Tory group proposes keeping back students who fail and replacing exam boards with single independent body Pupils should be held back a year if they fail to reach a minimum standard while more able pupils should be “fast-tracked”, under proposals to transform England’s education system outlined in a book written by a group of Tory MPs. The most able pupils could be accelerated through the system by taking courses in advanced mathematics while others take a more basic GCSE, the book, After the Coalition, proposes. The booklays out a Conservative agenda on a range of policy areas including the economy, public services and defence. On education, the MPs advocate that Britain should adopt Canada’s “escalator principle” under which the most able can move faster through the system but students who fail to reach a minimum standard will be held back. “This will guarantee that all students receive a core general education while stretching the most able. It would also put more responsibility on to the student for their own motivation. This has been lacking in Britain for too long.” The book calls for exam boards to be replaced by a central board controlled by universities to “tame grade inflation”. “This body should be free from the distortion of either government interference, or having to appeal to schools looking for lenient marking. While both schools and government would want some say in content and standards, the central focus of our independent body should be a board of the country’s top universities, setting out exactly what level of knowledge they are looking for.” The MPs also back the expansion of successful grammars. While they do not advocate a return to the 11-plus, they say that Britain has become less meritocratic since “the rise of the flawed egalitarian consensus of the 1960s”. “Although unpopular, grammar schools gave working class children a historically unequalled chance to get the best in academic education. By the end of the 1960s, only 38% of places at Oxford were afforded to privately educated pupils. The proportion is now back up to around 50%. “British politics has never been particularly logical about education, and in no area is this truer than the issue of grammar schools.” The MPs raise the prospect of allowing some selection in schools. They point out: “While selection by ability for secondary schools remains taboo, selection by ability for universities is seen as no more than best practice. At the very least, we should look into expanding currently successful grammar schools.” The education secretary Michael Gove said earlier this year that he wanted to scrap restrictions on the expansion of the most popular state schools. Ministers believe local authorities are in some cases deliberately preventing good schools from raising their “planned admissions numbers” because it becomes harder to sustain a weaker school if pupils defect. Schools GCSEs Private schools Conservatives Michael Gove Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Consultation will only cover civil marriage for same-sex couples, not religious weddings – nor heterosexual civil partnerships The prospect that gay and lesbian couples will no longer be denied the right to marry has come a step closer with the announcement that an official consultation on reforming the marriage laws will start in the spring. The Home Office lifted the ban on gay and lesbian civil partnership ceremonies being held in religious places eight months ago but strong opposition from some religious groups had blocked any further reform. The equalities minister, Lynne Featherstone, said that the launch of a formal consultation in March 2012 would allow any necessary changes of legislation to be made this side of the 2015 general election. A Home Office spokesman said that the consultation on reforming the marriage laws would only cover civil marriage for same sex couples and not religious marriage. Ministers have ruled out making it compulsory for churches or other faith groups to host gay or lesbian marriages. The Home Office also made clear that one option that will not be included in the formal consultation on reforming the marriage laws is giving heterosexual couples reciprocal rights to civil partnership ceremonies. Featherstone said that the necessary regulations to allow the first gay or lesbian civil partnership to take place on religious premises would be introduced to Parliament before the end of the year. The formal consultation on the marriage laws was originally envisaged to have started in May this year but reservations voiced by the Church of England and the Roman Catholic church are believed to have sparked further talks within Whitehall. The agreement to set a date of March 2012 to begin the consultation could put the reforms back on track. It will be the first time that any British government has formally looked at full marriage rights for gay and lesbian couples. “I am delighted