comparemela.com

Card image cap



president of ubecki -- becki-stan-stan, i'm going to say i don't know, do you know? >> the least of herman cain's problems now but they are causing trouble. i'll explain. then, new studies confirm what we know. america is slipping behind in education worldwide. we take an in-depth look with the secretary of education and bill gates. first, here's my take. i've been thinking about occupy wall street which is now occupying a number of other cities in america. and wondering what is it really about. the protesters don't like bank bailouts, they feel the 99% have been hard done by it, and they're protesting what they see as inequality. but america has always had more inequality than many countries. i think the underlying sense of frustration is over a very unamerican state of affairs, a loss of social mobility. americans have so far put up with inequality because they felt they could change their status. they didn't mind other being rich as long as they had a path to move up, as well. the american dream is all about social mobility in a sense. the idea that anyone can make it. well, "time" magazine has a great cover story this week that highlights the social mobility in america is declining. she points out that if you were born in 1970 in the bottom 1/5 of our socio-economic spectrum, you have only a 17% chance of making it into the upper 2/3. in other words, moving from the bottom toward the top. the data now show that it is much easier to climb up the ladder in many parts of europe than in the united states. rana points out that while nearly half of american men with fathers in the bottom 1/5 of the earning curve remain that, don't move up. only a quarter of danes and swedes and only 30% of britains do. in other words, the europeans do much better. the american dream seems to be thriving in europe, not at home. what happened and what can we do? well, there are a number of reasons why we find ourselves in this predicament. but the most important of them is how much we have lagged behind in education. no other factor is as closely linked to upward mobility. education is the engine of social mobility. and for all its current troubles, europe, especially northern europe, has done a much better job providing high-quality public education, particularly for those who are not rich or upper middle class. so they can move up. we talk a lot about the genius of steve jobs these days and justifiably because he was a genius. but he also grew up in an environment that helped. for example, he graduated from high school in 1972 at a time when the california public school system was ranked first in the country and american public education was the envy of the world. the public school he went to in cupertino was high quality with programs in science and the liberal arts. his twin passions. today, california's public schools are a disaster, and the state spends twice as much on prisons as it does on education. so how do we fix our education system? i'm not going to give it away right now. watch my "gps" special tonight. it's called "restoring the american dream: fixing education." it airs at 8:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m. eastern tonight. now back to our regular show. let's get started. the issue of the "atlantic" magazine that will hit the newsstands next week has a terrific story that adds significantly to a growing body of evidence on the pakistan problem up problem. cnn has special early access. one of the authors, jeffrey goldburg, joins me now, welcome. >> thank you. >> let's cut to the chase. the most interesting part of the piece is this conversation that you report between the head of the pakistani army and the head of the unit that is basically in charge of nuclear weapons. >> right. what happened afterafter, the ii army is shocked that u.s. raiders can come in, kill someone, kill someone in an army garrison town, leave without the pakistani military even knowing. so after, this the pakistani military gets very, very worried it american access to pakistan's nuclear weapons. and of course, as you know, pakistan treasures its nuclear weapons more than any other aspect of its arsenal certainly. and -- and -- >> it would be fair for them to think, as you point out, that there might be an american plan, a kind of a plan deep in the pentagon that in a worst case scenario if something terrible happened in pakistan, we would find a way of going in and securing the nuclear weapons. >> there -- there are plan, in fact. it's a very, very high priority for american planners. we'd rather have nothose nuclea weapons not fall in the hands of gee haddists, if the taliban gets closer to some of these bases. so what happened was this -- the spd, this pakistani army branch, gets a call from general kyani, chief the army staff, saying are we secure -- not from jihadists but from america. >> and what does the head of this nuclear unit, what does he do in response to kayani's concerns? >> well, this is very interesting. what happens is the nuclear program has already dispersed around the country. there are 12 or 15 sites where you could plausibly believe that there are nuclear weapons stored or components of nuclear weapons are stored. one of the pakistani doctrines to keep those weapons safe and away from prying eyes -- not only america's but india's -- is move them around, move them around the country. sometimes they're moved by helicopter. but often they're moved by road. and -- and what happened after abadabad was the pace this movement increased. in other words, they accelerated the velocity of this shell game, if you will. and here's the troubling -- the really troubling aspect of this. there are two ways you can do this, obviously. you can have huge armored convoys that are -- that are driven at night, well protected, moving weapons and components. but of course that draws attention. not only the attention of jihadists or whatever might be interested, but -- but spy satellites and et cetera so what happens is very often these war heads and material are moved around in the equivalent of delivery vans. over -- >> u.p.s. trucks basically? >> you wish. i mean, u.p.s. would probably do a fairly good job of it. it's an open question of how good a job is being done. now obviously if the intelligence is good, if they have good operational security on the movement of these trucks, put aside the issue of how dangerous pakistani roads are on a daily basis, but put that aside, if they have good operational