Vet Says Veterans’ Suicide Line Repeatedly Put Him on Hold

Vet Says Veterans’ Suicide Line Repeatedly Put Him on Hold

Vet Says Veterans' Suicide Line Repeatedly Put Him on Hold

It’s been nearly a year since last year’s audit detailing just how dire things are for veterans in need of medical attention , and apparently, not all that much has changed. According to veteran Ted Koran, he recently called the VA’s Suicide hotline only to be be put on Hold for up to ten minutes at a time—multiple times.

As Koran told ABC News, he suffered an emotional breakdown this past Saturday night after losing his wife to cancer six months ago. Finding himself on the brink of suicide, the Air Force vet decided to reach out to the VA, which responded to his call with a soothing refrain of try again later. From ABC’s report:

The U.S. Air Force veteran first called the James Haley VA Center in Tampa, where a recording gave him the 800 number to the hotline. Koran said he was placed on Hold for 10 minutes.

“I had to sit there patiently, in emotional distress, in tears, wanting to give up, desperately needing someone to talk to,” Koran said.

Koran said he hung up and redialed the number two more times.

“They had me on the [verge] of saying to hell with it,” he said.

Koran’s not alone. According to last year’s audit , over 57,000 vets had been forced to wait three months or more for medical care. Thousands more were never able to schedule appointments at all.

Even more recently, a Scripps investigation just this past February found that many vets calling for help either were either sent to voicemail or received no answer at all. Which is probably to be expected when a mere 52 operators are tasked with handling thousands of calls a day.

According to the VA’s own estimates, roughly 22 veterans commit Suicide every day.

Danny Masterson Sounds Off on Scientology Movie, Says Haters Can "Go F–k Yourself"

Danny Masterson Sounds Off on Scientology Movie, Says Haters Can "Go F–k Yourself"

خليجيةDanny Masterson Sounds off on Scientology hatersCredit: Gregg DeGuire/WireImage
Tell us how you really feel! Former That ‘70s Show actor, and practicing Scientologist, Danny Masterson sounded off on critics of his religion in a candid (and expletive-filled) interview with Paper magazine conducted at the Sundance Film Festival ahead of the premiere of controversial ********ary Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief. Masterson, in short, told the mag that those who think his religion is “weird” can “go f–k” themselves.
PHOTOS: Fellow Scientologist Tom Cruise
"I heard about that ********ary; the ********ary where they interviewed eight people who hate Scientology. Should be pretty interesting. I wonder if Sundance would allow a ********ary of, like, eight people who hate Judaism. But you know, my religion’s fair game, I guess, ’cause it’s new," Masterson told the mag, before going in to detail about his religion and those who frown upon it.
"There’s basically like 200 lies in the book and so therefore he couldn’t even publish that book [in Canada or the UK because the libel laws],” he added, referring to Lawrence Wright’s book, which inspired the buzzed-about ********ary.
Masterson, who started practicing the religion at age 8, went on to explain that it’s hard to explain Scientology to those who haven’t read founder L. Ron Hubbard’s book Dianetics. Essentially, he says, “Everything in Scientology is just based on logic…the word Scientology means the study of knowledge.”
PHOTOS: Celebs fight back
“There’s nothing else to it,” he adds. “It’s literally just that.” When it comes to his “personal relationship” with founder Hubbard, Masterson candidly added: “He’s a f–king guy who wrote awesome s–t that I love studying.”
After explaining the roots of the religion, Masterson then got into the battle between Scientology and psychiatry, and, not to mention, former follower Paul Haggis, who left the church on account of gay marriage.
“You will not find a Scientologist who does not f–king hate psychiatrists,” he sounded off. “Because their solution for mental and spiritual problems is drugs. So let’s talk about putting a Band-Aid on something that’s just going to get worse and worse and worse…[where as] Scientology handles those things, those mental problems that people have. It gets rid of them. It gets rid of them by that person doing it for themselves. That’s the solution to depression, not f–king Prozac.”
As for Haggis, Masterson said his anger “had nothing to do with Scientology.”
PHOTOS: Sundance2020
“[It’s] so stupid. What Paul was angry at made perfect sense, but it had nothing to do with Scientology,” he explained. “Paul was just mad that, as a religion, we’re not going to come out and say that we are for or against anything, which is a political matter…It’s like, ‘We have no opinion in the world of politics. We are a religion.’”
The interview with the magazine was a first for Masterson, who said he had yet to openly discuss his philosophy before. But, it likely won’t be the last.
“I love doing it and have no problem doing it,” he concluded. "I work, I have a family and I’m a spiritual being who likes to understand why things happen in the world and want to learn more so that I can have them not affect me adversely. So if that’s weird, then, well, you can go f—k yourself