to confirm that early next year, this government will begin a formal consultation on equal civil marriage for same-sex couples,” said Featherstone. “This would allow us to make any legislative changes before the end of this parliament,” she said. “We will be working closely with all those who have an interest in the area to understand their views ahead of the formal consultation.” The change would affect England and Wales but not Scotland or Northern Ireland. The proposal to enable full equality of civil marriage and civil partnerships for same-sex couples has been welcomed in the past by Quakers, Liberal Jews and Unitarians but the Anglicans and the Roman Catholics have been less enthusiastic. Leading figures in the Church of England have been uncomfortable with the idea that civil partnerships should be equated with full marriage. The House of Bishops has taken a consistent view that vicars should not provide services of blessing for those who register civil partnerships as it would lead to inconsistencies and confusion. Conservative evangelical groups, such as Affinity and the Christian Institute , have even demanded protection against legal action for refusing to host civil partnerships. Eight British couples filed a joint legal application to the European court of human rights in February seeking to overturn the twin bans on gay civil marriages and heterosexual civil partnerships. A Church of England spokesperson said: “The Church of England’s view remains that marriage is a life-long relationship entered into between a man and a woman.” Gay rights Marriage Civil partnerships Religion Catholicism Anglicanism Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Florida state officials confirm that the giant African land snail has taken hold in South Florida and may pose a threat to human health as well as agriculture. Now they are going door to door to try to eradicate the snails. (Sept. 16)
Continue reading …The collapse of a California solar panel manufacturer raises new questions about President Obama’s push for alternative energy — and whether White House pressure played a role in a loan guarantee that has taxpayers on the hook for millions. (Sept. 16)
Continue reading …Mike Lofgren spent 30 years on Capitol Hill working for Republicans before publicly leaving the party last week . Responding to Lofgren’s denunciation of the Grand Old Party as a “cult,” Andrew Sullivan agrees that the GOP, deep down, is behaving as a religious movement, not as a political party, and a radical religious movement at that. Lofgren sees the “Prosperity Gospel” as a divine blessing for personal enrichment and minimal taxation (yes, that kind of Gospel is compatible with Rand, just not compatible with the actual Gospels); for military power (with a major emphasis on the punitive, interventionist God of the Old Testament); and for radical change and contempt for existing institutions (as a product of End-Times thinking, intensified after 9/11). And so this political deadlock conceals a religious war at its heart. Why after all should one abandon or compromise sacred truths? And for those whose Christianity can only be sustained by denial of modern complexity, of scientific knowledge, and of what scholarly studies of the Bible’s origins have revealed, this fusion of political and spiritual lives into one seamless sensibility and culture, is irresistible. And public reminders of modernity – that, say, many Americans do not celebrate Christmas, that gay people have human needs, that America will soon be a majority-minority country and China will overtake the US in GDP by mid-century – are terribly threatening. I have written several times on this topic, but one must be careful with generalizations. To be sure, tea party and Fox News propaganda aim squarely at distinct cultural identities: think of Bill O’Reilly’s “war on Christmas.” But there’s no single religion at the heart of tea party or Republican cultural values. For example, I have seen lots of speculation as to whether America is ready to elect a Latter Day Saint, Mitt Romney, president. The “more spiritual than political” Glenn Beck rallies have sought to syncretize doctrinal differences into the kind of mushy, right wing unitarianism. The new Republican Party is marked by Michele Bachmann leaving her anti-papist church as well as Rick Perry’s prayer meetings. I agree with Sullivan that all this marks the downfall of evangelicalism in America, as the book of Rand has been inserted between Romans and Revelations. But I’m not sure you can describe the religion of the new right in a monolithic way. Instead, it may actually be more instructive to regard the Republican party as a brand, and the tea party as a new, competing brand from within the same corporation. Think of New Coke. For this purpose, I’ll turn things over to Patrick Hanlon for a minute; he’s a branding guru. “Branding” is the business of making products succeed