Irony of Priorities
Tony E Hansen
10 July 2012
There is nothing more telling about political priorities than seeing a new stadium being built for a professional sports team. When Major League Baseball began its season this year, another team opened with a brand new ball park in Miami. The new stadiums, or renovations, are dazzling displays and bring the “experience” of the game to a whole new dimension. There is an awful, if not, uncanny irony in the priorities that were considered around the new stadiums. This grand experience comes with a rise in tickets prices, and this comes while critical public services are being defunded.
One irony is, in the particular example of Miami, how the city is still facing major foreclosure problems and unemployment. Consider the massive investments that private and public institutions made in the new ball park while public schools are facing budgetary shortfalls. Consider that billion dollar investment while roads go unrepaired, cops cannot get gear, or teachers get salaries cut. This was a point made by former Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura when reporters asked if he would support new stadiums for the Twin Cities professional teams. The logic of the question seemed consistent with the fact that Mr. Ventura was a professional athlete before being governor, but Mr. Ventura had the good sense to realize that there are more critical things to consider in the budget than entertainment venues.
Another irony is the price of tickets does not go down after this major investment in a larger venue (despite having more available seating), but instead, the price to watch these games also rises (both the ticket as well as the concessions). A family of four can easily wind up spending over $200 per game and still have to use binoculars to watch the game. If you want to watch at field level, the price rises exponentially (New York Yankees price some of these seats around $2000 each). If you are a family of means, this may not be an issue, but with a game that is supposedly considered the “national pastime”, it is clear that many Americans are not able to afford the experience. If one thinks about this a bit, this may imply and reveal that the owners of the teams are completely disconnected from what is available to the many Americans. Maybe this reflects an interest, by the wealthier among us, to segregate society between those who have and those who do not.
We see yet another irony in these cases where the investment for ballparks involves the limited time of the sports season where supposed tourism will be concentrated. For NFL football, there are 10 home games (MLB has 81 home games) not including any playoffs, and we are to justify the civic expense because of the estimated tourism and revenues brought in because of these few games. Thus, commercial interests can plan on having business related to the games at least 10 to 81 days out of 365 days. There must be some serious business that is accumulated during those days that the rest of the year is not considered.
In parallel, we see significant donations from private donors to political campaigns that waste considerable money on a limited time political campaign in order to keep these same people from paying their fair share in taxes that would benefit the whole public (far beyond the campaign season). Interestingly though, the masses have been willing to approve tax supported measures to improve these big arenas or build new ones while they reject tax measures for schools, prisons or revitalization projects. For example, Jackson County Missouri approved beautiful upgrades to Kansas City’s stadiums but balked at sales tax increase to improve Kansas City public schools. All the while, the owners still need the masses in order to profit from the tickets and concessions at the stadiums, regardless of how smart the masses are.
In these cases, the wealthy owners are looking for financial support from the community to off-load some of the costs. This is little different than Wal-Mart requiring the city to provide new infrastructure to be built in order for a new store to be built. However, Wal-Mart will be open more than 10 or 81 days. Here, the wealthy puts some money forward, receives public assistance, and then pockets the profits. This shows why when people like Mitt Romney put money in non-taxable offshore accounts, that method of profit should not be a surprise to people. He was able to profit off his communities here, reduced his tax burden and still pocketed the profits. As one reporter suggested, if you have the means to avoid paying taxes and yet reap the rewards, why would you not? Of course, one has to have the means to set up these ventures and then, convince the public to accept this arrangement. All the while, that person can still whine about the taxes (even if the taxed amount is only a small fraction of the whole).
As someone who has enjoyed going to sports games, I am being hypocritical in arguing against these public arenas due to the personal benefit I have had. Yet, one has to consider that Roman emperors would build large coliseums, hold brutal games, and stage massive orgies in order to appease the masses to help the citizens forget that food supplies were short. Thus, this type of investment gives what the public wants instead of what the public needs. The most logical aim of this line of priority suggests that those with means are all too willing to help appease the masses in order to hide that they are actually taking more from the masses. Perhaps Karl Marx was wrong that the working classes will stop being appeased by the scraps from the bourgeois and realize the worth of the labor is powerful.