Read more: Danny Masterson to Scientology Haters: "Go F–k Yourself" – Us Weekly
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Giuliana Rancic Says Russell Crowe Was Awful To Interview

Giuliana Rancic Says Russell Crowe Was Awful To Interview

خليجية

I’ve been on both sides of an Interview (and not the kind that start with “Is there something wrong, officer?” and end with “THAT CLAP-HAVING JEZEBEL KNOWS WHAT SHE DID!!”) and one thing I know for sure is that the only thing worse than being asked pointless bullshit questions is being the one who asks said questions. If I had a nickel for every time I asked “What would you say your greatest weakness is?” through an Awful forced smile, I’d have enough nickels to finally afford the miracle to bring my soul back from the dead.
So naturally I assumed that someone like Giuliana Rancic must surely be completely dead inside or robot or one of the bug aliens from Men in Blackdisguised as a human, because why in the hell would you ever want to ask people stupid questions for a living. But apparently she’s a real person with feelings, feelings that once got trampled on and nearly squished to death during an interview. On Wednesday night’s episode of Watch What Happens Live, Googlyeyna Rancic was asked who her most awkward Interview was, and the winner was human ingrown toenail Russell Crowe:

“[He] was so mean to me. I had been at E! for a year, and I literally was like, ‘I’m gonna go easy because he’s pretty tough.’ And so I said, ‘Are you excited to be here tonight? Your big movie premiere?’ And he goes, ‘I’m contractually obligated to be here. What’s your next question?’ And I go ‘Um, isn’t it wonderful seeing all the fans?’ And he goes, ‘That’s your second question? 1, 2, you’re through!’ And walked away.”

Ironically, on the other side of the globe, Russell Crowe appeared on a show called Watch This, Will Ya Mate? where he talked about his best interview:

“There was this American girl from the E! channel who looked like a beautiful brunette grasshopper, and I never once called her a cunt or a fucking twat, or threw a phone at her face, or punched her in the nose or anything! I couldn’t believe it! Me, Russell Crowe, talking to another human without getting into a physical altercation! Yeah, it was definitely a personal best.”

Dlisted | Quelle Surprise: Giuliana Rancic Says Russell Crowe Was Awful To Interview

Joan Collins’ son says he felt abandoned by her

Joan Collins’ son says he felt abandoned by her

My mum Joan Collins, the narcissist: Son reveals how he felt abandoned by difficult and controlling star – and why her life still seems far too dramatic

  • Sacha Newly, 49, said he loves his 81-year-old actress mother in interview
  • But admitted she was difficult and had a strained relationship in childhood
  • Mr Newly and his sister Tara, 51, felt abandoned after being put with nanny
  • Portrait painter has described early life in a yet to be published memoir
  • He also revealed unusual relationship with nanny, Sue Delon, who died

By SAM CREIGHTON FOR THE DAILY MAIL
PUBLISHED: 00:59, 9 March2020 | UPDATED: 07:56, 9 March2020


خليجية

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Together: Sacha Newly with his mother Joan Collins in 1999. He described her as a ‘narcissist’

As Alexis Carrington in the glossy soap opera Dynasty, she was a difficult and controlling mother.
But Dame Joan Collins’ portrayal may have been closer to life than audiences realised, according to her only son.
Sacha Newley, 49, said he loves the 81-year-old actress ‘deeper than I can process’ but added that he had a strained childhood relationship with her and described her as a ‘narcissist’ who ‘abandoned’ him and his sister Tara, 51.
The portrait painter also said: ‘Her life still seems far too dramatic. Too much is happening. She is always dealing with some disaster. As much as she says she longs for a peaceful life, I don’t think she could handle it.’
Mr Newley, whose father was Dame Joan’s second husband, the actor and singer Anthony Newley, has described his early life in a yet to be published memoir, Hollywood Child; the rights have been bought by a film producer.
‘My mother wasn’t a monster, she was a narcissist,’ he said in an interview with the Sunday Times. ‘I can’t remember her hugging me, but that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.
‘I just wanted mummy to love me, and I wanted a connection with the mummy I found so overwhelming and so dazzling. She nourished me in a way a muse nourishes; at a distance.’
He claimed his mother handed over care of her two children to a nanny because she was ‘overwhelmed’ by being a mother, leading him to feel she had abandoned him.

