Astrology & the Presidential Election: Obama Vs Mccain

Stepping into the world of political prediction is a murky arena for an astrologer. My personal position is that I am for the good of all humanity. I want whoever wins to have a pure heart and intelligent mind, I want the candidate who will uplift and do what is right for the country, for all of humanity, and the planet. I am not a politician, I am simply offering what I see astrologically for the presidential race. Astrology offers insight into the nature of individuals and the planetary energy around us.

When an astrologer is looking to make a prediction he or she looks at the symbols and from there makes a judgment based upon the symbolic language of the planets.

This election is very difficult as there are many mixed messages as to who will win. The greatest symbol for the election is that everyone appears to be surprised in some way. One thing is certain the astrology is saying that election day will be anything but normal and that the results can surprise many people. That in itself would imply that McCain could win as Obama is expected to win. However I do not think that will happen.

            When we look at the day of the election we are looking at the emotional symbols around the candidates for the symbols that would represent victory, achievement, accomplishment and being happy. When a person wins a hard fought fight one would expect a feeling of elation that will accompany that victory, when someone loses we would expect a feeling of being deflated. In very simplistic terms we want to see who looks the happiest.  McCain has a Venus aspect, although minor, getting something he wants, the larger influence points back to the date that he was taken prisoner of war and is indicating he is coming into a time of his life that the decisions he made then come to fruition and completion. McCain’s chart also show that he will have a “date with destiny” by the beginning of December, meaning that he will be taking on something new in his life that will fulfill what he feels he needs to do in this life. This does not mean that he will be president, and it doesn’t mean he won’t:  it is indicating he is about to make major changes in what he has been doing to fulfill a mission he feels is important.

Obama’s chart also shows he will lose something that is precious to him, yet in light of the health of his grandmother, (she is still alive at the time of this article)  it may not be that he loses the presidential race he has been fighting for but his grandmother.

I think the most telling chart is not in the charts of the presidential candidates, but in the chart of Sarah Palin.

There are two reasons why I think that Senator Obama will win the presidential race. 1.) The day of the inauguration he has several indications of being in the public eye. 2.)  In Michelle’s chart it indicates she will be concerned around her children for the next couple of years and their school will be changing, and that they will be moving. 3.) The evening of and following day of the election Sarah Palin chart is indicating that she will be very angry.

All of these influences could be manifested in other occasions, such as Palin being angry does not mean that McCain loses, it could mean her kids do or say something that embarrass her and she is mad at them. When you look at an astrological influence you must make a conclusion about where and how you think the influence will manifest. The simplest and most straight forward way to predict the astrological influence which is present on November 4th 2008 is to say the candidate that is not expected to win will win, however my conclusion is that Obama wins after a day of chaos at the polls.

Whoever wins we know has a very tough job ahead of them, the chart of the USA is in very bad shape, indicating bankruptcy, continued disruption, and economic problems. However the nation seems to come together in June of 2009, that whoever wins can pull together the divisiveness and unite the country in hope and expectation. As difficult as the upcoming charts indicate there is the protection and gift from Jupiter; optimism, hope, and with it the opportunity to learn that will take us to a better future.

Donna Page MS
http://www.articlesbase.com/astrology-articles/astrology-the-presidential-election-obama-vs-mccain-616535.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




What Will Obama Mean for our Elitist Yuppie Industries?

Affluent urban professionals are so happy that Obama is our next president! They’re educated and urbane and liberal and they are simply in love with our elected leader, for a change! But now that they’ve finally gotten over their election night party hangovers, they’re starting to realize: whoa, these Democrats might not be so good for our beloved Fashion/ Advertising/ PR/ Entertainment industries, which give us affluent urban professionals our paychecks! After the jump, we take a brief look at how these industries of liberal elites really feel about the prospects of an Obama presidency:

Fashion: Fashionista types are so in the tank. The promise of Obama even lured Anna Wintour out of her Batcave to vote! So where does the huge industry trade group the American Apparel and Footwear Association stand on the issues? Well, they’re against anything that makes unions stronger, obviously. Not good. They’re very upset about China’s domination of the textile manufacturing sector. Obama will presumably push China on some issues, but he’s far from a protectionist. And they don’t want to have to compete with Federal Prisoners for government contracts. When Obama frees the oppressed, that won’t be a problem. Huzzah!

Advertising: Ad people love Obama so much they named him Marketer of the Year! But as Ad Age points out today, the industry is concerned about what the new administration might do on a number issues: Will they endanger direct-to-consumer drug advertising? Will they pass stricter privacy rules that cut back on the ability of marketers to profile people? Will they strengthen the FTC and the FCC to reverse rampant deregulation and media consolidation? The ad industry would not like to see any of those changes, all of which are objectively good for consumers.

