Daily Archives: February 26, 2017

Liberal powerbroker Michael Photios ‘took one for the team’ – The Sydney Morning Herald

Posted: February 26, 2017 at 11:42 pm

Lobbyist and Liberal powerbroker Michael Photios "took one for the team" by resigning as head of the party's left faction to shut down attacks about hisinfluence on Premier Gladys Berejiklian and her government, a senior source has revealed.

Mr Photios, whose firm Premier State is registered to lobby the NSW government on behalf of private sector clients, announced he would step down as chairman of the moderates board at a meeting of the left faction at Sydney Town Hall on Saturday night.

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Labor's campaign highlights Berejiklian's close relationship with left powerbroker Michael Photios. (Video: NSW Labor)

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Parramatta Eels back rower, Kenny Edwards gave a brief statement to press outside of the Parramatta court house, after he pleaded guilty to assaulting his former girlfriend.

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February will end with parts of the New South Wales coast forecast to receive their biggest downpours since last winter with possible flooding in places.

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The University of Sydney is investigating Wesley, one of its oldest colleges, after the distribution of a journal that named who had sex with the most people.

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Three men and one woman were arrested around 11pm on Saturday night after a violent brawl at a hotel in Sydney's inner west. Vision: Channel Seven.

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Dr Eman Sharobeem migrated to Australia more than 30 year ago, since then she has earned two PhDs and campaigned against issues such as forced marriage and family violence.

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Shark detecting drones are being trialled on beaches in NSW to combat shark attacks along the state's coast. Vision courtesy NSW DPI.

Labor's campaign highlights Berejiklian's close relationship with left powerbroker Michael Photios. (Video: NSW Labor)

The moderates board is the structure within the left faction where debate occurs about which candidates to support for preselection and related matters.

As chairman, Mr Photios was the leader of the left faction of which Ms Berejiklian is a loyal member.

Opposition Leader Luke Foley has attacked the manner in which Ms Berejikliansecured the numbersto secure the job, declaring that "the powerbrokers and lobbyists who pull the strings in the NSW Liberal party have decided Gladys Berejiklian will be their Premier".

A video distributed to party members for use on social media shortly before she was sworn in as Premier highlightedMs Berejiklian's association with Mr Photios.

"With Gladys Berejiklian as Premier, who is really running NSW?" it asked.

Mr Photiosexplained tothe meeting on Saturday nightthat he had chosen to resign now as he wanted to leave the positionat the top of his game like former New Zealand prime minister John Key.

He noted that members of theleft faction had now secured the jobs of Prime Ministerand NSW Premier.

But on Sunday a senior Liberal party source said Mr Photios' decision was closely tied to attacks on Ms Berejiklian.

"Michael did not want to become the story himself," the source said."He's taken a decision to remove the perception, real or otherwise, of his influence around the government.

"He's taken one for the team. He wanted to make sure that he wasn't the issue."

However, another Liberal source said: "There's no doubt he'll still be the puppet master".

NSW Innovation and Better Regulation Minister Matt Kean and federal member for North Sydney and former NSW Liberal presidentTrent Zimmermanhave been installed as co-chairs of the moderates board.

In April last year Fairfax Media revealed that Mr Photios was one of several NSW Liberal powerbrokers asked to resign from the party's state council in a push to remove professional lobbyists from positions of influence.

The request from NSW Liberal state director Chris Stone came shortly after former prime minister Tony Abbott complained about conflicts of interest during an interview with ABC TV'sFour Cornersprogram.

Mr Abbott told the program: "If you are making money out of the people whose preselections you control or influence, there is obviously a potential for corruption. And that's the last thing that we should have inside the Liberal Party."

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The Myth Of The Liberal Campus – Huffington Post

Posted: at 11:42 pm

This week has not been great for free speech in the U.S. The Trump administration excluded certain news outlets from an informal briefing with Sean Spicer, Republican lawmakers across the U.S. have been introducing bills aimed at curbing protesting in at least 18 states, and Betsy DeVos decided to reinforce the dubious argument that universities currently pose a threat to free speech. In her words, she claimed that The faculty, from adjunct professors to deans, tell you what to do, what to say, and more ominously, what to think. They say that if you voted for Donald Trump, youre a threat to the university community. But the real threat is silencing the First Amendment rights of people with whom you disagree.

