miércoles, 16 de noviembre de 2011

carecemos de estado de derecho

 

el gobierno y el estado peruano no pueden ejercer el estado de derecho ni en sus carceles. Se calcula que la poblacion carcelaria del Peru deberia ser de 300,ooo personas. Pero solo hay presos 25,ooo. Osea la mayoria de delincuentes y sicopatas estan sueltos con el grave riesgo que eso significa para la sociedad peruana. Y todavia hay politicos tontos e ignorantes que hablan de liberar mas presos para aligerar las carceles.

El estado peruano y  los gobiernos peruanos carecen una cutura de estado de derecho. Eso se puede ver en la manera como se han manejado algunos conflictos sociales en los ultimos tiempo. El Baguazo ,el andahuaylazo, los sucesos de los penales. Esto deriva de una concpecion marxista de los conflictos sociales, de la miseria la pobreza y la delincuencia. En donde se culpa a la sociedad de lo que hacen sus malos elementos. Para el marxismo la delincuencia es producto de la pobreza. No de sicopatias y por otro lado no quiere reconocer que el hombre es capaz de tener valores.  El hombre es solo un subproducto de la sociedad. Determinado economicamente por su estatus social. Es mas, si es pobre es bueno si es rico es malo.

c mori

 

 

Nuevos enfrentamientos en Maranguita por control de pabellón

15 de noviembre de 2011 | 11:15 p.m.
Sandro Marchand - web@epensa.com.pe
Lima -

Nuevamente el descontrol se apoderó del Centro Juvenil de Diagnóstico y Rehabilitación de Lima (Maranguita) al desatarse una trifulca entre adolescentes del Callao y de provincias, en una disputa por espacios.

Desde el último fin de semana se solicitó el apoyo de la Policía Nacional para el retiro de los líderes considerados como "negativos", pero ello no fue suficiente.

Los dos bandos en conflicto incrementaron sus disputas, llegando a quemar colchones y atrincherarse en uno de los pabellones conocido como "Nazareno".

Con la presencia de representantes del Ministerio Público, unidades especializadas de la policía ingresaron a las instalaciones para retomar el control y la calma. Mientras tanto, los familiares de algunos internos se encuentran también en los exteriores, preocupados por el estado de sus seres queridos.

(Video: América TV)

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martes, 1 de noviembre de 2011

will wilkinson

Will Wilkinson

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Will Wilkinson
Born 1973
Independence, Missouri
Education University of Northern Iowa (1995); M.A. in Philosophy from the Northern Illinois University (1998)
Occupation writer, public intellectual, blogger
Domestic partner Kerry Howley
Notable credit(s) policy analyst at the Cato Institute; Academic Coordinator of the Social Change Project and the Global Prosperity Initiative at The Mercatus Center at George Mason University; host of a weekly show, "Free Will," on BloggingHeads.tv; biweekly commentator on American Public Media'sMarketplace
Official website

Will Wilkinson (born 1973) is a Canadian American[1] libertarian writer. Until August 2010, he was a research fellow at the Cato Institute where he worked on a variety of issues including Social Security reform and, most notably, the policy implications of happiness research. He is currently working on a paper on how to think about economic inequality. Wilkinson was also the managing editor of the Cato Institute's monthly web magazine, Cato Unbound. Previously, he was Academic Coordinator of the Social Change Project and the Global Prosperity Initiative at The Mercatus Center at George Mason University, and, before that, he ran the Social Change Workshop for Graduate Students for The Institute for Humane Studies. His political philosophy is described by The American Conservative magazine as "Rawlsekian"; that is, a mixture of John Rawls's principles and Friedrich von Hayek's methods.[2]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Wilkinson was born in Independence, Missouri, and grew up in Marshalltown, Iowa. He graduated from the University of Northern Iowa in 1995, received his M.A. in Philosophy from the Northern Illinois University in 1998 and did work toward a Ph.D. at the University of Maryland.

[edit] Writing and Commentary

His writing has appeared in Slate,[3] Reason,[4] TCS Daily,[5] National Review,[6] the FoxNews website,[7] and on The Economist's Free Exchange economics blog,[8] where he was a regular contributor from 2007 onwards. As of 2010, he is one of the contributors of The Economist's Democracy in America blog under the pseudonym W.W.

Journalist Ryan Blitstein regards Wilkinson as an expert in the relationship of happiness research to public policy.[9] He has been cited on happiness and public policy in articles in Forbes,[10] The Los Angeles Times,[11] and The Washington Post.[12]

Wilkinson appears as a commentator every other week on American Public Media's widely syndicated radio show Marketplace. He is also the host of a weekly show, Free Will, on the current affairs diavlog site Bloggingheads TV. The show runs every Sunday and features discussions of new books and ideas with writers and intellectuals.

Wilkinson frequently appears in public forums and debates with leading intellectuals. In November 2007, Wilkinson, teamed with George Mason University economist Tyler Cowen, was pitted against Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs and University of Pennsylvania economist Betsey Stevenson in a highly publicized public debate on the economic and politics of happiness sponsored by The Economist newspaper.[13] Wilkinson has recently appeared with University of Chicago law professor Cass Sunstein and Stanford University psychology professor Philip Zimbardo at Cato Institute book forums where he offered critical comments on their recent books.[14][15]

On June 27, 2008, Wilkinson was cited by David Brooks as a member of a "group of young and unpredictable rightward-leaning writers" who have "emerged on the scene" in recent years. He calls their emergence a "genuine bright spot" for the conservative movement.[16]

[edit] Personal life

Wilkinson is an atheist. He has stated that he does not "like religion very much" in general and believes that less religious cultures or groups of people become better off. However, he has acknowledged that more religious people may be more likely to favor libertarianism in the United States than less religious people.[17]

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links

habra que quitarles poder a los politicos de alguna forma

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