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Friday, February 21, 2020

Stacey Abrams admits she was ‘worried’ during the 2018 Georgia election for governor

Stacey Abrams might not have won the Georgia gubernatorial election, but she is no loser.

The highly sought after social justice advocate and political darling spoke at the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference, Inc. 2020 Clergy & Lay Leadership Conference about the now legendary race and all of the flaws in that 2018 election process.

From the onset, she had to set the record straight.  While she was not victorious in the election, she did not lose.

To the assembly of over one thousand ministers and freedom fighters, she took the mic and basically preached to the congregation of supporters.

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams tackles voter suppression in new book due out in June

“When I go around the country talking about the work we do, I begin by announcing, ‘My name is Stacey Abrams and I am not the governor of Georgia.’” The assembly erupted as she continued, “I am not confused… But I don’t see that as a loss. There are those that would tell me that I need to learn to accept my place, that I lost that election. But the thing of it is, I didn’t lose.”

She said to the group, “I grew up in the tradition of the Methodist church. I grew up in Mississippi, the daughter of two people who eventually became pastors. I grew up understanding that in the space where I was born and the place where I was born, that if I used someone else’s definition of victory I was always going be behind.”

At 46, her steady cadence and confident swag represented a figure far more prepared for the mantle of the Civil Rights movement than many that preach in pulpits to Black people on Sunday mornings. Thus, it was apropos for her to keynote at this conference. Abrams, along with personalities like Candace Simpson and Tameka Mallory, are the new faces of the movement, connecting the heritage of the poor, Black and slavery-begotten-south with the sophistication of the resourceful, Black and access-plentiful- millennium.

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams executive producing CBS drama based off of her first book

She introduced those listening to her grandmother, Wilter Abrams, a woman who had just as much influence in her maturation as a leader than the green grass of Spelman College. In a reflection where she spoke about this feisty woman that even in her 90s watched MSNBC and fussed about politics gave her an extra push to stay in the race, fight for her people and moreover stay in the struggle creating impact with her voice.

Abrams shared, “In September 2018, as the election was heating up and stories were floating around the country about voter suppression that was being unveiled in the state of Georgia, I went home to Mississippi. I went back to my roots because my grandmother was ailing.”

“You would go to visit grandma, she had a rocking recliner where she sat in most of the day. She had a bed that sat right beside it and when you came into the room you sat on the edge of it and you took her hand. She was watching MSNBC and you didn’t want to interrupt her while she was mad that day.”

“When she got to a place where she would acknowledge your presence, she would mute the television and she would turn to you.” Abram continued as she recalled one of the last times she talked to her grandmother. “She wanted to talk about my election. She was mad.”

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams on being open to accepting VP role: ‘Of course I want it’

“She was mad at the man I was running against. She was mad at the man in the White House. She was mad that she couldn’t vote in Georgia. I said, ‘Well, grandma you never lived in Georgia.’ And she didn’t seem to think that was a rational enough explanation.”

“I said to her, ‘I am worried because this man I am running against is in charge of the election. He is the scorekeeper. He is the contestant. He is doing the box copy. He is the umpire and it’s gonna be hard.”

Abrams recalled her grandmother saying, “Have you done what you can?”

“Yes, ma’am!”

“Well, let me tell you about the first time I voted.”

As she recounted the story her grandmother told her, she shared that both of her parents were active in the Civil Rights movement, her father was even locked up. She also shared that while her grandmother could not be at the forefront of the movement in the 1960’s Mississippi, she contributed to the cause by providing bail money to get her children out of jail.

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams predicts she’ll be president by 2040

“In 1968, after the passage of the Civil Rights Act for the first presidential election which she would be eligible to vote in, she was sitting in the backroom of the three-room house. My grandfather was in the front with his brother LP and they were getting ready to vote. …They had gotten dressed because back then you used to get dressed up to go and vote.”

She said that her grandfather was calling her to come on so that they could go and vote and her grandmother said, “Jim, I don’t want to go.”

“What do you mean you don’t want to vote. You get to vote in this presidential election. What do you mean?”

“I am scared.”

Abrams said that her grandmother remembered the dogs, the hoses and the billy clubs and she was afraid.

Her grandfather tried to comfort her by saying, “But we won. The Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Voting Act of 1965 passed. Mississippi finally acknowledged the federal government. We get to go and vote.