20 July 2012
12 June 2012
Time for Work or Politics?
Time for Work or
Politics?
Tony E Hansen
25 Jan 2012
Tony E Hansen
25 Jan 2012
Over
the course of the past few months (and years), GOP candidates have been ramping
up claims that there are problems with President Obama’s leadership.
Interestingly, they have also frankly stated that their number one goal is to “stop”
Obama. Their focus is upon making Obama a one-term president: not job creation,
not deficits, not wars, not civility and definitely not helping middle class
Americans survive the Great Recession. Workers, rights, jobs, research, cost of
education, military and such clearly are not in the interests of the GOP.
There
has never been any hope for bipartisan efforts because that has been contrary
to the GOP focus since Obama was elected (especially since gaining control of
the House). Within hours of his election
(before even taking office), his policies were declared “failures” with no
alternative proposed and no evidence to showcase these purported failures. Just
because the talking heads say “Obama” and “failure” in the same sentence, herds
of “sheep” go around bleating mindlessly this characterization with an eye on embarrassing
Obama rather than addressing serious issues facing the United States. Perhaps
the economy could have a chance to recover quicker with help from those on the
right, but instead they choose to play the role of hecklers and thorns-in-the-side
of Obama.
The
right-wingers have continuously voted to block government efforts without
regard to the needs of the American public. Essentially, they have put
politics ahead of doing the work they were elected to do (e.g. governing).
This, at a time in American history, when people need responsible government
and the government needs to keep the economy from going into tailspins. They
want to discuss the validity of birth certificates, failed notions of
supply-side economics, or bailouts of companies (forgetting that we subsidize
large corporations with far more money year after year). They have brought our
financial stability into question without handling deficit spending, rather
than attempting to solve the issues.
They want to argue morality issues despite acting like spoiled
adolescents willing to jeopardize global markets through their inaction towards
budgets and fiscal matters. Even fellow Democrats have been willing to throw
Obama under the bus when he is not as progressive or liberal as they would like.
We
hear so much about freedom of religion so long as you are practicing a certain
type of Christianity. That is a mockery of religious freedom. As if to believe something different is
painfully inconvenient, people like Santorum want to reverse the gains in
equality and recognition of rights because that does not fit his contorted view
of fundamental Christianity. These people want to protect the unborn but are completely
happy with sending kids to die overseas fighting in Islamic countries. Are we fighting terrorists or are we becoming
them? These people want to introduce legislation
that extends “personhood” to the unborn, but does that also change when the “birthday?”
Maybe these God-fearing right wingers are content with sending kids that are
not even old enough to drink to die in battle because they do not want to clean
up the streets at home.
One
has to question whether these people even care to read the material (e.g. bills
and laws) they are discussing or just wait for O’Reilly and his type to declare
baseless talking points. Consider some
of these guys did not believe there was a recession and they thought that the pessimism
of the past years was completely unwarranted.
As someone who works in the utility industry, I can assure you that
there were dramatic reductions in commercial and industrial energy use during
the past few years that warranted pessimism.
People
are so blinded by rhetoric that they do not see what Obama has accomplished in
the last few years. We forget there were some really pressing issues that
needed to be handled, and without intervention, these issues would have sunk
the domestic and global economies. Even without the help of Congress, the Obama
administration has managed to save entire domestic industries from collapse.
Despite the posturing by the GOP in the Senate, we have long awaited health
reforms that will surely breed more changes to cut medical costs. Despite the
behavior of the GOP, Obama has moved forward with programs to help homeowners
and to help with education loans. Despite
the Congressional impasses, Obama has signed measures that will reduce budget
deficits by half over the next few years. Despite the roadblocks set by Congress,
he managed to keep our economy from going into a complete depression while he
got Bin Laden and helped to topple Gaddafi.
We
know that job creation does not happen simply when taxes are low (we have the
lowest tax rates in decades despite high unemployment numbers). We know that more money to the top 1% does
not “trickle down” to “raise all boats.”
