He argues in a speech that teachers cannot be responsible for all society’s problems following last month’s riots The deputy prime minister is to open up a new front in his disagreements with the education secretary, Michael Gove, criticising the recent decision by the Tories to heap responsibility for children’s development on to teachers. Nick Clegg’s aides believe the Conservatives have placed too much emphasis on teachers as arbiters of authority over children in the wake of last month’s riots. Gove is planning to fast-track former soldiers into school to provide children with more male role models. In a speech to teachers and pupils, Clegg will say: “We already expect our teachers to be social workers, child psychologists, nutritionists, child protection officers. We expect them to police the classroom, take care of our children’s health, counsel our sons and daughters, guide them, worry about them – and on top of that, educate them too. “Teachers are not surrogate mothers and fathers. They cannot do it all.” Clegg’s comments come as his party claimed to have reined in Gove’s desire to allow his free schools programme to become profit-making, and that any new wave of free schools had to be in deprived areas. In response to this Lib Dem assertion, Gove refused to rule out profit-making schools as a possibility in the future. Suggesting Clegg’s claim had more to do with positioning himself before his party conference meeting with his activist base than the real state of debate inside the government on free schools, a Gove source went on to rule out the idea that the next wave of free schools would be solely located in deprived areas. The source said the government would not rewrite the rules governing the location of free schools for Clegg and pointed out that half of those approved already were in the most deprived 30% of areas. Analysis conducted by the Guardian suggests this is not true. Clegg will talk about the experience of raising his own children. He will urge parents to take a more active role in supporting their children’s education and warn that he believes teachers cannot “do it all”. Giving children a proper breakfast, reading to them and ensuring the TV is switched off when it is time to do their homework must be the responsibility of families, Clegg says. Clegg, who shares the school run and other childcare duties equally with his wife, says that schools do not expect parents to cut down on their working hours. Instead, he will say: “They just want mothers and fathers to get into simple, commonsense, inexpensive routines.” These include an extra 15 minutes of reading at home and making sure children go to bed on time. Ruling out allowing free schools to be run for a profit, Clegg will say: “To anyone who is worried that, by expanding the mix of providers in our education system, we are inching towards inserting the profit motive into our school system, again, let me reassure you: yes to greater diversity; yes to more choice for parents. But no to running schools for profit, not in our state-funded education sector.” However, the Conservatives are declining to rule this out in future. On Sunday, Gove told the Andrew Marr programme on BBC1: “I’m a pragmatist, not an ideologue. We don’t need to have profit-making organisations involved at the moment.” Gove pointed out that the Conservative election manifesto said profit-making schools were not necessary “at the moment”. Allowing profit-making companies to get involved is one way to fund the building of schools without squeezing the Department for Education’s budget. Gove has already announced plans to build schools under private finance initiatives, which costs taxpayers more in the long term. Clegg is calling for all of the next wave of free schools to be in poorer neighbourhoods or areas in desperate need of extra classroom places. The first wave of 24 free schools is tilted towards middle-class neighbourhoods, according to analysis carried out for the Guardian. The analysis shows the 10-minute commuting areas around free school locations have 57% of better-off, educated and professional households compared with the English average of 42.8%. The government published its own analysis on Sunday which showed that the majority of the first crop of schools were located outside the most deprived neighbourhoods of the country. Just three schools – Nishkam free school, Rainbow primary school and Ark Atwood primary academy – are in the most deprived 10% of areas of England. Nine out of 24 are in the most deprived 20% of areas. The next wave of free schools, due to open next year, is expected to include more projects targeting the poorest parts of the country. A source close to Gove said: “[Profit-making] has been at the back of people’s minds but Cameron gave Clegg a veto and he’s exercised it. However on the idea that Clegg is insisting that the next wave of free schools have to be in areas of need, that is already the case. The