Thursday, August 27, 2015

Police Houses in the Neighborhood

Why do we have police stations? Because it's comfortable for policemen? Admittedly, we need community jails, courtrooms, and related support services in some centralized location, but I am talking about the policemen.

Where do we need the police? The answer is so obvious it sounds almost ridiculous: in the neighborhood.  Let the city pick out a foreclosed house, have a neighborhood painting party, and like magic the police are where they are needed.  Sure, it is more complicated and there are some security issues, but with low cost internet video cameras, police houses can monitor each other and their houses via their smart phone.  (Don't tell me they have hummers and not smart phones.)

I'm thinking a model station would have about two to three policeman a shift.  Policemen could use Periscope via twitter to talk to their community each morning and then walk among their fellow citizens.  Most work would be on foot in the community via scooter, bike or similar.  Cars would be allocated to roaming police that would move into and out of neighborhoods as requested by their brothers on the ground.

And, of course, it is all about forming relationships with the community. Walk by and tell a kid on the block happy birthday, or attend a funeral of a child shot in the neighborhood.  Act like these people dying in our slums means something to somebody.  Get the parents trust so that when their children are doing something illegal they talk to the policeman, not to get their child arrested, but for guidance on what to do.  And, yes, it would be better if most, or at least some of the policemen, were the same race as the people in the neighborhood. Yea, someday it may not matter, but for now one step at a time.

One step better would be for policemen to live in the neighborhood with their families.  No, its sad, we are not ready for that, but it would be a noble goal ... a Phase 2 of this general idea.  The goal is to have the policemen to be part of the community, to have the relationships in place that people in this neighborhood treat him as a wise and helpful person.

Now, here is the Phase 3... having the teachers of the children of the neighborhood living in the neighborhood, along with their preachers, the owners of the stores, the fast food restaurants, the banks, etc. all living together.  Yea, I know that is foolish we will never be that equal in this country.   (And yes, there are countries where the difference between the top and bottom of the social and economic ladder is much smaller than here, but we don't think that is fair.) 

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

America Spartan's Last Stand

My first election was Kennedy versus Nixon.   We had debates and ran an election in our high school.   We were afraid of Kennedy because he was a Catholic. Little did we know that Nixon later would resign in infamy.  Hope in America was unbelievable; we believed we could change the world.  Capitalism would make us wealthy, and we would set a shining example of living by principles.  Even in high school, we debated what America should stand for.

Now I look in sadness what America has become.  Yes, we became the great military power, but not much more.  And yes, capitalism has created trillions in wealth all over the globe, much of it in America.  But, the wealth is not distributed by the sweat put in to earn it, but is concentrated instead in the hands of the nobility.  Poverty creeps across the land slowly consuming what's left of our middle class.  And violence is so commonplace that we ignore it.

But, the biggest sadness comes in what has happened to our democracy.  Do school children still debate the issues?  How could they, the candidates don't even present the issues anymore.  Trump is the star student on how to run a campaign: bash everyone even in his one policy statement. But, Trump didn't invent the game, he is just very good at playing the modern version of whack a mole.

We are quickly becoming an oligarchy where votes are bought and sold on a tv reality show called America the Once Beautiful.  

I am wondering.  Can we make one last stand?  Can we rise up as a nation, put aside our petty differences and stand up to the rich?  Or, will we just roll over and let the rich have our country and be content to live as peasants in a land protected by our King's army. 

The rarest of all men has risen among us.  A man that the rich do not even offer to buy.  In fact, if he continues to gather support from the peasants, I would not be surprised if the rich do not go through the show of backing him just to destroy him.

And even more joyous to me is that this independent man wants to pull this country in a more compassionate direction.  In an age of Us and Them, he is only about Us.  He wants to pull all Americans into the Dream with education, healthcare, social and economic equality, and a bigger share of the American Pie.  

