Monthly Archives: March 2009

Bernacke

(Community Matters)
Wow, Fed Chair Bernacke is sounding out of touch. Scary.

Is it a Farce?

(Community Matters) Guess that proves who’s the “de facto leader of the Republican party”

Michael Steele has apologized to Rush Limbaugh for referring to him as an “entertainer” who can be “ugly” and “incendiary,” Mike Allen reports.

“My intent was not to go after Rush – I have enormous respect for Rush Limbaugh,” Steele said. “I was maybe a little bit inarticulate. … There was no attempt on my part to diminish his voice or his leadership.”

EARLIER:

Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele took umbrage Saturday night when CNN’s D.L. Hughley referred to radio host Rush Limbaugh as “the de facto leader of the Republican party.”

“No he’s not. I’m the de facto leader of the Republican party,” Steele said. The RNC chief went on to call Limbaugh, who that very day delivered the keynote address to the Conservative Political Action Conference, a mere “entertainer” whose show is “incendiary” and “ugly.”

The Surreal World We’re Living In

(Community Matters) Front page of the NYTimes: Markets Plung Around the World; DOJ Memos on Bush’s Power; Fallen Mortgage Giants; Secret Letter from Obama to Russia, Women Long Viewed As Chattel (Afghanistan).

Other articles on line about the Chairman of the Republican Party having to beg forgiveness of Rush Limbaugh, the guy hoping Obama fails.

It’s a scary world we’re living in – thanks to Rush Limbaugh’s GOP and GWB.

Celebrating 10 Years

(Community Matters) Last night, we celebrated the Entrepreneurs Foundation’s 10 year anniversary with friends, board members and other supporters at the Four Seasons.


Super group of attendees including our mayor pro tem, Brewster McCracken as well as several of the EF founders including our board chair Bill Bock, John Thornton and Lynne Skinner. Current board members (AV’s Phil Siegel, vcfo’s Ellen Wood, Allegro Associates, Elizabeth Davis, AV’s Jeff Browning, Vignette COB, Jan Lindelow, Triton’s Scott Collier, Sentinent Venture’s David Lee), advisory board members (Deloitte’s Amy Chronis and SVB’s Doug Mangum), member company CEO’s, close friends & supporters from the venture capital/high tech world including tech rainmaker Pike Powers and our dear friend and community collaborator Dr. Ken Gladish from the Austin Community Foundation.

Bill Bock (EF board chair), Jack McDonald, John Thornton (EF Advisory Board, co-chair)

This year’s EF Community Leadership Awardee was my close friend Jack McDonald, CEO Perficient and rumored CD-10 candidate 🙂 Jack’s been an extraordinary community leader in his leadership roles at the GACC, Tech Alliance, PeopleFund, PeopleTrust, American Youthworks, Kipp School and People’s Community Clinic. Carla McDonald joined us as well. John Thornton presented Jack with the award, discretely mentioning the rumored first official fundraiser at the Thornton’s Old West Austin home on May 7 (rats, since Steven, Suzanne Deal Booth and I driving to Marfa that day). Previous awardees are Joe Aragona, Bill Wood and Bill Bock. Many many thanks to the Four Seasons for taking such great care of us last night. The food was outstanding, drinks more than plentiful and weather exactly what we asked for since so many enjoyed hanging on the terrace taking in the beautiful lake.

There was a beautiful moment last night. We had a looped slide show projecting. One of our bartenders happened to see a slide of EF presenting a $100,000 check to Habitat for Humanity (we’ve granted them $150k in the last year, in additional to $250k from the Chestnut affordable housing fund). She also saw slides of our volunteers working at the Kipp School. She was so excited. She’s owns a home built by Habitat for Humanity and her daughter attends the Kipp School. Like the cherry on top of a sundae, completely made my day.

Entrepreneurs Affiliates

(Community Matters) We’re hosting our international affiliates meeting this week – actually started with a dinner at our house on Sunday. There are 10 USA affiliates and one in Tel Aviv.

It’s going to be a very tough couple of years for most of the affiliates. (Thank gosh for Austin Ventures and Silicon Labs who are underwriting Austin’s budget for 5 years!) Austin and Silicon Valley by far the largest, healthiest members. Silicon Valley leads the tribe in CSR consulting and the fee for service model. Austin leads in community involvement programs, especially our model of leadership programs (i.e., bringing together business and social entrepreneurs). The Valley & Austin both have 200+ companies which have donated stock. Other affiliates 50 or less. Colorado, and Kentucky newest to join. Some movement in New Mexico but not yet launched. Boston a sleeping outpost with tremendous potential; Seattle is under reconstruction. Tel Avis is strong with impressive results. Northwest (Portland) probably the fourth most impactful franchise.

Great being with such smart and dedicated colleagues. Lots of good ideas about further building value to offer our member companies and sponsors.