That 1% benefits when the 99% are able to do things. We do know when
more people have discretionary incomes; the economy can grow because more
people can buy more products. Yet, the
GOP cares more about protecting the 1% than letting them share the burdens of
capitalism.
Over
the next few months, we are going to hear more distortions and ridicule from
various candidates. Americans have to
realize that despite the awful set of circumstances; Obama helped the United
States weather a big storm. Hopefully,
we can realize a better future when we are able to fully implement a recovery
instead of these temporary emergency bandages. Maybe with a little help from
others in government, we can see a recovery that works for all Americans rather
than a select few as proposed by the several GOP candidates.
We
need substantial work from Congress rather than this rhetorical garbage that
paints falsehoods and ignores reality. Tell Congress to get beyond the
pettiness and do what they were elected to do: govern.
Why We Should “Occupy”
Why We Should “Occupy”
Tony E. Hansen
12 June 2012
The recent protests, called
“Occupy”, or the 99%, have echoed a chord with people in this country. Occupy needs to go beyond the protest into a
viable reform movement. For decades, powers have been able to sidestep issues
and pacify people into believing marketing campaigns and rhetorical nonsense. Some
are all too willing to accept the rhetoric and deceptions as part of a “gospel”
of capitalism being good for all Americans. Remember capitalism is essentially
justification to exploit resources and inequalities in society. Something needs
to change or our democracy faces potential unraveling on a grand scale because
all boats do not, in fact, raise when more water is given only to the 1%.
Due, in part, to the supposed
gospel of capitalism, we have seen the rapid disintegration of faith in
government and public sector institutions while corporations have become
multi-national, “too-big-to-fail” behemoths with a corollary increase in power
and influence upon public policy. The
only recourse that the public has against these powers is through the public
institutions, but, with the deregulation, as well as revolving doors between government
and Wall Street, we can see why so many people have lost faith in the public
institutions that were created to protect the little guy from those big guys. Yet,
Americans are willing to allow private firms, beholden only to their
shareholders, manage public institutions with a belief that these private firms
will do a better job. Further, these corporations want the public taxpayers to
pick up the tab to build supporting infrastructure or insist upon tax breaks
because they are “job creators.” If government is made of people and private
companies are made of people, where do we see improvement? Perpetuation of economic inequality and gross
over glorification of corporate power is central grief raised by the Occupy
movement.
With the pervasive influence of
corporations upon public policy, Americans feel excluded from the process that
is supposed to include them. This
coincides with research I did with my dissertation. Regulations and the tax code are rigged so that
only corporations can take advantage of capitalism rather than the individual
entrepreneurs. Both political parties are willing to give corporations and the wealthy
bailouts and tax breaks, but they balk at the idea of helping people forgive
student loan debt or stay in houses. People may have made “poor decisions” to
get the loans and houses, but the wealthy made money from accepting those
decisions. Yet, they do not want to be responsible for their part in those
decisions. I guess you have to be a millionaire before you “deserve” government
assistance.
Education is supposed to be a
means to achieve social status: a social power equalizer. A simple high school education
is no longer enough to sustain a person into the working world. Increasingly, employers are looking for people
with expensive college degrees, and with that requirement, many Americans also
build up substantial debt when they cannot pay for school costs up front. Thus, people want to get high paying jobs
with “stable” companies and banks, but we have to rack up large amounts of debt
to get the credentials that may get a
job (let alone a well-paying one). This is one of the big issues being echoed
in the Occupy protests: that of the crippling costs of education loans.
Debt obligates people to creditors;
in this case, the creditors are the banks. The banks barely service the loan
but instead just shuffle papers with a guarantee by the federal
government. One should wonder how we can
allow young adults to rack up education loan debt without a job and with no way
to discharge, and yet, no bank will loan the same people money for a mortgage
without jobs or resources. Banks should not even be involved. Increasing debt levels
will not help stimulate the economy.
