Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Peter G. Peterson Foundation

Peter G. Peterson. Mr. Peterson has been a prominent figure weighing in on budget debates for close to two decades. Mr. Peterson was the Commerce Secretary in the Nixon administration. He then went on to make billions of dollars as one of the top executives at the Blackstone Group, a private equity fund. Mr. Peterson is known as one of the top beneficiaries of the fund managers’ tax break, through which he personally pocketed tens of millions of dollars.
Mr. Peterson has never been shy about using his Wall Street wealth to try to cut Social Security and Medicare, and he recently stepped up his efforts. Last year he spent $1 billion to endow the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, which seems to have destroying these programs at the top of its agenda. (Mr. Peterson also has a think tank named after him, the Peter G. Peterson Institute for International Economics.)
Peterson’s main story is that these programs are bankrupting the government and will impose an unbearable burden on future generations. Of course, the reality is that we have a broken health care system. The projections of scary budget deficits that Peterson’s crew constantly cites is based almost entirely on projections of exploding health care costs. If the United States can get its health care system in order, as every other country has done, then we would be projecting enormous budget surpluses as far as the eye can see.

Monday, June 1, 2009

plane crash

The National Transportation Safety Board has released a preliminary report on a plane crash that killed a Tuscumbia man. Steven Raddatz, 41, of Tuscumbia was killed May 23 when the plane he was flying collided with another plane and crashed onto the lawn at Calhoun Community College in Decatur. The pilot of the other plane, B.J. Kennamore, 59, was able to land at Pryor Field and had only minor injuries.
According to the NTSB report, the two pilots had flown to Pryor Field for an open house. They were about to fly home to the Shoals and had planned to perform some aerial stunts so spectators could take photos. The report says Raddatz was going to fly in formation during a low pass over the airport, but he was flying faster than Kennamore. When Kennamore started to turn his plane and climb, Raddatz's left wing hit Kennamore's right wing. Raddatz's wing partially separated, causing him to lose control of the plane and crash.
Two people were killed yesterday when a single-engine training aircraft crashed just a few minutes after takeoff in the area of Kopaida, in the prefecture of Viotia, north of Athens. The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) confirmed the deaths of the 42-year-old pilot and the 35-year-old trainee, both Athenians, in the early afternoon. The plane took off shortly after 2 p.m. from the airstrip of a small aviation club in Kopaida and went down just a few minutes later after reaching an altitude of 150 meters, CAA officials said.

Chemistry

Chemistry is an integral component of S&T, and sadly, the Philippines has been slow in adapting to changes which are brought about by the rise of international standards and global competition. Recent developments and innovations in the field have underscored the urgency of repealing the decades-old Chemistry Law," said Angara who chairs the Congressional Commission on Science, Technology, and Engineering (COMSTE).
Angara, who recently filed the amendments to the country's Chemistry law, seeks to emphasize the role of chemistry in national development by promoting and protecting the interests of chemistry profession. It also aims to elevate the standards of the profession by strengthening the promotion, regulation and measures for continued development in the field.
Republic Act No. 754 also known as the Chemistry Law was enacted almost six decades ago - June 18, 1952. The senator told that it is now outdated and fails to respond to the demands of global trends. The proposed Chemistry Law will boost the country's aspirations towards global competitiveness. COMSTE is expected to introduce or amend legislation that will make the Philippines more globally competitive, particularly in Science and Technology.
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