venezuela en cuestión:

Artículo 333: Esta Constitución no perderá su vigencia si dejare de observarse por acto de fuerza o porque fuere derogada por cualquier otro medio distinto al previsto en ella. En tal eventualidad, todo ciudadano investido o ciudadana investida o no de autoridad, tendrá el deber de colaborar en el restablecimiento de su efectiva vigencia.

Artículo 350: El pueblo de Venezuela, fiel a su tradición republicana, a su lucha por la independencia, la paz y la libertad, desconocerá cualquier régimen, legislación o autoridad que contraríe los valores, principios y garantías democráticos o menoscabe los derechos humanos.

Imagen: http://www.2001.com.ve/image_articulos/62e7fdb5809ba89a53fb64d3a153c96b.jpg

Por José Ignacio Hernández G. | 21 de junio, 2017

El 20 de junio de 2017 la Mesa de la Unidad Democrática anunció, a través del Presidente de la Asamblea Nacional, la aplicación de los artículos 333 y 350 de la Constitución, en el marco de las protestas iniciadas desde marzo de 2017, con ocasión al golpe de Estado permanente perpetrado en contra de la Constitución, y que luego avanzó a través de la fraudulenta e ilegítima convocatoria de la asamblea nacional constituyente.

Muchos se preguntan cuáles son las consecuencias prácticas de este anuncio. O en otras palabras: ¿cómo se aplican estos artículos de la Constitución?

1.- Entendiendo el artículo 333 de la Constitución

 El artículo 333 indica que la Constitución, como es la “norma jurídica suprema”, no puede ser desconocida o derogada de manera indebida. Si ello sucediere, ese artículo ordena a ciudadanos y funcionarios a“colaborar en el restablecimiento de su efectiva vigencia”.

Por lo tanto, para que esa norma pueda ser aplicada, es necesario que la Constitución haya sido desconocida, lo que sucede en casos de golpe de Estado, o lo que es igual, ruptura del orden constitucional o del hilo constitucional.

Precisamente, desde el 2016 la Asamblea Nacional ha declarado que en Venezuela hay un golpe de Estado, con ocasión a las decisiones de la Sala Constitucional que invalidaron sus competencias, y luego, con ocasión a la suspensión del referendo revocatorio. En 2017 esa conclusión se reiteró frente a las sentencias 155 y 156, y posteriormente ante la ilegítima convocatoria de la asamblea nacional constituyente. La Fiscal General de la República también ha afirmado conclusiones similares.

2.- Entendiendo el artículo 350 de la Constitución

El artículo 350 de la Constitución reconoce un derecho propio de nuestra tradición republicana, muy estudiado por Juan Germán Roscio: el derecho a desobedecer todo Gobierno que vulnere la Constitución.

Mientras que la monarquía absoluta se basó en la obediencia ciega, la República iniciada en 1810 se basó en la obediencia racional: el ciudadano debe obediencia al Gobierno solo si éste actúa dentro de la Constitución. Pero si el Gobierno actúa fuera de sus facultades, invadiendo la libertad, entonces, el deber de obediencia cesa.

En 2003, la Sala Constitucional interpretó que el artículo 350 permitía invocar la desobediencia cumpliendo con tres esas condiciones: (i) debe existir un Gobierno, Ley o sentencia que usurpa la voluntad popular y actúa al margen de la Constitución; (ii) deben haberse intentado todas las acciones judiciales previstas en la Constitución, pese a lo cual (iii) se mantiene el desconocimiento a la Constitución. La sentencia, sin embargo, trató de limitar el alcance de ese derecho, lo que es una tarea inútil: el derecho a la desobediencia existe, incluso, frente a sentencias que arbitrariamente pretendan limitarlo.

3.- ¿Cómo se aplican en la práctica los artículos 333 y 350?

 Los artículos 333 y 350 son dos caras de una misma moneda. Tal y como Roscio lo explicó hace doscientos años, frente a Gobiernos despóticos, el ciudadano tiene dos derechos: (i) un derecho pasivo que consiste en no obedecer o colaborar con ese Gobierno (artículo 350) y (ii)un derecho activo que consiste en realizar todas las acciones para restablecer la vigencia de la Constitución (artículo 333). Ambas facetas parten del desconocimiento jurídico del Gobierno que actúa al margen de la Constitución, y que por ende, no debe ser obedecido.

