Archive for November, 2019

Josh Wallace: The Art of Business, The Business of Art | MarCom – Pacific Lutheran University

As an MBA student, Wallace hopes to bridge gaps between artists and business, and help foster community fine arts appreciation, by combining marketing savvy with arts knowledge.

The arts and entertainment connect the world on a larger level, he says.

He enrolled in PLUs MBA program because he understood some aspects of an acting career such as auditions but not accounting, marketing and management theories.

Many artists could learn more about marketing, he says: As an actor, you need to know how to market yourself, especially in the digital age, whether through Instagram or another form of social media.

Hes learning more about marketing in his MBA program. With teammates, Wallace delves into case studies and learns about marketing tools. For the year-end project, his group is crafting a real-world marketing plan for a local telemedicine business. We find out where they could market better, different marketing avenues, and how to grow their marketing, he says.

The business world could learn from the arts when it comes to creativity and play, he says. Parts of the business world are taken a bit too seriously, and as entrepreneurs you need to find a way to be more free-spirited and foster creativity a bit. Creative energy can spur brilliant ideas, but its important to hold onto dreams and passions.

Resilience is a key arts strength that can support entrepreneurs, he notes. When he first got into acting he heard, Youll get a million nos before you get your first yes something true for entrepreneurs, too.

In the future, Wallace hopes to be an actor, musician and producer, and eventually start his own arts and entertainment business the next Disney, for example.

Hes participating in the schools business plan competition, creating an app that connects artists professionally. Like eHarmony for artists, he says so a singer can find a guitarist or a producer, for example.

Read more:
Josh Wallace: The Art of Business, The Business of Art | MarCom - Pacific Lutheran University

Both left and right still misunderstand the politics of Barack Obama, conservative – Thehour.com

The Democrats who want to be president can't quite figure out how to talk about the most popular figure in their party. Former President Barack Obama still casts a long shadow over the 2020 primary campaign: Preserving Obama's legacy is the heart of former Vice President Joe Biden's pitch to voters - which has allowed his rivals to mark him as complacent. More left-leaning candidates, like Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, say the next president needs to do more to push for health care reforms and combat income inequality - but lately, she's struggling to sell her proposals. Former Obama Cabinet Secretary Julin Castro has ripped his ex-boss' record on immigration and deportation. South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg raced to have a reporter correct a story that misquoted him citing "failures of the Obama era." Picking and choosing which parts of Obama's tenure to embrace, and how much, has become a delicate game in the primary season.

And now Obama himself is working to cool down what he sees as an overheated political climate. In October, at a panel discussion for his foundation, he warned against the pitfalls of "woke" online cancel culture, telling a gathering of young activists that "if all you're doing is casting stones, you're probably not going to get that far." This month, at a gathering of influential Democrats, he cautioned the 2020 contenders against pushing too far, too fast on policy: "This is still a country that is less revolutionary than it is interested in improvement."

That distinction helps explain why so many of the candidates' proposals seem so far to the left of Obama. The former president was skeptical of sweeping change, bullish on markets, sanguine about the use of military force, high on individual responsibility and faithful to a set of old-school personal values. Compare that with the agenda of his would-be successors: Medicare for all, free college, a wealth tax, universal basic income.

Given the political climate, it's no surprise to see the party's base clamoring for something more dramatic. But the contrast between Obama's steady appraoch and the seeming radicalism of his Democratic heirs can't simply be chalked up to changing times. It's because the former president, going back at least to his 2004 Senate race, hasn't really occupied the left side of the ideological political spectrum. He wasn't a Republican, obviously: He never professed a desire to starve the federal government, and he opposed the Iraq War that Republicans overwhelmingly supported. But to the dismay of many on the left, and the continuing disbelief of many on the right, Obama never dramatically departed from the approach of presidents who came before him.

There's a simple reason for that: Barack Obama is a conservative.

No, he isn't a Republican. He never professed a desire to starve the federal government, and he opposed the Iraq War that Republicans overwhelmingly supported. But he was, and remains, skeptical of sweeping change, bullish on markets, sanguine about the use of military force, high on individual responsibility and faithful to a set of old-school personal values. To the dismay of many on the left, and to the continuing disbelief of many on the right, Obama never dramatically departed from the approach of presidents who came before him.