Public Relations: Lots of CEOs of major PR firms were totally in the tank for Obama, including big ole Democrat Richard Edelman, and Michael Kempner of MWW, who was at the Chicago Obama rally personally, palling around with Oprah! But PR firms are worried about a lot of the same communications and media law issues that the ad industry is worried about. Media consolidation could be considered good for corporate PR practitioners, because it narrows down the number of channels they have to deal with and gives them greater leverage. Net neutrality, which Obama probably will support, is a toss up. Political flacks will make their money no matter what, just on different issues. Mainly the PR industry would like Obama to fix the economy so they don’t, you know, lose all their clients. The biggest loser in all of PR since the election, obviously, is this guy.

Entertainment: Hollywood liberals are so sickeningly in the tank we won’t even bother listing dozens and dozens of examples in order to support our assertion! Why not drive your Prius over to Leonardo DiCaprio’s house and talk about it with him? So then, what does the MPAA, the trade group that rules Hollywood, care about politically? Well they won’t stop talking about “piracy” of movies, for one, which is getting really tiresome and is unlikely to be a matter of great interest to a President mired in two wars. Besides that ridiculous obsession, they basically want free flow of trade to enable them to spread their sinful pictures to all corners of the globe, filling their coffers in the process. So Hollywood types should get along okay with the Obama administration.
Until the new taxes come down.

for more imformation, please visit www.cantonfootwear.org

alexda
http://www.articlesbase.com/international-business-articles/what-will-obama-mean-for-our-elitist-yuppie-industries-631920.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Climbing a Wall of Worry! Dec. 12, 2008

BEING STREET SMART

___________________

Sy Harding

CLIMBING A WALL OF WORRY! Dec. 12, 2008.

The largest sectors of the economy continue to plunge into a seemingly bottomless hole; the housing industry (where it all started), the financial sector still locked in a credit crisis, the giant auto industry possibly within weeks of major bankruptcies, retailers struggling in their worst holiday season in decades.

Almost three million jobs have been lost since the recession began last December, more in the last six months than in the entire 2001-2002 recession. The loss of 533,000 jobs in November was the largest monthly decline since December 1974.

Investors have lost several $trillions in savings and investments in the worst bear market in stocks in 75 years. Income yields on bonds are at unbelievable lows.

Headline making scandals are showing up all over the place. The Governor of Illinois trying to sell his influence, even the former senate seat of President-elect Obama. Bernard Madoff, a former chairman of the Nasdaq Stock Market, and a respected Wall Street presence for almost 50 years, arrested and charged with fraud, in what the SEC is calling a $50 billion ‘Ponzi-scheme’ swindle of investors, “a stunning fraud that appears to be of epic proportions”.

Is it any wonder that the confidence of consumers and investors is also in a deep dark hole?

And it is. Over the last three months fearful investors have pulled a record amount of money out of mutual funds, brokerage accounts, and even hedge funds, in a panicked rush to get out of the stock market. Recent polls show a surprising percentage of investors and consumers now don’t even believe that money in government insured savings accounts or money market-funds is safe, and have been piling into short-term U.S. Treasury bills at a pace that has dropped the yield on T-Bills close to zero. They are willing to loan their money to the government for nothing rather than risk it anywhere else.

What is going on reminds me of a remark attributed to J.P. Morgan back in the early 1900’s that, “Bear markets return stocks to their rightful owners”. By that he meant that smart money or ‘rightful owners’ sell their stocks temporarily to public investors at high prices near market tops, but then buy them back at low prices when investors bail out at the lows of the subsequent bear markets.

What is going on reminded me of his arrogant remark because, while public investors have been bailing out at such a frenzied pace over the last couple of months, others have been quietly buying so heavily that not only did it offset all that selling, but was sufficient to produce a gain of 20.8% by the S&P 500 from its November low to its high last week.

The volatility has continued, but in the process the market has been in a bullish pattern of higher highs on the rallies and higher lows on the brief pullbacks.

And more importantly, it has been rallying in spite of the economic reports and worries becoming even more dismal and foreboding, including ugly employment numbers, plunging retail sales reports, threat of an auto industry bankruptcy, and soaring home foreclosure rates.

That is, for it three weeks anyway it has been climbing the proverbial ‘wall of worry’.

That is a good sign. As I have been saying for the last couple of months on my free daily blog, “The market always looks ahead and begins its next bull market while a recession is still underway and worsening, while public investors are at an extreme of pessimism. So obviously at some point it has to begin to rise in spite of continuing bad economic news. Since public investors aren’t buying, it has to be institutional and other ‘smart money’ that begins to buy in anticipation of improving economic conditions six to nine months ahead. And the market has to continue to climb a wall of worry for quite some time, until the economy itself begins to recover and public investors become less fearful.”

As regular readers of my column know, all year this year I have been predicting that the stock market would not bottom until the October/November time-frame, and that the bottom would be followed by a substantial bear market rally that would be well worth going after. Nothing so far had disabused me of that expectation. With the S&P 500 down 52% at its October low it would take a gain of 104% to get back to its peak of last October. It would take more than a 50% gain to retrace half of that decline in a bear market rally.

