Archive for April, 2022

Chaos, crisis and infighting threaten Democrats in 2022 – The Hill

With less than seven months until the midterm elections, Democrats face a number of major and mounting crises. Record-high inflation, soaring crime rates, the lingering COVID-19 pandemic and the shadow of President Bidens foreign policy failures in Afghanistan already have Democrats facing an uphill battle in November.

On top of that, recent developments surrounding another key issue immigration further threaten the Democratic Partys ability to retain its majority in Congress this year.

In a comprehensive and in-depthpieceforTheNew York Times, Zolan Kanno-Youngs, Michael D. Shear and Eileen Sullivan detail the extent of the chaos and infighting inside the Biden White House over the administrations immigration policy, specifically with regard to the migrant crisis at the southern border.

Among other revelations in the article, in a heated exchange over the surge of migrants in March 2021, President Biden erupted at staffers. Sensing that some were attempting to evade responsibility for the issue, the president demanded: Who do I need to fire to fix this?

To be sure, this is not the first presidential administration that has been caught between a rock and a hard place when it comes to tackling this complex problem. Past presidents from both parties have tried and failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform.

Yet, the Biden administrations internal division and paralysis on immigration policy as detailed byTheNew York Timespiece is particularly noteworthy, as it is emblematic of this White Houses inability to effectively solve problems.

Put another way, when it comes to managing crises both domestic and international the Biden administration is hopelessly divided and beset by internal strife, and the immigration crisis is no exception.

As a result, the Biden administrations immigration policies have come under fire from both parties Republicans attack the administration for the migrant crisis at the southern border, while progressives accuse the administration of failing to prioritize human rights and not living up to campaign promises to permanently protect Dreamers.

Indeed, a recent Politico Morning Consultpollshows that, when it comes to handling immigration, voters trust Republicans (47 percent) over Democrats (38 percent) in Congress. Worse, just 27 percent of Independents trust Democrats more on the issue.

TheNew York Timespiece notes that one of the major policies implemented by President Trump, Title 42 which is designed to give the president power to prevent immigration in times of public health emergencies has proven to be highly contentious and problematic inside the Biden White House.

Last summer, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention argued that Title 42 was no longer necessary, as the delta variant was already spreading rapidly throughout the U.S. Thus, preventing migrants and asylum seekers from entering the U.S. would not protect public health in a meaningful way.

The CDCs position was opposed by Bidens senior advisors, chief of staff Ron Klain and policy advisor Susan Rice, who feared that repealing Title 42 would worsen the migrant crisis at the border and become a political headache.

Even so, two weeks ago, the Biden administration announced that it would in fact end Title 42. Now, the Department of Homeland Security isreportedlypreparing for a worst-case scenario of up to 18,000 people trying to cross the border daily, a number that would surely overwhelm the already full border facilities.

While it remains to be seen whether COVID-19 infections will spike as a result, it is clear that the political consequences of repealing Title 42 will further complicate Democrats political prospects in this years midterms.

For one, voters will almost certainly be put off by the hypocrisy of the Biden administration repealing Title 42 while Democratic-led cities announce returns to mask mandates amid spikes in COVID-19 infections, as is the case inPhiladelphia.

Furthermore, if there is a surge at the border, as is expected, Republicans will be able to weaponize the issue against Democrats in the midterms. Rightly so, moderate Democrats in Washington, D.C. fear that appearing soft on illegal immigration will hurt their party politically.

AsThe New York Timespiece describes, Klain expressed concern that accusations about border chaos would grow worse, anger moderate voters, and potentially sink the party during 2022 midterms unless the administration found a way to deter illegal immigration.

Moreover, Democrats appearing soft on illegal immigration will allow Republicans to easily make the case to voters that Democrats are also soft on crime, especially as crime rates climb across the country.