Obama's perspectives don't line up with every position now seen as right-of-center: He joined the Paris climate accords, he signed Dodd-Frank financial-sector regulation and he's pro-choice. But even on that issue, in one of the first times he outlined his stance on abortion to a national constituency, Obama explained that as the father of daughters, "if they make a mistake, I don't want them punished with a baby" - a framing that outraged anti-choice advocates, but also hinted at a patriarchal sensibility. He flip-flopped to supporting same-sex marriage, but with an emphasis on marriage.

His constant search for consensus, for ways to bring Blue America and Red America together, could lead him to policies that used Republican means to achieve more liberal ends.

The underlying concept for Obama's signature legislation, the Affordable Care Act, with its individual mandate, was devised by the right-wing Heritage Foundation and was first implemented at the state level by Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), then governor of Massachusetts. Obama wanted to protect Americans from the catastrophic effects of a prolonged recession, so he agreed, in his last meaningful vote as a senator, to a bailout of banks - and, as president, prioritized recovery over punishing banks and bankers for their roleinthe financial crisis. Until the Sandy Hook tragedy in 2012, Obama studiously avoided any push for gun control. Indeed, in 2010, he signed laws that loosened restrictions on bringing firearms to national parks and on Amtrak. Though cast as a "dithering" peacenik, he stuck with his thesis that the imperative "to end the war in Iraq is to be able to get more troops into Afghanistan" and prosecuted a drone war in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen.

But Obama's approach to politics was marked by a circumspection that went even deeper than policies. As he recently said, "the average American doesn't think that we have to completely tear down the system and remake it." To be conservative, as philosopher-guru Michael Oakeshott, a conservative hero, once put it, "is to prefer the familiar to the unknown, to prefer the tried to the untried, fact to mystery, the actual to the possible, the limited to the unbounded, the near to the distant, the sufficient to the superabundant, the convenient to the perfect, present laughter to utopian bliss."

Obama believes, fundamentally, that the American model works - but, crucially, that it hasn't been allowed to work for everyone. He believes that in some cases, it's the government's role to help expand the American dream to individuals and communities to whom that dream has been denied. And in others, he believes Americans can achieve the dream if only they show the will to surmount obstacles on their own.

His second inaugural address was a thoroughly conservative document, underscoring equality of opportunity, as opposed to equality of outcome. Republican former House speaker Newt Gingrich's reaction at the time was: "95 percent of the speech I thought was classically American, emphasizing hard work, emphasizing self-reliance, emphasizing doing things together."

In his first year in office, he gave a back-to-school address that Republicans panned in advance as big-brotherism, even its though its central idea turned out to be: "At the end of the day, the circumstances of your life - what you look like, where you come from, how much money you have, what you've got going on at home - none of that is an excuse for neglecting your homework or having a bad attitude in school."

He once argued that in certain circumstances, government programs created welfare dependency, saying that "as somebody who worked in low-income neighborhoods, I've seen it where people weren't encouraged to work, weren't encouraged to upgrade their skills, were just getting a check, and over time their motivation started to diminish."

In remarks commemorating the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, Obama went out of his way to lecture that, in the civil rights era, "what had once been a call for equality of opportunity, the chance for all Americans to work hard and get ahead, was too often framed as a mere desire for government support, as if we had no agency in our own liberation, as if poverty was an excuse for not raising your child, and the bigotry of others was reason to give up on yourself." You'd never hear that sentiment expressed by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), for whom structural inequality explains nearly every American ill.

He was unapologetic about his identity as a role model for black men, in particular, and his grounding in African American intellectual and political traditions. And he repeatedly stressed that not all inequities in American society are attributable to discrimination, racial or otherwise. Striking that balance was precisely what granted Obama currency with the black electorate, which votes overwhelmingly for Democrats and is the core of the party's base, but frequently skews moderate to conservative, ideologically.