security then no one knows where these trucks going at any given moment. but because we know that the pakistani military has been infiltrated to some degree by people who are sympathetic to organizations like the taliban, that's a whole other level of worry. >> you mention in the article very specifically that the weapons in these unsecure or insecure convoys, perhaps one truck moving around, were both unmated and mated. this struck me as very, very worrying. explain what the difference is. >> right. well demated weapons are weapon in which the warhead is in one place. the fissile core is in another, the delivery system is another place entirely. so if you were plotting to steal a nuclear weapon, you're going to have a harder time when they're separate. and so we got reports that sometimes these weapons are actually the smaller tactical sized weapons that are -- that are mated permanently. the way they're designed is such that it's not possible to de-mate them. so you could have a complete nuclear weapon being driven around the streets of -- of pindi or la hor or karachi, where the naval base was that was attacked not long ago. and that's a whole -- another level of worry. and i know that people in the united states government are obviously very worried about that level of security. >> you also point out, and this is somewhat public knowledge, that you flush out some of the details. there have been attacks on six different bases in pakistan that are considered to be -- or rumored to have nuclear weapons on them, correct? >> there have been several attacks over the past five or six or seven years. the -- the attack that to me is the most interesting was the attack that came a few weeks after the abadabad raid. an attack on a naval air base outside karachi which some people believe might be a place that you would have nuclear weapons ready for delivery in case of a war between pakistan and india. they managed -- it's not only the fact that these guys penetrated the base, it's that they stayed on the base for i think 16 or 18 hours before they were neutralized. and they had a specific target. they were going for the p3 o'ryan spy planes, they blew up two of them. they had a very good idea of what they should be attacking, destroying. and they succeeded. this, of course -- in pakistan, where i did this reporting, it's widely assumed among people who are trying to deal honestly with the subject that these taliban figure who broke into the base had inside help. they wouldn't have known where to go otherwise. it's a large base. and so you have multiple situations where over the last years where these bases have been attacked. sometimes the attacks have been successfully repelled. sometimes it's not been so successful. >> jeffrey goldberg, fascinating article. thank you. >> thank you. when we come back, we're going to put jeffrey's findings to a pakistani who may have answers. the former army chief, the former president, pervez musharraf. stay with us. doesn't this worry you that this is happening? >> i don't think so. our nuclear ethics are very, very dispersed. and economic growth. north america actually has one of the largest oil reserves in the world. a large part of that is oil sands. this resource has the ability to create hundreds of thousands of jobs. at our kearl project in canada, we'll be able to produce these oil sands with the same emissions as many other oils and that's a huge breakthrough. that's good for our country's energy security and our economy. and started earning loads of points. you got a weather balloon with points? yes, i did. [ man ] points i could use for just about anything. ♪ keep on going in this direction. take this bridge over here. there it is. [ man ] so i used mine to get a whole new perspective. ♪ [ male announcer ] write your story with the citi thankyou premier card, with no point caps, and points that don't expire. get started at thankyoucard.citi.com. with no point caps, and points that don't expire. ♪ ♪ ♪ when your chain of supply ♪ goes from here to shanghai, that's logistics. ♪ ♪ chips from here, boards from there ♪ ♪ track it all through the air, that's logistics. ♪ ♪ clearing customs like that ♪ hurry up no time flat that's logistics. ♪ ♪ all new technology ups brings to me, ♪ ♪ that's logistics. ♪ [ female announcer ] introducing sheer ribbons lotion from gold bond ultimate. [ woman ] for a softness i can feel, radiance i can see. [ female announcer ] new sheer ribbons. as we were discussing, the new article in "the atlantic" paints a frightening perspective of pakistan. pervez musharraf ran pakistan's army and government for much of the last decade. thank you very much, president musharraf. >> you're welcome. >> i'd like to talk about some of the revelations in the article in "the atlantic." the first one is widely known, is that over the last years there have been six attacks by militants on sites that are generally known to be pakistani nuclear sites. you know, the sergoda air base, the atonement, the dara ghadzi site. don't you worry about this happening? >> the nuclear assets? >> yes. >> i don't think so. our nuclear assets are well disbursed, strongly held. &placaand placed in very reinfo areas which are not too accessible. >> you don't think that these attacks were an effort by militants to get at the nuclear arsenal -- >> no, i don't think so at all. >> so in this article, the allegation is based on multiple conversations with pakistani and american sources that after the raid, general kayani called the head of the group and asked them to make weapons more secure from the possibility of a raid by the united states and what was ordered was that the weapons then move in low-tech, low-security convoys, just trucks, and start moving around pakistan. that these trucks had both de-mated components, nuclear components, but also mated ones, intact nuclear weapons. what's your reaction? >> first of all, as far as movement, et cetera, is concerned, i am not privy to any such thing so i wouldn't be able to comment. i don't know. >> was it -- in your day, was special a policy to move these weapons around in trucks? >> no, that was not a policy, and i don't know whether it's being done now. i don't know it. but as far as this mating and demating is concerned, they are all de-mated. i think even when we had a confrontation with india, we never mated the weapons. and i don't think india did. so because we have conventional strength to meet the challenges of war. so we don't have to go unconventional