Mr Newley puts his mother’s alleged coldness down to her difficult relationship with her own father. ‘It’s true to say my mother didn’t receive a great deal of affection from her father,’ he said.
‘He was a glacier. My mother didn’t get physical warmth from her father and a girl needs that.’
خليجية

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With his mother and sister Tara in 1968 (left) and with Joan Collins at Heathrow Airport when he was 17 (right)

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Mother and son at Buckingham Palace in 1997 as she collected her OBE. Mr Newly has revealed they had a strained childhood relationship and he felt abandoned after she left him in the care of a nanny

He also revealed his unusual relationship with the nanny, Sue Delong, who later committed suicide after being fired from a series of jobs.
He said how he would get almost sexual gratification from her physical methods of disciplining him.
He said: ‘There was a lot of S&M. She wouldn’t just sit on me, but sit and grind me into the carpet. It was like the relationship boys might have with their older brothers, but in my case it was with a woman who was employed, so it had a different frisson about it.’

Anthony Newley speaks in 1981 on marriage to Joan Collins

خليجية


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Mr Newly with his father, Anthony Newly, Joan’s second husband (left) and at his mother’s book launch (right)

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The portrait painter also revealed his unusual relationship with the nanny, Sue Delong, who later committed suicide after being fired from a series of jobs

Mr Newley said that he and his mother – who married fifth husband Percy Gibson, 49, in 2024 – are currently ‘recalibrating’ their relationship and have frequent lunches so they can talk.
He also gave his assessment of his father, who died in 1999. While describing him as a musical genius, ‘the third in the holy trinity of Sinatra and Sammy Davis’, he put his father’s comparative lack of success down to his womanising.
Asked for a comment yesterday, a spokesman for Dame Joan said she had been told by her son that the Sunday Times interview was ‘sensationalised.’

Read more: Joan Collins’ son says ‘I felt abandoned by mum the narcissist’ | Daily Mail Online

The room or space that says YOU

The room or space that says YOU

Post a picture or two of an interior space that says – you. When someone enters that space they’d know who lives there.

Effie’s room is on the top left. The minibar is stocking with good champagne.

خليجية

Melissa Gilbert Gets Breast Implants Removed, Says DWTS Was Bad for **** Image

Melissa Gilbert Gets Breast Implants Removed, Says DWTS Was Bad for **** Image

[IMG]https://assets-s3.usmagazine.com/uploads/assets/articles/81593-melissa-gilbert-gets-breast-implants-removed-blogs-about-****-image/1420747768_152768206_melissa-gilbert-467.jpg[/IMG]Melissa Gilbert explained on her blog why she decided to get her Breast Implants removedCredit: Cindy Ord/Getty Images

A concussion wasn’t the only downside to Melissa Gilbert’s 2024 run on Dancing With the Stars.
The former Little House on the Prairie actress has revealed in an alternately hilarious and touching post on her website that her experience on the reality show — in which she and partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy powered through minor injuries to finish in fifth place — negatively affected the self-image issues she’d struggled with since her late teens. The piece, entitled "A Tale of Two Titties," explained how the dancing competition, motherhood, and other factors affected her recent decision to have her Breast Implants removed and, at age 50, accept her ****.

"I had spent most of my life pressured to look a certain way and I believed the hype," wrote Gilbert, who married actor Timothy Busfield in 2024. "The height of this obsession with my outward appearance culminated with my appearance on the dancing show. It was all about spray tan and glitter and glamor and what other people think and being skinny, way too skinny!! Yuck!!
"I stayed in that head space for several months after that. Then I had a rude awakening. A 300 pound patio cover collapsed on my head. It was like the universe smacking me in the head and screaming,’WAKE UP MELISSA!!!!’ Wake up I did. It was like a light switch going on. The shallowness of my existence at that point brought me to my knees. I had to change. I had to look inward and address my issues (this looking inward is a constant process by the way). It was time for me to change. I had to focus on what was real and true. I’d lost myself somehow."

