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Category Archives: Articles & Books of Interest

What Democrats Need to Hear

16 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Harvard Business Review, Joan C. Williams, WCC, White Working Class

The morning after the election I wrote, “The country spoke yesterday. And we must listen.”

For Democrats particularly, but also for some (many?) Republicans and Independents, the article below is one example of the thinking, understanding, and writing I meant when I said we need to listen. (Hat Tip to Richard Margolies for pointing out this article to me.)

Read: What So Many People Don’t Get About the White Working Class, by Joan C. Williams, Harvard Business Review, Nov. 10, 2016.

Williams is Distinguished Professor of Law and Founding Director of the Center of WorkLife Law at the University of California, Hastings College in Law.

As always, please consider adding your thoughts in the Comment section of this post.

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“What Do We Do Now?”

03 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

"Medium", "What Do We Do Now", Medium.com, Michael Slaby

As we near the election day ‘finish line,’ I suspect no matter who wins, our country will remain divided and the frustrations and dysfunctions that have been exposed will continue unless we learn there are some larger changes we need to make.

For me, one of the better essays on where we’re headed, what we can possibly learn, and how we might approach and respond to what is occurring is Michael Slaby’s recent essay. It’s short and seems to me to hit the nail on the head.

See: What Do We Do Now, by Michael Slaby, Medium.com

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Why Some of Us Love Baseball

25 Tuesday Oct 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, Go Sox

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Chicago Cubs, Cleveland Indians, Cubbies, Cubs, Indians, Nats, Sox, Thomas Boswell, Washington "Post", World Series

Grind: Extra Fine (Small Circles & Effect: High Contrast), Brew: Color Gels (1/2 Pic & Full Blended Circles), Serve: Stirred (Flash Burn Tone & Brown Bag Texture)

Photo by Ellen Miller

Great playoffs already.

Starting with two thrilling Wild Card games, moving on thru the losses of my beloved Sox and adopted Nats in their Division series, and to Indians and the Cubs deserved wins in the Championship series, we’ve already seen wonderful playoff baseball.

And tonight to the World Series, where along with the rest of the baseball world — except those who live in Cleveland and those who are related to the players and staff of the Indians — I too hope the Cubs win it all and give relief to all those who have suffered for the past 108 years.

Continue reading »

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“We Need to Have Our Stories Told”

19 Wednesday Oct 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

"The Guardian", Sarah Smarsh, Who Are the Trump Voters?

Thanks to a Facebook post last night by Anna G, I’ve read and reread an article by a woman from Kansas, Sarah Smarsh, published in The Guardian which makes a case that “Trump supporters are not the caricatures journalists depict.”

In her article, Smarsh urges readers to “be aware of our class biases…as we discern who they are.” She believes that the media has largely missed this story and writes:

What we need is to have our stories told.

It’s not a short article, but I believe it is worthy of the time it will take you to read it:

Dangerous Idiots: How the Liberal Media Failed Working-Class Americans.

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“How Trump Happened”

14 Friday Oct 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Donald Trump, Hilliary Clinton, Joseph E. Stiglist, Project Syndicate

How Trump Happened by Joseph E. Stiglist

NEW YORK – As I have traveled around the world in recent weeks, I am repeatedly asked two questions: Is it conceivable that Donald Trump could win the US presidency? And how did his candidacy get this far in the first place?

As for the first question, though political forecasting is even more difficult than economic forecasting, the odds are strongly in favor of Hillary Clinton. Still, the closeness of the race (at least until very recently) has been a mystery: Clinton is one of the most qualified and well prepared presidential candidates that the United States has had, while Trump is one of the least qualified and worst prepared. Moreover, Trump’s campaign has survived behavior by him that would have ended a candidate’s chances in the past.

So why would Americans be playing Russian roulette (for that is what even a one-in-six chance of a Trump victory means)? Those outside the US want to know the answer, because the outcome affects them, too, though they have no influence over it.

And that brings us to the second question: why did the US Republican Party nominate a candidate that even its leaders rejected?

Obviously, many factors helped Trump beat 16 Republican primary challengers to get this far. Personalities matter, and some people do seem to warm to Trump’s reality-TV persona.

