Friday, August 5, 2016

Working Away w/Thoughts on @DailyOutsider, #Startups & #Courage

It has been an interesting week,  to say the least.    After doing some work in support of @DailyOutsider (including some of the Social Curation along with a new Newsbyte), I wanted to reflect upon this guidance on Start-ups.  In some ways, what #outsiders has been about is to whether it can live up to the key lessons outlined in Bill Gross' Admonition.  It is also a good primer for all to think about and reflect upon.    It was quite timely as #Outsiders continues onward--one thing that #outsiders is not short of is "passion".

It is a lesson to be learnt by all no doubt-and I for one want to send a special shoutout to +Peter Diamandis for this and all that he has done to transform the conversation about our World and our Future: 

This week, I had a chance to sit down with my brilliant friend Bill Gross, the CEO and Founder of Idealab.
Bill is a startup guru… to say the least.
Over the last 25 years, within Idealab, Bill has come up with over 1,000 startup ideas and started 150 companies.
This blog is about some of the key lessons Bill has learned about entrepreneurship, turning ideas into companies, investing, and helping them succeed.

What is Idealab?

Idealab is the longest running technology incubator around today.
Founded by Bill Gross in 1996, Idealab has built an incredible ecosystem optimized to ideate, start, build, and grow great technology startups.
So far, their track record is unparalleled. Of the 150 companies they launched, 45 have now gone public or had M&A activities, and 45 are still active now. And, importantly, they've had 60 failures.
If you're familiar with the technology startup world, you know that typically less than 1 in 10 startups succeed.
Bill and I sat down to talk about the lessons he's learned over the years in my Abundance 360 webinar this week, and here are my top learnings…

9 Key Lessons from 150 Startups

As both entrepreneurs and investors, take these lessons to heart. They are based on a lot of experience.

1. It's easier when YOU are the customer.

When your startup company idea solves a problem that YOU have (and fundamentally understand), and you are the customer, it's going to be easier to reach "product-market fit."
YOU can be a good judge of whether you are meeting the need. Not someone else…
You can ask yourself: Am I winning at the goal that I have? Does this feel right? Would I use this thing?
If you aren't the customer, the alternative is having to constantly ask your prospective customers for feedback – not an easy thing to do accurately.

2. If you have an idea, test it!

If you think you have a good idea, the first thing you should do is: test it!
At Idealab, the philosophy is: How do we test an idea as quickly, and as cheaply, as possible to see if people want it? In Eric Ries' excellent book, Lean Startup, it's called putting out a "minimally viable product," or MVP.
Here's the story behind one of Bill's 'minimally minimal' product tests…
Bill was in the process of buying a car. He thought that the old-school way of dealing with dealerships and retail firms was painfully slow and inefficient.
His idea: people might actually buy a car online. (A revolutionary idea back in 1998.)
So he tested it, bringing in entrepreneur Scott Painter to lead the test period and, in success, to be the CEO of the resulting startup.
Within 30 days, they'd launched a simple website that allowed users to configure and buy a car with a $1,000 deposit. What buyers didn't know is that they weren't actually buying a real car. Idealab had not developed the relationships with the car manufacturers needed to implement.
The website was just a front to test a simple question: "Would a prospective customer actually put their credit card into a web form to buy something as expensive as a car?"
The first night, their site sold four cars. The test had worked and the test site was shut down.
That concept became Cars Direct, which, in 2004, expanded into other markets and subsequently changed its name to Internet Brands. In June 2014, the company announced that it had been acquired by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR) for $1.1 billion.

3. Create a culture that rewards killing ideas.

As I've discussed with regard to Google's moonshot factory 'X', Idealab also believes in killing ideas quickly.
Bill explains, "We kill a lot of ideas. There is no risk to our people; nobody gets fired. In fact, people get praised when we kill something. We save a lot of money when we kill a bad idea."
It is so critically important that this notion is ingrained into your culture – otherwise, it will never work. Reward your people for finding ways ideas won't work before you invest heavily in them.