in markets, which is far more complicated than just advertising. As Hanlon explains, brands are actually belief systems . More after the jump… One might ask what the real difference is between a religion and a marketing exercise, and in fact conservative politics today are a business , rife with profit-taking . But a fair examination must go deeper than that. Tea party activists and right-wing evangelicals want to believe . That is, their belief systems are bulwarks of rationalization . Like cult members, they invest in that system and become party to it. For his purposes, Hanlon identifies seven parts to a belief system: A CREATION STORY We know that tea parties began as a Ron Paul moneybomb experiment, were picked up as a meme by K-Street firms, were propelled by conservative media, and became the new marching banner for the same old right-wing conservatism — especially evangelicals. Indeed, tea party activism has consistently shed its libertarian origins, which is why Michele Bachmann has been more popular than Ron Paul among tea party adherents. But tea party members don’t like this narrative (indeed, many of them reject it), preferring to ignore the role of Republican and conservative policy shops in creating their “grassroots” phenomenon. For its part, the mainstream media has swallowed their creation story whole and unquestioning. One example of this is the general acceptance of capitalization for “Tea Party.” Note to the media: there is no The Tea Party. The NAACP tracks at least six major national tea party organizations . Infighting is common: some groups want to separate from FreedomWorks to maintain their indie spirit, while Tea Party Patriots and Tea Party Express have disdained each other at times. All of this goes on while the capitalized Republican Party seems diminished as a party of big ideas. A CREED Meanwhile, the creation story of the Republican Party has become moribund. Indeed, the advance of tea parties has happened in a vacuum left by the collapse of modern conservatism. William F. Buckley’s brand of conservatism has its last homes with David Frum and Andrew Sullivan. Rational conservatism, and the party it used to inform, have been overtaken by a movement in the grip of magical thinking and paranoid fantasy. Buckley ejected Bircherism from the Big Tent in 1964; it is back, and driving the party. I need hardly recite the tea party litany of paranoid memes and silly tinfoil hattery. It suffices to recall a button for sale at Tea Party Express rallies: WHY? Spend money we don’t have to build cars we don’t want to end man-made global warming that doesn’t exist That is a fully enclosed paranoid universe where the ice is not melting, the government is too big, and freedom is threatened by change. Moreover, the fundament of this “epistemic closure” is lies. Websites like Crooks & Liars, Media Matters, and Newshounds offer a virtual catalog of examples. I am not the first commentator to note the narrowed range of acceptability in Republican politics these days. Ron Paul was both cheered for letting the uninsured die and booed for apostasy on Islamophobia by the same crowd the other night. John Huntsman is running dead last because he admits that climate change is not a hoax; Rick Perry is running first because he says climate change is the hoax. If you don’t recite the creed, then you sit in the dark, cold corner of the “big tent.” RITUALS Tax Day tea parties. Tea Party Express bus stops. The tea party convention and tea parties at town halls. Remember the tea party rally on the National Mall in September 2009? FreedomWorks claimed that two million people showed up. FreedomWorks revised its figure down to merely 600,000 people, but that is still a lie. In fact, it is physically impossible for the crowd to have been larger than a tenth that size . Nevertheless, the lie was repeated at subsequent tea party events, permanently informing their cultural lore. It was a naked play for the “bandwagoning” effect: cultural conservatives were fed the appearance of a strong, active movement, and responded. At revivals, Billy Graham’s crusaders used to emerge “spontaneously” from the edges of the crowd to create the altar call rush. Rituals are “magic;” science understands it as psychology. Rituals are aimed at the unbeliever, too. Recently, Digby wrote about ritual defamation , quoting an article on the topic: The power of ritual defamation lies entirely in its capacity to intimidate and terrorize. It embraces some elements of primitive superstitious belief, as in a “curse” or “hex.” It plays into the subconscious fear most people have of being abandoned or rejected by the tribe or by society and being cut off from social and psychological support systems. Digby remarks on the way ritual defamation instills fear in liberals: “that they will be rejected by the American people — and a subconscious dulling of passion and inspiration in the mistaken belief