I AM A SONIC BOOMER, NOT A SENIOR... In this blog, I am writing to and for those who believe that the Boomers will change what the word Senior means. I also believe that Boomers will change what retirement means in our society. The blog is also for those who are interested in what life after retirement may look like for them. In this blog, I highlight and write about issues that I believe to be important both for Seniors and working Boomers.
Friday, May 25, 2012
Reading for parents raising boys
Thursday, May 24, 2012
Education in Canada one of the best in the world
Canada is the second in the world with respect to its education system I know we all want to be number one in the world, but Finland is still ahead of Canada. However, according to the Conference Board of Canada, we are closing the gap between us and Finland.
Lets keep moving ahead, however the Liberals in BC do not like this kind of news, as it goes against their agenda of the destruction of the public school system. Good news from the conference board of Canada does not make its way into the press in BC very often.
The government of the day in Victoria, along with its allies want to destroy public education and have started by attacking teachers. Unfortunately for them, teachers just continue to do the job they are paid to do and they do it well.
The government of BC just recently cut the funding for Adult Education going back to a user pay system. This is counter productive and will hurt the economy of BC in the long and short run. They are also ignoring what the Conference Board said when they did this. This is another example of how our government is going out of its way to hurt the ones that can least fight back.
Lets keep moving ahead, however the Liberals in BC do not like this kind of news, as it goes against their agenda of the destruction of the public school system. Good news from the conference board of Canada does not make its way into the press in BC very often.
The government of the day in Victoria, along with its allies want to destroy public education and have started by attacking teachers. Unfortunately for them, teachers just continue to do the job they are paid to do and they do it well.
The government of BC just recently cut the funding for Adult Education going back to a user pay system. This is counter productive and will hurt the economy of BC in the long and short run. They are also ignoring what the Conference Board said when they did this. This is another example of how our government is going out of its way to hurt the ones that can least fight back.
The Conference Board said in its report on Education
Canada should be concerned about its adult literacy rate. Canadians who have not been fortunate enough to acquire adequate education in school, therefore, are at risk of slipping through the cracks as adults. About 3 million adult Canadians have only Level 1 literacy and a further 4.5 million only achieve Level 2. A person with Level 1 literacy may have difficulty performing simple tasks like reading and understanding medicinal instructions. Many Level 2 adults hide their lack of broader functional literacy by tailoring their lives within narrow and simple work and life parameters.
Therefore, Canada has over 7 million adults who may lack the functional literacy to adjust to changes in the economy. Canada’s economic boom in the last 10 years has so far protected many of these people. Conference Board research shows, however, that people with low literacy skills have weaker attachments to the labour market and generally do not do well in economic downturns.
The students in Quebec are fighting the raise in tuition fees as they should—other students across Canada should be joining in this fight to keep their fees low. I think of tuition fees as taxes on students as the Universities are subsidized by the government. One of the reasons the governments fund post secondary education is that because a post secondary education is an investment in our county’s future. An increase in tuition fees not only hurts students today by increasing the tax they pay it hurts future generations by endangering our future economic well-being.
he following is a list of ten points that everyone should know about the student movement in Quebec to help place their struggle in its proper global context.
1) The issue is debt, not tuition
2) Striking students in Quebec are setting an example for youth across the continent
3) The student strike was organized through democratic means and with democratic aims
4) This is not an exclusively Quebecois phenomenon
5) Government officials and the media have been openly calling for violence and “fascist” tactics to be used against the students
6) Excessive state violence has been used against the students
7) The government supports organized crime and opposes organized students
8) Canada’s elites punish the people and oppose the students
9) The student strike is being subjected to a massive and highly successful propaganda campaign to discredit, dismiss, and demonize the students
10) The student movement is part of a much larger emerging global movement of resistance against austerity, neoliberalism, and corrupt power
The Conference Board goes on to say that:
Canada also underperforms in the highest levels of skills attainment. Canada produces relatively few “high-end” graduates with Ph.D.s (Canada receives a "D" grade), as well as graduates in science, math, computer science, and engineering (Canada receives a "C" grade).