But several underlying factors also appear to have contributed to the closeness of the race. For starters, many Americans are economically worse off than they were a quarter-century ago. The median income of full-time male employees is lower than it was 42 years ago, and it is increasingly difficult for those with limited education to get a full-time job that pays decent wages.

Indeed, real (inflation-adjusted) wages at the bottom of the income distribution are roughly where they were 60 years ago. So it is no surprise that Trump finds a large, receptive audience when he says the state of the economy is rotten. But Trump is wrong both about the diagnosis and the prescription. The US economy as a whole has done well for the last six decades: GDP has increased nearly six-fold. But the fruits of that growth have gone to a relatively few at the top – people like Trump, owing partly to massive tax cuts that he would extend and deepen.

At the same time, reforms that political leaders promised would ensure prosperity for all – such as trade and financial liberalization – have not delivered. Far from it. And those whose standard of living has stagnated or declined have reached a simple conclusion: America’s political leaders either didn’t know what they were talking about or were lying (or both).

Trump wants to blame all of America’s problems on trade and immigration. He’s wrong. The US would have faced deindustrialization even without freer trade: global employment in manufacturing has been declining, with productivity gains exceeding demand growth.

Where the trade agreements failed, it was not because the US was outsmarted by its trading partners; it was because the US trade agenda was shaped by corporate interests. America’s companies have done well, and it is the Republicans who have blocked efforts to ensure that Americans made worse off by trade agreements would share the benefits.

Thus, many Americans feel buffeted by forces outside their control, leading to outcomes that are distinctly unfair. Long-standing assumptions – that America is a land of opportunity and that each generation will be better off than the last – have been called into question. The global financial crisis may have represented a turning point for many voters: their government saved the rich bankers who had brought the US to the brink of ruin, while seemingly doing almost nothing for the millions of ordinary Americans who lost their jobs and homes. The system not only produced unfair results, but seemed rigged to do so.

Support for Trump is based, at least partly, on the widespread anger stemming from that loss of trust in government. But Trump’s proposed policies would make a bad situation much worse. Surely, another dose of trickle-down economics of the kind he promises, with tax cuts aimed almost entirely at rich Americans and corporations, would produce results no better than the last time they were tried.

In fact, launching a trade war with China, Mexico, and other US trading partners, as Trump promises, would make all Americans poorer and create new impediments to the global cooperation needed to address critical global problems like the Islamic State, global terrorism, and climate change. Using money that could be invested in technology, education, or infrastructure to build a wall between the US and Mexico is a twofer in terms of wasting resources.

There are two messages US political elites should be hearing. The simplistic neo-liberal market-fundamentalist theories that have shaped so much economic policy during the last four decades are badly misleading, with GDP growth coming at the price of soaring inequality. Trickle-down economics hasn’t and won’t work. Markets don’t exist in a vacuum. The Thatcher-Reagan “revolution,” which rewrote the rules and restructured markets for the benefit of those at the top, succeeded all too well in increasing inequality, but utterly failed in its mission to increase growth.

This leads to the second message: we need to rewrite the rules of the economy once again, this time to ensure that ordinary citizens benefit. Politicians in the US and elsewhere who ignore this lesson will be held accountable. Change entails risk. But the Trump phenomenon – and more than a few similar political developments in Europe – has revealed the far greater risks entailed by failing to heed this message: societies divided, democracies undermined, and economies weakened.

(Joseph E. Stiglitz was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2001 and is University Professor at Columbia University. The article above was published today in Project Syndicate.)

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ICYMI: Best/Most Popular Summer Posts

04 Sunday Sep 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest

≈ Leave a Comment

I haven’t done too much posting over the summer months as travel, family, baseball, and reading have been more prominent in my wonderful freedom to choose each day how I spend my time.

Still, there have been some posts, some of which you may have missed because of your own summer activities. And so, below are links to various posts from the last three months, organized generally by topic.

