Category Archives: education

New Book:: The Shock Doctrine “The Rise Of Disaster Capitalism



The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism

In THE SHOCK DOCTRINE, Naomi Klein explodes the myth that the global free market triumphed democratically. Exposing the thinking, the money trail and the puppet strings behind the world-changing crises and wars of the last four decades, The Shock Doctrine is the gripping story of how America’s “free market” policies have come to dominate the world– through the exploitation of disaster-shocked people and countries.

At the most chaotic juncture in Iraq’s civil war, a new law is unveiled that would allow Shell and BP to claim the country’s vast oil reserves…. Immediately following September 11, the Bush Administration quietly out-sources the running of the “War on Terror” to Halliburton and Blackwater…. After a tsunami wipes out the coasts of Southeast Asia, the pristine beaches are auctioned off to tourist resorts…. New Orleans’s residents, scattered from Hurricane Katrina, discover that their public housing, hospitals and schools will never be reopened…. These events are examples of “the shock doctrine”: using the public’s disorientation following massive collective shocks – wars, terrorist attacks, or natural disasters — to achieve control by imposing economic shock therapy. Sometimes, when the first two shocks don’t succeed in wiping out resistance, a third shock is employed: the electrode in the prison cell or the Taser gun on the streets.

Based on breakthrough historical research and four years of on-the-ground reporting in disaster zones, The Shock Doctrine vividly shows how disaster capitalism – the rapid-fire corporate reengineering of societies still reeling from shock – did not begin with September 11, 2001. The book traces its origins back fifty years, to the University of Chicago under Milton Friedman, which produced many of the leading neo-conservative and neo-liberal thinkers whose influence is still profound in Washington today. New, surprising connections are drawn between economic policy, “shock and awe” warfare and covert CIA-funded experiments in electroshock and sensory deprivation in the 1950s, research that helped write the torture manuals used today in Guantanamo Bay.

The Shock Doctrine follows the application of these ideas through our contemporary history, showing in riveting detail how well-known events of the recent past have been deliberate, active theatres for the shock doctrine, among them: Pinochet’s coup in Chile in 1973, the Falklands War in 1982, the Tiananmen Square Massacre in 1989, the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Asian Financial crisis in 1997 and Hurricane Mitch in 1998.

To hear the truth click here.

The Dangers of Synthetic Marijuana



By Eric Schelhopf (Kane County Chronicle)

Aurora mother Karen Dobner believes that a synthetic form of marijuana played a part in a crash that killed her 19-year-old son last month after his 1999 Chrysler Cirrus slammed into a house near the intersection of Mooseheart Road and Route 31 in unincorporated Batavia Township.

She will be interviewed this morning on the “Today” show to talk about her son, Max Dobner, and about what happened that day. Karen Dobner said she also wants to educate parents and teenagers about the dangers of synthetic drugs.

At 3:45 p.m. on June 14, about a half-hour before the crash, Dobner said her son had called his oldest brother, Justin Dobner.

“Max said, ‘I smoked that legal stuff, and my heart is pounding and I’m having a panic attack,’ ” Karen Dobner said.

The occupants of the home Max Dobner crashed into were in the backyard and were not injured. Witnesses said his 1999 Chrysler Cirrus was going at a high rate of speed before the crash, which occurred just south of the Mooseheart campus.

Dobner said she later found out that Max Dobner had smoked iAroma earlier that day. The product is marketed as potpourri or incense, and buyers are warned that it is not for public consumption.

“They sell it in tobacco shops,” she said. “Who goes to a tobacco shop to buy potpourri? Who buys potpourri by the gram?”

After talking to other teenagers about iAroma and its effects, Karen Dobner said she believes her son was hallucinating before the crash. The Kane County Sheriff’s Office continues to investigate the crash.

Lt. Pat Gengler said the state crime lab in Joliet is still working on Max Dobner’s toxicology.

“It can take several months depending on the backlog of cases at the crime lab,” Gengler said. “We won’t know what the results are until we have them.”

Karen Dobner has been cooperating with authorities.

“The first thing I did was to call the police and tell them what I discovered,” she said.

She said what happened to her son that day was totally out of character for him.

“My son never hurt a fly, and he was very respectful,” she said. “He would be horrified to know that he damaged a home.”

