• Estimated 500,000 march in London against public sector cuts • Police say protest was overwhelmingly peaceful: nine arrests • Hardliners attack Top Shop and occupy Fortnum and Mason • Read our latest summary • Read our latest news story on the march 7.01pm: There are reports on Twitter that Lilly Whites is now on fire. 6.59pm: Paul Lewis has called in with a report of a fire in Piccadilly that appears to be getting out of control. The fire is on Jermyn Street next to Piccadilly. It began about 15mins ago when clashes broke out between the police cordon and protesters. The protesters ripped up scaffolding and planks of wood, filled a waste bin and set it alight. That fire has now spread with flames reaching 11ft high, and from where I’m standing it looks like it is getting out of control. There’s a thick plume of black smoke rising into the sky. I’m about 30ft away and can feel the heat from where I’m standing. Riot police have cleared the immediate vicinity but the whole area around Piccadilly is becoming something of a magnet for people looking to cause disruption. The situation is now getting dangerous. You can see a photo of the fire here . 6.46pm: Met police saying that Fortnum and Mason is now being treated as a crime scene and threatening UKuncut with arrest. 6.40pm: My colleague Matthew Taylor has said that UKuncut have ended their occupation at Fortnum and Mason and are now being detained by police. 6.10pm: The Metropolitan police press office has said that today’s march has been largely peaceful and well ordered, with a small number of violent disruptions and just nine arrests. This is the police statement: Today’s TUC March for the Alternative has been peaceful and well-stewarded. However, there have been a number of separate incidents including the throwing of missiles in the Oxford Street area and criminal damage in Shaftesbury Avenue. Police are on the scene and dealing with this. There have been a small number of arrests made for various public order offences, criminal damage and violent disorder. We can confirm police have not advised businesses in central London to close. 6.00pm: Good evening and welcome to our continuing coverage of the March for the Alternative in London, and the aftermath. You can read our earlier live blog here. • Around 500,000 people have joined the anti-cuts march through central London . The figure was higher than originally hoped for by the organisers. • Police said the protest had been “peaceful and well-stewarded”. But there have been a few clashes between police and activists not associated with the main march, and nine arrests have been made. • More than a dozen stores on Oxford Street were occupied by Ukuncut . The group has also occuplied the upscale department store Fortnum & Mason. Riot police have set up a kettle around the area. Public sector cuts Cuts and closures Rowenna Davis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [h/t Heather ] Meet Tom Luna, Idaho’s Republican Superintendent of of Public Education, architect of the gutting of Idaho public schools, massive teacher layoffs, and union-buster. Tom Luna is an interesting character. He’s a good, solid Republican, 2-year veteran of the Bush Administration’s Department of Education, and doesn’t really have any educational qualifications for the office he now holds. No, seriously. He doesn’t. “> Here’s his resume´ in a nutshell: Education: Classes at Boise State and Ricks College, Bachelor of Art (2002) in Weights and Measures from Thomas Edison State College, a non-accredited on-line degree factory supposedly based in New Jersey. Also, he owns a scale company whose largest account is an Idaho corporation owned by Frank Vandersloot — Melaleuca. Remember that name. I’ll be talking about him later. Tom Luna’s Amazing Fundraising Abilities Now, Tom Luna had one of the best-financed 2010 re-election campaigns I’ve seen for an office that oversees about 280,000 students. (For perspective, California employs more teachers than Idaho’s total number of students.) But to get Tom Luna elected in a Republican state in 2010 when the Tea Party was full of hubris and madness, donors gave $212,000 to his campaign , of which $132,000 was spent as of November 18, 2010. This is not counting PACs, or independent expenditures. That’s direct campaign donations. With the exception of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, no other candidate for state office came anywhere near the campaign donations that Luna received. Those donors didn’t give because they were feeling generous and loved Tom Luna. They loved Tom Luna’s plans for the state’s public education system, though. If Luna’s “Students Come First” proposal passes the Legislature, online education will be mandated in Idaho and a laptop will be available to every high school student. That means 115 school districts, with 82,000 high school students, will be in the market for computers, software and online courses. Well, lookee there. And look at who Tom Luna’s top 2010 donors were: K12 Inc. of Virginia , an online company with 81,000 students and operator of the Idaho Virtual Academy. In Idaho, IVA enrolls 2,930 students and received $12.8 million from the state in fiscal 2010. K12, its employees and major stockholders spent about $44,000 supporting Luna; $25,000 of that was funneled to an Idaho interest group for independent advertising on Luna’s behalf. I should also mention that K12, Inc was started by Bill Bennett , Education Secretary under Ronald Reagan. Yes, *that* Bill Bennett. – Apollo Group of Phoenix , the parent company of the University of Phoenix, an online university with more than 400,000 students. Luna’s plan would allow high school students to earn college credits at state expense once they complete high school requirements. Apollo Group gave Luna $5,500. – Executives of Scantron Corp ., a Minnesota-based leader in testing technology that is aggressively expanding into online education. Scantron employees and family contributed $7,450. Other corporate education contributors: Apangea Learning, Inc. (online math courses) $1,000; Education Networks of America (educational video/network technology) $5,500; Madison Education Group (education consulting and advocacy) $5,000, and yes, Frank