Socialists and other left-wing parties captured the French Senate in yesterday’s elections for the first time since the founding of the Fifth Republic in 1958, reports the BBC . France’s sputtering economy and high unemployment, combined with divisions among the right, caused the dramatic shift. This “will go down in history,…
Continue reading …Moneyball may have scored a homerun with critics , but at the end of the weekend the only number that mattered was 3D, as Disney’s souped-up re-release of its 17-year-old The Lion King topped the box office for the second weekend in a row. The Lion King earned another $22.1…
Continue reading …Holy hell. The popular evangelical preacher who dared to say that God just maybe loves everyone, and questioned the eternal existence of hell has quit his Michigan megachurch to pursue “strategic opportunities.” Rob Bell’s book Love Wins discussing his radical ideas sparked a furious controversy among conservative evangelical theologians. Bell…
Continue reading …NHS takes 70 referrals to treatment centre for new generation of designer drugs before its official launch The first NHS clinic to treat people addicted to so-called clubbing drugs has opened, with 70 referrals already after people found it online ahead of the official launch. Nobody knows the scale of the problem that drugs such as ketamine, mephedrone and GHB or GBL may be causing the predominantly young people who take them when they go clubbing. Existing drug treatment centres were set up primarily to tackle more established abused drugs, such as heroin and cocaine, while GPs and other doctors are not well versed in the effects and dangers of the new drugs. Dr Owen Bowden-Jones, an addiction psychiatrist who has set up the Club Drug Clinic with funding from Central and North-west London NHS Foundation Trust, said those who take club drugs tend to be younger, employed and sometimes affluent. They are often in relationships and don’t necessarily identify themselves as addicts. But the need for a treatment centre became apparent during a pilot phase of the clinic before the official launch, when 70 people found it through the internet and called up or asked for a referral from a doctor. One was a 19-year-old student studying economics. He had first snorted methadone three years before and enjoyed it, said Bowden-Jones, but had developed a “binging pattern”. He took 7 grams most days at a cost of about £140 a week, which caused him fatigue and damaged his academic performance. A second applicant was a 27-year-old man who lived with his partner and worked as an administrator. “He first used GBL five years ago. Now he uses 2ml every hour and sets the alarm clock so he can dose himself through the night,” said Bowden-Jones. He was desperate to avoid withdrawal symptoms, which the consultant psychiatrist described as “horrendous”, and included tremors, sweating, agitation, hallucination and insomnia. Another was a 31-year-old woman who worked for a recruitment agency and had used a variety of drugs with friends in her twenties. When her friends started cutting down, she found she could not. She was spending £600 a month on ketamine which had led to ulcers forming on the inside of her bladder, which caused her to pass blood. She may need her bladder removed. All three were being successfully treated for their addiction, said Bowden-Jones, who recognised there would be plenty of clubbers using drugs without consequences. “If someone is using a substance and not having any problems with it, our clinic is not the place for them. We are not making any judgment about people’s drug use. The resource is for people who run into trouble.” About a quarter of 16 to 19-year-olds have used an illegal drug in the past year, compared with 9% of the adult population, he said. Among clubbers, crack cocaine and heroin, which most clinics treat, are least used – at 13.6% and 6.7% respectively. Clubbers are more likely to try new designer drugs that are being constantly produced in a bid to outstrip the authorities. Last year, 41 new substances were produced and a further 20 appeared in the first four months of this year. An outcry over mephedrone, known as “meow meow”, which had been a “legal high” for some time and sold as plant food, led to it being banned last year. However, the British Crime Survey showed the move made little difference to the drug’s popularity. New or slightly altered chemical substances are turning up on the club scene much faster than they can be identified and banned. Drugs Health NHS Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …High court extends injunction to stop evictions by Basildon council at illegal Travellers’ site in Essex Residents have won another temporary reprieve in their long-running battle to stay on the UK’s biggest illegal Travellers’ site. A judge in the high court ruled on Monday that residents of Dale Farm near Basildon in Essex were entitled to an extension of an injunction to stop their evictions until the courts have ruled on the legality of their proposed removal. The ruling was a blow to Basildon council, which is facing additional legal action that could prolong its 10-year battle to clear the site, expected to cost £18m. Travellers have more litigation in the pipeline which could further delay evictions. They plan to seek a judicial review on the grounds that eviction is “disproportionate” under human rights laws. On Sunday night the Travellers’ supporters called on council representatives to “return to the negotiating table”, saying that continuing the action will only see costs spiral even further out of control. The campaign group Dale Farm Solidarity (DFS) said several high-profile figures had offered to mediate, including bishops Thomas McMahon and Stephen Cottrell, UN representatives and the local MEP Richard Howitt. Kate O’Shea, from DFS, said: “We call on Tony Ball [the council leader] to return to the negotiation table. “The situation at Dale Farm needs a sensible and common sense approach and we urge all parties to use this pause to find an amicable solution. “The UN and two local bishops have offered to mediate any talks should this be required, and we urge Tony Ball to accept their offer.” The Gypsy Council echoed the calls, saying it had become clear during Friday’s hearing