She has started a foundation, www.tothemaximus.org, that seeks to provide education and awareness about synthetic drugs. The foundation would like to see a ban on these types of products. A news release from the American Association of Poison Control Centers noted that synthetic marijuana products have spurred more than 4,500 calls to U.S. poison centers since 2010.

“Our goal is to promote legislation to ban these products and educate and inform parents and teens,” Karen Dobner said.

“Most parents have no idea of their teens doing this.”

July Is Park And Recreation Month!



Since 1985, America has celebrated July as the nation’s official Park and Recreation Month. This year’s theme is “Rock Your Park!” NRPA and our new initiative, America’s Backyard, encourage you to show the country how parks and recreation make your life extraordinary!

Take the Five in July Park Pledge

There are five weekends in July 2011—five Fridays, five Saturdays, and five Sundays! Create a healthy weekend habit by getting out to a park, trail, playground, swimming pool, natural area, or other public space every weekend. Feel the energy of the crowds and have a great time! Make your personal commitment to get outdoors by signing our 5 in July Park Pledge. Do it for the glory!

**Take the Pledge**

*If you’d like to share this link for others to take the pledge, please use this link www.surveygizmo.com/s/533555/2011-five-in-july-pledge.

All individuals who sign the pledge will be eligible to win a free 8GB iPod Touch by random drawing. The winner will be announced on August 12, 2011. Only one winner shall be chosen. NRPA will contact the winner directly via e-mail, and the IPOD will be sent via mail. If the winning individual is not 18 years of age, the individual must also provide a name and contact information for a parent or guardian. NRPA will take proper steps to ensure the safe delivery of the prize, but is not responsible should the IPOD be lost, stolen, damaged, or for general wear and tear, nor is NRPA responsible for any injury, bodily harm, or other consequences that should arise from usage.

Exclusive Video:: Pete Rock, Smif n Wessun Release Party Police Brutality


Last night in NYC. The Duck Down Pete Rock Smif n Wessun release party was interrupted by NY finest in the worst way. Please people remember when you go out into a public place that there is a difference between “Serving and Protecting” and “Enforcing the Law” Be Aware!!!! and Be Safe!!!!! Pete Rock had his wife and oldest daughter there to celebrate with him when the malay broke out. His family was not hurt and this morning Pete reported on twitter that he was proud of his wife and how she protected their daughter, his daughter defended her mother and herself by punching a officer in the face when they were approached by law enforcement before being taken into police custody. Our Prayers goes out to Louie Slugger who was beating unconscious by at least 10 officers with billy clubs. Get well soon Louie.

New Book:: The Ripple Effect By Alex Prud’homme



Fresh water will be the defining resource of the 21st Century.
Experts call it “the next oil,” and predict water will be the focus of increased tension and great innovation in coming decades. In response, I set out in 2007 to discover how people across the U.S. and around the world are using and abusing water today – and how they are preparing for what the UN has deemed “the looming water crisis.”

The result is THE RIPPLE EFFECT. The book’s title comes from my observation that every time we use water – even for something as mundane as washing our hands, spraying the lawn, or generating power for light – it sets off deep and wide hydrologic ripple effects, with consequences that most of us are unaware of. But today we no longer have the luxury of ignorance: we must understand how our actions impact the earth’s limited supply of fresh water, and learn to value H2O more highly. After all, we can live without oil, but not without water.

I think of this book as an intellectual adventure story. In the course of reporting, I traveled from inside New York City’s new Water Tunnel No. 3 (the $6 billion water tunnel being drilled 600 feet beneath Manhattan) to the disputed aquifers of Poland Springs, ME, the “intersex” fish and Dead Zone of the Chesapeake Bay, poisoned wells and flooding rivers in the Midwest, the “water-energy nexus” in oil and gas fields, the failed levees of Katrina-wracked New Orleans, drought-threatened Las Vegas, California’s vulnerable San Francisco Delta, and up to the resource wars of the Alaskan Peninsula.

Each of these stories features compelling characters who grapple with crucial water issues, and is written in a narrative style for a broad audience. Water is a vast subject, and while THE RIPPLE EFFECT is inclusive it is not encyclopedic. The book is divided into four parts: water quality (what’s in our water?); drought; flood; and water in the twenty-first century.

