Monthly Archives: June 2020

Adult in the Room Quiz

 

Multiple Choice #1:

Which of the following individuals best exhibits appropriate adult behavior?

A.  Donald Trump on the morning of George Floyd’s funeral.

Trump snipes at Democrats on Twitter during impeachment hearing

B. Mike Pence refusing to wear mask at Mayo Clinic.

Mike Pence's Mask-Less Mayo Clinic Trip Tops This Week's Internet ...

C.  John F. Kennedy, Jr. on his third birthday (November 25, 1963).

John Kennedy Jr. Tot Salutes Dads Funeral Vintage 1960s Reprint ...

D.  “Liberate Michigan” Protesters at the state capitol.

Whitmer calls latest capitol protest 'disturbing' as Trump urges ...

This quiz was brought to you by The Einstein Project where we believe you do not have to be Albert Einstein to figure this out.

For What It’s Worth.
Dr. ESP

 

Follow the Rubles

 

On October 3, 1950, a televised version of the popular radio game show Can You Top This? debuted on ABC.  The premise was simple.  A panel of three comedians vied to get each other to laugh at their jokes.  Despite the radio version’s large audience, the video adaptation went off the air just eight months later.  Sadly, the latest iteration, broadcast live from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is in its fourth season.  And unlike its predecessors, Can You Top This? 2020 has no moderator and only one contestant Donald J. Trump, vying to outdo himself with inane comments and pure nonsense.

Fortunately, as was the case with The Apprentice, Trump’s other venture into entertainment media, the show’s ratings are now plummeting with the likelihood it will be pulled from the fall schedule.  (FACT: Between 2004 and 2007, The Apprentice viewership dropped form 20.7 million to 7.5 million.)  But it is not for lack of trying.  Who can forget last Friday’s must see episode when Trump suggested brutally murdered George Floyd was smiling down from heaven and celebrating a jobs report which at best heralded a five percent comeback from record unemployment.  Hard to top that one.

But this morning, he gave it his best effort.  At 8:34 AM, Trump tweeted:

Never in the history of Can You Top This? did one bit contain so many punchlines.  Take your pick.  Martin Gugino is associated with ANTIFA.  A 75 year-old man is tech-savvy enough to operate a device which can intercept coded police messages and disrupt communications.  He intentionally inflicted life threatening injury to himself.

One feature of the original radio show was when listeners were invited to submit jokes for the panelists, changing the nature of the competition.  The on-air participants were rated on their ability to deliver content which was not their own.  Which makes you wonder, “Does Trump write his own material?”  In this morning’s case, we know the answer.

The Gugino “joke” first appeared on the web site The Last Refuge, whose header includes the tag line, “Rag Tag Bunch of Conservative Misfits.”  They should have further qualified their status to include the word “confused”.  As evidence of Gugino’s ANTIFA credentials, the writer who only identified himself as “sundance” reported:

On Friday Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown admitted Gugino was a professional ‘agitator’ who tried to work up the crowd and had been asked to leave the area ‘numerous’ times.

Close, but no cigar.  As reported by The Hill later that day:

Mayor Byron Brown (D) said on Friday that he was told a protester who was tackled and arrested by state police earlier in the week was a “major instigator” and an “agitator.”

Brown said state police officers were involved in the arrest of the protester, Myles Carter, last Monday and that the city does not have the ability to take action against them.

Although the conspiracy theory involving Gugano was now debunked, it did not stop Trump’s new media outlet of choice One America News Network  (OANN) from spreading the connivance on-air Monday night.  They repeated the claim Gugano had been identified as an agitator without attributing the remark to Mayor Brown or any other source.  One would think OANN would want its viewers to know the president* of the United* States had picked up on their reporting, but the story has since been scrubbed from OANN’s web site.

Perhaps the network had second thoughts after several Twitter accounts noted the report had been filed by OANN correspondent Kristian Rouz.  Rouz joined OANN in August 2017 as a political reporter.  Despite his new affiliation, Rouz remains on the payroll of Sputnik, which as disclosed by The Daily Beast, is “a Kremlin-owned news wire that played a role in Russia’s 2016 election-interference operation, according to an assessment by the U.S. intelligence community.”

As they say in comedy, timing is everything.  Therefore, it should come as no surprise Rouz came to America in the spring of 2015, just prior to Trump’s announcement he was running for president.  His obtained a visa on the premise he was pursuing a career in music and did, in fact, join an indie rock band named White Tar.  In an interview with The Daily Beast  national security correspondent Kevin Poulsen, Rouz’ bandmate, who goes by the stage name Jov Paradice, recalls what can only be described as Rouz’ dual personality.

