Two-tier workforce condemning millions to low-paid jobs, study warns | Money | The Observer: "The study by the independent Resolution Foundation, entitled Low Pay Britain 2013, will highlight fears that the return to growth and higher employment is masking an ever-wider divide between people in low-skilled work and those in an upper tier of more stable, skilled, managerial and professional jobs.
The report comes as the three main political parties wrestle with ways to address the gulf between declining real wages for millions and the increasing cost of living, as they plan for the 2015 general election.
Labour will put its support for a "living wage" – higher than the minimum wage and judged as necessary for a decent standard of living – at the heart of its next election manifesto, citing it as one measure to help ease what it calls a crisis of living standards.
Low pay (defined as two-thirds of gross hourly median pay, £7.44 an hour in 2012) is becoming more prevalent among the young, the report says, and the trend seems to be continuing even as the economy improves.
Today more than one in three people aged 16-30 (2.4 million) are low-paid, compared with one in five in the 1970s (1.7 million at that time)."
'via Blog this'
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Two-tiers: economy, not trains
Inequality in Germany- beneath the surface
Low-paid Germans mind rich-poor gap as elections approach | World news | theguardian.com: Going to the cinema or her local outdoor pool are treats Christa Rein can rarely afford. "I can't ever buy things like salmon or a bottle of sparkling wine," says the 55-year-old. "The fridge can't break, as I wouldn't be able to afford to replace it."
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Fast Food, Slim wages
US fast-food workers stage nationwide strike in protest at low wages | World news | The Guardian: "US workers in the fast-food industry staged a one-day strike in dozens of cities on Thursday, calling for better wages and the right to unionise.
The strike was the largest so far in a 10-month campaign that began with 200 workers striking in New York last November, and which spread to Detroit and Chicago in July.
Organisers said the strikes, scheduled a day after the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington and a few days before Labor Day, were being held in 60 cities and had spread to the south – including Tampa and Raleigh – and the west, with workers in Los Angeles and San Francisco taking part.
In New York, the Democratic mayoral hopeful Christine Quinn took part in a march with several hundred workers and protesters before entering a McDonald's near the Empire State Building on Thursday morning.
Local organisers in Detroit said at least three stores had been shut down because of the strikes. One was a Checkers restaurant; the other two were Church's chicken restaurants."
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
E-Cubed= B-cubed (Executive Egregious Excess = Bailed Out, Booted and Busted)
Executive Excess 2013: Bailed Out, Booted, and Busted - IPS: "The Bailed Out: CEOs whose firms either ceased to exist or received taxpayer bailouts after the 2008 financial crash held 22 percent of the slots in our sample. Richard Fuld of Lehman Brothers enjoyed one of Corporate America’s largest 25 paychecks for eight consecutive years — until his firm went belly up in 2008.
The Booted: Not counting those on the bailed out list, another 8 percent of our sample was made up of CEOs who wound up losing their jobs involuntarily. Despite their poor performance, the “booted” CEOs jumped out the escape hatch with golden parachutes valued at $48 million on average.
The Busted: CEOs who led corporations that ended up paying significant fraud-related fines or settlements comprised an additional 8 percent of the sample. One CEO had to pay a penalty out of his own pocket for stock option back-dating. The other companies shelled out payments that totaled over $100 million per firm."
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Broccoli: a green signal for less pain
Broccoli may trump your genetics when it comes to your chances of getting arthritis - Science News | Daily News from The Irish Times - Wed, Aug 28, 2013: "The laboratory study shows that the substance, sulforaphane, slows down cartilage destruction associated with painful and often debilitating osteoarthritis. Mice fed a diet rich in the compound had significantly less cartilage damage.
Sulforaphane is released when eating cruciferous vegetables such as Brussels sprouts and cabbage, but particularly broccoli. While earlier studies involving the superfood focused on cancer, this is the first major study into its effects on joint health.
