Wednesday, July 17, 2013

90% Fruitvale Station

All Critics (62) | Top Critics (26) | Fresh (56) | Rotten (6)

Fruitvale Station's wrenching power lies in the specificity of its storytelling and the ordinary human warmth of the world it conjures.

From the moment the arrest begins, the film is blunt and stunning, a completely absorbing, protracted nightmare.

Although Coogler surely wants his movie to serve as a weapon against racially charged police brutality, he's smart enough, and sensitive enough, to know that this is above all a human tragedy -- and not a political rallying point.

Coogler's film is shaky, sometimes literally slipping out of focus even as its own vision remains resolutely blinkered.

"Fruitvale Station" is a potent dramatic chronicle of contemporary American life, crackling with energy and possibility, made with the cooperation of Grant's mother and girlfriend.

In the end, what is the meaning of the film?

BART allowed Coogler to shoot on location, and the young filmmaker, working with a score of actors and a crowd of extras, shows more competence in placing the camera coherently than many action directors with access to multimillion-dollar budgets.

Coogler shows the storytelling maturity and restraint to keep the focus squarely on the characters, not so much on the actual act of bloodshed itself but the wounds exacted upon the direct victims, witnesses, and families alike.

'Fruitvale Station,' is one the most endearing and profound films that echoes the essence of humanity. Ryan Coogler's feature debut gives Michael B. Jordan a career making performance.

Many will respond to the film as a gut-level human interest piece, but it's as curtailed and nuance-free a character study as it is a political polemic.

The closeness of family and the feeling of community comes across as genuine in every scene...

The actual events already serve as a parable of race in America, but Coogler's dramatization does them justice.

Galvanizing, tense gritty-indie, brilliantly acted by Jordan and Spencer. Very much worth watching even though the too-neat, manipulative screenplay undercuts it artistically.

"Fruitvale Station" is about what we can imagine when we cast our gaze across the longstanding divides in this persistently, cancerously segregated American society.

A noble effort to contextualize the life of a man who would become famous for the way that he died.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/fruitvale_station/

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Australian student wakes up from coma speaking fluent Chinese

A head-on car collision left Ben McMahon in a coma for one entire week. When he woke up, all the Mandarin that he studied in high school came back to him.

YouTube

A head-on car collision left Ben McMahon in a coma for one week. When he woke up, he could speak Mandarin, a language that he'd studied in high school but never mastered.

An Australian student who woke up from a weeklong coma able to speak fluent Mandarin is now a budding community TV star.

About 17 months ago, a debilitating car crash left Melbourne native Ben McMahon fighting for his life. When he regained consciousness, he had a whole new lease on life ? and a startling new way of communicating with the world.

"Most of it's hazy, but when I woke up seeing a Chinese nurse, I thought I was in China,? the 21-year-old told The Herald Sun. "It was like a dream. It was surreal. It was like my brain was in one place but my body in another. I just started speaking Chinese ? they were the first words that left my mouth.?

RELATED: GIRL WAKES FROM COMA WITH ?COMPLETELY DIFFERENT? PERSONALITY?

The college student studied Mandarin in high school, but the language had never clicked.

McMahon is now using his newfound skills to create a bridge between Australians and Chinese expats.

He?s one of the three hosts on ?Au My Ga? (Oh My God), a Chinese-language variety show that is set to premiere later this year. A dozen episodes from the first season have already been recorded in Melbourne. McMahon helps expose expats to different parts of Australian culture, such as food, relationships and entertainment.

RELATED: AMAZING BOB SEGER WISH COMES TRUE FOR WOMAN WHO AWOKE FROM COMA

"The show aims to promote and advance the understanding between Australia and China," McMahon said. "I think that is the key ? it signifies a big step towards creating stronger ties, while providing a local perspective."

McMahon has also worked as a Chinese-speaking tour guide in Melbourne.

But this new language came with a price. The student is finding that he gets tired a bit more easily after his accident.

"After the coma, I had to sleep quite a lot,? he said. ?Fortunately enough, apart from that and a couple of scars, I am lucky.?

On a mobile device? Click here to view the video.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nydnrss/news/world/~3/K2lRqcBjDn0/story01.htm

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Taking financial services to Africa?s poorest consumers

Millions of Africans have no access to banks. There can be no sustainable development without catering to these groups

The sustainable development agenda must tackle the myriad challenges that Africa faces today. These include rapid population growth, which is straining resource use, man-made and natural disasters for which most countries are ill-prepared, ineffective policies for addressing other crises. This is exacerbated by outmoded laws and the lack of capacity to enforce those laws, high dependency on primary commodities, made worse by declining (or volatile) commodity prices and unfair trade practices, as well as very poor financial inclusion for the millions of people without access to banking services.