Vandersloot, who not only picked up the tab for thousands in independent expenditures, but also donated $10,000 to Luna’s campaign. But don’t take my word for it. Here’s a whole huge list with all the tentacles listed. For-profit educators, GOP privatization organizations, marry at the IBCEE Frank Vandersloot is a wealthy affiliate marketer in Idaho who is also connected with the Education Alliance of Idaho , an affiliate of the Idaho Business Coalition for Education Excellence (IBCEE), a non-profit organization (which hasn’t filed any Federal disclosure forms that I can find) comprised of CEOs and company presidents. The Education Alliance membership is comprised of the following: Members include J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation and representatives from the Idaho Education Association, Idaho Association of School Administrators, Idaho School Boards Association, Idaho Parent Teacher Association, Idaho Digital Learning Academy, State Board of Education, State Department of Education and the State Division of Professional- Technical Education. According to the ” fact sheet (PDF) ” they publish it has a mission: The Education Alliance of Idaho is a coalition of key stakeholders in the Idaho education system. The core purpose of the Education Alliance is one of advocacy and advice. The Education Alliance does not have authority in statute, nor does it control policymakers. Instead, the organization’s influence on the future of the education system in Idaho comes from that of its members. Indeed. In 2005 ( the only annual report (PDF) I could find ), the JA and Kathryn Albertson Foundation funded 20 charter schools, including the Idaho Distance Education Academy, the Idaho Virtual Academy and INSPIRE Charter school, all online schools. The foundation has also given a large grant (in connection with the Micron Foundation, another Luna donor) to the Boise school District for the first ” brick-and-mortar web enabled elementary schools using K12 Inc. curriculum.” But it’s not only the Albertson grocery family. Others participate in the “influence on the future of the education system in Idaho.” Others, like Bill Hansen, co-founder of Big Luna Donor Madison Education Group and now President and CEO of Scantron have some influence, too. Hansen was an adviser to the 2008 Romney campaign, too. And Michael Milken, who owns 24% of K12, Inc. I’ve given you all of this detail on Idaho because it’s a small enough state that the money flow really stands out like a sore thumb. Despite Luna’s insistence that he’s not beholden to those who bought his re-election, his “reform proposals” say otherwise. But it’s not just Idaho. It’s Michigan . It’s Pennsylvania . It’s Arizona . Florida . Ohio . Indiana . The names are different but the model’s the same. In Michigan, it’s the DeVos family who funds charter schools and “influences policy”. The corporate education firms have different names but the goal is the same: To break unions, get rid of as many teachers as possible, and force students into online learning courses which teach to a test but don’t necessarily educate students. This particular model assumes students are commodities with identical learning styles and abilities. Profit centers, amortized over 12 years. Cronyism Strikes Deep Idaho’s high school students understand what’s at stake. It’s why they walked out in support of their teachers earlier this month. And some of Idaho’s citizens get it too . In fact, one retired secretary is beginning a recall effort against Luna. Her reasons echo the same reasons Wisconsin and Michigan citizens have for undertaking their own recall efforts. Berto has attended protests against Luna’s three big education reform bills with “Stop the Lunacy” and “Save Our Schools” signs. Despite overwhelming public testimony against the plan backed by Luna and GOP Gov. Butch Otter, two of the three bills are expected to get final legislative approval in the House Tuesday. The third bill is stalled in the Senate. Berto disputes Luna’s claim of a mandate for change — including larger class sizes, required online classes and a computer for every high school student — because neither he nor Otter mentioned the ideas in the 2010 campaign. I would only say this to Mrs. Berto: Follow the money during the campaign and it will tell you what they’re really planning to do after they’re elected. Luna’s campaign was so heavily and well-financed that it was clear from early on that the goal was exactly what they’ve now done. Tom Luna lives the GOP creed: Cronies Come First .
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [h/t Heather ] Meet Tom Luna, Idaho’s Republican Superintendent of of Public Education, architect of the gutting of Idaho public schools, massive teacher layoffs, and union-buster. Tom Luna is an interesting character. He’s a good, solid Republican, 2-year veteran of the Bush Administration’s Department of Education, and doesn’t really have any educational qualifications for the office he now holds. No, seriously. He doesn’t. “> Here’s his resume´ in a nutshell: Education: Classes at Boise State and Ricks College, Bachelor of Art (2002) in Weights and Measures from Thomas Edison State College, a non-accredited on-line degree factory supposedly based in New Jersey. Also, he owns a scale company whose largest account is an Idaho corporation owned by Frank Vandersloot — Melaleuca. Remember that name. I’ll be talking about him later. Tom Luna’s Amazing Fundraising Abilities Now, Tom Luna had one of the best-financed 2010 re-election campaigns I’ve seen for an office that oversees about 280,000 students. (For perspective, California employs more teachers than Idaho’s total number of students.) But to get Tom Luna elected in a Republican state in 2010 when the Tea Party was full of hubris and madness, donors gave $212,000 to his campaign , of which $132,000 was spent as of November 18, 2010. This is not counting PACs, or independent expenditures. That’s direct campaign donations. With the exception of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, no other candidate for state office came anywhere near the campaign donations that Luna received. Those donors didn’t give because they were feeling generous and loved Tom