that they can spare themselves further humiliation if only they control their rhetoric.” Rituals force witnesses toward the sacred with fear. ICONS Rituals also create habits. When Democracy Corps did a series of focus-groups with Georgia conservatives (.PDF) in October of 2009, they found that more than half of respondents watched Glenn Beck, or tried to watch him, every weekday. He was their Mecca, so to speak. For beyond the silly historic garb and Gadsden flags, the icons of the movement are mostly people. Remember, this tackier, paranoid conservatism emerged at Sarah Palin’s rallies on the 2008 campaign trail before most Americans had ever heard of tea parties. Look at the freshman class of the Republican Party, both in Congress and in state legislatures. Demographically, they are no different from their more experienced caucus colleagues. Rhetorically, they are louder and hotter: it is their brand . They are the emerging icons of the “new” old conservatism. SACRED WORDS Calling the Republican Party a “cult” is another way of saying that culture warriors dominate it. Language is a primary ingredient of culture, and the wholesale adoption of conservative language by tea parties is a telling indicator of what tea parties are. Think of the words and phrases common between the GOP and tea parties: freedom . Smaller government . Private enterprise . Free markets . Lower taxes . And so on. A phrase like “personal responsibility” invokes traditional American virtues and values — as George Lakoff would say, it activates their conservative brains. Put another way, the sacred words of conservatism resonate with their cultural identity. This is a distinct idea from dog whistles, however, which are about the profane. NON-BELIEVERS Brands make almost as much effort to define what they aren’t as what they are. Like hideous masks meant to scare off demons, the ugly signage of tea parties speaks to what they fear: foreigners, blacks, immigrants, “socialists.” Rush Limbaugh has made an entire career out of abusing the word “liberal” to identify what he isn’t. He has always styled himself the Mac to a liberal PC, though in his case the letters stand for political correctness . One of the reasons why tea parties, and hence Republicans, have become more offensive and bold is that they actively reject “political correctness.” Tolerance and multiculturalism are the infidel’s marks. LEADERS WHO STRUGGLE Charismatic figures always have a bio of personal victory over adversity. But there are many conservative leaders who actively work to build a false image of struggle: George Bush, all hat and no cattle, cutting brush on his dude ranch. Glenn Beck wearing a bulletproof vest at his rally. Sarah Palin “roughing it” and shooting wildlife. Michele Bachmann’s indeterminate number of foster children. CONCLUSION Of course, all of this is what you might expect from a Republican party and a conservative movement that have perfected the arts of their communication. Frank Luntz has focus-grouped phrases with every intention of seeing them added to the creed. Entire constellations of conservative organizations, many of them now hip-deep in tea parties, have been pushing the new religion of the righteous for decades. And that is what many commentators find most disturbing about Lofgren’s disaffection: political religion has stripped itself of redeeming virtues. In this great moment of reactionary culture, the belief system that drives Republican politics is turning radioactive.
Continue reading …Mike Lofgren spent 30 years on Capitol Hill working for Republicans before publicly leaving the party last week . Responding to Lofgren’s denunciation of the Grand Old Party as a “cult,” Andrew Sullivan agrees that the GOP, deep down, is behaving as a religious movement, not as a political party, and a radical religious movement at that. Lofgren sees the “Prosperity Gospel” as a divine blessing for personal enrichment and minimal taxation (yes, that kind of Gospel is compatible with Rand, just not compatible with the actual Gospels); for military power (with a major emphasis on the punitive, interventionist God of the Old Testament); and for radical change and contempt for existing institutions (as a product of End-Times thinking, intensified after 9/11). And so this political deadlock conceals a religious war at its heart. Why after all should one abandon or compromise sacred truths? And for those whose Christianity can only be sustained by denial of modern complexity, of scientific knowledge, and of what scholarly studies of the Bible’s origins have revealed, this fusion of political and spiritual lives into one seamless sensibility and culture, is irresistible. And public reminders of modernity – that, say, many Americans do not celebrate Christmas, that gay people have human needs, that America will soon be a majority-minority country and China will overtake the US in GDP by mid-century – are