right away. therefore they were kept mated. >> you said they were de-mated because they were effectively live nuclear weapons? >> yes, and they are not required to be mated. and therefore, they were never mated. i don't -- whoever has written this, i don't know whether this is true. >> under your rule you did not allow this -- >> everything that the spd does, doesn't have to be informed to the president or the prime minister of pakistan. things are done independently, they're -- their locations, their movement from science organizations to the force. nobody tells you all the time everything that is happening. governance is not such a one-sided, one-track issue. there are 1,000 things happening. these thing are not -- >> but an issue when nuclear weapons were being moved around the country, showerly as president you would have been told in general this is the process, not every time that these things happens -- >> no, no, never told. there are locations to be held, and there are forces to hold them. now it is not that every time something moves, okay, we are moving this from point a to point b. such regular information, running commentary is not given, you know. >> but you really have no worries about the security of the -- of the arsenal? the fact that they're moving them around, if they were, would that suggest to you that there is some kind of nervousness about attacks either from -- by militants or potentially a plan by the united states -- >> no. i don't think it is possible from my parly military perspective for anyone including the united states to attack them that easily. they are very well dispersed and in good positions and guarded. so therefore, i don't think it's as simple as osama bin laden action or one point action which is a soft target. this is a very hard target. these are very hard targets. and in places which are not accessible. >> with the rise of militant and terrorist attacks in pakistan that the isi has suffered, that the pakistani army has suffered, you don't worry about the security of pakistan's nuclear weapons? >> i don't. i don't. unless pakistan is -- the governance of pakistan is taken over by some religious extremist political organization. >> do you think that could happen? >> i don't think so. the moment, religious parties only have 3% or 4% of the total seats. and i don't see that happening in the near future. >> let's talk about the osama bin laden issue because osama bin laden presumably went to abadabad and started living there while you were president. there are, as you know, an enormous amount of suspicion and there are modest amounts of intelligence evidence that suggests that he had to have had some local support. he was living as people often point out one mile from pakistan's version of wonest point, your military training academy. what is your sense of what happene happened? >> my sense is clear that it's not a sense of complicity, it's a sense of terrible negligence. i say that, yes. if it was for -- if he believed that he was there for five years, i say if he believe because i'm not fully convinced that he was holed up this for five years. however, might take the word of the united states that they ought to give some evidence about that. two years was in my tenure. and i know that i didn't know. one thing i am very sure of, 500% sure of is that i didn't know. is it possible at the lower level, is it possible that the army or intelligence was following a policy which was not given by me? i don't think that is possible because -- because they -- i am from them, i am from the army. an officer mainly by the army. >> you've been critical of president obama's decision to withdraw -- draw daown american troops in afghanistan. you said you thought having timetables was a bad idea. now you've begun to talk about what afghanistan would look like as america draws down. do you see a great game beginning where pakistan and india struggling for influence in the battleground that is afghanistan? >> india is certainly, certainly doing that. and unfortunately, if one government is going along. i know that diplomats, intelligence personnel, military men, security people, go to india for training. i have been behind backwards -- >> from snafg. >> -- from afghanistan? >> from afghanistan. i have been be bending backwards, saying we open our training institution free of cost. come to afghanistan, we'll train you. not one has come. >> but he gave a speech or statement the other day saying if america were to attack pakistan, afghanistan would be by pakistan's side. what do you make of that? >> i think -- i think this is -- totally preposterous to imagine this kind of thing. and then i thank him that this is the first time he's made a pro-pakistan statement. >> so you don't don't trust him? >> not at all. >> what do you think that will happen to him? will he be able to hold on to power as americans draw down? does he have support in pakistan? >> i think it's going to be very difficult, very difficult. very, very difficult. he is not liked by the majority because of what he's doing. >> what you're describing, though, as the united states draws down, is the potential for very unstable afghanistan with a weak karzai at the head. pakistan and india struggling for domination. >> yes. there's confusion. there's confusion. i get a feeling that maybe we really will work toward whatever happened then. now if we have a strong army which they are trying to develop, i think a strong army there, but is it balanced? is the strong army again going to be target dominated? so therefore, are they starting a new war with the taliban, platooned? really i don't know these things. maybe this something happening which is much wiser than what i am thinking, but i don't know. >> pervez musharraf, pleasure to have you on. >> thank you. thank you very much. >> and we will be back. who's the president of ubeci-becki-stan-stan. ki-becki-. hey, did you ever finish last month's invoices? sadly, no. oh. but i did pick up your dry cleaning and had your shoes shined. well, i made you a reservation at the sushi place around the corner. well, in that case, i better get back to these invoices... which i'll do right after making your favorite pancakes. you know what? i'm going to tidy up your side of the office. i can't hear you because i'm also making you a smoothie. [ male announcer ] marriott hotels & resorts knows it's better for xerox to automate their global invoice process so they can focus on serving their customers. with