‘Dear Climate-Change Deniers, Please Don’t Buy Shares in APPLE’…

He leads a company that some would consider the epitome of ruthless global capitalism. But Apple chief executive Tim Cook has shocked some in the US with an impassioned attack on the single-minded pursuit of profit – and a direct appeal to climate-change deniers not to buy shares in his firm.

Eyewitnesses said Cook, who succeeded Steve Jobs as boss of the technology giant in 2011, was visibly angry as he took on a group of right-wing investors during a question-and-answer session at a shareholders’ meeting.

Responding to calls from the National Centre for Public Policy Research (NCPPR), a conservative think tank and investor, for Apple to refrain from putting money in green energy projects that were not profitable, he shot back that Apple did “a lot of things for reasons besides profit motive”. The chief executive added: “We want to leave the world better than we found it.”

Addressing he NCPPR representative directly, he said: “If you want me to do things only for ROI [return on investment] reasons, you should get out of this stock.”

Cook, who is generally known for his level-headed demeanour, also insisted that he places more importance on helping people and the environment than on pure profit, saying: “When we work on making our devices accessible to the blind, I don’t consider bloody ROI.”

Read more this story HERE.

Forbes’ Richest People: Number of Billionaires Up Significantly

Photo Credit: Bebeto Matthews/APForbes, the unofficial temperature-taker of the world’s fiscal upper echelons, released on Monday its annual list of the world’s richest people and, separately, a list of the 400 richest Americans.

Not all that much has changed at the top.

Bill Gates, worth about $76 billion, is the richest man in the world, according to this year’s list. If that sounds familiar, it should, because Mr. Gates has topped that list for the past two decades, but for a four-year loss to telecom mogul Carlos Slim, according to Forbes. Mr. Slim is second this year, valued at $72 billion.

Spain’s Amancio Ortego, of the Zara fashion outlet , came in at third at $64 billion – just as he did last year. Warren Buffett, who has placed in the Top 5 for the past 20 years, is the fourth wealthiest person in the world and the second richest American, at about $58 billion.

Oracle’s Larry Ellison, Charles and David Koch, gambling giant Sheldon Anderson, and Christy and Jim Walton, each valued at more than $34 billion, rounded out the Top 10 on the world list.

Read more this story HERE.

DC’s Green-Approved Buildings Using More Energy

Photo Credit: REUTERS/Adam Stepien/Agencja GazetaWashington, D.C. may have the highest number of certified green buildings in the country, but research by Environmental Policy Alliance suggests it might not be doing much good.

The free-market group analyzed the first round of energy usage data released by city officials Friday and found that large, privately-owned buildings that received the green energy certification Leadership in Energy Design (LEED) actually use more energy than buildings that didn’t receive this green stamp of approval.

LEED is the brainchild of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), a private environmental group.

Washington, D.C.’s Department of Environment made the capital the first city in the nation to mandate LEED certifications in the construction of public buildings. The standards are now being phased in.

The results are measured in EUI’s, a unit that relates a building’s energy consumption to its size; the higher the number, the more energy is expended by a smaller building.

Read more this story HERE.

Is the Obama Admin Freezing Fox News Out of Foreign Policy Interviews?

Photo Credit: Daily Caller The Obama administration faces a difficult problem. Diplomacy has failed, despite its best efforts, and the ruthless winner-take-all attitude of its adversary now leaves them but two choices: break off relations or capitulate to its demands.

That adversary, of course, is Fox News — and President Barack Obama finally seems prepared to enforce a hard line against them. In the past week the White House has frozen the top-rated news network out of two key foreign policy interviews provided to other networks — one on Sunday with Secretary of State John Kerry, and one last week with National Security Adviser Susan Rice.

Kerry made the rounds yesterday to discuss the White House’s response to Russia’s Friday invasion of Ukraine, appearing on NBC, CBS and ABC’s Sunday shows to promise a tough (if unspecified) response to Vladimir Putin’s power grab. But Chris Wallace of ”Fox News Sunday” was shut out.

Read more this story HERE.

Tea Party Turns Five: How The Movement Has Changed America (+video)

Half a decade later, the Tea Party is still going strong despite the concerted efforts of leftists determined to halt its growing influence on the nation. Joe Miller, who aligned with the Tea Party early and quickly became one of its most recognizable leaders, explained the importance of Rick Santelli’s 2009 impromptu monologue.

