Monday, April 30, 2018

when better cars are build, part 3



On December 2. 2015, I published an article about the Chinese-made vehicle that was going to be sold in America, and that has now become a reality.






The Envision is described as “a mid-size crossover that fits in dimensions between the Lincoln MKC and the Audi Q5.” According to Forbes magazine, “it’s virtually impossible to tell a difference in build quality or fit and finish between the China-made Envision, its KOREAN-made Encore, and its U.S. made Enclave”.


Buick offers the crossover with two engines. The base is a naturally aspirated 2.5-liter four-cylinder rated at 197 horsepower and 192 pound-feet of torque — try to avoid that engine as it’s overburdened by the Envision’s nearly 4,000-pound curb weight. A better choice is the turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder that is standard on the premium trims. It is rated at 252 horsepower and 260 pound-feet of torque and it comes bundled with a very capable “active Twin Clutch” all-wheel drive system (standard models are front-wheel drive). Regardless of the engine, all Envision models feature a 6-speed automatic transmission that is very competent and smooth in operation.

According to the official Buick website, the Envision is priced from $33,995 to $$42,225. Even Buick’s cheapest SUV, the Encore, can top $30,000, and it is made in KOREA.
At one point in time, Buick was the third most popular brand in America, in large part to its famous slogan, “when better cars are built, Buick will build them." Today, it is actually pretty rare to see ANY Buick on the road, but you’ll see a LOT of them in China, since Buick now sells at least 4 times as many cars in China as the company sells in America.


From 1949 to 1978, the most popular car in America was the full size Chevrolet, but it’s very rare to see a new Chevy Impala on the road today.

The top 2 selling vehicle in America today aren’t even cars. They are both trucks, and the Chevrolet Silverado is a distant second to the Ford F-Series. RAM trucks, incidentally, are in spot #3. The Impala is not even in the top 20, and the top-selling Chevrolet CAR is the Malibu, which comes in at #16 on the list. The proliferation of SUV’s on the list helps to explain why Ford, in the near future, will stop selling CARS altogether- with the lone exception of the Mustang.






If we are going to keep in step with the times, then, time to change the famous Buick slogan to the Chinese language, and this is what it would look like

當更好的汽車建成後,別克將建造它們


Dāng gèng hǎo de qìchē jiànchéng hòu, biékè jiāng jiànzào tāmen


Tuesday, April 24, 2018

why Arizona teachers are walking out




For a number of years, teachers in Arizona have been among the poorest paid in the country.  According to the most recent available data (see below) teachers in Arizona are paid, on average, $15,000 a year less than the national average for comparable positions. I have met numerous teachers with at least 10 years experience and a masters degree being paid in the low 40’s. That’s not only unfair, it’s an obscenity.   
 

In addition to being underpaid, Arizona teachers have to work a lot harder than they should have to. I am monitoring a history class today, and the average class size is 31 students, roughly 5 students too many for the ideal class size.

Inspired by the West Virginia teacher strike in February, teachers in Arizona met in March and formed a new organization called Arizona Educators United. Initially, they simply asked teachers to simply show up for work wearing red, and the RedForEd movement was born.




In March, Arizona Educators United and another group known as the Arizona Education Association sent surveys regarding the desirability of walking out to 57,000 teachers and classified employees. When the final vote tally was counted, 78% of those surveyed approved the walkout.

Since 2008, the Arizona legislature has cut education funding by nearly $1 billion. One result of that austerity is that the state has nearly 2000 unfilled teacher positions after more than half the current school year has passed. During that same time period, the legislature has cut taxes SIGNIFICANTLY. In 2016 alone, state law allowed $13.7 billion in taxes to go uncollected through a litany of exemptions, deductions, allowances, exclusions or credits. And that number is likely to grow by another $1-to-2 billion once individual income tax deductions are tallied.

According to data compiled by the Arizona Department of Revenue, more than half of all state taxes haven’t been collected for at least the past ten years. Called “tax expenditures,” they amount to $136.5 billion since fiscal year 2007, roughly equivalent to the sum of state budgets spanning the past 15 years.