African financial systems are among the smallest in the world, as measured by private credit to GDP and domestic revenues that are usually not adequate to meet the development requirements of a continent that is playing catch-up in a highly competitive global village. Yet, as Africa keeps growing it is important that governments mobilise and allocate more resources towards development.

Financial and technological innovation is helping Africa expand the coverage of financial services. Mobile banking is a good example of how African financial systems are providing access to basic payment services through mobile phones, even without a bank account.

Another example of financial innovation is tailor-making the credit assessment process to the circumstances of African entrepreneurs through the use of psychometric assessments as a low-cost, automated screening tool to identify high-potential entrepreneurs. The Standard Bank Group, for instance, has been very successful with their product, SME quick loans which makes the use of psychometric testing as opposed to financial analysis. With agriculture being a significant subsistence and commercial activity on the continent, farmers? fortunes are being supported by the creation of suitable agricultural insurance products.

Africa is making efforts to reach out to previously unbanked parts of the population. Successes have been realised through the cell phone-based M-Pesa in Kenya. Ecocash in Zimbabwe and the basic transaction accounts, such as Mzansi accounts in South Africa.

With improvements in the business environment, the private sector is growing in confidence to do business in Africa, representing an important opportunity for private sector driven development. Africa has immense opportunities to ride on successful implementation of public-private partnerships in the areas of infrastructure development and social services provision. This option has been tried and tested in parts of the continent, with success stories in the water supply systems in west Africa and transportation projects in southern Africa.

Africa still needs to deepen the financial systems through the development and expansion of local and regional pension funds and life insurance markets; as well as local and regional bond trading markets. This will enable mobilisation of medium to long-term finance, which is seriously scarce.

There is an argument that since developed economies are not driven by informal sector activities, it is flawed to attempt to drive economic progress through the informal sector elsewhere. This argument does not recognise that in some parts of Africa this sector contributes more than 60% of employment and income. As such, there is no better development process that includes the majority of economic players.

Financial institutions often find the risk of doing business in the informal sector higher than with formal businesses. The problem is exacerbated by the lack of information for traditional credit rating tools. Innovations using alternative assessment tools such as psychometric evaluation of borrowers represent workable options to promote access to financial resources in this sector. Training programmes tailor-made for the requirements of the informal sector entrepreneurs are not readily available and affordable. This would require those who design educations systems to be responsive to this growing need.

Small traders, hawkers and backyard industries are often not properly regulated, leading to harassment, frequent arrest of traders, confiscation of their goods and punitive fines. In most cases these traders need assistance. For example, by designating specific zones for their activities. There are potential fiscal revenue benefits to be achieved by legalising and properly catering for the development needs of the informal sector.

In conclusion, the challenge of developing the financial sector in most underdeveloped countries can be summarised using one word: costs. This refers to costs of putting up infrastructure to service the majority of people previously excluded from the formal financial sector, such as buildings, telecommunications systems, or the costs related to educating the masses about formal banking structures.

This is a cost banks should not shy away from as in the long run the survival of the banks specifically, as well as the development of Africa in general, will depend on the successful implementation of financial inclusion policies and programmes.

Pindie Nyandoro is the executive director of Standard Bank of Namibia Limited. A version of article was originally published in ECDPM?s monthly Great Insights.

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Tagged Africa, ECDPM, Global Development Professionals, Great Insights, Guardian Professional, Namibia, Pindie Nyandoro, Standard Bank Group, Zimbabwe

Source: http://www.angrytech.com/taking-financial-services-to-africas-poorest-consumers/

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

More than 100,000 protesters take to the streets in Brazil

Marcelo Say?o / EPA

Thousands of people participate in a protest against rising public transport costs in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 17 June 2013. Earlier police fired tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse hundreds of protesters near the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro. The demonstrators were protesting rising public transport costs and the billions of dollars spent on the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, reports said.

By Bradley Brooks, Associated Press

SAO PAULO ? More than 100,000 people took to the streets in overwhelmingly peaceful protests in at least eight cities Monday, demonstrations that voiced the deep frustrations Brazilians feel about carrying heavy tax burdens but receiving woeful returns in public education, health, security and transportation.

In Sao Paulo, Brazil's economic hub, at least 65,000 protesters gathered at a small, treeless plaza then broke into three directions in a Carnival atmosphere, with drummers beating out samba rhythms as the crowds chanted anti-corruption jingles. They also focused on the cause that initially sparked the protests last week - a 10-cent hike in bus and subway fares.