Some of the themes I address include:

New types of water pollution, and their mitigation

The cost of failing infrastructure such as dams and levees

Debates over bottled water and water privatization

Climate change, population growth, and changing diets

Sewage treatment

Water law and the prospect of water wars

Weather modification and desalination

Although I did not report abroad each story is a local drama with global implications: I compare US water pollution to that of China; drought here to that in Australia; US floods to those in Europe; mining and energy use here to that of Central America and other parts of the world, and the like.

Water is a timely issue. The U.S. is using water in unsustainable ways, but now – some forty years after the burning of the Cuyahoga River and the poisoning of Love Canal, the founding of the EPA, and the passage of the Clean Water Act — there is a slowly growing public awareness of the value of water, a booming market for water efficiency and treatment technologies, and a vibrant dialogue about potential solutions to the water problems of the coming decades.

Internet Safety For You And Your Kids



June was National Internet Safety Month. Aimed at educating adults as well as kids on the dangers of the internet. Our friends over at ParentFurther.com is helping with this issue by writing helpful tips for your family.

Keeping Kids Safe Online::

Kids are turning to the internet for everything from hanging out with friends to shopping, making it harder to keep track of all your kids’ online activities. That’s why most Internet Service Providers (such as Verizon, AOL, and Comcast) provide free blockers, filers, and trackers designed to help you keep track of and manager your kids’ online activities.

If your child has internet access that’s mobile (such as on a cell phone or a laptop computer), it will be more difficult to monitor and control your child’s internet use.

Content blockers and filters are great tools to use with younger kids. They allow you more control over where they go and what they do online. A content blocker blocks sites with explicit material or limits a child’s search to a predetermined set of sites. A content filter scans sites and images and blocks those that contain certain words, key phrases, or content.

Keep in mind that content blockers may sometimes block sites that are just fine for your kids. That’s why tracking software may be more effective; remember, though, that you need to take time on a regular basis to check on your child’s internet activity.

Consider tracking software for older teenagers. This software enables you to see which sites your children have visited, tracking their path online. This tool gives young people more freedom to explore the Web, but it also allows you to verify that they are using the internet responsibly. Let your teenagers know that you trust them, but that you will be periodically verifying that they are visiting appropriate sites online.

Even if you use content blockers, filters, and trackers, know that a lot of kids figure out ways to get around these, so it’s important to remain vigilant.

Remember that not all adult sites post an industry rating that can be identified by blocker, filter, or tracker software. That’s why it’s important to talk to your kids about what to do when something inappropriate or scary pops up.

Nothing can replace involvement and supervision by adults. Keep monitoring how your kids use the internet on a regular basis without getting into the role of internet traffic cop.

Your home computer or your child’s laptop, even though there are so many other options, will be a primary point of access to the internet. Fortunately, there are many options for controlling what your kids see on their computers. If you aren’t already using one, start today and talk to your kids about it.

Black Music Month:: And The Beat Goes On



Black Music Month: The Beat Goes On
by Angela P. Dodson , June 6, 2011

On June 7, 1979, President Jimmy Carter decreed that June would be Black Music Month, and all the United States presidents since then have acknowledged the month-long observance.

We have much to celebrate in the rich history of African Americans’ contributions to this art form. As the creators of spirituals, work songs, blues, ragtime, jazz, gospel, rock ‘n roll and rhythm & blues, black Americans have left a legacy that is ripe for exploration and scholarship.

Diversebooks.net has numerous offerings on the various facets of black music, among them are:

Black Diva of the Thirties: The Life of Ruby Elzy, by David E. Weaver, $25.20 (List Price: $28)

The story of Ruby Elzy, (1908-1943), might be better known today if she had not died at the age of 35 as a result of a routine surgery as she was preparing her grand opera debut in “Aida.” Millions knew her soprano voice and her signature song, “My Man’s Gone Now” from her radio performances. She also created the role of Serena for George Gershwin in his opera “Porgy and Bess” and co-starred with Paul Robeson in the movie version of “The Emperor Jones” and with Bing Crosby and Mary Martin in “Birth of the Blues.” She sang at the White House for Eleanor Roosevelt, at the Apollo Theater and the Hollywood Bowl. She studied at Rust College in Mississippi, Ohio State University and the Juilliard School in New York City.