Stay tuned!

Sy Harding publishes the financial website http://www.streetsmartreport.com/ and a free daily Internet blog at http://www.syhardingblog.com/. In 1999 he authored Riding The Bear – How To Prosper In the Coming Bear Market. His latest book is Beat the Market the Easy Way! – Proven Seasonal Strategies Double Market’s Performance!

Sy Harding
http://www.articlesbase.com/investing-articles/climbing-a-wall-of-worry-dec-12-2008-681645.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Pharmacist Career – Is It For You?

Choosing the career you would like to pursue is clearly much more important than choosing what clothes to wear for that big party or what cake you want for dessert. It’s definitely much harder and complicated and it’s one that will directly affect your life to next five, ten or even twenty years so it must be done with care and wisdom.

The healthcare industry has continued to grow over the past decade and it will continue to do so with as the American population continues to age and therefore an in demand career will definitely be that of a pharmacist or pharmacy technician.

Becoming a pharmacist is a noble profession but it certainly doesn’t have the prestige of a brain surgeon or other medical professional titles but it’s a solid career and one that more and more are turning to help ensure a good living and job security.

Although pharmacists makes a decent living most pharmacists don’t make what would be considered a high salary unless that attain a position in a top-level research project undertaken to make innovations in the drug industry but the responsibility and importance of a pharmacist must be underestimated and undervalued.

To become a pharmacist, you must first earn a pharmacist degree from a college or university which is recognized by the Educational Board in your state and accredited by the American Council on Pharmacy Education or ACPE. Upon graduation, you must then pass certain examinations in order to receive a license to practice in your chosen field.

The major pharmacist examinations are the North America Pharmacist License Examination or NAPLEX and the Multistate Pharmacist Jurisprudence Examination or MPJE – both are administered by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy. You may also be required to pass additional examinations, depending on the rules in your state so it’s better to check with the state authorities regarding their particular requirements. In addition, if you plan on moving to another state, you may also be required to pass that states’ pharmacist examinations.

A pharmacist is usually given the job of managing a pharmacy or drugstore. They are assigned to provide drugs to patients that have been prescribed by doctors and other healthcare practitioners. A pharmacist is also required to supply information to patients regarding other drugs, like the best brands when it comes to over the counter drugs. The pharmacist is also responsible for supervising others workers in the pharmacy like pharmacy technicians and pharmacist aides. In many instances, a pharmacist must double check the work of his subordinates in order to make sure that no error has been committed.

In hospitals, nursing homes, clinics and other healthcare facilities, the responsibilities and degree of authority given to pharmacists goes a notch higher. A pharmacist advises doctors on the selection of medicine, the side effects of each particular drug and the optimal dosages.

Pharmacists are expected to have an extensive knowledge on the composition of drugs, their uses and potential patient side affects. With all the questions a pharmacist receives regarding medicines they distribute they must be very knowledgeable and attentive to what advice they offer because of the potential consequences of offering poor advice.

The role of a pharmacist takes on a more social context in small town pharmacies. The pharmacist can sometimes be tagged as some sort of guardian towards the younger generation, advising on issues such as pre-marital sex, birth control pills and the proper use of sleeping pills or tranquilizers. Pharmacists may also play the role as counselor towards those who request information and maybe be asked to make personal healthcare suggestions.

Another career path that some pharmacists take is that of Research and Development with the drug companies. The reason behind this is normally financially based because they have the opportunity to earn a much higher salary. However, in order to secure these types or job one must have exceptional skills and total commitment.

On the other hand, some pharmacists prefer to work for insurance agencies and work as a consultant for health concerns. Other pharmacists however prefer what they say is the most noble of all professions and teach classes in high school and college.

If the allure of a pharmacist or pharmacy technician career appeals to you, check out the links below.

Scott Knutson
http://www.articlesbase.com/careers-articles/pharmacist-career-is-it-for-you-123233.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Concierge Medicine-don’t Let the Healthcare System Mandate How You Will be Treated

Over the years, the culture of healthcare has changed and it has become increasingly difficult for physicians to devote extended attention and care to their patients. The daily processes of practice management can often overshadow patient care, and too much time is spent addressing frustrations such as rising costs and declining reimbursement. Many physicians are forced to question why they chose to practice medicine in the first place. Physicians challenged me to think about ways to improve physicians’ practices so more time and attention can be spent on patient care and less time focusing on costly distractions. I have developed a company that builds and supports a patient-centered practice model to allow for greater freedom and control for physicians and improved satisfaction for patients. It’s called a retainer medicine model or Concierge Medicien.  Physicians can deliver superior primary care through a modern practice model that affords them many advantages over traditional practice models.Physicians engaged in a modern practice enjoy improved patient relationships, more professional and better overall care for patients.