Hundreds of protesters in the capital, Brasilia, peacefully marched on congress, where dozens scrambled up a ramp to a low-lying roof, dancing on the structure's large, hallmark upward-turned bowl designed by famed architect Oscar Niemeyer. Some congressional windows were broken, but police did not use force to contain the damage.

"This is a communal cry saying: `We're not satisfied,"' Maria Claudia Cardoso said on a Sao Paulo avenue, taking turns waving a sign reading "(hash)revolution" with her 16-year-old son, Fernando, as protesters streamed by.


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Stringer/Brazil / Reuters

Demonstrators shout anti-government slogans during one of many protests around Brazil's major cities in Sao Paulo June 17, 2013.

"We're massacred by the government's taxes - yet when we leave home in the morning to go to work, we don't know if we'll make it home alive because of the violence," she added. "We don't have good schools for our kids. Our hospitals are in awful shape. Corruption is rife. These protests will make history and wake our politicians up to the fact that we're not taking it anymore!"

The protests come after the opening matches of soccer's Confederations Cup over the weekend, just one month before a papal visit, a year before the World Cup and three years ahead of the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. The unrest is raising some security concerns, especially after protests last week in Sao Paulo and over the weekend in Rio produced injury-causing clashes with police.

Monday's demonstrations saw some violence. In Rio de Janeiro, a small group of protesters set a car on fire and threw rocks and flares at police. In the southern city of Porto Alegre, protesters hurled rocks at commuter trains.

But those were the exceptions to the peaceful norm.

Protest leaders went to pains to tell marchers that damaging public or private property would only damage their cause.

Police, too, changed tactics. In Sao Paulo, commanders said publicly Monday they would try to avoid violence, but warned they could resort to force if protesters destroyed property. During the first hours of the march that continued into the night there was barely any perceptible police presence.

The Sao Paulo march itself was a family oriented affair: A group of mothers received a rousing cheer when they arrived at the plaza where the march began, brandishing signs that said "Mothers Who Care Show Support."

"I'm here to make sure police don't hurt these kids," said Sandra Amalfe, whose 16-year-old daughter chatted with friends nearby. "We need better education, hospitals and security - not billions spent on the World Cup."

Officers in Rio fired tear gas and rubber bullets when a group of protesters invaded the state legislative assembly and hurled things at police. But most of the tens of thousands who protested in Rio did so peacefully, many of them dressed in white and brandishing placards and banners. Many people in the city left work early to avoid traffic jams downtown.

In Belo Horizonte, police estimated about 20,000 people joined a peaceful crowd protesting before a Confederations Cup match between Tahiti and Nigeria as police helicopters buzzed overhead and mounted officers patrolled the stadium area. Earlier in the day, demonstrators erected several barricades of burning tires on a nearby highway, disrupting traffic.

Protests also were reported in Curitiba, Belem and Salvador.

Marcos Lobo, a 45-year-old music producer who joined the protest in Sao Paulo, said the actions of police during earlier demonstrations persuaded him to come out Monday.

"I thought they (the protests) were infantile at first because of my preconceived notions," Lobo said. "Then I saw the aggression."

Another protester, Manoela Chiabai, said she wanted to express her dissatisfaction with the status quo.

"Everything in Brazil is a mess. There is no education, health care - no security. The government doesn't care," the 26-year-old photographer said. "We're a rich country with a lot of potential but the money doesn't go to those who need it most."

In a brief statement, President Dilma Rousseff, who faces re-election next year and whose popularity rating recently dipped for the first time in her presidency, acknowledged the protests, saying: "Peaceful demonstrations are legitimate and part of democracy. It is natural for young people to demonstrate."

Ariadne Natal, a professor at the University of Sao Paulo whose research focuses on violence, said protesters want to "take advantage of this moment when we have foreign visitors, when the world's press is watching, to showcase their cause."

"The problem we've seen is that the police action is trying to prevent these protests," she said. "What we need to figure out is how the protests as well as the big events can be carried out democratically."

Brazilians have long accepted malfeasance as a cost of doing business, whether in business or receiving public services. Brazilian government loses more than $47 billion each year to undeclared tax revenue, vanished public money and other widespread corruption, according to the Federation of Industries of Sao Paulo business group.

But in the last decade, about 40 million Brazilians have moved into the middle class and they have begun to demand more from government. Many are angry that billions of dollars in public funds are being spent to host the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics while few improvements are made elsewhere.

