matthewmcvickar + corporations 5
Hyping classroom technology helps tech firms, not students - latimes.com
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
‘It’s great to suggest that every student should be equipped with a laptop or given 24/7 access to Wi-Fi, but shouldn’t our federal bureaucrats figure out how to stem the tidal wave of layoffs in the teaching ranks and unrelenting cutbacks in school programs and maintenance budgets first? School districts can’t afford to buy enough textbooks for their pupils, but they’re supposed to equip every one of them with a $500 iPad?’
education
technology
corporations
politics
from instapaper
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Squashed, Clean Coal: Not a Thing
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
‘The coal companies are lying to you. Coal energy is not clean energy. It is the dirtiest form of energy generation we have. The coal companies are spending millions of dollars hoping you’ll forget this. A slick ad campaign doesn’t change the truth.’
energy
coal
advertising
marketing
corporations
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Squashed, Occupy, Inequality, Envy, and Class Warfare
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
‘Nobody wants a recession. Nobody wants historically high poverty rates and unemployment rates. Curiously, it’s the Occupy Wall Street folks who are most passionate about making whatever changes are necessary to ensure the next recession doesn’t happen. The financial industry, on the other hand, is fighting any effort at common-sense regulation tooth and nail.’
finance
corporations
government
america
ows
poverty
class
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Eric Lichtblau: For-Profit College Rules Scaled Back After Lobbying (NYTimes.com)
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
‘In all, industry advocates met more than two dozen times with White House and Education Department officials, including senior officials like Education Secretary Arne Duncan, records show, even as Mr. Obama has vowed to reduce the “outsize” influence of lobbyists and special interests in Washington.’
education
america
government
lobbying
corporations
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
For 29 Dead Miners, No Justice by David M. Uhlmann
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
‘We should not underestimate, however, the difficulty of prosecuting high-ranking officials in large corporations. This case may be an exception, but senior corporate officers rarely have sufficient personal involvement to be charged with crimes. To reach the boardroom, where policies are formed that can lead to tragedy, we must be willing to hold corporations criminally responsible.’
business
government
crime
corporations
from instapaper
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
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