There is an increasing
unwillingness of people to compromise, especially from the TEA Party. There is increasing
unwillingness to allow alternative opinions, and there is even growing willingness
to profess complete falsehoods in the name of policy positions that service
only the most able in this country (e.g. supply-side economics, military
build-ups, defund public schools, unregulated health care and financial
systems). Ironically, there is a complete disregard for the concept of
frugality (a core conservative value) with a perpetuation of gluttonous
appetites for all things material through a vain, and an adolescent, boastful, selfish
claim “It’s mine”. This is incivility at its core, and is a primary objection
raised by many of the Occupy.
There is an ugly and heavy hand
of religion being deployed into public policy. Respect for religion has morphed
into an idolatry of religion, specifically Evangelical-Protestant sects, as a
framework for public policy. There is little room for alternative ideas about
religion in the media or public arena with the heavy pronouncement by the
various religious zealots despite the Constitutional limitations upon American
government with respect to religion. Religious fundamentalists are among the
worst with respect to compromise since they consider their “marvelous superior”
position, or cause, as a calling
rather than a simple viewpoint. All other opinions cannot possibly matter
because the apparent “will of God” is on their side, and thus a forgone
conclusion of other opinions being inferior, regardless of just nature or
destruction that the zealots’ opinion may justify.
The late author Ray Bradbury
stated, “we insure the future by doing it”. Thus, if we do not want to see the
rollback of programs and services that protect Americans, we should occupy. If
we want civility in government rather than adolescence, we should occupy! If we want respect for religion rather than
religious law, we should occupy! If we want to restore faith in the society as
an aggregation of the individual goods, we should occupy! If we want government
for the 99% instead of the 1%, we should demand accountability from lawmakers,
occupy and VOTE!
04 May 2012
Father to Son
Father to Son
Tony E Hansen
April 2012
During high school, I was introduced to a poem by Langston
Hughes entitled “Mother to Son” where the mother explains to her son about some
of life’s unpleasant realities through a metaphorical approach of stairs. The
lessons being taught in this poem are similar to what I am poised to illustrate
to my own son because “…life ain’t been no crystal stair.” As my son turns sixteen, I suddenly found
myself with a discussion about what it means to be a, or to have a, gay parent with
all of the goofy “taboos” surrounding this.
Thus, I pen this open letter to him.
Son, life can be tough and sometimes not so great. We are given many things in life for which we
have no choice (e.g. our parents, our siblings, our athletic ability, our
intelligence, our ethnicity, or our sexuality.)
Some would decry these as reminders of the inequalities of life through
miserable feelings about how we have been treated unfairly or destructively.
Yet, I say we can find these as examples of our diverse natures and how we can
embrace those differences while learning to enjoy them with a little laugh. Thankfully, we have differences because life
would be considerably boring if we were all vanilla.
If we look at everything given to us as a tragedy, then our
whole outlook is founded in negativity, and then, how people perceive us, in
turn, will ultimately be negative.
Interestingly, similar-minded people tend to congregate together and
reinforce those ugly dimensions of life upon each other rather than looking at circumstances
as learning opportunities or even realizing the shear comedy of our lives.
The thing is that this idea took a long time for me to
understand because I felt that I was missing good role models in my life. Yet,
I cannot sit and stew about what did or what did not happen.
When I found people with good nature in their hearts and
learned different philosophies of life, I found an appreciation for the present
moment. In that, we do not know the
eventual outcome of many paths in our lives, but things do happen for a reason,
whatever that might be. We cannot worry ourselves about the past since there is
literally nothing we can do about that except to acknowledge our part and learn. There are many things in life that we wish we
could undo or decisions we may have done differently for potentially better
outcomes. We cannot agonize over what may happen in the future or what people
may think since that is only a possibility. We can wait for things to happen,
we can wait for that perfect opportunity, we can wait until there is more time
to do something, or we can fret over the possibility of something going wrong.
Yet, at those points, we are not living today because our focus is not here and
now.
Instead, get busy living! You can focus your effort on the
present moment, and you can do good in the present moment. This does not mean, however, to forgo planning
or to always be reckless about the present moment. Good things will reveal themselves to us if we
are willing to plan, to do good, to look at the whole picture, and to do that
with a smile. You could worry about someone’s opinion, wait for someone to act
or even agree with someone. Ultimately, you have to decide what you are willing
to do and if that action is appropriate.