xerox, you're ready for real business. what makes us number one in motorcycle insurance? we love bikes. we love riders. and most of all, we love to ride. perfect hair every time. leading the pack in motorcycle insurance. now, that's progressive. call or click today. we've been talking about pakistan a fair bit today. we've mentioned afghanistan. but there are other stans that are important to america. not, of course, according to herman cain. >> when they ask me who's the president of uzbeki-beki-beki stan-stan, i'm going to say, you know, i don't know, do you know? >> mr. cain i think was talking about uzbekistan. americans actually familiar with a whole other stan. >> my name is bore at, i came from kazakhstan. can i say first we support your war of terror? [ applause ] >> but there's another one yet that was in the news this week, and it made a decision that historians might mark as an inflection point for america in the 21st century. i'm talking about kyrgyzstan, a landlocked mountainous former soviet state. it elected a new president, and one of the first decisions he made was to announce that he would shut down the manas air base once its lease expires in 2014. it's our only major air force base in central asia and has been a crucial conduit of supplies to afghanistan. come 2014, whether we're still in afghanistan or not, it will be time to move out of kyrgyzstan. and russia is moving back in. after implicitly supporting s i kyrgyzstan's mass uprising last year, moscow is now rebuilding ties with its former soviet substate. not only does moscow keep its military air base there, the new leadership has also said it would consider joining a proposed euro asian union led by moscow. but let me return to why the story is relevant to the u.s. just last month, you heard the news that washington was going to pull out all its troops from iraq by the end of the year. while it's great that american troops are coming home, it is now well known that the white house didn't get the outcome it wanted. it was hoping to keep some troops in iraq to train iraqi forces. it was hoping to ensure that iran wouldn't gain influence there. so in both iraq and kyrgyzstan, democratically elected governments, governments that america has encouraged and helped, have requested that the americans go home. it sounds like bad news, but i don't think this is such a bad development. the united states has to manage its foreign policy resources more carefully. that means we will likely do fewer massive military operations like iraq. that's good. those kinds of operations have proven to be incredibly expensive, fraught with troubles, and rarely produced the benefits that justified the costs. we have, for example, achieved a good outcome in libya. at a fraction of the cost of iraq and with no lives lost. we've shared the responsibility with other stakeholders, the europeans. so drawing down on our various commitment abroad will give us greater flexibility. there's an indian scholar, roger mohn, who says if the u.s. steps back, it will see that it has a lot more options. he's talking about our presence in afghanistan. he says at this point you're sitting in the middle, and are you everybody's hate object. and everyone sees some great conspiracy what whatever you do. once you powell, you have a lot more options, and you can influence and effect outcomes rather than being pushed around and attacked by everyone. remember, the u.s. still has the largest military in the world and by a long margin. in the last decade by spending trillions of dollars in iraq and afghanistan, we lost our top billing in other crucial fields at home, education, innovation, infrastructure, and more. the irony is that by asking us to leave kyrgyzstan and iraq might be doing us a favor, by investing less and more secludely abroad, we might be able to get back to being number one at home. also we might be liked by other countries because we are not seen as occupying them. remember, that's what brought one fictional character from the stans to america in the first place. >> king in the castle. king in the castle. >> and we'll be right back. is there a crisis in education? because there are a number of people who feel that some of this rhetoric is overblown, that we're scaring people unnecessarily. >> well, hopefully we are scaring people because i think it's quite necessary. we believe doing the right thing never goes unnoticed. liberty mutual insurance. responsibility. what's your policy? ♪ we're centurylink... a new kind of broadband company committed to providing honest, personal service from real people... 5-year price-lock guarantees... consistently fast speeds... and more ways to customize your technology. ♪ education? time for a check of today's top stories. breaking news this morning. george papandreou will resign after a new coalition government is formed. the move follows papandreou's acceptance of a bailout package from the european union to keep his country from falling into bankruptcy. there are fresh concern about iran's nuclear program. western diplomats tell cnn that an international atomic energy agency report due out this week will make the most detailed claims yet that iran is trying to build nuclear weapons. at least one person was killed and 15 injured when four ieds blew up at an indoor market in central baghdad today. the latest explosions came despite the extra security measures put in place across iraq for a muslim holiday. seven people were killed today in a suicide attack near a mosque in northern afghanistan. the blast occurred as people were leaving the mosque after prayers. those are your top stories, now back to "fareed zakaria gps." tonight don't miss a brand new "gps" special, "restoring the american dream: fixing education." it airs at 8:00 and 11:00 p.m. on cnn. i look at just how bad our education problem is, other countries that are tops in education, and what we can learn from them. one of the people featured in tonight's show is my next guest. bill gates might actually be the wealthiest man in the world if he didn't give away so much of his money. don't feel bad, he's still number two. and recently one of the biggest recipients of cash from the bill and melinda gate foundation has been american education. $5 billion. what has he learned? let me let gates tell you that. is there a crisis in education? because there are a number of people who feel that some of this rhetoric is overblown. that we're scaring people unnecessarily. >> well, hopefully we are scaring