He embraced respectability politics as a way to communicate the sameness of a first family of color: The many Norman Rockwell-worthy photo-ops - the Obamas' 2009 family portrait, done by Annie Leibovitz, a study in wholesome family living; their annual vacations on Martha's Vineyard, summer haven of the black elite; dialing back his storied "cool," as when he displayed his stiff dance moves during an appearance "Ellen," laying claim to the mantle of the everyman dad. When asked what he thought about Kanye West interrupting Taylor Swift's 2009 MTV Video Music Awards acceptance speech to shower praise on Beyonc, Obama offered no mitigating analysis, saying simply, "He's a jackass."

In his 2014 immigration reform speech, he leaned on Exodus 23:9.

Obama called out racism in the criminal justice system. He met with Black Lives Matter activists, and his Justice Department used consent decrees to rein in police departments. For this, he was often portrayed as a cop-hater in right-wing media; former Milwaukee County sheriff David Clarke, a Fox News fixture, called him "the most anti-cop president I have ever seen." But the president routinely extolled law enforcement, including at the 2015 convention of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, when he said: "I reject any narrative that seeks to divide police and communities that they serve. I reject a storyline that says when it comes to public safety there's an 'us' and a 'them.'"

After George Zimmerman's acquittal, Obama - who had said "Trayvon Martin could have been me 35 years ago" - defended the system, emphasizing that "we are a nation of laws and a jury has spoken."

For most of his presidency, Obama governed with a Republican Congress dedicated to preventing his reelection or thwarting his agenda. Any efforts would have to entail compromise. Still, he made bargains that the rhetoric of current Democratic candidates would seem to foreclose. In 2010, Obama and Republicans traded a two-year extension of former president George W. Bush's top marginal income tax cut, along with a payroll tax holiday and an extension of unemployment benefits, that paved the way for a repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell. At the time the left fumed, but in that deal Obama benefitted from both the quid and the quo. He later also agreed to the Budget Control Act of 2011, known as "sequestration," that brought down year-to-year deficits by slashing federal spendingin exchange for GOP votes to raise the debt ceiling.

Obama was a believer in big government, but his views show many similarities with to those of Republican presidents like Theodore Roosevelt, who fought corporate monopolies and later led the Progressive Party; Dwight D. Eisenhower, who signed the Civil Rights Act of 1957 and the Federal Aid Highway Act, creating the interstate highway system; and establishment archetype George H.W. Bush, a veteran of Congress, the U.N., the CIA and the vice presidency who broke his "no new taxes" pledge, rescued savings and loans and declared an import ban on semi-automatic rifles. His conservatism also lines up with the late senator Edward Brooke (R-Mass.), a co-sponsor of the Fair Housing Act of 1968 who was the last black man to serve in the Senate prior to Obama.

Obama did advance priorities that progressives cheered: He tripled the number of women on the Supreme Court. On the environment, he implemented aggressive rules to limit coal-based power and ozone and mercury emissions. He supported anti-discrimination laws for LGBT employees and introduced rules that would protect some younger, undocumented immigrants from deportation. (He achieved many of these policies through executive fiat, meaning they are - or have already been - easily reversed.) But none of these changes revolutionized governance or structurally reordered American life.

The scramble that Obama can still cause reflects the dissonance he's generated for a decade: The center-left adores him, but to the far left he's a sellout. He's being rethought on the center-right, but remains the bte noire of the far right, which morphed from the (putatively) government-hating tea party wing to a strong-man-loving Republican core.

That's due, in part, to an enduring misunderstanding of what he represented.

Notwithstanding the change-we-can-believe-in marketing that propelled his political rise, Obama's aim was never to turn things upside down. Favoring "the familiar to the unknown" was Obama's disposition, but also his project: Expanding a traditional slate of priorities - the familiar American dream, not a reconceived one - to Americans for whom it had been previously denied. Part of that project was building, gradually, at moments almost reverently, on his predecessors' foundation.

That's left Republicans lurching in President Trump's direction. And forces Democrats to sort out who they are; and how to fuse Obama's appeal with an agenda that reaches further than he ever tried - or saw the need to.