4. Equity unlocks human potential.

Equity is an extraordinarily powerful incentive – Bill believes everyone should have it.
All of the employees at Idealab have equity in the company, from the CEO to the receptionist.
Bill describes it as follows: "Equity unlocks human potential. It's not only about the money, it's about the feeling of ownership you have in a venture. When you have just a 1% stake in something, it changes the way you think about things. It incentivizes people to use their brainpower, to feel ownership in that thing's success."
I call this capturing "shower time mindshare." When people feel like they have ownership in an idea, they can't stop thinking about it. The more ideas your stakeholders contribute, the better off your chances are at succeeding.

5. TIMING is the most important factor in startup success.

This is probably one of the most important lessons from Bill's learnings.
In fact, I wrote a whole blog on it here.
To summarize: Bill investigated how five key factors affected the success of the 125 companies in his portfolio at Idealab and 125 companies outside of his portfolio.
The factors he considered were:
  1. Quality of the Idea: How new is It? Is there a unique truth in the idea? Are there competitive moats you can build around it?
  2. The Team & Execution: How efficient is the team? How effective is it? How adaptable?
  3. The Business Model: Do you have a clear path to revenues?
  4. Financing: Can companies that raise more money than others out succeed where the others would fail?
  5. Timing: Are you too early? Just early? Too late? Right on time? Did that matter a lot?
Of these 250 companies, Bill picked 10 in each category: five companies that turned into billion-dollar companies, and five that everyone thought would be billion-dollar companies but failed.
The question: Which of the five variables accounted more for successes?
What was the MOST Important Factor? TIMING.
Timing accounted for 42 percent of the successes relative to failures.
Team and Execution came next.
You need to ask yourself: Is the world really ready for my product right now?
Bill explains, "You really need to look at the signals and be honest about what they are telling you. Go out to market – test if people want your product. If there aren't enough people, hoard money and conserve momentum."
Sometimes if you are a few years too early, you can hunker down and wait until the market is ready…

6. Startups don't have to be in Silicon Valley – you can scale from almost anywhere these days.

Bill explains, "I really believe startups can scale everywhere. Talent is everywhere. Money is now everywhere. In Silicon Valley, talent is everywhere, but it's moving from company to company. Other places are actually much more stable to start a company."
Exponential technologies have democratized access to many of the resources you need to build a company. Great founders can build great technology companies all over the world.

7. Adaptability and flexibility are the most important characteristics of a good CEO.

When Idealab decides to pursue a new business, their greatest challenge is finding a CEO. So, as you can imagine, they have a lot of experience searching for and evaluating CEOs.
So what does Bill look for in his top candidates? Adaptability and flexibility.
He goes on, "Of course you need integrity, hard work, and smarts. But it is very much the case that the business that you start is going to be different than the one you build. If you are so obstinate and not flexible to what the customers are saying, you're not going to succeed."
Mike Tyson has a great quote in this regard: "Everybody has a plan until you get punched in the face."

8. Trial Periods are great ways to test "Talent Fit."

When hiring people, interviews are tough ways to evaluate a person's skills, mindset and cultural fit.
Working on a project together is a much better indicator.
At Idealab, Bill says, "We really try to work with people. Sign someone up for 30 to 90 days, work on the project together, then see if there's a there there."

9. Passion should be the reason you do a startup.

It's clichรฉ now, but it's just the truth – you have to be driven by passion or you won't be able to handle the complexities and hard times you'll face in building your company.
Bill agrees: "Personal passion should be the dwarfing factor in choosing a startup to do of your own. Every startup I've done has had heartache. You have to be so in love with the idea, with the solution, that you can tolerate almost anything to make it happen. I have no idea how you could pick a business based on analysis and not on heart."

As I also reflected upon this interesting week, I ran across this during my walkabout on Twitter which struck me big time:



Lessons to be learnt no doubt--as I wish all a great W-End.

