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Write 2 page essay on the topic Campaign Reform.

Non-profit organizations are considered corporations under this law and are therefore subject to the same rules and regulations as these other corporations. These are referred to as “Electioneering Communications,“ or issue ads. This act amended the 1971 Federal Election Campaign Act.

The BCFR was a big step towards campaign finance reform. As a direct effect, the organizations Swift Boat Veterans for the Truth, the League of Conservation Voters, MoveOn.org, and Progress for America Voter Fund were all fined for not following the new laws.

In June of 2007, the US Supreme court found in Federal Election Commision Vs. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. that it was unconstitutional to apply the BCFR to ads that could be reasonably considered to be not specifically for or against a specific candidate. It will depend on the full extent of the 2008 election cycle to determine the extent to which this new ruling will affect campaign finance reform.

While the BCFR has begun the process of finance reform, many people think that there is still a long way to go in the process. For instance, many people still feel that lobbyists and special interest groups still have too much influence on politicians, yet the BCFR does not specifically deal with lobbyists. Also, some groups have begun the process of challenging the BCFR, stating that it violates free speech. Bradley A. Smith, in the book Unfree Speech: the Folly of Campaign Finance Reform, states that not only was the system that was in place before the BCFR not as corrupt as many Americans seemed to believe, but the BCFR has made the situation worse, with incumbent and wealthy candidates being much more likely to elected than previously because the BCFR discourages grassroots organizations (Smith, 2001). Smith’s main opposition to current attempts at campaign finance reform, though,

 

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Write 3 pages with APA style on Impact of Negative Stories on Emotional Health. Children are not excluded from the cruelty of negative stories from the multiple methods of communication. This paper will explore the ways in which the constant stream of negative stories via multiple methods of modern communication impact on peoples emotional health (Clark 25). Further, the write up will discuss the possible consequences of negative stories, which include feelings of anxiety, stress and depression. Many people have had the opportunity of sitting in their homes, or waiting rooms while watching the news and other programs in the television, which disturbed their emotional balance. The negative events that are repeatedly emphasized by the news are emotionally distracting (Clark 28). Television sets at the airports are constantly filled with negative scenes that form part of the travelers’ memories causing anxiety to them during the flight. Nothing frightens people who are taking a flight more than the idea that the plane might be attacked or get hijacked. Fear can heighten an individual’s emotions resulting to anxiety. Individuals can adapt to feeling of anxiety and successfully deal with them if it happens only once. However, repeated negative information results to constant build up anxiety that develops to stress and eventually depression. Another instance that results to anxiety is watching tragic events in the television in a hospital waiting room (Clark 43). News of disease outbreak and the toiling number of people who have died from the disease will cause anxiety to a patient. Such news will increase the patients’ anxiety, as well as escalate their suffering and pain. Negative media stories have a negative effect on an individual’s mental health especially when they are suffering. Watching and listening to murder stories while you wait for a doctor in the hospital is extremely traumatizing (Clark 51). These stories are disturbing and menacing, and they impact negatively on an individual well being. The frightening accounts of destruction and death bring anxiety to the human psyche and eventually develop to more serious emotional conditions like stress and depression. The bad stuffs that form part of the news bulletins bring a lot of frustrations to people. They are paraded with mayhem and muck, and the stories that have the greatest shock value win the attention of media houses (Clark 55). The unfortunate side is that these stories are dehumanizing, and any time one watches such news he feels like emaciated. The influence of unenthusiastic news is not with reference to cultural wars or political philosophies. Torment is an unavoidable of element of an individual condition. people require information to be able to redirect their effort towards making the world a better place to live. However, our continuous access to every part of news that troubles comes with authentic shock on physical and mental health. A group of people were shown a movie that was featuring traumatic events (Clark 73). Most of them reported that they were experiencing symptoms that were associated en route for post traumatic stress disorder after watching the footage. Violent activities and encounters wear away our sense of safety and generate intense feeling of anxiety, stress, helplessness, fear and anger.

