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I’ve been looking over the Gang of Six’s bipartisan class war manifesto . Uh, politicians? Although it’s unlikely, you may successfully shove these radical and undemocratic changes down our collective throat (if the House progressives let you), but you can’t make us go along with your pretense. You all keep talking about “shared sacrifice” and “belt-tightening” when there’s an 16% or so effective unemployment rate, wages are continuing their 30-year decline , jobs are non-existent and millions have lost their homes . For far too many of us , if we tighten our belts any more, we’ll break our backs! Meanwhile, Wall Street is doing better than ever . In what universe is this “shared” sacrifice? So here’s my question to the gentlemen millionaires of the Senate, and their dear friend in the White House: When is it your turn? Where’s your pain? We already had our turn. No more. Economist Dean Baker says it’s “striking” that the Gang of Six chose to respond to the crisis created by the collapse of the housing bubble by developing a plan that will give even more money to top Wall Street executives and traders – by taking it from little old ladies’ Social Security. And just to add insult to injury, there’s an upcoming series of trade deal votes that amount to a series of setbacks for American workers and taxpayers, unions and public interest groups. But hey, it makes it easier for the Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of manufacturers to offshore jobs — and to keep their corporate tax havens. It just makes me long for the days when we had actual, ass-kicking Democrats: Just a little historical deja vu…. Have you already contributed your share of pain? Nope. Not when those poor bankers still have those high co-op fees! 0% (0 votes) Are you kidding me? I’m reading this in the library because I can’t get cable in a cardboard box. 0% (0 votes) Look, politicians wouldn’t ask us to do anything that wasn’t for our own best interests. 0% (0 votes) Take this pain and shove it. We’ve had enough. 0% (0 votes) 0 votes

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School league tables to exclude thousands of vocational qualifications

Schools can still offer range of courses but only results in most rigorous qualifications will count under government plans Thousands of vocational qualifications which do not offer pupils a chance to go on to further study after 16 are due to be stripped out of school league tables, the government has announced. Qualifications such as an NVQ level 2 in hairdressing, which is worth the equivalent of six GCSEs, and an OCR level 2 national certificate in travel and tourism – worth four GCSEs – are likely to be ditched. But ministers are expected to allow graded music exams to count as the equivalent of a GCSE from 2014. Music exams are currently given the same value as part of a GCSE. Schools will still have the freedom to offer a range of courses but only results in the most rigorous qualifications will boost their position in league tables. Ministers are proposing that qualifications should count only if they have been taught for at least two years and have good levels of take-up among students. Pupils must also be offered “good progression” into post-16 courses rather than a limited number of occupational areas. The qualifications must also have a substantial proportion of external assessment. More than 4,800 qualifications currently count towards school results whether or not they include external assessment. Only two non-GCSEs will be allowed to count towards the existing five A* to C GCSE benchmark of success, the government says. The number of “equivalent” qualifications taken in schools up to 16 has boomed in recent years from 15,000 in 2004 to 575,000 in 2010. The proposed changes follow a review of vocational education carried out by Professor Alison Wolf, a public policy expert. She argues that pupils need to acquire “broad skills” to enable them to thrive over a lifetime of change. Wolf said: “In recent years schools have been under enormous pressure to pile up league-table points. When any qualification under the sun can contribute these, the pernicious effects are obvious. We need a single list of good qualifications, which all have the same key structural characteristics, but cover a wide range of content. They need to be stretching, standardised, and to fit easily into a typical pupil’s programme and into a school’s overall timetable.” The government confirmed on Wednesday that the makeup of the English baccalaureate will stay the same for the next set of league tables, which will be published in January based on this year’s results. Pupils’ results will count towards the EBacc if they achieve a C or better at GCSE in English, maths, geography or history, the sciences and a modern or ancient language. Brian Gates, chair of the Religious Education Council of England and Wales, accused the government of undermining religious education by not including it. He said: “The rigorous study of ethics, faiths and beliefs allows those selecting GCSE RE to develop strong written and verbal skills, as well as to gain a factual knowledge of the world we live in. It is a travesty that as we face challenges of cohesion and a weakening of our collective identity, the very subject that can make sense of it all has been deemed less academically viable than geography and history.” Vocational education Education policy School tables Further education Schools Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk

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Goran Hadzic capture a milestone for Yugoslav war crimes tribunal

Arrest of Milosevic puppet accused over massacre of hospital patients after Vukovar siege clears obstacle to Serbia joining EU The Yugoslav war crimes tribunal crowned 18 years of operations on Wednesday with the capture of the last of 161 suspects from the wars of the 1990s when Goran Hadzic, a leader of the Serbian insurgency in Croatia, was arrested by the Serbian authorities. The arrest, two months after Belgrade captured genocide suspect General Ratko Mladic and dispatched him for trial in The Hague, marked a turning point for Serbia in seeking to put a blood-soaked, criminalised past behind it and join the European mainstream. The arrest was also a big moment for the UN tribunal in The Hague. Every one of the 161 main war crimes suspects indicted for atrocities in Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, and Kosovo has now been apprehended and tried or is awaiting trial. “This is a precedent of enduring significance, not only for this tribunal, but also for international criminal justice more generally,” said Serge Brammertz, the chief prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague. “A milestone in the tribunal’s history,” added Judge O-Gon Kwon, the acting head of the temporary court established in 1993 at the height of the wars in Croatia and Bosnia. Hadzic, a former warehouse worker from Slavonia, a region in east Croatia, was a political leader of the Serbian rebellion in 1991, armed and sponsored by Slobodan Milosevic’s regime in Belgrade. He led ethnic pogroms and armed insurrection against Zagreb, after Croatia’s secession from Yugoslavia in June 1991, resulting in partition of the country and the Serbian seizure of a quarter of the territory during the war. Hadzic was president of the self-styled breakaway Serbian republic in Croatia for almost two years in 1992-93. He was indicted seven years ago and faces 14 counts of crimes against humanity and violating the laws of war for “persecutions on political, racial and religious grounds; extermination; murder; imprisonment; torture; inhumane acts; deportation; inhumane acts (forcible transfers)”, according to the charge sheet. A puppet of the Milosevic regime, Hadzic was a local leader of the campaign to expel Croats from a third of Croatia and annex the territory to a “Greater Serbia” also including half of Bosnia. The campaign ended in disaster, although today’s leader of the Serbian half of Bosnia, Milorad Dodik, regularly threatens to break away and destroy the country 16 years after the war ended. Helped by the then Serbian government, Hadzic went into hiding when indicted by the tribunal in 2004. Detectives from The Hague tracked him to his house in Novi Sad, north of Belgrade, but the authorities failed to seize him. He was arrested in the hills of northern Serbia where he was rumoured to enjoy the shelter of an Orthodox monastery. The most notorious of his alleged crimes concerns the murders of some 250 hospital patients in Vukovar, on Croatia’s Danube river border with Serbia in November 1991. The Serbs laid siege to the town for three months, shelling it to rubble. When Vukovar fell, the patients were taken to a pig farm and murdered in what acquired infamy as the Ovcara massacre. “Justice is slow, but achievable,” said the Croatian president, Ivo Josipovic, after the arrest of Hadzic, who had worked in Vukovar before the war. A more obscure figure than Mladic or Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serb leader being tried in The Hague, Hadzic was the last of that troika whom Serbia needed to capture and extradite to secure a future as a democracy and eventual accession to the European Union. EU and Nato leaders applauded the government of President Boris Tadic in Belgrade for delivering the last of the suspected war criminals. “This is a further important step for Serbia in realising its European perspective. We salute the determination and commitment of Serbia’s leadership in this effort,” said an EU statement. “The really really major obstacles are gone,” an EU official added. The arrest and imminent transfer to The Hague improves Serbia’s chances of getting a go-ahead in October or November to start negotiations to join the EU. Croatia has just completed that six-year task. War criminals apart, Serbia’s EU prospects will hinge even more greatly on settling its dispute with Kosovo, the Albanian-majority province which declared independence in 2008, but which Belgrade refuses to recognise and pledges never to give up. The first negotiations between the two sides, mediated by the EU, opened earlier this year. After a promising start, they have just broken down. Robert Cooper, the EU official in charge, postponed a session scheduled on Wednesday until September. Diplomats in Brussels said the talks on energy, telecommunications, and cross-border trade broke down because the Serbs would not agree to new customs stamps on Kosovo exports. “It became clear there was no chance. It’s not moving anywhere,” said an EU official. More ominously, Tadic has revived talk of partitioning Kosovo, alarming the British, European and US governments. “One should not marvel at the idea regarding the division of Kosovo since it has been present in the Serbian public for a while,” Tadic said in May, prompting a furious Kosovo response. “On Monday, Tadic proposes Kosovo’s partition, on Tuesday he talks about exchange of territories, on Wednesday he suggests creating mono-ethnic states in the Balkans,” said Enver Hoxhai, the Kosovo foreign minister, last month. “The borders of the Balkans are established and stable and the issues of sovereignty and territory are closed.” Last week in Croatia William Burns, the US under-secretary of state, sent a strong signal to Tadic. “Serbia faces unique challenges in joining the EU. Serbia needs to find a way to come to terms with the reality of Kosovo,” he said. “There is simply no possible way for borders in this region to be redrawn along ethnically clean lines. Any rhetoric calling for the partition of Kosovo will not advance Serbia’s strategic goal of European integration.” On Monday, David Lidington, the minister for Europe, said: “The frontiers in the Balkans have been drawn and there is no going back on Kosovo’s independence. Regional co-operation must be addressed in the context of an accession process for Serbia and a full European perspective for Kosovo.” Serbia War crimes Croatia European Union Europe Ian Traynor guardian.co.uk