terribly threatening. I have written several times on this topic, but one must be careful with generalizations. To be sure, tea party and Fox News propaganda aim squarely at distinct cultural identities: think of Bill O’Reilly’s “war on Christmas.” But there’s no single religion at the heart of tea party or Republican cultural values. For example, I have seen lots of speculation as to whether America is ready to elect a Latter Day Saint, Mitt Romney, president. The “more spiritual than political” Glenn Beck rallies have sought to syncretize doctrinal differences into the kind of mushy, right wing unitarianism. The new Republican Party is marked by Michele Bachmann leaving her anti-papist church as well as Rick Perry’s prayer meetings. I agree with Sullivan that all this marks the downfall of evangelicalism in America, as the book of Rand has been inserted between Romans and Revelations. But I’m not sure you can describe the religion of the new right in a monolithic way. Instead, it may actually be more instructive to regard the Republican party as a brand, and the tea party as a new, competing brand from within the same corporation. Think of New Coke. For this purpose, I’ll turn things over to Patrick Hanlon for a minute; he’s a branding guru. “Branding” is the business of making products succeed in markets, which is far more complicated than just advertising. As Hanlon explains, brands are actually belief systems . More after the jump… One might ask what the real difference is between a religion and a marketing exercise, and in fact conservative politics today are a business , rife with profit-taking . But a fair examination must go deeper than that. Tea party activists and right-wing evangelicals want to believe . That is, their belief systems are bulwarks of rationalization . Like cult members, they invest in that system and become party to it. For his purposes, Hanlon identifies seven parts to a belief system: A CREATION STORY We know that tea parties began as a Ron Paul moneybomb experiment, were picked up as a meme by K-Street firms, were propelled by conservative media, and became the new marching banner for the same old right-wing conservatism — especially evangelicals. Indeed, tea party activism has consistently shed its libertarian origins, which is why Michele Bachmann has been more popular than Ron Paul among tea party adherents. But tea party members don’t like this narrative (indeed, many of them reject it), preferring to ignore the role of Republican and conservative policy shops in creating their “grassroots” phenomenon. For its part, the mainstream media has swallowed their creation story whole and unquestioning. One example of this is the general acceptance of capitalization for “Tea Party.” Note to the media: there is no The Tea Party. The NAACP tracks at least six major national tea party organizations . Infighting is common: some groups want to separate from FreedomWorks to maintain their indie spirit, while Tea Party Patriots and Tea Party Express have disdained each other at times. All of this goes on while the capitalized Republican Party seems diminished as a party of big ideas. A CREED Meanwhile, the creation story of the Republican Party has become moribund. Indeed, the advance of tea parties has happened in a vacuum left by the collapse of modern conservatism. William F. Buckley’s brand of conservatism has its last homes with David Frum and Andrew Sullivan. Rational conservatism, and the party it used to inform, have been overtaken by a movement in the grip of magical thinking and paranoid fantasy. Buckley ejected Bircherism from the Big Tent in 1964; it is back, and driving the party. I need hardly recite the tea party litany of paranoid memes and silly tinfoil hattery. It suffices to recall a button for sale at Tea Party Express rallies: WHY? Spend money we don’t have to build cars we don’t want to end man-made global warming that doesn’t exist That is a fully enclosed paranoid universe where the ice is not melting, the government is too big, and freedom is threatened by change. Moreover, the fundament of this “epistemic closure” is lies. Websites like Crooks & Liars, Media Matters, and Newshounds offer a virtual catalog of examples. I am not the first commentator to note the narrowed range of acceptability in Republican politics these days. Ron Paul was both cheered for letting the uninsured die and booed for apostasy on Islamophobia by the same crowd the other night. John Huntsman is running dead last because he admits that climate change is not a hoax; Rick Perry is running first because he says climate change is the hoax. If you don’t recite the creed, then you sit in the dark, cold corner of the “big tent.” RITUALS Tax Day tea parties. Tea Party Express bus stops. The tea party convention and tea parties at town halls. Remember the tea party rally on the National Mall in September 2009? FreedomWorks claimed that two million