Luna. They loved Tom Luna’s plans for the state’s public education system, though. If Luna’s “Students Come First” proposal passes the Legislature, online education will be mandated in Idaho and a laptop will be available to every high school student. That means 115 school districts, with 82,000 high school students, will be in the market for computers, software and online courses. Well, lookee there. And look at who Tom Luna’s top 2010 donors were: K12 Inc. of Virginia , an online company with 81,000 students and operator of the Idaho Virtual Academy. In Idaho, IVA enrolls 2,930 students and received $12.8 million from the state in fiscal 2010. K12, its employees and major stockholders spent about $44,000 supporting Luna; $25,000 of that was funneled to an Idaho interest group for independent advertising on Luna’s behalf. I should also mention that K12, Inc was started by Bill Bennett , Education Secretary under Ronald Reagan. Yes, *that* Bill Bennett. – Apollo Group of Phoenix , the parent company of the University of Phoenix, an online university with more than 400,000 students. Luna’s plan would allow high school students to earn college credits at state expense once they complete high school requirements. Apollo Group gave Luna $5,500. – Executives of Scantron Corp ., a Minnesota-based leader in testing technology that is aggressively expanding into online education. Scantron employees and family contributed $7,450. Other corporate education contributors: Apangea Learning, Inc. (online math courses) $1,000; Education Networks of America (educational video/network technology) $5,500; Madison Education Group (education consulting and advocacy) $5,000, and yes, Frank Vandersloot, who not only picked up the tab for thousands in independent expenditures, but also donated $10,000 to Luna’s campaign. But don’t take my word for it. Here’s a whole huge list with all the tentacles listed. For-profit educators, GOP privatization organizations, marry at the IBCEE Frank Vandersloot is a wealthy affiliate marketer in Idaho who is also connected with the Education Alliance of Idaho , an affiliate of the Idaho Business Coalition for Education Excellence (IBCEE), a non-profit organization (which hasn’t filed any Federal disclosure forms that I can find) comprised of CEOs and company presidents. The Education Alliance membership is comprised of the following: Members include J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation and representatives from the Idaho Education Association, Idaho Association of School Administrators, Idaho School Boards Association, Idaho Parent Teacher Association, Idaho Digital Learning Academy, State Board of Education, State Department of Education and the State Division of Professional- Technical Education. According to the ” fact sheet (PDF) ” they publish it has a mission: The Education Alliance of Idaho is a coalition of key stakeholders in the Idaho education system. The core purpose of the Education Alliance is one of advocacy and advice. The Education Alliance does not have authority in statute, nor does it control policymakers. Instead, the organization’s influence on the future of the education system in Idaho comes from that of its members. Indeed. In 2005 ( the only annual report (PDF) I could find ), the JA and Kathryn Albertson Foundation funded 20 charter schools, including the Idaho Distance Education Academy, the Idaho Virtual Academy and INSPIRE Charter school, all online schools. The foundation has also given a large grant (in connection with the Micron Foundation, another Luna donor) to the Boise school District for the first ” brick-and-mortar web enabled elementary schools using K12 Inc. curriculum.” But it’s not only the Albertson grocery family. Others participate in the “influence on the future of the education system in Idaho.” Others, like Bill Hansen, co-founder of Big Luna Donor Madison Education Group and now President and CEO of Scantron have some influence, too. Hansen was an adviser to the 2008 Romney campaign, too. And Michael Milken, who owns 24% of K12, Inc. I’ve given you all of this detail on Idaho because it’s a small enough state that the money flow really stands out like a sore thumb. Despite Luna’s insistence that he’s not beholden to those who bought his re-election, his “reform proposals” say otherwise. But it’s not just Idaho. It’s Michigan . It’s Pennsylvania . It’s Arizona . Florida . Ohio . Indiana . The names are different but the model’s the same. In Michigan, it’s the DeVos family who funds charter schools and “influences policy”. The corporate education firms have different names but the goal is the same: To break unions, get rid of as many teachers as possible, and force students into online learning courses which teach to a test but don’t necessarily educate students. This particular model assumes students are commodities with identical learning styles and abilities. Profit centers, amortized over 12 years. Cronyism Strikes Deep Idaho’s high school students understand what’s at stake. It’s why they walked out in support of their teachers earlier this month. And some of Idaho’s citizens get it too . In fact, one retired secretary is beginning a recall effort against Luna. Her reasons echo the same reasons Wisconsin and Michigan citizens have for undertaking their own recall efforts. Berto has attended protests against Luna’s three big education reform bills with “Stop the Lunacy” and “Save Our Schools” signs. Despite overwhelming public testimony against the plan backed by Luna and GOP Gov. Butch Otter, two of the three bills are expected to get final legislative approval in the House Tuesday. The third bill is stalled in the Senate. Berto disputes Luna’s claim of a mandate for change — including larger class sizes, required online classes and a computer for every high school student — because neither he nor Otter mentioned the ideas in the 2010 campaign. I would only say this to Mrs. Berto: Follow the money during the campaign and it will tell you what they’re really planning to do after they’re elected. Luna’s campaign was so heavily and well-financed that it was clear from early on that the goal was exactly what they’ve now done. Tom Luna lives the GOP creed: Cronies Come First .