process is set up already for the next wave and we’re not going to start it all over again and actually it will be the case that many of the next free schools are in areas of deprivation anyway.” Fifteen of the first 24 schools are oversubscribed, including the west London free school, where Toby Young is chair of governors. The school received more than 500 applications for 120 places. Another nine, including the Bristol free school, are either full or still trying to fill “the last few remaining places”, according to the Department for Education. Nick Clegg Michael Gove Liberal Democrats Free schools Schools Allegra Stratton Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Another Saturday, another week for members of Fox’s Saturday morning “business block” to sit around and promote a race to the bottom for American workers. This segment the topic was President Obama’s new pick to lead his Council of Economic Advisers, Alan Krueger . Their issue with Krueger? He supports increases in the minimum wage, which they naturally start fearmongering over, even though there’s not a chance in hell we’d see another increase with the makeup of this current Congress. BUTTNER: Meet Alan Krueger. He’s the President’s pick to lead his team to help turn around the economy. And he’s also a big time believer in hiking the minimum wage. But, Gary B. you say in this bad economy, the way to get jobs back is to ditch the minimum wage altogether. SMITH: Absolutely Brenda. Look, you know, minimum wage is nothing more than a form of price control. That’s what it is, and even if you believe wholeheartedly in the goodness of the minimum wage, all you have to do is the statistics. When… the last time we bumped minimum wage in 2009, youth unemployment was 21%. It went to 30%. Black teen unemployment is now over 40% Brenda. So it’s not just wrong to say minimum wage is good. I think it’s irresponsible, particularly in this economy. After the panel’s one lonely liberal, Jehmu Greene called him out for just being wrong on the facts and some back forth between Greene and a couple of the other panel members on whether raising the minimum wage increases unemployment or hinders job growth or not, panelist Todd Schoenberger goes into a full rant agreeing with Gary B. Smith that the minimum wage should be eliminated or at least reduced, claiming that it’s killing job growth in our economy and can lead to inflation. You’ve got to love the reaction from the rest of them when Greene finishes off the segment with this statement: GREENE: Well, forget the minimum wage. Why don’t we just have the wages of the salaries keep up with where CEO’s have been in the last few years. And if that was the case, you would have workers making $22 an hour, but that’s clearly not the case. Followed by all of the wingnuts on the panel’s heads simultaneously exploding. Heaven forbid anyone brings up the horrible income disparity we have in the United States while they’re debating whether the lowest income earners among us should be paid even less. Media Matters posted a shorter portion of this segment and linked some research they did on the matter when Fox’s John Stossel was making similar claims to those of Smith and Schoenberger — Fox’s Stossel Ignores Evidence To Rail Against Minimum Wage .
Continue reading …School teacher and radio presenter accused of spreading false reports that gunmen were attacking schools in Veracruz A man and a woman are facing 30-year prison terms in Mexico for allegedly using Twitter to spread panic over a series of child kidnappings. Gilberto Martinez Vera, 48, a private school teacher, and Maria de Jesus Bravo Pagola, a radio presenter, were accused of spreading false reports that gunmen were attacking schools in the south-eastern city of Veracruz. The resulting panic caused dozens of car crashes after parents rushed to save their children from schools across the city and jammed emergency telephone lines, which “totally collapsed” under the pressure. Gerardo Buganza, the interior secretary for Veracruz state, compared the ensuing chaos to Orson Welles’s spoof news broadcast War of the Worlds in 1938. The two are facing charges under terrorism laws. “There were 26 car accidents, or people left their cars in the middle of the streets to run and pick up their children, because they thought these things were occurring at their kids’ schools,” Buganza said. The charges, which said that phone lines “totally collapsed because people were terrified” are the most serious charges to come from using Twitter to incite violence or chaos. Last month in the UK, Jordan Blackshaw, 20, and Perry Sutcliffe-Keenan, 22, were both sentenced to four years in prison for inciting people to riot in the Manchester area. Despite setting up an event called Smash Down in Northwich Town on Facebook, only Blackshaw and the police, who were monitoring the page, turned up at a designated meeting spot. The false reports in Mexico followed