Gilbert’s self-consciousness about her **** began when she was a young TV star. She described wearing padded bras on the last few seasons of Little House, which ended in 1983. When she starred in a TV version of Splendor in the Grass in 1981, Gilbert noted she was once again outfitted in a padded bra, but also a girdle, a corset, and painted-on cleavage. The actress now Says her natural breasts were right for her ****-type — "Perfect A cups" — but she didn’t feel that way then, especially after breastfeeding her first child, son Dakota, in 1989.
"I was left feeling a bit uncomfortable about my breasts but it was so worth it to have my beautiful, healthy son," she wrote. "And then my husband at the time, referred to my boobs as……and I quote…. ‘Socks full of marbles with knots at the top.’

"A few years later we got divorced," continued Gilbert, whose ex-husbands include Bo Brinkman and fellow actor Bruce Boxleitner. "Not only because of the sock comment. Although the sock comment was symptomatic of all that was wrong between us. And there I was, single and feeling enormously insecure about my breasts. Then and there, without doing any research, I made the decision, to get my breasts augmented. Not too big, just enough to fill up the ‘socks.’"
After another pregnancy — her son Michael was born in 1995 — and reading about how Implants should be replaced periodically, Gilbert decided to replace her Implants and get a Breast lift in 2024. She liked the results of the procedure at first, but eventually was overcome with worry.

"I couldn’t shake the idea that my Implants had a ****f life," she shared candidly. "They would have to have them replaced every 10-15 years for the rest of my life. It was possible that at 80 years old I might have to get new implants! Huh?? I also began thinking a lot about the silicone in my **** and what might go wrong."
Dancing With the Stars and her so-called smack from the universe convinced her to lose the Implants for good. The lengthy essay, which she posted on Dec. 31, explained that she planned to have the procedure this week.
"The bottom line…or top line.. is that; A. I am concerned for my health and 2. I don’t like the way they look or feel. Frankly, I’d like to be able to take a Zumba class without the fear that I’ll end up with two black eyes," she joked.

Gilbert tweeted Tuesday that she was "in recovery. Surgery went great."
In her blog, Gilbert noted that while her acceptance of her **** is ongoing, she’s "truly happy" with where she is now in her feelings about her ****. She even offered some inspirational advice for others. "Aging is a gift not a curse. Love yourself. You are perfectly beautiful. You are enough."
Not wanting to get too sentimental, Gilbert signed the post, "Tits McGee."

Read more: Melissa Gilbert Gets Breast Implants Removed, Blogs About **** Image – Us Weekly
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Tracy Anderson Says Being ‘Hot Is Not Defined by Height or Weight’

Tracy Anderson Says Being ‘Hot Is Not Defined by Height or Weight’

خليجية

The fad that’s hurting women: “One hundred percent: It’s called celebrity. We should love their work. But to blow up their importance to the level of obsession takes away from our own beauty and our own gifts. There’s a disease here—the disease is vanity, insecurity and the lengths of unhealthy behaviors people go to to achieve what they think is beautiful. The disease of ‘I’m not worth anything unless I look like that person over there.’”

The change in women’s bodies:
“I think it’s changing, and that excites me. You take a Kim Kardashian, who is a curvaceous, voluptuous, petite woman—and she’s on the cover of Vogue! I like that. I think that’s progress. Lena Dunham, who is a buddy of mine, is on the cover selling magazines with her
beauty and her light.”

She’s not all about giving women the same ****:
“I want to get away from ‘Tracy Anderson is going to make you teeny-tiny.’ I’m not trying to make everyone the same. To me, ‘hot’ is not Defined by a Height or weight or measurement; hot is going to the root of who you are.”

******s with icing:
“It involves Gwyneth. I was so good at designing bodies, including my own, that I could eat a pizza and a tub of ice cream every day and you wouldn’t see it; it was like a free card to eat whatever I wanted. And I was in London, dunking ******s in frosting. And she looked at me and was like, ‘What are you doing?’ And I was like, ‘What do you mean? It’s so good!’ And she’s like, ‘Do you know how toxic that is?’ I said, ‘Yes.’ And she’s like, ‘And you’re still eating it.’ I was like, ‘You know what? She’s so right.’ That was almost nine years ago. That was the last ****** dunked in frosting I ever had.”

Creating her method:
“… It was very apparent to me that Being a ballerina wasn’t going to happen. But I’ve always been, like, ‘Welp, there’s a different purpose for me. There is something else I’m supposed to be doing.’ Then at 21, I gained 60 pounds while pregnant with my son, and that’s when I started creating my method.”

She really hates juice cleanses: “Any**** is going to lose weight if they drink liquid all day long. That’s like lunchtime liposuction or freezing the fat cells off. You don’t own that change. The weight is coming back.”