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Open Thread: GOP Presidential Hopefuls Break Ranks With Party on Cut, Cap, and Balance

Last night, nine Republicans and five Democrats broke with their parties on the Cut, Cap, and Balance Act, which would require a balanced budget amendment if the debt ceiling were to be raised. Two of the Republicans who voted against it were presidential hopefuls: Rep. Michele Bachmann (Minn.) and Rep. Ron Paul (Texas), both of whom believe the act doesn't goes far enough. Bachmann instead offered her own version of the act which would include a repeal of ObamaCare, while Paul argued for even greater cuts to entitlement and military spending. Check out what they had to say after the break, and let us know if you think this will bode well for their 2012 campaigns in the comments. Bachmann explained to her South Carolina audience, “In signing the pledge, I am adding a line. I also pledge that along with cutting spending, putting in place enforceable spending caps, and passing a balanced budget amendment, we must repeal and defund ObamaCare.” She has also refused to raise the debt ceiling under any circumstance, reminding her audience, “I continue to stand for voting against increasing the debt ceiling.” ( Video via Politico ) Paul released a statement

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"Turkey Talk" Could Start Today on Debt Deal

President Barack Obama says congressional leaders will “start talking turkey” as soon as today on a deal to reduce the deficit and raise the debt limit. Last night the House passed a plan that would slash trillions in spending. (July 20)

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Cameron addresses phone-hacking scandal as MPs slam cops

PM Cameron addresses hacking allegations London (CNN) — Prime Minister David Cameron told British lawmakers Wednesday that if he knew then what he knows now about his former communications director, former News of the World editor Andy Coulson, he would not have offered him the job. He spoke at a heated session in the House of Commons where he was grilled over his relationships with those at the heart of a phone-hacking scandal at the News of the World. The session grew so contentious that legislators were reminded at least twice to be quiet and let the prime minister have his say. Cameron’s appearance in parliament shifted the focus in a burgeoning scandal squarely to the political realm….

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The House of Representatives passed the Tea Party-backed “cut, cap and balance” plan today, sending the measure to the Senate, where it stands next to no chance of passing. The measure, which requires trillions in spending cuts and a balanced-budget amendment to the Constitution in return for raising the debt…

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Washington (CNN)-The debt debate got ugly over the internet between two Florida representatives on either side of the House aisle….

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Ore. Suspect in 5 Deaths Was Convicted Molester

An Oregon man suspected of killing his wife and four children and setting fire to their house had been convicted of molesting children in California 21 years ago. (July 19)

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Ore. Suspect in 5 Deaths Was Convicted Molester

An Oregon man suspected of killing his wife and four children and setting fire to their house had been convicted of molesting children in California 21 years ago. (July 19)

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