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Working Away: On A Challenging Week w/Thoughts On @DailyOutsider & #Iran

As I did some work supporting @DailyOutsider, I wanted to take comfort in some Thoughts I had in my digital archives to hopefully bring a bit of joy to all despite the profound challenges before us this week.   I was especially mad when I listened to the most recent broadcast of the Farsi Service of the Voice of America on the extent of the corruption in Iran including Iran being one of the top countries in the World for money laundering.   (The Broadcast is in Farsi)

Onward to the weekend









Monday, August 1, 2016

On the Occasion of my 230th Post: A "Thought For the Week" On #Success

It is a bit of a milestone!!  My 230th Post here in my "virtual space"

I received this from one of my Walden Professors which I hope all enjoy as I wish all a fabulous Week!!




Sunday, July 31, 2016

On the Eve of a New Month: On #Freedom, @DailyOutsider, #KhizrKhan, #Turkey & Other Thoughts

I worked away on some weekend commitments at @DailyOutsider as I have been assessing what happened in July.    I still can't help get over the speech by the father of the fallen American Hero and the aftermath.  I made it a point of responding to Mr. Trump's comments on his response to Mr. Khan's comments and suggested that if he had just said I salute his service and his family's sacrifice--it would have sufficed.    What I found disturbing was how his Campaign Chair in trying to clean up Mr. Trump's latest gaffe, did not even acknowledge the family's sacrifice.    There is no policy response though despite The Trump Campaign Chair to the contrary--except attacks.  

Alan Murray at Fortune did a call to action about which Billionaire one will support--as Michael Bloomberg came out in support of Hillary Clinton and Mark Cuban did as well.    I hope I can contribute to the Fortune Network in response to it soon.   I have decided to be with Michael Bloomberg and Mark Cuban--and I will have more to say on it in @Medium  Soon in response to Alan Murray's call to action.   Michael Bloomberg's story is especially poignant on how he got to where he got--and as an Eagle Scout and political independent, his views resonates with me especially.    

Beyond the US, I have been horrified by the aftermath of the coup in Turkey.    For me, it was a pleasure to have shared this editorial over my Personal Twitter Feed while working away 




I have had profound disagreements with the editorials of the Journal over the years--but their courageous stance against Donald Trump has been stellar--and as an observer, I am grateful as I was with this.   I was hopeful that somehow what Erdogan was trying to do in Turkey would be the perfect antidote to the horrors of Daesh.    As I saw one of the images published in one of his meetings in his palace, it showed him alone--which reminded me of Khameini.   Erdogan seems to have borrowed a page from the way Khameini runs things which is even more disturbing.     I would suggest strongly that the United States does not buy into anything that comes out of Turkey in regards to Mr. Gulen.   

As I finish off before being "dark" here in my "Virtual Space" to begin a new month, I again did a "drop by" on Twitter and one of my favorites-@BrainyQuotes-had this which speaks volumes:




As I finish off these thoughts, it is also a bit of a milestone as this is my 229th write up here in my "Virtual Space".  It has been fun, so far!!!

Onward to August with all the possibilities :) :) 



Saturday, July 30, 2016

Working away w/Thoughts For the W-End.....

I ran across this series of thoughts courtesy of +Jonathan Huie  which I found to be so timely as I also supported The Daily Outsider W-End Beat with updates over the Twitter Channel.    It is so disturbing to see the level of anger out there right now.    I am glad that I was allowed to feature this in my own "Virtual Space":


 
An angry man opens his mouth and shuts his eyes.
- Cato

We cannot learn from one another until we stop shouting at one another -
until we speak quietly enough so that our words can
be heard as well as our voices.
- Richard M. Nixon

When angry, count to ten before you speak.
If very angry, count to one hundred.
- Thomas Jefferson

Anger is often more hurtful than the injury that caused it.
- English Proverb


What I also found so timely was this I saw on my inbox from Pope St. John Paul XXIII which all of us need to remember--I know it was quite a reminder for me with some of the on-going challenges:


“Consult not your fears
but your hopes and your dreams.
Think not about your frustrations,
but about your unfulfilled potential.
Concern yourself not with what you tried and failed in,
but with what it is still possible for you to do.”

~  Pope John XXIII
Pope John XXIII 

As I finish these thoughts, I wanted to wish all the very best of the W-End s as a new month is before us.

Onward!!!

