Category Archives: Uncategorized

Evolution – in search of a bumper sticker with meaning

Advocatus diaboli is my calling.

A good devil’s advocate challenges everything, even their own beliefs.

Over the last several years I have clung to the adjective conservative as somehow defining the whole me. Once upon a time it did describe me.

Once upon a time does not last forever. Am dropping the word ‘conservative’ as describing my general philosophy on life.

Classic liberalism is often associated with being conservative. Once upon a time I thought so too. They are not the same. I am not sure when and where they diverged. The classic liberal view still appeals to me but I find the appellation of conservative as something very negative and inflexible.

I see too many conservatives, as well as liberals, as being unwilling and possibly incapable of playing well with the other children on the playground. You do not always get what you want. Conservatism and its cousin Liberalism have both become capable of turning on its own quickly over any infraction of orthodoxy — although orthodoxy as a functioning concept in the modern liberal realm may best be described as cooperative chaos when it comes to decisionmaking.

I strive to be an independent observer of American/World/Local politics, economics and trends. I want to know why. I want to see the data. I strongly dislike people and movements that hide behind talking points.

My nature is pragmatism and centrist. Am a social liberal but a fiscal conservative. I guess that makes me a ‘a pragmatic libertarian’ … a classic liberal. Coexist. The 80% solution is usually a pretty good deal.

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Zenfully solving problems

Half of all problems can be ignored and they will turn out all right. Somehow magic will happen.

The other half of the problems we will just make them worse by trying to fix them. If you don’t have a good solution then don’t muck with it.

The important thing is to focus on just a few things which make a real difference and let everything else work itself out.

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Equal Marriage Rights – My View

Equal Marriage Rights

Suddenly lots of folks have discovered that maybe government should get out of sanctioning marriage — except they don’t really mean it.

>>> Example: Some would argue that rather than allow marriage among gays that the government just get out of the marriage business altogether and allow traditional marriage to be between a man and woman — but outside of government definition. This newfound solution to a modern problem sounds good but really it just sidesteps the larger implication of ‘what is marriage’.

‘Marriage’ is about economics and property rights more often than love and just wanting to live life with someone.

We could probably solve this quickly if government really did decide that ‘marriage’ happened between two people and was none of the government’s business … and if everyone that wanted to claim benefits and/or property rights filed for ‘civil union’ status then we could fix this quickly … whether man-woman, man-man, or woman-woman.

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Am straight, married and with two kids. I admit to not understanding the attraction to the same sex … but I also accept that it happens for other folks and it is normal for them. It would be nice if the Supreme Court redefined ‘marriage’ as meaning ‘civil union’ and we march on …

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Democrats, Republicans, and Chickweed

”The Democrats are the party of government activism, the party that says government can make you richer, smarter, taller, and get the chickweed out of your lawn. Republicans are the party that says government doesn’t work, and then get elected and prove it.”

—P.J. O’Rourke

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Education – 10 Worst States due to lack of Teacher Unionism Influence?

This graphic by Joe’s Union Review is badly flawed.

Education - 10 worst states for an education - BOGUS
The thesis of this graphic is that the weaker local teacher unions are at the state level then the less chance for a quality education.

There does appear to be some correlation of education quality and there being ‘involved’ teacher unions but it is an honest argument to say that the evidence for any direct correlation is shaky — the correlational results are very uneven upon review. // I have made it easy for you to make your own comparison of results via the two charts presented in my data source footnotes below.

As for the claims of the graphic:

#1 – Four of the 10 worst states have ‘forced unionism’ — every teacher must join a union in California, New Mexico, Alaska and West Virginia.

#2 – The nation’s largest school system is California and it is ranked at 43rd worst education in the nation. California is also one of the few states to be ranked as ‘Tier 1′ (most powerful in the nation) for union influence over the education system.

#3 – Of the six right-to-work states they all have teacher unions, although 4 of the 6 are ‘Tier 5′ (least influence over education policy).

