Wendell Potter worked for CIGNA health insurers for over 15 years, including a position as head of communications. He left that job, in a 180-degree switch, to fight for the rights of all Americans to affordable health care. He now serves as Senior Fellow on Health Care at the Center for Media and Democracy, and he joined Laura in studio today to give us a quick update on the health care reform process, explain the so-called "Cadillac tax," and remind us all that the battle isn't over yet--there's still time to fight. Organizations around the world are rallying to the aid of Haiti after the earthquake that devastated the country earlier this week. Artists for Peace and Justice sent us this video, discussing their work in Port-au-Prince and Petionville, and they too are collecting donations to rebuild hospitals and provide essential care to the people most affected by the quake. January 22nd is the 37th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that finally recognized a woman's right to her own reproductive choices. But even in the last year, we've seen Stupak and Nelson trying to use the health care reform bills to restrict rights even further, and clinics around the country have seen increased aggression, culminating in the brutal murder of Dr. George Tiller. To fill us in on the abortion wars, we spoke to Silvia Henriquez, Executive Director of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health, Carole Joffe, author of Dispatches from the Abortion Wars, and Lynn Paltrow, Executive Director of National Advocates for Pregnant Women. Two teachers at a Brooklyn middle school, frustrated with a lack of social-justice education in public schools, founded the Pass it On Project to engage their students, mostly black and Latino, around issues of race and the civil rights movement. They ended up taking a road trip through the South, visiting historic sites and learning from leaders from the civil rights era. The Pass It On Project is a feature documentary about that experience. Finally, Laura and Deanna Zandt both offer up some important things for us to think about in the aftermath of the earthquake in Haiti, and some suggestions for what we in the U.S. can do.