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Working Away As July 2016 is "almost history"..and August 2016 is before Us....

It has been a very challenging week of sorts working away at @DailyOutsider and other Projects.    But there is so much to be thankful for despite all the profound challenges.    I thought this "thought 4 the week" courtesy of +SUCCESS Magazine  was kind of cool as I hope all enjoy as the week winds down and we look to August--which for us here in South Orange County means kids are going back to school:




Please enjoy as I wish all a great W-End 

On The Eve of the W-End: Remembering Madiba

As we have been witness to a challenging week, I thought to step back and reflect upon one of the giants of our time.       I picked up these images as a measure of motivation, hope and engagement I trust will also find so as I wish all a great W-End:






 

 

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Working Away w/Thought(s) 4 the Week on #leadership, #life & Social Good


I wanted to revisit an old admonition I have at my desk daily which I look at daily: 



I also ran across the seven principles that I thought is so timely as we are dealing with such unprecedented change in our World which I trust will be part of the evolving nature of #Outsiders that I was very glad that Alan Murray  of +Fortune Magazine  noted this in his newsletter as the Democratic National Conventions is on-going in Philadelphia:

. ...Support for the twin drivers of post-World War II prosperity - globalization and digitization - is eroding.

How should global business respond? Rich Lesser and Martin Reeves of BCG have an interesting piece out this morning that calls on business leaders to adopt a new "corporate leadership manifesto." It "won't be easy," they say; but failing to adopt it may mean companies lose their "freedom to operate."

You can read the full piece here later today, or read my summary of their "seven imperatives" for business below:

1) Use technology to rethink globalization. In the future it must be less about global supply chains and low-cost offshoring, and more about serving the needs of individual markets.

2) Create business platforms and ecosystems that allow more people to participate. That's not just for tech businesses, but also for things like energy, with decentralized grids, or manufacturing, with decentralized supply chains.

3) Deploy technology from front to back. Business often adopts technology with a view toward increasing efficiency and eliminating jobs. Lesser and Reeves says they should start with serving the needs of customers, and work back from there.

4) Invest in human capital. The rapid pace of change requires people to constantly be acquiring news skills to survive. Companies should facilitate that re-skilling.

5) Apply a social business mindset. Business must think about the effects of their operations on communities and underserved populations. The Milton Friedman construct - that the social responsibility of business is to make a profit - is no longer sufficient.

6) Rethink compensation. Workers need a living wage, and exorbitant pay for corporate leaders, particularly when not linked to performance, undermines support for business.

7) Own the narrative. Business leaders need to do a better job explaining to the world how capitalism solves problems and creates prosperity.

Monday, July 25, 2016

On the Dawn of a New Week: Thoughts...& Other Thoughts.......and believing in Miracles......



As the new week is at hand, I decided to share some "tidbits" of thoughts over the past weeks--and as I was on Facebook, this popped up from 2010--It is this admonition that was so timely in the current challenging political environment before us: 



This is as also saw this that is quite a tough admonition to live up to:



“We must admit
the vanity of our false distinctions among men
and learn to find our own advancement
in the search for the advancement of all.
We must admit in ourselves
that our own children’s future
cannot be built on the misfortunes of others.
We must recognize
that this short life can neither be ennobled
or enriched by hatred or revenge.”

~ Robert F. Kennedy

As I was trying to temper my disappointment about the tone of the Republican National Convention, I saw this from another Facebook Friend who is one of the leading schoalrs of Iranian History int he World Today about his fears as he also featured Fareed Zakaria's takedown of Mr. Trump:   

After Mr. Trump's speech, for the first time I am worried for my family and the future in this country. I am just like Fareed Zakaria. I was born into a secular Muslim family. That is part of multiple identities which I carry. As Carlo Gainzburg once wrote, to paraphrase him, he never identified himself as a Jew, until he was identified by others to be as one.
If I am to be classified, stamped or have a badge, or my family and I are to be put into some camp, in the name of security, I will leave. But before I turn in my American passport and leave, I hope others will not vote for this candidate of the Republican party. This is not about keeping the party line. It is about common decency and humanity.