No one else can do more for your own happiness, your own future, your own
work, and your own family than yourself. That is neither selfish, nor egoistic, nor
inconsiderate because with compassionate heart and action, you are promoting
positive influences upon people all around you and beyond. The rest will take care of itself.
You have to decide what you are going to do to make your
world a better place despite the “…splinters and boards torn up” along the way.
Keep moving forward and climbing, even when life gets tough. Be proud and look up. Believe in the moment
because you are destined to be in that moment, and only you can make the most
of what you have here and now. Learn, grow, have compassion, work diligently,
and trust in yourself. Consider what Steve Jobs said: “be a yardstick of
quality” and “if today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I
am about to do today?” If you can affirm the first and if you can answer
positively to the latter, then no matter what anyone else says, you can say today
that you are your best (and the rest will fall where they may.)
I am proud that you are my son! Congratulations on your
birthday and may you continue to enjoy life with a good heart and good
mind. With loving kindness, Dad
03 May 2012
A Complete New Design and Refreshed Interface
I have worn the wpstudios.net label for years without many issues and lunarpages was a decent hosting vendor. Yet, there comes a time when change is needed.
I am retiring wpstudios.net in favor of the tigersndragons.com . This is partly due to want for expressing creativity, having fun with the site, and partly due to change in hosting vendors. With the new vendor, I am able to use more advanced Java technologies at a good price. However, I still have to migrate older work to the new site (maybe with a refreshed look as well). So for the interim, I have built a mock up of what tigersndragons.com look and feel will consist. As well, I have designed some work for Bret's cosmetology work.
In the new design, I have found usefulness in jQuery, HTML5, xhtml, and CSS3 as a really nice display tool. I mean to move content to Blogger as a Content Managment System like how most people use WordPress. In this way I can keep content fresh without having to design or redesign portions.
I hope you enjoy the work and look forward to your responses.
I am retiring wpstudios.net in favor of the tigersndragons.com . This is partly due to want for expressing creativity, having fun with the site, and partly due to change in hosting vendors. With the new vendor, I am able to use more advanced Java technologies at a good price. However, I still have to migrate older work to the new site (maybe with a refreshed look as well). So for the interim, I have built a mock up of what tigersndragons.com look and feel will consist. As well, I have designed some work for Bret's cosmetology work.
In the new design, I have found usefulness in jQuery, HTML5, xhtml, and CSS3 as a really nice display tool. I mean to move content to Blogger as a Content Managment System like how most people use WordPress. In this way I can keep content fresh without having to design or redesign portions.
I hope you enjoy the work and look forward to your responses.
Social Media Basic Policies for Companies
Basic Policies
- HR fairness and capacity to learn about employees and potential hires.
- Legal obligations and issues (Who, What and Why?)
- IT security requirements
- Address confidentiality requirements, address defamation, appropriate conduct and use of your organization's technology
- Build public relations contingencies and avoid a BP nightmare
- When you speak into a telephone there is no reason to believe you are not being recorded. (Likewise for social media, email and instant messaging).
- Policies should enforce inappropriate behavior as actionable (especially commenting about other employees).
- Policies have to be thoroughly communicated throughout the organization in order for them to be enforced.
Social Media Foundations to Strategy
Foundations to Strategy
- Strategy – targets? Scope, focus, find the right discussions (or create them) and join the discussion. Is your subject relevant for a particular site or discussion?
- Establish presence – reinforce credibility and create excitement for events, workshops or services.
- Expand reach into markets through collaboration and communications
- Nurture relationships and strategic partnerships
- Properly maintain presence
- Conduct a proper SWOT and due diligence for using these methods.
- Decide which part of social media technology is applicable for your organization and how you would monitor its use.
- Good strategies require good planning and consideration of the business model.
- Effective strategies require presence and interaction that builds relationships with customers and other stakeholders.
Important to realize that whether you have a planned presence or not, you have a de-facto strategy of ignorance. The question is begged whether the social media channels offer opportunities that the firm should use.
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