people because i think it's quite necessary. if you believe this is a country of equity, that people have equal opportunity, we're failing to deliver that because the inner city school systems are dropping out the majority of the kids. and that's terrible for those individuals, and it's terrible for the country. and yet we're spending massively on these schools. we've more than doubled what we spend on schools the last 30 years, and we should be age to engage those kids and give them skills so that they're qualified for work. >> what about compared with the rest of the world? do you think these comparisons are meaningful? >> absolutely. now it's not a bad thing that the rest of the world improves their education systems. it's not some zero-sum game where if you got told tomorrow that china messed up their education system, you don't go, yeah. they're starting to drop out kids like us, yeah, they're messing up. it's not a game like that. it's good that human potential globally is being tapped into. but yes, others are in many cases catching up, and in many moving ahead of us. >> i've heard people say, you know, the american system needs to be one which encourages people to be curious, adventurous, taking risks, not -- not the sort of asian-style system where everyone's hurtling toward the test. and they will only cite you as an example. they'll say, look, bill gates dropped out of college, spent hours and hours in computer labs just dreaming up stuff. this was not working methodically toward a test. what do you say to them? >> well, certainly if my example is meaningful, it's just one data point. my success as an engineer is because i was good at math. and i had good math teachers. and yes, i memorized the tables and how things worked and -- and gaining those facts helped me think about the patterns in those facts and looking at those patterns helped me think about what -- what computer could do in a very rich way. we don't have countries that are good at education who aren't inventive and creative. you know, is china creative? yes, there's all sorts of inventive stuff being done this. now there's a huge lag time between when you get basic education right which is very helpful to your economy bradley, and when you start to have the superstars who are inventing new software, new drugs and things like that. and china is proceeding down that path, creating research institutions, having smart scientists come back to their country. they're further along than india is, but there's still quite a gap. the u.s. by that measure is benefiting from 50 years -- the entire post-world war ii period where we believed in education, we put a lot of state resources into it. we funded research. it was part of our culture that you wanted to learn and contribute in those areas, and, you know, the fruits of that are very clear. >> what do you think makes a good teacher? >> as i've watched the videos of the great teachers, they are constantly looking out and seeing if the kids are starting to fidget. they are bringing up the energy level. they're calling on this kid. they're using examples. it's a fascinating thing. when we first got into this, that was the first data point i was interested in, are there some teachers who are really great. if it turned out they were all plus or minus 10% the same, i would say, okay, we have to discover something new that's not been discovered. and the likelihood of that is very low. instead, all we're doing is taking what the great teachers are doing and spreading that to the other teachers. so this is not it us deciding what good teaching is or inventing, you know, new, wild theories about how kids think or something. it's simply having a system that spreads the vast ways that teaching gets done. >> you're saying you don't know what makes a good teacher. but you spend a lot of time now thinking about how to excite three kids in particular, your own. when you watch your kids, what do you try to do to get them interested in math and science and stuff that's sometimes a little harder? >> well, one-on-one teaching is kind of the ideal that you -- you'd like to achieve. where you see where they're confused. you see where they're bored. and you're tuning what you say according to that. a classroom is much harder than that. i also get to take kids around to neat places. you know, my son and i have been to garbage dumps and toilet paper factories and particle cly colliders and museums, and all sort of things that are unusually stimulating. you get to work hands on, you get to talk to the people who work there. and you know, i wish every kid had the chance to go around and try out these things. >> over the hastert flast few y all the money you've spent, are you disheartened at where american education is, or do you think you can actually bend this curve? >> i believe it can be done. i think it's important enough that the r&d money should be this. that the new measurement tools should get tried out. and i do think that a lot of these things will be adopted. i think it can make a big difference. it's unfortunate that this is a time when the amount of money going to education will not be increasing. you know, i wish it was, you know, i'll push for that in any way that i can. >> so you're going to keep putting money into education? >> absolutely. something like this, you shouldn't go into it unless you've got, you know, at least 15, 20 years' patience to figure things out, tune it, try it out. push for the adoption and the real-time learning. there are no quick wins in this space. but, you know, you can see in the charters, you can see in the early piloting of some of these online hybrids, combined with the classroom. you can see a glimpse that we could make it a lot better. >> we'll be back in a moment with more on america's education crisis with the man responsible for making sure our children are properly educated. president obama's education secretary, arne duncan. >> if you look at college graduation rates among young people, we are now 16th in the world. one generation ago, we were first. we've flatlined, stagnated. [ man ] it's my new malibu. [ woman ] '57 bel air -- still have it. [ both ] our camaro. [ man ] chevy silverado -- third one. [ male announcer ] people love their chevys. that's because for 100 years, chevy has offered the best value in america. come in now and help us celebrate our centennial open house, november 1st through the 7th. and fall in love with your next chevy. ♪ if bill gates is one of the few people