In order to make it through the maze of what direction to go if you are a patient and what is the right model if you are a physician, consult with the expert and see if it’s right for you. The concierge medical model has saved lives, due to early detection and physicians have a better practice model. So if you don’t have your primary doctors personal phone number and you the MD have to see 30-40 patients/day to survive—> WE NEED TO TALK! The answer is clear.

I will answer all e-mails directly before any personal information is given. abenson54@msn.com

Think about how it might help or save you

ab

Arney Benson
http://www.articlesbase.com/medicine-articles/concierge-medicinedont-let-the-healthcare-system-mandate-how-you-will-be-treated-633330.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Jury System Reform in Personal Injury Cases

Civil juries have been called the conscience of the community. John Stuart Mill once observed that the jury system is “at the very heart of democracy Similarly, Alexis De Tocqueville stated that the American civil jury system is “one of the most efficacious means for the education of the people which society can employ.”

Those fighting for the rights of the people, namely Personal Injury Lawyers in Wrongful Death, Birth Injury, Brain Damage, Medical Malpractice, Truck Accident an similar cases, have long fought for strengthening the jury system.  The right to a trial by jury in civil cases is firmly embedded in the United States Constitution, as well as most state constitutions. The Seventh Amendment provides: “In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.” And the United States Supreme Court has held that “[m]aintenance of the jury as a fact-finding body is of such importance and occupies so firm a place in our history and jurisprudence that any seeming curtailment of the right to a jury trial should be scrutinized with utmost care.”

Why, then, has the American jury system been under attack in recent years? One answer is that this attack is nothing new. As early as 1872, Mark Twain commented: “The jury system puts a ban on intelligence and honesty, and a premium upon ignorance, stupidity and perjury. It is a shame that we must continue to use a worthless system because it was good a thousand years ago.”  Likewise, in 1911 Ambrose Bierce defined “trial” as a “formal inquiry designed to prove and put upon record the blameless characters of judges, advocates and jurors.”

Contrary to the literary critique of the 19th century, the recent attack on the American jury is far more potent.  Corporations and their insurers have been at the forefront of such attacks on civil juries, seeking to limit corporate liability exposure by replacing the civil jury system with a more manageable statutory structure.

And their call for jury reform is getting louder. Following the recent $253.4 million dollar jury verdict against Merck in the first Vioxx suit in Texas, some tort “reformists” have called for the “End of the Jury System for Civil Cases.” According to Professor Brainbridge of UCLA, this Vioxx verdict “raises serious questions as to the competence of lay jurors to resolve technical issues.”

Other commentators disagree, arguing that juries in civil cases stand as indispensable watchdogs over corporate negligence and corruption. Specifically, the Vioxx verdict illustrates how, “for ordinary Americans, the civil justice system is the last check-and sometimes the only check-against corporations that put profits before the health of safety of their own customers.”

Still, even the firmest supporters of the American civil jury agree that juror comprehension is strained by lengthy cases, complex evidence and intricate law. In such cases, not only are the interests of justice poorly served, but jurors themselves become dissatisfied with their participation. Accordingly, recent jury reform efforts have been aimed at making the jury system more responsive to citizen needs, as opposed to abandoning civil juries altogether.

The American Bar Association (ABA) has recently spearheaded two such efforts to highlight the importance of jury service in our nation: the American Jury Project and the Commission on the American Jury. The former has been charged with producing a single set of modern jury “Principles” that the ABA proposes as a model for courts across the country. The latter has been charged with a mission to encourage appreciation of the American jury system, to persuade the public to participate in the process, and to stimulate reform in hopes of improving the experience of serving on juries.

This paper examines some of the newest and more controversial jury trial innovations being considered by judges and attorneys to maximize juror comprehension of evidence and applicable law.

DISCUSSION

A.        Jurors Asking Questions

One of the more controversial jury-reform proposals is to allow jurors to ask witnesses questions during trial. This practice is slowly gaining acceptance in jurisdictions throughout the country, and is a practice endorsed by the American Bar Association.

Proponents of allowing jurors to ask questions note the difficulty juries face in analyzing evidence presented through one-way communication. That is, attorneys and witnesses speak during trials, while jurors only listen. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in United States v. Callahan, held that “[t]here is nothing improper about the practice of allowing occasional questions from jurors to be asked of witnesses. If a juror is unclear as to a point in the proof, it makes good common sense to allow a question to be asked about it.”

There are essentially two approaches on how jurors might ask questions during trial.   Under the first approach:

After both lawyers conclude their respective direct and cross-examination, the trial court asks the jurors for written questions; the jury and witness leave the courtroom while the judge determines the admissibility of the questions; the trial court reads the questions to both lawyers and allows them to object; the jury and witnesses are brought back into the courtroom and the judge reads the admissible questions to the witness; after the witness answers, both lawyers may ask follow-up questions limited to the subject matter of the jurors’ questions.

Under the second approach:

The juror writes the question and hands it to the bailiff, who then passes it to the judge; the judge (most often at a break) furnishes copies of the question to the attorneys so long as in the judges opinion, the question-or some variation of the question-is potentially meritorious (having foundation in law as well as being relevant and material to the case at hand); the juror’s question now belongs to the attorneys, who are free to handle the question as they deem appropriate and in their client’s best interest.