Follow this link:
Both left and right still misunderstand the politics of Barack Obama, conservative - Thehour.com

Culture Wars Expected To Continue In Tallahassee Over LGBTQ Rights – WFSU

Activists want Florida to be the 16th state to ban conversion therapy. The practice is known for trying to change someone from gay to straight. Awareness of LGBTQ issues is on the rise, but that doesn't mean acceptance is widespread.

On a cold November night in Tallahassee, about 20 protestors bundled in jackets and scarves, gathered outside Hotel Duval. They're led by community activist Lakey Love who's wearing a pink, yellow and blue striped flag as a cape. It represents Pansexual pride. The group chants "stand up, fight back," and "Not the church, not the state, we alone decide our fate.

As the group chants, cars drive by honking. Inside, Freedom Speaks President Bev Killmer, watches from the lobby as the prostestors scream in opposition to her group. She's hoping to find state legislators who will sponsor bills to ban sex education in elementary schools and ban gay-straight alliances at schools.

There should not be such a thing as a LGBTQ friendly school. Why does it even need to be an issue? Killmer asks, shaking her head as the group outside continues its protest.

How the protest started

Plans for the rally ignited after LGBTQ activists got their hands on a conference pamphlet printed by Freedom Speaks. The front page reads, Protecting Americas Heritage. Among Freedom Speaks' legislative efforts: passing a bill banning abortions when a fetal heartbeat is detected, and protecting monuments and memorials. The group also calls for "keeping Islam and the Qur'an out of" schools and goverment, and "making Americanism vs. Socialism a required course for graduation."

One section in the pamphlet reads, No child should have to be exposed to the ideology of LGBTQ, multiple gender identities, and the proper pronouns.

Love says Freedom Speaks' ideology could end up hurting kids.

We want to protect LGBTQIA+ kids that are just coming out in schools that are being bullied, that are being harassed, that can suffer discrimination at the hands of teachers, parents, other students."

Freedom Speaks' Claims

Killmer claims Florida is teaching elementary school kids LGBTQ issues in sex education courses.

To teach you about your body thats fine. To teach you about sexuality is not fine, she says.

When asked multiple times through email and phone calls for what schools and district's have such programs, Killmer didnt respond. The state allows local districts to determine how they teach sex education. Leon County uses a program created by Proctor and Gamble to teach fifth graders about their bodies. It doesnt mention sexual orientation or gender identity. When told this, Killmer pointed to a book titled, Its Perfectly Normal. This book does aim to teach children LGBTQ-related topics, but its not in Leon County School libraries nor is it present in any of the Big Bend's 13 school districts.

NPR describes the book as, "one of the most banned books of the past two decades."

LGBTQ Rights in Florida

The clash at Hotel Duval is mirrored throughout Florida. For 12 years, lawmakers have been trying to pass laws to protect LGBTQ people from workplace discrimination. Local human rights ordinances exist in several cities, but there is no state-wide protection.

A bill banning Conversion therapy has been filed in the legisature for the fifth time. Conversion therapy tries to change a persons gender identity and sexual orientation. The American Psychiatric Association opposes the practice, saying it poses significant harm to patients. The American Academy of Pediatrics, along with numerous medical organizations, also opposes the practice and 15 other states have banned it. During a recent anti-conversion therapy town hall in Tallahassee, a skirmish breaks out when a woman from Freedom Speaks, stands up but doesn't give her name.

Its not that these peoplethat these children are being born gay, the woman begins, Its that theyre being groomed and lured into the transgender and LGBTQ culture. Her remarks stirred audience members. Panelist Denzel Pierre responded by recounting how she grew up in a Christian church with no knowledge of the LGBTQ community.

With all due respect maam, I think your information and your ideology is rooted in a hate toward us,Pierre says.

The woman was kicked out.

For years, there's not been enough Republican support to pass the conversion therapy ban or expanding anti-descrimination laws to include LGBTQ Floridians. Republicans hold the majority in the legislature and control the governorship. However, that could be changing. Last year, Republican Party of Florida Chairman and state Sen. Joe Gruters, R-Sarasota, sponsored a measure to grant workplace protections. But LGBTQ activists criticized him for not adding housing and public accommodations to the package, and his bill died.

