After comedian Bill Maher referred to Sarah Palin as a derogatory term for a vagina a little over week a ago, NewsBusters asked , “Can the dreaded C-word be far behind?” According to the Dallas Voice, this happened on Sunday while Maher was “performing” at the Winspear Opera House (photo courtesy Reuters): It’s that fearlessness — he acknowledged that some people would probably be uncomfortable with some of his remarks about religion, not to mention calling Sarah Palin a “cunt” (“there’s just no other word for her”) — that makes Maher the most dangerous person in comedy. For those unfamiliar, the Winspear Opera House is indeed where the Dallas Opera performs. Seems a metaphysical certitude that word isn't uttered on that stage very often. The reviewer – writing at the self-described “Premier Media Source For LGBT Texas” – noted: Maher spoke the truth for a nearly two-hour set, and, in my mind, established himself as the pre-eminent political commentator of a generation. He’s a comedian, too, of course. But really, he’s a voice. And that's what makes him dangerous, not just to the right but to all Americans. Maher is indeed doing political commentary. When he gets interviewed by CNN, MSNBC, or any of the broadcast network news programs, it's not to do one-liners.
Continue reading …Shanghai Volkswagen to Recall Over 24000 Cars Lexus Recall, VW to Build Indy Engines? – Autoline Daily 61 VOLKSWAGEN ANNOUNCES VOLUNTARY SAFETY RECALL OF 71000 2011 MODEL … Volkswagen recall 12612 Routan minivans over ignition key displacement · The New 2011 Volkswagen Jetta (W/Video) · 2011 Volkswagen Jetta leaked images · Spy Photo: 2011 Volkswagen Jetta uncovered with an odd badge … Volkswagen Announces Voluntary Safety Recall of 71000 2011 Model … Tags: Accidents, Alarm System, Herndon Va, Jetta, Jettas, Theft Alarm, Volkswagen, Volkswagen Of America, Volkswagen Of America Inc, Volkswagen Recall , Voluntary Safety. This entry was posted on Monday, March 28th, 2011 at 7:11 pm and … VW Jetta horn, alarm problem prompt 71000-car recall | Car Deal Expert Volkswagen Newsroom. Monday, March 28th, 2011 by. Steve Tarlow. Tags: horn short circuit, jetta recall, jetta wiring problem, volkswagen recall , vw jetta horn problem, vw jetta recall, vw recall. Category: Auto News … Volkswagen recalls 71043 Jettas in the U.S – FreeHindu – An Online … … bought in between this period would be notified of the recall in a few weeks and the changes would be made free of cost. Tags. 71043 jettas, volkswagen, Volkswagen Jetta, Volkswagen recall of jettas, VW spokeswoman Sheriece Matias … Volkswagen recalls 71000 Jettas | Bradenton Sarasota Drigg [Video] Ford, Subaru, Volkswagen among safest new vehicles 1 year 18 weeks ago; Ford, Subaru, Volkswagen win big with Insurance Institute for Highway Safety 1 year 18 weeks ago; [Video] Audi and Volkswagen recall vehicles 1 year 31 … Bananappeal says: RT @commshopp : Volkswagen Recall 2011: Jetta Model List and Serious Wiring Issue: We have some very important news t… http://bit.ly/gIqaKu #shopasone
Continue reading …[PSP] Norma Beatty Arte Exhibition – Tales of the World: Radiant Mythology 3 (HD) The Sheepdogs – How Late How Long BMSchilling’s webcam video March 28, 2011 03:42 PM A Sultry Rihanna Covers Rolling Stone | PopEater.com Rihanna graces the cover of Rolling Stone’s April issue, and the ‘S&M’ singer is bound to turn a few heads with this one. Her barely there. Steven Tyler, the Savior of 'American Idol' | Rolling Stone Culture Oh, Steven Tyler, how could we all have doubted you? As soon as the news broke that the notoriously motormouthed Aerosmith stud was taking over the ju. MissInfo.tv » Rihanna Covers Rolling Stone Now the red haired pop star covers the latest issue of Rolling Stone magazine, with a headline caption that reads “Pop’s Queen of Pain on Sexting, Bad Boys & Her Attraction to the Dark Side”. You can catch a copy when it hits newsstands … Eight Acts Remain in Rolling Stone Magazine's 'Choose the Cover … The melting-pot popsters are gearing up to release their full-length debut, and while they understand why some have compared Rolling Stone’s contest to ‘American Idol,’ they respect the magazine for letting contestants stick with their … Army: Rolling Stone Photos Of Afghan Killings 'In Striking … OLYMPIA, Wash. — The U.S. Army on Monday apologized for any distress caused by recently published photos of American soldiers posing with dead Afghans, calling their content “disturbing” and “in striking contrast” to the Army’s … nevakares says: Rolling Stone described “the only exception” as a “subtle radioheadesque ballad.” What drugs are they on, specifically?