When Trump was getting elected, he went into full sports coat mode. He had an indie style before—the whole blurred-line-of-sexuality thing—then he was wearing red ties and a suit. I said, “I’m not getting on the stage with Trump.”

Imagine, a Russian national, showing up in the United States at the start of the 2016 presidential election with an affinity for Donald Trump who joins a right-wing cable news outlet while still being paid by a Russian news organization and promoting conspiracy theories which Trump then shares via Twitter.  Can you top that?

For what it’s worth.
Dr. ESP

 

Racism & A Moment in Time

 

What better time to look in the rear view mirror than the year 2020.  And while some events, most notably the eight minute 46 second public execution of George Floyd was impossible to miss, others were less apparent.  But numbers do not lie.  During the past five months, four centuries of systemic racism have come together in a perfect storm of physical, economic and social destruction in minority communities across America.

While journalists and pundits have focused on the lasting symptoms of America’s racial history–a disproportionate share of COVID19 deaths among African-Americans, rising unemployment even as the economy shows some signs of recovery, excessive force by police or Donald Trump parroting 50 year-old racist memes–they target the WHATS without examining the WHYS.  Racial bias is a filter through which we all view our environment and which influences everyday decisions consciously or subconsciously.  Consider the following example, international travel policy in response to the coronavirus outbreak.

On January 31, 2020, Trump’s Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar announced a travel ban on flights to the United States from China.  Despite the fact 400,000 people from China entered the country during the month of January and another 30,000 were exempted from the ban, on its surface, the policy made sense since the virus originated in Wuhan, China.  Forty-one days later (March 12), Trump announced a travel restriction on 26 European nations, but exempted the United Kingdom and Ireland.  Two days later, the ban was extended to Great Britain.

What was the impact of the time frame in which the administration rolled out the travel restrictions?  Consider the following table, current as of 6:00 a.m. on June 8, 2020. (Source: Johns Hopkins University Hospital)

What do you notice about the top five ranked states?  They have airports–JFK, Newark, Logan, Philadelphia International and O’Hare–which service the most overwhelming majority of flights from Europe.  In contrast, California and Washington have the three airports–L.A. International, S.F. International and SeaTac–which are the initial U.S. destination for most inbound flights from China.  Most striking is the fact the first case of coronavirus in the United States was identified in Washington State yet it now has a fraction of the deaths reported in the top five states and California.

What does racism have to do with this disparity?  First, if you always refer to the coronavirus as the “China virus,” your first instinct is to focus on China regardless of what the data implies.  And exactly what would the data have told you if you had not followed your racist instinct?  First, the number of confirmed cases in Europe had been on the rise since February 22.  By the time Trump announced the restrictions on the first 26 European countries (March 12), the number of confirmed new daily cases had risen to 5,523.  By the time he added Great Britain (March 14), that same statistic had increased to 7,318.  Keep in mind, those confirmed cases may have included individuals who had been coronavirus carriers for 7-10 days prior to the appearance of any symptoms and could have had contact with individuals already in the United States or headed that way.

Weeks prior to March 12, data affirmed the virus was no longer confined to Wuhan or China as a whole.  It had already become a global pandemic.  But the second data point may be more relevant.  And since Donald Trump prefers visual aids, I wonder if his national security team showed him the following snapshot of air traffic on a typical pre-pandemic day.

Compare the number of overseas flights approaching the west coast and those heading to the five major airports in the Northeast and Midwest.  Airports in cities with large minority populations who are now paying the price of Trump’s witting or unwitting racial preference for those who look more like he does.

Yes, the virus originated in China, but it’s gateway of choice to America was via Europe.  Like a broken clock, Trump gets it right once in a while.  During an April 10 press briefing, Trump said, “The virus is so brilliant, the antibiotics can’t keep up with it.”  That’s not  the only thing that couldn’t keep up with it.  It remembered Trump had once said he preferred immigrants from countries like Norway and used that bias to its advantage.  For an administration that has made a living misdirecting the American public to follow the shiny object, the virus knew Trump’s eye would be drawn to China, leaving the right flank wide open, open to those invaders from countries more like Norway.

For what it’s worth.
Dr. ESP

 

Sticks & Carrots

 

Creativity101:  A valuable tool when it comes to creative thinking is the “unrelated stimulus,” taking an image, experience or lesson from one discipline and applying to a totally difference situation.  The power of this technique grows exponentially when you draw on multiple analogies.  Today’s post is inspired by two totally unrelated experiences.

Changing the culture of any organization occurs only when the individuals who lead and work within that culture modify their personal behavior.  There are two ways to do this.  We can either punish those who violate standards and norms or we can reward those who contribute to the fulfillment of the highest values and expectations.