The Silver Lining

(Community Matters) GOP strategist Mike Murphy:

The country is changing. Ronald Reagan won in 1980 with 51% of the vote. We all worship Ronald Reagan. But if that election had been held with the current demographics in America today, Ronald Reagan would have gotten 47 percent of the vote. The math is changing. Anglo vote is 74 percent now not 89. And if we don’t modernize conservatism, we are going to have a party of 25 percent of the vote going to Limbaugh rallies, joining every applause line, ripping the furniture up, we’re going to be in permanent minority status.

Jump from 3/8/09 – More on Coming Together

(Community Matters)  continued . . . . 


. . . . The real costs of nearly a decade of misrule by GWB and the GOP won’t be known until the last U.S. troops are brought home from Iraq. But the tab will probably exceed the $3 trillion estimated by Joseph Stiglitz, and the price paid in lives lost will in any case be incalculable. And for what? There were no WMDs. That reminder needs to be a part of any discussion of Iraq: the smoking gun was never going to be a mushroom cloud.And as you rightly point out, not a single senior figure from the Bush administration has apologized for inflicting that appalling, colossal waste of blood and treasure on the rest of us. And they are solely responsible it, the largest debacle in our history. 

There have been much worse sins–slavery, the extermination of the Indians–but for sheer determined stupidity, this one takes the prize with disgusting ease.Although I think the Republicans should be permanently branded as the party of the Iraq War–imagine the elephant logo riding in an insufficiently armored Humvee over an IED–I don’t think there should be war-crime trials or that kind of retribution. In the aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Polish journalist Adam Michnik was asked what should be done about all the Poles who had helped the Soviets oppress their own people. He replied, “Nothing destroys a human being so much as hatred and the need for vengeance . . . So I thought up the formula that one has to be for amnesty and against amnesia . . . You have to remember, but you have to be able to transcend the frontier of your own suffering.” 

I think that’s essential: you have to remember. Our culture encourages, maybe even aspires to, amnesia. The echo chamber of 24-hour news contributes greatly to this–watching it feels like having your head inside a tin bucket that’s being beaten with a hammer–but the pitiful state of historical awareness in this country is systemic and, possibly, intentional. 

Remember in school when history was relegated to being taught by unqualified coaches because, as a course, it was considered unimportant? Perhaps if anyone in the Bush administration had bothered to read up on the British Empire’s experience in Mesopotamia, we might not have gone into Iraq quite so quickly, or at all. So memory, accurate and unsparing, is key.

Too often, calls for forgiveness or magnanimity are really just pleas for amnesia, for forgetfulness. Please don’t listen to anyone who encourages you to take that path. And with memory comes the requirement to remind others of what happened, to discourage their own tendency toward amnesia. In the moral codes of the ancient Greeks and ancient Hebrews, memory was a precondition for justice–justice as opposed to vengeance. Insist that the gross misdeeds of Bush and his cronies never be forgotten; that is to take the first step in ensuring that they are never repeated and that justice, ultimately, will be done.

Keep fighting the good fight, Kip


Steven Dietz in AAS

(Community Matters) Nice piece on our friend & neighbor Steven Dietz in today’s AAS. Article doesn’t mention that Steven’s wife, Allison Gregory, is an accomplished playwright too. We’re long overdue for an evening with these two. (AAS photo)

Jump – March 30 Capitol 10k

(Community Matters) Jump from 3/30/09 – Capitol City 10k



Maureen

retiring AAS Community Manager, Rhetta Kelly

Kathy & Claus with Tana

Stephen Yelenosky & Jill – Happy Birthday today, Stephen

the tribe

Lily

Ivy

a block over, a band just set up and played – rather perfect actually






Will Someone Please Fire Bill Hammond?

(Community Matters) Bill Hammond, President of the Texas Association of Business

‘It’s like a drug dealer. The dealer gives you your first hit for free to get you hooked, and then you are addicted and are paying the consequences for a long, long time.’

arguing against policies to provide aid for unemployed Texans

Rush Limbaugh as Icon of the GOP

(Community Matters) He doesn’t get that most Americans were NOT hoping GWB would fail. here

The Best System of Healthcare in the World?

(Community Matters) Nicholas D. Kristof in the NYTimes.

so many Americans fall through the cracks and don’t have insurance, life expectancy is higher in most of Europe than in the United States. Even the people of Cyprus live longer than Americans, according to United Nations figures.

American children are twice as likely to die by the age of 5 as children in Portugal, Spain or Slovenia. And the World Health Organization found that an American woman’s lifetime risk of dying in childbirth is more than three times that of a woman in Greece, Spain or Germany.

Meanwhile, Americans spend $6,800 per person to get these second-rate results, about double what is paid in Canada or much of Europe.

McKinsey Global Institute found that the United States spends about $650 billion more on health care each year than one would expect for a country at its income level. That’s $2,100 per American, and it’s one gauge of the waste of our existing system.