Link to Alison Weir Lecture (Author) Podcast


Plenary: Alison Weir

LECTURE

Speaker: Alison Weir (author and historian)

Alison Weir author of Innocent Traitor (2006); The Lady Elizabeth (2008); and The Captive Queen (2010) discusses her views of what makes good historical fiction and her relationship to academic history.

Plucked from the WordPress Blog: Novel Approaches from academic history to historical fiction

About these ads

Gingrich: Laws preventing child labor are ‘truly stupid’ (Can you guess what I think he is?)


Gingrich: Laws preventing child labor are ‘truly stupid’ – CNN Political Ticker – CNN.com Blogs.

Gingrich: Laws preventing child labor are ‘truly stupid’ – CNN Political Ticker - CNN.com Blogs Newt Gingrich proposed a plan Friday that would allow poor children to clean their schools for money, saying such a setup would both allow students to earn income and endow them with a strong work ethic.

(Only poor people need to be endowed with a strong work ethic?!?!?)

Speaking at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, the former House Speaker said his system would be an improvement on current child labor laws, which he called “truly stupid.”

“It is tragic what we do in the poorest neighborhoods, entrapping children in child laws which are truly stupid,” Gingrich said. “Saying to people you shouldn’t go to work before you’re 14, 16. You’re totally poor, you’re in a school that’s failing with a teacher that’s failing.”

(I was brought up to think EDUCATION was MOST important, you too?)

Gingrich then proposed a system he said would help those students rise from poverty.

“I tried for years to have a very simple model. These schools should get rid of unionized janitors, have one master janitor, pay local students to take care of the school. The kids would actually do work; they’d have cash; they’d have pride in the schools. They’d begin the process of rising.”

(And most likely be made to turn any money made over to their cash-strapped parents)

Gingrich pointed to successful acquaintances as examples of the benefits of beginning a job early in life.

“Go out and talk to people who are really successful in one generation,” Gingrich said. “They all started their first job at 9 to 14 years of age. They are selling newspapers, going door to door, washing cars. They were all making money at a very young age. What do we say to poor kids in poor neighborhoods? Don’t do it. Remember all the stuff about not getting a hamburger-flipping job? Worst possible advice to give the poor children.”

(I started working at 14, I only make 21k a year, almost 40 years later, my time would have been better spent continuing college as my parents wanted instead of being a 17 yr old who wanted to get out of the house.  My parents would not pay for my college later in life, hindsight ya know? My work didn’t interfere with my schooling, as it was during the SUMMER!  Not every night in place of time to do my homework)

Gingrich said his idea would be “making work worthwhile” for children.

Ohio Lawmaker: No Pay Cut For Republicans Because We Earn Our Pay | Crooks and Liars


Ohio Lawmaker: No Pay Cut For Republicans Because We Earn Our Pay | Crooks and Liars.

Ohio’s referendum on pay cuts and union-busting is coming up for a vote on Tuesday. As outside right-wing money floods the state, Republican lawmakers are trying to shift from defense to offense in the face of very long odds, since most Ohioans support repeal of this horrible law.

This short clip from a public radio interview in Ohio should give you a sense of the attitudes of Republicans in that state. In it, State Representative (and Speaker Pro Tempore) of the Ohio House of Representatives makes this statement in response to a question about why lawmakers expect sacrifice from public workers while not sacrificing anything themselves. Here’s the money quote in response to the question:

Because it’s not merited. I earn my pay. I think that was just political baloney. So they can say in an ad, `Gee , you know, they didn’t support a pay cut.’ Well, no, I don’t support a pay cut. Republicans earn their money. Apparently Democrats don’t. They feel they should be paid less. That may be true. Maybe we’ll just cut the Democrats’ pay.

Daily Kos:

This time around, the Republican-dominated Ohio legislature has already attempted to disenfranchise 900,000 Ohio voters—nearly 20% of the overall electorate. The vast majority of these newly disenfranchised citizens come from demographics indicating they are progressive voters who would vote to defeat Issue 2. Republican efforts came through HB 194, designed to make it difficult for the elderly, disabled, poor, and students to vote. Thankfully, a separate petition drive has temporarily blocked this latest reincarnaton of Jim Crow in the north.

But the GOP did kill early voting on the weekend before the election. This hugely successful expansion of the effective franchise had allowed tens of thousands of Ohioans to vote at public locations the Saturday and Sunday prior to the 2008 presidential election. This “excess of democracy” proved too much for the 1%, which got rid of it this year on the back of one of the legislature’s many anti-voter rights bills.

Everyone should view this vote as a testing ground for 2012.

Ohio has a long-held tradition of corrupting the voting process when a Republican holds the office of Secretary of State. Between the legislative efforts to disenfranchise voters, ending early voting, and their extremely hackable voting machines, there are no guarantees of any form of democracy in Ohio at this time.

Polls in Ohio show Issue 2 should go down to resounding defeat, but as always, Ohio has seemed to defy polling, because Republicans cheat.

John Nichols at The Nation on their cheating ways:

On Friday, across Ohio, county boards of elections shut down early voting for next Tuesday’s election. They did so on orders from Secretary of State Jon Husted. A Republican stalwart, Husted served as the party’s legislative pointman (rising to the rank of Ohio House Speaker), co-chaired GOP campaigns (including that of 2008 presidential candidate John McCain) and has been closely tied to national conservative groups working on issues such as school choice and privatization. While serving in the legislature, Husted was allied with the corporate-funded American Legislative Exchange Council, which has promoting Voter ID laws and other rule changes designed to suppress turnout.

Husted claimed a hastily-passed and deliberately vague new state law, which took effect just last week, that early voting was prohibited in the three days before the election. That’s a dramatic change from traditional practice in Ohio, where early voting on the Saturday, Sunday and Monday before high-profile elections has been allowed for years — and has permitted tens of thousands of citizens to participate in the process.

Perhaps the one thing Republicans work harder at is subverting democracy?