Travel & Photography – mostly photographs with a bit of my writing about trips to Spain, Louisiana, and Ireland:

*Andalusiai: Thru Ellen’s Eyes

*Thru Ellen’s Lens: The Alligator Blinked First

*Ireland Thru Ellen’s Lens

Family – some thoughts, photos, and musings about family

*She Died too Soon

*The Importance of Fathers

*More Things I Never Knew or What I Learned Last Weekend

Books – not wanting to wait a whole year, I’ve posted what books I’m enjoying and what some of you have reported to have enjoyed in the first part of 2016:

*I’m Reading What You Recommended, Part I

*New Reads, Recent Favorites, Part II

*Books MillersTime Readers Are Enjoying

*More Mid-Summer Recommendations by MT Readers

Films/Theater – nine films and a play:

*Movies: Three to See

*Six Movies to Consider

*Writing at Its Best – (Joe Posnanski on the play Hamilton and his daughter)

Baseball – surprisingly (to me), I haven’t posted much about my obsession with the Red Sox and baseball, tho I’ve spent many hours on this important matter all summer. (Note: as of this post, the mighty Sox are tied for first place in the AL East.)

*Join Me for a Nats’ Game in Sept./Oct.

Articles of Interest/The Outer Loop – attempts to pull from other writers understandings of what is occurring in our political world, along with a simple statement on why I voted for Hilliary in the DC primary and will do so in the general election:

*Trump Voters: Strangers in Their Own Land?

*“I Want My Country Back”

*I Voted for Hilliary Today

It’s not too late to add your voice, thoughts, comments to any of the above posts.

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Trump Voters: Strangers in Their Own Land?

29 Monday Aug 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"Mother Jones", "Talking Points Memo", Arlie Russell Hochschild, Josh Marshall

Another Article of Interest for MillersTime readers, one I have posted in The Outer Loop section of my blog.

In this article, taken in part from his new book, Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right, sociologist and author Arlie Russell Hochschild reports on five years of interviews with a portion of our population who find themselves strangers in their own country and who, though they didn’t start out as Trump supporters, have been people who believe Trump understands them.

Check out the article from Sept./Oct. Mother Jones. (Hat Tip to Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo for leading me to this.)

Respectful comments and reactions are welcomed.

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“There’s No Such Thing as a Protest Vote”

08 Monday Aug 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

", "Here Comes Everybody", "Medium", 2016 Elections, Biz Stone, Clay Shirky, Ev Williams, Protest Votes, Refusing to Vote, Third Parties, Twitter, Voting, Write-in Votes

As I occasionally do, I am posting a link to an article that I found of value. It’s not arguing for any particular candidate, but it’s author, Clay Shirky, believes “There’s No Such Thing as Protest Vote,” and he explains why.

If you read the article, scroll to the very bottom and click on “Show All Responses.” Unlike many Comment sections following an article that may be controversial, some of these responses are quite good and many take exception to what Shirky writes, but they do so respectfully.

I’m pasteing in the first few paragraphs so you can see if it is something you want to spend the six minutes it will take to read the article:

There’s No Such Thing As A Protest Vote

We’re in the season of protest vote advocacy, with writers of all political stripes making arguments for third-party candidates (Jill Stein, Gary Johnson), write-in votes (Bernie Sanders, Rod Silva), or refusing to vote altogether (#NeverTrump, #BernieOrBust.) For all the eloquence and passion and rage in these arguments, however, they suffer from a common flaw: there is no such thing as a protest vote.

The authors of these pieces rarely line up their preferred Presidential voting strategies — third-party, write-in, refusal — with the electoral system as it actually exists. In 2016, that system will offer 130 million or so voters just three options:

A. I prefer Donald Trump be President, rather than Hillary Clinton.
B. I prefer Hillary Clinton be President, rather than Donald Trump.
C. Whatever everybody else decides is OK with me.

That’s it. Those are the choices. All strategies other than a preference for Trump over Clinton or vice-versa reduce to Option C.

You can link to the article Here and get to the Comments Here.

Clay Shirky is someone I respect and follow. He wrote an important book — Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations (2008) — and is one of the more informed and thoughtful individuals on the emerging role of the Internet and on Internet technology. Among the many other things in which he’s involved, he teaches at NYU and his writings and thoughts are usually at the forefront of what is happening in this new world of the Internet.

Medium, the site on which Shirky published this article is a somewhat new ‘publishing platform’ founded by Ev Williams and Biz Stone, who among other things were founders of Twitter. This endeavor is to give writers a longer space (longer than 140 characters) to post articles. They also have writers of their own, and I think Shirky might be writing for them. Their website explains, “Medium is a community of readers and writers offering unique perspectives on ideas large and small.”  If you’re interested in learning more about Medium, you can check out the site here.