Continue reading …Key prosecution witness gives contradictory testimony over murder of British student Meredith Kercher Lawyers appealing against the convictions of Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito for murdering British student Meredith Kercher have claimed an important victory in court, as a key witness for the prosecution gave confusing and contradictory testimony. Antonio Curatolo, a homeless drug addict living in Perugia, close to where Kercher was murdered, on 1
Continue reading …Fall of Ajdabiya is first significant victory for rebels since coalition strikes began a week ago Khalif Ameen leaped on the blackened tank, its innards hollowed out by the blast of a missile from an unseen plane, and waved his Kalashnikov as he declared the war all but won. “Now Gaddafi is finished. We have won Ajdabiya. We will not stop. Next Brega, Ras Lanuf, Sirte, Tripoli. Gaddafi will go quick,” said the young man who a few weeks ago was an engineering student. But the burned-out remnants of the Libyan dictator’s armour abandoned on the outskirts of Ajdabiya after the strategic town finally fell to rebel forces told a different story that does not bode well for Ameen’s dream of marching all the way to Tripoli. The fall of Ajdabiya after days of artillery duels and air bombardment delivered the Libyan revolutionaries their first significant victory over Muammar Gaddafi’s forces since the coalition air strikes began a week ago. The Libyan army sat outside town, astride the main coastal highway, blocking the rebels’ attempts to advance west toward the capital and recapture territory lost as Gaddafi found his footing after the initial shock of the uprising. On Friday, the insurgents moved rocket launchers and other weapons down the road from Benghazi, then said they fought through the night with the dug-in enemy. “We hit them with our rockets and RPGs,” said Mohammed Rahim, a former regular soldier wearing a makeshift uniform of blue camouflage jacket and green trousers who went over to the rebels at the beginning of the uprising last month. “The fighting went on all night. It was a big battle. All the fighters came from Benghazi for it.” However, the destruction of tanks on the edge of the town suggested it was air strikes by coalition forces, ostensibly to protect civilians, that had finally broken the back of strong resistance by army forces before the rebels moved in. The length of time it took the insurgents to overcome the army, and the rebels’ reliance on air strikes to destroy the bulk of its armour before finally taking Ajdabiya, confirmed how dependent the poorly armed and inexperienced revolutionaries are on foreign air forces to fight their war for them. Libya’s deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim, acknowledged the defeat, which he blamed on the “heavy involvement” of Western forces. “This is the objective of the coalition now, it is not to protect civilians, because now they are directly fighting against the armed forces,” he said. “They are trying to push the country to the brink of a civil war.” Six wrecked tanks marked the road into the town alongside artillery guns and rocket launchers mangled by the missiles from beyond the clouds. Ammunition littered the ground. Other guns were left intact and were hauled away by the rebels for the next battle. On the other side of Ajdabiya, where the road heads west out of town, squatted more destroyed tanks and armoured vehicles. Others sat by the roadside unscathed. Abandoned piles of weapons and ammunition, including Russian-made tank shells and rocket-propelled grenades, suggested Gaddafi’s forces had left in a hurry. The rebels swiftly arrived with transporters to remove the armour to add to an expanding revolutionary tank force that has yet to see action. Corpses of Gaddafi fighters lay among some of the clusters of armour, but around others there was no sign of bodies, perhaps further evidence that they had fled from their tanks in fear of the air strikes. At least 20 tanks were destroyed or abandoned along with artillery guns and rocket launchers. The strikes also appeared to have destroyed a military barracks. One of the fighters, Mansour Mahdy, acknowledged that the battle would not have been won without foreign planes. “We are very grateful to the West. Everyone wants to thank France. Was it France this time? Or America? We thank them all,” he said. Days of air strikes were carried out by both countries, plus British aircraft. The rebels took control of a mostly empty town, raising the revolutionary flag – the pre-Gaddafi-era ensign – and firing off more bullets in celebration. As word spread that the fighting was over, residents began to pour back in hundreds of cars . The few of the town’s 130,000 people who endured the siege were relieved but stunned. Some gave accounts of Gaddafi security men hunting down rebel sympathisers when they occupied the town. One man said he was looking for his brother and feared he had been executed or taken to prison in Tripoli. Other residents said they had not been badly treated and that, after the initial street battles and occasional shelling, the hardest part had been to endure a town with no electricity or water and dwindling food supplies. The local hospital closed after most of the staff fled because they feared they would be targeted by Gaddafi’s forces after some doctors publicly sided with the rebels. One elderly man did not seem to view it as liberation. He said he feared the fighting would return. He did not seem entirely trustful of the rebels either. “We never had this before, all these men with guns. This was a peaceful town. Now everyone has run away. We did not ask for this,” he said. The victory will provide a boost to morale in revolutionary-held territory after a string of defeats that saw the army even invading the de facto rebel capital of Benghazi until Gaddafi’s forces were destroyed by the first air strikes. But for all the celebrations, the rebels’ struggle to overcome the relatively limited defences of Ajdabiya does not bode well for their bellicose threats to march all the way to Tripoli. If Ajdabiya is the example, it offers the prospect of a protracted conflict or military stalemate, largely decided by how far the Western allies are prepared to go in support of the rebels’ advance. Unless the regime cracks under other pressures, such as a sudden collapse of support for Gaddafi from within his own system, there appears little prospect of the rebels marching on Tripoli unless Britain, France and the US are prepared to offer rolling air cover for the revolutionaries that obliterates the regime’s ability to fight. The rebels said enemy forces were in rapid retreat back to the next town of Brega, without the heavy weapons they had used to defend Ajdabiya, and that the insurgents would catch up and crush them. The revolutionaries can probably move swiftly along the coastal road and retake the small towns