Grandma told Abrams, “I sat there and I looked at my husband. I can’t do this, I am afraid.”

“But your children went to jail for this,” her grandfather replied. “Our friends and family… we’ve fought for this. Why won’t you come.”

Grandma said, “I wasn’t afraid of the right to vote. I was afraid of the power.”

Abrams continued, “We live in a country where people are afraid of power. Where we are afraid not of the things we are told we cannot have, we are afraid of the things we want. Because we are afraid we might get what we need. And as my grandfather took her hand and said, ‘Wilter, you need to come on,’ My grandmother said, ‘I didn’t want to go because I was afraid that if I got up and got out there, I might be disappointed. It might not work. But she screwed her courage up anyway.”

The crowd erupted as she continued to speak on the importance of the vote, resting on this anecdote to further stress her life’s mission.

But no applause was more thunderous, than when she said, “You don’t need to vote because someone died [so that you can have the right to vote], you need to vote so we can live.”

And it is about living. Voting is about as urgent as life or death when you account for all the aspects of one’s life that are impacted by the vote.

As of today, no Democratic candidate has invited Abrams on the ticket to be run as their Vice President. She told the ladies of ABC’s The View, that she would definitely consider running if asked.

“It would be doing a disservice to every woman of color, every woman of ambition, every child who wants to think beyond their known space for me to say no or to pretend, ‘Oh, no, I don’t want it.’ Of course, I want it. Of course, I want to serve America. Of course, I want to be a patriot and do this work. And so, I’d say yes.”

The post Stacey Abrams admits she was ‘worried’ during the 2018 Georgia election for governor appeared first on TheGrio.



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Wake Forest apologizes for slavery in university’s past

By TOM FOREMAN Jr. Associated Press
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — The president of Wake Forest University issued a public apology Thursday for the institution’s past involvement in slavery.

President Nathan Hatch’s apology, delivered in a speech during the school’s Founders’ Day ceremonies, comes after a series of events stirred up racial tension on the campus, including anonymous, racist emails sent to faculty members last year. Schools around the South and beyond have been grappling in recent years with what to do about past ties to slavery or white supremacy.

“It is important and overdue that, on behalf of Wake Forest University, I unequivocally apologize for participating in and benefiting from the institution of slavery,” Hatch said during his remarks on campus. “I apologize for the exploitation and use of enslaved people – both those known and unknown – who helped create and build this university through no choice of their own.”

He made no mention of the recent tension on the campus resulting from a threatening email that caused the head of the sociology department to shut down his building and suspend classes for a week. A statement issued after his remarks noted that Hatch last year convened a committee to look at race issues and the legacy of slavery on campus.
During Hatch’s remarks, some students stood up in a silent demonstration. Senior Alexander Holt, who helped organize the gesture, said in an emailed statement before the event that they planned to stand in recognition of the involuntary sacrifices of enslaved people and the continuing impact of slavery’s legacy on current students.

Jonathan Walton, dean of the divinity school, told the audience at Wait Chapel that Wake Forest must acknowledge that “our history is both beautiful and terrible, noble and tragic, honorable and despicable.”

“We owe our very existence in part to the exploited lives of enslaved labor of people of African descent,” Walton said. “Precious people whose humanity was sacrificed to prepare young, white Baptist men for ministry, Baptist young men whose conception of of Christ supported America’s serpentine system of slavery.”

Sierra Deveaux, 19, a sophomore from New York, said Hatch’s public apology resonated with her, but she said there must be a plan that follows up on the apology.

“They need to put action to their words,” Deveaux said. “Through policy on this campus, more transparency on how they go about condemning acts of white supremacy on this campus and making it clear that they do not support white supremacy and making clear through their actions that certain behavior is not OK and that certain behavior will have consequences, and actual, written-down consequences if this is to happen.”

Other universities have apologized for their role in slavery, including the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill in 2018.

The post Wake Forest apologizes for slavery in university’s past appeared first on TheGrio.



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Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick Hopes for a Presidential Pardon from Donald Trump

Kwame Kilpatrick

After President Donald Trump went on a pardoning spree the other day, former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick is hoping that he can be afforded the same opportunity as those the president has recently approved for prison release, according to The Grio.

Kilpatrick, who was convicted and jailed for multiple public corruption crimes, is currently serving 28 years in prison. He is currently in a federal prison in New Jersey after he was convicted in 2013 of 24 charges including extortion, mail fraud, and tax violations. He has requested a commutation of his prison term from the White House after losing all filed appeals. He maintains that he was wrongfully convicted and railroaded by overzealous prosecutors.

