Society's Child
The "Every Child Achieves Act" has passed unanimously out of the Health, Education, Labor, and Pension Committee in the Senate. The usual suspects are singing its praises while the people who actually read all 601 pages of the bill are dreading its implementation.
This bill is an affront to everyone who loves children. The teaching profession requires love and patience and creativity. Real teaching to inspire real learning requires these traits. Continuous computer testing for compliance to a prescribed outcome does not. In fact, love and creativity will get in the way of implementing this one-size-fits-all experimental disaster.
Anyone who loves children would not want to subject children to this creativity crushing soul sucking system. This bill funds lots of testing and lots of interventions for "at risk" students, which apparently includes everyone who doesn't ace the Common Core assessments - in other words, everyone.
Anyone who thinks this is a good idea that will lead to improved learning for students clearly knows nothing about human nature or any of the proven analysis of W.E. Deming. Top down quality control measures that rely on a system of punishments and rewards placing everyone in a competitive atmosphere do not even work in the business world for which they were designed.
"Some flights are experiencing an issue with a software application on pilot iPads," the Texas-based airline explained on Twitter late on Tuesday after passengers began complaining about delays.
"In some cases, the flight has had to return to the gate to access a Wi-Fi connection to fix the issue. We apologize for the inconvenience to our customers. We are working to have them on the way to their destination as soon as possible," Andrea Huguely, a spokesperson for American Airlines, later clarified to the Verge.
The airline didn't give specific numbers, but another spokesperson told the Verge that "a few dozen flights" had been affected by the issue. According to updates posted to Twitter by a husband and wife who had planned to fly from Dallas to Austin, they heard that American's entire fleet of Boeing 737s had been grounded over the issue.
@bjacaruso Some flights are experiencing an issue with a software application on pilot iPads. We'll have info about your departure soon.
— American Airlines (@AmericanAir) April 29, 2015
Germany's government uses bunds to finance its spending. Long term bonds, those with durations of between ten and 30 years are issued the most. Bunds are auctioned off in the primary market and then traded in the secondary market.
According to Jefferies this means that more than 30 percent of all government debt in the Eurozone is trading on a negative interest rate.
That's two trillion euros worth of money that has been borrowed and must be repaid.
"It's an over-indebted global and European economy and that debt is weighing upon the growth function," says Chris Watling from consultancy Longview Economics.
"Productivity it terrible — it's a very sad growth mix for the global and European economy."
Prison Radio is an independent media content company aimed at challenging unjust police and prosecutorial practices which result in mass incarceration, racism and gender discrimination.
"The way the US deals with poor people and people of color... created this culture of mass incarceration," Hanrahan said, adding that in the last forty years the prison population in the United States increased tenfold to over two million inmates.
"One in forty six people in the US will make prison time, and one in ninety nine is currently incarcerated, and the massive incarceration has corrupted our society," Hanrahan said.
Almost every day, 60-year-old Smokie visited Elvis Summers' apartment to ask if he had any recyclables. The pair soon developed a friendship, and when Summers discovered Smokie's sleeping situation he knew he had to help.
Summers said he became inspired one day after reading an article about a man in Oakland, California, who built tiny houses out of scrap material. The article prompted him to spend some money of his own to build a home for Smokie so she would no longer have to sleep in the dirt. Five days later, Summers presented the home to his friend.
"I had nowhere to really build it, so I just built it in the street outside of my apartment," he said. "The local LAPD cops have been super cool, and have told me they support it - as long as we move it to a different spot every 72 hours."
Comment: It's heartening to hear that their are still people with a conscience and enough creativity to help the homeless, particularly during times when so many cities are actively harassing them and even targeting those who try to help. Projects like these could make a huge difference to millions of lives if they were launched in cities across the world.
Utah is ending homelessness by giving people homes
A US Air Force refueling jet, Boeing KC-135R Stratotanker, has landed safely at British base after reportedly disappearing off the radar over the English Channel.
A US Air Force refuelling jet, the Boeing KC-135R Stratotanker has been reported as disappeared off the radar over the English Channel.
The jet left Amiens in northern France at 0.05am local time and was last reported by a flight tracking website to be flying between Dover and Calais.
Fifteen minutes after take-off, at 0.20am, the aircraft fell off the tracking website.
The jet however landed an hour later at RAF Mildenhall, the Royal Air Force station located near Mildenhall in Suffolk.
Comment: There have been other recent cases of planes suddenly 'disappearing' from radar. Last June, an air-safety investigation was launched after 13 planes flying over Europe disappeared from radar screens in two "unprecedented" blackouts, leading to reports stating air traffic control systems had been hacked.
Or is there an element of 'High Strangeness' to these incidents, like MH370?
Both managers could face serve jail sentences and the company could be charged with a maximum fine of $1.5 million.