Continue reading …Alex Jones – March 28 2011 Soros’ Media Matters Declares War On Alternative Media Alex Jones Tv 2 2 Soros’ Media Matters Declares War On Alternative Media -1/2 28 Mar 2011 The KGB of the Left? Media Matters 'Sabatoge' War Against Fox … Politico has a story up about Media Matters that shows just how illegitimate, how low down, how filled with vitriol and hate its efforts to push George Sorros’ left-wing agenda is. Media Matters , you see, has quietly revamped its … media matters | TRENDS GOOGLE Media Matters for America (MMfA) is a progressive media watchdog group which describes itself as “dedicated to comprehensively monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media. … Glenn Beck > :[ @ Media Matters | Mofo Politics Glenn Beck on “O’Reilly Factor” – 3/25/11 3 days ago; Glenn Beck goofs on Alex Jones, Charlie Sheen 3 days ago; Red Eye “Robot Theater” on Media Matters Boot Camp 5 days ago; Glenn Beck on “O’Reilly Factor” – 3/17/11 11 days ago … Media Matters Declares War Against Fox News | Hot News Today Information and news about Media Matters , the left wing media watchdog group, has dropped its mission of being a media critic, mostly of those it perceives as right wing venues, and in Hot News Today. The KGB of the Left? Media Matters 'Sabatoge' War Against Fox … Politico has a programme up most Media Matters that shows foregather how illegitimate, how baritone down, how filled with acid and dislike its efforts to near martyr Sorros’ left-wing itemize is. Media Matters , you see, … AbleGoodman says: RT @BreitbartVideo Rush: Media Matters ‘War On Fox’ Is Breaking The Law – They Are A Partisan Political Group: http://bit.ly/gFKLn0
Continue reading …Libya – President Obama Addresses the Nation on Libya – PART 1 of 2 Democrats React to Obama’s Libya Speech.flv Obama’s Speech on His Invasion of Libya (Filled with Lies & Hubris) – PT 2 of 2 Obama's Speech , RealClearWorld – The Compass Blog Obama’s Speech . Posted by Greg Scoblete at 7:38 PM. President Obama offered a very strong humanitarian case for American intervention in Libya. The crux: It is true that America cannot use our military wherever repression occurs. … Will Obama Speech Address Region, or Just Libya? – NYTimes.com President Obama will seek to answer what the White House calls “legitimate” questions about the American involvement in the war in Libya. Text Of President Obama's Speech On The Situation In Libya | TPM … The White House has released the text of President Obama’s address on Libya, as prepared for delivery. Here’s the full text: Good evening. Tonight, I’d like to update the American people on the international effort that we have led in. Scott White: Obama's Speech on Libya (I WIsh) The following is a confidential, annotated first draft of the speech President Obama plans on giving to the nation Monday night about US involvement in Libya. It has reached The Huffington Post through an unauthorized disclosure, … Riehl World View: Sen. Rand Paul responds to Obama's speech on Libya Jennifer of Cubachi Senator Rand Paul gave a response to President Obama’s Libya speech. He is as puzzled as most of us over what the mission is in Libya, and he also asks why Obama consulted with the UN… Sean_Coppernoll says: #Palin admits #Obama speech confusing. Seems eloquence and integrity confound her.
