Daily Archives: May 28, 2017

We ended slavery, so why exploit people with a $7.25 minimum … – The Hill (blog)

Posted: May 28, 2017 at 7:34 am

As Americans, we have always tried to do better, to live up to the ideals upon which we were founded 240 years ago.

When Thomas Jefferson wrote about the self-evident truth that all men are created equal, but excluded women, we corrected his mistake. When he wrote that power is derived from the consent of the governed, but left out nonwhite citizens, we corrected his mistake. And when the Founding Fathers allowed Americans to buy and sell their fellow humans as property Americas original sin we corrected this injustice.

Or did we? More than 150 years after we ended slavery, we continue to exploit human labor in a misguided attempt to maximize profits for the aristocrats and oligarchs.

Is this the best we can do? Is this progress we can be proud of?

Working 40 hours per week at the federal minimum wage, a worker will earn just $290 per week or $15,080 per year before taxes assuming that worker takes no vacation days, never gets sick, and works Christmas, Thanksgiving and every other holiday. That leaves just $1,250 per month to cover essential needs like housing, food, clothing and transportation. Its just not sustainable.

Families supported by minimum wage jobs are excluded from Americas promise. There is no opportunity to spend time with children, to build wealth or to even participate in civic life. We may have left the plantations, but for too many Americans, the realities arent much different today than they were at Mt. Vernon.

To help these families survive not succeed, but merely survive the government has developed a number of programs like the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), food stamps and Medicaid. This helps fill the gap between a full days pay and the dollars needed to subsist, but these programs were intended as a safety net, not as a subsidy to corporations who refuse to pay even a subsistence wage.

That is exactly what they have become Walmart and McDonalds even help their employees with the application process for public assistance.

But welfare comes with strings and a stigma. And what clearer, and more humiliating, sign can an employer send to an employee than to say, We dont even think youre worth a living wage?

Government programs are not the solution, except for those who are truly the most vulnerable members of our society. The solution is to guarantee that every American who works a full-time job can earn a salary that meets their basic needs and lets them participate in their family, in public life and in the economy. The solution is to attach value to the jobs our neighbors do and to our neighbors themselves by showing them that we attach value to their labor. The solution is to rid ourselves of our original sin and remove the last vestiges of a slave culture we claim to have rejected more than a century and a half ago.

The solution is to raise the minimum wage and ensure that its a living wage.

The moral argument for doing so is clear. The economic argument should be clear as well. In an economy that is 70 percent driven by consumer demand, putting more money into peoples pockets means putting more money into the economy, and the closer a worker is to just making ends meet, the faster every additional dollar they have isreturned to the economy a concept known as the velocity of money.

Put another way, raising the minimum wage instantly pumps millions of dollars into the economy. Its good for the individual, good for business and good for the country as a whole.

In nine years, America will celebrate our 250th birthday. We have come a long way in that time, but we still have far to go. Will we be a nation that has moved closer to the ideals of equality so critical to our founding, or will we still be struggling to erase the lingering residue of slavery, our original sin?

If we truly do hope to be an ever more perfect union, the answer should be clear.

Morris Pearl is chairman of the Patriotic Millionaires, a group of wealthy Americans dedicated to equality for all people. He was previously a managing director for investment firm BlackRock.

Marc Morial is president of the National Urban League and the former mayor of New Orleans.

The views of contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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Adidas’ slavery buster hopes technology can give workers a voice … – Reuters

Posted: at 7:34 am

LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Adidas executive Aditi Wanchoo is on a mission - to wipe out any slavery in the German sportswear company's supply chain, and she hopes giving workers the technology to speak out will help.

With a background in corporate social responsibility at consultancy firm Accenture, Wanchoo was hired 18 months ago in a new position created by Adidas, one of the first companies to set up a role dedicated to fighting slavery.

In recent years modern-day slavery has increasingly come under the spotlight, putting regulatory and consumer pressure on companies to ensure their supply chains are free of forced labor, child labor and other forms of slavery.

As apparel and footwear industries rely heavily on outsourcing, sportswear companies have faced growing scrutiny.

Wanchoo said Adidas had been actively working on this issue since it was revealed at the 1998 World Cup that footballs were produced by child laborers in India and companies realized they did not have control over their suppliers.

Governments are now trying to tackle the problem with new legislation, such as the UK's 2015 law requiring companies to disclose how they are ensuring supply chains are slavery free.