Meanwhile, activists like Love say they wont back down. But Neither will those like Freedom Speaks Killmer.

Read this article:
Culture Wars Expected To Continue In Tallahassee Over LGBTQ Rights - WFSU

7 Thanksgiving bottles to tame the wine culture wars – San Francisco Chronicle

Gail Pinot Grigio Sonoma Valley Morning Sun Ranch 2018 (13.3%, $25): Pinot Grigio is a punchline in some wine circles, often producing a wine thats bland, insipid and immediately forgettable. Thats what makes winemaker Dan OBriens version, for his Gail Wines label, so cool. Its got all the lightness and brightness that Pinot Grigio should have you could throw it back but its also lush with orchard fruit and a hint of grassiness. Youll love it, and so will your Santa Margherita-drinking aunt.

Irene Chardonnay Sonoma Coast 2017 (13%, $35): Few wine categories are as polarizing as California Chardonnay. You might have a drinker at your table who drinks the oaky, buttery stuff with abandon and another one who wont touch it. This example from Irene, a label owned by husband and wife Brian and Katelynn Jessen, would make a fine peace offering. From a vineyard that gets cool Petaluma Gap winds, their Chardonnay is neither too rich nor too searing, characterized by the bright flavor of lemon zest. Its acidity gives it firm structure, which plays off the wines round shape and lightly chalky texture.

Unti Vermentino Dry Creek Valley 2018 (13.4%, $28): By all means, bring an offbeat white wine to Thanksgiving, but make it a crowd pleaser like Vermentino a grape widely grown around Italys Mediterranean coasts that can retain acidity when grown in warm climates. Untis Vermentino, from its estate outside Healdsburg, proves why more California winemakers are interested in this grape. Its crisp and straightforward (it never sees oak barrels and does not go through malolactic fermentation) but still full of character, juicy with apricot and lemon flavors and intensely floral.

Birichino Saint Georges Pinot Noir Central Coast 2017 (13.5%, $25): Many people consider Pinot Noir especially American Pinot Noir as mandatory at Thanksgiving, given its general friendliness with poultry and autumnal flavors. But there is a lot of American Pinot Noir out there that tastes like candied yams: dominated by the sweet flavors of toasted oak barrels and overripe cherries. Luckily, theres also Pinot Noir from Birichino, a Santa Cruz winery co-owned by John Locke and Alex Krause. Their single-vineyard Pinots are stunning (look for the Enz Vineyard), but the $25 Saint Georges blend is exemplary of their finessed style: crunchy, tart, dynamically textured. Its dark, earthy flavors would play well with stuffing, cranberry sauce and a gravy-dressed slice of turkey. But hold the candied yams.

Trevor Grace Estate Grenache El Dorado County 2017 (14.2%, $30): Increasingly, California Grenache seems to be moving toward two poles: one rich and robust, modeled on Chateauneuf du Pape, the other lean and translucent. Heres an example of a wine that nicely straddles both, from the offshoot label of winemaker Trevor Grace, who also works for his familys Lewis Grace Winery in Placerville. Its got some heft and structure to it while also feeling light on its feet, with velvety tannins and striking flavors of wet stone, orange peel and red currant.

Eden Rift Zinfandel Dickinson Block Cienega Valley 2017 (15.2%, $45): For that relative who wants to maximize his alcohol consumption per sip, heres a wine that packs a serious punch but thank goodness doesnt burn on the finish. The Eden Rift estate in Hollister(San Benito County) is mostly devoted to Pinot Noir and Chardonnay but maintains a block of Zinfandel planted in 1906. It smells like acai berries and blueberry pie, with an impression of tart red plum on the palate. Its juicy, tangy and balanced, despite that 15.2% ABV, a perfect bridge between dinner and dessert.