A federal prosecutor is against a release by the president. “So far, Mr. Kilpatrick has shown absolutely no remorse for his crimes. He denies any responsibility for the 24 federal felony offenses of which he was convicted, and he has served only one-quarter of his sentence,” U.S. Attorney Matthew Schneider told the Detroit Free Press one day after Trump granted clemency to 11 convicted criminals. 

“My office is willing to provide any assistance to the Pardon Attorney to explain what really happened in Detroit under Mr. Kilpatrick’s watch, and why his conduct justified the sentence he received,” said Schneider, who called Kilpatrick’s 28-year sentence “a fair and just punishment” for the “devastating impact” his crimes had on Detroit. “As the elected mayor, he ran a criminal enterprise that corrupted wide swaths of city government in the early 2000s — at a time when city residents desperately needed honest and effective city services,” Schneider said.

Trump, who has broad clemency powers, granted by the Constitution, granted full pardons to seven people and commuted, or shortened, the sentences of four others.

Kilpatrick had originally sent a letter to Trump last year according to Deadline Detroit. The letter, here, in part:

“Mr. President, I am humbly and respectfully asking that you will extend your heart to me and my family, for another chance at abundant life. I am humbly requesting that you would give me relief from this egregious and unjust federal prison sentence of 28 years. With ONE STROKE OF YOUR PEN, you would give new life, freedom and hope to me, my family, and many who will be served by your gesture of kindness, mercy, and forgiveness. (Clemency Case Number: C199974…KILPATRICK)”.



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Oprah Winfrey foundation gives $5 million to New Jersey-based after school program

The Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation has given a $5 million donation to a Newark, New Jersey-based and nationally-operated after school program that helps prepare students of color for college.

Judith Griffin, founder of Pathways to College, said she learned her program had received the donation last September, but first shared the news on Thursday with Pathway students and family members during a luncheon in Montclair, reported NJ.com.

READ MORE: Oprah Winfrey gives Morehouse student new iPhone 11

“Of all the charities in the country, she would choose to give this contribution to us because she believed in what we do. I don’t even know how you put a price on that,” Griffin told NJ.com.

During the luncheon, a video message was played of Winfrey praising the program. The kids were thrilled.

“I celebrate and honor the work Pathways to College does in securing futures for young people who want to go to college,” Winfrey said in the video, according to NJ.com. “I am proud to sponsor and support all of these young people and their dreams for a better life through education.”

Established in 2003, the program is offered nationwide for students of color from school districts with limited resources. Through the program, which aims to prepare students for college success and support then in achieving successful lives, students visit college campuses.

The national program has been in Newark the longest, but is in a total of 20 sites across the country, including Gary, Indiana, Detroit, Michigan, and Pine Bluff and Altheimer, Arkansas. Since its inception, Pathways has supported more than 4,000 students and 100% of program attendees have gone on to college, NJ.com reported.

When Oprah’s message played on the screen, Sumwen Osagie, 18, told NJ.com was in disbelief.

“Oprah knows Pathways to College,” Osagie said. “It’s something that motivates me to keep on going no matter what.’’

Osagie, a senior at Arts High School, applied to 13 colleges and was accepted at all of them. She told NJ.com she is going to Fairleigh Dickson in the fall.

READ MORE: Black teen who applied to 20 top colleges gets full ride to all of them

Were it not for Pathways, Osagie added that she “would have been all over the place’’ in her college search and preparation.

Last year, Winfrey also donated $500,000 to “Lights On,” another Newark-based after school program, which operates at West Side High School and keeps kids off the streets in the evenings.

The post Oprah Winfrey foundation gives $5 million to New Jersey-based after school program appeared first on TheGrio.



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JPMorgan Chase Beefs Up Commitment To Build Black Wealth With Fresh $5 Million Investment and New Initiatives

JPMorgan Chase

JPMorgan Chase is investing $5 million to reaffirm its commitment to Advancing Black Pathways (ABP) and supporting new initiatives to create economic opportunities for black Americans.

This month marks the one-year anniversary since the nation’s largest bank launched ABP, a drive to help African Americans achieve sustained economic success. The action builds on the bank’s existing efforts to help communities of color by focusing on three key areas where blacks have historically lagged behind other ethnic groups: wealth creation, educational outcomes, and career success.