This is not a new argument, nor is it factual, but it is one that has gained an inordinate amount of support from many on the left and on the right. The right has been waging a campaign against liberal academics for decades and opposition to political correctness has proven to be a highly effective political strategy. The myth of the liberal campus functions as a broad generalization that paints all college campuses as bastions of liberal indoctrination without accounting for the differences and diversity in those institutions. This myth is particularly dangerous in that it diverts our attention from actual threats to some forms of speech on college campuses while serving as a useful tool for those who wish to divest in public education. What follows is a list of the current arguments that serve as the foundation for the myth of the liberal campus and an analysis of why their validity should be questioned.

Argument: Liberal Faculty Members are Using Classrooms to Promote Their Agenda

One of the assumptions in the myth of the liberal campus is that simply because one has progressive values they therefore teach progressive ideologies. Nicolas Kristof laments the fact that so few Republicans are represented amongst faculty on college campuses, but this presumes that ones party affiliation correlates with how one might teach math or science or english. A chemist who voted for Clinton or Sanders isnt necessarily going to teach a progressive form of biochemistry, yet we assume because someone is a Marxist or a progressive, they are necessarily teaching in their discipline using that lens.

Secondly, this presumes that all faculty members, even when the very nature of their discipline is political, are able to speak freely on these issues without fear of consequence. Given that most college faculty do not currently have the tenured protections of academic freedom, most professors are unlikely to even engage in any sort of political conversation for fear of termination or student retribution. Untenured faculty on the campus where I teach are fearful of discussing anything that could even be perceived as political for fear of termination. This chilling effect prevents even general discussions related to that which could be seen as political and therefore partisan. This fear has only increased with the knowledge that conservative groups are openly encouraging students to videotape their professors to try and catch them in the act of so-called indoctrination.

And, as many of us who teach in higher education know, due to massive budget cuts across across the nation, universities more heavily rely on adjunct and graduate student labor to try and save money. Kevin Birmingham notes that, Tenured faculty represent only 17 percent of college instructors. Part-time adjuncts are now the majority of the professoriate and its fastest-growing segment. From 1975 to 2011, the number of part-time adjuncts quadrupled. And the so-called part-time designation is misleading because most of them are piecing together teaching jobs at multiple institutions simultaneously. A 2014 congressional report suggests that 89 percent of adjuncts work at more than one institution; 13 percent work at four or more. And, as Trevor Griffey points out, The vast majority of college faculty in the United States today are ineligible for tenure.

Given the fact that most classes around the country are taught by adjunct professors who have no job security and even less academic freedom in the classroom, even if that professor despised Donald Trump or conservative ideologies, what is the likelihood that she would actually engage in a 30 minute Trump bashing rant simply because she either has the platform or the captive audience? Entirely unlikely. Yet again, when we generalize about all faculty, we fail to discern between who actually has the power and privilege to go on such a rant at all, let alone discuss anything that could be perceived as political in nature.

Lastly, this presumes that simply because one teaches in higher education, they arent actually a professional capable of divorcing their own political ideologies from their work. The progressive academic advisor is still capable of giving her students advice on transfer opportunities without delving into the political subject of the day in the same way the conservative math professor is capable of teaching calculus without telling students who he voted for in the last election.

Argument: Look At Whats Happening At Berkeley!

Those who criticize the free speech problem on all college campuses tend to routinely point to those campuses that make headlines like Berkeley or Yale. The reality is that the small number of campuses making headlines arent actually reflective of most institutions of higher education. According to Jonathan Zimmerman, author of Campus Politics: What Everyone Needs to Know (Oxford University Press, 2016) There are over 4,000 places to get a B.A. in the United States. And most of them look nothing like the colleges that you see on TV, or if youre from the upper middle class like the one you attended. Those of us in that class assume that you start college when youre 18, that you live as well as study there, and that you graduate in four years. But most of our students dont fit those patterns at all. Half of all undergraduates attend community colleges, which are rarely residential and serve an enormous range of age groups.