El derecho a la desobediencia, como derecho pasivo, tiene un contenido específico: no obedecer órdenes o mandatos derivados de Gobiernos que actúan al margen de la Constitución. Ese derecho debe ser ejercido por los ciudadanos por medio de mecanismos de no-cooperación, mucho de los cuales ya se han venido cumpliendo en el marco de las recientes protestas. Por ejemplo, cuando la UCAB y otras universidades decidieron no colaborar con el CNE en el fraudulento proceso constituyente, estaban actuando al amparo de este artículo, aun cuando no haya sido formalmente invocado.

Para los funcionarios, este derecho es ampliado en el artículo 29 constitucional, el cual reconoce el derecho a no obedecer órdenes violatorias de derechos humanos. Aquí, la desobediencia tiene un grado de eficacia mayor, pues en definitiva, las ordenes contrarias a la Constitución (desde la represión a manifestantes hasta las elecciones de la “constituyente”) requieren de actuaciones de funcionarios, quienes legítimamente pueden negarse a colaborar con esos procesos, impidiendo de esa manera la vulneración de los derechos humanos.

Por su parte, el contenido del artículo 333 es más amplio. En realidad, esa norma solamente establece una obligación de resultado: si la Constitución es desconocida, su eficacia debe ser restablecida. Pero la Constitución no explica cómo puede lograrse ese restablecimiento, lo que es lógico, pues esa norma rige frente a situaciones de hecho excepcionales en las cuales las normas constitucionales han perdido eficacia.

Por ello, para restablecer la vigencia de la Constitución, los ciudadanos y los funcionarios pueden adoptar cualquier acción, bajo dos límites: (i) la acción debe ser necesaria y pertinente para restablecer, en la práctica, la vigencia de la Constitución, y (ii)  no pueden vulnerarse principios superiores como la libertad, el pluralismo y la democracia, así como los derechos humanos. Por ello, el artículo 333 no es un cheque en blanco.

4.- ¿Y qué puede hacer la Asamblea Nacional?

La Asamblea Nacional cumple un rol importante en la aplicación del artículo 333 constitucional, pues en su condición de representante del pueblo, tiene legitimidad democrática suficiente para emprender cualquier acción necesaria para restablecer la vigencia de la Constitución, dentro de los límites ya señalados.

Ese rol debe ser cumplido tomando en cuenta dos particularidades.

Lo primero que debe considerarse es que el artículo 333 se aplica para incidir en las condiciones materiales que impiden que la Constitución tenga vigencia plena. No basta, por ello, con decisiones jurídicas dictadas por la Asamblea: es necesario que en la práctica esas decisiones sean cumplidas.

Lo segundo que debe tomarse en cuenta es que la derogatoria de hecho de la Constitución de 1999 no responde a una única causa, sino a causas complejas. Por lo tanto, para restablecer la vigencia de la Constitución deben adoptarse decisiones complejas, planificadas y articuladas para lograr el objetivo querido por el artículo 333.

Como se  observa, la aplicación del artículo 333 por la Asamblea no requiere simplemente de un acto que se cumpla de manera instantánea, sino más bien de un proceso a través del cual la actual situación de hecho actual pase a ser una situación de Derecho regida efectivamente por la Constitución.

Ese proceso, en suma, es un proceso de transición hacia la democracia, o lo que es igual, un proceso de transición democrática, al cual recientemente se refirió Luis Ugalde. Fue en este sentido que la Asamblea, en mayo pasado, decidió crear la Comisión de Garantías para la Transición.

De esa manera, la Asamblea Nacional, como legítimo representante del pueblo, es a quien le corresponde planificar y coordinar el proceso de restablecimiento efectivo de la Constitución. Para ello, ciertamente, es necesario continuar con los procedimientos de designación de los magistrados del Tribunal y de los rectores del CNE, entre otras accionesorientadasa la transición hacia una democracia constitucional estable.

Pero nuevamente debo advertir que esas decisiones de la Asamblea, en sí mismas, serían insuficientes, pues se requiere que ademássean cumplidas en la práctica. Para garantizar esa aplicación práctica no solo se precisa del apoyo de la sociedad civil (a través de métodos de protesta y no-cooperación), sino también de los funcionarios, quienes de acuerdo con los artículos 29 y 333 de la Constitución, deben colaborar en el restablecimiento efectivo de la Constitución, como ya ha hecho la Fiscal.