Inflammation
The University of East Anglia study, which also examined human cartilage cells, discovered that sulforaphane blocks the enzymes that cause joint destruction by stopping a key molecule known to cause inflammation."
'via Blog this'
French Fry Burger
French Fry Burger? See who's selling fries on a burger for a buck. - CSMonitor.com: "The "French Fry Burger" will start selling for $1 on September 1, as Burger King tries to fend off McDonald's aggressive push for its Dollar Menu.
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The Miami-based chain says the burger will be available through the fall, as it looks to drum up sales and customer interest with cheap new concoctions...."
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Monday, August 26, 2013
Germany and privacy
Germany should lead on disarming our global surveillance system | Comment is free | theguardian.com: "But among the blind, the one-eyed man is king. In the last decade, Germany too has started using totalitarian methods. Many laws have been passed to ease surveillance – most of them while Angela Merkel was chancellor. Nearly one in every four of them were then scrapped by our highest court for being unconstitutional. Even the lax barriers of spy-friendly laws are regularly being ignored by public agencies. And still, we feel like a nation with the highest standards of privacy rights although, in fact, we have ceased to be one.
But the feeling and the high estimation of privacy is still vivid and this can now be used to reset the course, back to democracy, where we, the people, define checks and balances and the degree of transparency we want. It is no accident that the Pirate party has seats in four German state parliaments and realistic prospects to enter the national parliament in September. This young political force represents the digital society, fighting for transparent governments and citizen empowerment as well as for freedom rights and privacy."
'via Blog this'
Instagram, down by Amazon
Amazon glitch hits Instagram and AirBnB | Technology | theguardian.com: "Several popular websites suffered outages or slowdowns on Sunday when Amazon's unit that runs web servers for other companies experienced problems.
Picture site Instagram and Twitter's Vine video-sharing application were among the sites slow or unavailable along with holidays site AirBnB.
Instagram sent a tweet saying it was aware some users were having trouble loading Instagram and that it was working to resolve the problem. Vine later sent a similar tweet.
AirBnB tweeted that it was one of several websites and apps that were temporarily down because of Amazon server problems.
Amazon Web Services provides companies with online storage and computing power. Its website reported several problems resolved on Sunday evening, with only minor issues remaining.
By late on Sunday, videos posted to Vine appeared to be working again while Instagram and AirBnB were functioning but slow."
'via Blog this'
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Guns N' Classrooms
Keep the guns out of my classroom | Ashley Lauren Samsa | Comment is free | theguardian.com: "If I were in Ohio, though, it's entirely possible that I could have been attending summer trainings on how to shoot guns on the run, how to shoot while navigating obstacles like narrow hallways and staircases, and how to anticipate the actions of a killer.
This training isn't just for police anymore. The Buckeye Firearms Association offered this class for teachers who wanted to learn how to effectively use a gun against an intruder to their school. The seminar drew over 1,400 applicants for 24 spots. It seems that teachers in Ohio and in the more than 30 other states which have proposed laws allowing teachers to carry firearms are taking National Rifle Association executive vice-president Wayne LaPierre's statement after the awful Newtown shooting to heart:"
The only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.
When did Balmer becomer her?
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer to retire as company faces needed shake-up | Technology | The Guardian: ""That's why today's news is even more surprising after Ballmer achieved such a big change for Microsoft. If his or her successor doesn't like the 'One Microsoft' vision, he'll have to do another reorganization," noted TechCrunch."
'via Blog this'
Friday, August 23, 2013
Social justice, Sweden's way
Our inability to teach basic values is at the heart of the storm over social media abuse - Social Affairs & News from Ireland & Abroad | The Irish Times - Sat, Aug 24, 2013: "In a recent case in Sweden, two teenage girls aged 16 and 17 set up a “slut-shaming” account on Instagram, asking people to nominate the biggest sluts in Gothenburg.
