Thursday, June 24, 2010
Lame (Duck)
A Lame Duck is an elected official approaching the end of his tenure, thus making him ineffective. Recent articles in the “Wall Street Journal”, “US News and World Report”, and even Germany’s “Der Spiegel” are comparing the President to one-term President Carter. Criticism has been flowing from his staunchest supporters such as MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews. The common theme among all observers is the inability of the president to handle the problems confronting him and to stop shifting blame for his situation back to the prior administration.
Every administration in history has inherited problems; President Ford was a stop-gap president between Nixon and Carter. Throughout Carter’s presidency he used the problems of President Nixon, the energy crisis, recession, and of course Watergate, to make himself appear more presidential. The hostage taking in Tehran occurred on his watch, and ultimately became his death nail when he proved he lacked the faculties to resolve the crisis.
President George HW Bush became a one-term president after bipartisan efforts to negotiate a budget resulted in reneging on a famous campaign promise, “read my lips, no new taxes.” Regardless of his successful foreign policy efforts and management of the world stage, the American people were unforgiving and mandated change through a resounding defeat.
Similarly, President Obama offered “Hope and Change”, but has delivered on little of what he promised. After an elegant campaign two years ago we watch with dismay wishing Hillary Clinton had won the nomination instead. Among both sides there is acknowledgment that she has proven herself loyal and demonstrated leadership characteristics. Vice President Biden correctly prophesied the President would be tested, and the fury of examinations have come both domestically and internationally: Ft. Hood, The Underwear Bomber, Times Square bombing, losing the Chicago Olympics, failing to close Guantanamo, breaking Afghanistan troop withdrawal promises, economic instability, cloudy transparency, the Gulf crisis, and a cast of Czars to guide him.
The inexperienced man, with no executive experience, has missed multiple opportunities to provide “Hope and Change.” Last week was the ultimate example during the Gulf Spill speech, no solutions were offered, no Presidential analysis was given. Instead, Chicago-style political thuggery was the theme to pressure BP, ensure constituency votes were purchased, and springboard non-related legislation. We have 29 months until the next election, and I believe we have a Lame Duck president who, like President Ford, will be remembered for his golf game.
A Lame Duck is an elected official approaching the end of his tenure, thus making him ineffective. Recent articles in the “Wall Street Journal”, “US News and World Report”, and even Germany’s “Der Spiegel” are comparing the President to one-term President Carter. Criticism has been flowing from his staunchest supporters such as MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews. The common theme among all observers is the inability of the president to handle the problems confronting him and to stop shifting blame for his situation back to the prior administration.
Every administration in history has inherited problems; President Ford was a stop-gap president between Nixon and Carter. Throughout Carter’s presidency he used the problems of President Nixon, the energy crisis, recession, and of course Watergate, to make himself appear more presidential. The hostage taking in Tehran occurred on his watch, and ultimately became his death nail when he proved he lacked the faculties to resolve the crisis.
President George HW Bush became a one-term president after bipartisan efforts to negotiate a budget resulted in reneging on a famous campaign promise, “read my lips, no new taxes.” Regardless of his successful foreign policy efforts and management of the world stage, the American people were unforgiving and mandated change through a resounding defeat.
Similarly, President Obama offered “Hope and Change”, but has delivered on little of what he promised. After an elegant campaign two years ago we watch with dismay wishing Hillary Clinton had won the nomination instead. Among both sides there is acknowledgment that she has proven herself loyal and demonstrated leadership characteristics. Vice President Biden correctly prophesied the President would be tested, and the fury of examinations have come both domestically and internationally: Ft. Hood, The Underwear Bomber, Times Square bombing, losing the Chicago Olympics, failing to close Guantanamo, breaking Afghanistan troop withdrawal promises, economic instability, cloudy transparency, the Gulf crisis, and a cast of Czars to guide him.
