BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

Friday, March 30, 2012

"The Death of Why: The Decline of Questioning and the Future of Democracy"

Andrea Batista Schlesinger


Andrea Batista Schlesinger recently left City Hall where she was a Special Advisor to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Director of Strategic Initiatives for the Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services. In this role she coordinated the Mayor’s Young Men’s Initiative, a comprehensive package of policy reform and programmatic initiatives designed to reduce the disparities challenging Black and Latino young males. 

Andrea Batista Schlesinger’s commentary has a simple thesis.  An inquisitive attitude is essential to dutiful citizenship in a democracy, and the attitude is waning among American youths.  Teenagers and 20-year-olds in the United States have little curiosity about the workings of government, they don’t follow the actions of their representatives, they don’t read the newspaper or watch the network news, and, worst of all, they don’t care—or at least they are taught not to.  The institutions that should inspire civic inquiry—schools, media, governments—fail their responsibility, sometimes deliberately so, and the rising generation follows their lead.  We’ve lost the crucial interrogative “Why?”

Furthermore, other forces squelch young people’s curiosity about such matters.  They include:
  • Parenting styles that emphasize self-esteem and praise, with the effect of discouraging the kind of intellectual struggles that come with civic inquiry.
  • Google, which allows over-fast results to questioning, disallowing lengthier, serendipitous ways of searching.
  • The Web, which allows users to customize their connections to the world, linking them to things that already interest them and people that already agree with them.
  • School curricula that aim to produce effective and obedient workers, not independent thinkers.
  • Media that downplay investigative journalism and reporting on the facts, instead offering pundits and personalities that opine and rant.
It’s a consumerist, individualist era, Schlesinger maintains, and people eschew the labor of examination.  “I see an environment that prizes projections of certainty over the wisdom gained from questioning, and questioning again,” she says (page 5).  Whereas the Internet, politicians, and media promise a world ever-more respectful of public opinion, audience tastes, and empowered users, in truth, “I see us asking our media, our politicians, our self-help gurus for an answer, any answer, to help us understand the world around us.”  Indeed, therein lies the real attraction of the Internet—not that it opens people to the world and inspires their curiosity, but that it delivers quick and handy resolutions to their confusions and uncertainties.  Firedoglake.com (FDL)

And while advocates of digital learning such as Tom Watson claim that “the Internet encourages curiosity,”  Schlesinger finds that “young people search for information online without any intention.  They bounce all over the place, hopping and skipping their way through content” (page 61).  The Bush Administration pledged that No Child Left Behind would raise outcomes across the board, but their testing focus, though it may have enhanced basic skills, blunted civic knowledge and critical thinking.

Who Writes Our Laws?

Trayvon Martin's death has put a spotlight on Florida's "stand your ground" law. The American Legislative Exchange Council uses that law as a model and encourages other states to adopt it. Host Michel Martin speaks with Lisa Graves of the progressive watchdog Center for Media and Democracy. She says ALEC is fueled by corporate interests.


At least half the states in the country now have something like that in place, according to a number of watchdog groups and that is, in part, because of a group called ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council. It's been using the Florida law as a model and encouraging other states to adopt similar legislation and that has caught the attention of progressive groups which are trying to stop them.




(They [ALEC] note that they did not come up with the Stand Your Ground Law, but they, rather, use the Florida law as a model for other states.)
They[ALEC] say, quote, "Stand Your Ground, or the Castle Doctrine, designed to protect people who defend themselves from imminent death and great bodily harm. It does not allow you to pursue another person. It does not allow you to seek confrontation. It does not allow you to attack someone who does not pose an imminent threat. What it does is allow you to defend yourself and your family from immediate and real danger."   American Legislative Exchange Council  


We've seen that these bills have been cited in numerous incidences in which the shooter acted aggressively, did not follow 911 instructions to basically stand their ground or stand down and, instead, have shot people, as appears to be the case in Florida.    Executive Director of the Center for Media and Democracy, Lisa Graves
Center for Media and Democracy the publisher of PR Watch, SourceWatch, BanksterUSA, and ALECexposed.org. 