Because of an amendment to the Arizona Constitution passed by Arizona voters in 1992, any change to the tax code that would result in an increase in revenue, such as removing a carve-out or reducing the expenditure it creates, would require approval by a two-thirds supermajority in each legislative chamber instead of a simple majority.


At a March 28 rally at the Capitol, Arizona Educators United threatened to strike if state leaders didn't address five demands. They are: 20 percent teacher pay raises; competitive pay for support staff; restore state education funding to 2008 levels; create permanent salary structures that include annual raises; and no new tax cuts until per-pupil funding reaches the national average. 

Funding all of the demands laid out by Arizona Educators United would likely cost the state billions of dollars.

Legislative budget analysts have estimated a pay raise for teachers would cost about $29 million per percentage point, bringing a 20 percent raise to about $580 million. 

Restoring funding to 2008 levels would require adding about $1 billion more in state funding to education.

 Arizona spends $924 less per student in inflation-adjusted dollars today than it did in 2008, according to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee.

Such a steep price tag would likely require raising taxes, putting educators at odds with Gov. Doug Ducey and some Republican lawmakers who control the Legislature, as both have said publicly that they will not raise taxes.

In view of the fact that the state did not collect $13.7 billion in taxes that it should have collected in 2016, the problem in Arizona is not because the state has a shortage of money. It’s because the state’s priorities are completely wrong.                   


As of last Friday, Governor Ducey had not met with representative from either  Arizona Educators United or Arizona Education Association organizers, both of which have requested to negotiate directly with the governor. Ducey, however, met with a group of 13 classroom teachers days before educators announced a walkout date to discuss his so-called #20by2020 proposal.


During the recession, the state legislature stopped increasing education funding tied to inflation, as required by law. In 2010, a coalition of school districts and organizations filed a suit against the state government for cutting inflation adjustments to education during the recession. After 5 long years, governor Ducey signed legislation that would put an additional $3.5   billion into education over the next decade, which ended the lawsuit, even though it provided only 72% of the money that a judge had ordered the state to pay.    
        

60% of the $3.5 billion would come from drawing on the state land fund. In order to tap into the principal of fund, and not just the interest, it was necessary to amend the state constitution. The state’s solution was Proposition 123, which was passed by a narrow margin (50.92% in favor, and 49.08%  opposed) on May 17, 2016. Due to “clerical error”, thousands of informational packets were not mailed out to the voters. Those who DID receive packets did not receive accurate information, which adversely affected the outcome. Included in list of comments by those who were opposed to the proposition were comments by Jeff DeWitt, who happened to be state treasurer at that point in time. Due to the fact that HE WAS NOT IDENTIFIED AS THE STATE TREASURER on the ballot, his opposition to the proposition was not taken as seriously as it should have been. 
                                

On March 26, 2018, a federal judge in Phoenix ruled that Proposition 123 in unconstitutional, and a violation of federal law. It’s anybody’s guess what will happen now.


There are plenty of people to blame for the ill-advised decision by a variety of states to cut funding for education (how did that turn out for you, Kansas?), but the one individual who is REALLY to blame is a guy named Grover Norquist, who has never held elected office. However, in 1985, he founded an organization called Americans for Tax Reform, allegedly at the request of Ronald Reagan. As a result of that organization, he created “Taxpayer Protection Pledge", a pledge signed by lawmakers who agree to oppose increases in marginal income tax rates for individuals and businesses, as well as net reductions or eliminations of deductions and credits without a matching reduced tax rate. Prior to the November 2012 election, the pledge was signed by 95% of all Republican members of Congress and all but one of the candidates running for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination.                        


In case you have forgotten, the “trickle down economics” of Reagan increased the national debt from $826,519,000,000 on September 30, 1979 to 2,350,276,890,000 on September 39, 1987.    
     

After Reagan’s successor, George H.W. Bush completed his first (only one term), he was succeeded by Bill Clinton, who increased taxes. If the Clinton-era tax rates had been left in place, the public debt would have been ELIMINATED by the year 2010.