Continue reading …Geoff Berg & Gary Polland Discuss Obama’s Libya Speech Democrats React to Obama’s Libya Speech.flv President Obama’s Speech on Libya Pajamas Media » Drunkblogging Obama's Libya Speech Drunkblogging Obama’s Libya Speech . A time-limited, vermouth-limited overserved kinetic martini-action cocktail operation. (Watch the president’s speech and follow-up reaction live, cocktails optional, at PJTV.) … Obama Libya Speech Fudges the Details – The Daily Beast The president’s Libya speech may have been a strong oration, but it fudged a few key elements, from why we responded to Gaddafi to whether we’re at war, says Howard Kurtz. Obama's Libya Speech : America's “Unique Role” in the World … I’ll have a longer analysis of Barack Obama’s speech about Libya later tonight. But my thumbnail take is that Obama delivered a thoughtful speech, one in the tradition of the Washington foreign policy establishment, which managed to … Barack Obama's Libya Speech – Swampland – TIME.com A White House briefing on Libya today, featuring deputy national security advisor Denis McDonough, shed little new light on the ongoing kinetic military operation in North Africa. Obama's Libya speech Obama’s Libya speech . I was struck by a singular observation that puts Obama’s soaring paean to freedom in its proper context. Sayeth Obama, “Born as we are out of a revolution by those who longed to be free, we welcome the fact that … adleyb says: Thought Obama #libya speech was an inspiring argument that managed to convince this skeptic and hopefully many others. Job well done #POTUS
Continue reading …According to Ofsted, history is successful in schools. Not so, says controversial historian Niall Ferguson : the inspectors are missing the ruination of the subject Is there a crisis in the teaching of history in British schools? Not if you believe the conclusions of History for All, the report published earlier this month by Ofsted. Based on evidence from inspections conducted between 2007 and 2010 in 83 primary schools and the same number of secondary schools, the report begins on a reassuringly positive note. “There was much that was good and outstanding” in the history lessons the inspectors observed. “Most pupils enjoyed well-planned lessons that extended their knowledge, challenged their thinking and enhanced their understanding.” In secondary schools, we are assured, “effective teaching by well-qualified and highly competent teachers enabled the majority of students to develop knowledge and understanding in depth”. In short, history is “generally a popular and successful subject, which many pupils enjoy”. Attainment at the secondary level is “high and continu[ing] to rise”. Well, that’s all right then. Clearly, all last year’s talk by Michael Gove, Simon Schama, myself and others about the urgent need for reform was mere alarmism, doubtless actuated by some sinister political motive. Or was it? A closer look at the main body of the report suggests that there are indeed grounds for concern. First, it can hardly be a cause of celebration that students in independent schools are almost twice as likely to study GCSE history as those in maintained schools. In 2010, more than a hundred state secondary schools entered no students for GCSE history. Second, as the inspectors’ report acknowledges, England is the only country in Europe where history is not compulsory for students beyond the age of 14. Worse, many state schools now offer a two-year key stage 3 course, which allows some pupils to stop studying history at the age of 13. And here are four more facts that are not in the Ofsted report: • 25% of all schools no longer teach history as a discrete subject in year 7 • 30% of comprehensives spend less than one hour a week on history in the years up to age 13 • More GCSE candidates took design and technology than history last year • More A-level candidates took psychology. It is a paradox indeed. History has never been more popular outside schools than it is in Britain today. Yet history has never been so unpopular in British schools. Even more disturbing is the evidence of widespread historical ignorance among school-leavers. A recent survey of first-year undergraduates reading history at a reputable UK university found that: 66% did not know who was monarch at time of the Armada; 69% did not know the location of the Boer war; 84% did not know who commanded British forces at Waterloo (a third thought it was Nelson); and 89% could not name a single 19th-century British prime minister. Such evidence should make us very sceptical indeed about Ofsted’s claim that history is “a successful subject in schools”. How did we get here? The problem is surely not poor teaching. Rather, it is the stuff that teachers are expected to do, which is the product of an unholy alliance between well-meaning politicians and educationalists, not forgetting over-mighty examination boards. The politicians ranged from Kenneth Baker, who vainly hoped that a new national curriculum would force schools to teach a