Finally, as always, I encourage MillersTime readers to comment, respectfully, on these linked articles directly on my site. Please consider doing so and let others know what you think about Shirky’s view that “There Is No Such Thing as a Protest Vote.”

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“I Want My Country Back”

25 Saturday Jun 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Brexit, Hiraeth, New Statesman, Welsh word

From time to time I link to or quote an article that seems to explain something that is going on in this country or abroad, something that resonates with me.

So this morning, I draw your attention to a column in the NewStatesman, Britain’s current affairs and political magazine. It doesn’t cover everything about Brexit (for instance there is nothing about the poor turnout of millennials who ‘backed’ the Remain side of the ballot – Brexit Is What Happens When Millennials Don’t Vote), but it does explain and react to some of what has occurred in the United Kingdom.

Don’t many of us, no matter our political views, feel “hiraeth“? That’s the Welsh word that roughly translates as a deep desire for home, “a home you can never return to, a home which may never have existed at all.”

See Laurie Penny’s I Want My Country Back, published yesterday in the NewStatesman.

 

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Understanding Trump’s Appeal

10 Friday Jun 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Donald Trump, James A. Lindsay

For a few months now I’ve been ‘loosely involved’ with a group of friends who are concerned about what is happening in our politics and who have been exchanging emails about where the country is headed. One of the intents of the individual who brought this group together was to answer the question about how we might direct our energies and move beyond the “divisiveness and denouncing the other side.” The questions he posed were these: “Isn’t it our obligation to seek to understand and look for ways to heal the schism and reduce the divisiveness? Isn’t that our best response to what we see happening at this time in our history?”

One of my bedrock beliefs and something that has formed the core of my professional life (working with troubled children, adolescents, parents, and families) is that before solutions to troubles are possible it is necessary to understand what is upsetting to each of the ‘parties.’

In that light, I draw your attention to a lengthy blog post by someone named James A. Lindsay whose somewhat provocative title to what he has to say is Liberals, Want Trump to Win? Keep Calling Him a Racist.

I hope you will take the time to read what Lindsay has to say. Not because I agree with all of it nor because I think all of his views or his conclusions are valid. What is valuable is that Lindsay writes from the ‘right’ and explains what is so upsetting to others like himself.

Probably the easiest way to read the article is to click on this link, but I am also posting it in its entirety below.

Continue reading »

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I Voted for Hillary Clinton Today

04 Saturday Jun 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Absentee Voting, Bernie Sanders, District of Columbia Primary, Divided Democrats, Hilliary Clinton, Robert Reich, Rocky De La Fuente

Ballot

I live in Washington, DC, and the only ballot I can cast that counts on a national level is the one for the Presidency.

DC has a primary election on June 14, 2016 with three names on the ballot: Hillary Clinton, “Rocky” Roque De La Fuente, and Bernie Sanders.

Since I will be out of town on June 14th, I filled out and mailed my absentee ballot today.

I voted for Hillary Clinton.

It was an easy vote to cast.

Given these candidates, there is no doubt in my mind that the former Senator and Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, is the most qualified and capable candidate of the three.

While I am attracted to much of Sen. Sanders’ analyses of what is not right in our country, I could not vote for him. I do not believe his qualifications or capabilities match Hillary’s.

I understand the enthusiasm of Sanders’ followers and that of much of the younger generations’. I hope they will fight to the end of the convention for Sanders, and if he is not the nominee, then I hope they will get behind Clinton. (If, though it seems unlikely, Sanders is the nominee, I will vote for him in the general election.)**

There is absolutely no doubt in my mind between Clinton and Trump which candidate I would trust in the White House. Trump, though he speaks to and/or for a significant portion of individuals in our country, has not shown the temperament nor the qualifications necessary to lead our country. Clinton, though she has not shown good judgment in regard to her emails and in many ways is likely to perpetuate some of the policies that don’t speak to important problems in our country, she is qualified and capable to deal with the enormous burdens of the presidency. On the issue of Supreme Court nominations alone, I think her potential appointees will reflect more of what I believe are the directions the Court and our country needs to move.

I will vote for Hillary (or Sanders if he’s the Democratic candidate) in the General Election.

**Robert Reich’s Advice for Divided Democrats.

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Writing at Its Best

01 Wednesday Jun 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, Escapes and Pleasures, Go Sox

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"Hamilton", Joe Posnanski

I love good writing.