What he said during his speech was in line with fascist speeches of the 1930s and 1940s. This man is devisive and destructive for this country and for the rest of the world. Government is not a business. International politics is not corporate America. Letting the army and the police into the street of America will not solve our problems. Bombing other countries will not bring security to the US and the world. It will only worsen it.
What has become to the party of Lincoln and Roosevelt?

I also begin this week with this simple and yet powerful clip from one of my favorite artists Cold Play--the race has to be finished--and that we shall: 


Friday, July 22, 2016

Working Away.....

Jefferson Quran 


As I was working away @ The Daily Outsider, I also was working away on the "Grid" assessing the aftermath of the Donald Trump Speech last night.     I did not see the speech but read the transcript and what I read was dark, scary and divisive.      The +Vox  Ezra Klein gave voice to the danger of the Trump Presidency.      Although I did not see the speech, I caught snippets of it when the Daily Show and the Late Show provided analysis on it which validated what Ezra Klein noted in his article.  The problem has been that unless one was a fan of +The Real News Network    Followed & checked out the Twitter Channel for the Daily Outsider , read the Economist of London, watched the Daily Show,  the Media was by in large asleep at the Wheel until it was too late.    The coverage was in the billions--and it yielded the result as it did.    Jon Stewart joined the late show to tear into Mr. Trump's narrative--for me the most powerful point was when the pseudo-patriots did not even want to renew the support for the 9/11 First Responders.      

As I was working away on the "Grid", I picked up the image posted by a Facebook Friend on the Thomas Jefferson's Quran that is now at the Library of Congress.     I could not help but wonder about Newt Gingrich's Comments on Muslims as I saw this and took President Obama's queue to actually check out as I saw this on the Library of Congress on how tolerant they actually were as America was being formed (an experiment that continues even now).

There were some late breaking developments on the political front Beyond the historical facts, there were some late breaking developments.     An 18-Year Old German-Iranian went on a shooting spree in Munich and then killed himself.     This is as Hillary Clinton settled on Tim Kaine, the US Senator and Former Governor of Virginia, as her Vice Presidential Pick.    News reports (and I picked it up first on Twitter) started the news, Mrs.  Clinton sent out a text (with her signature "H") and then it became  news.   It is probably a good choice since Virginia is important and if they win, Virginia Governor Terry McAculiff (A Democrat)  will appoint a Democrat to replace him.    The "snapshot" by the Washington Post captured the selection process and the thinking by Mrs Clinton brilliantly tonight.

Onward to the weekend with all its' possiblities....


On the Eve of another working weekend.......

Please enjoy this on Grit I ran across courtesy of one of my Walden University Professors from +TED:


It is about, in the end, the art of the possible!!!

Onward to the Weekend with all its' possibilities


Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Working Away w/some midweek thoughts remembering Richard Nixon on This @GOP Week 2016

As I work away, some true "food 4 thought" From Richard Nixon--Despite his own oversights (and he admitted as such himself when he said, ".....Well, I screwed it up real good, didn't I?..." still these thoughts and especially the final one resonated greatly....


 

  

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Working Away Being Witness to History w/Brief Thoughts....

It is always fun to be witness to history right now as the formal roll call is on-going as States declare their votes for Donald Trump.   As the convention continues, The commentary on all sides has been interesting,  to say the least as Mr. Trump gears up for the general election.    

I had this in my archives that I thought was quite appropriate to truly reflect upon the art of the possible and overcoming odds with this tribute to the great Maya Angelou.       In many ways, her story is the story of America --and the need to overcome is ever so evident now:

Prepare yourself so that you can be a rainbow in somebody else's cloud. - Maya Angelou (1928-2014), American Renaissance Woman
 
For me ... until her passing yesterday ... she was just a poet that had an opportunity to share her words at Bill Clinton's presidential inauguration in 1993...

Her parents divorced when she was 3. She was raped by her mother's boyfriend at age 7. At 17, she was a single mother. In her 20's, she was a shake dancer in a nightclub, a prostitute, a cook, and ran a brothel. 