As with most mainstream corporate news coverage, that which is the most sensational makes headlines. But most campuses dont look anything like Berkeley or Yale. My campus rarely makes headlines unless were asked to reduce more services to students due to funding cuts. But those stories of how my students lack advisors or mental health counseling because the state continues to cut millions from our budget arent as juicy as Milo Yiannopoulos getting yelled at by Berkeley protesters. These stories simply do not reflect the experience of many students, yet serve to reinforce only the most negative of stereotypes. My students are kind and tolerant but theyre also adults and dont shy away from difficult conversations. Most of my students work 2 or 3 jobs. They are parents and grandparentsmany of them the first in their families to pursue a college degree. If you truly think all college students are entitled snowflakes, I have a hard time believing youve ever met one. Sadly, however, these types of students arent the ones getting airtime.

Argument: Universities Silence Conservative Speech and Ideologies

One of the primary narratives surrounding campus speech is that universities are hypocritical since they claim to value diverse voices but actively work to silence conservative leaning speech or ideas. What this argument fails to point out is how conservative legislators and watch groups have been actively targeting what they consider leftist or radical views on campuses for decades. If those on the right claim to support all speech from all groups as a bedrock of freedom, why restrict or target certain types of speech? As Jason Blakely argues, One of the more troubling examples of this is the attempt to stigmatize certain professors through the website ProfessorWatchList.org, which compiles lists of professors that purportedly need to be monitored due to their radical agenda. This website professes to fight for free speech and the right for professors to say whatever they wish but at the same time it publicly isolates professors whose perspective is seen as offensive or shocking to conservative students. Through the use of this website students can now know before they ever walk into their college classrooms if their professor is too radical to take seriously (or perhaps even too radical to take the class). At best the website serves as a massive trigger warning for conservative-leaning students; at worst it is a modern Scarlet Letter.

This also ignores patterns of attempts by conservative lawmakers to try and legislate whose voices get heard on college campuses. In Iowa, Senator Mark Chelgren proposed that universities gather voter-registration data for prospective instructors to ensure a balance of conservative voices on campus. In Wisconsin, as Donald P. Moynihan writes, At least three times in the past six months, state legislators have threatened to cut the budget of the University of Wisconsin at Madison for teaching about homosexuality, gender and race. . . . At the University of North Carolina, the board of governors closed a privately funded research center that studied poverty; its director had criticized state elected officials for adopting policies that he argued amounted to a war on poor people. Amid broader budget cuts here in Wisconsin, Gov. Scott Walker, without warning or explanation, tried to yank all the state funding for a renewable energy research center. On both private and public campuses, instructors who discuss race, gender, class, reproductive rights, elections or even just politics can find themselves subjected to attack by conservative groups like Media Trackers or Professor Watchlist. Faculty members in public institutions also have to worry about the possibility of having their email searched via Freedom of Information law requests. The ultimate audience for such trawling is lawmakers, who set the rules for public institutions. Indeed, a Media Trackers employee whose job included writing negative profiles of Wisconsin professors recently took a position with a state senator who likes to attack universities as being unfriendly to free speech.

Finally, this argument assumes all viewpoints are equally valid and good. The reason UW-Madison faculty criticized the state Department of Natural Resources for scrubbing its website of language that stated human activity is causing climate change isnt because those faculty members are tree-hugging lefties who hate jobs, but because human influence on climate is supported by sound peer reviewed evidence. The reason you wont find climate change deniers working in ecology departments on college campuses is because that idea does not hold up to scrutiny and hard evidence. As Caroline Levine argues, Say what you want about professors, but we spend our lives pursuing the truth. This means relentlessly interrogating what we think we know, and pushing ourselves to ask questions that feel, even to ourselves, uncomfortable. We insist on evidence and logic to support our claims. All of our publications are subject to rigorous peer review by experts around the world. We cant win tenure unless the most respected people in the field confirm that we have produced original and valuable knowledge. We are not paid by lobbyists. We do not earn more or less money if we take one position rather than another. And so were free to explore unpopular hypotheses, and some of these turn out to be true.

Yes, instructors demand that students use evidence to support their ideas. Yes, we demand that that evidence not come from the first website you may have stumbled on in your initial Google search. But thats a very different argument than saying faculty discriminate between conservative and liberal ideas. In my class, I ask my students to conduct library research and to use peer reviewed data so that they are making claims based on the best evidencenot simply a topic that aligns with my personal worldview. And this is where we tend to conflate evidence with liberal ideology.

