Sunday, January 22, 2017

Yanis Varoufakis: capitalism, solution to the Eurozone crisis and Debt...


Published on Jan 19, 2017
Views: 171
Yanis Varoufakis is a Greek economist, academic and politician, who served as the Greek Minister of Finance from January to July 2015, when he resigned. Varoufakis was also a Syriza member of the Hellenic Parliament (MP) for Athens B from January to September 2015.

Short On Details > Education The “Centerpiece” Of Governor Ducey’s New Budget

Nearly 500 East Valley business and community leaders enthusiastically applauded Governor Ducey on Thursday as he outlined a 15-point plan for improving K-12 public education in Arizona.
A pivotal part of the plan involves more financial rewards for teachers, ranging from raises to a free state university education for anyone committing to teach in Arizona.
“I want the teachers of our state to know—you make the difference. I value your work and it’s time we return the favor,” Ducey said at a breakfast sponsored by East Valley chambers of commerce and the East Valley Partnership.
“I have a commitment our educators can take to the bank—increased investment in our public schools above and beyond inflation every single year I am governor,” he added.

Ducey, who gave his speech the same day he released his proposed 2017-18 budget, did not spell out details of how he would fund his plan. His budget also includes money for capital expenditures for repairs and new schools as well as an expansion of all-day kindergarten in poor school districts.
For all teachers, Ducey promised “a permanent, lasting salary increase above” whatever raises they are receiving through Proposition 123, overrides or local school district initiatives. He did not say what that raise would amount to.
He was somewhat more specific as he laid out a plan to blunt the teacher shortage: eliminating the “crushing burden” of college loan debt.
He proposed accomplishing that by having the three state universities and community college systems in the state work together to develop an Arizona Teachers Academy. Graduates of that academy would get a free education if they committed to teach in the state. He did not set a timeline for the academy’s development or indicate how long a commitment would be expected from its grads.
For teachers who sign up to work in low-income districts, Ducey proposed a $1,000 signing bonus.
He also proposed overhauling or even eliminating the state teacher certification process, noting that former U.S. Justice Sandra Day O’Connor would not qualify to teach in a public high school under current certification rules despite a long history of academic and other achievements.
Virtually all East Valley districts provide all-day kindergarten through budget overrides or simple general fund expenditures and it was unclear how many would benefit from the help Ducey pledged for all-day K in low-income districts.
Moreover, the top leaders of the State Senate and House, who are from Chandler, have said previously that the state had only about $24 million in uncommitted money for the coming budget year.
Ducey made no mention of those assertions, stating:
“We have a plan to prioritize K-12 education in a serious and thoughtful way and we have only just begun.”

For Your Review and Input

Draft Bill for AZ Emissions Bank 
We look forward to seeing you at the next stakeholder meeting regarding the AZ Emissions Bank. Please find the draft bill linked below for your review and input. 
HB2152_Emissions_Bank_Updated_Draft.docx


QUESTIONS? 
Natalie Muilenberg602-771-1089
nm3@azdeq.gov

Attend the meeting in person or via conference call:
When: Tues., Jan. 24, 2017, 1:00 to 3:00 p.m.Where: ADEQ, 1110 W. Washington St., Third Floor, Room 3175, Phoenix AZ, 85007
Conference Call:
1-877-820-7829 | Passcode: 228497#

Nouriel Roubini: “America First” and Global Conflict Next

 

The historical record is clear: protectionism, isolationism, and “America first” policies are a recipe for economic and military disaster.

Nouriel Roubini, a professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business and Chairman of Roubini Macro Associates, was Senior Economist for International Affairs in the White House's Council of Economic Advisers during the Clinton Administration. He has worked for the International Monetary Fund, the US Feder… read more