Had I met her at that point, I'm guessing I'd have felt sorry for her and maybe a little judgmental at the same time. I'm pretty certain I'd never have bet on her as someone who would go on to have such an incredibly positive influence on so many people during her life ... and following her life. 

She went on to be a singer, an actor, a civil rights activist (worked with Malcolm X and Martin Luther King), a college professor, a writer, a speaker, and ... a poet. 

She also won the Presidential Medal of Freedom (the highest civilian honor in the United States). 

Next time I'm feeling judgmental (at work or in life) or a little down about something or feeling some past action (something I've done or something someone else has done) will make it difficult to keep moving forward ... contributing something positive to the world ... making good things happen ... next time ... I've got a new hero. 

Rest in peace, Maya Angelou. Nice work! 
Sam (the guy behind this stuff)







Sunday, July 17, 2016

On this Tragic Day in #BatonRogue: Brief Personal Thoughts

It has been a dark day in America as three cops fell as they were doing their job protecting the citizens of Baton Rogue, Louisiana.    As I supported @DailyOutsider earlier with a View of the Week, for me this was personal in many ways I remember how cops talked about how they expected the worst and hoped for the best.   It should not have to be that way.   They are us--and we have to remember that.    I understood this ever more when I had the pleasure to attend my City's Citizens Academy.

After Dallas,   I made it a point of reaching out to my local Police Leadership team underscoring how an attack on one Cop is an attack on us all.    As the Police Commissioner of New York noted, we live in perilous times and it is a very complex place--talk is not enough.  We have to go beyond it.   I also note how Commissioner noted how we have to stop talking past each other.    We have to also think about Guns in this Country--the idea of an AR-15 being legal is just beyond the pale to me. 

We can, shall and will overcome.


Working Away w/Brief Thoughts.....

It was a horrific week in our World with the attack in Nice on Bastille Night.   It was also even more horrific to be witness to the coup in Turkey and the aftermath.     The reports of mass arrests and purges in the aftermath of the coup have been even more horrific with some images coming out of Turkey that are just too gruesome to observe.

As I reflected upon this, I ran across this that speaks volumes: 


When life's problems seem overwhelming, look around and see what other people are coping with. You may consider yourself fortunate. ~ Ann Landers

So much to be thankful for indeed....Onward to the new week with all its' possibilities...




Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Working Away w/Brief Thoughts For the Week......

It was quite a historical day as Britain changed Prime Ministers.   It is always fun to be witness to history.      This is as Our World continues to be  faced with profound challenges in our World.    A sense of being grateful again was brought home as I listened to this latest +TED talk from this brave soul from Syria:


The extent of the devastation is simply too shocking to embrace and understand.  I never thought about how Architecture laid the foundation for War.    

When will we have the courage to transform our thinking?    Can we, though?




Monday, July 11, 2016

As a New Week Dawns.....




I had a "tad bit of fun" as I was working away visiting this Site on some thoughts that took what was on Facebook and formulated some edicts--it is actually pretty good!!

Onward to the new week w/all its' possibilities



Saturday, July 9, 2016

Working Away w/Notations For the W-End.....

Abdul Sattar Edhi passed away.   He was not well known in the West--and I personally was  not  as aware of him as I should have been until I saw reports of his passing that was widely reported around the World.    He was 92 years old.

He was the founder of Pakistan's largest welfare organization.   When I saw the headline in Saturday's New York Times about deeming him Pakistan's "Mother Teresa", it prompted me to check on him.   It was striking to me that he only had 868 Entries in Google and 79 Entries in Bing.    As I read the reporting in +i24news EN, It struck me that he only owned 2 pieces of clothes.     It is the story of such people that gives me a sense of optimism and hope.      

As I was working away, I helped finish off a View of the Week on a sense of hope I was talking about--what John Legend is trying to do with the inmates in California was so moving.   These thoughts reminded us all of what we must embrace and be aware thanks to the great work +Jonathan Huie does:  




Jesus preached more and taught more about helping
the poor and the sick and the hungry
than he did about heaven and hell.
Shouldn't that tell us something?
- John Grisham

Jesus said: "When you give a feast, invite the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind.
And you will be blessed, because they cannot repay you."
- Luke 14:13-14

Universal compassion is the only guarantee of morality.
- Arthur Schopenhauer

A new command I give you: Love one another.
As I have loved you, so you must love one another.
- Jesus of Nazareth (John 13:34)


Helping & Love....lessons to be remembered by us all....