that has enough money to try to fix american education, arne duncan is one of the few that has the power to change it. he is president obama's secretary of education. secretary duncan, thank you for joining me. >> thanks so much for the opportunity. >> how does the united states compare with the rest of the world, particularly the rest of the advanced or rich countries in education? if you were to put it very simply. >> not nearly as well as we should. i think part of my job is to wake up the country. i think we've opinion far too complacent. many different ways to measure it. if you look at college graduation rates among young people, we are now 16th in the world. one generation ago, we were first. we've flat lined, we've stagnated, 15 other countries have passed us by. if you read math results, we're anywhere from 15th to 30th, so we're nowhere where we should be, where we need to be. some think we're at the top in international rankings, we're not. that's the brutal truth. >> why do you think it happened? why did we go from being first in the world this college aggression to 50th? why did these areas -- a generation ago we were doing pretty well. >> we weren't doing well, we were doing great. we were leading the world, we were number one. we got complacent. we got self-satisfied. and other countries were hungrier than us, they invested more, they outcompeted us, they worked harder, they made this a national priority. we have to stop resting on our laurels from 25, 30 years ago, we're not competing in our districts, cities, and states or in the country, we're competing with india and china and south korea and singapore to keep good jobs in this country. good middle-class jobs where folks can own their own home and support their family. jobs that are going to go to where the knowledge workers are and the world shrunk. these jobs can go anywhere. if we want to retain these jobs in this country, we have to do a better job of educating young people so that companies will want to invest and want to build here in the united states. >> and when you look at high school kids who are graduating and then go on to college, both at the high school level and college level, a huge number of dropouts, right? >> on the high school side, it's actually staggering. we have about a 25% dropout rate from high school. as you know, there are no good jobs, none, in today's economy for a high school dropout. we lose about a million young people each year from our schools to the street. to me that's both morally unacceptable, and it's economically unsustainable. >> so what are we doing wrong? i mean, one of the things i notice is the school year. and you've talked about it. and if you -- if you accept malcolm gladwell's line that you've got to practice 10,000 hours before you get proficient at anything, well, the koreans and even the europeans, particularly northern europeans, they goat that 10,000 hours a lot faster than we do. >> when i talk it us being far too complacent, our academic calendar, our school year is based upon the agrarian economy. a 19th century model. i don't think your children, my children are working in the fields anymore. and somehow our calendar is still based upon when children worked in the fields in the summer. our children in this country are as smart, as talented, as committed, as entrepreneurial as children anywhere in the world. but dmirn other countries, india, china, south korea, going to school 30, 35 more days than children here. >> what does that add up to over a high school lifetime? >> i use this analogy, if you're a sports team and your team is practicing five days a week and my team is practicing three days a week, you're going to beat me more often than i'm going to beet you. i want to give children a chance to compete in this global compre. we need longer days, longer weeks. we need to get rid of long summer breaks, especially for disadvantaged children. middle-class children who have access to libraries and parks and museums in the summer, that's okay. but we have so many children where during the summer they fall behind. they come back to school in september, further behind than when they left in june. that doesn't make sense. children shouldn't just be learning six hours a day, sitting in a chair, 24/7, children can and should be learning today. >> we have these bad scattered showers in comparison to the rest of the advanced world. and yet we spend not just more but considerably more money. is it fair for an american taxpayer to say, where the hell is all that money going? >> it is a fair question. we have to invest, but we can't invest in the status quo. so where we have crumbling schools and where schools lack math labs and science labs and computer labs, we do our children and ultimately our country a great disservice. and we're trying to rebuild that. the president's job act is asking for $30 million to put into that. where you see class size skyrocketing, that's not good for children and education. we need to invest and need to invest wisely. other countries, high-perming countries, do a couple things that we don't do. first of all, they pay their teachers a lot more. they really get great talent to come in. they also invest more in disadvantaged communities. so there's -- you don't have the great disparities, great achievement gaps that you have here. do we have to invest? absolutely, we have to do it in a much more thoughtful, strategic way. and you have to do this trade told career. people look for one simple answer. it's not that simple. i stay up at night worrying about the challenges, worrying about the 25% dropout rate. worry being making sure we've got great middle-class jobs in this country. but i know we can get this done. we just have to challenge the status quo and ways we haven't, and have to stop pointing fingers and work together k. america get this done? i know we can get this done. >> arne duncan, thank you very much. >> thanks for the opportunity. and we will be back. [ horn honks ] hey, it's sandra -- from accounting. peter. i can see that you're busy... but you were gonna help us crunch the numbers for accounts receivable today. i mean i know that this is important. well, both are important. let's be clear. they are but this is important too. [ man ] the receivables. [ male announcer ] michelin knows it's better for xerox to help manage their finance processing. so they can focus on keeping the world moving. with xerox, you're ready for real business. [ male announcer ] it's powerful