• Email scott.murray@guardian.co.uk with your thoughts • Click here for more on the Rugby World Cup Terrible news for New Zealand! “Choking? New Zealand? What are you going on about, Scott?” splutters Kevin Mannerings. “Why even your beloved Sergio Garcia is taking an eight-shot lead into the last round of the Castello Masters in Valencia . New Zealand, and Sergio, will banish the ghosts today and bring it home.” Oh Kevin! How could you! That’s torn it now. If/when France make off with the pot, the Kiwi nation is never going to forgive you for this. Sergio, needless to say, I’ve already given up on. Referee: Craig Joubert (South Africa) France: Medard, Clerc, Rougerie, Mermoz, Palisson, Parra, Yachvili, Poux, Servat, Mas, Pape, Nallet, Dusautoir, Bonnaire, Harinordoquy. Replacements: Szarzewski, Barcella, Pierre, Ouedraogo, Doussain, Trinh-Duc, Traille. New Zealand: Dagg, Jane, Smith, Nonu, Kahui, Cruden, Weepu, Woodcock, Mealamu, O. Franks, Whitelock, Thorn, Kaino, McCaw, Read. Replacements: Hore, B. Franks, A. Williams, Thomson, Ellis, Donald, S. Williams. Kick off: 9am in the British “Summer” Time. In summary: It is on! It’s France, though, isn’t it. They’re arguing amongst themselves, and they all hate the coach. It’s like the 2006 and 2010 football World Cup squads rolled into one, and multiplied by some good old-fashioned industrial action. On the flip side, of course, they’ve knocked New Zealand out of two of the last three World Cups, which will give the All Blacks pause. But most importantly of all, they’re France . And France, so the cliché which I’m only too happy to trot out goes, are due a stellar performance every now and then. They’ve not had one in this World Cup, yet have made the final? Could the stars finally be aligning for Les Bleus, the only Big Nation yet to make off with the Webb Ellis Cup. Still, they’re by far the best team in the 2011 World Cup. And they’ve got home advantage. This should be a shoo-in for the All Blacks: they’ve played France 50 times in Tests, winning 37 of the games and drawing one, losing only 12. They’ve only lost against Les Bleus four times on their own soil in 24 outings. Their biggest winning margin against the French came four years ago in Wellington – a nine-try 61-10 hammering – and of course they’ve won the only previous World Cup final between the two sides, that 1987 match, 29-9. So, then, this New Zealand choking record. They haven’t actually done much choking, have they? Let’s look at the facts. They won the first staging of the Rugby World Cup in 1987. In 1991, Australia were simply the best team in the world, and the pre-tournament favourites. In 1995, New Zealand were the best team in the world, and should have won the final, but in fairness two-thirds of the team were doing the Pizza Hut Pasodoble and spent most of the time leading up to the big game in the pan. In 1999, they should have won the tournament, but were blown away by France with the line in sight during the second half of that semi-final, but hey, these things happen. In 2003, they froze against Australia in the semi, and in 2007, they froze against France in the quarters. So, er, OK, maybe they do a fair bit of choking. Rugby World Cup 2011 New Zealand rugby union team France rugby union team Rugby union Scott Murray guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Watch live streaming video from globalrevolution at livestream.com Tweets out of the group said protesters were not offered the option to leave Grant Park without being arrested. From Saturday:: For the second weekend in a row, anti-Wall Street protesters marched through the downtown streets in another attempt to take over Grant Park. Between 1,500 and 2,500 protesters marched Saturday night from LaSalle and Jackson to the northeast corner of Congress and Michigan, where organizers said they again planned to set up a camp with the hopes of spending the night . Organizers said they are hoping to move the entire Occupy Chicago protest from the financial district to Grant Park going forward. “We are going to hold this space, and that’s what we are going to do,” said Brit Schulte, 23, an organizer who was arrested at Grant Park last week and who has been protesting for 25 days straight. “Our ability to invoke our civil rights to protest shouldn’t be limited, and we shouldn’t be censored.” Schulte, who recently moved to Chicago from Texas, said organizers didn’t request a permit to spend the night because they didn’t think they need it. But as of midnight, only one tent had been set up and only about 100 protesters remained in the park. Police set up metal barricades around the group. A few hundred people stood in support outside the barricades on the sidewalks around and across the street from the park and watched.