of Brega and Ras Lanuf, important for their oil facilities, which they held at the beginning of the uprising. But moving on to the larger and more politically important town of Sirte may prove to be a challenge too far. Sirte is Gaddafi’s birthplace and he once proposed making it Libya’s capital. He is likely to reinforce the town because its fall would be a devastating blow. A rebel assault on Sirte would also raise a dilemma for Nato and the coalition leading the air strikes. The UN resolution permits military action in defence of civilians. Until now, it has been Gaddafi’s forces threatening rebel-held cities such as Benghazi, Misrata and Ajdabiya. But a rebel assault on Sirte would present the question of whether the coalition is prepared to launch air strikes to help take a town that has not risen up against Gaddafi. If not, it appears unlikely the rebels will be able to overcome the regime’s defences in Sirte on their own. Alternatively, if Gaddafi’s forces make a stand in the desert, where no civilians are threatened, that would also present the coalition forces with difficulty in justifying air strikes in support of the rebels. The revolutionary leadership had not expected Gaddafi’s forces to hold out for as long as they did at Ajdabiya, a sign that they are not entirely deterred from fighting by the air strikes. The rebels still do not know the size of the enemy force they faced or even who they are for sure. The revolutionary leadership claims Serb mercenaries were among Gaddafi’s fighters at Ajdabiya and that they had been seeking to surrender in return for safe passage to Serbia. But the rebel leadership has made false claims about mercenaries in the past in an attempt to whip up foreign support, even parading innocent migrant workers from Ghana in front of reporters. The revolutionaries acknowledge the shortcomings of their own military, mostly made up of young men with no experience, while continuing to insist they have the ability to defeat Gaddafi’s forces if only they were equipped with the necessary arms, particularly anti-tank weapons, rockets and radios. The rebels’ military spokesman, Colonel Ahmed Omar Bani, has said that promises of weapons had been made by several foreign government that he declined to name, although none had so far delivered any. But given the rebels’ poor combat record on the battlefield, where the civilian volunteers who have joined their ranks have proved to be ill-disciplined and prone to flee in chaos, there may be a reluctance to supply weapons that might fall into the hands of Gaddafi’s military. For all its insistence that it will not accept a divided Libya, the revolutionary council is increasingly adjusting to the reality that it may be facing military stalemate and governing the rump of a country until Gaddafi’s regime implodes. But almost no one is predicting when that will be. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …On Thursday morning I attended a breakfast and roundtable discussion sponsored by the Missouri Health Advocacy Alliance that discussed the Affordable Care Act one year on, and how it has benefited Missouri small businesses since the first provisions started kicking in last September. When I walked up to the table to sign in, I was surprised that they were so thrilled to see a B-list blogger show up with a netbook and a digital recorder to capture and report on the event. Then when I walked into the room I knew why. There was not another soul in that room that even remotely resembled a reporter, even though a press release went out last week announcing the event. This meeting was held at the Plaza Marriott, at 45th and Main in Kansas City. The KKFI studio is at 39th and Main, the KCUR studio is at 48th and Troost and the Kansas City Star is at 17th and Grand. It isn’t like it was held in an inconvenient location. I didn’t expect television cameras, but I did expect some coverage by either the print or radio press. I mean, if 50 teabaggers who are against healthcare reform get together and wave misspelled, grammatically incorrect signs around, the Star covers that . But 50 small business owners and administrators who have benefited from the provisions of the law that have already kicked in, gathered in a meeting room to discuss those benefits? Nothing to see there, they don’t even bother to send a reporter. They will report on people who scream about “death panels” and “government takeover of healthcare” — both rated “lies of the year” by PolitiFact for 2009 and 2010, respectively — but they don’t report on the very real benefits of the legislation. No wonder the law isn’t more popular. If the traditional media had sent a reporter to the Marriott Thursday morning, they could have reported on the benefits to small business, like the tax credit that allows Merrill Gobetz, the operations manager of Bistro Kids to insure her chefs, and how access to healthcare has made her employees healthier, less stressed and more productive. Or they could have reported on the grants available right now through the Department of Health and Human Services. These are funds that are set aside to help small businesses devise and implement workplace wellness programs — which are proven to pay for themselves and even turn a profit in the form of reduced overall costs in both healthcare and lost productivity. A lot of small businesses jumped at the chance to offer their employees health coverage as soon as they could afford to, thanks to the tax credit. Low income individuals who aren’t offered health coverage benefit as well, because the ACA increased funding to subsidize community health centers, where low-income people can receive care either free or at a reduced rate. Kansas City has several great working examples of this in action that could serve as models for the rest of the country — the Swope Health Center clinics and the Truman Medical Centers hospital system. We have these wonderful assets that are making our community healthier, but I never see or hear local stories about how what we have been doing right for years is being rewarded and will be able to expand and help even more people, thanks to the ACA. Why is that? They would also have had the opportunity to educate the public about the exchanges that will be set up and offering coverage options by 2014. Exchanges will essentially be a clearinghouse where you will be able to compare rates and details of coverage for all of the plans in the exchange and pick the plan that your prefered provider accepts assignment from, and select the level of coverage that is right for you, and that once you decide on a plan, the company won’t be able to deny you coverage, even if you have a pre-existing condition. Or that if you are self-employed or employed by a small business that is exempt from the mandate, your income will determine your premium, which will be charged on a sliding scale. They also missed the opportunity to inform the listening/reading