KDS Training Academy candidate Bruce discusses the impact the course has had on his life

Posted on December 28th, 2009 by admin

Bruce was a candidate at our hugely successful second Inverness Training Academy. Our Training Academies are for the long-term unemployed and Bruce discusses how this course has not only assisted him with his job prospects but also changed his whole outlook on life.

More background on this Training Academy below.

The KDS Training team, with Managing Director Stephen Kidd, have now completed a dual sector Academy in scenic Inverness. Working with Jobcentre Plus and the Highland Employer Coalition, prospective candidates were invited to attend an Open Day where an outline of the 4 week course was presented. 10 lucky candidates were selected to attend the intensive course.

The four essential mandatory training units included Elementary Food Hygiene, H&S at Work, Fire Warden and First Aid Appointed person. This comprehensive training program will assist the candidates in securing future employment. Specific targeted training complimented by short work placements also gave the candidates a real insight to their chosen sector.

In addition to this, KDS Training Academy’s unique attention to soft skills training of Life Coaching and personal development supplies our candidates with a well rounded set of personal and professional skills.

We are delight to report to date that nine candidates completed the course. Four have been successful, even before the completion of the course, in securing employment with a further five pending outcome from their interviews.

Further information can be found here:

http://www.kiddsdistribution.co.uk

Duration : 0:3:20

Read the rest of this entry »

BAVC PI09 #5 – The Way We Get By

Posted on December 28th, 2009 by admin

The movie “The Way We Get By” deals with a lot of large issues, aging in America, military service, but manages to succeed as an intimate portrait of a group of senior citizens in Bangor Maine, who dedicate their lives to greet homecoming troops. Draxtor welcomes producer Gita Pullapilly to the virtual BAVC studio.

Every year, SF based Bay Area Video Coalition brings filmmakers together with technologists to develop new media strategies for their projects at the annual Producer’s Institute.
[more about BAVC PI 2009 at http://www.bavc.org/producersinstitute ]

Duration : 0:5:42

Read the rest of this entry »

Healthcare: Maine Coalition to Protect Patient Rights – Part 1

Posted on December 28th, 2009 by admin

Dr. Donald Palmisano, the head of the Coalition to Protect Patient Rights, talks about patient-centered healthcare reform that will protect the doctor patient relationship with Maine State Senator Carol Weston, and Dr. Robert Walker from Waldo County, Maine.

This is part 1 of a 3 part video.

www.protectpatientrights.org

Duration : 0:9:32

Read the rest of this entry »

Irfan Dhalla, Canadian Health Coalition – 091117

Posted on December 28th, 2009 by admin

Dr. Irfan Dhalla of Canadian Doctors for Medicare is interviewed by Ish Theilheimer at the Canadian Health Coalition 30th anniversary event – recorded at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa for Straight Goods News on November 17, 2009.

Duration : 0:5:24

Read the rest of this entry »

The Fate of East Coast Coalition…. and a bunch of randomness O.o?

Posted on December 28th, 2009 by admin

The title says it all, up and coming Emcee Michael Suess and Hip Hop Artist Sean da Rookie discuss the fate of E.C.C. , C-4, Random topics, and give alot of Shout outs.

Duration : 0:9:45

Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under coalitions | 2 Comments »

Opposition coalition ‘united’ despite differences

Posted on December 28th, 2009 by admin

Nearly two years after the Pakatan Rakyat drastically changed the political landscape along with controversies and infighting, today it seems to have come of age as it set out a common coalition platform.

At its inaugural convention in Shah Alam witnessed by 1,500 delegates from three opposition parties, PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang reassured other Pakatan partners that his party can work together with them. http://malaysiakini.com/news/120188

Duration : 0:8:20

Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under coalition | 19 Comments »

Is it legal for a church to distribute a paid political ad for/against a state amendment?

Posted on December 25th, 2009 by admin

Is it legal for a church to distribute in their weekly bulletin at Sunday service a bulletin that has "paid political ad…" for/against a state amendment that is up for a vote?
Is it legal for the same church to post Christian Coalition of America on their website along with ValuesVoter link?
What are the church’s obligations as a tax-exempt organization as far as distribution of paid political ads and assocations with politcal groups?

If the church is claiming tax exempt status while doing these things, it may be breaking both federal law and one of the Commandments by stealing from American tax payers.

Link below is to the IRS website documentation on this issue. It is very detailed, even mentioning that when a tax exempt organization establishes a web link to another website there are consequences if that linked site endorses a particular candidate, or favors one over another (Christian Coalition does).

If you have any concerns, contact the IRS.

New Zealand Citizens: What do you think will come out of the new National Party / ACT coalition?

Posted on December 25th, 2009 by admin

http://www.reason.com/blog/show/129999.html

I am not a New Zealander but I am happy to see that at least one country is moving away from socialism.

Is it possible to invade the United States of America?