Opponents of allowing jurors to ask questions under either approach argue that it may disturb the respective roles of the attorneys and juries, transcending jurors from neutral fact-finders into advocates. Additionally, jurors might become distracted by thinking of questions rather than paying attention to the trial. Furthermore, a probing question from a juror might improperly aid an otherwise ineffective attorney.

State appellate courts have taken differing approaches to the practice of allowing juror questions. In City of Springfield v. Thompson Sales Co., the Missouri Supreme Court expressly upheld the use of jury questioning. On the other hand, in Steele v. Atlanta Maternal-Fetal Medicine, P.C.,the Court of Appeals of Georgia found that the trial court abused its discretion by allowing jurors to submit questions for witnesses. The Supreme Court of Vermont, in State v. Dolesny,held that it was within the trial court’s discretion to permit jurors in criminal cases to submit written questions for the witnesses.

Despite the increasing number of jurisdictions permitting jurors to ask questions, most attorneys remain cautious about this reform proposal. In a traditional adversary trial, lawyers control the questioning of witnesses, subject only to judicial scrutiny. When jurors are allowed to ask questions, attorneys must yield some of this control to the jury.

B.        Consecutive Expert Witness Testimony

Most of the criticism surrounding the Vioxx verdict suggests that jurors are incapable of understanding and evaluating complex expert testimony. One jury reform proposal seeks to address this concern by reordering the sequence of proof so that opposing experts offer their testimony consecutively.

In complex cases involving a “battle of the experts,” some jurisdictions have experimented with reordering the traditional sequence of proof to better facilitate juror comprehension. For example, if a plaintiff offers an expert witness on the issue of causation, the defendant’s causation witness would testify immediately after the plaintiff’s expert, rather than much later in the trial during the defendant’s case-in-chief. This procedure would allow jurors to hear all the expert causation witnesses in the same approximate time period.

Another approach would allow each side’s expert to appear together in front of the jury, following their testimony, to answer one another’s questions about the testimony. For instance, expert witness A could be asked to respond to expert witness B’s criticism of expert witness A’s conclusions. This technique allows the jury to examine the extent of any real difference between expert testimony and to compare these differences side by side.

Still, this proposal certainly has detractors. Both plaintiff and defense lawyers are concerned with disrupting their trial presentation strategy by reorganizing the timing of presentation of expert witnesses. Accordingly, most commentators agree such reordering of testimony should not occur without the consent of the judge and all parties.

C.        Interim Summaries

Another controversial jury-reform innovation is to allow attorneys to provide jurors with interim summaries during various stages throughout the trial. One common problem for jurors is the inability to put individual pieces of evidence together in any meaningful context. Because jurors can better understand evidence when they know why it is being presented to them, some jurisdictions permit lawyers to make mini-summations during the trial.

Proponents of the practice argue that such summaries are useful in long and/or complex jury trials. Mini-summations can help the jury focus on the significance of evidence and place evidence in context while it is still fresh. The Arizona Supreme Court Committee on More Effective Use of Juries concluded that “[i]nterim summaries can enhance jury comprehension, aid juror recall of the evidence and help jurors avoid making premature judgments in the case.”

Opponents of mini-summation argue that this practice allows lawyers to “put a spin on the testimony before all the evidence is in,” which can be highly prejudicial. Furthermore, opponents note that interim summaries can waste time, bore the jurors, and interrupt the flow of presenting testimony.

D.        Juror Deliberations During Trial

In most jurisdictions, jurors are prohibited from discussing the case until they receive final jury instructions. However, some jurisdictions have considered permitting pre-deliberation discussions by jurors, especially in lengthy or complex cases.

In fact, Arizona became the first jurisdiction to expressly permit jurors to discuss evidence during civil trials. Currently, Arizona jurors can do so only in civil trials; in criminal trials they must still wait until the final deliberations to discuss the case with one another.

In civil cases in Arizona, jurors are instructed at the outset that they may discuss the evidence amongst themselves during the trial but only in the jury room and only when all are present. They are cautioned that discussion is appropriate only as long as they keep an open mind until they have heard all the evidence, all the instructions on the law, and all arguments of counsel. A number of trial judges across the country are using this procedure on an experimental basis, generally with the consent of the parties.

The foremost objection to pre-deliberation jury discussion is the belief that jurors who engage in this practice will prejudice the case before hearing all the evidence and instructions on the law. This practice also raises concerns about shifting the burden of proof from the plaintiff to the defense, if jurors form an opinion before the defense has presented its case.

CONCLUSION

Many of the innovative jury reform proposals described above can enhance the civil jury’s decision-making ability. To the extent that reform makes jury duty a more enjoyable experience and helps lawyers communicate more effectively with jurors, such proposals should be seriously considered.

