Archive for grassroots

2 Football Foundation 10 Year Anniversary WebTV Show and launch of PitchFinderEngland may have missed out on the World Cup but don’t let this leave you feeling despondent. On a positive note both you and your family can use the rest of the summer to play the beautiful game rather than watching it on the TV. And there are many local teams and facilities you can join and use to get a taste of what true grassroots football is all about.

Signing up not only expands your social circle but it will have positive impacts on your health as well.

Aside from increased stamina, it can help you lose weight and tone up and if your children join a team of their own there will be plenty to keep them occupied over the summer holidays.

But if you have not played since school and wouldn’t know where to start, then help is at hand.

In order to get you started, The Football Foundation has launched PitchFinder, the largest database of football facilities in Britain. It allows you to find local pitches and provides information on the type of facilities that you can expect to find there. It also allows you to get route planning information, street maps and aerial views of these sites.

With over £900m worth of funding in over 7,800 grassroots projects over the last ten years by the Football Foundation and its funding partners, getting out there locally is easily achievable.

If all of this leaves you hungry for football glory then log onto this live webTV show where the Chief Executive of the Football Foundation Paul Thorogood will be offering his advice on how you can get your foot on the ball.

Paul Thorogood joins us live online at www.studiotalk.tv on Thursday 8th July at 14:00 to discuss how you can become a bigger part of football

For more information visit www.footballfoundation.org.uk

Duration : 0:19:47

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2 My 2 Year Anniversary on YouTube! RepresentativePress Videoshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BuTQ6ystWrw&feature=PlayList&p=7D2F342A1F2AEA82&index=0&playnext=1
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My 2 Year anniversary on YouTube! RepresentativePress Videos
Excerpt from a 40 minute interview with Noam Chomsky:
TOM MURPHY: I agree with you that – or is this what you’re saying that, is it economic reasons …

NOAM CHOMSKY: Strategic reasons. I mean, economic and strategic, which are impossible to distinguish. But since the Second World War, I’ll quote the State Department, the Middle East oil producing regions have been regarded, I’ll quote the words, “a stupendous source of strategic power.” George Kennan, State Department, head of the planning section said control, not access, control over the Middle East oil gives us “veto power” over what our rivals might do, other industrial powers. You control the spigot, have your hand on the spigot, you have a lot of world control. It’s not even access to oil. The first, roughly, 30 years after the Second World War, the U.S. was – North America was the major oil producer. It wasn’t using Middle East oil, never the less we had to keep an iron hand of control on Middle East oil and if the U.S. were to go to solar energy, they’d still want to control Middle East oil because that’s a lever of world control. Everyone understands it but we’re not allowed to think about it.

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I plan to put the whole interview on YouTube soon.

Here’s a link to another talk Chomsky gave about U.S. Middle East Policy
Noam Chomsky at Columbia University, April 4, 1999

http://www.chomsky.info/talks/19990404.htm

“the US took over from Britain in the Middle East and, in fact, much of the world, after the Second World War. In fact actually, replaced Britain and France. France was summarily expelled— they weren’t given the time of day. Britain however, was given a role. It was given the role of “junior partner”, as the British foreign office rather ruefully described it, accurately. Britain was going to be our lieutenant— the fashionable word is “partner”— as they were described by a senior adviser in the Kennedy administration. That’s reasonably accurate— you’re seeing an example of it right now. The lieutenant is doing its job— the attack-dog, maybe.”

http://www.chomsky.info/talks/19990404.htm

“The core issue in the Middle East is very straightforward, namely oil. Since WWI, when the world began to move onto an oil-based economy, the Middle East has become central in world affairs, for the very obvious reason that it has, by far the largest and the most accessible petroleum resources— primarily in Saudi Arabia, secondarily in Iraq, and thirdly in the Gulf Emirates, and elsewhere. It is, as the State Department described it during the Second World War, when the US was taking over: “It’s a stupendous source of strategic power and the greatest material prize in world history.” “It’s strategically the most important part of the world”, as the president of Columbia University described it, as he was making his transition from Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe to supreme commander of the world— in the White House.”

Duration : 0:2:17

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