people showed up. FreedomWorks revised its figure down to merely 600,000 people, but that is still a lie. In fact, it is physically impossible for the crowd to have been larger than a tenth that size . Nevertheless, the lie was repeated at subsequent tea party events, permanently informing their cultural lore. It was a naked play for the “bandwagoning” effect: cultural conservatives were fed the appearance of a strong, active movement, and responded. At revivals, Billy Graham’s crusaders used to emerge “spontaneously” from the edges of the crowd to create the altar call rush. Rituals are “magic;” science understands it as psychology. Rituals are aimed at the unbeliever, too. Recently, Digby wrote about ritual defamation , quoting an article on the topic: The power of ritual defamation lies entirely in its capacity to intimidate and terrorize. It embraces some elements of primitive superstitious belief, as in a “curse” or “hex.” It plays into the subconscious fear most people have of being abandoned or rejected by the tribe or by society and being cut off from social and psychological support systems. Digby remarks on the way ritual defamation instills fear in liberals: “that they will be rejected by the American people — and a subconscious dulling of passion and inspiration in the mistaken belief that they can spare themselves further humiliation if only they control their rhetoric.” Rituals force witnesses toward the sacred with fear. ICONS Rituals also create habits. When Democracy Corps did a series of focus-groups with Georgia conservatives (.PDF) in October of 2009, they found that more than half of respondents watched Glenn Beck, or tried to watch him, every weekday. He was their Mecca, so to speak. For beyond the silly historic garb and Gadsden flags, the icons of the movement are mostly people. Remember, this tackier, paranoid conservatism emerged at Sarah Palin’s rallies on the 2008 campaign trail before most Americans had ever heard of tea parties. Look at the freshman class of the Republican Party, both in Congress and in state legislatures. Demographically, they are no different from their more experienced caucus colleagues. Rhetorically, they are louder and hotter: it is their brand . They are the emerging icons of the “new” old conservatism. SACRED WORDS Calling the Republican Party a “cult” is another way of saying that culture warriors dominate it. Language is a primary ingredient of culture, and the wholesale adoption of conservative language by tea parties is a telling indicator of what tea parties are. Think of the words and phrases common between the GOP and tea parties: freedom . Smaller government . Private enterprise . Free markets . Lower taxes . And so on. A phrase like “personal responsibility” invokes traditional American virtues and values — as George Lakoff would say, it activates their conservative brains. Put another way, the sacred words of conservatism resonate with their cultural identity. This is a distinct idea from dog whistles, however, which are about the profane. NON-BELIEVERS Brands make almost as much effort to define what they aren’t as what they are. Like hideous masks meant to scare off demons, the ugly signage of tea parties speaks to what they fear: foreigners, blacks, immigrants, “socialists.” Rush Limbaugh has made an entire career out of abusing the word “liberal” to identify what he isn’t. He has always styled himself the Mac to a liberal PC, though in his case the letters stand for political correctness . One of the reasons why tea parties, and hence Republicans, have become more offensive and bold is that they actively reject “political correctness.” Tolerance and multiculturalism are the infidel’s marks. LEADERS WHO STRUGGLE Charismatic figures always have a bio of personal victory over adversity. But there are many conservative leaders who actively work to build a false image of struggle: George Bush, all hat and no cattle, cutting brush on his dude ranch. Glenn Beck wearing a bulletproof vest at his rally. Sarah Palin “roughing it” and shooting wildlife. Michele Bachmann’s indeterminate number of foster children. CONCLUSION Of course, all of this is what you might expect from a Republican party and a conservative movement that have perfected the arts of their communication. Frank Luntz has focus-grouped phrases with every intention of seeing them added to the creed. Entire constellations of conservative organizations, many of them now hip-deep in tea parties, have been pushing the new religion of the righteous for decades. And that is what many commentators find most disturbing about Lofgren’s disaffection: political religion has stripped itself of redeeming virtues. In this great moment of reactionary culture, the belief system that drives Republican politics is turning radioactive.
Continue reading …An overview of metastatic cancer in bones: how and why it happens and what you can expect from treatment.