#4 – Good news for California, there appears to be little correlation between the strength of teachers unions and the quality of education. Massachusetts is ranked #1 in education and it is only a ‘Tier 3′ state (union authority is neutral/negligible).

#5 – Of the ‘Tier 1′ states (most unionized) here are their education system rankings: California #43, Oregon #37, Washington #26, Montana #13, Illinois #17, Pennsylvania #8, New York #19, New Jersey #2, and Rhode Island #20.

SOURCES:

Educational system rankings: KidsCount.org

Influence of teacher unions by state: EdExcellence.net

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JOBS / Life / Career Changes / Income Expectations / TeleEverything / Retirement … and about those damned robo ts

JOBS / Life / Career Changes / Income Expectations / TeleEverything / Retirement … and about those damned robots

by Bill Golden
CEO, USAJobZoo.com
aka IntelligenceCareers.com

Think different. Start yesterday. That is when the future arrived.

What made for success in the past is not a guarantee for the future … your market value no longer ‘always increases’ … expect some skills to remain popular but value to drop … some to increase … expect flat salaries over the next decade … wherever you go there you are: always have a Plan B as you will probably change your core ‘what I do for a living’ at least 5-8 times before you finally collect a retirement check … from your 401K or IRA which you funded throughout your life … right?

How often will you change jobs in life? Survey sez …

A Department of Labor report from summer of 2012 found that the average American age 18-46 would change employers an average of 11.3 times … half of those changes would be between the ages 18-24.

++++ This information is not based on our current generation but on the experiences of Boomers born between 1957-1964.

++++ I realize that the numbers are probably quite different for today’s age group of 18-24 … many of whom are still trying to find that first job.

For those ages 24 and under: employment in your age group has always been challenging. In the old days (like 20 years ago) we still had a lot of manual-based labor jobs that you could always slide into while figuring out what life meant and where it was taking you. Those same opportunities are far fewer today … but so is the requirement for education. Survey says that for those currently under the age of 30: college degrees matter, even when applying for jobs that do not pay well.

As for salary and income expectation, things have changed immensely since even the mid-2000s. For experienced professionals it was not uncommon for an employer to ask you for a salary history for either your last 2-3 jobs or for the last 10 years. The idea behind was that real talent is always growing in compensation — resumes can say anything but the proof is in the money that you get as to how good you are.

In a recent Atlantic Magazine article entitled Robots Won’t Steal Your Job Next Decade (They’ll Just Steal Your Raise), the magazine talks about income remaining flat through about 2017 and then a miracle happens where income just takes off … recovering to 2005 levels by 2020 … or almost recovering to 2005 levels … if the miracle happens — which Atlantic calls the Little Orphan Annie theory of recoveries — catchup growth is always just a year away, until it’s another year away.

Future Outlook

We do more with less. MUCH LESS … or perhaps more grammatically correct: many fewer … people … we can do more with many fewer people … and at higher profit margins, too.

The headline of the Atlantic Magazine article mentions ‘Robots’ but what we are really talking about is the ability of information technologies when combined with physical and organizational processes.

Automation of processes, collaboration, logistics integration and manufacturing are the challenges that our workforce faces today and in the immediate future; these are the folks whose primary role in our economic society is to trade services for a paycheck … and since they no longer live on a farm then they need that paycheck to buy food and they need that paycheck to do all the things which they can no longer do as when our culture was primary rural and small town … as it was just a generation or so ago.

We need a bigger conversation about JOBS JOBS JOBS … because the future has arrived.

Think different. Start yesterday. That is when the future arrived.

Best regards,

Bill Golden
WGolden@USAJobZoo.com

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JOBS / Defense / Obama’s Sequestration Plan Appears DOA in Congress | GOP Abandons Proposing A Plan / Game on!

JOBS / Defense / Obama’s Sequestration Plan Appears DOA in Congress | GOP Abandons Proposing A Plan / Game on!