Meat Processing use of HOClAs demonstrated by the following example, shifting from a culture of punishment to one of reward can make a significant impact on outcomes.  For most of its history, promoting safety in the meat processing sanitation business, one that involves high-pressure, scalding hot water and chemicals, has been stick-oriented.  The overwhelming majority of injuries, and even fatalities, have resulted from “pilot” error, employees’ not observing safety procedures.  Violations resulted in suspensions without pay or, in the most grievous cases, termination.

Employee turnover is among the highest in any industry.  It is not the most desirable way to make a living. Crews arrive after the second plant shift (around midnight) and must complete their tasks before USDA inspectors arrive the next morning.  If the plant fails inspection, crews are called back to address regulatory violations.  In these cases, the contracts between the processing company and the cleaning business generally require the latter to reimburse the former for lost revenue if the morning shift cannot start work on schedule.  In this industry, time is money and the focus is on systems and procedures.

Until someone outside the industry took a different approach.  Lance White, a financial analyst at ChemEx, which owned DCS Sanitation Management, was asked to prepare a prospectus to sell the company.  While evaluating the venture’s worth, White determined the business had substantial growth potential and decided to make an offer himself.  Upon taking the reins at DCS, White chose to prioritize employee safety as workers compensation insurance and client reimbursements for lost revenues were a major drain on profitability.

White decided to take a different tack from the industry norm.  Instead of docking employees for safety violations, he created a bonus schedule based on the number of days each employee completed a shift without an incident.  The result?  Fewer injuries, less payout to clients and eventually lower insurance rates.

30 years of innovation continues to carry out Mr. K's promise ...The second unrelated stimulus was Project Choice, a program of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation in Kansas City.  Mr. K, as he was affectionately known to friends and business associates, wanted to help the largely minority student body that now attended the high school where he had studied as a young boy.  He viewed education as the way to break the cycle of poverty and incarceration which were a part of so many of these students’ family histories,  But Mr. K also believed in personal responsibility.

Mr. K melded these two principles in the design of Project Choice.  He offered to sign a contract with each boy and girl who entered Westport High School, beginning in their freshman year.  If that student graduated with a B average or better and stayed out of trouble, he would fully fund their college education (tuition, fees, books, room and board).  In some cases, the payout included graduate school or professional training.  As Mr. K would say at each assembly when new Westport students were introduced to the offer, “When others did not give you a chance, we wanted to give you a choice.”

I have thought a lot about Lance (a Miami University graduate, who I invited to speak every semester in my Imagination and Entrepreneurship class) and Mr. K over the past 10 days.  In particular, I wondered if the lessons I learned from each provided guidance to help us move beyond the anger, frustration and division which have plagued the nation since the murder of George Floyd.

Of the two, Lance’s approach to worker safety is an obvious alternative to law enforcement officers being fired and charged with crimes for excessive force and endangerment.  Imagine a system where police are rewarded when they demonstrate compassion and understanding for the residents of the communities in which they serve.  Or receive bonuses in incidences where they deescalate tension in situations which might otherwise lead to unrest and violence.  Do not tell me law enforcement budgets cannot support such payments.  Compared to the settlements and legal fees associated with civil suits, an economic case can be made that rewarding good behavior would be much less expensive than cleaning up after bad actors.

The relevance of Project Choice to the current racial environment is much more complex.  Putting aside those who have resorted to violence to achieve political goals, I cannot help but think looting, for the sole purpose of obtaining something to which the looter thinks he/she is entitled, has been exacerbated since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.  Economic analyses show the increase in black unemployment since the outbreak is two percent higher than the population as a whole.  And more than 50 percent of African-American men are currently out of work.  As strange as this may sound, watching celebrities on late night television  and journalists/pundits on cable news shows from their spacious and well-appointed homes is a reminder of the disparity in lifestyles between the rich and famous and the average black household.  It is just one more piece of evidence of the income and wealth gap which has existed since the first African slave arrived in the new world 401 years ago.

I have been warned by more than one person to be careful about using the term reparations; so, I will let readers decide what to call the following analysis and proposal.  Regardless of label, the goal is economic justice and racial reconciliation.

Here are the facts.

  • In 2019, there were just over 17 million household described as “black alone” meaning they were not inter-racial.  Those represented 13 percent of the total 128.6 million American households.
  • That same year, the median annual household income in “black alone” households was $41,361 compared to $63,179 for all households, a difference of $21,818/year.

Suppose, as recognition of  the “knee that has been on the neck of black America” for four centuries as Al Sharpton preached at Floyd’s memorial service, Congress passed legislation which would allocate the differential in median income to each black household for one year.  The total cost would be just under $375 billion.  I know, budget hawks will be screaming bloody murder (one more false equivalency).  But it is nothing compared to the bailouts to corporate America since 2008 when one totals the housing bailout, the Trump tax cuts and now the COVID19 CARE package.