If you have a few minutes, take a look at this piece by Joe Posnanski.

He’s a sports’ writer, and I follow him pretty closely.

But this piece is not about sports.

I suspect some of you will want to pass it on to others.

Enjoy.

(For my own take on a similar subject, tho no where near as well written, see Broadway as You’ve Never Known It.)

 

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“The Secret History of Tiger Woods”

25 Monday Apr 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, Go Sox

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

"The Secret History of Tiger Woods", ESPN, Tiger Woods, Wright Thompson

tigerheadPhoto Illustration by Richard Roberts

I’ve never been too fascinated by golf and have often used the snarky quote, “It spoils a good walk,” to express my view of this ‘sport.’ (Mark Twain is quoted to have said, “Golf is a good walk spoiled,” although that quote apparently precedes Twain.)

But I have always been interested in the best players in any sport and will read about or even attend events other than baseball to see the likes of a Michael Jordan, Andre Agassi, Pele, etc.

Tiger Woods fits (or once did) into that category of best ever, and when he seemed to self destruct a few years ago, I wondered what the ‘back’ story was, why someone of his great abilities could fall so precipitously.

A long article I read several days ago about Tiger Woods — The Secret History of Tiger Woods by Wright Thompson — gives some insight that I had not previously had to this fallen, ‘best ever’ athlete.

Check it out: The Secret History of Tiger Woods, by Wright Thompson, ESPN, 4/21/16.

What do you think?

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Two Things to Always Remember When Watching Baseball

26 Saturday Mar 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, Go Sox

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

2016 MillersTime Baseball Contest, baseball, Toughest Outs in Baseball, Watching Baseball

Of course there are many more than two things that baseball fans need to remember when watching the greatest game ever invented.

But, taking a ‘page’ from Art Buchwald’s wise reprinting each year of his le Jour de Merci Donnant, I want to remind those of you who pay attention to more than just the home runs and final score of games about two articles I have posted in the past:

Read This and You’ll Never Watch Baseball the Same Way Again

The Three Thoughest Outs in Baseball

And since I have your attention, once more let me remind you:

Don’t forget to get in your 2016 Baseball Contest Picks. Deadline is approaching One Week away as I type this.

I know most of you who have not sent in your predictions yet are simply waiting for Spring Training to be over so you’ll have all the information you need to make wise, judicious decisions. None of you, I’m sure, are procrastinators.

(Your next reminder will be a personal email from me with a few choice remarks.)

(Also, for those who may have missed it, this year, at the urging of several of you, I have made and posted my predictions for these Baseball Contests. I’m not eligible for any of the prizes, which is probably not an issue once you see my picks.)

New Season Countdown

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An Abuse of Power

20 Sunday Mar 2016

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, The Outer Loop

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Abuse of Power, An Open Letter to Mitch McConnell, confirmation, Kate Geiselman, nomination, Pres. Obama, Republican Senate, Sen. Mitch McConnell, Senate, Supreme Court

I suspect most readers of MillersTime, as well as most individuals who are concerned about the nomination and confirmation to the Supreme Court of Pres. Obama’s selection, have already settled in their mind where they stand on this issue.

My two cents is not so different from what I read in an Open Letter to Mitch McConnell by Kate Geiselman, someone I have never known. They key part of her view is toward the end of her very short, six paragraph letter:

The purpose of the confirmation process is not so you can wait for someone from your party to take office and pick a nominee you like better. No, the reason checks and balances exist is so that one branch of the government cannot abuse its power. By design, the system slows government down, and that’s as it should be. But deliberately forestalling the confirmation process of a moderate, qualified nominee who would likely sail through were it not an election year is not “checking” the executive branch. It’s ugly partisan politics.

Actually, I would take it a bit further.

It’s not just partisan politics. It’s obstruction, something Sen. McConnell has perfected in the last seven years.

It seems to me the bottom line is that the Republican Senate, because of their numbers, has the power to wait to advise and consent until a new President is elected, despite the fact that there are nine months remaining in the current President’s term (his second term).

But because someone or some group has a certain amount of power, that does not mean that exercising that power is the right thing to do. To deny the President and his nominee a hearing and a vote is an abuse of that power.

It’s that clear and simple to me.

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