However, jury reform should not disturb the role of jurors as impartial finders of fact. Perhaps the best thing to come out of the jury reform debate is that trial lawyers are becoming keenly aware of the need to communicate more effectively with juries.

Mathew A. Passen
http://www.articlesbase.com/personal-injury-articles/jury-system-reform-in-personal-injury-cases-723750.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




How Can Engineers Help me to Become a Wise Global Citizen?

If we want to heal the planet then we need to begin working with the positive forces that already exist. Moving away from the current unsustainable guiding principles of strategy or growth, towards health, personal and global isn’t easy, although now that Barack Obama is President elect of the USA, everything seems more possible.

Many of us live in societies that encourage us to believe that the planet’s resources are there to serve ‘limitless’ wants and manufactured needs. Scientist Richard Eckersley explains that we have created these by turning the seven deadly sins, greed, lust, laziness and so on, into the seven marketing imperatives. Despite this, many of us also realise that the planet’s resources are finite and strained and that we have to change our values if we want our civilisation to continue. Becoming a wise global citizen means moving away from a ‘what’s in it for me’ culture to a ‘we’re in this together’ culture based on partnership not domination. This challenges perspectives and values.

As a university teacher, I want to contribute to healthier, healing futures. By chance, I became involved with first year engineering students. The teaching team wanted to improve their communication skills, break down some of the perceived gender and ethnic barriers and introduce principles of sustainability. Communication skills included written and oral skills and interpersonal and cross-cultural communication. As long as engineering discourse continues to denigrate these as ‘soft’ skills, there is little reason for students to respect their importance. Since “soft” is usually a feminine attribute, this also makes it harder for women to become part of this engineering culture.

Most engineering students come from a wide variety of ethnic and cultural backgrounds and, in Australia, include many international students. Although the presence of diversity is widely believed to create better cultural understanding, it doesn’t just happen. It is hard for students to cross gender, age and culture barriers without active support from teachers. By sustainability, we meant moving beyond an add-on, token acknowledgement of the widely accepted Brundtland definition that sustainability means meeting “the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” (WCED, 1987, p. 8). It is also unfortunate that sustainability has been welded to words such as ‘growth’, ‘consumption’ and ‘development’, which have caused many of the problems. A more appropriate ethic is what the sustainability scientists call interconnectedness, based on taking responsibility for “the well-being of others, nature and future generations” (Raskin et al., 2002, p. 56).

The initial responses to these topics and the methods, including a reflective journal, were disheartening. Everyone, they assured us, hated the work and couldn’t see why engineers had to engage with such ‘crap’. And yet, when I read the journals of this diverse group of students, mainly male, but from over 30 different ethnic backgrounds and including international and mature age students, signs of growth shone through.

Six years of research helped me to understand what was happening and to improve what I taught and how I taught it (Kelly, 2006). I used student interviews to help me understand what changes took place, what blocked them, what helped students to grow and how they grew. The unit of study was far from perfect and poorly supported by other engineering faculty but still students changed. The data showed that far from “everyone” hating what we did, around 65% accepted it, willingly, “I’m really looking forward to this”, or grudgingly, “I’ll give it a go”. 25% were converts, who hated it at the beginning but understood the benefits at the end. For some of these the change was transformative.

Resisters and ‘resistings’

The problems lay with the disproportionate influence of the around 10% who, for various reasons, resisted all the way. Resisters are so “loud” in their resistance and criticism that we assume “everyone” feels the same way. “Arrogance” and “contempt for non-technical material” have been identified as lingering aspects of engineering culture, but similar attitudes are recognisable in every organization or group. What we and they need to realise is they do not speak for all students (or staff) and that they have to respect others’ right to change.

I moved past seeing these students as “resisters,’ with all the negative connotations of that label. Identifying and understanding the causes behind ‘resistings’ in any situation, can help us to work more effectively. For example, some of the engineering resisters were scared of writing because they had been criticised for poor writing at school. The findings are useful because resistance to challenging the dominant culture is not peculiar to western systems. India, for example, is trying various approaches to improve the participation of women and minority groups in engineering and academic life generally.

I identified the following stages in interviewees who changed, not necessarily in this order. Students first got connected, to the topics and to others; they got respect, for themselves and others; they got insight; they got inspired; they got healing, from damaged self-esteem, from being racists and from feeling victimized by racism; and they got transformation. These were expressed as six qualities that I think mark a wise global citizen:

Empathy with and sensitivity to other ways of being and knowing

Global consciousness

Being capable of trans-generational thinking, past and future;

Having courage;

Being able to contemplate changes to their current way of life;

Working towards healthier futures, from the personal to the spiritual.

Wanting to make a difference

The hopeful message is that so many students wanted to work for a better future, even at the expense of their own privileged way of life, and were relieved to get support to say so. Wanting to make a difference is an emerging, healthy but still muted discourse. Recently I revisited engineering education, looking at an Australian report and a national newspaper advertorial trying to attract students to engineering as a career. The underlying myth of the education report is a ‘business as usual’ future in which the planet is a market place where engineers make it, sell it or fix it. The advertorial’s myth is worse, seeing the planet as an open-cut mine. Engineers are depicted as well-paid cogs in a boom machine which is based on consume now, pay later.