As Bill Hart Davidson writes, Ironically, the most strident calls for safety come from those who want us to issue protections for discredited ideas. Things that science doesnt support AND that have destroyed livesthings like the inherent superiority of one race over another. Those ideas wither under demands for evidence. They *are* unwelcome. But lets be clear: they are unwelcome because they have not survived the challenge of scrutiny. The resistance I see is from people who cant take that scrutiny and who cant defend their ideas. They know it. They are afraid of it. So they accuse us of shutting them out. They cant win, and so they insist the game is rigged. The answer is more simple: they are weak. Bring a strong ideaone accompanied by evidenceand it will always win. Thats the beauty of the place where I work. Good ideas thrive. Bad ones wither and die, as they should.

In this post-truth era of fake news and my YouTube video is just as credible as your peer reviewed journal article, we must support those who are regularly pursuing truth and knowledge for the sake of pursuing truth and knowledge and challenge the false assumption that teaching critical thinking is the same as liberal indoctrination. This means supporting the few areas in the U.S. where this type of work is still happening, one being on college campuses.

Argument: The faculty, from adjunct professors to deans, tell you what to do, what to say, and more ominously, what to think

This is perhaps, I think, the most egregious claim of them all for it essentially presumes that students are so gullible and incapable of free thought, professors can shape their minds and turn them into bots in mere seconds. This line of thinking comes mostly from those who have never taught in a college classroom or who have never actually interacted with a college student. And this is where I would welcome anyone of any political stripes to come and sit in on my classes. My students are brilliant. They work hard, they are kind, and they are capable of thinking for themselves. My job is to get them to think critically; my job is not to tell them what to think. My job is to teach them to question the validity of sources, to learn how to conduct research, and asking them to question authority, even if that authority is me.

I am incredibly proud of the fact that I regularly have students of all political backgrounds enrolling in my classes semester after semester because they know they will be treated with dignity. Last year I won the teaching excellence award on my campus, an award voted on by the student body and given to an instructor of the highest caliber every year. I note this not because I enjoy bragging about my accomplishments but because I, like most everyone I work with, takes such great pride in teaching well and making sure every voice and every student in our classes feels valuedeven if those students are white supremacists or Holocaust deniers. We go to extraordinary lengths to make sure we dont stifle speech in our classes, but that we do create an environment where students must engage with each other civilly. If demand for civility and evidence based reasoning is liberal indoctrination, then yes, I am guilty of that.

So what has changed and why should we worry? Years of divestment in public education and the demonization of intellectualism and expertise has created a culture in which we need people who can teach critical thinking skills now more than ever yet those same people are routinely painted as enemies of the state. Arguments about faculty as thought police on college campuses only reinforces the narrative that these institutions no longer serve the public and that they are no longer a public good. The myth of the liberal campus allows legislators to threaten to withhold funding from institutions where they feel their voices arent getting a fair shake. And when legislators pit taxpayers against university faculty (forgetting faculty employed by the state are, in fact, also taxpayers) we set up a system whereby politicians can argue that states need not fund higher education since these institutions are just imposing liberal agendas in their classrooms. This not only defies logic but also reality. If liberal professors were so good at indoctrinating students, how did Trump outperform Clinton by a 4-point margin amongst white college graduates? If liberal indoctrination were real, how did Betsy DeVos make it through college without adhering to a radical political agenda? Sadly, for many, this reality doesnt matter. What matters is only the illusion that liberal campuses are real, that they are un-American, that those who work there hate free speech and expression, and that they serve no use to anyone. When enough citizens believe this to be true, asking states to invest in education will be impossible.

If you are truly worried about the state of college campuses, visit one. Come to my classes. See for yourselves the level of thoughtful debates and dialogues that happen in most classrooms. But please, stop demonizing faculty and students based on crude stereotypes. This is a dangerous fiction, one created by those who see no value in public education and who dont actually care about the welfare of students on these campuses. These discussions serve as a distraction from the real threats to higher education and we all need to do a better job of dismissing them as such.