rather traditional kind of history, to Gordon Brown, who decided (Scotsman as he was) that schools should be pressed to teach British rather than English history, in order to promote a sense of “Britishness”. Such initiatives from above provided the proponents of a so-called new history with a golden opportunity to reshape historical education. Historical “skills” such as source analysis, they argued, should be elevated above mere factual knowledge. And “discovery” by children should count for more than dusty old pedagogy. The result was a national curriculum designed to instil in schoolchildren all kinds of “key concepts” like “chronological understanding”, “cultural, ethnic and religious diversity”, “change and continuity”, “cause and consequence”, “significance” and “interpretation”. And these were to be taught with reference to an impressively wide range of subject matter. Who could possibly object to such an enlightened scheme? The trouble is not so much with the theory as with the practice that has evolved in too many schools. As Ofsted admits in a damning passage on primary pupils, “some … found it difficult to place the historical episodes they had studied within any coherent, long-term narrative. They knew about particular events, characters and periods, but did not have an overview. Their chronological understanding was often underdeveloped and so they found it difficult to link developments together.” The only thing wrong with this observation is that Ofsted seems to think it applies only to primary school pupils, whereas it could equally well be applied to those in secondary school – and students at a good few universities, too. In fact, as the inspectors concede elsewhere, in 28 of the 58 secondary schools they visited, “students’ chronological understanding was not sufficiently well developed: they had … a poor sense of the historical narrative”. This is hardly a minor deficiency. It’s a bit like saying that maths is a successful subject in British schools, apart from the fact that pupils in half of schools can’t count. I have complained before that it is possible to leave school in England knowing only about Henry VIII, Hitler and Martin Luther King Jr. This is a caricature, admittedly, but it is not a wholly unfair one. Commenting on a not untypical primary curriculum, the authors of History for All say that “its principal weaknesses are the disconnected topics and the potential for the pupils to be left with a fragmented overview”. You can say that again. Consider this list of topics spread in this order over four years: • Romans and Celts – why have people invaded and settled? • Ancient Egypt – what can we find out from what has survived? • What can we learn about history by studying a famous person? • Why did Henry VIII marry six times? • Tudor times – rich and poor; exploration • What was it like to live here in the past? • Victorian children • Victorians – how your area has changed since the Victorian era • The second world war • Ancient Greeks • Britain since 1948 The word smorgasbord doesn’t really do justice to this random assortment. Lost, as Simon Schama has justly lamented, is the “long arc of time”, to be replaced by odds and sods. And some of those odds really are odd, especially if you go on to GCSE and A-level, where the “methods” become ever more idiosyncratic. If you really want to understand what’s going wrong in English schools, take a look at some of the lessons Ofsted singles out for praise… “Students in year 8 analysed the changing attitudes towards Oliver Cromwell from the 17th to the 20th centuries and, in year
Continue reading …According to Ofsted, history is successful in schools. Not so, says controversial historian Niall Ferguson : the inspectors are missing the ruination of the subject Is there a crisis in the teaching of history in British schools? Not if you believe the conclusions of History for All, the report published earlier this month by Ofsted. Based on evidence from inspections conducted between 2007 and 2010 in 83 primary schools and the same number of secondary schools, the report begins on a reassuringly positive note. “There was much that was good and outstanding” in the history lessons the inspectors observed. “Most pupils enjoyed well-planned lessons that extended their knowledge, challenged their thinking and enhanced their understanding.” In secondary schools, we are assured, “effective teaching by well-qualified and highly competent teachers enabled the majority of students to develop knowledge and understanding in depth”. In short, history is “generally a popular and successful subject, which many pupils enjoy”. Attainment at the secondary level is “high and continu[ing] to rise”. Well, that’s all right then. Clearly, all last year’s talk by Michael Gove, Simon Schama, myself and others about the urgent need for reform was mere alarmism, doubtless actuated by some sinister political motive. Or was it? A closer look at the main body of the report suggests that there are indeed grounds for