and stylish. it's the world's thinnest 14-inch laptop with internal dvd. but mostly, it helps me combine my two favorite hobbies: watching sports and getting paaaid. you know. [ male announcer ] designed with the 2nd gen intel® core™ i5 or i7 processors. performance you need, style you want. for a limited time purchase select dell pc's and receive our holiday photo solution. our gift to you. an accident doesn't have to slow you down. with better car replacement, available only from liberty mutual insurance, if your car's totaled, we give you the money to buy a car that's one model-year newer... with 15,000 fewer miles on it. there's no other auto insurance product like it. better car replacement, available only from liberty mutual. it's a better policy that gets you a better car. call... or visit one of our local offices today, and we'll provide the coverage you need at the right price. liberty mutual auto insurance -- responsibility. what's your policy? aspercreme breaks the grip, with maximum-strength medicine and no embarrassing odor. break the grip of pain with aspercreme. this week a strange but significant anniversary was marked. 100 years ago tuesday on november 1, 1911, the first aerial bombing occurred which brings me to the question on "gps challenge." on which country was that first aerial bomb dropped 100 years ago? was it current day turkey, libya, italy, or egypt? stay tuned, and we'll tell you the correct answer. make sure you go to cnn.com/gps for ten more questions, and while you're there, check out our web site, the global public square, you'll find fresh content all the time, interviews, analysis, insights. and don't forget, you can follow us on twitter and facebook. this week's book of the week is titled simply "steve jobs." i know, i know. everyone is reading it. but it really is a great read. it is a quintessentially american story of a working class kid who dreamed up a new world. the book tells the story of jobs' business success, but it also explores the fascinating personal life of steve jobs, who was deeply affected by the counterculture of the 1960s and stayed true to its ethos and practices to the end. it's the compelling story of a compelling man. and now for the "last look." citementingly unremarkable glass of water. except it's not just any water, it comes from the flooded basement of the fukushima nuclear power plant in japan. officials there have been insisting for weeks that the water is safe to drink. but it seems people didn't buy that theory. so one government official set out to prove a point. now that is dedication to your job. as you can see, he doesn't look entirely comfortable. is that a nod to the skies? maybe he shouldn't be. experts confirm this wasn't a smart move. water is a shield against radioactivity, so it's very difficult to gauge how radioactive that water was. good luck. the correct answer our to see our "gps" question was b. the first aerial bombing

Related Keywords

Ieds , Pakistan , Article , Response , Magazine , Access , Revelations , Reporter , Atlantic , Nuclear Arsenal , Cnn , Northern Afghanistan , President , United States , Musharraf , Charges , Drawdown , Least , Of Ubecki , Problems , Trouble , Studies , Becki Stan , Herman Cain , Fixing Education , Number , Bill Gates , Thinking , Secretary , First , Look , Stake , Occupy Wall Street , It , Inequality , Protesters , Cities , Bank Bailouts , 99 , Countries , Sense , Loss Of Social Mobility , Frustration , Mobility , Idea , Anyone , Status , Path , Mind Other , The American Dream , Social Mobility , Cover Story , Spectrum , 1970 , 1 5 , Chance , Words , Data , Northern Europe , Parts , Bottom , Top , Ladder , 2 3 , 17 , Europeans , Rana Points , Men , Earning Curve , Fathers , Half , Danes , Swedes , Don T Move Up , Britains , 30 , Home , Important , Predicament , Reasons , Troubles , Factor , Engine , Steve Jobs , Job , Lot , Genius , Education , Class , Country , High School , Example , Environment , American Public Education , California Public School System , 1972 , World , Science , Public School , Programs , Envy , Liberal Arts , Passions , California S , In Cupertino , Schools , Estate , Gps , Education System , Special , Prisons , Disaster , Restoring The American Dream , Show , 11 , 00 , 8 , Story , Issue , Evidence , Body , Hit The Newsstands Next , Jeffrey Goldburg , Head , Part , Problem , Conversation , Authors , Piece , Cut To The Chase , One , Weapons , Unit , Charge , Pakistani Army , The Ii Army , Afterafter , Military , Someone , Raiders , Leave , Army Garrison , Town , Kind , Course , Plan , Arsenal , Aspect , Something , Way , Fact , Pentagon , Case Scenario , Planners , Nothose Nuclea Weapons , Bases , Some , Spd , Taliban , Kyani , Hands , Call , Gee Haddists , Chief The Army , Jihadists , Program , Concerns , General Kayani , Sites , Components , India S , Eyes , Doctrines , 12 , 15 , Movement , Road , Helicopter , Space , Abadabad , Ways , Convoys , Shell Game , Troubling , Velocity , Two , Whatever , Attention , Et Cetera , War Heads , Spy Satellites , Trucks , Question , Ups , Material , Delivery Vans , Dover , Security , Intelligence , No One , Basis , Roads , Aside , People , Level , Worry , Organizations , Degree , Difference , Truck , Place , Weapon , Delivery System , Core , Another , Warhead , Karachi , Pindi , Streets , Naval Base , Hor , Whole , La , Attacks , Knowledge , Details , United States Government , Six , Attack , Interesting , Five , Seven , War , Raid , Case , Delivery , Naval Air Base , Target , Base , Guys , 18 , 16 , Attacking , Spy Planes , Reporting , O Ryan , Destroying , Help , Figure , Subject , Situations , Answers , Findings , Jeffrey Goldberg , Pervez Musharraf , Doesn T , Stay , Growth , Ethics , Jobs , Oil Sands , Resource , Oil Reserves , Ability , Hundreds , Thousands , Oils , Emissions , Project , Kearl , Canada , Points , Economy , Yes , Energy Security , Breakthrough , Earning Loads , Weather Balloon , Oman , Announcer , Anything , Perspective , Bridge , Direction , Don T , Logistics , Point Caps , Supply , Citi Thankyou , Chain , Premier , Thankyoucard Citi Com , Shanghai , Hair , Clearing Customs , Flat , Chips , Boards , Technology Ups , Ribbons , Woman , Softness , Radiance , Lotion , Bond , Army , Government , Much , Militants , President Musharraf , Sergoda Air Base , Dara Ghadzi , Happening , Assets , Areas , Effort , Lacaand , Conversations , Sources , Allegation , Group , Possibility , Just Trucks , Ones , Policy , Thing , Wall , I Don