The site caused such anger that a near-riot ensued outside a school where one of the girls who set up the site was allegedly a student. The two girls were charged with aggravated defamation and found guilty. One was sentenced to juvenile detention, and the other got 45 hours’ community service. They were fined 570,000 krona (€65,500), to be divided among their 38 victims. In an interesting twist, the older girl’s mother was made responsible for half of the fine."
'via Blog this'
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Eugene Robinson: The GOP’s shutdown fantasy - The Washington Post
Eugene Robinson: The GOP’s shutdown fantasy - The Washington Post: "The make-believe crusade by publicity-hound Republicans to somehow stop Obamacare is one of the most cynical political exercises we’ve seen in many years. And that, my friends, is saying something.
Charlatans are peddling the fantasy that somehow they can prevent the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act from becoming what it already is: the law of the land. Congress passed it, President Obama signed it, the Supreme Court upheld it, many of its provisions are already in force, and others will soon take effect."
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Greece-ian formula
If Greece needs a third bailout, Europe had better find a formula that sticks | Business | The Guardian: "So, Greece will soon need a third bailout. German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble admitted as much on Tuesday – and was even prepared to say so during the pre-election period in Germany. One assumes Schäuble deemed it safe to dive into these politically contentious waters only because he also stuck to the party line that Athens would receive no more debt forgiveness.
What a shame. If a third bailout is required the time has come for the euro-powers to find a formula that sticks. A small loan package, to fill the hole already identified by the International Monetary Fund, would represent another dose of medicine that isn't working. The Greek economy, weighed down by austerity measures, would stumble along for a while – but a fourth package would loom sooner or later."
'via Blog this'
Monday, August 19, 2013
Revealing Stories...
White House was given 'heads-up' over David Miranda detention in UK | World news | theguardian.com: "Josh Earnest, the principal deputy White House press secretary, said at the daily briefing: "There was a heads-up that was provided by the British government. This is something that we had an indication that was likely to occur but it is not something that we requested. It was something that was done specifically by the British law enforcement officials. This is an independent British law enforcement decision that was made."
Earnest had earlier said: "This is a decision that was made by the British government without the involvement – and not at the request – of the United States government. It is as simple as that."
The White House spokesman confirmed that Britain alerted the US authorities after Miranda's name appeared on a passenger manifest of a flight from Berlin to Heathrow on Sunday morning. "I think that is an accurate interpretation of what a heads-up is," Earnest said when asked if the tip was provided when Miranda's name appeared on the manifest."
'CIA admits role in 1953 Iranian coup | World news | The Guardian: ""The military coup that overthrew Mosaddeq and his National Front cabinet was carried out under CIA direction as an act of US foreign policy, conceived and approved at the highest levels of government," reads a previously excised section of an internal CIA history titled The Battle for Iran.
The documents, published on the archive's website under freedom of information laws, describe in detail how the US – with British help – engineered the coup, codenamed TPAJAX by the CIA and Operation Boot by Britain's MI6.
Britain, and in particular Sir Anthony Eden, the foreign secretary, regarded Mosaddeq as a serious threat to its strategic and economic interests after the Iranian leader nationalised the British Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, latterly known as BP. But the UK needed US support. The Eisenhower administration in Washington was easily persuaded.
British documents show how senior officials in the 1970s tried to stop Washington from releasing documents that would be "very embarrassing" to the UK."
'via Blog this'
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Utah and water
Northern Utah cities asked to cut water use by 50 percent | ksl.com: "BRIGHAM CITY — Residents in a number of northern Utah cities are being told to greatly reduce their secondary water usage or face some strict penalties.
Pineview Water Systems has asked all users to immediately reduce their water use by at least 50 percent for the remainder of the watering season. People affected by this restriction live in the areas from Washington Terrace north to Brigham City.
Users were asked to water their lawns only once every five days from now to the end of August, and once every seven days during the month of September.
Those who don't comply with the restrictions will have their secondary water service turned off , with an added cost of $500 to turn it back on next year."
