I will. A big thanks for an awesome1 introduction to our Halloween edition of CNN Student News. We'll have more of your impressive pumpkin2 powers later on but we start today with affordable3 care act which is usually known as Obamacare. The site where people can sigh up went live at the beginning of Oct but the launch didn't go smoothly4. One person described the experience of using the site as miserably5 frustrating6 and that was the person who's in charge of it. Catholine Sebilious is the US health and human services secretary. Her department is responsible for different parts of Obamacare that includes the enrollment7 website and the problems that have come with it.
"I am as
frustrated8 and angry as anyone with the flawed launch of healthcare. gov. So, let me say directly to these Americans. You deserve better. I apologize."
Secretary Sebilious faced hours of questions during that congressional hearing yesterday.
Democrats9 and Republicans in Congress talked about the problems with the Obamacare website but that isn't the only
controversy10 surrounding the new law. There's a big debate about the health insurance plans that Americans already have. Most Americans who have health insurance get it through their employers or government programs like Medicare but more than 15 million Americans have individual health
coverage11. When this law was proposed, President Obama and his administration said many times that Americans could keep their health care plans but people who work in the insurance industry say most of those Americans with individual plans will see changes or even cancellations.
Just the facts. The cold war has the story period that started after World War II. The main opponents were the United States and the former
Soviet12 Union. Although other countries were involved as well, the cold war including spying between countries but it never developed into a direct military conflict. But it was over by 1991 when the Soviet Union
collapsed13.
One of the biggest symbols of the cold war was in Germany, the Berlin Wall. It split the city and the country in half, separating communist East Germany from democratic west Germany. The wall came down in 1989 and Germany reunited next year. Now, Germany says it's the victim of cold war tactics, spying and German officials want answers.
NSA field station, Berlin T., a
relic14 of US e. in the forests around Berlin. Now, a
converse15 for a f. artists and backdrop for some of the best kite flying in the German capital. From this vantage point, right on top of the tiny island that was west Berlin. Every which direction you looked was east, the eastern block. This was one of the most important surveillance posts of the cold war. Now, if the allegations made in Germany's D. magazine are true, the United States has used an even more
conspicuous16 location from which to gather intelligence. Though this time on its friends, that's its own embassy roof, a stone from government co. Germany's interior minister has promised to expel any US
diplomat17 proven complicit in spying operations, including
alleged18 eavesdropping19 on the chancellor's personal mobile phone. German are especially sensitive to the dangerous of state surveillance and the destructive nature of the society which spied on itself. The federal commission for the S. records, the secret police force of the former east Germany understands, perhaps, better than most why intelligence
gathering20 needs controls.
"We have very direct historical link to what it means if the state did not respect the boundaries of privacy and the rights of its own citizens. So, the shadow of the past kind of lingers always when something as seemly not so dramatic to American like a wiretapping of a cell phone happens."
Delegates from the European parliament are already in DC demanding an explanation. Germany's top intelligence officers are set to follow. Trying to establish a
mechanism21 whereby intelligence agencies operate within acceptable international frameworks while it`s holding to account counterparts who`ve reportedly failed to keep faith with the allies. Di., CNN, Berlin.