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The Myth Of The Liberal Campus - Huffington Post

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Democracy liberal enough in UK for defaulters to stay: Jaitley – The Hindu

Posted: at 11:42 pm


The Hindu
Democracy liberal enough in UK for defaulters to stay: Jaitley
The Hindu
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has said democracy is liberal enough in the U.K. to permit defaulters to stay there and that normal needs to be cracked, in an apparent reference to liquor baron Vijay Mallya, who is wanted in India for loan default and ...

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Philippines Improves in Economic Freedom ranking – CFO innovation ASIA

Posted: at 11:42 pm

By CFO Innovation Asia Staff | Monday, February 27, 2017 - 10:58

The Philippines jumped 12 spots from 70th to 58th in the 2017 Index of Economic Freedom.

The index measures the effects of policy changes on the overall quality of life. The study attributes fiscal gains, monetary stability, consumption, and government spending for the rise in the rankings.

In spite of a weak global demand in 2016-17, Philippines grew at 6.8 percent driven by an increase in investment and consumer spending.

The country was rated their highest on fiscal health (97.2) followed by government spending (89.4) as it maintained its public debt levels at 37.1 percent of gross domestic product.

Financial freedom was ranked at 60, while monetary freedom was higher at 80.6 in line with the Central Banks policies for maintaining price stability, issuing new banking licenses, and maintaining low inflation.

Reduction in cost and time for managing licensing requirements led to a gradual improvement in the business climate rankings while investment freedom witnessed no change due to investment restrictions in several sectors.

Philippines scored low in property rights, judicial effectiveness, and government integrity due to a weak state of law. The government is pursuing tax and legislative reforms to facilitate entrepreneurship, eliminate corruption and improve the ease of doing investments to attract investments and achieve a growth of eight percent by 2022.

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Pleading poverty, demanding new taxes – Washington Times

Posted: at 11:42 pm

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

Stop me if youve heard this story before. Governors and state legislators are pleading poverty again and they are demanding tax hikes of every imaginable kind.

More than half the states are facing big deficits this year and they are mostly blue states like California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois and New York and Oregon. (See chart.) These are the highest tax states with some of the deepest pools of red ink. Theres got to be a message here.

But many red states have money woes too, and we now have Republicans chomping at the bit to raise taxes. The biggest fight is in Kansas where the Republican-dominated legislature recently passed a massive income tax hike that would raise taxes on every small business in the state and every wage earner with income above $15,000. Fortunately, Gov. Sam Brownback vetoed the Republican tax hike but they will be back.

Republican governors Bill Haslam of Tennessee, Mary Fallin of Oklahoma and Eric Holcomb of Indiana want gas tax increases. Republicans in Alaska and Wyoming are considering enacting a state income tax to fill funding holes. These are two of the nine states without an income tax.

So what is the source of the budget crises from coast to coast? First, on the revenue side, tax receipts are down because states are front-line victims of the slow-growth era of the Obama years. When the U.S. economy sputters at only 1.6 percent as it did in 2016, state and local tax revenues barely trickle in. So much for the liberal spin that President Obama left behind a healthy economy.

Revenues are also way down in oil-producing states like Alaska, Kansas, Oklahoma, North Dakota, and Wyoming. Liberals are pushing big tax increases in each of these states that not so long ago gorged on new spending during the years of high prices. North Dakota had one year that the budget rose more than 50 percent.

The best thing Washington can do to help states is pass the Trump tax cuts so we get faster economic growth. Nothing heals state budgets quicker than a dose of prosperity.

The even bigger story is the eight-year state spending binge that almost no one is reporting on. Chris Edwards, a fiscal analyst at the Cato Institute, has run the numbers. He reports that state general fund spending has soared 32 percent since 2010. The National Association of State Budget Officers predicts a 4.3 percent hike in fiscal 2017 budgets.

One reason state budgets have spun out of control is Obamacare. Some 20 million Americans have been added to state Medicaid rolls. For now, the feds pay most of the costs. But in several years the patients will still be on Medicaid but the costs will be shifted to the states. All the more reason to repeal Obamacare as rapidly as possible before the Medicaid caseloads grow by millions more.

Its worth noting that many of the blue states that signed up for the Obamacare Medicaid expansions now face the biggest deficits.

