Monthly Archives: April 2019

Gramm Crackers

Speculation seems to be the order of the day.  So I thought I’d join in.  The question?  Which of the following is most interesting and about which we are least informed?  The contents of the Mueller Report?  Or who is the front runner for the 2020 Democratic nomination for president?  Without any real data–the actual REPORT in the case of the former and VOTES in the latter–pundits are, as Bob Dylan reminds us, just blowing in the wind.  (Query:  Does the noise from political pundits blowing in the wind cause cancer?)

While I have questioned the process by which William Barr has shared information about the Mueller Report with us, I am holding my tongue on the content until I get a chance to read it.  So today, I will take my first shot at coverage of the 2020 race for Democratic nomination.

Since March 31, the emphasis has been on fundraising by the plethora of presidential aspirants.  Much has been made about the a candidate’s total take, the average size of donations and the number of contributors.  This information is readily available as all candidates for federal office must file quarterly campaign financials with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC).  Therefore, we can assume the numbers for the first quarter of 2019 are accurate.  Here are the results for the top four fundraisers.

Bernie Sanders/$18.2 million
Kamala Harris/$12.1 million
Beto O’Rourke/$9.4 million
Pete Buttigieg/$7 million

But as my late friend Michie Slaughter used to remind us, “Sometimes the things that are important are hard to measure, and the things that are easy to measure are not important.”

Related imageWhich brings me to the title of today’s post.  In 1995, Texas Republican Senator Phil Gramm saw himself as the heir apparent to Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, saving the country from another four years of Bill Clinton.  He announced his candidacy immediately following the 1994 midterm elections.  In February 1995, Gramm raised $4.1 million ($6.8 million in current dollars) not in one quarter, but at one event, a dinner in Dallas which was billed in the New York Times as “one of the largest takes for a single campaign event in American political history.”  By end of his campaign one year later, Gramm’s campaign had raised and spent a total of $35.81 million ($59.4 million in current dollars).

Since there is no record of President Gramm, you know how the story ends.  What you may be too young to have experienced or too old to recall is that he abandoned his bid for the White House on February 25, 1996, just days after the first Republican votes were cast in Iowa.  Of the 96,762 caucus attendees, Gramm finished fifth with 9,055 or 9.35 percent. He clearly had not cracked the code for a successful run for president. (Historical Footnote:  Is it any surprise a man who spent $3,954 per vote in Iowa, later as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, deregulated the banking industry, an action which was largely responsible for the financial crisis of 2008?)

During a phone call with a relative this week, he asked my opinion of the Democratic candidates.  While I admitted I have no idea who will eventually end up on top, I suggested that Buttigieg was someone to watch.  When asked why, I found it hard to explain.  The closest I came was my reaction to his appearances on CNN, MSNBC and last Friday night on “Real Time with Bill Maher.”  He did not lecture or talk at me.  He did not tell me what was good for me or the country.  He talked about what he believed was important and how he felt about the future.  And his curiosity.  “I cannot help but think what things will be like in 2054 when I am the age of the current incumbent.”  When asked by religious skeptic Maher whether there was a conflict between his pursuit of knowledge and his faith, Mayor Pete replied, “Do you think you’ve figured it all out?  I haven’t.”  Even a devout agnostic can live with that.

Phil Gramm’s campaign had just the opposite experience.  According to the New York Times, “Internal campaign memorandums suggest that even with a huge budget for television commercials, Mr. Gramm had image problems with the voters.”  It became known as the “Yuck” factor, a reference to a story about his wife Wendy’s initial reaction upon meeting her future spouse.

After four years of cringing every time Donald Trump appears on television, maybe all we are looking for is someone with whom we are comfortable.  I have no idea how you measure that.

For what it’s worth.
Dr. ESP

The Seduction of Joe Biden

The title of this post is a reference to the 1979 movie The Seduction of Joe Tynan, written by and starring Alan Alda.  I have a personal connection to this film as it was shot in Maryland at a time when I worked for the state Department of Economic and Community Development in Annapolis.  The Maryland Film Commission, which helps producers find locations and services during filming, was housed in our department.  Additionally, one scene pictured here of Alda and Meryl Streep was shot at a small general aviation airport just down the road from my house on the East River.

The title character U.S. Senator Joe Tynan is seduced by the power he accrues when asked to lead the fight against a Supreme Court nominee.  He becomes a captive of his environment and the situation.

So what does this have to do with Joe Biden and recent allegations by Lucy Flores that the then Vice President inappropriately touched her?  No one, I repeat NO ONE, is accusing Biden, for lack of a better phrase, of “hitting” on them.  Even Flores, in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper did not accuse Biden of anything close to sexual harassment.  The terms she used included “made to feel uneasy” and “he violated my space.”

