Sunday, July 9, 2017

Notations On Our World (Special W-End Edition): On #Yazd, #Turkey & Our Launch On Google Play




As we look to a new week, we wanted to begin with some good news out of UNESCO as the historic City of Yazd was declared a World Heritage Site:








We have also been on the Virtual Prowl as the March for Justice in Turkey just concluded. We found it amazing that the autocratic President of Turkey allowed it to continue, although we understand from reports that 15,000 Security Personnel were deployed in Istanbul:





We have also been tracking the case of the Chinese Noble Peace Prize Winner who was imprisoned and now has Terminal Liver Cancer.  We are seeing reports (courtesy of Al Jazeera) that he is able to get treatment abroad.     We also continue to assess the on-going bullying of Qatar by Saudi Arabia and others and the latest updates can be checked by visiting this link Courtesy of Al Jazeera.   This is also as Iraq prevailed over Daesh with significant help and support from the International coalition.   But Daesh (also known as ISIS in the west) is not dead by any means.   


The political discourse here in the United States will not be far from our mind as we continue our on-going assessment throughout the week.    The aftermath of the G20 continues to reverberate  throughout the World as this latest from the New York Times underscores how Vice President Pence continues to lay out a potential future indepedent of President Trump as investigations and controversies loom and as the Trump agenda continues to face headwinds.


As our team continues onward, we also pleased to report that we've released our Daily Outsider App on Google Play which will be available by clicking here :



It is hereby noted that as per Google Policy that, "....Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google Inc.".   


.    We just received the ratings which we are pleased to report on it for all:


IARCRating Certificate
App Title:The Daily Outsider 
Certificate ID:889b0355-17ce-4bdd-9c62-e9b6a5915d92Storefront:Google Play
Date Issued:Sunday, July 9, 2017
This rating may only be used on storefronts participating in IARC. It may not be used on physical products.
Rating AuthorityRegionRating CategoryContent Descriptors
ClassIndBrazilLClassificação Livre
ESRBThe AmericasEEveryone
PEGIEurope3PEGI 3
USKGermany0USK ab 0 Jahren
GenericOther Regions3

 It is indeed fascinating times to be witness to it all.





Saturday, July 8, 2017

Notations From the Grid (W-End Edition): On Venezuela; Turkey; @realDonaldTrump & Other Thoughts




Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez hugging his children at his house in Caracas after his release from prison (08 July 2017)



It has been quite a few days around our World.    There was some good news as Venezuelan Opposition Leader Leonardo Lopez was released from Prison to House Arrest and joyfully reunited with his children:





There was the March for Justice led by the key opposition leader in Turkey.   Some compared it to the Gandhi March to the Sea to Make Salt:


  Photo published for Adalet Yürüyüşü'ne 215 bin kişi katıldı; Gandhi'nin rekoru bugün kırılıyor

What the Turkish President does will be interesting in this regard. 

Our team was also continuing its' on-going assessment of the latest dispute between Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt as the dispute seems to continue for at least a while yet.  The Secretary of State is slated to visit the region Monday.   Saudi Arabia, a member of the G20, is slated to host the next G20 Summit as the  G20 in Hamburg  is now in the history books.  The United States, though, was isolated--although Trump Administration Officials were putting a positive spin on it from the President Onward.     One of the most devastating assessment was made by Australia Broadcasting:


This is as there were reports of hacking of US Energy Infrastructure by Russians and as reports of another Russian meeting set up by Donald Trump Jr. emerged in the aftermath of the Meetings--and the Trump team blamed Democrats.  This is as the "stories of action and ideas" courtesy of the Guardian of London took center stage: 

The Resistance Now

The resistance now: it's recess week, but Republicans are hiding from constituents

Elected officials traditionally engage with constituents during their seven days off, but unhappiness with the healthcare bill has the GOP avoiding voters
Americans have not been happy with the Republican healthcare plan.
 Americans have not been happy with the Republican healthcare plan. Photograph: Scott Olson/Getty Images

Adam Gabbatt


Hide and seek...