“He basically said, ‘This is America. President Obama, are you listening? It’s time for another tea party,’” Miller recalled during an address at the recent Western Conservative Conference.

Since then, he explained, “grassroots have become activated.”

Instead of wringing their hands and lamenting the direction of America, millions of concerned citizens were able to identify with the movement and find a way to become active in correcting our nation’s course.

“If you want to change the direction of this country and are willing to go outside of the box to make it happen,” Miller continued, the Tea Party presented such opportunities.

Read more this story HERE.

Labor Force Participation in 2013 Lowest in 35 Years

Photo Credit: APThe average annual labor force participation rate hit a 35-year-low of 63.2 percent in the United States in 2013, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

The last time the average annual labor force participation rate was that low was in in 1978, when it was also 63.2 percent. Jimmy Carter was president then.

The BLS bases its employment statistics on the civilian noninstitutional population, which consists of all people in the United States 16 or older who are not on active duty in the military or in an institution such as a prison, nursing home or mental hospital. The labor force participation rate is the percentage of people in the civilian noninstitutional population who either had a job or who actively sought one in the previous four weeks.

Read more this story HERE.

Oscars: Matthew McConaughey ‘God Has Graced My Life…Not of My Hand’

Photo Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty ImagesBy Debbie Emery.

Matthew McConaughey won the Oscar for best actor for his performance in Dallas Buyers Club on Sunday during the 86th Academy Awards.

The 44-year-old walked away with his first Oscar after winning both the Golden Globe and SAG Award for his portrayal of AIDS patient Ron Woodroof in the biographical drama from Focus Features.

When he took the stage to accept his award, McConaughey, wearing a white tuxedo, calmed his usual exuberance by thanking God, his father, his mother, his wife, Camila Alves, and their children.

He concluded his heartfelt speech with his now-signature line — “All right, all right, all right” — from Dazed and Confused.

Read more this story HERE.

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By Paul Bond.

Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and others tease celebrities who are “confused” when the actor thanks God after winning best actor for his performance in “Dallas Buyers Club.”

Matthew McConaughey’s best-actor acceptance speech invoking God and family might have garnered a lukewarm reception from his celebrity colleagues at the Oscars on Sunday night, but it was getting lots of positive attention from conservative media figures, including Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, who used the moment to insinuate that Hollywood is anti-religion.

“First off, I want to thank God because that’s who I look up to. He’s graced my life with opportunities that I know are not of my hand or any other human hand,” McConaughey said after winning for his performance in Dallas Buyers Club.

Limbaugh said during his syndicated radio show Monday that the celebrities at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood for the 86th Academy Awards were “confused” by McConaughey’s acceptance speech.

Read more this story HERE.

Gun-Grabbing Cop Goes Ballistic: ‘I’m the Master!’

Photo Credit: WNDA citizen’s phone call to Connecticut state police about a letter ordering gun owners to dispose of their unregistered so-called “assault” weapons and standard-capacity magazines is sending shockwaves through the national gun-rights community after being recorded and posted online.

The heated phone conversation over the document took place amid rapidly escalating tensions between gun owners and state authorities determined to impose more gun control on Connecticut residents.

In the recording, state police spokesman Lt. Paul Vance – who did not know he was being recorded and told WND it was illegal to do so – can be heard telling the woman that anyone who refuses to dispose of their newly banned firearms in accordance with official instructions could face felony arrest.

Analysts believe the vast majority of Connecticut gun owners failed to comply with the controversial new law, with some suggesting that massive statewide civil disobedience may be at work.

Some accounts estimate that as many as 100,000 people or more could be in violation of the statute.

Read more this story HERE.

Competition and Risk: Government versus Private Sector

Photo Credit: Wonderlane/flickrRemember when long distance phone calls cost so much that one teenager separated from their friend could bankrupt your budget? Reagan brought competition to the phone industry and opened the door for cell phones and cheap long distance. Now we don’t even think about making long distance phone calls, they’re just part of the plan. This is exactly the kinds of efficiencies and cost savings that competition can bring to education in Alaska. In this article I’d like to show a specific aspect of governmental programs that would be drastically improved with some competition.