First, I understand exactly how Ms. Flores felt.  I value my space and feel uneasy when others get overly close.  It does not have to involve physical contact.  Someone standing too close behind me in a line at the bank or grocery store makes me feel uneasy.  And there is a physiological rationale for this response.

Some years back I was exposed to the Herrmann Brain Dominance Instrument (HBDI) for which I am now a certified facilitator.  Developed by the late Ned Herrmann during his employment at General Electric, it focuses on our behavior and how it depends on the way our brain is hardwired, unlike behavioral models such as the more familiar Meyers-Briggs assessment.  HBDI measures an individual’s preference (score) on four scales associated with the four quadrants of the human brain:  logical/rational, structured/conservative, interpersonal and conceptual/risk-taking.

You probably will not be surprised at my preferences.  My highest score is on the conceptual scale.  People in this quadrant tend to explain things in metaphors (like comparing life to movies).  My lowest score is on the interpersonal scale.  That explains why I prefer spending hours alone in my office cranking out this blog than attending conferences to present my thoughts.

Which brings me back to Biden and Flores.  Without administering the HBDI test, I would bet the farm Joe Biden is off the interpersonal scale and Lucy Flores’ dominant preference is on the structured/conservative scale.  Thus, unlike Joe Tynan, Biden and also Flores are not captives of their environments.  They are captives of their dominant brain preferences.  Biden wants to hug everyone.  One of the major shortcomings of the weekend reporting is every picture only showed Biden interacting with women.  But how about the photos below?

Image result for biden hugging menRelated imageImage result for biden hugging menImage result for biden hugging men

And if I’m correct about Lucy Flores, Joe Biden is not the only person who she feels has at one time or another violated her space.  That is why, when we conduct HBDI team training, the goal is not to compare profiles, but to help participants understand how people with different preferences react differently to words, actions or situations.

The conclusion.  Neither party is at fault.  Lucy Flores has a right to her space and one can certainly understand her discomfort at asking the sitting Vice President of the United States to “back off.”  And Joe Biden is not a seducer, but is seduced by his preference to be close to people. The fact he has now acknowledged her discomfort is a learning moment.

What worries me more is we seem to have lost the distinction between one person’s desire to connect with others and another person’s belief that grabbing women by the genitals is okay.

For what it’s worth.
Dr. ESP

 

Barr None

Image result for dumbo 2019Attorney General William Barr’s non-summary summary of the Mueller report was such a hit with Donald Trump’s base, he decided to bring his new talent to a different arena.  The entertainment industry.  Thus, in his first edition of “Barr None,” the man who can make anything sound favorable provides the following summaries of critical reviews of Disney Studio’s remake of the classic “Dumbo,” which arrived in theaters this past weekend.

Barr’s summary of Owen Glieberman in Variety:

“…a miraculous tale…”

Glieberman’s actual review:

“It transforms a miraculous tale into a routine story by weighing it down with a lot of nuts and bolts it didn’t need.”

Barr’s summary of Peter Rainer in the Christian Science Monitor:

“..a CGI creation with big ocean blue eyes and those lovable floppy ears…”

To which Rainer added:

“But the spirit and heart of the original ‘Dumbo’ is still locked away in the Disney vault.”

Barr’s summary of Mathew Dessem in Slate:

“There’s a lot going on in the movie…”

About which Dessem concludes:

“…none of it entirely coherent.”

Barr’s summary of Ty Burr in the Boston Globe:

“Dumbo flies!”

Followed by:

“The movie, sadly, never soars.”

And finally, Barr’s summary of Alissa Wilkinson in Vox:

“…barn burner…”

Nice try, here’s the complete sentence from her review:

“Dumbo is no barn-burner, largely forgettable in a way its predecessor wasn’t.”

We can only wonder if Barr’s original letter stating the Mueller Report “did not find that the Trump campaign or anyone associated with it conspired or coordinated with Russia in its efforts to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election, ” is based on this same approach to summarizing movie reviews.  In that case, one might speculate the actual Mueller Report contains the following sentence.

“A reader could find that the Trump campaign or anyone associated with it conspired or coordinated with Russia in its efforts to influence the 2016 president election, if you ignore the nearly 100 Russian interactions with Trump associates about which all of the latter lied, Jared Kushner’s efforts to create a back-channel to communicate with the Kremlin outside accepted protocols, Paul Manafort’s sharing of campaign information with oligarchs close to Vladimir Putin or the campaign’s failure to report Russian offers of assistance to the appropriate federal authorities.”

Based on Barr’s summary of critics’ reviews of the Dumbo reboot, the film grossed an estimated $45 million during its opening weekend.  Donald Trump and his attorney general are betting the same people who dished out their hard earned money for this retelling of an animated classic about an elephant who can fly are equally inclined to prefer Barr’s reboot of the Mueller Report to the original.

For what it’s worth.
Dr. ESP