Wishing all a fabulous Sunday & a fantastic Week......

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Tragic Days.....

America has been witness to the tragic shootings of two African American Men within the past 24 hours.     However, I could not help but take to my personal space here as I note how ill I was to my stomach I was as I saw that 10 Dallas Police Officers were shot and three have died by snipers during a protest rally in Texas.   I helped finish an update for #Outsiders earlier tonight on it.    I can't even begin to imagine what the families of the fallen officers are feeling.   Thoughts and prayers for those families are just not enough more for them--is it?   

Some will say this is not a time for politics--especially the folks at the NRA, Gun Owners of America and their supporters in Congress.    Over the last number of years, we have seen shooting after shooting.   Kids got shot in Sandy Hook.   Nothing was done.    People of faith were shot in Charleston.   Nothing was done.   A lowlife subhuman  madman massacred 150 people in Orlando.    Nothing was done.   Now, 10 cops have been shot and three have died.    This is as the President spoke to the profound challenge that African American Men Continue to face consistently in the hands of law enforcement while on his last NATO Summit.     Although some  arguments by Brooklyn College's Corey Robin has merit,  it is critical that we all collectively make a concerted effort to not just make sure the African American Community is safe, but all Americans are--and the insanity is pervasive ever more.

Yoda's admonition is ever so true now: 



The time to do something is Now.    The time for trying is over.   The tragedy of it is that Congress is not even trying (despite the best of intentions) as it talks about the Constitution and their claim to protect "due process".  What about ensuring public safety?    As the Benghazi obsession was finished by Congress after millions spent, now they've got another one:  The Clinton Emails.     

The need to govern is ever so evident.     Will that happen?   I wonder....

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Working Away w/Mid-Week Notations On #Iraq, #Iran, #Freedom & #Hope

Independence Day 2016 W-End here in the United States was quite a weekend.  I had the privilege to work on a number of Community Service Projects including helping to host the Open House for St Timothy's Catholic Parish 's Food Ministry Pantry that I have the privilege to serve as a staff member.   I also worked on supporting the City of Laguna Niguel's 38th Annual Run in the Park and thereafter with my local Scout Troop as the Troop had the first ever Hot Dog Stand.    A Visual Essay was produced for the DailyOutsider Community Page.   

As I was reflecting upon this wonderful weekend of Community spirit, my mind again drifted away half-way around the World as the carnage continued ever more.   As I write this, Bangladesh is witnessing another terror attack on Eid-Fitr Celebrations and a gun battle has been raging on.   I was just numb as I saw reports over the weekend about the Over 250 People have lost their lives in Baghdad.   There seems to be no end to the carnage that has been unleashed by the subhumans that in the name of Islam do whatever it is they are doing.  I compare this to what I saw as Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo cited a verse of the Holy Quran--A catholic hospital quoting a Muslim Verse--on the back of its' business card.

I also helped finish a notation for Outsider on the Chilcot Report on the Iraq War.   The Iraq War was one of the reasons that I took to the Virtual World--without knowing the intelligence, those of us who advocated how wrong the whole war was proved right all along.   This from the Guardian of London said it all:



I caught Tony Blair's Statement.     I will not put much stock in his statement and only note this final thought that says it all in a full rebuttal to his statement:  "...Mr Blair’s impulse to trot alongside a know-nothing cowboy might reflect a deep need to bury the CND badge of his youth and earn some muscular respectability. Mr Corbyn’s ascent is the most ironic of the consequences of his historic mistake. But by far the most serious are still being played out far away – on the streets of Iraq...."  I would also take their comments one step further by underscoring how the whole region is in chaos over this disastrous decision.     

