VISION

VISION
WHERE THERE IS NO VISION THERE IS NO FUTURE!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

FEMA eyes debt take-back as hurricane season looms

FEMA eyes debt take-back as hurricane season looms
FEMA eyes debt take-back as hurricane season looms

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Nearly six years have passed since Hurricane Katrina drowned New Orleans in misery, but many residents haven't forgiven the Federal Emergency Management Agency for its sluggish response to the storm. Now another delayed reaction by FEMA -- a stop-and-start push to recoup millions of dollars in disaster aid -- is reminding storm victims why they often cursed the agency's name.


Black People are Reeping the Recompence of our failure as a people to do something for ourself

YouTube - Black People are Reeping the Recompence of our failure as a people to do something for ourself

New law on crack cocaine could apply to old cases

New law on crack cocaine could apply to old cases
New law on crack cocaine could apply to old cases

WASHINGTON (AP) - A year ago, a drug dealer caught with 50 grams of crack cocaine faced a mandatory 10 years in federal prison. Today, new rules cut that to as little as five years, and thousands of inmates not covered by the change are saying their sentences should be reduced, too.


How Seed Banks, Vaults and Exchanges Are Saving Our Food From Disaster | | AlterNet

How Seed Banks, Vaults and Exchanges Are Saving Our Food From Disaster | | AlterNet

During the Nazi siege of Leningrad, a group of scientists at the world's oldest seed bank voluntarily starved to death rather than eat the wheat, potatoes, nuts and other seeds being stored at Leningrad's Vavilov Research Institute of Plant Industry. At the same time, courtesy of Stalin, the institute's founding visionary Nikolay Vavilov was starving to death in a Siberian prison -- but not before he'd gathered more than 50,000 samples from 40 different countries for his institute's collection.


America's Creeping Police State | | AlterNet

America's Creeping Police State | | AlterNet

The late Chalmers Johnson often reminded us that “A nation can be one or the other, a democracy or an imperialist, but it can’t be both. If it sticks to imperialism, it will, like the old Roman Republic, on which so much of our system was modeled, lose its democracy to a domestic dictatorship.” His warning rings more true by the day, as Americans watch the erosion of their civil liberties accelerate in conjunction with the expansion of the US Empire.


The Next Bubble Is About to Burst: College Grads Face Dwindling Jobs and Mounting Loans | | AlterNet

The Next Bubble Is About to Burst: College Grads Face Dwindling Jobs and Mounting Loans | | AlterNet

It's the beginning of summer: warmer weather, longer days, the end of the school year. And that means graduation for thousands of young people across the U.S.; graduation with more student debt than ever before, and into a job market that is anything but promising.


Remembering Gil Scott-Heron: Outspoken Activist and Musical Legend | | AlterNet

Remembering Gil Scott-Heron: Outspoken Activist and Musical Legend | | AlterNet
Legendary artist Gil Scott-Heron was, by many accounts, a pioneering genius. Largely considered one of the progenitors of modern hip-hop, he was an artist that transcended both genre and medium to speak truth to power, and leaves behind a vast body of work that includes poems, albums and novels. So when it was announced late last Friday that the man mostly known for his song “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised” had died at the tender age of 62, may admirers were left grappling with what to make of a man who for decades had shown both strength and vulnerability to his fans.