T Know , Reaction , Confrontation , Mating , Demating , De Mated , Challenges , Strength , Rule , Things , Everything , Locations , Force , Science Organizations , Prime Minister , Nobody , Does , Governance , Showerly , 1000 , Forces , Process , Moves , Worries , Commentary , Point A To B Such Regular Information , Nervousness , Military Perspective , Action , Positions , Osama Bin Laden , Places , Terrorist , Targets , Rise , Isi , I Don T , Extremist , Parties , Talk , Organization , Seats , Let , 3 , 4 , Support , Amounts , Amount , Wonest Point , Suspicion , Version , Military Training Academy , Complicity , Negligence , Word , Tenure , 500 , Decision , Officer , President Obama , Troops , Timetables , Great Game Beginning , Influence , Battleground , Diplomats , Security People , Personnel , Training , Go To India , Snafg , Statement , Cost , Training Institution , Speech , Side , Time , Him , Potential , Majority , Karzai , Confusion , Feeling , Domination , Pleasure , Platooned , Invoices , Ubeci Becki Stan , Ki Becki , Office , Reservation , Pancakes , Dry Cleaning , Shoes , Corner , Sushi , Business , Xerox , Marriott Hotels Resorts , Invoice Process , Smoothie , Customers , Motorcycle Insurance , Number One , Most , Progressive , Bikes , Riders , Pack , Stans , Stan , Cain , Mr , Bore , My Name , Uzbeki Beki , Uzbekistan , Kazakhstan , News , Applause , Terror , Historians , Kyrgyzstan , Inflection Point , Manas Air Base , Decisions , Soviet , 21 , Air Force Base , Supplies , Release , Conduit , Central Asia , 2014 , Moscow , Ties , Si Kyrgyzstan S Mass Uprising Last , Russia , Leadership , Military Air Base , Substate , Euro Asian Union , Washington , Coming Home , Iraq , Outcome , Didn T , The End , White House , Governments , Wouldn T , There , The Americans Go Home , Iran , Foreign Policy , Development , Bad News , Operations , Benefits , Kinds , Responsibility , Drawing , Costs , Commitment , Fraction , Stakeholders , Libya , Indian Scholar , Roger Mohn , Point , Options , Presence , Middle , Steps , Greater Flexibility , Everyone , Everybody , Outcomes , Conspiracy , Effect , Hate Object , You Powell , Fields , Top Billing , Margin , Dollars , Trillions , More , Secludely , Irony , Innovation , Infrastructure , Favor , To Leave Kyrgyzstan , King , Character , The Castle , Crisis , Rhetoric , Liberty Mutual Insurance , Company , Speeds , Broadband , Price Lock Guarantees , Service , Centurylink , 5 , Technology , Coalition Government , George Papandreou , Stories , Breaking News , Acceptance , Bailout Package , Move , Check , European Union , Bankruptcy , Concern , Iran S Nuclear Program , Western , International Atomic Energy Agency , Market , Security Measures , Explosions , Central Baghdad Today , Person , Claims , Four , Holiday , Mosque , Suicide Attack , Muslim , Blast , Prayers , Fareed Zakaria Gps , Tonight Don T , Brand New , Education Problem , Guest , On Cnn , Money , American Education , Bill , Recipients , Cash , Melinda Gate Foundation , 6 Billion , 5 Billion , Gates , Opportunity , Equity , Kids , Individuals , School Systems , Inner City , Rest , Comparisons , Work , Skills , Game , China , Education Systems , Don T Go , Zero , Others , Messing Up , Human Potential , System , Many , Cases , Risks , College , Computer Labs , Stuff , Test , Sort , Hurtling , Asian , Math , Data Point , Success , Engineer , Patterns , Facts , Computer , Math Teachers , Tables , Sorts , Aren T Inventive , Right , Superstars , Drugs , Software , Bradley , Scientists , Measure , Research Institutions , Gap , 50 , State Resources , Research , Culture , Fruits , Post World War Ii , Teachers , Teacher , Kid , Energy Level , Videos , Fidget , Examples , Same , Minus 10 , Doing , Likelihood , Teaching , Inventing , Theories , Three , Ideal , Little , Classroom , Particle , Factories , Garbage Dumps , Son , Toilet Paper , Museums , Cly Colliders , Hands On , Few , Curve , Hastert , Measurement Tools , R D , You Shouldn T , Learning , Wins , Tune It , Push , Adoption , 20 , Glimpse , Charters , Education Crisis , Hybrids , Piloting , Children , Generation , Arne Duncan , College Graduation Rates , Stagnated , Bel Air , Both , Camaro , Malibu , 57 , Centennial , Chevy , Open House , Value , Chevys , Chevy Silverado , 7th , November 1st , 1 , 7 , 100 , Love , Fix American Education , Thanks , Secretary Duncan , Power , Opinion , Math Results , Rankings , Brutal Truth , College Aggression , We Weren T Doing Well , States , Priority , Laurels , Districts , 25 , Folks , Anywhere , Knowledge Workers , Family , South Korea , Singapore , High School Kids , Companies , Graduating , Dropout Rate , Dropouts , High School Dropout , None , A Million , Line , The Street , Malcolm Gladwell , Koreans , Goat , 10000 , Summer , Calendar , School Year , Model , Smart , 19th Century , 19 , Add , Dmirn , 35 , Team , Sports Team , Analogy , Global Compre , Back To School , Summer Breaks , Libraries , Parks , Children Shouldn T , Comparison , Showers , Doesn T Make Sense , Chair , 24 7 , Shell , Taxpayer , Status Quo , Math Labs , Labs , Class Size Skyrocketing , Disservice , Job Act , 00 Million , 30 Million , Talent , Communities , Answer , Achievement Gaps , Trade , Disparities , Career , Done , K America , Fingers , Ways We Haven T , Horn Honks , Accounting , Sandra , Peter , Michelin , Numbers , Finance Processing , Receivables , Gonna , Dvd , Laptop , 14 , Sports , Processors , Performance , Intel , Getting Paaaid , 2nd Gen , Coretm I5 Or I7 , Hobbies , 2 , Holiday Photo Solution , Pc , Gift , Dell , Car Replacement , Accident Doesn T , Car , Auto Insurance Product , 15000 , Offices , Price , Coverage , Auto Insurance , Grip , Aspercreme , Medicine , Odor , Spain , Bombing , Anniversary , 1911 , November 1 1911 , Bomb , Gps Challenge , Turkey , Egypt , Italy , Book , Global Public Square , Interviews , Content , Questions , Analysis , Insights , Facebook , Twitter , Ten , Tread , Quintessentially American Story Of A Working Class Kid , Reading , The Story Of Jobs Business Success , Counterculture , Life , Ethos , Practices , 1960 , Water , Basement , Glass , Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant , Last Look , Citementingly , Japan , Officials , Government Official , Theory , Dedication , Radioactivity , Nod , Wasn T A Smart Move , Skies , Experts , Shouldn T Be , Viewers , Blow Up , State Of The Union , First Up , Around The World , Fareed Zakaria , Candy Crowley , Luck ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.