Continue reading …Watch live streaming video from globalrevolution at livestream.com Tweets out of the group said protesters were not offered the option to leave Grant Park without being arrested. From Saturday:: For the second weekend in a row, anti-Wall Street protesters marched through the downtown streets in another attempt to take over Grant Park. Between 1,500 and 2,500 protesters marched Saturday night from LaSalle and Jackson to the northeast corner of Congress and Michigan, where organizers said they again planned to set up a camp with the hopes of spending the night . Organizers said they are hoping to move the entire Occupy Chicago protest from the financial district to Grant Park going forward. “We are going to hold this space, and that’s what we are going to do,” said Brit Schulte, 23, an organizer who was arrested at Grant Park last week and who has been protesting for 25 days straight. “Our ability to invoke our civil rights to protest shouldn’t be limited, and we shouldn’t be censored.” Schulte, who recently moved to Chicago from Texas, said organizers didn’t request a permit to spend the night because they didn’t think they need it. But as of midnight, only one tent had been set up and only about 100 protesters remained in the park. Police set up metal barricades around the group. A few hundred people stood in support outside the barricades on the sidewalks around and across the street from the park and watched.
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly podcast with The Professional Left, a.k.a. our own Driftglass and Bluegal. Links for this episode include: Adventus : “People are Messy” Herman Cain sold his own campaign 100K worth of books. Occupy the Boardroom Charles Pierce at Esquire channels Driftglass You can listen to the archives at The Professional Left and make a donation there if you’d like to help keep these going. You can also follow them on Facebook at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal . And exciting news. Marlene Zenkel has written an I-Tunes app to benefit the podcast. It has both DG and BG’s blogs and the podcast, and we have plans for exclusive iOS user content very soon. Have a great weekend everyone and enjoy the podcast.
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly podcast with The Professional Left, a.k.a. our own Driftglass and Bluegal. Links for this episode include: Adventus : “People are Messy” Herman Cain sold his own campaign 100K worth of books. Occupy the Boardroom Charles Pierce at Esquire channels Driftglass You can listen to the archives at The Professional Left and make a donation there if you’d like to help keep these going. You can also follow them on Facebook at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal . And exciting news. Marlene Zenkel has written an I-Tunes app to benefit the podcast. It has both DG and BG’s blogs and the podcast, and we have plans for exclusive iOS user content very soon. Have a great weekend everyone and enjoy the podcast.
Continue reading …enlarge In short – Yankee go home! Click here to view this media It certainly was a day for civil unrest. October 21, 1995 saw a wave of prison riots erupting across the U.S. – some blamed the refusal to relax stiff penalties on crack cocaine, others attributed it to the Million Man March. Whatever the reason, all prisons in the U.S. on this particular day were on lock down. And there were riots in Okinawa – due to the continued U.S. military presence on the island and the recent rash of rapes among U.S. service personnel and Okinawa locals. Fingers were crossed that hostage David Hutchings and three others would be released shortly from captivity in India, at least it was hoped. President Clinton leveled a few blasts at the GOP for their Budget plan. Mexico suffered it’s third earthquake in a month. This doing a bit more damage than the others. And the World Series was getting underway this evening with the Cleveland Indians going up against the Atlanta Braves – the first time the Indians made it to a World series since 1954. And that’s what today was all about in 1995, via The CBS World News Roundup for October 21, 1995.
Continue reading …enlarge In short – Yankee go home! Click here to view this media It certainly was a day for civil unrest. October 21, 1995 saw a wave of prison riots erupting across the U.S. – some blamed the refusal to relax stiff penalties on crack cocaine, others attributed it to the Million Man March. Whatever the reason, all prisons in the U.S. on this particular day were on lock down. And there were riots in Okinawa – due to the continued U.S. military presence on the island and the recent rash of rapes among U.S. service personnel and Okinawa locals. Fingers were crossed that hostage David Hutchings and three others would be released shortly from captivity in India, at least it was hoped. President Clinton leveled a few blasts at the GOP for their Budget plan. Mexico suffered it’s third earthquake in a month. This doing a bit more damage than the others. And the World Series was getting underway this evening with the Cleveland Indians going up against the Atlanta Braves – the first time the Indians made it to a World series since 1954. And that’s what today was all about in 1995, via The CBS World News Roundup for October 21, 1995.