“We’re committed to bringing the full force of our firm to provide improved access to education, job training and wealth creation for the black community,” stated Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase. “We believe we’ve laid a strong foundation for Advancing Black Pathways to achieve lasting, meaningful impact, but recognize that we have a long way to go towards accomplishing that goal.”

The bank’s push is aimed at helping to address the racial wealth divide between black and white Americans

If current trends persist, the median wealth of black Americans will fall to $0 by 2053, reports the economic advocacy group Prosperity Now. Plus, despite accounting for nearly 13% of the U.S. population, black people occupy less than 8% of the nation’s white-collar jobs. The educational achievement gap is significant as well. Only 46% of black college students complete four-year degree programs within six years, compared to 69% of white students and 77% of Asian American students.

“JPMorgan Chase launched Advancing Black Pathways last year out of a belief that making the economy work for more people is both a business imperative and a moral obligation, stated Sekou Kaalund, Head of Advancing Black Pathways.

Thasunda Duckett, CEO of Chase Consumer Banking and executive sponsor of ABP, added, “We’re proud of the progress we’ve made through Advancing Black Pathways to hire more black talent, invest in black-owned businesses and help black Americans of all wealth levels achieve their long-term financial goals. We look forward to building on these efforts for years to come.”

Here’s a glimpse at some new initiatives the bank is backing to boost black economic opportunity.

  • Student Financial Hardship Fund: Through ABP, JPMorgan Chase is committing $1 million each year to help students attending HBCUs cover the cost of personal finance emergencies. The United Negro College Fund (UNCF) and Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF) will evenly administer the funds to students who attend publicly supported HBCUs within their respective networks of 84 member schools.

Helping Nonprofit Organizations Advance Racial Equality in Local Communities 

  • Prosperity Now: JPMorgan Chase announced a $3 million commitment over two years to help nonprofit leaders of color in Minneapolis and Seattle address racial economic inequality. The new investment expands a partnership with the bank through its corporate philanthropy program. First launched in 2015, JPMorgan Chase has invested more than $8.8 million in Prosperity Now’s Racial Wealth Divide Initiative. The initiative was previously launched in Dallas, Wilmington, New Orleans, Miami, Baltimore, and Chicago.
  • Inclusiv: The firm is making a $1 million commitment over the next year to Inclusiv to help people in low- and moderate-income communities in Detroit and Cleveland, improve their financial health.
  •  Advancing Black Entrepreneurship: JPMorgan Chase also announced the formation of “Pathways to Capital by Chase for Business,” to improve access to capital and business advisory services for black small business owners. Pathways to Capital will prepare black entrepreneurs for the loan application process and provide improved access to Chase’s Business Banking advisory services. Pathways to Capital is still under development and will launch later in 2020.

To create the program, ABP and Chase’s Business Bank formed a coalition with four partners: the National Minority Supplier Development Council, National Urban League, U.S. Black Chambers, and Black Enterprise.

McKinsey & Co. and E. Smith Advisors will assist the effort as consultants.

“In addition to homeownership, entrepreneurship holds an important key towards closing the racial wealth divide,” says Kaalund, Head of Advancing Black Pathways. “Black entrepreneurs are job creators, and possess a net worth that’s 12 times higher than black non-entrepreneurs, so we must do our part to promote and advance small business ownership.”

In its news release, JPMorgan Chase also reflects on several highlights the bank achieved through ABP to help black Americans in 2019 in other key areas such as wealth creation as well as education and careers.

Along with ABP, JPMorgan Chase has multiple programs designed to help people of color achieve economic and career success. Those programs include the Entrepreneurs of Color Fund, The Fellowship Initiative and Advancing Black Leaders (ABL).

 



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One year on, Algeria’s protest movement is soul-searching

Has Algeria's protest movement failed or is it simply work in progress?

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Susan Fowler and the End of the ‘High Performer’ Defense

Plus: Remembering Larry Tesler, the qualities of a successful founder, and the business of houseplant styling.

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The Best Snow Gear (2020): Ski Jackets, Goggles, and More

From snowboard bindings to the best balaclava we've ever tested, here is our favorite ski and snowboard equipment.

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Boosie Badazz allegedly gets kicked out of Planet Fitness for comments about Zaya Wade

Boosie Badazz claims that he was put out of Planet Fitness because of an Instagram video he posted deriding former NBA star Dwyane Wade for supporting his transgender child. And Boosie’s teenage son also weighed in with his own offensive rant against Wade.

