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Sunday, August 28, 2016

Fw: Educating the whole child




----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Economic Policy Institute <newsletter@epi.org>
To: stars2man@yahoo.com
Sent: Sunday, August 28, 2016 8:07 AM
Subject: Educating the whole child

Economic Policy Institute Newsletter
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EconomicPolicyInstitute

Making whole-child education the norm

Skills such as critical thinking, persistence, and self-control—which are often called noncognitive skills or social and emotional skills—are vitally important to children's development. In a new report, EPI's Emma García and Elaine Weiss outline why and how nurturing these skills should be incorporated into the goals and components of public education. García and Weiss argue that since these skills are linked to academic achievement, productivity and collegiality at work, positive health indicators, and civic participation, they should be an explicit goal of public education.
THE FED

Making the Federal Reserve work for everyone

On Thursday, August 25, EPI's Josh Bivens joined the Fed Up coalition, eight Federal Reserve presidents, and two Federal Reserve governors in a discussion about monetary policy and governance at the Federal Reserve Bank's annual Economic Policy Symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
EPI's Valerie Wilson coauthored a new report that describes why the Federal Reserve Bank should be fully public, and explains how this can be achieved. The report also proposes actions to enhance the bank's public accountability and transparency.

IN THE NEWS
Reuters
The Wall Street Journal covered EPI and Fed Up's joint report on making the Federal Reserve Bank more accountable. EPI's Valerie Wilson explained that the Federal Reserve's outdated structure makes it harder for its decisions to serve the public. | "Former Fed staffer, activists detail plan to overhaul Central Bank" »
Reuters
The Washington Post quoted EPI research associate Ron Hira on the use of guestworker visas to hire IT professionals. "This drives down wages and harms working conditions for Americans and immigrants alike because H-1B workers are paid less," he noted. | "IT now accounts for 4.6 million jobs — and most of them are going to men" »
Reuters
Mic quoted EPI's Ross Eisenbrey on how Sen. Bernie Sanders influenced Hillary Clinton's political agenda. "I think he sharpened her attack on the wealthy and has pushed her to do more on, for example, fighting corporate offshoring of profits." | "Hillary Clinton makes big promises to Bernie's millennial fans — but can she keep them?" »
Reuters
The Washington Post cited EPI research on raising the federal minimum wage, noting that 35 percent of African American workers would see their wages rise, directly or indirectly, due to a hike to $12. | "African Americans have a lot to 'lose' from a Trump presidency" »
Reuters
In "Marketplace's" story about EPI's recent report on the teacher pay gap, EPI's Lawrence Mishel explained that "some teachers have foregone wage increases in order to preserve their benefits." | "Teachers feel undervalued — and they may be right" »
Reuters
The Wall Street Journal also covered EPI's report on the teacher pay gap, noting that even when including benefits, teachers' weekly compensation was 11 percent less than similar workers' last year. | "Pay gap between public-school teachers and similar workers is wider than ever" »
From the EPI Blog
Ross Eisenbrey
Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces Executive Order makes contracting system more accountable
Robert E. Scott
Why is President Obama making one last push for the TPP?
Josh Bivens
Look to the 1990s, not the 1970s, for the right lessons to guide today's monetary policy
Ron Hira
Top 10 H-1B employers are all IT offshore outsourcing firms, costing U.S. workers tens of thousands of jobs
Ross Eisenbrey
Operation Smile's misleading opposition to the new overtime rules
Lawrence Mishel
A tale of two speeches
Daniel Costa
Melania Trump visa issues highlight lack of regulation and enforcement in temporary visa programs
Hunter Blair
Trump's plan for the economy does little to help working people
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Saturday, July 16, 2016

Junk Free TV | NOT in the USA

Junk Free TV | Cancer Research UK



We’re campaigning against junk food TV adverts because evidence suggests children who see these, eat more unhealthy food. That’s why we’re asking the Government to remove junk food advertising before the 9pm watershed – to reduce children’s exposure by more than half.
Television channels in the UK already aren’t allowed to show unhealthy adverts around children’s programmes. We want this to be extended to include programmes that families watch together.
image: http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/sites/default/files/styles/cruk_wide_resp_breakpoint_one/public/blog_impact_2.png?itok=dM2KhOr4
Blog impact



How can you help?

The Government plan to release their Childhood Obesity Strategy this summer. This means we only have a small window of opportunity to tell MPs why we need to tackle children’s obesity. Ask your MP to write to the Public Health Minister in support of our campaign to remove TV junk food adverts before 9pm. 


Read more at http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/support-us/campaign-for-us/junk-free-tv#WHW4GB42mrdGvwR1.99

Friday, July 01, 2016

DoctorYourself.com: Andrew Saul's Natural Health Website

DoctorYourself.com: Andrew Saul's Natural Health Website





Don't bother looking in the history books for what has slaughtered the most Americans. Look instead at your dinner table. There's an old saying: "One fourth of what you eat keeps you alive. The other three-fourths keep your doctor alive." We eat too much of the wrong things and not enough of the right things. Scientific research continually indicates nationwide vitamin and mineral deficiencies in our country. We spend over two million million dollars (two trillion) each year on disease care in America. Is it any surprise that doctors consistently place among the very highest incomes?