Precisamente, como anunció la Asamblea al crear la citada Comisión de Garantías para la Transición, es necesario establecer incentivos para que los funcionarios desconozcan los actos que configuran el golpe de Estado y colaboren en el restablecimiento de la Constitución.

Sobre estas ideas estaré profundizando en nuevos artículos.

José Ignacio Hernández G.  José Ignacio Hernández es abogado venezolano, Doctor en Derecho de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid y Profesor de la UCV y UCAB. Puedes seguirlo en Twitter en @ignandez

En: prodavinci.com 

History: Supreme Court strikes down Obama-backed ‘prostitution pledge’ in AIDS funding

– The Washington Times – Thursday, June 20, 2013

An anti-prostitution provision in a federal AIDS funding program created under the George W. Bush administration was struck down as unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday

The decision is a victory for private aid organizations that believe the provision, which required them to explicitly oppose prostitution and sex trafficking as a condition for getting federal dollars, has blocked them from serving at-risk AIDS populations, such as sex workers.

The 6-2 decision, written by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., said it is a violation of the First Amendment to require people “to pledge allegiance to the government’s policy of eradicating prostitution” as a funding condition.

Associate Justice Elena Kagan, who was the Obama administration’s solicitor general before joining the court in 2010, recused herself from the case. Associates Justice Antonin Scalia and Associate Justice Clarence Thomas dissented.

The provision — sometimes called the “prostitution pledge” — was part of the U.S. Global Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Act of 2003. The act includes the $4.5 billion President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).

The law says its funds cannot be used “to promote or advocate the legalization or practice of prostitution or sex trafficking.” But it went further, asking that grant recipients adopt that same viewpoint and sign a pledge that they “explicitly” opposed prostitution and sex trafficking.

That requirement “to profess a specific belief” went too far, the majority wrote, affirming a 2011 decision by the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals that struck down the pledge.

Rep. Christopher H. Smith, New Jersey Republican, called the ruling “extremely disappointing and tragic for all victims of sexual exploitation, including sex trafficking.”

He and other lawmakers had put the pledge into the PEPFAR program as a way to ensure that the U.S. government didn’t unwittingly fund or promote commercial sex activities — “pimps and brothel owners” — as part of the battle to stop the spread of HIV/AIDS.

“The U.S. taxpayer may well now legitimately question whether U.S. assistance being given for laudable purposes is being administered by hands that undermine those very goals,” said Mr. Smith, chairman of the global human rights panel on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick J. Leahy, Vermont Democrat, praised the ruling, saying, “I have noted time and again that we cannot successfully combat HIV/AIDS by ignoring commercial sex workers who transmit the disease.”

The Alliance for Open Society International (AOSI) and three other AIDS-fighting groups challenged the law as an unconstitutional violation of free speech.

“Today’s ruling is an important victory toward lifting the taboo that has plagued HIV prevention programs since the anti-prostitution pledge began,” said Marine Buissonniere, director of the Open Society Public Health Program.

“It is critical to work in concert with sex workers and their advocates in the fight against HIV and AIDS. Condemnation and alienation are not public health strategies,” she said.

The U.S. Agency for International Development, which oversees PEPFAR, was sued in the case.

In April, when the high court heard arguments on the case, Deputy Solicitor General Sri Srinivasan defended the law, saying Congress placed rational limitations on the use of its HIV/AIDS funds.

The government can and does set restrictions on its funding programs to find the best “partners” for its efforts, and it is reasonable to ask groups receiving funds to fight AIDS to also oppose prostitution and sex trafficking, said Mr. Srinivasan, who represented the Agency for International Development, the Department of Health and Human Services, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. He has since been confirmed to join the D.C. federal appeals court.

On the other side, David W. Bowker, who represented AOSI, a group funded by billionaire George Soros, said the pledge was unconstitutional and hobbles AIDS-fighting efforts with one of the very populations that needs services.

The pledge makes funding recipients go through “an ideological purity test” and then forces them “to adopt and express the government’s viewpoint as their own,” the AOSI, Pathfinder International, the Global Health Council and InterAction said in their brief. The pledge does not even apply to other government-funded public health programs, they noted.