Continue reading …I don’t think that this fact can be overemphasized as we have various corporate media and political pundits seek to minimize Occupy Wall Street: We are the richest nation in the world . There is a massive amount of wealth here, enough to keep each and every citizen living at a very comfortable level. The problem is that there is also a staggering income inequality as well, more so than in some third world nations, like Trinidad and Tobago, Mozambique and Tunisia. Again, the richest nation in the country cannot serve its citizens as equitably as Mozambique. In a word: unacceptable. One of the ways that Wall Street has caused this massive shift of wealth strictly to the top 1 percent is in the way corporations have decimated pension funds. Investigative journalist Ellen Schultz wrote the book Retirement Heist: How Companies Plunder and Profit from the Nest Eggs of American Workers to illustrate how these corporations have pulled a reverse Robin Hood and robbed from the working poor to give yet even more to the rich. From the publisher’s description: It’s no secret that hundreds of companies have been slashing pensions and health coverage earned by millions of retirees. Employers blame an aging workforce, stock market losses, and spiraling costs- what they call “a perfect storm” of external forces that has forced them to take drastic measures. But this so-called retirement crisis is no accident. Ellen E. Schultz, award-winning investigative reporter for the Wall Street Journal , reveals how large companies and the retirement industry-benefits consultants, insurance companies, and banks-have all played a huge and hidden role in the death spiral of American pensions and benefits. A little over a decade ago, most companies had more than enough set aside to pay the benefits earned by two generations of workers, no matter how long they lived. But by exploiting loopholes, ambiguous regulations, and new accounting rules, companies essentially turned their pension plans into piggy banks, tax shelters, and profit centers. Drawing on original analysis of company data, government filings, internal corporate documents, and confidential memos, Schultz uncovers decades of widespread deception during which employers have exaggerated their retiree burdens while lobbying for government handouts, secretly cutting pensions, tricking employees, and misleading shareholders. She reveals how companies: Siphon billions of dollars from their pension plans to finance downsizings and sell the assets in merger deals Overstate the burden of rank-and-file retiree obligations to justify benefits cuts while simultaneously using the savings to inflate executive pay and pensions Hide their growing executive pension liabilities, which at some companies now exceed the liabilities for the regular pension plans Purchase billions of dollars of life insurance on workers and use the policies as informal executive pension funds. When the insured workers and retirees die, the company collects tax-free death benefits Preemptively sue retirees after cutting retiree health benefits and use other legal strategies to erode their legal protections. Though the focus is on large companies-which drive the legislative agenda-the same games are being played at smaller companies, non-profits, public pensions plans and retirement systems overseas. Nor is this a partisan issue: employees of all political persuasions and income levels-from managers to miners, pro- football players to pilots-have been slammed. I keep hearing the gatekeepers of the 1 percent telling the rest of us that we’re broke, that we don’t have the money to allow hardworking people the dignity of a retirement they’ve earned. Let’s be clear: this is a huge lie being perpetuated on 99 percent of us so that the 1 percent can keep stealing our hard earned money.