Posted on December 25th, 2009 by admin

The answer is clearly NO, but I won’t to hear what the disbelievers have to say… An invasion of America would be impossible. Even if the entire world came crashing down on America with a massive coalition, it would still be impossible. And yes, i am accounting for the possibility that Canada and Mexico join this inevitably doomed coalition. Other countries with aircraft carriers and transport planes, (assuming they have any), would be blown out of the water or sky before they got within 2,000 miles of either coast. Hell, for that matter our Coast Guard could take on just about anything the world could throw at us…In fact, lol,,,the Coast Guard is larger than the Royal Navy…so just think about that for sec….Bottom line, if you cannot land troops on American soil…you cannot beat us…But if you think we can be invaded…I would love to hear how…Adults only please..

i’s possible and i’ts not possible at the same time.

What’s at the heart of the SCHIP debate.?

Posted on December 25th, 2009 by admin

What’s at the heart of the SCHIP debate.

Congress faces a critical question this week: Will U.S. health care be government-run, or will Americans be given the freedom to obtain their insurance plans and medical care from private firms? The next U.S. president will likely answer this question, but the resolution to the current debate about SCHIP — the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, a state and federal government partnership for insuring poor children — that is roiling Washington, D.C., will preview the answer.

Although health care is a crucial issue for the electorate; traditionally, presidential candidates have avoided any but the blandest generalities. Health care is the third rail of politics. Its complexity, size, and multiple, committed stakeholders scare away most would-be saviors.

Yet, the underlying debate is simple: It is all about who will manage and control the health-care sector that comprises one-seventh of our economy. Will individual Americans have the freedom to make their own choices? Or, will we trust government bureaucrats, lawyers, and politicians to make those decisions for them? Our future health-care system will be shaped by how we answer these simple questions.

Let’s be clear: The SCHIP battle is not about whether to insure poor children. The debate is about how to insure them: Via the government or private insurers? This debate has not only pitted Democrats against Republicans but has also sundered the Republican coalition. Some Democrats wanted SCHIP expanded by $50 billion dollars so that even families earning about $81,000 a year who have eligible children were included. (The 2005 U.S. median household income was $46,000.) A resolution with the Republicans who hold minority leadership roles led to a compromise, costing only $35 billion, which allowed coverage for those earning up to $60,000.

A fundamental problem with this compromise is that the same amount of coverage for children within SCHIP costs $1,000 more per child than under private insurance. A group of forward-thinking Republicans led by U.S. Senator Richard Burr (R., N.C.) and others has an entirely different idea of how to provide insurance: they want to cash out eligible people and enable them to use this money to buy health insurance from private insurers in a tax-protected way. Count the president in too. He has pledged to veto legislation that permits expansion of the present program.

None of the combatants’ are supported by an unblemished array of evidence. The Democrats support the expansion of SCHIP by lauding the universal coverage and substantially lower costs of single-payer, government-run systems, like the U.K.’s and Canada’s. Yes; but costs are controlled by rationing health care to the sick. More than 20,000 Brits would not have died from cancer in the U.S. Onerous waiting lists have caused illegal, for-profit health-service centers to proliferate in Canada. These rogue establishments are so well-accepted that the head of one became the president of the Canadian Medical Association. Nor do single-payer systems achieve equality of access or health status — the powerful, assertive, litigious, and connected go to the head of the line.

In the U.S., the government-controlled Medicaid program has achieved its low costs per person by stringent limits on provider prices. As many as 40 percent of doctors refuse to see Medicaid enrollees, leading to reduced health care quality. Physicians who accept Medicaid often shift their un-reimbursed costs to the privately insured. A system totally paid by the government would shut down this escape hatch, exacerbating the current shortage of primary care doctors.

But the group of Republicans who support private insurance acknowledge that they cannot laud health insurance as a model industry. The massive bureaucracies patients all-too-often encounter when they attempt to obtain the medical services they paid for are not merely frustrating, they sometimes kill. Free-market Republicans claim that the problem with the U.S. insurance firms arises from their lack of accountability. Agents, such as governments and employers, use our money to buy health plans. The agents’ incentives — simplicity and cost control — are not well aligned with our needs for responsiveness.

Senators Richard Burr (R., N.C.), Bob Corker (R., Tenn.) and others want to refigure the tax code so that we could buy health insurance with tax-sheltered money, a right currently reserved solely for our employers. If we purchased our own health insurance with tax-protected funds, we could keep these arrogant behemoths in check, just as we do in the other sectors of the American economy. The Swiss universal-coverage, consumer-driven system requires people, not employers or governments, to buy health insurance. (The poor primarily receive funds to purchase insurance just like everybody else.) This consumer control enables the Swiss to enjoy an excellent quality of care without the social inequality of single-payer countries at costs that are a third lower than ours.

SCHIP is not merely a debate about yet another mystifying government program. It is all about free-market principles versus government mandates. Giving taxpayers the freedom to choose and buy their own health care would unleash powerful market forces that have been subdued by third-party bureaucracies for the last 60 years. In every area of our economy, market forces have transformed rare, costly products and services like cars and computers into common products and services. We can make health care cheaper, better, and more widely available, if Congress can muster the vision and courage to act.

That is the longest question ever…lol

The debate is about :

1. whos responsibility is it to provide for an individual?
(personal accountability)

2. Who is poor? (who is deserving/who is undeserving)

3. Who is a child? (>18,>24…what is it?)

Why does Congress continue to want to tweek things that are not broken?

  • Categories

  • Pages

  • Tags

  • Archives

  • Meta

  •