READ MORE: Boosie Badazz slammed for crude comments about Dwyane Wade’s transgender 12-year-old

“Do not go to Planet Fitness, they racists, they haters,” the “Nasty Nasty” rapper said in an Instagram video. “They just put me out of Planet Fitness cause of what I said about Dwyane Wade’s son.”

“They chessing for Dwyane Wade’s son so don’t go to Planet Fitness no more. Nobody, nobody goes to Planet Fitness,” Boosie adds, driving away in the rain with a carload of people.

Boosie captioned the post “MANAGER WHO WAS GAY REFUSED TO LET ME N PLANET FITNESS BECAUSE OF MY PAST ACTIONS ON SOCIAL MEDIA ABOUT GENDER ETC. DO NOT SUPPORT PLANET FITNESS” before listing the address of the location that gave him the boot. “THEy Racist ,THEY HAVE ROACHES , N THEY SHOWER WATER DONT GET HOT ‼️GET OUT YA FEELINGS LIL BITCH.”

Then his son, who goes by the IG name tootie_raww, posted on his IG story: “F*ck Dwayne [sic] and his son, idc he gay. My pops said what he said. Stop sendin gme that. I bet you won’t say it to our face.”

Boosie Badass Son theGrio.com
Screenshot from Boosie Badass son’s IG Story regarding his father’s controversy about Dwayne Wade’s daughter, Zaya
Boosie Badass Son theGrio.com
Screenshot from Boosie Badass son’s IG Story regarding his father’s controversy about Dwayne Wade’s daughter, Zaya

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Recently, Wade and wife Gabrielle Union announced to the world their daughter, Zaya Wade’s change of name and gender identity. Although many people have been supportive of the announcement, some, like Boosie, have publicly ridiculed the news on social media.

“Don’t cut his f*cking d*ck off!” the Louisiana rapper said in an earlier video on IG. He recorded that transphobic video at the same gym on Feb. 18.

Boosie criticized Wade for supporting Zaya’s gender identity and warns that she is too young to make such a drastic decision.

READ MORE: Lil Boosie sets the record straight about his alleged fistfight with George Zimmerman

“I gotta say something about this sh*t, bro. Dwyane Wade, you went too f*cking far, dawg,” he said in his IG video. “That is a male. A 12-year-old. At 12, they don’t even know what they next meal is gonna be. They don’t have sh*t figured out yet. He might meet a woman, anything, at 16 and fall in love with her. But his d*ck be gone—how he gon’—like, bruh, you going too far, dawg” Boosie said on the earlier video.

The Wades never said anything about Zaya undergoing gender reassignment surgery, but have just told their social media followers the pronouns Zaya has chosen to identify herself by.

The post Boosie Badazz allegedly gets kicked out of Planet Fitness for comments about Zaya Wade appeared first on TheGrio.



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Coronavirus: Ethiopian student living in Wuhan

Hanok Andamariam is an Ethiopian student in Wuhan, the city at the centre of the coronavirus outbreak.

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Who Qualifies for Medicare?

Medicare Supplement plans.

Trying to learn the ins and outs of Medicare doesn’t have to be overwhelming. This guide will lay out who is eligible for Medicare, available options, and how to get the coverage you need.

Qualifications For Medicare

To qualify for Medicare, you must fit specific criteria. You are eligible if:

  • You are aged 65 years or older and have begun collecting retirement benefits.

 You may also enroll if you are younger than 65 and:

  • You have been receiving Social Security disability benefits for 24 months.
  • Have end-stage renal disease (ESRD).
  • Have Lou Gehrig’s disease (ALS).

Age-Based Eligibility

You can enroll in Medicare anytime three months before your 65th birthday, the month you turn 65, and three months after your 65th birthday.

If your birthday is in May, you may enroll in the months of February, March, April, May, June, July, and August. This time period is known as your Initial Enrollment Period.

If you worked but did not contribute Social Security payments you may still purchase Part A health insurance, but you will be required to pay a premium. Remember: It’s the Social Security Administration, not Medicare, that determines your eligibility.

Qualifying eligibility for premium-free Part A Medicare requires a minimum of 10 years or 30 quarters worked by you or your spouse while paying into Social Security.

Disability-Based Eligibility

Disability: If you’ve received Social Security Disability benefits for 24 months, you’re automatically eligible for Medicare.