public about the “webinar” that the Small Business Majority is hosting on March 31st at 2:00 p.m. Eastern, 11:00 a.m. Pacific, that will focus on what the ACA means for small business and how both federal and state provisions help local small business owners understand how the law can benefit them and their employees, and that those interested in participating or just following along can preregister at www.smallbusinessmajority.org/webinar and that questions can be submitted in advance to national@smallbusinessmajority.org. But they won’t pass along any of the reasoned and factual information that people need to know because they didn’t send a reporter. The lopsided reporting is definitely something to keep in mind the next time you hear a report about how unpopular the ACA is. It’s also depressing as hell, because I have no freakin’ idea how to break through the media blackout when the only person who shows up to report on the positive aspects of the law is a blogger with 500 regular daily readers. This post originally appeared at Show Me Progress
Continue reading …Don’t they have ethics laws in Florida? I guess even if they once did, Jeb Bush got rid of them. Gov. Rick Scott truly is shameless, as Ezra Klein points out: Florida Gov. Rick Scott is one of the most entertainingly shameless figures in American political life. In the 1990s, Scott headed Columbia/HCA Healthcare, the largest for-profit hospital in America. While Scott was running Columbia/HCA Healthcare, it got involved in a bit — okay, a lot — of fraud. As Forbes reported , the company “increased Medicare billings by exaggerating the seriousness of the illnesses they were treating. It also granted doctors partnerships in company hospitals as a kickback for the doctors referring patients to HCA. In addition, it gave doctors ‘loans’ that were never expected to be paid back, free rent, free office furniture, and free drugs from hospital pharmacies.” The scale of the fraud was so immense that Columbia/HCA Healthcare ended up paying more than $2 billion (PDF) back to the federal government in the single largest fraud case in history . (The previous record holder? Drexel Burnham.) Scott resigned shortly before the judgment came down.Today, Scott is enjoying a second act as governor of Florida. And, as Suzy Khimm reports , he doesn’t seem all that chastened. Before running for office, he turned his $62 million stake in Solantic, the urgent-care clinic chain he founded after resigning from Columbia/HCA Healthcare, over to a trust in his wife’s name. Solantic doesn’t take traditional Medicaid, but it does work with the private HMOs that, under a 2005 pilot program, were allowed to contract with Medicaid. And Scott is now pushing a bill that would expand that program across the state making those HMOs — the ones Solantic works with — the norm for Medicaid. Asked about the apparent conflict of interest, Scott said , “If you look at everything that I want to accomplish in health care in Florida is basically what I’ve believed all my life. I believe in the principle that if you have more competition it will drive down the prices.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media We warned this was coming : On Friday, Glenn Beck devoted his entire hour to promoting the conspiracy theories of G. Edward Griffin, a John Bircher and 9/11 truther whose book, The Creature from Jekyll Island , attacks the Federal Reserve as a nefarious cabal intent on enslaving and destroying America. It was quite a performance: Among other things we learned from Griffin was that he believes there is no actual gold at Fort Knox (maybe Goldfinger rendered it radioactive, eh?) and that there is a real inflation rate of around 20 percent right now. Well, as we explained already : Beck, as we all know, has previously demonstrated a fondness for the Birch Society, and this is consistent with that: Griffin, after all, was a close personal friend and longtime associate of Birch Society founder Robert Welch, and wrote a popular Birch book published in 1964, The Fearful Master: A Second Look at the United Nations. The Creature from Jekyll Island is in many ways a compendium of previous works claiming that the Federal Reserve is a fundamentally illegitimate — and therefore deeply nefarious — organization. Most of these theories were deeply anti-Semitic in nature, since they depicted the Fed’s bankers as part of a Jewish cabal intent on destroying white American society. What sets Griffin’s work apart is that — like most Birch texts, which assiduously avoided anti-Semitism — he manages to scrub out the anti-Semitic elements while keeping the paranoid conspiracist elements intact. Since its publication in 1994, Griffin’s book has become a popular text for a large number of right-wing extremists, particularly tax protesters and Patriot movement believers. Griffin himself was involved in organizing a gathering on Jekyll Island last year that the Southern Poverty Law Center credits with helping revive the militia movement . It has been debunked thoroughly, of course — probably most notably by historian Gerry Rough, whose three-part series on the origins of the Fed, “Another Twist on the Jacksonian Bank War,” pretty thoroughly reveal just how fraudulent Griffin’s text really is. You can read it here: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3. [Rough has debunked Griffin further in other essays as well: here, here, and here. ] Media Matters has more background on Griffin : Griffin, in addition to spinning conspiracy theories about the Fed, is also a 9-11 truther and has written extensively about the U.S. government’s “facilitation” of the attacks. In April 2008, Griffin appeared on the radio program of conspiracist Alex Jones and claimed that he predicted just days after 9-11 that “the FBI and the intelligence agencies of the federal government had advance knowledge of this attack but did nothing to stop it,” and that he was proven right. He also is — or, at least, was — a member of the ultra-right wing John Birch Society. He wrote a 1970 pamphlet entitled “This is the John Birch Society: An Invitation to Join,” and a 1975 book entitled The Life and Words of Robert Welch: Founder of the John Birch Society. Another terrific debunking of far-right Federal Reserve theories generally, including Griffin’s texts, was provided by Edward Flaherty at Public Eye. From the first part : Following the near catastrophic financial disaster of 1907, the movement for banking reform picked up steam among Wall Street bankers, Republicans, and eastern Democrats. However, much of the country was still distrustful of bankers and of banking in general, especially after 1907. After two decades of minority status, Democrats regained control of Congress in 1910 and were able to block several Republican attempts at reform, even though they recognized the need for some kind of currency and banking changes. In 1912 Woodrow Wilson won the Democratic