concern. First, it can hardly be a cause of celebration that students in independent schools are almost twice as likely to study GCSE history as those in maintained schools. In 2010, more than a hundred state secondary schools entered no students for GCSE history. Second, as the inspectors’ report acknowledges, England is the only country in Europe where history is not compulsory for students beyond the age of 14. Worse, many state schools now offer a two-year key stage 3 course, which allows some pupils to stop studying history at the age of 13. And here are four more facts that are not in the Ofsted report: • 25% of all schools no longer teach history as a discrete subject in year 7 • 30% of comprehensives spend less than one hour a week on history in the years up to age 13 • More GCSE candidates took design and technology than history last year • More A-level candidates took psychology. It is a paradox indeed. History has never been more popular outside schools than it is in Britain today. Yet history has never been so unpopular in British schools. Even more disturbing is the evidence of widespread historical ignorance among school-leavers. A recent survey of first-year undergraduates reading history at a reputable UK university found that: 66% did not know who was monarch at time of the Armada; 69% did not know the location of the Boer war; 84% did not know who commanded British forces at Waterloo (a third thought it was Nelson); and 89% could not name a single 19th-century British prime minister. Such evidence should make us very sceptical indeed about Ofsted’s claim that history is “a successful subject in schools”. How did we get here? The problem is surely not poor teaching. Rather, it is the stuff that teachers are expected to do, which is the product of an unholy alliance between well-meaning politicians and educationalists, not forgetting over-mighty examination boards. The politicians ranged from Kenneth Baker, who vainly hoped that a new national curriculum would force schools to teach a rather traditional kind of history, to Gordon Brown, who decided (Scotsman as he was) that schools should be pressed to teach British rather than English history, in order to promote a sense of “Britishness”. Such initiatives from above provided the proponents of a so-called new history with a golden opportunity to reshape historical education. Historical “skills” such as source analysis, they argued, should be elevated above mere factual knowledge. And “discovery” by children should count for more than dusty old pedagogy. The result was a national curriculum designed to instil in schoolchildren all kinds of “key concepts” like “chronological understanding”, “cultural, ethnic and religious diversity”, “change and continuity”, “cause and consequence”, “significance” and “interpretation”. And these were to be taught with reference to an impressively wide range of subject matter. Who could possibly object to such an enlightened scheme? The trouble is not so much with the theory as with the practice that has evolved in too many schools. As Ofsted admits in a damning passage on primary pupils, “some … found it difficult to place the historical episodes they had studied within any coherent, long-term narrative. They knew about particular events, characters and periods, but did not have an overview. Their chronological understanding was often underdeveloped and so they found it difficult to link developments together.” The only thing wrong with this observation is that Ofsted seems to think it applies only to primary school pupils, whereas it could equally well be applied to those in secondary school – and students at a good few universities, too. In fact, as the inspectors concede elsewhere, in 28 of the 58 secondary schools they visited, “students’ chronological understanding was not sufficiently well developed: they had … a poor sense of the historical narrative”. This is hardly a minor deficiency. It’s a bit like saying that maths is a successful subject in British schools, apart from the fact that pupils in half of schools can’t count. I have complained before that it is possible to leave school in England knowing only about Henry VIII, Hitler and Martin Luther King Jr. This is a caricature, admittedly, but it is not a wholly unfair one. Commenting on a not untypical primary curriculum, the authors of History for All say that “its principal weaknesses are the disconnected topics and the potential for the pupils to be left with a fragmented overview”. You can say that again. Consider this list of topics spread in this order over four years: • Romans and Celts – why have people invaded and settled? • Ancient Egypt – what can we find out from what has survived? • What can we learn about history by studying a famous person? • Why did Henry VIII marry six times? • Tudor times – rich and poor; exploration • What was it like to live here in the past? • Victorian children • Victorians – how your area has changed since the Victorian era • The second world war • Ancient Greeks • Britain since 1948 The word smorgasbord doesn’t really do justice to this random assortment. Lost, as Simon Schama has justly lamented, is the “long arc of time”, to be replaced by odds and sods. And some of those odds really are odd, especially if you go on to GCSE and A-level, where the “methods” become ever more idiosyncratic. If you really want to understand what’s going wrong in English schools, take a look at some of the lessons Ofsted singles out for praise… “Students in year 8 analysed the changing attitudes towards Oliver Cromwell from the 17th to the 20th centuries and, in year