In their dissent, Justices Scalia and Thomas said “a central part of the government’s HIV/AIDS strategy is the suppression of prostitution, by which HIV is transmitted. It is entirely reasonable to admit to participation in the program only those who believe in that goal.”

The AOSI runs a program in Central Asia to reduce drug use and prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS, while Pathfinder International offers family planning and reproductive health care in more than 20 countries. The two other groups, the Global Health Council and InterAction, are involved in fighting AIDS through public health and collaborative efforts of nongovernmental organizations.

In: thewashingtontimes 

SERVIR implementa el Sistema de Casilla Electrónica – SICE del Tribunal del Servicio Civil.

Desde este jueves 11 de mayo. SICE será de uso obligatorio para las entidades públicas y para las personas que interpongan recursos de apelación.

La Autoridad Nacional del Servicio Civil – SERVIR y el Tribunal del Servicio Civil – TSC han implementado el Sistema de Casilla Electrónica – SICE que permitirá brindar una mayor eficiencia y eficacia en las notificaciones de los documentos emitidos por el TSC tanto para los administrados como para las entidades públicas.

SICE es un mecanismo tecnológico de tramitación de los recursos de apelación sometidos a conocimiento del Tribunal, y principalmente está orientado a notificar, a los administrados y a las entidades públicas, todas las comunicaciones cursadas por la Secretaría Técnica y las Resoluciones emitidas por el Tribunal.

Cabe destacar que el Sistema de Casilla Electrónica – SICE entrará en vigencia a partir del jueves 11 de mayo, de acuerdo con la Resolución de Presidencia Ejecutiva Nº 085-2017-SERVIR/PE, publicada en el Boletín de Normas Legales del Diario El Peruano, para todos los recursos de apelación que sean interpuesto a partir de esta fecha ante las entidades públicas.

Para tal efecto, tratándose de las entidades públicas, de acuerdo a lo establecido en la Directiva; la máxima autoridad administrativa de las entidades deberá proporcionar a la Secretaría Técnica del TSC los datos del Jefe de la Oficina de Recursos Humanos o de aquél que haga sus veces, quien será registrado como Usuario de la Casilla Electrónica en el SICE.

Esta información deberá estar consignada en el Formato N°1 y contener:

  • Número de Documento Nacional de Identidad o carné de extranjería.
  • Nombres y apellidos completos.
  • Cargo.
  • Dirección exacta de la sede institucional donde presta servicios (calle, distrito, provincia, departamento).
  • Correo electrónico institucional.
  • Número telefónico fijo y móvil (celular).
  • Copia de la resolución de designación o documento que acredita la responsabilidad del cargo.

En el caso de los administrados, éstos deberán adjuntar a su recurso de apelación el Formato N° 1, con la siguiente información:

  • Número de Documento Nacional de Identidad o carné de extranjería.
  • Nombres y apellidos completos.
  • Correo electrónico.
  • Número telefónico fijo y móvil (celular).

De esta manera, el TSC podrá crear la correspondiente Casilla Electrónica en el SICE y así optimizar y agilizar la tramitación de los recursos de apelación sometidos a su conocimiento.

Lima, 10 de mayo de 2017
Imagen Institucional

En: SERVIR 

¿Ya no sabes lo que estas tomando por las mañanas gracias a “Leche Gloria”? Aquí información relevante: La Leche Entera

Imagen: http://assets.trome.pe/files/article_main/uploads/2017/06/04/59344e277dc83.jpeg

La leche entera es un alimento esencial en todo el mundo y uno de los más completos por las propiedades nutricionales de la leche. Normalmente, la que se encuentra en el supermercado es leche de vaca, pero también hay de otros mamíferos. Uno de los principales nutrientes de la leche es el calcio, por eso es buena para los huesos. Además, también contiene lactosa, lo que la hace intolerante para algunas personas.

Características de la leche entera

La leche entera es un líquido de color blanquecino opaco con numerosos beneficios y propiedades. Es muy común para producir derivados lácteos, como yogur, mantequilla o queso. La principal diferencia entre la leche entera, la leche semidesnatada y la leche desnatada es la grasa o crema. De las tres, la que más grasa contiene es la leche entera, por lo que no se recomienda para personas que quieren perder peso. Es mejor optar por la semidesnatada, que contiene poca crema y sacia más que la desnatada, a la que se le han eliminado todas las grasas y gran parte de los nutrientes y vitaminas de la leche.