It’s Republicans’ least favourite time of the year: recess week. GOP senators have marked their seven days off – traditionally a time for elected officials to engage with constituents – by almost universally hiding from their constituents.
It’s because of that Senate healthcare bill, you see. Not many people like it.
As of Wednesday only four Republicans had either held or planned to hold public town hall events. And two of those events – step forward Texas’s Ted Cruz and Pennsylvania’s Pat Toomey – were hardly public.
Pat Toomey protesters
 People protest as Pat Toomey holds an invite-only town hall. Photograph: Marc Levy/AP

Toomey appeared in a Harrisburg television studio with an audience that had been invited by ABC 27. The number of audience members? Eight. Cruz held an event in his safe space of a Koch brothers-backed Q&A. Still, protesters outside Toomey’s gig – and hecklers inside Cruz’s – served to let the pair know what they thought of the Better Care Reconciliation Act.

...but you can’t hide forever

Meanwhile, more than 1,000 activists staged sit-ins at senators’ offices in 21 different states on Thursday – demanding that they vote no on the Senate bill.
The demonstrations were organized by Our Revolution, Democracy Spring, Ultraviolet and more, and targeted senators including Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell – the brains behind the healthcare bill – as well as Rob Portman in Ohio, and Bill Cassidy in Louisiana.
Just as a reminder: that Senate bill would see 22m additional people lose healthcare, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Healthcare activists in New York City.
 Healthcare activists in New York City. Photograph: Erik McGregor/Pacific/Barcroft

WTF?

Two Silicon Valley billionaires – specifically Mark Pincus of Zynga and Reid Hoffman of LinkedIn – launched a new online platform called Win the Future(hence WTF) this week. It’s intended to form as a platform for crowdsourcing ideas to move the Democratic party in a different direction.
So far, so good. Except the direction they appear to want to move the Democratic party – hardly a bastion of liberalism as is – further to the right.
Pincus told Recode the party was “already moving too far to the left” and that he would like to make it more “pro-business”. According to the Huffington Post, the tech moguls have “sunk $500,000” into Win the Future. The idea is not picking up much traction with progressives.
To the right, to the right: Mark Pincus of Zynga.
 To the right, to the right: Mark Pincus of Zynga. Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

No dogs allowed

A group of animal rights activists “were taken into police custody” at the infamous Nathan’s Fourth of July hot dog eating contest this week, according to the Washington Post. Five people had attempted to unveil an anti-meat banner. They were released without charge. Joey Chestnut won the contest by eating 72 hot dogs and buns. It was his 10th victory.
Hot dog-eating champ Joey Chestnut is on the right.
 Hot dog-eating champ Joey Chestnut is on the right. Photograph: ACE Pictures/REX/Shutterstock

What we’re reading

“Rural progressives” is not an oxymoron, writes Anthony Flaccovento at Blue Virginia. Flaccovento ran for congress in 2012, and says his message that “attacked inequality and trickle-down economics” appealed to people in the rural areas of his state. So why isn’t the left doing better in the red parts of states like Virginia? Because “the Democratic party and the progressive movement both have, for the most part, written off rural America”.

Friday, July 7, 2017

View of the Week (Special Friday Edition): ON the #G20


Displaying




We received the following courtesy of the team at Mauldin Economics which we are pleased to feature for this special Friday edition of View of the Week as the meetings in Hamburg begin of the 20 Largest Economies in the World:


Hostages to History at the G-20 Summit

By George Friedman
July 5, 2017

Leaders overstate how much their relationships define national agendas.
Anyone who has ever been to a meeting knows that meetings are often confounding, frustrating affairs. Most of them are designed simply to be held. The people who attend them are unlikely to agree on anything except maybe the date the next one will convene, and the possibility that they accomplish something gets smaller as the meeting itself gets larger. The G-20 summit, which will be held July 7, is no exception. But that’s only because the people who attend it, the leaders of the countries with the world’s 20 largest economies, think of themselves as decision-makers when really they are hostages to history.
In fact, the dynamics involved at a meeting such as the G-20 are indifferent to the people who attend it. Personalities are interesting but ultimately indecisive in power politics. World leaders may not like Donald Trump – in fact, many do not – but since they cannot avoid dealing with the United States, still the world’s only superpower, they cannot avoid dealing with its president.
The United States is inextricably linked to three major issues that will be addressed but probably not resolved at the G-20 summit. The first is the progression of North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, an issue the United States and China simply cannot ignore or fully resolve without at least talking to each other. On July 4, Pyongyang tested a missile it claims was an intercontinental ballistic missile. The North Koreans may be exaggerating, of course. The missile still needs guidance systems and a configured payload, but as U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis said, the United States can’t wait for North Korea to have a functional ICBM.

Here again, personalities matter less than imperatives. The Trump administration had planned for an economic confrontation with China, at least if statements from the campaign were to be believed. The reckoning has been postponed now that Washington needs Beijing to persuade North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program. So far the talks have been futile, and it’s unclear if China even wants them to succeed. If the United States attacks North Korea, China could get what it wants – North Korea without a nuclear weapon – without lifting a finger, superbly positioned thereafter to play the role of peacekeeper against the belligerent United States. In the meantime, Chinese President Xi Jinping will promise to try harder to disarm North Korea because it strengthens his case if the U.S. attacks while he is “negotiating.” Washington probably sees the trap China is trying to set but can’t really get around it; it will simply remember this later, after the North Korea issue has been resolved one way or the other, when it turns its attention back to Beijing. After all, the U.S. can damage the Chinese economy far more than China can harm the American.
The second issue is Russian interference in the domestic affairs of other countries – a hot-button issue that elides some obvious facts: Nations interfere with other nations all the time, and the Russians have a long history of agitation and propaganda. Moscow has, in no uncertain terms, interfered in the domestic affairs of other countries, particularly former Soviet states that lay west of Russia. The government claims, albeit quietly, they are justifiable responses to meddling in the “color revolutions” of Eastern Europe in the 2000s, funded as they were by U.S. nongovernmental organizations. Whatever may or may not have happened in the 2016 U.S. presidential election is beside the point. The bigger issue for Russia is that its oil is cheap, and that cheap oil will continue to hurt the Russian economy. Nothing from the meeting will change that.
The third issue is U.S.-German relations. The party of Chancellor Angela Merkel no longer uses the word “friend” to describe the United States in its platform. But in fact, Merkel has blamed Trump for a rupture he has little to do with. At issue are the national interests of both countries. Germany needs for the European Union to be economically healthy enough to buy the exports on which its economy depends, but the United States, which has little leverage or stake in the European Union, sees its disintegration as a European problem. And so Washington has been working with countries like the United Kingdom and Eastern Europe states on a bilateral basis to contain Russia rather than going through Brussels. Germany, moreover, wants to be in NATO and the EU, but both organizations have a hard time instituting policies that benefit all its members because none of its members have identical national interests. And then there is Russia. The last thing Germany wants to do, in light of its other problems, is confront Russia, but blocking Russia is central to U.S policy, and it needs Europe united in that regard. The divergence between the United States and Germany has been growing since 2008, and there is little Trump could have done to change things.
World leaders take their relationships with other world leaders very seriously. To them, their relationships with their peers define their national interest. Though this line of thinking is misguided, it has its advantages, given Trump’s apparent unpopularity. Xi will blame Trump for disrupting a nearly successful peace process in North Korea. Putin, in an effort to dispel rumors of collusion, will blame Trump for conspiracies against Russia. Merkel will blame him for disrupting U.S.-German relations. Trump’s personality, however, will no more define what happens at the G-20 summit than his healthcare views will define what emerges from Congress