The Color of Jazz: Race and Representation in Postwar American Culture, by Jon Panish, $19.80 (List price: $22)

This book presents the long view of American attitudes toward jazz as it emerged out of the African American experience and journeyed toward widespread acceptance and appreciation in post-World War II America. The author explores how this music form was depicted in popular culture and especially how black and white writers write about it through different prisms. While black texts tend to emphasize history and common experience in discussions of jazz and jazz artists, the book argues, white writers tend to focus on musicianship, performance, and improvisation, stressing the individual over collective experience and ignoring history.

Nobody Knows Where the Blues Come From: Lyrics and History, by Robert Springer, $22.50 (List price: $25)

The sound of the blues and the legendary characters who created it and keep it alive have attracted their share of popular attention and scholarship. Less studied are the words, the lyrics that make the blues uniquely rich and that constitute an oral history of a people.
In this volume, an international cast of contributors explores the stories and themes that run through blues songs and cover the range of human experience—love, loss, violence, imprisonment and disasters, natural and manmade.

The Pilgrim Jubilees, by Alan Young, $45 (List price: $50)

Fifty years after making a groundbreaking recording that revolutionized and set the standard for modern gospel music, the Pilgrim Jubilees are still performing. This book by a New Zealand researcher is the first to tell their story, from their roots in rural Mississippi to their worldwide travels. They remain one of the finest examples of male gospel quartet singers ever to sing harmony. They reveal not only the hardships of their journey but also the joys of spreading the Gospel through such songs as “Jesus Got Me Off,” “Somebody Touched Me” and “I’ll Fly Away.”

Did The Atomic Energy Commission Leave A Hole In The Ozone?



Seventy-five miles north of Las Vegas sits a land parcel in the middle of the desert. Called Area 51, the parcel is just outside of the abandoned Nevada Test and Training Range, where more than 100 atmospheric bomb tests were conducted in the 1950s. Officially, the U.S. government has never acknowledged the existence of Area 51. Unofficially, it has become a place associated with conspiracy theories, alien landings and tiny spaceships.

Journalist Annie Jacobsen tells Fresh Air’s Terry Gross that the site has remained classified for many years — not because of aliens or spaceships, but because the government once used the site for top-secret nuclear testing and weapons development.

Give a listen to her interview on NPR. as she explain how the Atomic Energy Commission could have left a hole in our ozone layer with their nuclear test.

Bonus:: A 1955 Atomic Energy Commission brochure on atomic test effects in Nevada

LOCAL FOOD:: “how to make it happen in your community” by Tamzin Pinkerton and Rob Hopkins



The next book in my transitioning series will help with local foods. Local foods are important because they are fresher, more likely to be organic and purchasing helps keep money in the community.

Local Food provides inspiration and practical advice for creating local food initiatives – showing how to restore and establish community networks to generate healthy, locally produced food.

Many people already buy their vegetables as locally as possible, eat organic and seasonal food when they can, and are perhaps even getting to grips with managing an allotment. However, with current economic pressures and mounting concerns about climate change and peak oil, there is a growing feeling that we need to do more to reduce dependence on the global market.

Local Food offers an inspiring and practical guide to what can be achieved if you get together with the people on your street or in your village, town or city. It explores a huge range of local food initiatives for rebuilding a diverse, resilient local food network – including community gardens, farmers’ markets, Community Supported Agriculture schemes and projects in schools – and includes all the information you will need to get ideas off the ground.

Drawing on the practical experience of Transition initiatives and other community projects around the world, Local Food demonstrates the power of working collaboratively. In today’s culture of supermarkets and food miles, an explosion of activity at community level is urgently needed. This book is the ideal place to start.

Click here to download a free 12 page leaflet

Mumia Abu-Jamal Granted New Sentencing Hearing



A federal appeals court on Tuesday ordered a new sentencing hearing for convicted police killer and death-row activist Mumia Abu-Jamal, finding for a second time that the death-penalty instructions given to the jury at his 1982 trial were potentially misleading.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered prosecutors to conduct the new sentencing hearing within six months or agree to a life sentence. Abu-Jamal’s first-degree murder conviction nonetheless stands in the fatal shooting of Officer Daniel Faulkner. Continue reading