Precaución: La leche de casi todos los mamíferos contiene derivados de la morfina llamados casomorfinas, que se encargan de mantener cierto nivel de adicción en los lactantes para incentivar su apetito durante los primeros meses de vida. Esto podría explicar por qué muchas personas son adictas a la leche. Hay un estudio que demuestra que los hombres que consumen gran cantidad de productos lácteos tiene el doble de riesgo de padecer cáncer de próstata, por lo que no se recomienda abusar de la leche de vaca ni de los derivados lácteos.

PROPIEDADES DE LA LECHE ENTERA

Beneficios de la Leche entera

La leche entera está compuesta principalmente por agua; iones como sal, minerales y calcio; glúcidos como la lactosa; materia grasa; proteínas como la caseína, y vitaminas A, D, B y E. Por ello, es buena para mantener unos huesos fuertes y sanos y prevenir la osteoporisis. Además, es hidratante y saciante y proporcioan energía. En los recién nacidos, la leche protege el tracto gastrointestinal contra patógenos, toxinas e inflamación, y regula los procesos de obtención de energía, especialmente el metabolismo de la glucosa y la insulina. La leche también es un alimento que ayuda a mantener el funcionamiento del cerebro, a dormir mejor y a cuidar la piel, así como es ideal para embarazadas y deportistas.

Saciantes

Contraindicaciones de la Leche entera

La leche contiene lactosa, un azúcar al que muchas personas son intolerantes, por lo que se recomienda que tomen leche sin lactosa. La leche entera también contiene mucha grasa, por lo que aquellas personas que padecen colesterol o quieren adelgazar, deberían tomar leche semidesnatada o desnatada. Además, también hay personas alérgicas a la proteína de leche de vaca, que está comprobado que no es buena para personas con piel atópica. Tampoco se recomienda beber leche si se padece algún trastorno digestivo.

INFORMACIÓN NUTRICIONAL DE LA LECHE ENTERA

1 ración (244 gr.) 100 gr.
Calorías 102 kcal 42 kcal
Grasas 2.37 g 0.97 g
Grasas saturadas 1.545 g 0.633 g
Grasas poliinsaturadas 0.085 g 0.035 g
Grasas monoinsaturadas 0.676 g 0.277 g
Proteínas 8.22 g 3.37 g
Carbohidratos 12.18 g 4.99 g
Azúcar 12.69 g 5.2 g
Fibra 0.0 g 0 g
Colesterol 12 mg 5 mg
Minerales
Calcio 305 mg 125 mg
Hierro 0.07 mg 0.03 mg
Sodio 107 mg 44 mg
Potasio 366 mg 150 mg
Magnesio 27 mg 11 mg
Fósforo 232 mg 95 mg
Zinc 1.02 mg 0.42 mg
Vitaminas
Vitamina A 115 IU 47 IU
Vitamina C — mg — mg
Vitamina D — µg — µg
Vitamina B1 (Tiamina) 0.049 mg 0.02 mg
Vitamina B6 0.090 mg 0.037 mg
Vitamina B sub 12 1.15 µg 0.47 µg
Vitamina E 0.02 mg 0.01 mg
Vitamina K 0.2 µg 0.1 µg
Folato (ácido fólico) 12 µg 5 µg
Beta Caroteno 5 µg 2 µg
Agua 219.40 g 89.92 g
Cafeína — mg — mg

 

En: biotrends

La corrupción gana la batalla en Salud, por Jaime de Althaus

Edmundo Beteta ha caído porque empezaba a ordenar el SIS, racionalizar tarifas y eliminar corruptelas.

Ya podemos ir entendiendo las razones de la protesta de la Federación Médica y de los congresistas galenos. Se acababa el negocio. (Foto: El Comercio).

Jaime de Althaus – 02.06.2017 / 03:00 pm

La semana pasada la ministra de Salud le pidió su renuncia a Edmundo Beteta, jefe del SIS, cediendo a la presión del gremio médico y de sus representantes en el Congreso, que ya habían pedido la cabeza de Beteta y amenazaban con censurar a la propia ministra. Es una lástima. Beteta ha caído porque empezaba a ordenar el SIS, racionalizar tarifas y eliminar corruptelas. Y eso afectaba el statu quo ineficiente y plagado de intereses dedicados al desvío de recursos de los establecimientos de Salud.