In the face of powerful overt and covert institutionalised resistance and counter-messages we need Globo sapiens’ courage to make conscious and self-conscious efforts to change what we say, write and do. At work and in our personal life, we can use our authentic voice, however small it seems, on behalf of each other and the planet. As Globo sapiens we won’t just be a civilising influence because we are doing better things differently. We will be different.

References

Eckersley, R. (2004). Well and Good: Morality, meaning and happiness. Melbourne, Australia: Text Publishing.
Kelly, P. (2006). Towards Globo sapiens: Using Reflective Journals to prepare engineering students able to engage with sustainable futures, from http://adt.library.qut.edu.au/adt-qut/public/adt-QUT20070403.150024/
Kelly, P. (2008). Towards Globo Sapiens: Transforming learners in Higher Education. Rotterdam: Sense Publishers.
Raskin, P., Banuri, T., Gallopin, G., Gutman, P., Hammond, A., Kates, R., et al. (2002). Great Transition: the promise and lure of the times ahead. Boston: Stockholm Environment Institute.
WCED, World Commission on Environment and Development. (1987). Our Common Future (The Brundtland Report). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Patricia Kelly
http://www.articlesbase.com/education-articles/how-can-engineers-help-me-to-become-a-wise-global-citizen-696366.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Wtc: Make the Past Right Before Taking on the Future

<!– @page { size: 8.5in 11in; margin: 0.79in } P { margin-bottom: 0.08in } –>

Now that we the United States have elected the next President of the United States, we must stick to our word and our stance for change. Many have told Obama that he has a lot of work to do, this may be entirely true but so does the public. The United States is going through an economic crisis that has millions worried job security, finances, and anything and everything in between. In order to gain some progress for our current efforts, we must first take a look at what is holding us down from progressing with steam. We must take care of the past before we take care of the future, for if we do not deal with what got us in this mess, we will surely commit these acts again. In order to restore faith, hope, and unity in this country we must come together and do what is right, not what is convenient. Once we have acted in this matter we will be able to face the future with all of the right tools on our side. One major issue I am talking about 9/11 and the injured workers who have still yet to gain any compensation for medical bills, loss of wages, and for pain and suffering. These people dedicated their lives to helping others and the city that so many call home, yet after their efforts they we just pushed aside and told to take a number. So many people have experienced respiratory problems that they are unable to go back to work and unable to provide for their families. These people then have to rely on government assistance and the circle repeats itself.

One thing that is a positive however is that the WTC project is gaining headway. There has been many obstacles to overcome in which the budget was overdrawn and the deadline was delayed multiple times. My question is that why do we keep increasing the budget for a memorial when people are still suffering from injuries from the tragic event. I would think that most people would rather have that money go to the injured workers than to a more extravagant memorial. We need to get out priorities in order and determine what really matters. In these trying times we cannot focus on materialistic things, what we need to focus on is the quality of life. Having a greater quality of life will enable people to go back to work, spend more money, and get the economy going again. It is here where we can start to find relief from the chains that are currently holding us down.

If you or a loved one has been injured while working at the WTC site and has yet to recover any type of monies to cover medical expenses, contact a lawyer as soon as possible. This type of behavior is unacceptable as people are still out of work and suffering from the injuries that were incurred from working at the WTC site.

Kaplan
http://www.articlesbase.com/news-and-society-articles/wtc-make-the-past-right-before-taking-on-the-future-655342.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Working Toward ‘yes We Did’

 

As a person who goes on record as a passionate advocate for community building, I’m nervous talking politics. I suppose I fear that anything I say on the topic will be as polarizing as inserting myself in the middle of a sibling squabble, with half my audience nodding its head in smug “Hah!-mom’s-on-my-side” superiority while the other rolls its eyes in “Whateverrrr” disgust.

 

This does not a come-together message make. For the record, it does little to create a peaceful family dinner either. But in life and in parenting, sometimes a side must be taken.

 

If you’re the sibling who’s audacious enough to swipe the last clean pair of socks from her sister’s dresser, or you choose to sneak off with the last three homemade chocolate chip cookies while leaving her with nothing more than some shards of stale graham crackers in the back of the cupboard, I will rise up in my Kevlar vest and stand up to you about what is right.

 

What is right, for me, is usually summed up in a way that manages to be both simple and daunting at the very same time – it is a desire to live in peace, harmony and unity; both in the micro level of my house and the macro level of this whole wide world we live in.

 

Yes, this is a wish that is as ambitious of a prospect at home as it is abroad.