Continue reading …Once again this past few weeks, the ongoing education debate in the United States occupied the headlines, bylines and cable news scrolls. NBC launched its second annual “Education Nation Summit”, billed as a way “to engage the country in a solutions-focused conversation about the state of education in America”. Meanwhile, President Obama, approaching warp speed on the campaign trail to try to convince us he’s actually the transformational guy from 2008 – as opposed to the chary chap we’ve found running our country since – made a fresh pitch in his weekly radio address for his version of education reform. Obama tied it to the economic future of our country, and discussed waivers to allow states to opt out of provisions of his predecessor’s much-maligned legislation, the No Child Left Behind Act. Of course, the problem is that we’re not having an honest conversation about education in the US, because many of the broader trends degrading our overall political culture are also at work with this issue. Although some people really want to improve the system for our children, there are also those who see our schools as a way to bring about their vision of a 21st-century America – which sometimes looks a lot like 1984. This whole cast of characters will seem familiar – much like that coffee stain you just can’t get out of the carpet, or overacting in a Nicolas Cage movie. First, there is the science-despising Christian Right, who think school is for fairy tales and the teachings of the unimpeachable sources at their weekly snake handling. If their Bible said that gravity didn’t exist, it wouldn’t. If you walked off a building and fell straight to the pavement a la “The Happening”, it would be your fault for a three-martini lunch you had in April of 1996, or for being married as many times as Rush Limbaugh. Don’t fool yourself into thinking these people don’t have a lot of influence. If you don’t believe me, see “Texas Board of Education” and “textbooks”. So is it any wonder, then, that in December 2010 the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development released a study showing the US ranking 17th in the world in science and 25th in maths? Just spitballing here, but it would appear that there is this strange relationship between teaching kids maths and science and their learning … maths and science. Who knew? But those who would put “intelligent design” on par with scientific theory are not the only problem. Predatory corporate entities have jumped head-over-heels onto the education-reform bandwagon. It provides numerous benefits to investors – in the form of a huge tax windfall known as the New Markets Tax Credit – realised by investing in the infrastructure of privately owned charter schools. Bonus: There’s always the more-fun-than-foosball opportunity to bash public-sector unions comprised of teachers, which has occurred in states like Ohio and Wisconsin. This is not to say that there are not genuine reformers pushing for positive changes to our education system. I have a friend I knew growing up who came from a working-class section of Staten Island who is passionate about education. He started a charter school in East Harlem that has been thriving. Additionally, I’ve worked with an education expert named Dr Steve Edwards, nationally recognised for his leadership of East Hartford High School in Connecticut. During Edwards’ tenure, violence at the school has dropped by 50 per cent and dropout rates have fallen below two per cent. His firm, Edwards Education Associates (EES), emphasises cultural factors in its programmes to improve schools, such as facilitating communication between teachers, students, administrators and parents, and teaching leadership skills to students that instil them with the confidence to succeed. Overall, EES uses data-driven methods to individually address the myriad different challenges at different public schools. It may not be as sexy as testing – but it works. In fact, to Edwards and his associates, the testing fad that has become as ubiquitous as bad cafeteria food is a faulty one-size-fits-all solution, often leading teachers to “teach to the test”. According to Edwards, “testing should be about 20 per cent of the pie, not 90 per cent as some want it to be. Testing simply can’t capture many significant factors that need to be addressed to turn around schools.” Of course, it doesn’t hurt that whole industries have been erected, much like Roman arches, in homage to the glory that is testing and test preparation – just another reason some in the corporate boardrooms may have suddenly (hallelujah!) seen the light in the school classroom. But here is something with which it is hard to argue. In the Toledo, Ohio public school system, EES worked with 47 high schools out of 61 overall. The ones that hired EES accomplished 75 per cent of the goals set by the district, while the others achieved about 10 per cent of them. Elementary students working with EES reached maths proficiency nearly 50 per cent of the time; those not working with EES accomplished this just five per cent of the time. No, that last one is not a typo. Meanwhile, science proficiency in high school students showed much the same pattern: At high schools that worked with EES, 60 per cent of students were found to be proficient; in other schools, just 35 per cent were proficient. There is a lesson in this, not just for education, but for the political culture that helped spawn its slippery slide downwards. From this issue, to health care, to the environment and beyond, we must repair our fraying culture, and good policy will follow. Only then might we once again become what Puritan settler John Winthrop saw as “a shining city upon a hill”. This column was first published at Al Jazeera English Follow me on Twitter @cliffschecter