There are two more points that need to be considered.  First, some opponents of this concept will argue, “Why include every black household? Not all African-Americans are descendants of slaves.”  That is the easiest objection to address and is the main reason the use of the word reparations can be misleading.  Did Fred Trump ask those he prohibited from renting Trump housing whether they were descendants of slaves?   Did the NFL owners ask Colin Kaepernik if there were slaves in his family history when they blackballed him from the league?  As he pressed his knee on George Floyd’s neck, did Derek Chauvin think it mattered if his detainee was the great-great-grandson of a slave?  Every African-American, regardless of when and how they came to this country, has been impacted not by direct lineage to pre-Emancipation status, but by the underlying rationale for slavery, that people of color were less human than those with pale complexions, and thus, less deserving of equal housing, equal pay, equal justice under the law and equal rights delineated in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

The second and final point is a recognition by African-Americans that they can also use this opportunity to make a reciprocal gesture to those who over the years have been the victims of illegal behavior by members of the their own community.  What if public officials and clergy in the black community began a discussion about how best each family could use the federal payment to promote reconciliation.  For example, what if black leaders suggested that anyone who had looted during the Floyd protests make an anonymous payment to the store’s owner?  I am not idealistic or naive enough to believe this would happen on a grand scale, but no movement in history every started with an expectation everyone would jump on the bandwagon immediately.

Every entrepreneurship class I have taught or attended began with some variation of the model devised by Jeffrey Timmons which described the three elements essential to any successful venture:  opportunity, team and resources.  The size and makeup of the team and the amount of required resources depended on the magnitude of the opportunity.  If the demand for change precipitated by George Floyd’s murder is as big an opportunity as some believe, we should not be afraid to assemble the proportionate team and resources to respond in kind.

For what it’s worth.
Dr. ESP

 

Visual Evidence

 

How many times has Donald Trump asked us, “Who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes?”  Or tried to walk back remarks by claiming the words he used did not mean what they normally mean.  You know, it was a matter of semantics.

Well, it happened again yesterday when the Trump campaign demanded media outlets retract reports tear gas was used to disperse the crowd in Lafayette Park so Trump could show the American people he was strong enough to lift a book.  A spokesman for the U.S. Parks Police claimed their weapons of choice were “smoke canisters and pepper balls.”  Too bad they did not check with the CDC first which defines tear gas as “an umbrella term for various non-lethal riot control agents, including pepper spray.”

As legendary sportscaster Warner Wolf would say, “Roll the video tape.”  There was the visual evidence.  Protesters with watery eyes.  Individuals splashing water in their faces to dilute the irritant. The only thing missing was Kellyanne Conway promoting the alternative fact these people were Trump supporters crying for joy because her boss stood up to those thugs and anarchists who had no respect for the rule of law.

It makes a person wonder whether there are similar explanations for other Trump gaffes or incriminating comments.  Let’s take one example, the infamous Access Hollywood tape.  I know, you thought he was talking about himself when he said, “Grab ’em by the pussy.  You can do anything.”  But sometimes, interruptions in audio transmission can change the essence of the message.  Remember Neil Armstrong as he stepped off the ladder onto the lunar surface.  We heard, “One small step for man; one giant leap for mankind.”  Armstrong actually said, “One small step for a man…”

You also have to consider the audio filter associated with Miles Law, “Where you stand depends on where you sit.”  If you are just an average voter and believe Donald Trump is a vulgar, misogynist you hear one thing.  But, if you are a member of the Secret Service detail assigned to the Republican (and I use that term loosely) nominee for president the Saturday before the general election, you take his words to mean something entirely different.  As was the case at a Reno, Nevada rally on November 5, 2016, you hear something consistent with your duty to protect your charge, “Grab the pussy.  You can do anything (to protect him).”  (As was the case with Armstrong, “em by” was lost in transmission.) Visual evidence the Secret Service responded accordingly is provided below.

Donald Trump is rushed off stage by Secret Service agents at ...

FOOTNOTE:  The above incident began when Austyn Crites moved toward the stage brandishing a lethal sign which read, “Republicans Against Trump.”  Only a cardboard president would feel that threatened by another piece of cardboard.  For the record, at the time Crites was a 33 year old Eagle Scout and a registered Republican although Kellyanne Conway accused him of being a Democratic plant on the Sunday talk shows the following morning.   And of course, Junior retweeted posts which characterized Crites’ protest as “an assassination attempt.”

For what it’s worth.
Dr. ESP