"We have found that the UK Modern Slavery Act and recent legislative action in France and Australia have helped take the conversations to the boardroom," Wanchoo told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an interview this week in London.

"My role was created to look at building relevant partnerships to continue our work on addressingpotential modern slavery risks for our extended supply chain, i.e. our Tier 2 processing facilities and Tier 3 raw material sources."

Slavery has emerged as a major global problem with the Global Slavery Index by the Walk Free Foundation estimating there are nearly 46 million slaves in the world.

The United Nations has a global goal to eradicate forced labor and slavery by 2030 and end all child labor by 2025.

Wanchoo said she was tackling the issue in various ways such as collaborating with other companies, NGOs and governments, and training suppliers about the risks of bonded labor and the impact of recruitment fees on workers.

TECH TO GIVE WORKERS A VOICE

She said Adidas was also on a major drive to encourage workers to speak up and use this information to eradicate slavery and improve workers' conditions.

The company already has "worker hotlines" giving 300,000 factory workers in China, Indonesia, Vietnam and Cambodia the opportunity to anonymously ask questions, make suggestions or express concerns via text messages and smart phone applications.

But the company found this was not enough, and over the past year Adidas has run a pilot project in China with apps for workers to anonymously report issues - data that is collected and then analyzed.

Wanchoo said the aim is to introduce such a system in all of the company's 105 or so primary factories in the next five years and then look at cascading this down to second-tier suppliers.

In Turkey these worker grievance systems had uncovered concerns about child labor and reports of illegal workers from Turkmenistan, while in Asia workers had complained about abuse by supervisors, wage issues and food, she said.

She added that efforts to hear directly from workers was paying off. Last year campaign organization KnowTheChain ranked Adidas top out of 20 firms, chosen because of their size, for its efforts to eliminate forced labor and human trafficking.

"We want to make it as easy and anonymous as possible for workers," said Hong Kong-based Wanchoo, whose official title is senior manager - development partnerships, social and environmental affairs at Adidas.

She acknowledged this did not always go down well with suppliers who aim to keep costs as competitive as possible.

"Sometimes there can be resistance from suppliers, but we work with them to demonstrate how this can help them in the long run by improving supply chain transparency, communication, productivity and worker retention," she said.

(Reporting by Belinda Goldsmith @BeeGoldsmith, Editing by Alisa Tang.; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit news.trust.org)

BEIJING China's securities markets regulator published rules on Saturday aimed at preventing major shareholders of listed companies from reducing their holdings in an "intensive, massive and disorderly" manner that "disturbed market order and dented investor confidence," according to a statement on its website.

NEW YORK (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A dozen delivery and supply companies and affiliates based in Turkey are banned from doing business with the U.S. government due to their roles in profiteering from humanitarian aid intended for Syria, U.S. officials said on Friday.

Cancun, Mexico (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The rapid reaction by the Democratic Republic of Congo to recent cases of Ebola showed lessons were learned from earlier outbreaks, a top global health official said on Friday, stressing the need to factor health into disaster risk plans.

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College Actually Offers ‘Abolition Of Whiteness’ Class – PJ Media – PJ Media

Posted: at 7:34 am

American colleges and universities, and the Leftists who dominate them, are blind to their own bigotry and hypocrisy.

If a school offered a class titled "The Problems of Blackness," academia -- and everyone else -- would be outraged, and for good reason. That class material would be racist as hell. Yet change it to "The Problems of Whiteness," and you have a course that would be applauded for speaking openly about race.

Of course, I'm sugarcoating it. The modern Left isn't into simply discussing their hate anymore.

The class in question sounds like it's moved far beyond "speaking openly" to outright advocating for genocide, as it's actually called"The ABOLITION of Whiteness":

While the schools official course catalog discloses very little about what is actually discussed in the course, a flyer advertising a previous iteration of the class from the fall of 2016 describes it as an overview of whiteness studies in the United States, specifically focusing on concepts of consciousness, in/visibility, disavowal, and resentment.

Well be examining how whiteness -- and/or white supremacy and violence -- is intertwined with conceptions of gender, race, sexuality, class, body ability, nationality, and age, the description continues, adding that a petition for this course is on file with the College Senate so that it fulfills Pluralism and Diversity Parts B, C, or D, referring to mandatory courses that focus, respectively, on the historical conditions, perspectives and/or intellectual traditions of ethnic minorities in the U.S., women and those with non-traditional sexual orientations, and Europeans.