This man is not afraid to say to the rich or wealthy corporations, "you need to pull more of the load".  He is labelled a socialist, a word in America we are afraid of.  He does not seek to destroy capitalism but simply enable the weakest among us  to share in the bountiful harvest.  He dares to hope that all citizens will have an education and healthcare despite their status at birth.  Perhaps this economic equality will help us move more toward the social equality that has been so elusive for us. 

In short,  Bernie wants to give us back the American Dream that we debated so many decades ago  in my high school class in El Paso.   Can we as Americans rise up and make one last stand like the Spartans did to save democracy.





Friday, August 21, 2015

Corporations Fleeing From American Greed

We always talk about corporate greed.  But many countries are fleeing the greed of the American people.  

The average corporate tax in Europe is 25%.  In America, with Federal income tax at 35% and the average state income tax at 4%, companies pay 39% corporate tax to be headquartered in America.

U.S. Corporations found a way around this ... it is called inverting.  The buy a foreign firm and then move the headquarters to that country.  Congress in their brilliance has made this harder to do.  But, now something else is happening.

Foreign corporations are buying U.S. Corporations at an accelerating rate.  Over $335 billion worth of U.S. corporations have been sold this year.  How do they do it?  They simply point out to the shareholders all the taxes they will save by being owned by a foreign corporations.

Yea, we can get even tougher on the corporations, but they will simply move everything to overseas with the loss of American jobs.  Yea, sure we can also put a tariff on the goods, but guess who pays the tariff ultimately, the U.S. taxpayer, plus the other country can play the same game with our country exports.   It is a lose, lose game.  We must play the game by the world rules or the world simply discounts America.  We are not King Kong anymore.

We live in an international environment. We need the world, increasingly the world only needs our military might.  It is a role we have chosen, to be the world policeman. But, we can not pay for that military by taxing corporations more than the rest of the world taxes corporations.  Our greed will simply drive corporations from America to a place that treats them better. 

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Trump's Heartless Immigration Plan


Wileyfoxes.jpg
Trump’s Immigration Plan
Robert R. Odle, Ph.D.

…Where is Trump's Heart? ...
Trump’s immigration plan is both heartless and stupid.  I won't dwell on the stupid parts, like getting Mexico to pay for building a wall that can be easily crossed by ladders, but instead focus on the lack of compassion (also with plenty of stupidity) in his “family plan” for deporting immigrants.
He wants to send 11 (perhaps as many as 20) million illegal immigrants and their children, some citizens, home.   So he plans to round these people and their children, some who have been here for decades, and ship them home.  Trump says screw being a U.S. citizen by laws that have stood for more than a hundred years and guaranteed by the 14th Amendment and court rulings such as United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898) … he is in effect proposing to break the law.  But, let’s say he is successful in breaking the law or changing the 14th Amendment (really?)
Imagine the harm done to a 10 year child, who only speaks English, who has been here is whole life being ripped out of his house and dumped with his parents without money or means to make a living in the middle of Mexico.  Where is the compassion in anyone who would do that do a ten year old kid, or his parents for that matter.  Is America becoming so heartless that it will support a person with such a plan?

So where is the compassion in the Trump plan?










Sunday, August 16, 2015

Separate but Equal



Wileyfoxes.jpg
Separate But Equal
Robert R. Odle, Ph.D.


