A 25-year-old waitress who turned down a job providing "sexual services'' at a brothel in Berlin faces possible cuts to her unemployment benefit under laws introduced this year.
Who says the Germans serious about reforming the welfare state?
FRANK R. BRUSHABER, Appt.,
v,
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY.
Today is the anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in 1916 that income tax is a violation of the Constitution. But like most good things it couldnt last - the politicians just changed the Constitution.
TSUNAMI-struck Thailand has been told by the European Commission that it must buy six A380 Airbus aircraft if it wants to escape the tariffs against its fishing industry.Nice.
Is Poland the Next Spain? Ask Francesco Caselli, Silvana Tenreyro. Does that mean we can expect pig fighting, vodka sangria and sunshine in Warsaw sometime soon.
What nonsense is this?
“The school department was recently forced to publicly admit that the sixth-grade MCAS math scores have steadily declined over the past three years to the point where 32 percent of sixth-graders are now in the "warning" or "needs improvement" category.”Why
?
“The school department offered no tangible explanation for these declining scores other than to admit that they have no explanation, as articulated by Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction Carolyn Wyatt (salary $106,804), "[The results] have decreased, incrementally, each year and continue to puzzle us." She went on to admit that this downward trend is peculiar to Newton and "is not being seen statewide." Again, she offered no explanation, but she did assure the School Committee that her assistant, Math Coordinator Mary Eich (salary $101,399), is currently investigating the problem.”
One suspects that Mary will not find out why. As the article observes, there is only one likely answer:-“ what has changed in the elementary and middle school math curriculum to have affected such a dramatic decline in the MCAS scores?
Answer: the new math curriculum, otherwise known as anti-racist multicultural math. In 2001 Mr. Young, Mrs. Wyatt and an assortment of other well-paid school administrators, defined the new number-one priority for teaching mathematics, as documented in the curriculum benchmarks, "Respect for Human Differences
Really no comment needed. Madness
Posted by wardx107 at 06:02 PM | Comments (8)
Interesting article here about the ossification in US scientific research:-
“"We have developed an incentive system for young scientists that is much too risk-averse," Bruce Alberts, president of the National Academy of Sciences, said in a speech last year. Alberts, whose organization advises the federal government on scientific and technical matters, was basing his comments on biological research. But, he said, "I suspect that similar considerations also apply in many other areas of science."
As usual the article goes on to argue that various reforms to government research proposals need to be made. In reality it seem that in the sciences what we’re observing is just regulatory capture, the scientific community is more geared towards playing the system than developing research:-
“One feature of the existing research system is that scientists are getting older before they pin down funding of their own to pursue experiments, Alberts said in his speech. "Almost no one finds it possible to start an independent scientific career under the age of 35," he said. "Even the most talented of our young people seem to be forced to endure several years of rejected grant applications before they finally acquire enough 'preliminary data' to assure the reviewers that they are likely to accomplish their stated goals. Weinstein said the current situation differs from a time when young people were allowed to publish highly speculative, even wrong assertions, on their path to major discoveries. This applies to both Albert Einstein and Nobel prize-winning physicist Paul Dirac, he said. The system effectively discourages scientists from doing excellent work, Weinstein said.
Commenting on the launch of the new super jumbo:
“ “Chirac said the debut of the A380 "is for all of us a moment of emotion and pride" and "a great success for Europe."German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder struck a similar chord, calling the A380 a "triumph of European science and European engineering."
My view is that as long as Boeing is still capable of making 747’s it will prevent Airbus charging prices high enough to earn super normal profits. The other concern has to be baggage:-
“London's Heathrow airport says it is spending over $800 million, providing everything from double-decker passenger ramps to enlarged baggage conveyors capable of processing 555 passengers on one flight.And if they aren’t then serious network effects kick in – airlines may be able to transport passengers at a lower cost in the A380 but if you have to wait an hour for your baggage at the other end will it be worth it.Other airports are spending billions more on similar improvements, but there is concern that some may not be ready in time.”