ALEC Exposed


The bill was brought to ALEC by the National Rifle Association (NRA) and was unanimously approved by an ALEC task force co-chaired by Wal-Mart and stocked by other special interests. Additionally, the corporate board members of ALEC, like AT&T, Koch Industries, and Kraft Foods, help facilitate the spread of these laws by financially underwriting its operations.

What is ALEC? Despite claims that it’s nonpartisan, it’s very much a movement-conservative organization, funded by the usual suspects: the Kochs, Exxon Mobil, and so on. Unlike other such groups, however, it doesn’t just influence laws, it literally writes them, supplying fully drafted bills to state legislators.

"To a large extent the organization seeks not limited government but privatized government, in which corporations get their profits from taxpayer dollars, dollars steered their way by friendly politicians. In short, ALEC isn’t so much about promoting free markets as it is about expanding crony capitalism."  

"This complex has a financial stake in anything that sends more people into the courts and the prisons, whether it’s exaggerated fear of racial minorities or Arizona’s draconian immigration law, a law that followed an ALEC template almost verbatim." 














Corporations Represented on ALEC's Private Enterprise Board 

Organization200920102011
Altria Group
$12,770,000
$10,360,000
$5,480,000
American Bail Coalition
$0
$80,000
$35,000
AT&T Inc.
$14,729,673
$15,395,078
$11,690,000
Bayer AG
$8,478,512
$4,903,640
$3,380,000
Coca-Cola Co.
$9,390,000
$7,352,795
$3,450,000
Diageo PLC
$2,250,000
$2,620,000
$1,100,000
Energy Future Holdings Corp.
$3,974,014
$4,731,228
$2,770,000
Exxon Mobil
$27,430,000
$12,450,000
$6,820,000
GlaxoSmithKline
$8,760,000
$6,070,000
$2,650,000
Intuit Inc.
$2,142,000
$2,249,000
$1,589,000
Johnson & Johnson
$6,560,000
$6,700,000
$3,106,000
Koch Industries
$12,450,000
$8,070,000
$4,060,000
Kraft Foods
$3,390,000
$3,000,000
$1,450,000
Peabody Energy
$5,835,000
$6,591,000
$3,727,000
Pfizer Inc.
$25,819,268
$13,380,000
$7,440,000
PhRMA
$26,150,520
$21,740,000
$9,290,000
Reed Elsevier Inc.
$2,130,000
$1,670,000
$810,000
Reynolds American
$4,556,215
$4,323,293
$1,728,305
Salt River Project
$1,170,000
$870,000
$370,000
State Farm Insurance
$3,420,000
$3,620,000
$1,540,000
United Parcel Service
$8,430,526
$5,587,349
$2,642,399
Wal-Mart Stores
$7,390,000
$6,160,000
$4,070,00

Of the 23 companies on the private enterprise board,Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) has spent the largest amount on lobbying the government. 






Trayvon's Father: We Don't Want 'An Eye For An Eye'

 Individual liberty is one thing when it comes to protecting your home or your children. It’s quite another when it means gunning down a teenager armed only with Skittles in his father’s neighborhood.

Trayvon Martin's parents, Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin, visited Capitol Hill this week to meet with Democratic leaders. While in Washington, D.C., Tracy Martin spoke about the case in an interview with Tell Me More host Michel Martin.

"I have confidence until proven otherwise. I think my faith was broken a lot, by all the cover-ups that the Sanford Police Department had indeed placed upon us. So, in a certain aspect, that trust in the judicial system has definitely been lost."

Heard on air
Transcript




tell me more people












Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.), stated Wednesday that he does not believe the Trayvon Martin case should be politicized.
"I don't think anyone should be using this tragedy to push an ideological agenda -- to include the anti-gun lobby," West
The congressman added: “Let’s all be appalled at this instance not because of race, but because a young American man has lost his life, seemingly, for no reason.”
The Florida lawmaker said that he had signed a letter supporting the Justice Department’s investigation but that he did not plan to attend protests in Florida “to shout and scream, because we need the responsible entities and agencies to handle this situation from this point without media bias or undue political influences.”

Monday, March 26, 2012

Blogs in Education




A blog is a website for which an individual or a group frequently generates text, photographs video or audio files, and/or links, typically (but not always) on a daily basis. 