ALS: If you’re diagnosed with ALS, you are eligible in the first month of your diagnosis with no waiting period.

ESRD: Those diagnosed with ESRD are eligible for premium-free Part A if they receive dialysis treatments or qualify for a kidney transplant and meet one of the following criteria:

  • Have worked 10 years or 30 quarters while paying into Social Security.
  • Are receiving or eligible to receive Social Security benefits.
  • Are the spouse or dependent child of a person who either worked 10 years or 30 quarters while paying into Social Security or is receiving Social Security benefits.

For those in this category, Part A coverage begins:

  • The third months after regular dialysis treatments begin; or
  • The first month of regular dialysis treatments with self-dialysis training; or
  • The month of their kidney transplant; or
  • Two months before the month of scheduled transplant, if you are hospitalized during the months prior in preparation for the transplant.

Medicare Coverage

To ensure adequate healthcare coverage, it’s important to learn what parts of Medicare you need. Medicare is broken down into four parts: Part A, B, C, and D.

Part A: Covers costs related to hospital stays and typically has no premium.

Part B: Covers costs related to doctor visits and carries a monthly premium.

Part C: Combination of Part A, B, and D, and carries a separate monthly premium in addition to Part B monthly premium.

Part D: Covers costs related to prescription drugs and carries a monthly premium.

Here’s a closer look at what each part covers.

PLAN COVERAGE PREMIUM
Part A Inpatient hospital coverage Might have premium
Part B Outpatient care

Doctor visits

Lab tests

Home health services

Medical equipment

Will have premium +

Medicare pays 80%

You pay 20% of everything else

No cap or maximum

Part C Inpatient hospital coverage

Outpatient care

Prescription drug coverage

Dental*

Vision*

Hearing*

Fitness*

Will have premium

 

Part D Drug coverage % deductible varies

* Not all Medicare Part C Plans cover these items.

Medicare Parts – Optional Or Required?

Not all parts of Medicare are automatically applied to a Medicare enrollee. Knowing which parts are automatic and which need to be chosen will help you make the right decisions when the time comes.

  • Part A is automatic and everyone eligible is enrolled.
  • Part B is optional but necessary to deflect the high cost of doctor visits and lab tests.
  • Part C, also known as Medicare Advantage, offers the most coverage, providing coverage for A, B, and D, while potentially covering other options such as dental and vision.
  • Part D is optional but highly recommended to cover prescription drug coverage.

Reference the chart above for an estimate of fees and charges associated with each part of Medicare.

Timely Enrollment

It’s important to enroll in Medicare as soon as you become eligible. When enrolling in Part A, you will need to decide whether you will opt into Part B and D, or choose Part C. Timely enrollment is crucial to ensure coverage begins when your employee coverage ends. Speaking with a Medicare expert will ensure that you understand all of your coverage options.



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‘Environmental DNA’ Lets Scientists Probe Underwater Life

With the help of a new kind of drone, marine biologists can sequence DNA found in the ocean to reveal what's living in an ecosystem—and what's missing.

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Gadget Lab Podcast: Inside Textio’s Anti-Bias Bot

Textio CEO Kieran Snyder talks to WIRED about training computers to make human language more inclusive.

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Want to Look Inside a Brain? With Transparent Organs, You Can

Using clever chemical wizardry, researchers have made human organs see-through. The dazzling 3D maps could one day lead to organs made in the lab.

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Best MacBooks (2020): Which Model Should You Buy?

MacBook Pro or MacBook Air? Do you need a Touch Bar? Let us help you navigate Apple's laptops.

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Defeated Chess Champ Garry Kasparov Has Made Peace With AI

Twenty-three years after he lost to Deep Blue, Kasparov says people need to work with machines. You have to “nudge the flock of intelligent algorithms.”

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Companies Are Stealing Influencers' Faces

Fast fashion sellers are using social media stars' images without permission—and there's not much they can do about it.

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Surgeon who harmed Scots is now working in Libya

A top surgeon who harmed patients for years and can no longer work in the UK is operating again.

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Thomas Thabane: Lesotho PM leaves country as murder charges loom

Police accuse Thomas Thabane and the First Lady of murdering his previous wife in 2017.

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Kamara leaves Ivory Coast by mutual agreement

Ibrahim Kamara has left his role as head coach of Ivory Coast by mutual agreement

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