El pecado de Beteta fue empezar a aplicar las recomendaciones del Informe de la Comisión Interventora del SIS que se creó luego del escándalo Moreno. Ese informe y luego el propio Beteta descubrieron la cantidad de milagros que el SIS había financiado: el parto de 194 hombres y de 143 ancianas y los de 34.812 mujeres que dieron a luz dos veces en menos de dos o tres meses. También la muerte, resurrección y nueva muerte de muchos que cobraron sepelio más de una vez, y 200 operaciones de catarata a un solo paciente, por ejemplo.

Beteta empezó a hacer auditorías a las prestaciones (no había control) y a poner tarifas que pagaran solo los gastos variables de las prestaciones, no los gastos fijos ni menos bonos remunerativos, que corresponden al presupuesto ordinario. Pero cometió sacrilegio cuando aplicó la recomendación del informe de cortar el incremento explosivo de los desvíos irregulares hacia clínicas privadas: el pago por atenciones en emergencias privadas había pasado de 1,7 millones de soles el 2014 a ¡114 millones! el 2016. Médicos de los propios hospitales aprovecharon para derivar pacientes que habían llegado a emergencias públicas, a sus clínicas privadas o a las de médicos amigos. O había muchos casos que no eran de emergencia u otros que se quedaban muchos días (28 casos de pacientes con estancias que se encuentran entre los ¡100 y 381 días!).

Beteta cortó todo eso: las emergencias en establecimientos privados bajaron abruptamente de 630 casos por un valor de 5,5 millones de soles en setiembre del 2016 a solo 5 casos por un valor de 10 mil soles en marzo del 2017.

Ya podemos ir entendiendo las razones de la protesta de la Federación Médica y de los congresistas galenos. Se acababa el negocio. Beteta estaba firmando convenios con hospitales y regiones con las nuevas reglas de juego. Se lo han tumbado cuando todavía faltaba firmar con la mayor parte de establecimientos y regiones. Adiós, reforma.

Es francamente desalentador. Es la consecuencia de un gobierno extremadamente débil que no ha sido capaz de buscar un acuerdo político con Fuerza Popular –que tampoco ha dado la menor señal de quererlo– para blindar procesos de reforma como este (el de la policía es otro) que afectan intereses poderosos y enquistados en el propio Congreso de la República. Me pregunto si todavía estamos a tiempo para rescatar un acuerdo como ese. De lo contrario, habremos perdido otros cinco años.

Resolución en la página web del Diario Oficial “El Peruano” (Documento .pdf): 1524324-1

Resolución en la página web del Diario Oficial “El Peruano”: http://busquedas.elperuano.com.pe/normaslegales/dan-por-concluida-designacion-de-jefe-del-seguro-integral-de-resolucion-suprema-n-007-2017-sa-1524324-1/

Dan por concluida designación de Jefe del Seguro Integral de Salud

RESOLUCIÓN SUPREMA Nº 007-2017-SA

Lima, 23 de mayo del 2017

CONSIDERANDO:

Que, mediante Resolución Suprema Nº 023-2016- SA, se designó al economista Edmundo Pablo Beteta Obreros, en el cargo de Jefe del Seguro Integral de Salud;

Que, se ha visto por conveniente dar por concluida la designación del citado funcionario;

De conformidad con lo dispuesto en la Ley Nº 27594, Ley que regula la participación del Poder Ejecutivo en el nombramiento y designación de funcionarios públicos, la Ley Nº 29158, Ley Orgánica del Poder Ejecutivo, y el Decreto Legislativo Nº 1161, Decreto Legislativo que aprueba la Ley de Organización y Funciones del Ministerio de Salud;

SE RESUELVE:

Artículo 1.- Dar por concluida la designación del economista Edmundo Pablo Beteta Obreros, en el cargo de Jefe del Seguro Integral de Salud, dándosele las gracias por los servicios prestados.

Artículo 2.- La presente Resolución Suprema es refrendada por la Ministra de Salud. Regístrese, comuníquese y publíquese.

PEDRO PABLO KUCZYNSKI GODARD

Presidente de la República

PATRICIA J. GARCÍA FUNEGRA

Ministra de Salud

1524324-1

Nota en: elcomercio

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