'via Blog this'
Saturday, August 17, 2013
A SAR-ry story: Not for I-KEAs
Some Assembly Required — the lies of Ikea and beyond: "Some Assembly Required, it says.
This is one of those horrible euphemisms of modern life. Some Assembly Required is like Minor Side Effects Include: Drowsiness, Dizziness, Sudden Tendency To Start Sleep-Eating and Sleep-Operating Machinery and Sleep-Driving, Death. It’s not an oxymoron like Facebook Privacy or an outright lie like Fun Size, but it comes close. Some Assembly Required packs all the devious You Are Not Getting The Fun You Expected of “Baggage Carousel” into three devious words.
There was a time, I realize, when not only did we have to build all furniture ourselves, but we had to do so without any instructions. But usually you could get out of having to assemble any furniture by quietly dying of smallpox. That was a time when your furniture was assembled by a guy called a cabinetmaker, a guy whose entire trade was to assemble beautiful furniture. "
Friday, August 16, 2013
India's skin colour obsession: helped by the Fair but not lovely creams, and the unconscionable stars
India's unfair obsession with lighter skin | World news | The Guardian: "
India's obsession with fair skin is well documented: in 1978, Unilever launched Fair & Lovely cream, which has subsequently spawned numerous whitening face cleansers, shower gels and even vaginal washes that claim to lighten the surrounding skin. In 2010, India's whitening-cream market was worth $432m, according to a report by market researchers ACNielsen, and was growing at 18% per year. Last year, Indians reportedly consumed 233 tonnes of skin-whitening products, spending more money on them than on Coca-Cola.
Cricket players and Bollywood stars regularly endorse these products. But now the film star Nandita Das has taken a stance against the craze and given her support to the Dark is Beautiful campaign which challenges the belief that success and beauty are determined by skin colour. "I want people to be comfortable in their own skin and realise that there is more to life than skin colour," she says, adding that an Indian paper had written "about my support for the campaign and then lightened the photo of me that went alongside it"."
'via Blog this'
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Celtic Green to Celtic Brown by 2050? Heat is on, in Ireland.
Ireland to experience huge temperature rises, says expert - Science News | Daily News from The Irish Times - Fri, Aug 16, 2013: "Ireland will experience “huge increases” in temperatures over this century, according to a leading Irish expert on climate change. Average Irish August temperatures are projected to have increased by “two to three degrees Celsius by 2050, and by six to seven degrees Celsius by 2100”, according to Prof Colin O’Dowd, director of NUI Galway’s centre for climate and air pollution studies. The rises predicted are significantly higher than most current forecasts.
His warning comes as new research published yesterday by German scientists shows climate change will trigger more frequent and severe heatwaves in the next 30 years regardless of the carbon dioxide (CO2) we emit into the atmosphere.
Dramatic changes
The study, published in the journal Environmental Research Letters, predicts dramatic changes as soon as 2020."
'via Blog this'
McD-gets crowdsourced heat
Melbourne McDonald's protesters to take petition to US head office | World news | theguardian.com: "Protesters opposing a McDonald's restaurant in Melbourne's outer east will take their fight to the fast food chain's head office in the US.
They are asking the 84,000 people who have signed a petition on the website change.org to oppose McDonald's building a restaurant in Tecoma to make a small donation to pay for one person to hand deliver the petition to the company's Chicago office.
A spokesman, Garry Muratore, says they have raised $16,000 in the first 24 hours.
"McDonald's Australia might think that by sending in the bulldozers, they've won," he said. "They couldn't be more wrong."
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Kite-flying-- not a child's fun game
Reprehensible budget kite-flying on old-age pension designed to target the most vulnerable - Financial Services News | Business News | The Irish Times - Mon, Aug 12, 2013: "Kite-flying has become one of the more reprehensible features of the the annual Irish budget jamboree – generally designed specifically to target the most vulnerable sections of society in the hope that other, less austere measures on budget day will be greeted with relief. If this is the transparency of process the Government promised us in its handling of budgets under its watch, it has little to commend it. Already, this summer, targets have included child benefit and pensioners’ free travel."