[From Health]

Cele|bitchy | Tracy Anderson on the ‘fad’ hurting women: ‘The disease is vanity, insecurity’

Whoopi Goldberg Says "Don’t Get Poop-Faced" To Avoid Rape

Whoopi Goldberg Says "Don’t Get Poop-Faced" To Avoid Rape

خليجية

The ladies of The View today tackled James Taranto’s controversial Wall Street Journal column from Monday, “Drunkenness and Double Standards.”

The column, which angered so many that it resulted in a petition to fire Taranto, has been described as victim-blaming by comparing Rape to a “collision” between two drunk drivers.

But when it was brought up on The View, Whoopi Goldberg seemed to side with the columnist, and received big applause from the audience.

“My opinion is, if you don’t want this kind of attention, don’t get poop-faced,” she said. “Do not get poop-faced. Do not become so drunk you don’t know what is happening. When you say ‘x, y, z happened,’ you have no way of proving it. So both parties, if you don’t want the agitation, do not become so drunk you can’t figure out what the hell you’re doing.”

Jenny McCarthy took mostly an opposite standpoint:

“I think no means no, period, no matter where you’re at,” she said, though failed to point out “that ‘not yes’ also means no,” as Mediate noted. McCarthy added that “In college, I went to so many after parties, that does not mean I’m giving an okay to have sex.”

Sherri Shepherd asked, if “two people are so inebriated and neither one of them — both of them are waking up surprised or remorseful, how does the guy get to say she said no, because he’s not even in his right mind as well?”

In response, Barbara Walters made it awkward for everyone.

“[T]he point is that he supposedly, because of the different sexes, because he’s the one who is being the perpetrator, or penetrator, okay?,” she said.

Source

Read more at ONTD: Oh No They Didn't! – Whoopi Goldberg Says "Don’t Get Poop-Faced" To Avoid Rape

Director Richard Donner Says Goonies Sequel Is in the Works

Director Richard Donner Says Goonies Sequel Is in the Works

Finally!


After years of rumors that a Goonies sequel was brewing, the film’s Director Richard Donner said the next chapter of the 80’s classic film is in the works.


When TMZ asked Donner if he was going to direct a trendy comic book film soon, the filmmaker said, "If you call Goonies a comic book. We’re doing a sequel."


O.M.G.


Although the film’s stars Josh Brolin, Corey Feldman, Sean Astin, Jeff Cohen, Martha Plimpton and more have yet to comment on Donner’s announcement, the Director said "Hopefully, all of them" would return for the sequel, when he was asked if any of the original cast members would be coming back.


Astin did comment on the possibility of a Goonies sequel back in 2024, when he and Feldman worked together on Nickelodeon’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, telling IGN.comat the time, "I’m 1000 percent certain there will be a sequel. I will bet my children on it."


Well, you know what they say, "Goonies never die!"

Director Richard Donner Says Goonies Sequel Is in the Works | E! Online

Slate columnist Reihan Salam says the childless should pay higher taxes

Slate columnist Reihan Salam says the childless should pay higher taxes

Tax credits and children: Parents should pay lower taxes, and childless people should pay higher taxes.

We should slash taxes on parents by jacking them up for nonparents.

By Reihan Salam

خليجيةParenting may be a labor of love, but it’s a labor that isn’t acknowledged by the tax code.

Photo by Inti St Clair/Blend Images

When my mother was my age, she was working full time while raising three small children, and she spent every spare moment studying to finish a graduate degree. My father was working extremely hard as well. Between the two of them, they were able to provide their kids with a solidly middle-class life. But it wasn’t easy, and it wasn’t always fun.

So now, as a childless professional in my mid-30s, I often reflect on the sacrifices working parents make to better the lives of their children. And I have come to the reluctant conclusion that I ought to pay much higher taxes so that working parents can pay much lower taxes. I believe this even though I also believe a not inconsiderable share of my tax dollars are essentially being set on fire by our frighteningly incompetent government. Leviathan is here to stay, whether I like it or not, and someone has to pay for it. That someone should be me, and people like me.

