In Oldham, there are ten political parties and five independent candidates contesting seats in the borough’s 20 wards in the local elections
Voters are preparing to head to the polls today (Thursday) to decide who they want to represent them as councillors.
In Oldham, there are ten political parties and five independent candidates contesting seats in the borough’s 20 wards in the local elections.
The parties and independents have set out their stall of what they would offer the electorate and what they hope to achieve for residents if they win enough support.
Here’s what they want to say to voters:
Political parties and independent candidates in Oldham set out their stall ahead of Thursday s local election
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We wish to thank Dr. Giorgios Kallis for his wide-ranging response to our lead essay and for his collegiate tone. Kallis writes that “The problem now is not resource scarcity, but damage to the environment (e.g., biodiversity).” He notes that “Resource use grows hand in hand with GDP, even in service economies like the US or the UK where economists expected reductions,” and he advocates in favor of “degrowth.” Finally, Kallis believes that “satisfactory levels of wellbeing can be achieved at a fraction of the highest national incomes.”
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I wish to thank Dr. Katherine Trebeck and Dr. Dirk Philipsen for their response to our lead essay. It is a pleasure to discuss important ideas with scholars who are searching for the truth and human betterment. Trebeck and Philipsen question “the human ability to invent itself out of the basic laws of physics” and call for “A Wellbeing Economy [that] positions the economy in service of human flourishing and true freedom; less precariousness and more dignity; fewer dirty industries and more businesses who put their workers and communities front and center.”
I agree that humanity still faces many problems, but I ask, along with the British historian Thomas Babington Macaulay, “On what principle is it that with nothing but improvement behind us, we are to expect nothing but deterioration before us.”[1] Below, I outline a number of ways in which the world has become a better place over the last few decades and propose that many people are already living in a Wellbeing Econ
By IAN SHAPIRA | The Washington Post | Published: April 15, 2021 LEXINGTON, Va. The Virginia Military Institute, under fire for its treatment of minorities, has selected its first Black superintendent in the school s 182-year-old history. Cedric T. Wins, a retired Army Major General and 1985 VMI graduate, was appointed Thursday to the top job in a unanimous vote by the college s Board of Visitors, the body that oversees the Lexington school. Wins, 57, who grew up in Hyattsville, Md., and was the first in his family to attend college, has been leading the nation s oldest state-supported military college since Nov. 13, when he was appointed as interim superintendent. He replaced retired Army Gen. J.H. Binford Peay III, 80, who resigned Oct. 26, seven days after Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, D, ordered an investigation into the school, and nine days after The Washington Post chronicled rampant racism on the campus.
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