party’s nomination for President, and in his populist-friendly acceptance speech he warned against the “money trusts,” and advised that “a concentration of the control of credit … may at any time become infinitely dangerous to free enterprise.”3 Also in 1910, Senator Nelson Aldrich, Frank Vanderlip of National City (today know as Citibank), Henry Davison of Morgan Bank, and Paul Warburg of the Kuhn, Loeb Investment House met secretly at Jeckyll Island, a resort island off the coast of Georgia, to discuss and formulate banking reform, including plans for a form of central banking. The meeting was held in secret because the participants knew that any plan they generated would be rejected automatically in the House of Representatives if it were associated with Wall Street. Because it was secret and because it involved Wall Street, the Jekyll Island affair has always been a favorite source of conspiracy theories. However, the movement toward significant banking and monetary reform was well-known.3 It is hardly surprising that given the real possibility of substantial reform, the banking industry would want some sort of input into the nature of the reforms. The Aldrich Plan which the secret meeting produced was even defeated in the House, so even if the Jekyll Island affair was a genuine conspiracy, it clearly failed. The Aldrich Plan called for a system of fifteen regional central banks, called National Reserve Associations, whose actions would be coordinated by a national board of commercial bankers. The Reserve Association would make emergency loans to member banks, create money to provide an elastic currency that could be exchanged equally for demand deposits, and would act as a fiscal agent for the federal government. Although it was defeated, the Aldrich Plan served as an outline for the bill that eventually was adopted. 5 The problem with the Aldrich Plan was that the regional banks would be controlled individually and nationally by bankers, a prospect that did not sit well with the populist Democratic party or with Wilson. As the debate began to take shape in the spring of 1913, Congressman Arsene Pujo provided good evidence that the nation’s credit markets were under the tight control of a handful of banks – the “money trusts” against which Wilson warned.1 Wilson and the Democrats wanted a reform measure which would decentralize control away from the money trusts. The legislation that eventually emerged was the Federal Reserve Act, also known at the time as the Currency Bill, or the Owen-Glass Act. The bill called for a system of eight to twelve mostly autonomous regional Reserve Banks that would be owned by the banks in their region and whose actions would be coordinated by a Federal Reserve Board appointed by the President. The Board’s members originally included the Secretary of the Treasury, the Comptroller of the Currency, and other officials appointed by the President to represent public interests. The proposed Federal Reserve System would therefore be privately owned, but publicly controlled. Wilson signed the bill on December 23, 1913 and the Federal Reserve System was born.6 Conspiracy theorists have long viewed the Federal Reserve Act as a means of giving control of the banking system to the money trusts, when in reality the intent and effect was to wrestle control away from them. History clearly demonstrates that in the decades prior to the Federal Reserve Act the decisions of a few large New York banks had, at times, enormous repercussions for banks throughout the country and the economy in general. Following the return to central banking, at least some measure of control was removed from them and placed with the Federal Reserve. Ben Dimiero at Media Matters observes: Among many, many other bizarre conspiracies, Griffin has written a book alleging that cancer can be cured by the B-17 vitamin, but this has been covered up due to “the hidden economic and power agenda of those who dominate the medical establishment.” Oh, and according to Griffin’s website, Glenn Beck’s dismissal of birthers is evidence that Beck’s “role as a controlled opposition leader is becoming more obvious.” Yet as you can see, Beck practically scrapes at Griffin’s feet, treating each of his words as golden nuggets of truth: Click here to view this media Click here to view this media Griffin is a clever hoaxter, in large part because he’s able to tap into the circular far-right informational bubble, wherein conspiracy theorists cite each other endlessly as “evidence” of their own outlandish ideas. Gerry Rough has an interesting essay explaining how this works : What happens with conspiracy theories is that author “A” will write a passage in his text, place a footnote or endnote as a reference source for the passage, then move on with the conspiratorial narrative. This is no different than any other work of non-fiction: this is merely standard operating procedure. Author “B” on the other hand, will assume that the passage is correct, cite the same passage, and never bother to check to see if the passage had anything at all to do with a verifiable conspiracy. It is here where conspiracy theories are patently different than other works of non-fiction. *At no point ever* do conspiracy theorists verify the authenticity of the original passage, nor is there any attempt to verify context. So, if a passage turns out to be fabricated or grossly distorted, precisely as *all three examples* in part 3 of this debate, no conspiracy theorist will ever likely have knowledge of it. In other words, they breathe their own exhaust and convince each other it’s fresh air. And as Rough explains, Griffin is noted for playing a key role in this circle-jerk by giving other conspiracy theorists “authoritative” quotations that in fact are bogus in nature: This is much more likely the scenario that happened with Flynn’s research. In point of fact, G. Edward Griffin, a well known author and editor of John Birch Society publications, deliberately lied about the passage in question, then Flynn simply passed on the lie all too willingly while citing Griffin as the original source. In the case of Griffin’s research, there are no other options: Griffin did not cite another author as the source for the passage that his text quoted. In failing to do so, the ultimate responsibility for lying stops at the desk of Griffin alone. But lets not let Flynn and other conspiracy theorists off the hook so easily either. All who write this conspiracy theory nonsense had at one point a responsibility to verify any given passage in question. They willingly shunned that public responsibility and aided a lie by way of omission. If this were an intellectual crime it would be likely classified as criminal negligence. And then when you have a popular TV host with an audience of millions treating this kind of fraud as a factual representation of history … well, it’s no wonder people can’t pass a damned citizenship exam.