that the site would not necessarily be returned to open countryside even if the eviction went ahead. In a statement it said: “Pursuing this eviction would be a bad thing for both sides.” Dale Farm Roma, Gypsies and Travellers guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Shadow chancellor proposes help for homeowners and small businesses and repeat of bankers’ bonus tax – using the money to guarantee 100,000 jobs and build 25,000 homes Follow all the latest developments on our Labour conference live blog The shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, has set out a five-point growth package including slashing VAT to 5% for home improvements and a one-year small firms national insurance tax holiday for taking on extra workers. He also reaffirmed previous proposals to reverse January’s VAT rise from 17.5% to 20% and promised a repeat of this year’s bankers’ bonus tax, using the money to guarantee 100,000 jobs for young people and building 25,000 affordable homes. He also said the government should bring forward genuine long-term investment projects covering schools roads and transports, but did not put a figure on this. There was no costing for his overall proposals but his aides said the targeted VAT cut for the housing industry would cost between £100m and £500m, adding similar targeted VAT cuts were being tried in France. The national insurance holiday for small business taking on extra staff would be funded from money left over from the government’s failed national insurance rebate fund. Ministers had originally set aside £1bn for this fund. Balls in interviews afterwards said he could not specify how much extra spending he was proposing over the government’s spending plans. He also made a series of admissions about Labour mistakes in government and promised he would set up tough fiscal rules monitored by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBS). He also admitted he could not promise to reverse every Tory spending cut. In a shift of tone, reflecting Labour’s current low credibility on the economy, he said: “No matter how much we dislike particular Tory sending cuts or tax rises we cannot make promises now to reverse them.” He added: “I won’t do that and neither will any of my shadow cabinet colleagues.” He added: “We still know today what we recognised 17 years ago, we will never have the credibility unless we have the discipline and strength to take tough decisions.” He said he “always knew that a reputation for credibility and a platform for stability were the essential preconditions for achieving [Labour's] goals”. He promised discipline in pay, adding: “We cannot duck difficult decisions on pensions,” and that under Labour contributions and the retirement age would be rising too. But the bulk of his speech was an attack on the Conservative-led coalition for continuing to cut at a time when unemployment was rising and growth faltering. Plan A was not working, he said. Balls ridiculed the idea that Britain was a safe haven and said he did not believe there was any risk of retribution from the fund markets if the government spent more. But he added he did not know what the debt levels will have reached by the end of November when growth figures are published. Underling the scale of the crisis the shadow chancellor said: “These are the darkest, most dangerous times for the global economy in my lifetime. Our country – the whole of the world – is facing a threat that most of us only have ever read about in the history books – a lost decade of economic stagnation.” He said: “This is not a crisis of debt as the government claims, which can be solved country by country, by austerity, cuts and retrenchment, but truly a global growth crisis which is deepening and becoming more dangerous by the day.” He said: “The world must learn the lessons of the 30s. There is no credibility [in] piling austerity on austerity, tax rise on tax rise, cut upon cut in the eventual hope that it will work when the evidence is pointing the other way.” He claimed Labour had shown discipline in office and rejected suggestions that Gordon Brown’s Treasury had spent too heavily in advance of the banking crash in 2008. Balls said: “Don’t let anyone tell you that a Labour government was profligate with public money. When we went into the crisis with lower national debt than we inherited in 1997, and lower than America, France, Germany and Japan. Don’t let anyone say it was the public spending on public services here in Britain which caused the global financial crisis.” But he added: “We did not get everything right, we made mistakes”. The list of Labour errors offered by Balls included “the 75p pension rise, we did not do enough to get all employers to train, we should have adopted tougher controls on migration from eastern Europe, we did not spend every pound of public money well. And yes we did not regulate the banks toughly enough and stop their gross irresponsibility.” All these apologies have been made before either by Tony Blair, Brown or Balls himself. Blair apologised for the 75p pension rise a decade ago. John Cridland, the CBI director general, said: “Labour has form spending money it does not really have.” He questioned whether the five-point plan was affordable, adding the reversal of the VAT rise could cost billions. But he welcomed proposals to help the young unemployed. Labour conference 2011 Ed Balls Economic policy Tax and spending Labour Labour conference Economic growth (GDP) Economics Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The new documentary “American Teacher” argues that the country’s 3.2 million teachers are under-compensated and under-valued. The film profiles four enthusiastic public school teachers who are struggling to survive on their salaries. One teacher reluctantly leaves his job for a better salary as a real estate agent. (A former student of his tells the camera
Continue reading …A former top White House economics adviser is hitting back against criticism of her one-time boss’s jobs plan. In a New York Times op-ed article, Christina Romer, who chaired the White House Council of Economic Advisers from 2009 to 2010, takes on four distinct arguments against the plan, which is currently being considered by Congress.
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