While the description of the class implies the usual racistbunk that white people are inherently evil,sitting on top of the heap, looking down at everyone around them, the biggest issue may just be that title. Gaboury, who is white, doesn't seem to understand that "abolishing" whiteness is going to involve, you know, genocide.

Try to offera class on "The Abolition of Blackness" or "The Abolition of Hispanic-ness" and hell would break loose. The professor would find himself out of work immediately -- and his safety threatened. Students would mob administrators, demanding more sensitivity training, anti-racism programs, and "white-free" safe spaces.

Violence, bigotry, fascism, everything evil you can think of is in style now on college campuses.

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Pourakarmikas protest, demand abolition of contract system – The Hindu

Posted: at 7:34 am

Pourakarmikas protest, demand abolition of contract system
The Hindu
Wielding brooms, pourakarmikas gathered at the Freedom Park here on Thursday demanding the abolition of contract system and threatening to strike work from June 12 if their demands are not met. Narayan, State president, Karnataka Rajya Nagarapaalike, ...

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‘Abolition Of Whiteness’ Course Fulfills Political Science Requirement – The Libertarian Republic

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By Rob Shimshock

Students at a public university in New York will have the chance to take a class called the Abolition of Whiteness in the fall, all while knocking out a political science requirement.

Jennifer Gaboury, a women and gender studies professor, teaches Abolition of Whiteness at Hunter College. POLSC 20474-01: Abolition of Whiteness can be taken as either a women and gender studies course, or as a class for the political science department, for which it fulfills a requirementfor the 4 subfields of political science, according to Campus Reform.

Abolition of Whiteness course listing (Photo: Courtesy of Campus Reform)

The classs listing on the schools course catalog provides only a vague description of its content, but a flyerdisplaying a fall 2016 offeringof the course claims it examines how whiteness and/or white supremacy and violence is intertwined with conceptions of gender, race, sexuality, class, body ability, nationality, and age.

Students obtain 3 credits for taking Abolition of Whiteness and 15 out of 25 seats in the course were full when the screenshot was taken, Campus Reform reported Thursday.

In addition to teaching the course, Gaboury serves as assistant director of Hunter Colleges Women and Gender Studies Program. Her work pertains to masculinities, feminisms, and politics; she is currently working on a project related to race and sex segregation in public bathroom facilities.

The Daily Caller News Foundation reached out to Gaboury and Hunter College for more information regarding the course, but received no comment in time for publication.

Abolition of WhitenessHunter CollegeJennifer Gaboury

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Cabinet approves abolition of Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) – Times Now

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Times Now
Cabinet approves abolition of Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB)
Times Now
Henceforth, the work relating to processing of applications for FDI and approval of the Government thereon under the extant FDI Policy and Foreign Exchange Management Act, shall now be handled by the concerned Ministries/Departments in consultation ...
Govt approves phasing out of 25-year-old Foreign Investment Promotion BoardThe Hindu
Make in India gets sourcing push from govtBusiness Standard

all 94 news articles »

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Labour’s Diane Abbott claims her views on the IRA have changed, just like her ‘splendid afro’ – Mirror.co.uk

Posted: at 7:34 am

Diane Abbott has insisted her previous views on the IRA have changed, just like her afro.

The Shadow Home Secretary made the surprising comment as she was grilled on her alleged comment in 1984 that "every defeat of the British state is a victory for all of us."

BBC presenter Andrew Marr asked her about the claim, which the Sunday Times said was made in an interview with pro-republican journal Labour and Ireland.

Ms Abbott replied: "It was 34 years ago, I had a rather splendid afro at the time, I dont have the same hairstyle and I dont have the same views.

"It is 34 years on. The hairstyle has gone, and some of the views have gone."

She dismissed the quote as coming "from a now defunct left newspaper", but did not deny saying it and would not say she regretted it.

Tory Home Secretary Amber Rudd snapped back: "Ive changed my hairstyle a few times in 34 years as well but Ive not changed my view about how we keep the British people safe."

Grilled minutes later on ITV, Jeremy Corbyn appeared not to be caught unawares.

"Diane's hairstyle is a matter for Diane," the Labour leader said, adding: "We learnt all of us a lot from the whole experience of Northern Ireland."

Ms Abbott's apparent comments were revealed in a report in the Sunday Times last week.

She was quoted in 1984 as saying Ireland "is our struggle - every defeat of the British state is a victory for all of us. A defeat in Northern Ireland would be a defeat indeed."

During her interview Ms Abbott defended voting against orders to proscribe alleged terror organisations, saying: "The reality of some of those groups is they were dissidents in their country of origin."