general unease over recent drug gang violence in the city. In one reported incident a gunman tossed a grenade near a tourist attraction, killing one tourist. Tensions were also raised after armed convoys of marines were drafted on to the streets in August. Prosecutors allege that Vera then posted numerous messages on Twitter saying gunmen were kidnapping children from local schools. In one message he is said to have tweeted: “My sister-in-law just called me all upset, they just kidnapped five children from the school.” Other tweets included a story about six teenagers who were run over in one neighbourhood but although prosecutors acknowledge the incident happened, they said it did not involve any children. Pagola, who also styled herself a “TwitTerrorist” on the Facebook website, is accused of spreading rumours of child kidnapping using the social network – a charge she denies. Lawyers for both defendants have argued that both were repeating rumours they had already seen on the internet. Speaking through her lawyer, Pagola said: “How can they possibly do this to me, for re-tweeting a message? I mean, it’s 140 characters. It’s not logical.” Amnesty International accused officials of violating freedom of expression and instead blamed the panic on the city drug wars, in which 35,000 people are believed to have been killed in five years and which has seen people turning to social networks for information – both true and false. Amnesty said: “The lack of safety creates an atmosphere of mistrust in which rumours that circulate on social networks are part of people’s efforts to protect themselves, since there is very little trustworthy information.” Raul Trejo, a Mexican media expert, said that while the terrorism charge was unwarranted, the actions of Vera and Pagola were “a very incautious use of Twitter.” Mexico Twitter Internet Jo Adetunji guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media This Sunday’s Meet the Press was themed “The Politics of the Economy: What’s Holding America Back?” which featured a discussion between an uncharacteristically wide variety of thinkers across the political spectrum. It is, in part, a discussion we desperately need as we’re thrown into this political turmoil between the Tea Party Republicans and the rest of the country. We are struggling at this crossroads to decide what kind of country we want to be. In the past, I’ve had many disagreements with Thomas Friedman about the role he believes my generation should play as we begin to take over the country. But today, much like that fabled broken clock, I found myself in much agreement as Friedman spoke about the differences between the Greatest Generation and the Baby Boom Generation. He argues this problem began not in 2008, instead it began after the Cold War ended in 1980: “We had a generational shift. We went from the Greatest Generation which the philosophy basically was “save and invest” and we are still living off of their saving and investing. To the Baby Boom Generation whose philosophy turned out to be “borrow and spend.” And we’ve really shifted from a generation born in The Depression, World War 2, and the Cold War, these were serious people. They wouldn’t think of shutting down the government for a minute, ok. To a generation basically that is much less serious. We’ve gone from basically the values of the Greatest Generation, which my friend philosopher Doug Simon calls “sustainable values.” Values that sustain. To a Baby Boom Generation whose values are situational values. Do whatever the situation allows. You put them all together and I think you really account for a lot of the hole we’re in right now structurally.” Friedman goes on to say, that instead of being the drivers of innovation and a world leader that, we spent the 2000′s “chasing the losers of globalization instead of the winners,” referring to our wars across the Middle East. Friedman discusses the “Five Pillars” which enabled us to grow and thrive as a country and as a government for 200 years. “We didn’t get here by accident. As a great country. We actually won at every historical turn. How did we win in every historical turn? Because we had a formula for success. That you can actually date back to Hamilton but you certainly see it in Lincoln. It was five pillars: basically educate our people up to and beyond whatever the level of technology is. Whether it’s the cotton gin or the supercomputer. Immigration: attract the world’s most talented and energetic people. Third, infrastructure. Have the world’s best infrastructure. Fourth, have the right rules for enchanting capital formation and risk taking and preventing recklessness. And last, government-funded research. Put those together, stir, bake for 200 years and you get the United States of America. If you take all five of those, David, and you look at the last decade, which we call ‘the terrible 2′s,’ possibly the worst if not the worst decades in American History. Education (makes a downward gesture). Infrastructure (makes a downward gesture). Immigration (makes a downward gesture). Rules for Capital Investment, how’d you like that sub-prime crisis? (makes a downward gesture) Research and Development (makes a downward gesture). So all five of our pillars of success have been weakened. That’s the underlying theme here. And that’s what we’ve got to be looking; that’s what the President has got to be out there defending.” Earlier in the program, Friedman said that he believes there are two types of countries: HIEs and LIEs. In Friedman vernacular, that means high imagination enabling countries and low imagination enabling countries and details the ease of building a product and bringing it to market. “Forget developing and developed. . . . what isn’t a commodity is this (Friedman says snapping his fingers meaning ideas). If you look at the countries that are thriving today, look at Israel – start-up nation. We’re not going to bail our way out of this crisis. We’re not going to stimulate our way out of this crisis. We’re ultimately going to educate, imagine, and invent our way out of this crisis.” Unfortunately, it appears that the Friedman is putting the cart before the horse. While the solution is no doubt going to be innovation, with the weakening of those five pillars consistently by conservative politics, where will these educated, imaginative and inventive people going to come from? In a totally separate portion of the program , historian Doris Kearns Goodwin and her son, Lt. Joseph K. Goodwin, talked about being part of the generation that began after the Cold War and the impact 9/11 had on what is now termed the Millennial Generation. He believes 9/11 presented a unique opportunity that was missed by leaders. After Pearl Harbor, our country was thrown into a great war in which the entire country was invested. Women immediately took over the work force as every man in the country became a soldier. Children collected rubber bands to be melted down; women drew “seams” on the back of their legs so that silk production could be redirected to parachutes instead of hose; food, gas and even clothing was rationed. In short, everyone sacrificed and contributed towards the war effort. After 9/11, America was never asked to sacrifice or contribute anything. Lt. Goodwin says this is the reason that he feels we’re have so much debt and financial troubles now, because we charged the wars on our credit card. As Friedman would say we allowed the situational values of our leaders enact a policy that cost us so much that our entire country stands on the brink of both an economic and even identity crash. Lt. Goodwin believes if we as a country had been asked to sacrifice as much as they were in WWII that maybe we wouldn’t be here. If Lt. Goodwin believes that 9/11 won’t be what defines a generation, perhaps the Millennials can decide to define themselves as the “Ideas Generation” that Friedman says is so needed to build us back into a stable economy and a world leader. In a recent piece by Mike Hais and Morley Winograd, authors of Millennial Makeover and the new book Millennial Momentum, the two authors argue that indeed this generation — which will comprise more than 1 in 3 adults by the end of the decade — can be the drivers of this economy if given the tools and authority to do so. Instead of the “taking to the street” philosophy that Friedman has advocated in the past, perhaps he can get on board with more of an innovative bandwagon.
Continue reading …WRONG ANSWER. Dick Cheney minimized the role of the left-wing media during the Bush years today during his interview on FOX News Sunday. Chris Wallace: Do you think there is a liberal bias in the mainstream media? Dick Cheney: Oh, … Continue reading → Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Gateway Pundit Discovery Date : 04/09/2011 17:45 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …Obama sticker in urinal draws criticism and laughs KGET TV 17. Some think he’s a political whiz, but perhaps this isn’t what they had mind. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : I Hate The Media Discovery Date : 03/09/2011 17:21 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Tea party favorite Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) said Sunday that it was going to be “hard” to watch President Barack Obama give a speech on job creation to a joint session of Congress, calling it “pandering.” “I’m so tired of his speeches, it’s going to be hard for me to watch,” the South Carolina senator told CNN’s Candy Crowley. “I’m, frankly, very tired of speeches,” DeMint repeated on ABC. “I don’t want to be disrespectful to the president… I don’t think the president is going to come out with things that are really going to create jobs. I’m afraid it’s just pandering to his base. But if he’ll send a written proposal, I’ll give it every chance. But I’m not interested in his speech right now.”