Continue reading …As BBC director general Mark Thompson discusses cuts, this week we ask whether British TV is in rude health or in need of a prune – starting with entertainment programmes Entertainment programming makes up some of the most watched, most profitable, and at times most controversial television on British screens. Like them or not, our noisy, trashy, shiny-floored shows bring huge ratings and have helped transform Saturday night television. That’s why America bought Pop Idol and turned it into American Idol. It’s why America bought Strictly Come Dancing and turned it into Dancing with the Stars. And it’s why, later this year when millions of Americans turn to each other during US X Factor and shriek “What IS this crap?”, we can all feel proud. That’s our crap, America. Ours. Once we were content to spend our weekends watching Ted Rogers hand over boxes of steak knives to badly permed women from Runcorn – but no more. Now entertainment shows are all about size and spectacle. I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! is broadcast live from the other side of the world. The X Factor is like being punched in the face by an exploding petrol tanker for three months at a time. Question the content if you like – and many, many people do – but these shows are the Clifton suspension bridge of their days. If Brunel could see the engineering that goes into making them, he’d weep. Creatively they’re berserk, too. A woman who inspects poo for a living being trapped in a rat-filled coffin until she faints. Members of the public compete against a 4x4x4 metre Perspex cube. Soon we’ll be watching a show called Sing If You Can where, judging by the international versions , pop stars will belt out tunes while being mauled by a dog. It’s as if production companies have started to plunder avant garde foreign-language horror films for ideas. Of course, the internet has helped. Previously, Saturday evening telly was something you watched alone when everyone else was out having fun. But thanks to Twitter, the world has been transformed into one big living room, where people trade quips and make buzzer noises whenever a Take Me Out contestant drops below their desired level of acceptability. Twitter – not to mention Guardian liveblogs – has made entertainment TV a communal pursuit again. But there is a sense that we might be riding the crest of a particularly perilous wave. Every year The X Factor gets bigger, and every year its ratings swell to ever more ridiculous heights (at one point during last year’s final, 19.4 million people were watching ). But one day, maybe soon, The X Factor will inevitably go in to decline. Perhaps it will finally become too off-puttingly ridiculous for public consumption. Perhaps when the first episode of the next series is broadcast, ITV will realise that it still hasn’t hired any judges. But it will happen. And when it does, the flaws in our entertainment television will be exposed for all to see. For instance, we still don’t have a definitive chatshow. Product-plugging celebrities currently only have the choice of Piers Morgan (unappealing because he’ll make you cry), Top Gear (unappealing because Jeremy Clarkson will berate you for owning a Nissan Sunny once), Graham Norton (unappealing because you’ll just sit quietly for the whole show while he giggles at cat videos on the internet), Alan Carr (unappealing because it takes place in a room that looks like it was used to host wife-swapping parties in the 1970s) and The One Show (unappealing). The UK sorely needs a Letterman-style nightly talkshow that mixes comedy, guests and music. Also, there are a fair few horrors among the hits. Channel 4, for instance, might be the home of The Million Pound Drop – but then it also broadcast the risible Famous and Fearless, a show that assumed that people wanted to see Rufus Hound cycle around a convention centre. While Sky1 has Got To Dance, the nightmare that was Don’t Forget the Lyrics! should never be repeated. And just because we can sell international rights to everything we make, it doesn’t mean we should. America will soon be confronted with 101 Ways to Leave a Gameshow, a remake of a tedious BBC1 misfire from last summer. If any Americans happen to shriek “What IS this crap?” during that, it might be best to keep schtum. The X Factor Television Entertainment Stuart Heritage guardian.co.uk
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