 

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• Managing People Experienced Workers: Past Practices Put a Premium on Seniority

 Despite the fact that most employers were cutting payrolls during the most recent recession, the data revealed that most of the attrition was among younger workers, and that employment levels for workers over 55 years of age actually increased during that time period. Indeed, pay-level data reflected a similar trend. Whereas inflation-adjusted wages for workers in the “25 to 55 age group” dropped on average over 2% in the most recent data, employees in the 55 and older age category experienced wage gains of over 4%. In addition to this, recent data suggest that the labor participation rate for older workers hit a historic high in 2010. Several specific industries seemed to be particularly protective of their older workers, and this can be traced to some of their past practices with respect to managing previous labor surpluses.

 For example, in 2009, Boeing cut 10,000 jobs, but almost none of these cuts included their most senior employees. Part of this can be attributed to Boeing’s experience in the 1990s, when similar cuts were obtained by supplying the workforce with voluntary buyout plans. Left to decide on their own, workers with the most experience, and hence best alternative employment opportunities, accepted the buyouts. When the recession ended, however, and the company tried to expand, it was hurt by labor shortages in the jobs that required the most experience. Richard Hartnett, Boeing’s Chief of Global Staffing noted in 2009 that “We don’t ever want to get ourselves stuck in that situation again,” and this time around, when it came to reducing the size of the labor force, few of the cuts were voluntary. Instead, this time Boeing is picking and choosing who stays and who leaves, and more often than not, workers with the higher levels of experience are being kept on.

 In the oil industry, past labor surpluses were met with “attrition-related” adjustments. Rather than directly laying workers off, most employers in the industry simply did not hire new workers when older ones retired. The lack of hiring meant that many younger people gave up on that industry as a viable career alternative, and enrollments in undergraduate programs related to the oil industry dropped 85% from 1982 to 2003. With over 40% of their workforce now over the age of 50 and no replacements in sight, employers like Conoco are struggling to keep their most senior employees from retiring with higher pay and more lucrative benefits. As Michael Killalea, Vice President of the International Association of Drilling Contractors notes, “We skipped an entire generation of workers, and we cannot make the transition fast enough without extending the service of our most senior employees.

” Finally, another example of this can be seen in the Federal Aviation Authority, the group that oversees airline safety. The majority of air traffic controllers who currently work for this agency were hired in the mid-1980s after then-President Ronald Reagan fired over 10,000 controllers who were illegally striking. Now, 25 years later, most of these controllers are nearing the age of retirement, and the FAA is desperately trying to retain these workers for as long as possible, in order to help ease the transition to a younger, less-experienced workforce. The problem, however, is that strained labor-management relations has created a situation where job dissatisfaction among current controllers is very high, and a mass exodus is taking place. As one departing controller noted, “it is only a matter of time before an accident occurs, and the pervasive feeling among experienced controllers is that I don’t want to be there when it happens.” This kind of quote strikes fear into the hearts of would-be flyers, and dramatizes the generic need in the economy for all sorts of employers to hold onto their most senior and experienced members.

 Questions

1.    This article suggests some reasons why, on the supply side, the demand for older workers is high. What are some recent short-term phenomena related to the housing market and the recent financial situation that create a higher supply of older workers relative to the past?

2.    What are some long-term phenomena that might also contribute to the increased supply of older workers in the workforce?

3. Our “Competing through Sustainability” box in this chapter described the plight of young workers across the globe, and their struggles to gain meaningful employment. To what extent has the change in labor supply among older workers affected the demand for labor among younger workers, and what can employers, workers, unions, and government do to help balance this equation?

 

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Only need to answer these questions:

1. (20%) What was the most challenging part of the group project? What did you find to be the most difficult part, and why?

2. (20%) What was the most interesting part of the group project, and why?

3. (20%) What was the most surprising result of the group project, or the most surprising thing you learned through the group project, and why? 

4. (20%) If you had a chance to re-do your group project, what would you change, and why?

5. (20%) Has working on this project affected the way you think about  data collection and analysis in health care, or what you think when you read published papers about health care? If so, how and why? If not, why not?

 

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