Unfortunately, George W. Bush got elected in 2000. During his 2 terms, our country started 2 wars, passed two major tax cuts, and passed an unfunded prescription drug program. When he started his first term, the national debt was $5.674 trillion, and by the time Obama was sworn in 2009, the debt had increased to $11.910 trillion. As of today, the national debt is $20.245 trillion, but is expected to rise to $25.020 trillion, by 2021, in large part to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,  which largely benefits corporation and wealthy individuals.



Starting on Thursday of this week, many school districts in Arizona (including TUSD in Tucson) will be closing their schools. In view of the abuse that teachers have suffered in the past, and in view of the reluctance of the legislature to find more funding, I am not optimistic that the problem will be resolved at any time in the near future. 
                            


                            



Monday, April 23, 2018

I love the comics !





Even when I was a little kid, I LOVED the Sunday comics. I don’t remember a lot of the strips from those misty days of long ago, but I DO remember “Maggie and Jiggs”, “there oughta be a law”, “Pogo”and “Li’l Abner”. It took a while to catch on to the fact that many of the strips were designed to be thought-provoking. in addition to being entertaining, and “Li’l Abner” was a prime example of that. To my knowledge, Al Capp (the creator of “Li’l Abner” is the only cartoonist who made it on to the cover of TIME magazine, and he accomplished that feat in 1950. His comic strip was published from 1934 through 1977. “Pogo” lasted almost as long, since it was published from 1948 through 1975.

Even today, the Sunday comics are still my favorite part of the paper. Sometimes, the comics are the first section that I read.

It is no secret that comic strips have been around for a long time, but few people realize EXACTLY when they first started, so here is a surprising fact for you:

An example of an early precursor to print comics is Trajan's Column. Rome's Trajan's Column, dedicated in 110 AD, is an early surviving example of a narrative told through sequential pictures, while Egyptian hieroglyphsGreek friezes, medieval tapestries such as the Bayeux Tapestry and illustrated manuscripts also combine sequential images and words to tell a story. Versions of the Bible relying primarily on images rather than text were widely distributed in Europe in order to bring the teachings of Christianity to the illiterate. In medieval paintings, multiple sequential scenes of the same story (usually a Biblical one) appear simultaneously in the same painting. However, these works did not travel to the reader; it took the invention of modern printing techniques to bring the form to a wide audience and become a mass medium


The invention of the printing press allowed for a much greater distribution of comics. Although the first of the “modern” comics were printed in the late 17th century, the first “official” comic strip was the The Glasgow Lookng Glass, which was first published in 1826. After more than 100 years of publication, comic strips evolved into a new form of entertainment called “the comic book”. In 1938, Action Comics published its first book, and Superman was on the cover:


Image result for 1st superman comic


Even before The Glascow Looking Glass was published in 1826, newspapers in America started publishing political cartoons. The first known example is Benjamin Franklin’s The Pennsylvania Gazette, which started publication in 1754. The political cartoons had a tremendous effect our society, but it wasn’t until 1922 that they were considered to be worth of accolades.


The first Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning was awarded in 1922, and has been awarded every year since that time EXCEPT FOR 1923, 1936, 1960, 1965, and 1973, when no award was given. 18 people have earned the award twice, and 5 people (Rollin Kirby, Edmund Duffy, Herbert Block, Paul Conrad, and Jeff McNelly have won three times.


Since I lived in the Chicago area for more than 25 years, I was able to enjoy Jeff McNelly’s work for many years, since he contributed to The Chicago Tribune from 1974 until at least 1986, but his comic strip “Shoe” continues to be published today, 18 years after his death.
Now that I live in Arizona, Stephen Benson has become my favorite editorial cartoonist. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1993, but was a finalist in 1984, 1989, 1992, and 1994. For several years, he served as president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists. His cartoons are always very timely, as exemplified by the cartoon that he published this morning about the Arizona teacher’s walkout:


Arguably, the cartoonist who has had the most profound effect on America society is Garry Trudeau, who first started publishing Doonesbury in 1970 and it is still being published today. It is syndicated by 1000 daily and Sunday newspapers worldwide, and is accessible online in Association with the Washington Post. He won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1975 (the first comic strip to be so honored) and was also a finalist in 1990, 2004, and 2005. For more than 30 years, his favorite target has been Donald Trump, and yesterday’s cartoon was no exception, since it takes a healthy swipe at the evangelists who support Trump:






http://doonesbury.washingtonpost.com/strip/archive/2018/4/22 

It’s interesting to note that Trump has 25 “spiritual advisors”. If you review their bios at the link below, you’ll discover that many of them are little more than “snake oil salesmen”. By definition, that means a snake oil salesman is someone who knowingly sells fraudulent goods or who is himself or herself a fraud, quackcharlatan, and the like.

https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2016/june-web-only/whos-who-of-trumps-tremendous-faith-advisors.html

(In case you are wondering, you can actually buy a bottle of snake oil at Walmart for $4.99):


If you would like to see a snake oil salesperson at work, just watch Gloria Copeland (of Copeland Ministries) talk about flu shots:



We all receive far too much news on a daily basis, so it’s refreshing to note that we will always have the comic strips to take us in a more enjoyable direction, even it is only for a few minutes a day. 


Friday, April 20, 2018

Was Christopher Columbus a Jew?




The popular concept of Christopher Columbus is that he was an Italian explorer, navigator, and colonizer. He was alleged to have been born in the Republic of Genoa on October 31, 1451.

At a time when European kingdoms were beginning to establish new trade routes and colonies, motivated by imperialism and economic competition, Columbus proposed to reach the East Indies (South and Southeast Asia) by sailing westward. This eventually received the support of the Spanish Crown, which saw a chance to enter the spice trade with Asia through this new route. During his first voyage in 1492, he reached the New World. Instead of arriving in Japan as he had intended, he landed on an island in the Bahamas archipelago that he named San Salvador. Over the course of three more voyages, he visited the Greater and Lesser Antilles, as well as the Caribbean coast of Venezuela and Central America, claiming all of it for the Crown of Castile.

Although he never wrote in what was said to be his native language (a Genoese version of Ligurian) he later learned Latin, Portugese, and (most importantly) Castilian, the language spoken in Spain. He was said to have a keen interest in the Bible, and he used that knowledge in order to convince the Catholic monarchy in Spain to lend him money for his voyages.

In 1485 and 1488, he appealed (unsuccessfully) for money from King John II of Portugal. Undaunted, he then applied for assistance from Genoa, Venice, and England. All of those appeals also proved to be futile. He finally found a benefactor in 1489, when the Catholic monarchs of Spain gave him a modest annual allowance, which later was increased to full support in January of 1492. On August 3, 1492, he finally set sail on the first of his four voyages to the New World, and land was finally sited on the morning of October 12.






To quote the old Avis ads, though, the truth about Columbus is “not exactly” the same as the story that we are all familiar with.




During Columbus' lifetime, Jews became the target of fanatical religious persecution.. On March 31, 1492, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella proclaimed that all Jews were to be expelled from Spain. The Alhambra Decree especially targeted the 800,000 Jews who had never converted, and gave them four months to pack up and get out. The final date for them to leave was July 31 of 1492, which happened to be 3 days before Columbus first set sail for the New World.

The Alhambra Decree was a natural progression from the Spanish Inquisition, which was established on November 1, 1478. By the time the Inquisition was formally disbanded on July 15, 1834, an estimated 150,000 had been persecuted and tortured, and  between 3000 and 5000 people had been executed. If you take the time to read the details in the link below, you will discover that Jews were not the only target of the Inquisition.


As a result of the Alhambra decree and persecution in prior years, over 200,000 Jews converted to Catholicism and between 40,000 and 100,000 were expelled, an indeterminate number returning to Spain in the years following the expulsion. Those who stayed faced the death penalty. The Jews who actually converted to Catholicism were known as “Conversos”. The Jews who PRETENDED to convert to Catholicism, but secretly still practiced Judaism, were known as “Marranos”, or “swine”.  Inevitably, of course, some of the “Marranos” were “outed”. Tens of thousands of Marranos were tortured by the Spanish Inquisition. They were pressured to offer names of friends and family members, who were ultimately paraded in front of crowds, tied to stakes and burned alive. Their land and personal possessions were then divvied up by the church and crown.