Protests are routine in Brazil, but few turn violent. Security experts say the demonstrations aren't the main danger for the hundreds of thousands of visitors who will descend on Brazil from now through the Olympics in 2016.

However, Joe Biundini, whose FAM International Group provides security details to executives attending the Confederations Cup, said there is a danger of escalating violence from the protests if authorities don't negotiate with demonstrators.

"If the government doesn't sit down with them it could get worse in future matches," Biundini said.

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? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2ea6b5f2/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C170C190A10A2290Emore0Ethan0E10A0A0A0A0A0Eprotesters0Etake0Eto0Ethe0Estreets0Ein0Ebrazil0Dlite/story01.htm

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Crowd gathers near scene of Ark. police shooting

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) ? Dozens of protesters gathered in Little Rock shortly after a man was fatally shot by police following a traffic stop, with some citing frustration about the recent Trayvon Martin verdict.

Little Rock police spokeswoman Sgt. Cassandra Davis says the shooting happened Monday after authorities pulled over an SUV they believed was stolen.

Davis says the driver, 26-year-old Deon Williams, fled on foot but was shot by an officer who said Williams had a gun. She says both Williams and the officer are black.

Protesters expressed outrage about Williams' death. Some carried signs, including one calling for justice for a teen killed by Little Rock police last year.

Others cited Saturday's acquittal of George Zimmerman, the Florida neighborhood watch volunteer who fatally shot Martin. Martin, a black teen, was unarmed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/crowd-gathers-near-scene-ark-police-shooting-001421156.html

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Reid, McConnell yield no ground in filibuster showdown

By Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Senate's top Democrat and Republican yielded no ground on Sunday as they neared a showdown over President Barack Obama's executive-branch nominees that could dramatically change how the Senate operates.

Appearing on NBC's "Meet the Press," Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid charged that Republican obstructionism has prevented Obama from getting much of his second-term team in place.

Unless Republicans permit a number of Obama's nominees to be confirmed this week, Reid has threatened to change the rules and strip Republicans of their ability to block the president's picks with procedural roadblocks known as filibuster.

Nominees set for vote on Tuesday include Richard Cordray as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau; Gina McCarthy to head of the Environmental Protection Agency; Thomas Perez as labor secretary, and three picks for the National Labor Relations Board.

"I want everyone to hear this. The changes we are making a very, very minimal," Reid said, sounding as if a final decision had already been made.

"What we are doing is saying, 'Look American people, shouldn't President Obama have somebody working for whom he wants?'" Reid said.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell his party was obstructing the process and urged Democrats to reconsider plans for an unprecedented change in Senate rules.

Filibusters have long been part of the Senate's basic fabric, providing the chamber's minority leverage to extend debate and force the majority to compromise.

But in the past decade or so, each side, when in the majority, has accused the minority of misusing the filibuster to produce gridlock, not change.

Reid is moving toward abolishing the filibuster only on executive-branch nominees, not on judicial nominees or legislation.

Democrats charge that Republicans have blocked a number of top nominees, not because they are unqualified, but because Republicans oppose the agencies that they would head.

Senate rules state that 67 votes are needed to change its rules. But Democrats, who hold the Senate, 54-46, could do it with just 51 by essentially rewriting the rule book with a procedural power plan known as "the nuclear option."

Once Democrats switched the threshold on rule changes, they would then reduce to 51 from 60 the number of votes needed to end filibusters on executive-branch nominees.

"The reason they call this the 'nuclear option' because it is breaking the rules of the Senate to change the rules of the Senate," McConnell said in a separate appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press."

With Senate Democrats and Republicans set to meet privately on Monday to discuss their difference, McConnell urged calm.

"We need to start talking to each other rather than at each other," said McConnell, who last week said Reid would go down as "the worst Senate leader ever" if he invoked "the nuclear option."

In 2005, the then-Senate Republican majority threatened "the nuclear option" in response to Democrats blocking a number of Republican President George W. Bush conservative nominees.

At the time, Reid spoke against "the nuclear option," saying it would undermine the Senate, while McConnell argued for it, saying change was needed.

The threat was averted when a bipartisan deal was reached only to filibuster judges in "extraordinary circumstances."

"I'm glad we didn't do it," McConnell said of the 2005 showdown. "We went to the brink and we pulled back because cooler heads prevailed .... That is what I hope happens here."

(Reporting by Thomas Ferraro; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/reid-mcconnell-yield-no-ground-u-filibuster-showdown-164546330.html

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Washington Post Columnist Clinton Yates talks about Trayvon Martin on Bill Press...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/current/posts/10151690329798864

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