Read more at Defense News

March 1st will see the beginning of approximately $110 billion in cuts for federal spending. $45 billion of those cuts will come from defense.

WHAT THIS MEANS is that federal defense employees can expect to be furloughed without pay at least one day every two weeks, if not one day per week.

WHAT THIS MEANS is that defense contractors that are people-intensive (your product is thought or information services not hardware) can expect A) a cut in their base rate/salary … or B) a furlough plan similar to what federal government employees will face … or C) layoffs for as many as 47,000.

Just a thought: When you want the other guy to cut their expenses because your own are just two important … what goes around comes around. Neither side wants to give up anything so … so we’ll just go with that.

15 days and counting as of now.

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JOBS / Disconnected from America?

JOBS / Disconnected from America? http://ow.ly/hDJVf

… Bill Golden says that it feels great living in the metro Washington DC area. The seven counties of northern Virginia and most of southern Maryland are truly the land of plenty. What few issues we have must sound like whining to the rest of America.

What happens if we were to wake up and ‘being smart’ were no longer enough? Metro Washington DC is made up primarily of knowledge capital workers. For various reasons there is a huge concentrated demand for these folks … living at the center of the empire as they do.

But what if anything were to disrupt the need for that knowledge? Are these Knowledge Workers smart enough to have a Plan B or C?

Chances are that this region of the USA could find itself in some turmoil over the next few years.

Washington Post headline on February 12th, 2013: One in 7 Washington households in the top 5 percent

VIEW interactive map of where wealth exists in the USA: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/nation/census-high-income/

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Zen – Life is a Game.

In all things I feel blessed. Have come to appreciate that any bad seems to usually work out in some way that is for my good.

A good attitude can work miracles. Stay curious. Challenge authority. The biggest loser is someone that doesn’t try to play the game.

Life is a game. You may not like politics or whatever, but not liking something will not keep it from coming to you. Life happens. Play it well.

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Jobs / Future / Connected Workforce – Chattanooga, Tennessee

Chattanooga, Tennessee, home of VW in North America, has now joined the rarefied ranks of ‘intelligent cities’ — Chattanooga is the only U.S. city with a population of over 100,000 that has achieved this designation.

An intelligent city is one where the intersection of information technology and urban design are planned together with intent to unite information availability and information flow with business, homes and the workforce.

Despite Chattanooga’s access to broadband speeds of 50 Mbps connections (average connectivity speed in the U.S. is 6.7 mps), the telecom giants and lobbyists are busy at work convincing states to block power grid broadband delivery from happening. Nineteen states have passed laws that block local governments from setting up publicly-owned broadband services — which has proven to be the most common method of building such networks.

We should look to private industry to efficiently deliver solutions and capabilities that meet public needs. Certainly high speed internet that can be delivered anywhere over a power grid would be such a service, especially lightning fast broadband that puts most broadband to shame. Unfortunately this technology is being hindered and heldback because much of the private sector has not yet figured out how to create a delivery grid that can compete with the power grid which already exists in our homes and businesses.

From Governing.com

Chattanooga, Tennessee (pop 167,000), has leapt to the forefront of American cities with ultra high-speed broadband service and has accomplished the feat in a surprisingly old-fashioned way: the city’s municipally-owned electric utility provides the service. Tennessee’s fourth-largest city is now a member of a small, but elite group of world-class cities that can offer residents and businesses Internet service of up to one gigabit per second, 200 times faster than the average broadband speed in America, according to The New York Times.

Harnessing Intellectual Capital

From Ross Honeywill, Australian futurist and business consultant: “The urban fabric of the world is changing as key cities turn their backs on the traditional economy and move towards an intelligent future. An Intelligent City is characterized by its place in the new- or neo-economy with a commitment to cultural capital, innovative environments, diversity, high social intelligence and digital leadership.

It typically has diversity in social relationships, a high capacity for imagination and innovation central to the creativity of its population and its institutions of knowledge creation; and a rapidly evolving digital infrastructure for communication and knowledge management.

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