'via Blog this'
Cutting argument against austerit-attack against the old and the poor
Who will be the last to suffer for the mistake of austerity? - Political News | Irish & International Politics | The Irish Times - Tue, Aug 13, 2013: "Cutting the incomes of the poorest people is indecent. It is particularly stupid when children are overrepresented in poor households, meaning the long-term social and economic costs will be all the greater. But even leaving aside considerations of basic decency, it is an exercise in bone-headed futility, like generals throwing kids and the elderly on to the frontlines in a war that is already lost. It is not fiscal responsibility, but social and economic recklessness. We’ve had zombie banks and zombie politics and now we have a zombie idea, a policy based on calculations admitted to be wrong. Are we really telling people to go cold and go hungry because somebody couldn’t do the maths?"
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Luxurious Necessities? or Necessary Luxuries?
Giving up coffee to balance the books: how many lattes to financial freedom? | Money | theguardian.com: "...The latest to take on the challenge of convincing Americans of the reality of their financial lives is Joseph N Cohen, an assistant professor of sociology at Queens College. In a paper released this past weekend at the American Sociological Association's annual meeting in New York City, Cohen used figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to bust the myth of the latte factor: the idea that we're wasting our precious funds on pointless luxuries.
...""A colleague of mine once told me that America is a place where the luxuries are cheap but the necessities expensive. A cell phone is affordable. What's killing people is housing and childcare and medical expenses."
Monday, August 12, 2013
Not a flight of fancy- being green flies into rough weather, and provokes serious self-examination
Air Travel Is Worse Than a Hummer With Wings - Bloomberg: "The question answers itself, doesn’t it? Giving up air travel and overnight delivery is much more personally costly for the public intellectuals who write about this stuff than giving up a big SUV. If you live in one of the five or six major cities that contain virtually everyone who writes about climate change, having a small car (or no car), is a pretty easy adjustment to imagine. On the other hand, try to imagine giving up far-flung vacations, conferences, etc. -- especially since travel to interesting locales is one of the hidden perks of not-very-well remunerated positions at universities, public policy groups, nongovernmental organizations, and yes, news organizations.
If we’re going to get serious about greenhouse gasses, we need to get serious about air travel. Going to a distant conference should attract the kind of scorn among the chattering classes that is currently reserved for buying a Hummer."
'via Blog this'
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Subsizing Walmart and other minimum-wage payers
'via Blog this'
Thirst for water, Texas Size!
A Texan tragedy: ample oil, no water | Environment | theguardian.com: ""We have large urban centres sucking water out of west Texas to put on their lands. We have a huge agricultural community, and now we have fracking which is also using water," she said. And then there is climate change.
West Texas has a long history of recurring drought, but under climate change, the south-west has been experiencing record-breaking heatwaves, further drying out the soil and speeding the evaporation of water in lakes and reservoirs. Underground aquifers failed to regenerate. "What happens is that climate change comes on top and in many cases it can be the final straw that breaks the camel's back, but the camel is already overloaded," said Hayhoe.
Other communities across a bone-dry south-west are resorting to extraordinary measures to keep the water flowing. Robert Lee, also in the oil patch, has been hauling in water by tanker. So has Spicewood Beach, a resort town 40 miles from Austin, which has been trucking in water since early 2012.
San Angelo, a city of 100,000, dug a pipeline to an underground water source more than 60 miles away, and sunk half a dozen new wells."
'via Blog this'
The Opt-Out Generation: homw many people are needed to create a "generation"...
The Opt-Out Generation Wants Back In - NYTimes.com: "fter one emotional session with a friend, her 12-year-old daughter asked what all the fuss was about. O’Donnel told her: “This is the perfect reason why you need to work. You don’t have to make a million dollars. You don’t have to have a wealthy lifestyle. You just always have to be able to at least earn enough so you can support yourself.”