I caught up on the latest Last Page that was on Voice of America's Farsi Service.    There is a scandal brewing in Iran as it has been exposed that Senior Managers (including Ministers) have received hefty pay packages, sweet deals on Loans and expenses that are just beyond the pale.   Some of them, it appears, make more that the President of the United States!!!!   This is some 12 Millon People officially are unemployed and  as repression continues.    I tracked down this beautiful song from a very talented artist who was imprisoned for giving voice to the true challenges in the country right now:  




The song is about freedom and hope  despite all the challenges that the Country faces--and in the end noting that freedom will prevail.   It showcases some of the most successful Iranian Women including Anouseh Ansari (The first Iranian-American Woman in Space that went to space on the Russian Space Station); The winner of the equivalent of the Nobel Prize Maryam Mirzakhani along with Golshifteh Farahani and the Oscar-Nominated Shohreh Aghdaslou.     Here is a translation of the lyrics thanks to the folks at Lyrics Translate: 


We are happy, joyful and full of laughter
Even though we are imprisoned,
Our way is blocked and our feet sore
But we set fire,
We are the generation of roars
And have joined our hands together,
We are covered in blood but we know
that at the end of the story, We're free
♫♫♫
We've been in the prison for 100 years
and won't stay here any longer,
We become windows and vocal cords*
and sing the freedom song
We are the generation of roars
And have joined our hands together
We are covered in blood but we know
that at the end of the story, We're free
♫♫♫
We share the same story and pain
and have made our sorrows into one,
We side by side search every single house
to find our dreams
We are the generation of roars
And have joined our hands together
We are covered in blood but we know
that at the end of the story, We're free
We are covered in blood but we know
at the end of the story, We're free
at the end of the story, We're free
at the end of the story, We're free
He was released on bail--I have not seen anything lately being loaded on his YouTube Page though.     The repression is ever more evident now as three Iranian Music Distributors have been sentenced to jail despite the promises of the current President to change things.

As I was catching up on the "Social Grid" For the night, I ran across this courtesy of a Facebook Friend that I took comfort in--Not easy when one is witness to such a challenging World--but there is no choice--is there? 


Sunday, July 3, 2016

On this #July4 2016 W-End: Thoughts on #Liberty, #Compassion & The Possibilities....

As I write this, it is now "officially"July 4 as America celebrates its' independence day.   It has been a working weekend for me as I have watched a season of the West Wing as I work through some plans for the Daily Outsider--it was great to be able to be supportive as the corners were curated and the Twitter Channel was worked through.

It has also been a week as I have been witness to the wonder of Community spirit in Action.  I reflected upon it briefly when I was on NextDoor earlier today for the Community.    Whether it was the City of Laguna Niguel Run in the Park or the vibrancy of St. Timothy's Catholic Parish, it was just such a joy to be witness to it all.  

I wanted to be "dark", but I was so moved by this as I watched episodes of the West Wing with this on Blame and Compassion: 




If it was within my power, I will force every single candidate to listen to this 3 minutes and to really sit back and think about our future especially as America along with all the other episodes of the 7 seasons of the West Wing to really think about and reflect upon the promise of America.   I wonder if that can be possible.

As I will be away on Community Commitments and gear up for a challenging quarter at #Outsiders and beyond, I finished this on Twitter Earlier in support of @DailyOutsider before making sure @DailyOutsider goes dark for July 4: 

As I finished this, I saw this on my "hike daily" feed:  

"You have to make it happen-Denis Diderot" 


& this courtesy of +Jonathan Huie that is one of my required readings and #outsiders features it prominently in the "Thought For the Week" Corner: 


We hold these truths to be self-evident:
that all men are created equal,
that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights,
among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
- Thomas Jefferson [Declaration of Independence]


They who can give up essential liberty
to obtain a little temporary safety
deserve neither liberty nor safety.
- Benjamin Franklin

Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves.
- Abraham Lincoln

The only thing necessary for evil to triumph
is for enough good men to do nothing.
- Edmund Burke

The best way to enhance freedom in other lands
is to demonstrate here that our democratic system is worthy of emulation.
- Jimmy Carter

It is up to us...isn't it? 


Happy 4th!!!