The inexperienced man, with no executive experience, has missed multiple opportunities to provide “Hope and Change.” Last week was the ultimate example during the Gulf Spill speech, no solutions were offered, no Presidential analysis was given. Instead, Chicago-style political thuggery was the theme to pressure BP, ensure constituency votes were purchased, and springboard non-related legislation. We have 29 months until the next election, and I believe we have a Lame Duck president who, like President Ford, will be remembered for his golf game.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
My Dad
My Dad turned 71 years old on May 26th. To celebrate, my wife, son, and I took my Dad and Mom to a local restaurant for wings, something he had only once before. During dinner I interrogated my Dad; asking questions about his childhood, life on the farm, school, and enlisting in the Air Force. I joked with my Dad that I knew he had no friends growing up because he did not have a Facebook page. Through all of the conversation though it reminded me how different his life was from mine, and how different the children of today are living.
My Dad was born in a farm house, not a hospital. My Grandmother did not worry about insurance; she had my Dad anyway. Living in a wooden house on 200-acres in Scandia, Minnesota the family raised crops, milking cows, pigs, and poultry. My Dad was expected to help on the farm before and after school, he had no cell phone, no computer, and did not have television until he was 14. To get to school he walked, in the snow, nearly two miles. By comparison, his grandchildren get a ride everyday in an air-conditioned car to the doorsteps of school, watch endless hours of television, have cell phones, and have minimal chores.
My Dad has lived through 13 presidencies, from Roosevelt to Obama. He has worked a variety of jobs, had careers, and struggled with recessions. I cannot imagine the amount of money he has paid in taxes, well over a million dollars, and now he reaps the benefit of a broken Social Security and questionable Medicare system. Once he collected unemployment for a few weeks in the recession of 1981, but has given far more than he will ever receive.
My Dad never expected anyone to give something to him for nothing, and he taught me the same. He inspired me to work hard, be true to my word, and have integrity. My Dad worked hard to have bigger homes, new cars and “stuff”. My Dad does not see life as a lottery; with some people luckier than others. Sadly, our country seems to have an opposite view where government is considered the better choice over private business, subsidizing those who choose not to work so they can have “stuff”, and mocking people like my Dad for his values, integrity, and hard work.
My Dad turned 71 years old on May 26th. To celebrate, my wife, son, and I took my Dad and Mom to a local restaurant for wings, something he had only once before. During dinner I interrogated my Dad; asking questions about his childhood, life on the farm, school, and enlisting in the Air Force. I joked with my Dad that I knew he had no friends growing up because he did not have a Facebook page. Through all of the conversation though it reminded me how different his life was from mine, and how different the children of today are living.
My Dad was born in a farm house, not a hospital. My Grandmother did not worry about insurance; she had my Dad anyway. Living in a wooden house on 200-acres in Scandia, Minnesota the family raised crops, milking cows, pigs, and poultry. My Dad was expected to help on the farm before and after school, he had no cell phone, no computer, and did not have television until he was 14. To get to school he walked, in the snow, nearly two miles. By comparison, his grandchildren get a ride everyday in an air-conditioned car to the doorsteps of school, watch endless hours of television, have cell phones, and have minimal chores.
My Dad has lived through 13 presidencies, from Roosevelt to Obama. He has worked a variety of jobs, had careers, and struggled with recessions. I cannot imagine the amount of money he has paid in taxes, well over a million dollars, and now he reaps the benefit of a broken Social Security and questionable Medicare system. Once he collected unemployment for a few weeks in the recession of 1981, but has given far more than he will ever receive.
My Dad never expected anyone to give something to him for nothing, and he taught me the same. He inspired me to work hard, be true to my word, and have integrity. My Dad worked hard to have bigger homes, new cars and “stuff”. My Dad does not see life as a lottery; with some people luckier than others. Sadly, our country seems to have an opposite view where government is considered the better choice over private business, subsidizing those who choose not to work so they can have “stuff”, and mocking people like my Dad for his values, integrity, and hard work.
My Greatest Job
A year ago I had to quit the greatest job I ever had, teaching at Deltona High School. I remain in touch with my students, continuing to get calls, emails, text messages, and Facebook comments. Some are to tell me how they are doing; others are to ask for my help. I had over 160 students and I taught four periods of Honors Chemistry and two periods of AP Environmental Science.