Interesting article about how trying to use telephone to warn of the tsunami was the wrong strategy:-
Then there's the other half of the problem: critical information getting stuck in bureaucratic, 20th-century back channels. With plenty of time to save thousands of lives, seismologists working in Hawaii, Harvard University, Australia and Thailand had some inkling about the destructive tsunamis moving across the Indian Ocean. Those scientists wanted to get warnings out. They tried calling officials in affected countries but didn't have the right phone numbers, or no one picked up.
Charles McCreery, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's center in Honolulu, told Reuters: "We don't have contacts in our address book for anybody in that part of the world." Phone calls! Address books! How sad is that? Even if somebody answers, telephones are one-to-one communication — a terrible waste of time in an emergency.
The Net has brought one-to-many communication to everyday life: blogs, Web pages, bulletin boards like Slashdot, even e-mail lists. Any Net user can post so millions of others can see it.
Other Net users who see the post might e-mail it around to people who, in turn, post it other places. In that viral way, a piece of vital information can reach millions in the time it takes to hard-boil an egg.
If seismologists had flung their warnings to the Web when the phone calls failed, some kind of alert might have reached the beaches of Phuket or Tangara — or perhaps the CNN newsroom, where a reporter might have put the story on a channel that was probably being watched in a number of resort hotel rooms.
The downside of such open communication is the possibility of fraud. Someone clever could, perhaps, send panic up and down a coastline. But the upside of using 21st-century communication for emergencies is too great to ignore.
Is there a danger that too much aid is being raised for the Tsunami disaster funds? The signs are there for some :-
“The Australian branch of aid agency Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF, Doctors without Borders) has become possibly the first in the world to ask donors to stop pledging money to its tsunami appeal. The local MSF branch paused its appeal after reaching its $1 million [US$ 0.77 million] target in just three days. It decided it would be breaching its ethical code to collect money if it could not be used for its designated purpose”
There are a number of channels though which this may occur;_
1. A signaling effect:- some business are already complaining that the excessive coverage to drum up aid is harming their ability to redevelop their livelihoods and business:-
Much to our dismay there are many unsubstantiated news stories about “total destruction” of Phuket’s coral reefs. Even our own effort to bring a CBS team to the Similans for a first hand look turned into a nightmare when they broke their promise and turned it into yet another “spectacular disaster” story. Our crew and passengers were quoted out of context and our underwater video footage used incorrectly. Never again!”
As long as the aid agencies are raising and spending money they will be implicitly advertising that the relevant areas are disaster zones and should therefore not be visited.
2. Crowding Out and Inflation
Aid agencies live in hotels and buy local goods. Typically they have limited cash controls meaning that the price of local goods may be artificially inflated in the affected area. This not only distorts price signals but again may discourage tourists and the establishment of new businesses.
3. Carpet BaggingThe presence of large numbers of NGO’s with little idea of how to spend the money will undoubtedly attract some unscrupulous carpet baggers with ideas about how this money should be spent. More dangerously, in areas already fairly lawless this can spill over into the warlordism that afflicted the aid effort in Somalia in the 90’s. there are already signs of fights over aid starting to break out in Sri Lanka where the Tamil Tigers are already starting to compete with the Sinhalese government over the allocation of aid.
But of course all this will be ignored because there isn’t really any one in charge with the incentive to care.
For those seeking protection against the “housing bubble”:-
“Macro Securities Research, a company affiliated with Robert J. Shiller, the Yale economist, has reached an agreement with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange to list pairs of derivative instruments that are essentially index funds linked to home prices in certain markets. One instrument in each pair will rise as its market index rises; the other will rise as the same index falls. That will let investors bet on the direction of housing prices. Similar, but less sensitive, vehicles are being offered by HedgeStreet, a firm in San Mateo, Calif., that offers small-scale derivatives speculation online. “
Instead this product is likely to be of greater benefit to those who might expect to loose their job, and hence need to move to get another, when the housing bubble bursts. Like realtors.