Nine years ago, O’Donnel was promoting a very different message. She was a spokeswoman of sorts for a group of women — highly educated, very accomplished, well-paid professionals with high-earning spouses — who in the early 2000s made headlines for leaving the work force just when they were hitting their stride. They were a small demographic to be sure (another, larger, group who left the work force at that time — poor mothers who couldn’t afford child care — went without notice), but they garnered a great deal of media attention.
This magazine, in a cover article by Lisa Belkin, called the phenomenon of their leaving work the “Opt-Out Revolution,” and other coverage followed: a Time magazine cover story on “The Case for Staying Home” and a “60 Minutes” segment devoted to a group of former mega-achievers who were, as the anchor Lesley Stahl put it, “giving up money, success and big futures” to be home with their children."
The Opt-Out Generation: homw many people are needed to create a "generation"...
The Opt-Out Generation Wants Back In - NYTimes.com: "fter one emotional session with a friend, her 12-year-old daughter asked what all the fuss was about. O’Donnel told her: “This is the perfect reason why you need to work. You don’t have to make a million dollars. You don’t have to have a wealthy lifestyle. You just always have to be able to at least earn enough so you can support yourself.”
Nine years ago, O’Donnel was promoting a very different message. She was a spokeswoman of sorts for a group of women — highly educated, very accomplished, well-paid professionals with high-earning spouses — who in the early 2000s made headlines for leaving the work force just when they were hitting their stride. They were a small demographic to be sure (another, larger, group who left the work force at that time — poor mothers who couldn’t afford child care — went without notice), but they garnered a great deal of media attention.
This magazine, in a cover article by Lisa Belkin, called the phenomenon of their leaving work the “Opt-Out Revolution,” and other coverage followed: a Time magazine cover story on “The Case for Staying Home” and a “60 Minutes” segment devoted to a group of former mega-achievers who were, as the anchor Lesley Stahl put it, “giving up money, success and big futures” to be home with their children."
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Veggie prices, not veggies, going to the sun
Veggie prices shoot up - The Hindu: "This festive season, people are feeling the pinch of rising vegetable prices in the capital following poor arrivals at different markets, including Rythu Bazaars, due to the ongoing Samaikyandhra agitations.
Price of green chillies, onions, capsicum, carrot, brinjal have hit the roof as majority of these vegetables are transported to the capital everyday from different places in coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema regions.
While a kg of green chillies is now costing Rs. 42, capsicum Rs. 54, carrot Rs. 42 at different Rythu Bazaars, it is higher in the retail markets and pushcart vendors offer them at much higher rates.
Depending on the quality, the price of onions is fluctuating around Rs. 45 per kg and to make it convenient for people, the government is now offering onions at Rs. 23 per kg at special counters in all the rythu bazaars in the capital."
'via Blog this'
Wal-Mart's New Goal: Sell All the Beer - Businessweek
Wal-Mart's New Goal: Sell All the Beer - Businessweek: "When Wal-Mart (WMT) began buying a greater number of locally grown fruits and vegetables in 2010, it made sure its efforts got plenty of publicity. But when Walmart decided it wanted to double its alcohol sales by 2016, it didn’t exactly issue a press release.
Customers noticed, and those in the alcohol industry—or, as Walmart prefers, the adult beverage business—certainly took note of the change. “They’ve said they want to be the No. 1 beer seller in the world,” Cameron Smith, the president of an executive search firm that works closely with Walmart’s supplier network, told Bloomberg News. “They’re getting there quick. Everyone in the supplier community is on cloud nine.”
So far, Walmart seems pretty pleased with the results, although the company hasn’t provided specific sales figures. “Feedback has been very positive” and the relationship with distributors “has been very collaborative,” says Deisha Barnett, a Walmart spokeswoman."