We need more graduates with advanced qualifications and graduates in these fields to enhance innovation and productivity growth—and ultimately to ensure a high and sustainable quality of life for all Canadians.
Some long-term structural issues are not being adequately addressed through Canada’s current approach to education and skills. To maintain its high ranking, Canadians need to have access to education and skills outside the traditional school system. Currently, Canadian employers are notably low investors in workplace training programs. And of what they do invest, only a very small percentage—less than 2 per cent—goes to basic literacy skills. As a result, the Canadian training system does not fill the skills gap for people who, for various reasons, have not acquired skills at school. Much more needs to be done in the workplace in order to improve Canada’s adult literacy rate.
Demographic change in Canada offers an opportunity to shift resources from the formal education system into the skills system. Instead, as the population of school-aged Canadians declined in the 1990s, education spending on youth kept increasing. Canada will need to shift resources into other parts of the education and skills system as demand for traditional schooling continues to decline.
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Something to think about
The opposite of a correct statement is a false statement. But the opposite of a profound truth may well be another profound truth. -- Neils Bohr
It may be handy to know that simply dwelling upon joy, abundance, or anything else involving people, in a positive manner, will literally draw complete strangers into your life, as if they were puppets on marionette strings.
It may be handy to know that simply dwelling upon joy, abundance, or anything else involving people, in a positive manner, will literally draw complete strangers into your life, as if they were puppets on marionette strings.
Creating new and totally unpredictable circumstances will bring you more, more, more of whatever you were thinking about.
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Thought for the day
Each challenge of life adds to the suspense, adds to the mystery, adds to the chaos, adds to the possibilities, adds to the romance, adds to the adventure, adds to the joy.
And anything that adds to the joy should be embraced.
Monday, May 21, 2012
Children born today 'will work to 80' under pension reforms in Britain
Let’s hope Harper is not paying too much attention to the pension reforms in Britain. Let’s hope the scandals he faces today will keep him and his minions away from reading what is happening in Britain. The following was posted on May 09, 2012 and shows how the government there is taking steps to destroy the social contract between it and the people.
The state retirement age will rise in line with life expectancy under plans for a radical overhaul of the pension system. By Robert Winnett, Political Editor
A planned increase in the retirement age to 67 will be brought forward to between 2026 and 2028, after which it will be linked to longevity for future retirees. Children born today may not be able to retire until they are 80.
A separate piece of legislation was also unveiled which will overhaul the pensions offered to public-sector workers, which will in future be calculated on the basis of “career average” earnings rather than a final salary. The schemes will also become cheaper for the taxpayer. The changes have been bitterly opposed by the trade unions in recent months.
The reforms to the pension system were one of the few radical pieces of legislation to be announced in yesterday’s speech. Successive governments over the past decade have grappled with the problems of the complicated state pension and the increased cost of retirement because of sharp increases in life expectancy.
The Government briefing on the changes said it is “committing to ensuring that the state pension age is increased in future to take into account increases in longevity”.
The measures will run alongside a drive to tackle the pensions savings crisis, which will see up to 10 million people automatically enrolled into workplace schemes from this autumn, starting with larger companies.
John Lawson, head of pension policy at Standard Life, said: “If after 2026 the state pension age increases in line with our changing life expectancy, we could expect that someone who is currently 37 won’t be able to start drawing their state pension until they are 70 and someone who is 21 won’t receive it until they are 75.
“This means that children born in 2012 are unlikely to get their state pension until 80, if life expectancy at retirement rises in line with the last 30 years.”
The simplification of the state pension was welcomed by the National Association of Pension Funds.
Joanne Segars, the association’s chief executive, said: “We are delighted by this confirmation of the Government’s commitment to a long-awaited, landmark reform.
“This is another big step towards a simpler, more generous state pension that no longer penalises people for saving. A new system will take millions out of means-tested benefits and will encourage people to take control of their own age by saving towards it.”
She added: “We are all living longer, so it is inevitable that retirement ages move upwards to reflect that. The trade-off for working longer must be a better state pension come retirement.”
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