xjkw
05.02.08, 19:41
Znalazlem ciekawy artykul, czego ucza sie dzieci w szkole we Francji i Niemczech:
www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/opinion/points/stories/DN-theil_03edi.ART0.State.Edition1.45d8091.html
"Economic growth imposes a hectic form of life, producing overwork, stress, nervous depression, cardiovascular disease and, according to some, even the development of cancer"
"The past 20 years have "doubled wealth, doubled unemployment, poverty and exclusion, whose ill effects constitute the background for a profound social malaise,"
"Capitalism itself is described at various points in the text as "brutal," "savage," "neoliberal," and "American."
To we Francji.
" Students learn that private companies destroy jobs while government policy creates them. Employers exploit while the state protects. Free markets offer chaos while government regulation brings order."
One 10th-grade social studies text, Fakt, has a chapter on "What to do against unemployment." Instead of describing how companies might create jobs, the section explains how those without jobs can organize into self-help groups and join weekly anti-reform protests "
A to w Niemczech
Rezultat:
40% - Of Germans and the French would like to be their own boss, compared with 60 percent of Americans.
200% - As many Germans as Americans tell pollsters that you shouldn't start a business if you think it might fail.
1% - Of the French and 2 percent of Germans say they are currently involved in starting a business, compared with 8 percent of Americans.
11% - Of the French and 18 percent of Germans say they are considering starting a business, compared with 18 percent of Americans.