 

As I write this, though, during the week we inaugurate our new president, I feel so very empowered in the belief that our collective small efforts can amount to great change, both right here in our Bay Area communities and in the role we play in the world. If only President Obama could work his inspiration all the way down to the micro-micro level of inter-sibling relations, I could be a one-woman, “Kumbaya” karaoke act.

 

While it is true that many of my daily thoughts are directed to the relatively shallow injustices involving snickerdoodles and socks, my concerns for our nation run deeper. So with my vital organs protected with some virtual Kevlar, I stand up today to the people – both the strangers and the members of my extended family – who did not vote for Obama.

 

I realize that you, like me, voted your mind and your heart for what you felt was the best direction for our country. But now that it is done, I beg you not to sit in your armchair waiting for our president to fail. The price to pay for your being right is simply too high to pay, because Obama’s failure would be our own. The state of our economy is too dour to expect the government to throw money at every one of the problems we face. This means that, as individuals, we have to stand up and do what we can with our own human effort.

 

While all of this sounds daunting, it is anything but. The way I see it, if every one of us takes a moment to remember why we chose to raise our family in our respective communities, we can start right there. For my family, the choice to set up our home in Almaden Valley was about the quality of our schools, the beauty of our geography and the sense that we could live in a small town within a big city.

 

By pinpointing why we made this choice, we clarify our priorities and can easily determine where we can make a difference with a genuine sense of passion. Those of us who are bold and ambitious can create groups and organize legions of people to support us in our mission, and the rest of us can choose to quietly work as individuals towards our cause.

 

When I give my time and energy as a classroom volunteer or PTA member; when I pick up the pieces of trash we all seem to think someone else should pick up; when I greet my neighbors by name and act inclusively in my gatherings, I am making sure that my community will go even further towards being all of the things that drew me here.

 

If each individual in our communities makes these small efforts, President Obama will have proven that we not only can and will, but after four years of individual accountability for the common cause, he will be able to tell us, Yes We Did.

 

###

Shana McLean Moore is a resident of Almaden Valley. In addition to being a columnist and staff writer for the Almaden Times, she is a motivational speaker who specializes in community building. She can be reached through her blog: http://www.sunnysidecommunications.com

 

Shana McLean Moore
http://www.articlesbase.com/causes-and-organizations-articles/working-toward-yes-we-did-738422.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




What are Managed Health Care Plans?

Most of the health services and financial issues related to healthcare insurance policies are handled by what is called managed health care. This is one of the most common ways of providing healthcare coverage to people across the United States. Managed health care strives to provide the highest quality healthcare to its members, along with other additional benefits.

Managed health care ensures that the patients are provided with healthcare in a most appropriate location, close to their home or even inside their home if a patient is that much ill and needs constant care. In addition to this, they also see to it that an appropriate provider is chosen to cater to the needs of the patient. These plans are composed of networks consisting of only a limited number of doctors and healthcare professionals unlike other health insurance services.

Mainly there are three types of managed care plans available to customers: Health Maintenance Organizations (HMO), Preferred Provider Organizations (PPO), and Point-of-Service (POS) plans. The features and benefits offered by each of these plans differ from one another. Also, there is a level of restriction found in each one of these plans. Before choosing a managed care plan you need to carefully assess your situation.

An HMO has contracts with medical professionals and hospitals that offer discounts to their patients. The patients or members are required to pay a monthly fee, regardless of whether they see a doctor every month or not. They also have to choose their Primary Care Physician (PCP) and always see him first before going to other members of the provider network. PCP is also known as a gatekeeper. So if you come across this term on a membership form, do not be surprised or worried. The patients will only be able to see specialists, for example a cardiologist, if this is first authorized by the PCP. Without a referral HMO is not responsible for the charges that specialist will ask for. If you have signed up with an HMO, you will have to select a doctor listed on their providers list. If you prefer someone else (for example a family doctor) you will have to select another care plan.

PPO works almost in the same way an HMO does, except that the patient does not have a PCP. PPO forms a providers network just like HMO, but patients can also choose a doctor from outside that network. However, the network is formed to give extra financial incentives to its members. Keep in mind that PPO costs more than an HMO because of the flexibility in choosing your doctor and the fact that you do not need referrals to see a specialist.

A POS plan is somewhat a combination of both PPO and HMO. It is also called an open-ended HMO. The patients or members are given the freedom of choosing either a PPO service or an HMO service depending upon their situation and the kind of healthcare they require. Sometimes seeing a specialist without a referral is very urgent and important. In such a case the members can go with the PPO and pay a little extra fee. In other cases when only a general physician would be sufficient to provide the necessary prescription, the members can go with HMO. Patients are also given the freedom of choosing their PCP if they want to. These kinds of plans are becoming increasingly popular because of the lack of restrictions and flexibility they have to offer to their members.

It is again encouraged that before jumping to one of these managed care plans you should carefully analyze your situation and the urgency of healthcare insurance.

George Wood
http://www.articlesbase.com/non-fiction-articles/what-are-managed-health-care-plans-82585.html

AddThis Social Bookmark Button