Continue reading …CNN's American Morning brought on liberal academic Jeffrey Sachs to analyze Speaker Boehner's jobs plan Friday. Instead of hosting a conservative critic of President Obama the morning after he unveiled his jobs plan, the network actually interviewed the President's economic policy assistant. While Sachs went on-air and criticized the Republican plan as inherently flawed, Obama's director of the National Economic Council Gene Sperling received a soft interview concerning the President's jobs plan. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor did appear on CNN shortly afterward, but was pressed repeatedly about whether Republicans would compromise on the Obama's bill and was not asked to critique the President's plan. Sachs, while not advertised as a liberal economist, was a self-professed Obama supporter in 2008. CNN's media critic Howard Kurtz identified Sachs as a “liberal academic” in a 2009 Washington Post column. Sachs criticized both Obama's plan and Boehner's plan – although he saw the GOP plan as inherently flawed, while opining that the President's plan didn't go far enough. “The President talks a bit more about skills and infrastructure, but he wants a one-year plan,” Sachs noted. “One-year tax cuts to be followed by tax increases later on. What's a one-year plan going to do?” “So, the Democrats really do focus on a kind of gimmick of do something next year before the elections. The Republicans have a longer-term view, but a wrong one, in my view, which is just cut taxes,” he noted.” Sachs also cast the Republicans and their corporate supporters as greedy, since the GOP wants to enact tax cuts for already wealthy businesses and corporations. “That's the problem with the opposition side. It's just greed at this point,” said Sachs. A transcript of the segment, which aired on September 16 at 6:39 a.m. EDT, is as follows: CHRISTINE ROMANS: Let's talk about John Boehner's plan. I mean, less regulation and pro-growth policies, which we presume means tax cuts and not getting – smaller government in general. Is this the way to create jobs? JEFFREY SACHS, international economist: I don't think that either side has it right. It's so sad they're arguing with each other viciously, actually, but neither side is focusing on some basic points. We have a lot of people, especially young people in this economy without the skills to be able to compete internationally. We've lost a lot of jobs abroad. We need better education, more training, the ability to mobilize technology to compete. Neither side is talking about that. The Republican side just wants to cut taxes, give money to corporations but the corporations are filled with money now, but they don't want to invest in jobs in America. They're investing in jobs abroad. The President talks a bit more about skills and infrastructure, but he wants a one-year plan. ROMANS: Right. SACHS: One-year tax cuts to be followed by tax increases later on. What's a one-year plan going to do? So, the Democrats really do focus on a kind of gimmick of do something next year before the elections. The Republicans have a longer-term view, but a wrong one, in my view, which is just cut taxes. But that's not going to solve the structural problems that our country has. ROMANS: But in this kind of political climate – I mean, real, meaningful tax reform, real, meaningful education reform, really focusing on retraining in a way that the right skills are given to the right people, that takes investments. I don't think you're going to – when can you ever see political unity on some of these big – these are big structural issues that need to be addressed. SACHS: I think the sad part is that President Obama had that chance in 2009 when he – ROMANS: When he did health care reform. SACHS: He did health care reform but we never heard a longer term strategy and a budget that would go alongside it. So, he started with what I do agree – on the Republican critique, was a bit of a gimmick, that stimulus. One jolt and we're back. But one jolt wasn't going to bring us back to competitiveness. The problem is that the opponents of this want an even worse gimmick, which is just cut taxes, give money to the rich, give money to the corporations. But if they look at what's really happening, it's not that the companies don't have money, they're filled with trillions — billions and billions of dollars that are often tax havens, that are – they've already given the tax cuts. How rich can people be without saying, OK, we'll contribute something? That's the problem with the opposition side. It's just greed at this point. ROMANS: And there's also just a lack of confidence. I mean, there's a lack of confidence from corporate CEOs who don't want to hire in this country because they don't see clarity, they say. And from Americans who are stressed. They don't have a job or they're afraid of losing their job and they're worried about their home value. SACHS: These same CEOs are hiring, but abroad. ROMANS: Right. SACHS: And why is that? That's what we need to ask. Now, Republicans say it's because of regulation. But that's not really the change going on. When you ask a real business person, and I know from my own experience, because we hire people, also – finding skilled workers is the critical issue right now. ROMANS: Right. SACHS: Better skills, people with higher education, they're employed. The people with high school degrees only, they can't find jobs that keep them in the middle class. This is America's problem.
Continue reading …Breasts: Some women worry that theirs are too big or too small or not as firm and youthful as they once were, but here’s one thing that every woman desires — healthy breasts for a lifetime.
Continue reading …Prince William and Kate Middleton won’t be too worried, but they may now have some competition when it comes to the wedding of the year in the U.K. Our friends at People have confirmed that Paul McCartney will wed his American fiancée, Nancy Shevell, at the same venue at which he tied the knot to
Continue reading …