She said she, like some Tory MPs, was simply holding the government to account.

She also confirmed Labour's pledge today to hire 1,000 more intelligence and security officers was merely a pledge to fulfil what has already been announced.

But she denied reports she wants to wipe clean police DNA records, saying she would only do so for children who committed no crime.

She said "of course" she would no longer call for the abolition of MI5, because the nature of the organisation has changed since the 1980s.

And she insisted she could be trusted with tracking terror suspects if Labour wins the general election on June 8.

She said: "I was a Home Office civil servant. I know how these things work.

"If the files are put in front of me, evidence is put in front of me, of course I'll sign orders for surveillance."

The interview came as Manchester prepares to close the first week since the terror bombing by Salman Abedi that killed 22 concert-goers at an Ariana Grande gig.

Labour restated its commitment to hire 10,000 more police officers, 3,000 more firefighters, 3,000 more prison officers and 500 more border guards.

Jeremy Corbyn said: "Ensuring the safety of our communities demands properly resourced action across many fronts.

"It means upholding and enforcing our individual rights, promoting community relations, supporting our emergency services, tackling and preventing crime and protecting us from danger, including threats of terror and violence."

Meanwhile the Tories announced a new Commission for Countering Extremism would have a remit to clamp down on "unacceptable cultural norms" such as female genital mutilation, and promote "British values".

It will also act to ensure that women's rights are upheld in all of Britain's ethnic and religious communities, Theresa May said.

Mrs May wrote in the Sun on Sunday: "Enough is enough. We need to be stronger and more resolute in standing up to those who hate our values and want to destroy the freedoms we hold dear".

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Tools of liberation: how 1960s Californian counterculture lives on in … – The Drum

Posted: at 7:33 am

The hippie communes that formed down the USAs West Coast after the Summer of Love dont appear to be the logical starting point for the empires of Apple, Google and Uber. But the philosophy developed in this time and place that of democratising the tools of liberation is one that continues to live on in Californian technology and design.

The formation, expansion and product of these tools of liberation is the central focus of the Design Museums latest exhibition. Brendan McGertick, the co-curator of California: Designing Freedom, explained: What distinguished Californian design is, is a certain kind of philosophy or ethos which thinks that design or creativity or innovation should go towards personal empowerment.

This new attitude to design is encapsulated in the Whole Earth Catalog [sic] a guide, first published in 1968 and displayed at the show, on DIY building for those seeking a communal life away from the established towns and cities. The build-it-yourself culture aimed to shift technology from the military-industrial complex into the hands of the masses and went on to directly inspire the big players of the Silicon Valley tech scene, including Steve Jobs, who dubbed the Whole Earth Catalog as one of the bibles of my generation.

One of the first aspects of the [Californian 1960s] counterculture is the back to land movement, which is where a lot of people following the Summer of Love left San Francisco to try to form their own communes in different parts of the country, said McGertick. Through that process a certain philosophy emerged, which is that tech should help empower people to create their own realities, create their own communities and build their own alternative societies.

What we learnt is that idea actually went on to be very influential toward the next generation of computer designers and computer programmers and it established a way of understanding design that resonates today.

The exhibition contends that the notion of freedom in 1960s California found itself expressed in less obvious ways too. For instance, the museum displays Waymo, the worlds first self-driving car, alongside intricate designs of LSD on blotting paper; the earliest skateboards which opened up freedom of movement can be viewed next to make-your-own computer kits.

The show is divided into five sections: Go where you want: tool of movement and escape; See what you want: tools of perception and fantasy; Say what you want: tools of sef-expression and rebellion; Make what you want: tools of production and self-reliance; and Join who you want: tools of collaboration and community.

California: Designing Freedom also explores how advertising was influenced by the West Coast counterculture. For instance, the We the people campaign released ahead of the inauguration of Donald Trump is displayed to showed how personal liberation and anti-establishmentarianism still find themselves relevant to todays marketing design.

However the ad that embodies the Californian ethos most is Apple Macs 1984 spot, which aired the same year at the Superbowl. As such, a video of the commercial playing on a loop is given a prime place at the exhibition.

This idea that Californian technology is somehow liberating or empowering to the individual very much played out in Silicon Valley advertising, said Justin McGuirk, exhibition co-curator and chief curator at the Design Museum. If you look at the Apple Mac from 1984, which was really the computer that launched personal computing, the advert directed by Ridley Scott was an advert about personal freedom a colourful, creative individual rebelling against a grey, bureaucratic, Orwellian society.