'via Blog this'
Friday, August 09, 2013
Africa and digital dumping
Africa will not be Europe's digital dumping ground, say leaders | Global development | theguardian.com: "In a document released this week, African countries that adopted an international convention on hazardous waste called for uniform action to end the import of discarded electronic goods containing dangerous components. In some cases, the products are sent as donations for re-use, even though they are no longer useful.
In response to the trade in e-waste, the EU took steps in 2012 to strengthen its export laws to prevent the dumping of electronic goods in Africa.
The update to the 2003 waste from electrical and electronic equipment (Weee) directive followed hard-fought bargaining over how to improve the recovery of computers and other electronic and electrical waste, much of which was either dumped in landfills or shipped abroad for disposal because of the high cost of recycling in Europe.
In June, signatories to the Bamako convention on the export of hazardous waste to Africa met in the Malian capital for the first time since the international agreement was formed in 1991."
'via Blog this'
Do No Evil does not equate to Do Some Good, and Good Only
Bill Gates criticises Google's Project Loon initiative | Technology | theguardian.com: "Google's Project Loon initiative wants to provide internet access for the developing world from a network of balloons floating in the stratosphere. Former Microsoft boss Bill Gates isn't keen on the idea.
"When you're dying of malaria, I suppose you'll look up and see that balloon, and I'm not sure how it'll help you. When a kid gets diarrhoea, no, there's no website that relieves that," Gates told Business Week, in an interview about the work of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
"Certainly I'm a huge believer in the digital revolution. And connecting up primary-healthcare centres, connecting up schools, those are good things. But no, those are not, for the really low-income countries, unless you directly say we're going to do something about malaria.""
'via Blog this'
Thursday, August 08, 2013
$450 an hour to train toddlers
The serious side of child’s play - FT.com: "Bribing toddlers can be counter-productive, according to Vanessa. Instead, the 28-year-old coaches her young charges how to play together – for $450 an hour. After all, play dates are no trivial matter. They can decide a child’s future.
Vanessa, who declines to give her last name, is one of a new breed of play date experts that help children prepare for admission to New York’s elite kindergartens. As part of the admission process to these schools that charge up to $40,000 a year, four-year-olds must attend a playgroup where they are tested by teachers for academic ability and their social and emotional IQ.
Play date experts set up situations to see how children respond and then make suggestions for improvement. For example, if everyone has to write down his or her name but there are not enough pencils, they must wait their turn."
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, August 07, 2013
Call-recognition, Dolphin way
Dolphins can recognize calls from old tank mates from 20 years ago, study finds - The Washington Post: "Dolphins have long impressed people with their sharp minds and humanlike traits, such as calling each other by name, goofing off and even understanding numbers. Now a scientist has found that the mammals can recognize an old friend’s whistle, even after they have been apart for 20 years — the longest social memory ever recorded for a non-human.
In a study released Tuesday, dolphins largely ignored calls from unfamiliar dolphins but responded when an old tank mate’s signature whistle was played back to them. It didn’t matter how much time had passed since the two had last seen each other or whether they had been tank mates for only a few months: The dolphins appeared to remember a familiar whistle."
'via Blog this'
Three cracked pillars of a failed state - Logical analysis by Fintan O"Toole that applies here as well
irishtimes.com - Three cracked pillars of a failed state - Tue Aug 06 01:00:00 IST 2013: "Fintan O'Toole
Failure of the State
The failure of the State can be calibrated in many ways: the unwillingness to protect vulnerable citizens from slavery and abuse, the inability to sustain a modest prosperity, the apparently endemic resort to mass emigration, the descent into systemic corruption, the throwing away of hard-won sovereignty, the persistence of structural inequality. But we can also see it even if we look at the State in its simplest expression as a set of institutions.
'via Blog this'
Tuesday, August 06, 2013
Tough life, even for polar bears
Starved polar bear perished due to record sea-ice melt, says expert | Environment | The Guardian: "A starved polar bear found found dead in Svalbard as "little more than skin and bones" perished due to a lack of sea ice on which to hunt seals, according to a renowned polar bear expert.