Working as a teacher gave me insights I never could have imagined. Teachers spend more time with our children than most parents, they are the most important asset our country has, but as the economy has worsened teachers have become disposable targets. Now, I watch with dismay as local municipalities nationwide are struggling to meet their budgets and newspaper reports show thousands of teachers being laid off. No system is perfect, as the local contribution of property taxes first flows to the state capital and then is allocated back to the local school board by complicated formulas.
The budget consists of two parts: operating and capital, about 40% and 60% respectively. The capital budget funds buildings and debt service whereas the operating budget has sustained most of the cuts. I believe schools have focused monies incorrectly on “technology in the classroom” and buildings where hundreds of millions of dollars built new schools, rivaling the nicest hotels and office buildings. Schools now have IT departments, equivalent to dot-com companies, but have cut arts, music, and after-school sports. But, salaries and benefits make up the bulk of the operating budget and must be managed to bring the budget in line. I would focus first on top-heavy salaries and then closely examine the unionized system where longevity and mediocrity are rewarded instead of performance. Disparities of $50,000/year exist due to tenure and length of service, not quality of teaching.
Through all of these problems, I believe our local schools do an excellent job. For example, New Smyrna Beach Middle School has been an “A” rated school two years in a row and about a one-fourth of the students managed to make the Honor Roll throughout the entire year. Principles like Jim Tager navigate these times by keeping the focus on students and receiving outstanding parental support through PTA. Our future is our children and we need to protect them, not deny them the best possible teachers and education.
A year ago I had to quit the greatest job I ever had, teaching at Deltona High School. I remain in touch with my students, continuing to get calls, emails, text messages, and Facebook comments. Some are to tell me how they are doing; others are to ask for my help. I had over 160 students and I taught four periods of Honors Chemistry and two periods of AP Environmental Science.
Working as a teacher gave me insights I never could have imagined. Teachers spend more time with our children than most parents, they are the most important asset our country has, but as the economy has worsened teachers have become disposable targets. Now, I watch with dismay as local municipalities nationwide are struggling to meet their budgets and newspaper reports show thousands of teachers being laid off. No system is perfect, as the local contribution of property taxes first flows to the state capital and then is allocated back to the local school board by complicated formulas.
The budget consists of two parts: operating and capital, about 40% and 60% respectively. The capital budget funds buildings and debt service whereas the operating budget has sustained most of the cuts. I believe schools have focused monies incorrectly on “technology in the classroom” and buildings where hundreds of millions of dollars built new schools, rivaling the nicest hotels and office buildings. Schools now have IT departments, equivalent to dot-com companies, but have cut arts, music, and after-school sports. But, salaries and benefits make up the bulk of the operating budget and must be managed to bring the budget in line. I would focus first on top-heavy salaries and then closely examine the unionized system where longevity and mediocrity are rewarded instead of performance. Disparities of $50,000/year exist due to tenure and length of service, not quality of teaching.
Through all of these problems, I believe our local schools do an excellent job. For example, New Smyrna Beach Middle School has been an “A” rated school two years in a row and about a one-fourth of the students managed to make the Honor Roll throughout the entire year. Principles like Jim Tager navigate these times by keeping the focus on students and receiving outstanding parental support through PTA. Our future is our children and we need to protect them, not deny them the best possible teachers and education.
Ripple Effects
Off the beaten path and traveling the back roads of the countryside brings opportunity to cross paths with new people. Recently passing through a small town I struck up conversation with the proprietor of a local service station and I commented on the lumber mill and how fortunate the town was to have industry. My new friend then informed me the mill had just closed, permanently, two weeks before after 100 years in business. Over 1,100 jobs were lost at the mill, but the real tragedy he said “was the ripple effect.” He explained there were house cleaners, landscape companies, automobile service garages, pressure washers, and even the local dry cleaner that depended on the employees of the mill to buy their services.