…separate but not equal....
Perhaps we were wrong. Remember when we decided that separate was inherently not equal.  Well, 40 years later, we are still mostly separate and definitely still not equal with regard to both opportunities and how minorities are treated:
  1. Schools are still predominantly white or black or hispanic.
  2. Neighborhoods and slums are still dominated by single races.
  3. Most social groups seem to naturally segregate by race.
  4. Work environments, especially management, is white dominated. Even places like colleges where we would expect the most progress, are still dominated by white professors.  (Am I wrong on any of this, they are just based eyeball observations not data.)
So, if we are still separate and integration is so elusive, it makes sense to me to make sure everything is equal.  Let’s start with the schools:
  1. Are the “black: (or hispanic, or native etc.) equalled funded? If not, let’s make sure it happens across states, neighborhoods, etc.
  2. Are the teachers in “black schools” paid as much as their counterparts in “white schools”?  If not, let’s make it so.
  3. Are the facilities in the “black schools” as aesthetically pleasing and as functional as the schools in the “white” schools. If not, fix it.
  4. Are the information systems in the “black schools” as good as their counterparts in the “white schools”.  If not, fix it.
Of course, these are easy concepts, but they are complicated to execute.  But, do we even have the will to set up such goals and pursue them.  One of the biggest obstacle  is the ridiculous way schools are funded primarily from property taxes. It means from the first step we are struggling to equalize the flow of money to schools in poor neighborhoods.  Of course, as stupid as funding schools primarily from property taxes, I don’t see anyone advocating to change this and fund schools out of the general fund.


Have you noticed that most of your social events are with people of your own color.  That’s the way it is in my world.  I don’t really it like it this way, but I am at a loss on how to change it.  We have one African American in our movie group, who I really enjoy, but she is the only person of color in my life on a social, or any other role. I know I need life experiences with other races to really appreciate their view of life and them as fellow travelers on our journey.


I’m not saying give up on integration, I am just saying while we figure out integration (or not), let’s start working on the concept that all students should have an equal opportunity for success starting with kindergarten (if not sooner). Couple that with free college education at the other end and perhaps we can position America for this new automated, computer world that is coming.
is equal good enough for now?









Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Humans Need Not Apply


Wileyfoxes.jpg
Humans Need Not Apply
Robert R. Odle, Ph.D.

…a new book we must read to be fair ....

Humans Need Not Apply: A Guide to Wealth and Work in the Age of Artificial Intelligence Hardcover – August 4, 2015

by Jerry Kaplan  (Author)
Summary of Book: After billions of dollars and fifty years of effort, researchers are finally cracking the code on artificial intelligence. As society stands on the cusp of unprecedented change, Jerry Kaplan unpacks the latest advances in robotics, machine learning, and perception powering systems that rival or exceed human capabilities. Driverless cars, robotic helpers, and intelligent agents that promote our interests have the potential to usher in a new age of affluence and leisure — but as Kaplan warns, the transition may be protracted and brutal unless we address the two great scourges of the modern developed world: volatile labor markets and income inequality. He proposes innovative, free-market adjustments to our economic system and social policies to avoid an extended period of social turmoil. His timely and accessible analysis of the promise and perils of artificial intelligence is a must-read for business leaders and policymakers on both sides of the aisle.

Some Scary Stuff in this New Book

  1. The rate of automation is accelerating.  The rate of eliminating jobs and making humans obsolete is accelerating.
  2. Wealth inequality for the U.S., already one of the worst in the world (comparable to Russia and India) is going to get much worse very quickly (it is already happening).

If a small percentage of your population working with computers and machines can generate more wealth than we have ever known then how do we answer these questions:
  1. How is that great wealth to be distributed?
    1. Option 1: The owners of the computers/machines and the programmers (the lucky few) are the only one that gets the wealth.
    2. Option 2. The owners of the computers/machines and the programmers get almost all of the wealth and everyone else lives in poverty.
    3. Option 3.  The owners of the computer/machines and the programmers get most of the wealth and everyone else gets paid for improving themselves (free education, art, training) and working for the common good (peace corps for america, volunteer work, childcare for students/poor people, etc.)
    4. Option 4.  The owners of the computer/machines and the programmers get most of the wealth and everyone else gets a stipend.
  2. How does everyone else but the lucky few find meaning/value for their lives?
  3. If the lucky few get almost all the wealth, do we house all the rest in prisons or just terminate them?



what value guides your opinion









Sunday, August 09, 2015

Useless People


Blog Archive