Monthly Archives: July 2012

#romneyshambles

(Community Matters) I assume this was tweeted in jest but interesting idea:  

@jlr_1969  #MittRomney fears the LDS leadership more than the people of the US. No returns because he’s been shorting his 10% tithe. #romneyshambles

#romneyshambles – is a stream of tweets related to Romney’s European visit. Hasn’t gone too well so far since he insulted the Brit’s just before arriving.

yikes, now they’re digging & piling on – England [sic] is just a small island. Its roads and houses are small. With few exceptions, it doesn’t make things that people in the rest of the world want to buy.

Monocle’s Top 25 Cities

(Community Matters) Monocle’s Top 25 Cities in the World – quality of life

The New Economy Movement

(Community Matters) important article in this month’s Sojourners, ‘the New Economy Movement,’ the democratization of the ownership of wealth – 6 examples happening right now in America (eg., credit unions, coops, employee owned companies, land trusts, etc). A thought provoking piece by Prof. Gar Aplerovitz who I hear will be in Austin soon

American Fiesta in LA

(Community Matters) Steven’s American Fiesta will premiere in LA at the Colony Theatre on Sept 26.

 

Company Volunteerism & Employee Engagement/Satisfaction

(Community Matters) Cool Deloitte study infographic

 

Apple Results

(Community Matters) slower iPhone sales are in anticipation of new model.  Not mutually exclusive . . . an astute investment friend warned me of this earlier this year, also of the availability of old phones and the resale market (potentially even more impactful on sustainability of growth?)

addt’l: But even the growth of the iPad still has not come close to dislodging the iPhone’s importance to Apple. It accounted for 46 percent of the company’s revenue in the quarter, and, according to Mr. Cihra’s estimates, about 60 percent of its profits.

Mr. Cook added that Apple would release the latest version of its Mac operating system, Mountain Lion, on Wednesday.

Syria, Post-Assad

(Community Matters) Thomas Friedman

The NEW New Deal

(Community Matters)  from this morning’s Playbook

FIRST LOOK – ONE OF THE YEAR’S DEEPEST BOOKS — “The NEW New Deal: The Hidden Story of Change in the Obama Era,” by Michael Grunwald (@MikeGrunwald) – TIME senior national correspondent, author of “The Swamp: The Everglades, Florida, and the Politics of Paradise,” and alumnus of WashPost and Boston Globe – out Aug. 14 from Simon & Schuster – Grunwald explains why little-covered policy choices embedded in the stimulus law will long outlast this presidency: The “notional package” that Jason Furman, now principal deputy director of the White House’s National Economic Council, outlined for his boss during the transition included the crucial line, ” Stimulus as down payment on long-term goals.”

Grunwald writes: “Obama had done lots of talking about clean energy, health care, education, and infrastructure. Now he could do lots of spending. … Innovation doesn’t move in a straight line. Disruptive technologies can putter around the margins … for years … But if they get better or cheaper, at some point they can suddenly take off, challenging the status quo. And as they scale up, they get even cheaper. That’s what’s happening as solar power travels down the cost curve. … Solyndra was just a bump in the road to a clean-energy future, and we’re further down the road than most people realize. … Change isn’t always obvious. … Even before Obamacare, the Recovery Act started pushing the medical system in the directions Obama wanted it to go. …

“Vice President Biden was having a bit of fun at my expense, thanking me for my journalistic work as a Recovery Act cheerleader. ‘As you might guess, I’ve read your articles, because you’re the only guy that wrote anything remotely positive,’ he needled me. I’m generally more Debbie Downer than Little Mary Sunshine, and I told Biden this was unusual for me. He grinned. ‘I took ’em to bed, slept on ’em … ‘ We laughed. It was kind of funny because it was kind of true. At times, I did feel like I was writing about an alternative universe stimulus. … Good government is hard to quantify . It’s mostly a counterfactual achievement, measured by the lack of scandals and other flubs. …

“The new New Deal has not left an indelible mark on the national psyche the way the New Deal did. … Its iconic solar arrays and wind farms are in remote areas; its bullet trains are still question marks; its smarter grid and refundable tax cuts have mostly gone unnoticed. … The Recovery Act has already launched America on an inexorable course toward digital medicine and a digital grid, and helping to rescue the country from a second depression will always be part of its legacy as well. … Politically, the most obvious legacy of the stimulus is that politicians want nothing to do with ‘stimulus.’ … Obama still won’t say the S-word, and the bipartisan consensus for fiscal expansion during recessions has completely unraveled. … The ultimate legacy of the stimulus will be decided in 2012.” $17.32 on Amazon http://amzn.to/Kp8ZnD

Frank Rich on Declinist Panic

(Community Matters) Frank Rich in the New York

I know there are lots of problems: economic, environmental, and with public education (though I contend the latter is getting better, public funding notwithstanding & for which I am working to help launch an important initiative). Sometimes problems get worse, sometimes better. I recall back stage at Grant Park almost 4 years ago – we all knew, we acknowledged, that this was gonna be a hard 4 years, there would be few heros, certainly not the president who had to govern during a deja vu of Hoover times. And, we were crying, shouting & happy – I’m not a cheerleader for American exceptionalism. That’s something others should say about us, not us about ourselves. Yet admittedly, in our states of elation, we were awed that the USA was among (if not the) first developed countries to elect a member of a minority as its chief executive officer.

Constant pessimistic drumming is aggravating, self destructive & too often allows us to feel we’re contributing to solutions while couch surfing.

 

Celebrating Kip

(Community Matters) delayed birthday dinner – Steven, Kip Keller, Michael Barnes & moi) celebrating Kip’s 49th birthday. Great tomatoes from the garden made for a lovely French tomato tart from Kate Hill’s Culinary Journey in Gascony . . . not to mention the season’s fantastic peaches for a fresh baked galette served w/ home made vanilla ice cream. There was also lamb chops, halibut, crab cakes, sage roasted potatoes, asparagus and carrots – maybe a wee too much salt but good all around. And the  wines a la Wren Cottage: a 2006 Goldenage Pinot Noir and a 2007 Williamson Cabaernet.

Prediction: Romney Will Not be the Republican Nominee

(Community Matters)  I had not deduced it might be past amnesty for non-reporting, non-payment of taxes on foreign accounts. Paul Abrams’ prediction in the Huffington Post, “Romney Will Not be the Republican Nominee” 

I was thinking the same thing this weekend, ie., Romney will have to withdraw at the convention because of whatever is in the tax returns – must be bad for him to risk not disclosing, then when Ann came out and drew the line in the sand . . .

Matthew Yglesias in Slate

update: interesting tweet: John Linton Roberson@jlr_1969  #MittRomney fears the LDS leadership more than the people of the US. No returns because he’s been shorting his 10% tithe. #romneyshambles

Papi Tino’s Cantina – Queso Champion

(Community Matters) How have I never heard about this place until it won the best quesoff contest contest?  Papi Tino’s Cantina

omg – check out their menu (breakfast, lunch & dinner)