The Alhambra Decree was formally and symbolically revoked on December 16, 1968, a full century after Jews had been openly practicing their religion in Spain, and synagogues were once more legal places of worship under Spain’s Laws of Religious Freedom. In 2014, the government of Spain passed a law allowing dual citizenship to Jewish descendants who apply, to "compensate for shameful events in the country's past.. Thus, Sephardi Jews who can prove they are the descendants of those Jews expelled from Spain because of the Alhambra Decree can "become Spaniards without leaving home or giving up their present nationality”.

Recently, a number of Spanish scholars, such as Jose Erugo, Celso Garcia de la Riega, Otero Sanchez and Nicholas Dias Perez, have concluded that Columbus was actually a Marrano, whose survival depended upon the suppression of all evidence of his Jewish background in face of the brutal, systematic ethnic cleansing.

Columbus, who was known in Spain as Cristóbal Colón and didn't speak Italian, signed his last will and testament on May 19, 1506, and made five curious -- and revealing -- provisions.

Two of his wishes -- tithe one-tenth of his income to the poor and provide an anonymous dowry for poor girls -- are part of Jewish customs. He also decreed to give money to a Jew who lived at the entrance of the Lisbon Jewish Quarter.
On those documents, Columbus used a triangular signature of dots and letters that resembled inscriptions found on gravestones of Jewish cemeteries in Spain. He ordered his heirs to use the signature in perpetuity. 

According to British historian Cecil Roth's "The History of the Marranos," the anagram was a cryptic substitute for the Kaddish, a prayer recited in the synagogue by mourners after the death of a close relative. Thus, Columbus' subterfuge allowed his sons to say Kaddish for their crypto-Jewish father when he died. Finally, Columbus left money to support the crusade he hoped his successors would take up to liberate the Holy Land.

Estelle Irizarry, a linguistics professor at Georgetown University, has analyzed the language and syntax of hundreds of handwritten letters, diaries and documents of Columbus and concluded that the explorer's primary written and spoken language was Castilian Spanish. Irizarry explains that 15th-century Castilian Spanish was the "Yiddish" of Spanish Jewry, known as "Ladino." At the top left-hand corner of all but one of the 13 letters written by Columbus to his son Diego contained the handwritten Hebrew letters bet-hei, meaning b'ezrat Hashem (with God's help). Observant Jews have for centuries customarily added this blessing to their letters. No letters to outsiders bear this mark, and the one letter to Diego in which this was omitted was one meant for King Ferdinand.

In Simon Weisenthal's book, "Sails of Hope," he argues that Columbus' voyage was motivated by a desire to find a safe haven for the Jews in light of their expulsion from Spain. Likewise, Carol Delaney, a cultural anthropologist at Stanford University, concludes that Columbus was a deeply religious man whose purpose was to sail to Asia to obtain gold in order to finance a crusade to take back Jerusalem and rebuild the Jews' holy Temple
.
In Columbus' day, Jews widely believed that Jerusalem had to be liberated and the Temple rebuilt for the Messiah to come. Scholars point to the date on which Columbus set sail as further evidence of his true motives. He was originally going to sail on August 2, 1492, a day that happened to coincide with the Jewish holiday of Tisha B'Av, marking the destruction of the First and Second Holy Temples of Jerusalem. Columbus postponed this original sail date by one day to avoid embarking on the holiday, which would have been considered by Jews to be an unlucky day to set sail. (Coincidentally or significantly, the day he set forth was the very day that Jews were, by law, given the choice of converting, leaving Spain, or being killed.)