This idea that technology that enables you to do anything anywhere has often be sold to the consumer as personally liberating.

Everybodys free (to make money)

The paradox for todays consumer is reconciling the world of hippies searching for a life outside a governmental system to the corporate tech behemoths that we know and use today. How can the central ideas of truth and liberation live on in brands so embedded to the mainstream and dedicated on making money?

One of the interesting things about California is that while it is completely wedded to an idea that design should empower the individual and technology should be distributed to the widest swath of the population possible, it is also an entrepreneurial society where getting rich is not in any way shameful, said McGertick. Its this idea of wanting to change the world and get rich at the same time.

I think in Europe or even on the east coast of America thats more of a contentious idea but [in California] theyve synthesised it in a way that allows someone like Steve Jobs to feel that hes coming from a hippie impulse but be a billionaire and thats justified.

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Guest column: Financial empowerment takes a village – Star Local Media

Posted: at 7:33 am

You have likely heard the statistics. Most Americans can't pass a basic financial literacy quiz, they aren't saving enough for retirement, and they consider money to be a top source of stress.

Perhaps more so than any other factor, our economy hinges on personal financial knowledge and informed decision-making. Without understanding the fundamentals, we can make financial mistakes that range from frustrating to life-altering.

For those living paycheck to paycheck or struggling to get by, the stakes are especially high. A recent study from Pew Charitable Trusts shows that low-income families have the equivalent of less than two weeks worth of income in checking and savings accounts and cash at home. Many young adults are in the same boat. Weve found in our own research that nearly four in ten have no savings at all. And, with one in three saddled with student debt, thats a scary thing.

We, as a community, need to ensure that our schools continue and grow their efforts to prioritize financial educationboth by advocating for required courses and properly equipping our teachers with the knowledge and resources that they need to succeed. But we know that schools cant go it alone, and thats where both public and private partnerships can work.

Here in North Texas, there are efforts afoot to address this challenge. The Dallas and Plano mayors summer intern programs are great examples of partnerships that, in addition to providing work and leadership experience to deserving students, prepare young people for life on their own. Through the online financial education initiative called Better Money Habits and collaborations with organizations and community leaders, we are enabling personal financial health and growth. High school students who are about to graduate are learning the basics of banking processes such as available account types and tips on how to manage bills, budget and save. Teaching these principles now can help them avoid living paycheck to paycheck, defaulting on student loans, falling further into debt, or making wrong decisions that can have a big impact on their financial lives.

In addition to equipping students, we need to make sure that local non-profits like the North Texas Food Bank or Legacy Grace Project serving women living with HIV/AIDs have the resources they need to operate. Sometimes that help is through financial support, but many times it is ensuring that non-profits and community partners are aware and taking advantage of the tools and resources local corporations already haveand actively talking to their constituents about them. This could be in the form of great financial education content that discusses what to do if youre in a financial bind. It could be telling them about a loan that might be available to them or an affordable housing option.

Now is a good time to step back, recognize the scope of this challenge and double down on our efforts as a community to improve financial well-being for North Texas residents. We should listen closely to those who need our support the most, identify the right resources and best channels to reach them, and make sure they are fully empowered to take control of their financial futures.

Richard Holt is Dallas market president of Bank of America

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Sauti Sol’s Savara launches mentorship program for women – SDE Entertainment News

Posted: at 7:33 am

They say that turning 30 comes with perspective and for sure Savara of Sauti Sol has proven just that. He officially launched a project he has been working on for a while that involves training and mentorship program for young ladies in Eastlands.

The project dubbed Savara Women's Advancement #SaWA Program is a platform created to empower women on how to explore their full potential no matter their background.

I am happy that on my special day I am launching a project that has been close to my heart for years: #SaWA. I want all the young ladies in Eastlands to apply for the #SaWA training program. It will be all about empowerment, personal growth, and knowing how powerful an individual you are. Watch this space for more details soon!

The 30 year old singer also announced their first activity will be a football tournament that will be held at Camp Toyoyo, Jericho starting 9.a.m. on the 17th and 18th of June.

The tournament shall be a 5-a-side set up with a total of 20 teams of five players between the ages of 18 and 25. Every team will have to have at-least two women. The top teams will win great prizes.

Savara shall also return to the field, playing soccer for the first time since his injury early this year. The icing on the cake will be the after party where the group shall give their first concert in Eastlands, my brothers and I are ready to tear it down.

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