Jose Melena, 62, was performing maintenance work in 35-foot-long industrial oven at Bumble Bee's Santa Fe Springs plant in October 2012 when a co-worker, thinking Melena was on a bathroom break, filled the pressure cooker with thousands of pounds of canned tuna and turned it on.
According to a report by the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health (OSHA), Melena's supervisor then noticed he was missing. A search was conducted in the plant and parking lot before his body was found two hours later - after the oven reached a temperature of 270 degrees Fahrenheit.
Prosecutors charged the company and two managers each with three counts of violating OSHA rules: The violation of a safety plan, the violation of rules for workers entering confined spaces and the violation of safety procedures that ensure machinery and equipment are turned off when a worker is conducting cleaning or maintenance
The two managers could face up to three years in prison and fines of up to $250,000 if convicted of all charges. The company faces a maximum fine of $1.5 million.
With the incredible reliance we have on electronic communications, we are very vulnerable to system failures that could erupt in the event of a catastrophic interruption in telephone, data, or wireless communications. While much of the information moving in these networks is recreational, a huge proportion of it pertains directly to the distribution of food and other critical needs.
As simple as it seems to walk into a store and purchase items, the fact is that there are thousands of electronic components that must function without interruption in order to make those goods appear on a shelf.
After decades of this lifestyle, we take it for granted. We should not. Instead, we should all equip ourselves to survive for an extended period with no expectation of being able to buy anything--or even having money to buy it. In an article entitled "20 Facts that Prove the US Retail Sector is About to Collapse", theantimedia.org explains why.
So the logic behind hedging against such a disaster is sound, and the event isn't as unlikely as many would have you believe. Many of your neighbors may be well ahead of you on it.
Comment: Many people tend to dismiss 'preppers' as being too catastrophically minded. However, if one takes even a brief glimpse at the bizarre weather patterns that have been increasing globally and considers how quickly grocery stores might be emptied during even a short supply disruption, then those who are prepared seem much more grounded in reality. And, this does not even consider the potential for chaos that could ensue if the global financial system actually collapses, which is something that is highly likely to happen in the near future. Taking some precautions to insure your family will not suffer unnecessarily, is always wise.
- Signs that the American elite are feverishly preparing for something BIG
- Welcome to the new normal - and how to prepare for it
- Preparing for real-life economic collapse - acquire new skills!
- Are you prepping your diet?
According to MyFoxDetroit, 16-year-old Dana Hamrick originally posted the video - where she tearfully explained that she is bullied on a daily basis at Harry Truman High School - only to be told later in the day to take it down by school officials.
In the video, an emotional Hamrick says, "One of the vice principals, he would threaten to suspend me for three days because I wasn't in the cafeteria getting bullied," adding, "I am sitting here, bawling my eyes out and you tell me to get out of your sight."
Two days later she reposted the video which had been seen by tens of thousands.
"I posted the video because I want people to know that bullying hurts," she explained. "It does, words hurt."
According to school officials, the morning Hamrick posted the video, her parents were contacted and a meeting was scheduled. Administrators said that they had offered support and an intervention for the teen months ago, but she had refused, saying she was afraid to name her attackers out of fear of retaliation.
Comment: Words do hurt - they actually damage the brain. See:
Sticks and Stones--Hurtful Words Damage the Brain
Recently, the population of Vermont, and the rest of the country, is swooning over the state's political representatives for enacting the nation's first mandatory GMO labeling law. After a short legal hang-up forced by corporate influence, the law will begin on July 1st, 2016. What better state to remove vaccine exemptions than one in which its politicians can do no wrong. As first reported by AgeofAutism:
"Friday, April 10th, Jennifer Stella, head of the Vermont Coalition for Vaccine Choice learned that Sen. Kevin Mullin, R-Rutland, and Sen. John Campbell, D-Windsor, had tried to tack the exemption removal language onto another bill. The move was ruled to be non-germane and was disallowed.
The following Tuesday evening Stella learned that another attempt was coming, this time to tack the bill onto a vaccination registry expansion bill that had already passed the house, and would be debated the following morning. By the time the bill (H98) hit the senate floor on Wednesday, a barrage of phone calls had been made to concerned parents, who showed up in the Senate Chamber ready to fight the measure. The bill surfaced as an amendment introduced, again by Senators Mullin and Campbell, and this time joined by Senator Sears, D-Windsor."
Comment: Let nothing get in the way of Big Pharma's profits.















Comment: Have our children become products to be inspected, stamped, dated and sold to the highest funder? Can we see the pathological handprint here? Let's create robot worker children who esteem to claw their way to the top without an original thought or creative promise. By the book. By the numbers. Can we surmise that any emotional variance will be punished out and any selfish manipulation will bring praise and reward? And, we will wake up one morning and not know or recognize our kids. They will be the manifestation of a cold and heartless system.