Climate change has reduced sea ice in the Arctic to record lows in the last year and Dr Ian Stirling, who has studied the bears for almost 40 years and examined the animal, said the lack of ice forced the bear into ranging far and wide in an ultimately unsuccessful search for food.
"From his lying position in death the bear appears to simply have starved and died where he dropped," Stirling said. "He had no external suggestion of any remaining fat, having been reduced to little more than skin and bone."
Monday, August 05, 2013
low-pay, part-time, world
New jobs disproportionately low-pay or part-time - Yahoo! Finance: " disproportionate number of the added jobs were part-time or low-paying — or both.
Part-time work accounted for more than 65 percent of the positions employers added in July. Low-paying retailers, restaurants and bars supplied more than half July's job gain.
"You're getting jobs added, but they might not be the best-quality job," says John Canally, an economist with LPL Financial in Boston.
So far this year, low-paying industries have provided 61 percent of the nation's job growth, even though these industries represent just 39 percent of overall U.S. jobs, according to Labor Department numbers analyzed by Moody's Analytics. Mid-paying industries have contributed just 22 percent of this year's job gain.
"The jobs that are being created are not generating much income," Steven Ricchiuto, chief economist at Mizuho Securities USA, wrote in a note to clients."
'via Blog this'
Saturday, August 03, 2013
Capitalism- only when I like it: Rules according to BOB
The administration, which had 60 days to review the ITC’s June 4 “final determination,” announced its decision in a four-page letter by Ambassador Michael Froman, a U.S. trade representative, to Irving A. Williamson, chairman of the U.S. ITC. The ITC issued the ban on older Apple devices — the iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPad 3G and iPad 2 3G distributed with cellular service by AT&T — after agreeing with Samsung that Apple infringed one of Samsung’s standard-essential patents (SEP). The ban would have gone into effect Aug. 5."
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Friday, August 02, 2013
When logic and ethics are foreign or unknown- the Big Lie
The Big Lie Goes After Obamacare - Bloomberg: "I called Brase to ask what she would advise for a 22-year-old who can't afford insurance outside of the exchanges. She started by arguing that getting coverage on the exchanges doesn't guarantee access to care, and so may not be any better than going without insurance.
That claim is absurd on its face: Even if you believe that exchange-purchased insurance will offer fewer care options than other types of coverage, some insurance is leagues better than none. Forget about the penalty for not carrying insurance; what if that 22-year-old needs medical care? He can pay his doctors directly, Brase responded, or seek charity care.
Having dismissed the entire concept of insurance, Brase then tried a different argument: Thanks to the law's guarantee that nobody can be denied coverage, anyone who gets sick can simply sign up for insurance. But it isn't that simple. While you can't be denied coverage because you're sick, you still need to buy that coverage during the annual open enrollment period, as with employer-sponsored insurance. That ends March 31, 2014."
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This Is What Would Happen If Fast-Food Workers Got Raises - Businessweek
Consumed by Consumption? Clarify by Cleaning Out!
Clutter no more: packing in the habit of outrageous consumption - Life & Style | Trends, Tips, News & Advice | The Irish Times - Wed, Jul 31, 2013: "Stuff and nonsense
Again, this isn’t all that surprising: another study found that the average American child acquires 70 new toys a year.
None of the families in the UCLA study were hoarders: they were just ordinary people who had become overwhelmed with stuff. “Mothers were very aware of the mess and clutter and [had adopted] a laugh-it-off attitude that this was going to just keep recurring,” one of the researchers, anthropology professor Jeanne E Arnold told the Washington Post. “A few were almost bitter.”
Somehow, we have become caught on a treadmill that we can’t get off. We work harder to earn more (or at least in the hope that, in a recession, we won’t earn substantially less), so that we can keep spending. Acquiring and managing our mountains of stuff takes up so much time that we have fewer resources and less energy for the things that really matter. We end up living in cluttered houses, feeling overwhelmed and unproductive, and never, ever able to find our keys."
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