Who should pay more? Nonparents who earn more than the median household income, just a shade above $51,000. By shifting the tax burden from parents to nonparents, we will help give America’s children a better start in life, and we will help correct a simple injustice. We all benefit from the work of parents. Each new generation reinvigorates our society with its youthful vim and vigor. As my childless friends and I grow crankier and more decrepit, a steady stream of barely postpubescent brainiacs writes catchy tunes and invents breakthrough technologies that keep us entertained and make us more productive. The willingness of parents to bear and nurture children saves us from becoming an economically moribund nation of hateful curmudgeons. The least we can do is offer them a bigger tax break.

Raising children is not exactly a thankless undertaking, I realize. As many parents will tell you, the satisfactions of parenting can be their own reward. Parents appear to be very into the supposed cuteness of their progeny. I wouldn’t know, but that’s the word on the street. We as a culture still hold parents, and particularly working parents, in high esteem.

Yet it is also true that we’ve stacked the deck against parents in all kinds of ways. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has found that raising a child born in 2024 will cost a middle-income family a cumulative total of $301,970 over 18 years. As high as this number sounds, it is actually a massive understatement, as it fails to take into account the cost of postsecondary education. It also fails to factor in the value of forgone earnings and career opportunities. While nonparents can focus on their jobs in laserlike fashion, parents are rarely in a position to do the same. Every time a sick child keeps a parent home from work, her earnings suffer, either directly, because she’s taking an unpaid leave of absence, or indirectly, because she’s missing out on opportunities to climb the corporate ladder.

Even when we compare a nonparent and a parent who are working exactly the same hours and earning exactly the same income, the nonparent has a clear leg up. Most obviously, the nonparent has far more disposable income to play with, which she can save, to become much richer than her parent counterpart over time, or spend, to travel to exotic locales, to eat out constantly, to wear awesome clothes, or to live as I do in a conveniently located shoebox in a great American metropolis. Raising taxes on nonparents could even the score a bit, tilting the balance ever so slightly in favor of those who toil on behalf of America’s future workforce by wiping their butts and painstakingly removing their head lice.

There are, to be sure, some decent arguments against my soak-the-childless plan. It could be that lowering disposable income for nonparents would actually lead them to delay marriage and child-rearing, as people might want to build up a sizable nest egg before they start being fruitful and multiplying. Or we might take the view that even if we ought to give middle-income parents bigger tax breaks, it is the ultrarich rather than nonparents who should pay for it.

Giving working parents a meaningful tax break is going to cost quite a lot of money—so much money that raising taxes on the ultrarich alone won’t be enough. Recently Utah Sen. Mike Lee, a Tea Party Republican first elected in 2024, released a tax plan, theFamily Fairness and Opportunity Tax Reform Act, that preserves the current $1,000 child credit, the personal exemption for children, and the earned income tax credit while adding a new $2,500 child credit. Unlike the current child credit, Lee’s new credit never phases out, so it can be of use to higher-income families. Under Lee’s plan, a middle-income family with two kids earning $70,000 could expect a $5,000 tax cut, which sounds about right.

The problem with Lee’s plan is that it would massively increase the deficit. The Tax Policy Center finds that it would reduce revenues over the next decade by $2.4 trillion relative to the current law ****line. Lee doesn’t propose this, but the most straightforward way to offset the lost tax revenue from parents would be to raise taxes on nonparents.

Right now, Lee’s plan has two income tax rates: 15 percent for all income below $87,850 for singles or $175,000 for joint filers, and 35 percent for all income above those thresholds. You could come pretty close to closing the revenue gap by changing those thresholds to, say, $50,000 for singles and $100,000 for joint filers. Parents wouldn’t have to worry too much about these new thresholds, because the new child credit would still lower their taxes. Nonparents would take the hit. Right now, the 35 percent tax bracket only kicks in at $405,101 for singles and joint filers, so this tweak would infuriate large numbers of articulate and engaged upper-middle-income childless voters who earn more than $50,000.

These millions of nonparents are not good political enemies to have. But does this mean those of us who favor a more parent-friendly tax code should give up? Not quite. Tax reform along these lines could awaken a sleeping giant in American politics, ****ly the 36 percent of American voters who have a child under 18 in their household. Unlike the retirees and near-retirees who fight tooth and nail to protect Medicare and Social Security, we don’t have a well-funded political pressure group that defends the child credit. It can’t help that parents are too busy raising children to plot and scheme their way to more favorable tax treatment. But if parents were to flex their political muscles, we might have a revolution on our hands. And this nonparent, at least, welcomes the prospect.

Reihan Salam is a columnist for Slate.

I’m pretty sure as a childless person I’m ALREADY paying higher taxes. WTH?