“Think-off question for 2010: Must rich help poor? - Winona Daily News” plus 4 more |
- Think-off question for 2010: Must rich help poor? - Winona Daily News
- Think-off question for '10: Must rich help poor? - San Francisco Chronicle
- JAKE GYLLENHAAL WANTS TO GO BACK TO SCHOOL - New Kerala
- North Memorial, Fairview open Maple Grove Hospital - Minneapolis-St Paul Business Journal
- The Secret "Political Philosophy of Jesus Christ" at the heart of the ... - DAILY KOS
Think-off question for 2010: Must rich help poor? - Winona Daily News Posted: 06 Jan 2010 09:41 PM PST NEW YORK MILLS, Minn. - A Minnesota group has released its annual philosophy question that will lead to one entrant being named "America's Greatest Thinker for 2010." This year's debate question is, "Do the wealthy have an obligation to help the poor?" The 2010 Great American Think-Off is an amateur philosophy contest organized by the New York Mills Regional Cultural Center in Minnesota. The nonprofit has been organizing the contest for 18 years. Anyone can enter free by submitting an essay of 750 words or fewer. Four finalists will debate the question in New York Mills on June 12 before a live audience. New York Mills is a farming town of some 1,200 people in central Minnesota, about 170 miles northwest of Minneapolis. More information is available at www.think-off.org. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
Think-off question for '10: Must rich help poor? - San Francisco Chronicle Posted: 06 Jan 2010 11:54 AM PST This year's debate question is, "Do the wealthy have an obligation to help the poor?" The 2010 Great American Think-Off is an amateur philosophy contest organized by the New York Mills Regional Cultural Center in Minnesota. The nonprofit has been organizing the contest for 18 years. Anyone can enter free by submitting an essay of 750 words or fewer. Four finalists will debate the question in New York Mills on June 12 before a live audience. New York Mills is a farming town of some 1,200 people in central Minnesota, about 170 miles northwest of Minneapolis. ___ On the Net: Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
JAKE GYLLENHAAL WANTS TO GO BACK TO SCHOOL - New Kerala Posted: 03 Jan 2010 09:23 PM PST
JAKE GYLLENHAAL is planning to take a break from acting to go back to university.
The actor quit his course at New York City's Columbia University to pursue a career in Hollywood. Gyllenhaal admits he's always regretted the decision to cut short his education, and he's planning to find time to return to college to finish where he left off. He says, "I dropped out of Columbia University in 2000 after two years of studying Eastern religions and philosophy to concentrate on acting. But I have always wanted to finished my degree." --IANS-WENN
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Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
North Memorial, Fairview open Maple Grove Hospital - Minneapolis-St Paul Business Journal Posted: 30 Dec 2009 08:49 AM PST Maple Grove Hospital, the first Twin Cities' hospital to open in a decade, officially started seeing patients on Wednesday. The $138.9 million, 225,000 square-foot hospital is located just east of I-94 at Maple Grove Parkway. It opened Wednesday with 30 patient rooms — all private — and a staff of 200. The hospital — 75 percent owned by Robbinsdale-based North Memorial Health Care and 25 percent owned by Minneapolis-based Fairview Health Services — will very much be a community hospital for the fast-growing suburb of Maple Grove, concentrating on such bread-and-butter health care needs as delivering babies and emergency room services. The hospital expects to deliver about 1,200 babies by the end of 2010. And it expects 11,000 people will visit the Emergency Care Center during the first year. Andy Cochrane, the hospital's CEO, said the experience of the patients is the facility's focus. "Our physicians, nurses and staff have adopted a philosophy of care that ensures our patients are treated as individuals who deserve exceptional care that is tailored to their needs," Cochrane said. Minnesota has a moratorium on new hospital construction that requires the state Legislature to approve any exemption. That means a hospital opening is a rare occurrence in the state. The last hospital to open around the Twin Cities was Woodwinds Health Campus in Woodbury in 2000. Maple Grove Hospital is opening small for now. But it's owners are leaving room for growth. The hospital is able to triple its patient rooms to 90 when patient volumes increase. The hospital is designed to accommodate 300 patient rooms in the future with additional construction. The hospital also expects to double its number of staff to 400 by the end of 2010. About 8,500 people have applied for jobs there. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
The Secret "Political Philosophy of Jesus Christ" at the heart of the ... - DAILY KOS Posted: 07 Jan 2010 09:44 AM PST Crossposted on Amplify The Family has been heavily involved the Uganda anti-homosexuality bill. They lend political and economic aide to proponents of the bill, and the person who introduced the anti-homosexuality law is a member of The Family in Uganda. According the Jeff Sharlet's book and his appearances on the Daily Show, Rachael Maddow, and Fresh Air, The Family believes in a different teaching of jesus Christ. Rather than help for the masses, the poor, and the meek, The Family believes that Jesus' message was meant for an elite group of people. I recommend listening to the Fresh Air interview with Sharlet, as it was fascinating. Some of these 'select few' people live in the C Street house in DC and have become very powerful in American politics. The C-street house is a tax-exempt church in DC that provides below market priced housing for congressmen. Governor Mark Sanford and Senator Ensign are members of this group, as well as Representatives Bart Stupak and Joe Pitts. The Family prides itself on being bipartisan, Bart Stupak and Bill Nelson are among its Democrat members. Having extramarital affairs is excused, because chosen leaders do not have to follow the rules. The Family also believes that Hitler, Stalin and Mow understood the New Testament the best, and the Family studies these leaders carefully. The Family teaches that Jesus' message was not about peace, mercy, and justice; it was about power. More power for powerful people, not peace and love for the masses. The idea is that the powerful have the right to pass blessings onto the poor, kindof like trickle down theory for love, peace and justice. The Family does not sound like a fundamentalist Christian group, but a different interpretation of Jesus teachings altogether. They apply this to politics. They believe in biblical capitalism, which opposes all regulation of markets because it interferes with the "invisible hand" idea, which they literally believe to be God. According to Jeff Sharlet, the Family has been involved in international affairs for the last 50 years. The Family identifies leaders of countries where they think God chose the leader, and they try to get that person to focus on very traditional, conservative values. United States Senator Inhofe has traveled to Africa more than 20 times on missionary trips, using tax payer dollars, to promote the political philosophy of Jesus as taught by the Family. This group is pretty scary. They oppose gay rights, women's rights, abortion, programs to help the poor, and comprehensive sex education. They identify leaders and sometimes dictators of foreign countries and they lend political and economic aide in promoting these policies. The Family also believes in what is called "male headship," and women in The Family act like a maid service for the males in the group. They believe women should live their lives submissively and in service to men. Sharlet promoted his book In a recent interview with NPR's Terry Gross, and he broke the news that The Family has significant influence in the anti-homosexuality bill in Uganda. Terry Gross asked him about the Uganda anti-homosexuality bill: You follow [the] money. You look at their archives. You do interviews where you can. It's not so invisible anymore. So that's how working with some research colleagues we discovered that David Bahati, the man behind this legislation, is really deeply, deeply involved in The Family's work in Uganda, that the ethics minister of Uganda, Museveni's kind of right-hand man, a guy named Nsaba Buturo, is also helping to organize The Family's National Prayer Breakfast. And here's a guy who has been the main force for this Anti-Homosexuality Act in Uganda's executive office and has been very vocal about what he's doing, in a rather extreme and hateful way. But these guys are not so much under the influence of The Family. They are, in Uganda, The Family." This is shocking. The Family, who seems to control dozens of American congressmen, also has incredible power in Africa. More from the interview: This, of course, is the bill that would KILL any HIV positive gay person for having sex, and imprison people for life for having any homosexual sex. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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