Will tax hikes solve the problem? The answer can be found in Connecticut and Illinois. These two states passed multi-billion dollar income tax hikes on the rich. Both have seen their economies get crushed by the out-migration of tax filers to avoid the tax hikes. Today their deficits are still gigantic. Connecticut faces a near half-billion dollar deficit with Democratic Gov, Daniel Malloy calling for his third mega-tax increase to stop the red ink. Illinois has at least $6 billion in unpaid bills following its biggest tax increase in history.

Spending discipline and pro-growth tax reforms are the best formula for reviving state budgets. If Republicans who control 69 of the 99 state legislative chambers think they can tax their way back to prosperity, dont be surprised if they find themselves back in the minority after 2018.

Stephen Moore is an economic consultant with Freedom Works and a CNN senior economic analyst.

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Publishers: Cuomo proposal removes transparency – Oneonta Daily Star

Posted: at 11:42 pm

ALBANY The lobby association for New York's newspapers is urging lawmakers to reject parts of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's proposed $152 billion state budget, contending the package would make some state contracts less transparent and would give the administration "virtually unconstrained authority" over public works projects.

A memo released in late January by the New York News Publishers Associations to its members argues that the bundle of budget bills framed by the Cuomo administration would harm government transparency in New York.

Specifically, the association, in the memo authored by its director, Diane Kennedy, states that it would allow the governor's administration to bypass the review authority of the state comptroller's office the state's fiscal watchdog with proposed contracts for some public construction projects.

The proposed process being advanced by the Cuomo administration could result in newspapers and local contractors being kept unaware of public works projects being planned for their communities, Kennedy warned.

"The Governors proposal would make this new public works method permanent and expand its provisions to all state agencies, authorities, local governments outside New York City, the State University and City University of New York, as well as their affiliates and subsidiaries," Kennedy said in the memo. "It would apply to all projects expected to cost more than $1.2 million."

In response, a spokesman for Cuomo's Division of the Budget, Freeman Klopott, said the measures being advanced by the governor will equip the state "with tools that will keep public works projects on time and reduce taxpayer costs through a transparent, public bidding process.

Klopott noted that two major design and construction projects, the replacements of the Tappan Zee and Kosciuszko bridges, are proceeding smoothly and "remain on budget."

Kennedy said in an interview that the publishers "are not objecting to best-value contracting and we're not opposed to doing public works in innovative ways. We just want to make sure the public is adequately informed."

NYNPA's members in New York include the Niagara Gazette, the Plattsburgh Press-Republican and the Lockport Journal, all newspapers published by Community News Holdings Inc., the company that also owns The Daily Star.

Kennedy's contention that the public's ability to access state information would be weakened echoes concerns that good-government groups have been making regarding what they contend is the need for greater transparency in public works contracts.

The push for independent oversight over state spending has been led by Comptroller Tom DiNapoli, Cuomo and DiNapoli are both Democrats, though their relationship has been rocky.

Lawmakers and Cuomo must be in accord on final budget bills by March 31 for the spending plan to be in place when the new state fiscal year begins April 1. The Senate and Assembly are expected to draft their own budget plans in March, after which negotiations aimed at achieving compromise will commence.

In an interview, DiNapoli said that he shares the concern that "the additional steps being proposed would certainly reduce some of the accountability that comes with oversight."

Of particular concern, he said, is a Cuomo push for "a very significant expansion of executive power without any real check on it. I think that is why the Legislature is taking a close look at it, as well they should."

While it remains unclear whether lawmakers will accept Cuomo's proposals or revise them, DiNapoli said he hopes that the final rush of horse-trading to produce a spending blueprint doesn't occur "at the expense of transparency and accountability."

Cuomo's administration was rocked last year by federal corruption charges against the governor's former top aide, Joseph Percoco, SUNY Polytechnic Institute leader Alain Kaloyeros, lobbyist Todd Howe and six upstate development executives on charges stemming from a probe into bid-rigging and bribery.

In January, Cuomo highlighted the need for ethics reforms, including a 10-point plan in one of his State of the State speeches, calling for limits on the outside income of lawmakers as well as term limits for elected officials and an expansion of Freedom of Information Law requirements for the Legislature.

Kennedy's memo also called attention to the fact that the budget proposals would exempt records of complaints filed with the state against ride-hailing companies from being accessed with Freedom of Information Law requests. Cuomo and many lawmakers are calling for authorization for such companies as Uber and Lyft to offer their services in upstate communities. Such complaints are now public record in New York City, where the companies already operate.