Di Co Cabernet Sauvignon Napa Valley 2017 (14.3%, $65): If youve got a family member who wants to drink only Napa Cab and another one who refuses to drink Napa Cab, this is the wine to appease them both. Winemaker Massimo di Costanzo brings a refined touch to the category, and his entry-level Di Co wine is an outrageous value for what it is: single-vineyard Cabernet from 30-year-old vines in the Mount Veeder foothills. The vineyard is called Rafael, and its wine shares the same sense of restraint and structure as di Costanzos higher-end bottlings from the Farella and Montecillo vineyards. The Di Co is both floral and savory, suggesting lavender, pencil lead and dark, crushed berries.

Go here to read the rest:
7 Thanksgiving bottles to tame the wine culture wars - San Francisco Chronicle

The Court: Ground Zero In The Culture Wars – Long Island Weekly News

Justice on Trial: The Kavanaugh Confirmation and the Future of the Supreme Court, cowritten by Mollie Hemingway and Carrie Severino, might be retitled The [Ongoing] Education of Conservatives. Supreme Court nomination fights have become ground zero in the culture wars. In 1987, when President Reagan nominated Robert H. Bork for the court, Democrats were loaded for bear. The Reagan White House, then run by former senator Howard Baker, was asleep at the switch. When the opposition ran television ads opposing Bork featuring Gregory Peck of To Kill A Mockingbird fame, both Clint Eastwood and Charlton Heston volunteered to appear in a pro-Bork ad. The White House, incredibly enough, turned them down. One suspects Baker had no stomach for the fight with his old Democratic Party pals.

That nomination fight was the most important political event of the 1980s. Borks defeat allowed liberals to dominate the courts for the next 30-odd years, upholding rulings on abortion and affirmative action, while legalizing same sex marriage. In 1991, there was a replay with the Clarence Thomas nomination. By the time Kavanaugh was nominated, conservatives were in their battle stations. They now had a network (Fox News), plus numerous special interest groups able to spend millions on pro-Kavanaugh ads. It didnt hurt that Kavanaugh had no intention of stepping down and even if he did, President Donald Trump would not have allowed it.

The nomination wars didnt start with Bork. The co-authors dont remember the 1969 donnybrook over Clement Haynsworth, a South Carolina jurist nominated by President Nixon. That was just as nasty. That fight broke down on regional, rather than on party lines. Southern Democrats such as Ernest Hollings (DSC) and Richard Russell (DGA) supported Haynsworth, while such liberal Republicans as Hugh Scott (RPA) opposed him, prevailing in the end. (Todays conservatives would never want to be on the same side as Russell or, say, Senator James Eastland (DMS), who also supported Haynsworth.) This oversight hampers an otherwise intense read.

The co-authors are not sanguine about the future. The next time a Republican president nominates a jurist to the court, fireworks on a scale no one can possibly imagine will explode. The co-authorsand their fellow conservativesare stuck with placing their hopes on the American people.

One justice who escaped the confirmation wars is Neil Gorsuch. The man can spend the rest of his days on the nations highest court, writing opinions to his hearts content. A Republic If You Can Keep It is a compilation of Gorsuchs opinions, speeches and testimony from recent years. The purpose of the collection is to show Gorsuch in a good light, a thoroughly harmless fellow. Kavanaugh is being raked over the coals on a regular basis. That wont happen to Gorsuch. His collection is similar to George Wills recent book, The Conservative Sensibility. Youd think the two compared notes. Gorsuch hits all the right notes: No to Plessy vs. Ferguson, yes to Brown vs. Board of Education and conveniently enough, no mention of Roe vs. Wade or Obergefell vs. Hodges.

Gorsuch does reject the notion of a living constitution. Plus, he maintains that the courts should rule on what a law is rather than what it should be. Alas, the volume is sunk by cliches. The United States does not have a shared common culture in the classic sense, the justice proclaims. We do not have the many centuries of shared heritage that exists in, say, China or England.

This statement is demonstratively false. The original colonies had a shared common culture (Anglo-Saxon-Celtic Protestant) for 167 years (1607 to 1776) before the American founding and a good 211 years (1776 to 1987) afterwards. Thats 380 years, nearly four centuries. A nation that lacks a common culture becomeswell, the kind of country America has become today. Only the character of a people can uphold a legal document such as the U.S. Constitution.

Here is the original post:
The Court: Ground Zero In The Culture Wars - Long Island Weekly News