Columbus' voyage was not, as is commonly believed, funded by the deep pockets of Queen Isabella, but rather by two Jewish Conversos and another prominent Jew. Louis de Santangel and Gabriel Sanchez advanced an interest free loan of 17,000 ducats from their own pockets to help pay for the voyage, as did Don Isaac Abrabanel, rabbi and Jewish statesman.
Indeed, the first two letters Columbus sent back from his journey were not to Ferdinand and Isabella, but to Santangel and Sanchez, thanking them for their support and telling them what he had found.

The evidence seem to bear out a far more complicated picture of the man for whom our nation now celebrates a national holiday and has named its capital, and it is a very complicated story for three reasons:
1)    In recent years, Columbus has been criticized for starting the slave trade in America, even though the first slaves from Africa did not leave until after his voyages. However, the Papal Bull of 1493 gave almost all of the New World to Spain, the Spanish started to send slaves from Africa to America. The first enslaved Africans arrived in Hispaniola in 1501. The slave trade finally peaked in the late 18th Century. The U.S. states of Alaska, Hawaii, Oregon, South Dakota, and Vermont do not recognize Columbus Day at all; but they mark the day with an alternative holiday or observance. Hawaii celebrates Discoverer's Day, which commemorates the Polynesian discoverers of Hawaii on the same date, the second Monday of October. though the name change has not ended protest related to the observance of Columbus's discovery. The state government does not treat either Columbus Day or Discoverer's Day as a legal holiday. State, city and county government offices and schools are open for business. Similarly, in 2016, Vermont started celebrating Indigenous Peoples' Day instead of Columbus Day. Because this change was made by Governor Peter Shumlin's executive proclamation, it only applies for 2016. In the future it would have to be issued by the sitting governor on a yearly basis, or officially changed by the legislature in order to become permanent.On the other hand, South Dakota celebrates the day as an official state holiday known as Native American Day. Until 2017, Oregon did not recognize Columbus Day, either as a holiday or as a commemoration; schools and public offices remained open. However, on Columbus Day, 2017, Oregon Governor Kate Brown renamed the holiday "Indigenous Peoples' Day," to remember these cultures and commemorate the struggles of native peoples during European colonization. Two additional states, Iowa and Nevada, do not celebrate it as an official holiday, but the states' respective governors are "authorized and requested" by statute to proclaim the day each year.
      Several other states have removed the day as a paid holiday for government             workers while still maintaining it either as a day of recognition, or as a legal             holiday for other purposes. These include California and Texas.
 The city of Berkeley, California, replaced Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples' Day in 1992, a move which has been followed by multiple other localities including Sebastopol and Santa Cruz, California; 
Dane County, Wisconsin; Seattle, Washington; Missoula, Montana; 
Cambridge, Massachusetts; Denver, Colorado; Phoenix, Arizona; Los Angeles, California; Austin, Texas; and Salt Lake City, Utah. Various tribal governments in Oklahoma designate the day Native American Day, or name it after their own tribe.
  
The first celebration in America has been recorded as early as 1792, when it was started by the Tammany Society in New York City. In 1892, President Benjamin Harrison called on people to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Columbus’ landing in the New World. In April 1934, as a result of lobbying by the Knights of Columbus and New York City Italian leader Generoso Pope, Congress and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt proclaimed October 12 a Federal holiday  under the name Columbus Day. Since 1971, the holiday has been fixed at the second Monday in October.  It is generally observed nowadays by banks, the bond market, the U.S. Postal Service, other federal agencies, most state government offices, many businesses, and most school districts


2)   One of the real reasons wanted to sail to the New World was to find a safe place to live for his fellow Jews, which would allow them to escape from persecution by Catholic rulers in Spain and Portugal. As a result, it is ironic that the biggest push for the holiday in America was a result of the efforts by the Knights of Columbus in 1934 in New York City.

3) The year 1973 provided another example of an ironic event, when the Yom Kippur War (which started on October 6 and ended on October 25) neatly bracketed the celebration of Columbus Day in that year.

 As we witness bloodshed the world over in the name of religious freedom, it is valuable to take another look at the man who sailed the seas in search of such freedoms -- landing in a place that would eventually come to hold such an ideal at its very core.