Joe Mahoney covers the New York Statehouse for CNHIs newspapers and websites. Reach him at jmahoney@cnhi.com.

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‘Thousands’ of cancer sufferers forced to borrow money from parents because of financial difficulties caused by illness – The Independent

Posted: at 11:41 pm

In addition to the physical and emotional turmoil experienced by cancer patients, tens of thousands are also suffering financially, according to a new report.

More than 30,000 middle-aged people with cancer have had to borrow money from their elderly parents, research by Macmillan Cancer Support found.

An estimated 2,000 people have been forced to sell their homes and move in with their parents because of the costs associated with the illness.

Financial difficulties add a further layer of indignity to suffering cancer, can rob people of their independence and leave them feeling ashamed and distressed, Macmillansaid in thenew report, No Small Change.

Cancer Research's new ad is a live colonoscopy

For 83 per cent of cancer patients, lost income and increased expenditure like travelling to hospital brought about by the disease costs them an average of 570 a month, according to the research.

It is heart-breaking that people in their 40s and 50s with cancer might have to go cap in hand to their elderly parents to ask for money simply to keep a roof over their head or put food on the table, said Lynda Thomas, chief executive of Macmillan.

The cost of cancer is robbing people of their independence and leaving them embarrassed, ashamed and dependent.

Terry White was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma aged 56, and said it was deeply embarrassing having to ask his parents for help with finances during his treatment.

Life before cancer had been comfortable, he said. Id worked hard and saved hard but six months into an eight-month chemo regime our savings had dwindled to nothing and our finances had spiralled out of control.

Mr White, from Nottinghamshire, had to claim benefits for the first time in his life and lived in constant fear of his home being repossessed.

It got so bad that I had to borrow 2,000 from my 78-year-old parents, he said.

It was deeply embarrassing that at this time in my life I was going cap in hand to ask for their support.

Macmillan expressed concern for the future, highlighting the growing numbers of British families in debt and the rising numbers of cancer diagnoses. Nearly half the population is predicted to get cancer at some point in their lives by 2020.

The charity called for urgent action, particularly from the state and financial services.

Borrowing money could cause tension amongst families at a time when people need support more than ever, said Ms Thomas.

While Macmillan is here for anyone facing money worries, we also need the Government, healthcare professionals and the banking and insurance sector to play their part to ease this burden.

People worried about the financial impact of cancer can visit the Macmillan website

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'Thousands' of cancer sufferers forced to borrow money from parents because of financial difficulties caused by illness - The Independent

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Government shakeups and political unrest are coming to Stellaris in its Utopia expansion – PCGamesN

Posted: at 11:40 pm

Continuing their drip feed of information about the new features present in their Utopia expansion, Paradox have revealed some of the changes that are coming to Stellaris political systems. While the thrust of the Utopia expansion and the free Banks update is mainly to do with empire customization and ethics, it would seem odd if government reform was not included in these sweeping changes. If only government reform were so easy in real life.

If you're one for simulating governments, try these other 4X games.

The government rework will be available to all Stellaris players, with players now being able to create their own government rather than picking from a preconfigured list. You first off start with your Authority, which determines how the transition of power is handled. You can choose democratic rule where power is transferred every 10 years, an oligarchy where a new ruler is elected every 40 or 50 years, a dictatorship where power only changes hands upon a rulers death or an imperial system, where rulers rule for life and power is then passed down the bloodline.

For all the systems that involve the populace electing their leader, you need to take into account the separate political factions that are present in each empire. If youre supposed to be running an inclusive democracy, picking an authoritarian human supremacist for leader may cause some problems. You also have to consider Civics, which gives specific bonuses and should tie into the ethics of your empire. You start off with two Civics slot, with a third being unlocked via additional research. The Civics range from things like environmentalism, mandatory military service, open borders and so on. If you (or an armed populace) decide that the current government direction is not helping society, you can reform your government to change your Authority and Civics slot.

If you buy the Utopia expansion, would be political reformers gain access to certain advanced Civics and a special Authority. The new Civics can turn your empire into the Imperium of Man from Warhammer 40k, violently purging any other alien races and vastly boosting your military output. You can be an entirely mechanised society, where you start off with robot workers or you can be a society where you have another species as a dedicated underclass, used mainly as either cannon fodder or slave workers.