Continue reading …Here's the headline and sub-head : Libyan rebel commander admits his fighters have al-Qaeda links Abdel-Hakim al-Hasidi, the Libyan rebel leader, has said jihadists who fought against allied troops in Iraq are on the front lines of the battle against Muammar Gaddafi's regime. So how will the U.S. press deal with this hot potato? Here are excerpts from the UK Telegraph story: In an interview with the Italian newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore, Mr al-Hasidi admitted that he had recruited “around 25″ men from the Derna area in eastern Libya to fight against coalition troops in Iraq. Some of them, he said, are “today are on the front lines in Adjabiya”.
Continue reading …War is a blunt instrument, be your weapons ever so precise. Firepower has a limited utility inversely proportional to its explosive potential. Nevertheless, my response to those who say that ‘war is a lie’ is to ask the city fathers of Carthage what they think about the notion. Indeed, Tripolitania — the northern sector of modern-day Libya, formerly part of the Carthaginian Empire — has been a scene of many wars, including the dance between Generals Rommel and Montgomery during World War II. There are many factors in this uprising: Ghaddafi has used water to play Libyan tribes off one another, destabilize his neighbors , and build a “legacy” ; advancing desertification , and the high cost of food due to climate-change induced Russian drought , have put pressure on Ghaddafi’s system. (High food prices were a factor in Egypt’s revolution as well .) In the meantime, Ghaddafi has socked away untold scores of billions in oil wealth . That is the Libyan social, economic, and political picture in a snapshot; Libya is a “sick man” of North Africa because Moammar is a despot. You can see it in Libya’s cities. As an ardent anti-urbanist, Ghaddafi sleeps in a tent and writes semi-poetic screeds about how much “I hate the city.” He has done little to prepare Libya for a burgeoning population; education and opportunity have been non-existent. His ideology, as presented in his ” Little Green Book ” (like Mao’s Little Red Book ; get it?), is pastoral authoritarianism . Since mid-February of this year, an armed uprising has challenged his power and rejected his ideology. The presence of pre-Ghaddafi flags among the rebels is proof enough that an entire order is being rejected. But a symbol is the only unifying feature thus far: the rebellion has fallen along tribal lines, as the armed forces have been maintained this way — with the out-tribes receiving less equipment and money than the loyal ones — for years. Much of the volunteer mob has no formal military training, with no central command structure to exploit openings or pursue objectives. Thus, mobility has been a limiting factor for the rebellion. Moving lots of men and material from one place to another and bringing the enemy to a decision is not easy, which is why militaries spend most of their time practicing movement. Ad hoc military units created from turncoat elements of the Libyan military are only slightly more cohesive than the disorganized mob. There have been many reported incidents of rebels taking an area only to lose it the next day by disorganization. Ammunition gets wasted in celebration. Without fire discipline or direction, many opportunities were lost — and the forces loyal to Moammar Ghaddafi began to control the chaos better than the rebels. By last Saturday, when the world intervened, the opposition had collapsed and loyalist forces were already at the gates of Benghazi. Allied forces are now one week into their intervention, having destroyed the organized spearhead of Ghaddafi’s ground forces, established total air supremacy, and relieved Benghazi with supplies. In effect, the campaign has leveled the odds again. The rest will have to be up to the Libyans themselves, which is as it should be. Ongoing battles in key cities along the Mediterranean shoreline have seen continued used of heavy weapons and sniper fire against civilians. Western air power has limited utility here. As one Iraqi Colonel testified after the 1991 Gulf War, forty-six days of allied bombardment had reduced him from 35 tanks to 31; within minutes of engaging American M-1 tanks, he had exactly one tank left. It simply isn’t possible to find and destroy every Libyan tank from the air, and even if you could, it would be impossible to separate rebel from loyalist. There is nothing a Mirage jet can do about your sniper, except perhaps drop a bomb on him; and that might not be helpful, particularly if you wish to avoid civilian casualties. This deadly balancing act is a design feature of OP Odyssey Dawn. The strategy seems to be that more innocent Libyans die at Moammar’s hands than the West’s. For his part, Ghaddafi is doing a fine job of making that strategy a success. Moreover, urban environments actually limit the use of tanks, which become vulnerable in close quarters (there is nothing more dangerous to a tank than infantrymen waiting in cover). Thus, the fight for the cities will continue to be an infantry battle. The crucial factor, then, is gasoline: Moammar Ghaddafi has a limited supply of fuel to run his tanks and motor his troops. If rebels achieve control of the means of fuel production , Ghaddafi hasn’t got a prayer of maintaining his grip — rebels will have freedom of movement to concentrate their ad hoc formations decisively. The government’s recapture of Ras Lanuf led to the near-fall of Benghazi for much the same reason. The notion that loyalist commanders will turn coat once the Western alliance shows up — an illusion that mainly seems to have affected the opposition — may actually prove true once the spigot is off. So here, then, is a nightmare question for both the anti-interventionists of the left and the entire Republican Party: what if it works? Video via BlackWaterDog Crossposted at Osborne Ink
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