Continue reading …Once again this past few weeks, the ongoing education debate in the United States occupied the headlines, bylines and cable news scrolls. NBC launched its second annual “Education Nation Summit”, billed as a way “to engage the country in a solutions-focused conversation about the state of education in America”. Meanwhile, President Obama, approaching warp speed on the campaign trail to try to convince us he’s actually the transformational guy from 2008 – as opposed to the chary chap we’ve found running our country since – made a fresh pitch in his weekly radio address for his version of education reform. Obama tied it to the economic future of our country, and discussed waivers to allow states to opt out of provisions of his predecessor’s much-maligned legislation, the No Child Left Behind Act. Of course, the problem is that we’re not having an honest conversation about education in the US, because many of the broader trends degrading our overall political culture are also at work with this issue. Although some people really want to improve the system for our children, there are also those who see our schools as a way to bring about their vision of a 21st-century America – which sometimes looks a lot like 1984. This whole cast of characters will seem familiar – much like that coffee stain you just can’t get out of the carpet, or overacting in a Nicolas Cage movie. First, there is the science-despising Christian Right, who think school is for fairy tales and the teachings of the unimpeachable sources at their weekly snake handling. If their Bible said that gravity didn’t exist, it wouldn’t. If you walked off a building and fell straight to the pavement a la “The Happening”, it would be your fault for a three-martini lunch you had in April of 1996, or for being married as many times as Rush Limbaugh. Don’t fool yourself into thinking these people don’t have a lot of influence. If you don’t believe me, see “Texas Board of Education” and “textbooks”. So is it any wonder, then, that in December 2010 the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development released a study showing the US ranking 17th in the world in science and 25th in maths? Just spitballing here, but it would appear that there is this strange relationship between teaching kids maths and science and their learning … maths and science. Who knew? But those who would put “intelligent design” on par with scientific theory are not the only problem. Predatory corporate entities have jumped head-over-heels onto the education-reform bandwagon. It provides numerous benefits to investors – in the form of a huge tax windfall known as the New Markets Tax Credit – realised by investing in the infrastructure of privately owned charter schools. Bonus: There’s always the more-fun-than-foosball opportunity to bash public-sector unions comprised of teachers, which has occurred in states like Ohio and Wisconsin. This is not to say that there are not genuine reformers pushing for positive changes to our education system. I have a friend I knew growing up who came from a working-class section of Staten Island who is passionate about education. He started a charter school in East Harlem that has been thriving. Additionally, I’ve worked with an education expert named Dr Steve Edwards, nationally recognised for his leadership of East Hartford High School in Connecticut. During Edwards’ tenure, violence at the school has dropped by 50 per cent and dropout rates have fallen below two per cent. His firm, Edwards Education Associates (EES), emphasises cultural factors in its programmes to improve schools, such as facilitating communication between teachers, students, administrators and parents, and teaching leadership skills to students that instil them with the confidence to succeed. Overall, EES uses data-driven methods to individually address the myriad different challenges at different public schools. It may not be as sexy as testing – but it works. In fact, to Edwards and his associates, the testing fad that has become as ubiquitous as bad cafeteria food is a faulty one-size-fits-all solution, often leading teachers to “teach to the test”. According to Edwards, “testing should be about 20 per cent of the pie, not 90 per cent as some want it to be. Testing simply can’t capture many significant factors that need to be addressed to turn around schools.” Of course, it doesn’t hurt that whole industries have been erected, much like Roman arches, in homage to the glory that is testing and test preparation – just another reason some in the corporate boardrooms may have suddenly (hallelujah!) seen the light in the school classroom. But here is something with which it is hard to argue. In the Toledo, Ohio public school system, EES worked with 47 high schools out of 61 overall. The ones that hired EES accomplished 75 per cent of the goals set by the district, while the others achieved about 10 per cent of them. Elementary students working with EES reached maths proficiency nearly 50 per cent of the time; those not working with EES accomplished this just five per cent of the time. No, that last one is not a typo. Meanwhile, science proficiency in high school students showed much the same pattern: At high schools that worked with EES, 60 per cent of students were found to be proficient; in other schools, just 35 per cent were proficient. There is a lesson in this, not just for education, but for the political culture that helped spawn its slippery slide downwards. From this issue, to health care, to the environment and beyond, we must repair our fraying culture, and good policy will follow. Only then might we once again become what Puritan settler John Winthrop saw as “a shining city upon a hill”. This column was first published at Al Jazeera English Follow me on Twitter @cliffschecter
Continue reading …