NEW YORK – Donald Trump’s election as President of the United States does not just represent a mounting populist backlash against globalization. It may also portend the end of Pax Americana – the international order of free exchange and shared security that the US and its allies built after World War II.
That US-led global order has enabled 70 years of prosperity. It rests on market-oriented regimes of trade liberalization, increased capital mobility, and appropriate social-welfare policies; backed by American security guarantees in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, through NATO and various other alliances.
Trump, however, may pursue populist, anti-globalization, and protectionist policies that hinder trade and restrict the movement of labor and capital. And he has cast doubt on existing US security guarantees by suggesting that he will force America’s allies to pay for more of their own defense. If Trump is serious about putting “America first,” his administration will shift US geopolitical strategy toward isolationism and unilateralism, pursuing only the national interests of the homeland.
When the US pursued similar policies in the 1920s and 1930s, it helped sow the seeds of World War II. Protectionism – starting with the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, which affected thousands of imported goods – triggered retaliatory trade and currency wars that worsened the Great Depression. More important, American isolationism – based on a false belief that the US was safely protected by two oceans – allowed Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan to wage aggressive war and threaten the entire world. With the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the US was finally forced to take its head out of the sand.
Today, too, a US turn to isolationism and the pursuit of strictly US national interests may eventually lead to a global conflict. Even without the prospect of American disengagement from Europe, the European Union and the eurozone already appear to be disintegrating, particularly in the wake of the United Kingdom’s June Brexit vote and Italy’s failed referendum on constitutional reforms in December. Moreover, in 2017, extreme anti-Europe left- or right-wing populist parties could come to power in France and Italy, and possibly in other parts of Europe.
Without active US engagement in Europe, an aggressively revanchist Russia will step in. Russia is already challenging the US and the EU in Ukraine, Syria, the Baltics, and the Balkans, and it may capitalize on the EU’s looming collapse by reasserting its influence in the former Soviet bloc countries, and supporting pro-Russia movements within Europe. If Europe gradually loses its US security umbrella, no one stands to benefit more than Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Trump’s proposals also threaten to exacerbate the situation in the Middle East. He has said that he will make America energy independent, which entails abandoning US interests in the region and becoming more reliant on domestically produced greenhouse-gas-emitting fossil fuels. And he has maintained his position that Islam itself, rather than just radical militant Islam, is dangerous. This view, shared by Trump’s incoming National Security Adviser, General Michael Flynn, plays directly into Islamist militants’ own narrative of a clash of civilizations.
Meanwhile, an “America first” approach under Trump will likely worsen the longstanding Sunni-Shia proxy wars between Saudi Arabia and Iran. And if the US no longer guarantees its Sunni allies’ security, all regional powers – including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Egypt – might decide that they can defend themselves only by acquiring nuclear weapons, and even more deadly conflict will ensue.
In Asia, US economic and military primacy has provided decades of stability; but a rising China is now challenging the status quo. US President Barack Obama’s strategic “pivot” to Asia depended primarily on enacting the 12-country Trans-Pacific Partnership, which Trump has promised to scrap on his first day in office. Meanwhile, China is quickly strengthening its own economic ties in Asia, the Pacific, and Latin America through its “one belt, one road” policy, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the New Development Bank (formerly known as the BRICS bank), and its own regional free-trade proposal to rival the TPP.
If the US gives up on its Asian allies such as the Philippines, South Korea, and Taiwan, those countries may have no choice but to prostrate themselves before China; and other US allies, such as Japan and India, may be forced to militarize and challenge China openly. Thus, an American withdrawal from the region could very well eventually precipitate a military conflict there.

Nobody ‘Stealing' Your Jobs, You Spend Too Much On Wars - Jack Ma Alibaba founde...


Published on Jan 20, 2017
Views: 63,538
Chinese billionaire and Alibaba founder Jack Ma believes that improper distribution of funds and hyper inflated US military spending, not globalization or other countries “stealing” US jobs, is behind the economic decline in America.

Rapid Changes in Earth's Core/Pole Flip?


Published on Jan 19, 2017
Views: 68,242
The Swarm Satellites are indicating a jet stream in the earths outer molten core and that it is quickly speeding up.

DIALECTIC: Why Hegel Knew There Would Be Days Like These

Reason & Emotion
Published on Jan 20, 2017
Views: 139,439
The German philosopher Hegel helps us to understand that progress in societies is never linear, and that these societies may have to go through a variety of reversals before advancing, a process he termed ‘the dialectic.’ If you like our films, take a look at our shop (we ship worldwide): https://goo.gl/xL5OuN 

FURTHER READING

“There have been places and periods of history when only a congenital optimist could have had any hope for the future of our species. Think of the end of Athens’s golden age, the fall of the Roman Empire, the petering out of the Renaissance, the close of the Enlightenment, the rise of fascism…”