In conversation another friend shared with me the story of the recession on an aviation business, losing fuel sales due to the cutback of medical transplant flights. Curious, I asked why and learned the typical transplant donor is a male, aged 18-24 who dies in a motorcycle crash. In this recession those young males cannot buy motorcycles due to the credit crisis. Therefore due to the economy there is no credit, no motorcycle purchases, no crashes, no transplants, no flights, and no sales.
Since 2007 the economy has struggled to regain footing, slowed down like a marathon runner in the 18th mile. Restarting the economic engine is more serious than easing credit, encouraging spending, or building confidence. The concept of the “new normal” which mirrors Europe’s economy with high unemployment, social programs to help those in need, and lackluster performance is cheered as a political success. In this recession two very different demographics have suffered catastrophically: low-income minorities on one end and high-income whites on the other. Expecting to find themselves in the most prosperous years of their lives the 40-55 year old group of white males has learned the jobs they once coveted have been shipped off-shore, gone forever. Cities like Detroit are facing 50% unemployment, arguably far from an economic recovery. Regardless of which group is examined though, it is apparent society has been slow to understand this change. If not unemployed, then a blind eye is turned to those who need help with housing, loans, child support, and groceries.
Movies like the “Butterfly Effect” or stories like Ray Bradbury’s “A Sound of Thunder” exemplify the catastrophic possibilities of small changes to once known realities. In 2010 we are experiencing the ripple effects of radical changes to a once vibrant economic system. As of this month more Americans than any time in history receive food stamps, nearly 40 million, real unemployment according to a recent Gallup poll is close to 20%, and the housing market is set to fall again due to the end of government tax incentives. I must agree with the words, “new normal” and assert our success will depend on adaptability, not returning to what we once had.
Off the beaten path and traveling the back roads of the countryside brings opportunity to cross paths with new people. Recently passing through a small town I struck up conversation with the proprietor of a local service station and I commented on the lumber mill and how fortunate the town was to have industry. My new friend then informed me the mill had just closed, permanently, two weeks before after 100 years in business. Over 1,100 jobs were lost at the mill, but the real tragedy he said “was the ripple effect.” He explained there were house cleaners, landscape companies, automobile service garages, pressure washers, and even the local dry cleaner that depended on the employees of the mill to buy their services.
In conversation another friend shared with me the story of the recession on an aviation business, losing fuel sales due to the cutback of medical transplant flights. Curious, I asked why and learned the typical transplant donor is a male, aged 18-24 who dies in a motorcycle crash. In this recession those young males cannot buy motorcycles due to the credit crisis. Therefore due to the economy there is no credit, no motorcycle purchases, no crashes, no transplants, no flights, and no sales.
Since 2007 the economy has struggled to regain footing, slowed down like a marathon runner in the 18th mile. Restarting the economic engine is more serious than easing credit, encouraging spending, or building confidence. The concept of the “new normal” which mirrors Europe’s economy with high unemployment, social programs to help those in need, and lackluster performance is cheered as a political success. In this recession two very different demographics have suffered catastrophically: low-income minorities on one end and high-income whites on the other. Expecting to find themselves in the most prosperous years of their lives the 40-55 year old group of white males has learned the jobs they once coveted have been shipped off-shore, gone forever. Cities like Detroit are facing 50% unemployment, arguably far from an economic recovery. Regardless of which group is examined though, it is apparent society has been slow to understand this change. If not unemployed, then a blind eye is turned to those who need help with housing, loans, child support, and groceries.
Movies like the “Butterfly Effect” or stories like Ray Bradbury’s “A Sound of Thunder” exemplify the catastrophic possibilities of small changes to once known realities. In 2010 we are experiencing the ripple effects of radical changes to a once vibrant economic system. As of this month more Americans than any time in history receive food stamps, nearly 40 million, real unemployment according to a recent Gallup poll is close to 20%, and the housing market is set to fall again due to the end of government tax incentives. I must agree with the words, “new normal” and assert our success will depend on adaptability, not returning to what we once had.
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