Continue reading …Extra police will be posted outside schools and tube stations until half term to counter pupil crime, especially mobile phone theft Around 1,000 police and community support officers will protect children travelling to and from London schools against robbery, Scotland Yard said. Pupils starting secondary school will be given special attention, with officers outside schools, around tube stations and on buses until half-term on 21 October. There were 15,766 muggings in the capital between April and last month, with more than a third of victims aged between 10 and 19, and 8,200 mobile phones reported stolen. Police said that robberies in which mobile phones are taken from young people leaving school increase at this time of year. Ian McPherson, the Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner, said: “We take street crime very seriously – being robbed can be a traumatic experience, and so tackling it is a key priority for us.” He added: “I’d like to remind Londoners that street robbery is still relatively lower than in previous years, including 2006 when robbery was at peak levels.” Crime Police London Schools guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Youth, 17, will appear in court on Monday charged with assault and violent disorder when rioters pretended to help student A 17-year-old has been charged with assaulting a Malaysian student during the London riots. The youth is accused of assaulting Ashraf Rossli on 8 August. He is due to appear at Thames magistrates court on Monday charged with GBH against the student, robbery, burglary and violent disorder. Rossli was taken to hospital with a broken jaw after being set upon by attackers less than a month after he arrived in Britain. Members of the public donated thousands of pounds to a fund set up for him after footage of the attack was posted on YouTube, but he indicated he intended to give at least some of it away, saying: “I think there’s a lot of other victims that need help as well.” A man has already appeared in court accused of robbing Rossli. Reece Donovan, 21, is accused of stealing a portable Sony PlayStation and Nokia mobile phone from the student. Donovan appeared at Wood Green crown court for a preliminary hearing on 19 August. He was remanded in custody and will next appear at the same court on 10 October for a plea and case management hearing. UK riots Crime guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …US politician tells Tea Party rally the president is adrift and accuses some of her rivals of ‘crony capitalism’ Sarah Palin spent the Labour Day holiday weekend fuelling speculation she may yet run for president, blasting Barack Obama and Republican rivals on the latest stops on her bus tour of key election states. As the crowd braved driving rain at a Tea Party rally in Indianola, Iowa, on Saturday Palin attacked the “crony capitalism” she said was destroying the US and a “permanent political class” that reinforced it. But she stopped short of answering the big question about whether the purpose of her tour was a run at the White House or an increase in book sales. On Monday Palin will speak in Manchester, New Hampshire, the state that holds the first primary vote for presidential candidates. Palin has said she will announce by the end of this month whether she will join the race for the White House in 2012. Palin’s latest push comes days before the official Republican candidates hold their next televised debate. This is the second Republican candidate debate and the first since Rick Perry, Texas governor and a Tea Party favourite, joined the race. In Iowa 2,000 people travelled to a muddy field to hear Palin attack Obama. “Barack Obama promised to cut the deficit in half. Instead he turned around and tripled it,” she said. “Barack Obama is adrift. He doesn’t make sense. “Who wants to win the future by investing in harebrained ideas [like] solar panels and really fast trains?” The ideas were “nonstarters”, she said. “All aboard Obama’s bullet train to bankruptcy,” she added. But she also made digs at her potential Republican rivals. Obama was set to raise a billion dollars for his reelection campaign, she said, but Republican candidates “also raise mammoth amounts of cash”. “We need to ask them too, what, if anything, do their donors expect from their investments,” Palin said. “Our country can’t afford more trillion-dollar thank-you notes to campaign backers.” Perry, seen as the frontrunner in the Republican race, is a career politician who has been accused of using his position to help his donors. “There is a name for this,” Palin said. “It’s called corporate crony capitalism. It’s not the capitalism of free men and free markets, of innovation and hard work and ethics, of sacrifice and of risk. No, this is the capitalism of connections and government bailouts and handouts … and influence peddling and corporate welfare.” Sarah Palin United States Republicans US politics Tea Party movement Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk
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