Sunday, March 25, 2012

VMware View™ Bootcamp

Get ready for desktop virtualization with VMware View!
In this nine-part bootcamp, we show you how to get started and successfully roll out and deploy your virtual desktops and applications. We have sessions covering everything from storage and networking best practices to PCoIP tuning and optimizing your base image. We also touch on VMware's new security server for PCoIP and how you can take advantage of powershell to write your own scripts for View.
Just in case Check it out

blogs.vmware

Hermits of Harlem - Collyer Brothers

On March 21, 1947, the 122nd Street police station in New York City received a call from a man claiming that there was a dead body at 2078 Fifth Street Avenue.
The police knew the house, a decaying three-story brownstone in a run-down part of Harlem, and its inhabitants, Langley and Homer Collyer, two eccentric recluses. 

It took 3 weeks to shift through the estimated 136 tons of junk with which the house was filled. The bizarre collection of objects included 14 grand pianos, two organs, and a clavichord; human medical specimens preserved in a glass jars; the chassis of a Model-T Ford; a library of thousands of medical and engineering books; an armory of weapons; the top of a carriage; 6 U.S. flags and one Union Jack; a primitive X-Ray machine; and 34 bank deposit books with the balance totaling $3,007.18.  

In total, police and workmen took 136 tons of garbage out of the house. Estate of the Collyer brothers was valued at $91,000; $20,000 in personal property. All the junk was auctioned and eventually the house was torn down as a fire hazard.

Collyer Brothers Park

Saturday, March 24, 2012

List of Mega-Churches in America

list-of-mega-churches
“official” definition of a mega-church is any church with over 2000 members

Mega churches in America
Here is one of the breakdown of the Mega churches in America. Once again, complements of Jeff Young

click on image to enlarge



The Elect
In Romans 9:6-13 Paul makes that argument to those who believe that God’s promises to Christians might fail just as the seemed to fail with Israel that it is only the elect that are “children of promise.” Not all of Israel is true Israel.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Castle Doctrine & Stand Your Ground



Castle Doctrine & Stand Your Ground « Red Ensign

A stand-your-ground law is a law that allows a person to use deadly force when threatened without attempting to retreat. In some cases, a person may use deadly force in public areas without a duty to retreat.

Castle Law or a Defense of Habitation Law) is an American legal doctrine that designates a person's abode (or, in some states, any place legally occupied, such as a car or place of work) as a place in which the person has certain protections and immunities and may in certain circumstances attack an intruder without becoming liable to prosecution

A number of states in the US have either Castle Doctrine, Stand Your Ground, or both. Castle Doctrine is derived from English Common Law, that a man’s home is his castle. You have every right to defend yourself in your home and no duty to retreat in the face of danger. Stand Your Ground extends that principle to outside your residence. If threatened in public, you have the right to defend yourself and no duty to retreat. There are 18 States with Castle Doctrine, 1 State with Stand Your Ground, and 12 States with both. In total, there are 31 States with some form of Castle Doctrine and/or Stand Your Ground.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Gamer Double Fine Works Around Publishers

Gamer Double Fine Works Around Publishers

Game-makers are in San Francisco this week for the industry's largest global event. Roughly 20,000 people from 100 countries are there. And a game that hasn't even been created yet is getting lots of attention. It's also exposing the rift between the creative and business minds in this $33 billion industry.

Forget The Robots: Venture Capitalists Change Their Health Care Investments : Shots - Health Blog : NPR

Forget The Robots: Venture Capitalists Change Their Health Care Investments : Shots - Health Blog : NPR

Friday, March 9, 2012

Galli Theater - Theater for Personal Growth

Founded by philosopher, playwright, and actor Johannes Galli, the Galli Theater celebrates childhood and strives to help its actors and audiences reveal their true selves with modern adaptations of fairy tales. Each year the nonprofit organization produces more than eight family-friendly productions designed to "help participants gain self-confidence, learn new languages and cultures, improve acting skills, and increase health and wellness," according to its website. With performances of well-known and widely loved titles such as Aladdin, The Princess and the Pea, and Snow White, both audiences and actors leave each show having learned valuable life lessons and different clapping styles.

Garment District 347 West 36th Street
New York, New York 10018
212-731-0668