Risk is a factor in any project or process, and a lot of effort and resources go into managing that risk. It can come from underestimating the costs, not recognizing the impacts of attached strings, legal liability, and a host of other reasons. The borough itself has a Risk Management division just to look at these issues. Risk aversion is rapidly becoming one of the largest costs of the government doing business.

A current local example is where the Borough spent $503,600 to put up 350 bus stop signs. This has resulted in the borough twice adding more money into the bus stop project. A significant portion of that was because public works had all the signs and their placements engineered, instead of just having a contractor install them according to already known safe standards. This was done to mitigate the risk that a sign might fall over and hit someone in the head. So how far do you go to avoid risk? Do you encase all the signs in NERF® material? Do you mount the signs on pilings driven to bedrock? What you find in these situations is that a private business is always willing to take more risk than the government, so private enterprise is always able to do it for less. To be honest, you’ll never completely get away from this as long as government is doing projects, because the money isn’t their own. The government never feels the need to take more risk when it can just take more money.

So now let’s take a look at education and some of the risks. If you didn’t have enough teacher time allocated for each student then maybe you would be sued for not dedicating that time. If you don’t have enough security at the schools then if anything happened you could get sued. If you don’t have a psychologist at every school, then any psychological problems the children may have in the future you may take the blame for. While not all of these examples are fully implemented in our school district, it is the line of reasoning that has led to the doubling of staff (not teachers) in the last twenty years, while student population has declined. In its great desire to avoid any risk or liability, the school district has been increasing the number of employees to mitigate risk.

It’s important to note that a lot of the risk mitigation here locally has been driven by the federal No Child Left Behind standards. They require all students to test to the same level (if the school district wants federal handouts). It has now reached the point where the school district sometimes has one teacher for one student. This is because it feels that if it doesn’t show that it’s putting out enough effort, i.e. spending more, then it could be held liable if the child fails the test. It will only get worse with the pseudo-Common Core standards that the State has adopted, which are completely test-driven (woe to those students who have test anxieties).

What competition can bring to this playing field is that private and charter schools can accept more responsibility from the students and parents, and therefore require the parents to take more risk. Each parent will be able to weigh in the balance the risk they are willing to accept versus the quality of education that the parent wants, and make the decision on where to educate their children. The government schools will respond because of their desire to have more students, and move back towards where the schools once were with regards to risk and responsibility. As mentioned already, government will never be as efficient as private enterprise, but it can certainly be more efficient than it is right now. We currently spend around $16,000 per student in the Borough, one of the highest rates in the country, and a large portion of that is the school district dealing with potential liability. There is a bill in the legislature (SJR9/HJR1) to allow the citizens to vote on whether parents should have choice in their educational systems. It would allow those of all incomes to utilize private systems of education. Polling has shown that overwhelmingly most Alaskans do want that choice, but the no-choice lobby has been pressuring the Senate and House to not support letting the people vote on this issue. Please let your legislators know that you would like to vote on this issue. You can email the entire legislature at [email protected].

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Lance Roberts is a member of the Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly. The views expressed here are his own and do not represent the assembly or borough administration.

Hollywood Actress: Public Schools Are Brainwashing Kids With ‘Progressive Agenda’

Photo Credit: Heritage Network An actress who was formerly quiet about her political beliefs has come out against what she calls “a progressive agenda” in America’s public schools.

Sam Sorbo, the wife of “Hercules” actor Kevin Sorbo, homeschools her children and recently began publicly writing about the topic of education.

In an interview with The Blaze’s Dana Loesch, Sorbo said she initially did not think writing about education would cause much political controversy — but she was wrong.

“Of course school is the most political, because that’s where the progressive agenda is coming out the strongest and the hardest,” said Sorbo.

Sorbo said she was hesitant to reveal her faith or political beliefs publicly because of possible backlash and negative reaction from Hollywood.

But she could not remain silent on education.

“You people who send your kids to school, you have no idea what the schools are doing to their fresh little brains, in brainwashing them into this progressive, liberal—it’s antithetical to America, the agenda that they’re being indoctrinated with,” Sorbo said.

This article appeared originally at Heritage.com and is re-published in full with the Heritage Foundation’s permission.