You can also have your empire be a psychically linked hive mind, where there is no need for internal politics as everyone obeys without question. The main downside with creating your own Borg civilization is that you can only assimilate other empires if you have advanced gene splicing technology. Otherwise, any conquered species will eventually die out as they are used to feed the hive mind. You can still perform diplomacy if you want to be a peaceful empire of collective consciousnesses, but non hive mind empires will initially distrust you.

Speaking of conquering species, you can now indoctrinate more primitive species before taking them over. This essentially involves feeding a planet propaganda until they start to line up with your empires ethics, where you can then march in and take over as the conquering heroes. This can also backfire, as the new Unrest stat means that citizens can resist certain policies and even stage an armed revolt if they are unhappy enough. Your efforts to make Ziltron-4 great again may end up with people staging a mass uprising.

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Government shakeups and political unrest are coming to Stellaris in its Utopia expansion - PCGamesN

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Utopia is coming, with a basic income for all – The Times (subscription)

Posted: at 11:40 pm

A perfect world seems impossible but a provocative new book says it is within our grasp. Its author tells Bryan Appleyard giving everyone a fixed sum can end poverty, cut crime and make healthcare cheaper

Rutger Bregman, a historian, is young and Dutch. These things matter. Opinions and ideas change quite quickly, he says, and Im 28, I have all the time in the world.

And being Dutch? The funny thing is that 15 to 20 years ago in the Netherlands there was this ideology that we were a guide country, a country that should guide other countries give most to development aid and these other things. Now we dont believe that any more.

Being young he can think big thoughts and reasonably expect to see them change the world. Being Dutch he has experienced the most startling case of collapsing postwar liberalism and rising illiberalism in the form of Geert Wilderss far-right Party for Freedom.

That collapse along

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Utopia is coming, with a basic income for all - The Times (subscription)

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McCartney tops 4.82m Oceania record in Auckland, Crouser throws 22.15m – International Association of Athletics Federations

Posted: at 11:39 pm

26 FEB 2017 Report Auckland, New Zealand

Competing on her home track, Eliza McCartney broke the Oceania record in the pole vault, topping 4.82m at the Auckland Track Challenge on Sunday (26).

With her leap, the Olympic bronze medallist, 20, added one centimetre to Alana Boyd's Oceania record, and two to her own New Zealand national record. Her performance is also an early season outdoor world lead.

"I was supper happy to get that," said McCartney, speaking with Stuff.co.nz. "Not only because it's my all-time PB, it's also a massive PB for the run-up I was on."

McCartney used a shorter 12-step approached, four less than her standard run-up. She ended the competition with three tries at 4.90m, but said she was emotionally and physically drained by the time she resumed jumping.

"I think I would have been able to give 4.90m a much better crack if I hadn't had all that emotion in the competition beforehand."

Alysha Newman of Canada was second with 4.50m.

Meanwhile, Ryan Crouser of the US, the Olympic shot put champion, extended his own world lead and streak of 22m-plus early season competitions with an impressive 22.15m effort, a ten centimetre improvement on his world lead and New Zealand all-comers record he set a week ago in Christchurch.

Competing against Olympic bronze medallist Tom Walsh before a large vocal crowd for the second week in a row, Crouser dominated the event, sending four of this six efforts beyond the 22-metre line.

Opening with 21.71m, Crouser improved to 22.03m in the second round, to 22.08m in the fourth, before capping the event with back-to-back 22.15m throws in rounds five and six.

"I was just hoping to match Christchurch here and managed to be really consistent," Crouser told Stuff.co.nz.

"This is probably my most consistent meet outside of the Olympics and it's still really early so I'm really, really happy."

Walsh finished second again with a consistent series of his own. Opening with 21.58m, he reache 21.67m in round three and 21.80 in the fourth, another season's best.

Jacko Gill was third with 20.92, just nine centimetres shy of his personal best set in Wellington five weeks ago.

Elsewhere, Brett Robinson of Australia won the 5000m in 13:22.93.

Bob Ramsak for the IAAF

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McCartney tops 4.82m Oceania record in Auckland, Crouser throws 22.15m - International Association of Athletics Federations

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