Sunday, November 30, 2008
POVERTY KILLS
THE LEGACY OF WAR
Cluster bomblets are destroyed at a farm in Xiengkhuang
"Imagine growing up in a country where the equivalent of a B52 planeload of cluster bombs was dropped every eight minutes for nine years. Then imagine seeing your children and grandchildren being killed and maimed by the same bombs, three decades after the war is over. Welcome to Laos, a country with the unwanted claim of being the most bombed nation per capita in the world. Between 1964 and 1973, the U.S. military dropped more than 2 million tons of explosive ordnance, including an estimated 260 million cluster munitions -- also known as bombie in Laos. To put this into perspective, this is more bombs than fell on Europe during World War Two. The U.S. bombing was largely aimed at destroying enemy supply lines during the Vietnam war that passed through Laos. The war ended 35 years ago, yet the civilian casualties continue. According to aid agency Handicap International, as many as 12,000 civilians have been killed or maimed since, and there are hundreds of new casualties every year." (Yahoo News, 26 November) RD
Saturday, November 29, 2008
GOOD BUSINESS PRACTICE
(New York Times, 28 November) RD
NOT SO NICE
(Daily Telegraph, 27 November) RD
Friday, November 28, 2008
NO THERMOSTATICALLY CONTROLLED BEDS?
(BBC News, 27 November) RD
MORE MADNESS FROM CAPITALISM
Thursday, November 27, 2008
REVENUES AND RELIGIONS
(Wall Street Journal, 26 November) RD
MORE RELIGIOUS NONSENSE
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
ANOTHER "EXPERT" RECANTS
(Observer, 23 November) RD
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
DOLE QUEUE DICTIONARY
ONLY INSIDE SOCIALISM?
Monday, November 24, 2008
GOOD NEWS FOR SOME
Sunday, November 23, 2008
A SOCIETY IN CONFLICT
(Yahoo News, 16 November) RD
Saturday, November 22, 2008
ANOTHER EXPERT SPEAKS
Friday, November 21, 2008
THE COST OF WAR
BUSINESS AS USUAL
Asbestos compensation ruling due
Insurance companies try to wriggle out of compensation claims. | |
A ruling is expected later that could have profound implications for asbestos-related cancer victims and their families. The High Court is due to give a verdict in a case between victims' families, employers and insurance firms. The hearing has hinged on when an insurance firm was liable - at time of exposure or when a worker becomes ill. This is in keeping with many claims against employers,.despite reforms over a century for negligence, neglect and just plain poor safety standards,employers attempt to wriggle out of paying high insurance premiums and insurers out of paying compensation claims. By the time some settlement is made in a lot of cases the worker is dead and buried,their families exhausted with the care of them and the employers have taken off to pastures new, their profits intact. It can't even deliver compensation. (As if we can compensate for a life ruined) Capitalism is bad for our health ,the environment,the planet. Lets get rid of it,its wage-slavery and its monstrous legal and financial spin-offs, such as insurance and courts, deciding on the very relief of its victims and establish a sane system of society with' free access' to all we need and require to live a fulfilling and useful life. From a BBC News item |
Thursday, November 20, 2008
A MURDEROUS SYSTEM
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
American poverty
Almost 700,000 U.S. children lived in households that struggled to put food on the table at some point in 2007, according to a federal report.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's annual report on food security showed that those 691,000 children lived in homes where families had to eat non-balanced meals and low-cost food, or even skip meals because of a lack of money. The number of children struggling to feed themselves adequately rose 50 percent from 430,000 children in 2006.
Nearly 36.2 million children and adults struggled to put proper food on the table in 2007, according to the report. Of the 36.2 million, nearly a third were not able to eat what was deemed a proper meal.
The other two-thirds -- 11.9 million people -- changed their eating habits by eating low-cost foods, participated in federal food and nutrition assistance programs, ate less varied diets or obtained emergency food from pantries or emergency kitchens, according to the report. That number is up more than 40 percent since 2000.
Families headed by single mothers, Hispanic families, African-American families and households with incomes below the poverty line struggled the most, according to the report.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
THE FUTILITY OF REFORMISM
-
Paternalism is a common attitude among well-meaning social reformers. Stemming from the root pater, or father, paternalism implies a patria...