Ultimately, the Biden administrations uneven and ineffective approach to immigration which mirrors their incompetence on issues like the economy, the COVID-19 pandemic, crime and foreign policy is giving Republicans fresh ammo going into the midterms.

As Lanae Erickson of Third Way a centrist Democratic think tank told the Times: Republicans are trying to make the case that Democrats are the party of chaos.

Unless the Biden administration can turn things around and prove to voters that they are not the party of chaos but rather of progress and problem-solving Democrats are almost certain to be brought down by Republicans in 2022, 2024 and beyond.

Douglas E. Schoen is a political consultant who served as an adviser to former President Clinton and to the 2020 presidential campaign of Michael Bloomberg. He is the author of The End of Democracy? Russia and China on the Rise and America in Retreat.

Originally posted here:
Chaos, crisis and infighting threaten Democrats in 2022 - The Hill

B2b Unlimited Lead Generation Tools? ictsd.org – ICTSD Bridges News

A lead generation tool facilitates the marketing and sales teams of B2B businesses to identify prospects for additional revenue. Companies can automate manual lead generation processes, such as finding accurate up-to-date contact information, which can result in lower research costs and increased quality in their prospects.

What Tools Did You Use Specifically For Leads Generation?

How Do You Generate More B2B Sales Leads?

What Are The Free Lead Generating Websites For B2B?

It goes without saying that you will come to CRM software customer relationship management after evaluating lead gen software. A lot of CRM tools and features have lead generation as an integral component. Marketing and building relationships with customers are all in play when you are nurturing your sales pipeline.

How Do You Lead Generation B2B?

What Lead Generation Tools Do You Use Or Are You Familiar With?

How Do I Attract More B2B Clients?

How Do You Generate More Sales Leads?

This website does not show lead pages. LeadPages an easy-to-use tool to find and capture leads on your business website makes it easy to do so. The following options will let you develop custom landing pages for specific audiences.

Read more here:
B2b Unlimited Lead Generation Tools? ictsd.org - ICTSD Bridges News

TikTok set to surpass combined ad revenues of Twitter, Snapchat – Marketing Dive

Dive Brief:

TikTok has skyrocketed in popularity over the past two years, rapidly becoming an important digital platform for the marketing world and a favorite app for many consumers. While it had 508 million monthly active users as of December 2019, TikTok is now one of the world's most popular social media apps at over 1 billion active users. In 2021, it dethroned Google as the most popular web address in the world for the first time.

That popularity among consumers has driven brands to increasingly experiment with the app, including with e-commerce,and further embed TikTok into their marketing strategies.

"It has moved well beyond its roots as a lip-syncing and dancing app; it creates trends and fosters deep connections with creators that keep users engaged, video after video. Advertisers want to reach a passionate, dedicated audience, and TikTok can deliver that," Debra Aho Williamson, Insider Intelligence principal analyst, said in the report.

Skyrocketing interest in the platform among consumers and brands alike is propelling TikTok's ad revenue, which is expected to overshadow Twitter and Snapchat's ad revenue combined, per Insider Intelligence's new report.

While brands clamored to reach users on TikTok last year, the app attempted to cozy up to brands in a push to win marketers' trust and snag a larger share of their budgets. The app in 2021 made significant investments to bolster its standing among marketers by doubling down on privacy, ad measurement and commerce, adding creator tools and launching a TV app that's designed to bring the app to bigger screens in gyms and restaurants through a partnership with Atmosphere.

"Another factor that will drive growth in ad spending is TikTok's unique take on social commerce. It pairs marketers with creators to help content go viral, and that can drive enormous demand for products that advertisers want to promote," Williamson said.

See original here:
TikTok set to surpass combined ad revenues of Twitter, Snapchat - Marketing Dive

SBJ Football: The USFL steps up for its turn in the spring spotlight – Sports Business Journal

Just anecdotally, tourist and commuter crowds seem to have really surged this week in Manhattan, which is especially notable juxtaposed with the ridiculous fear mongering about this city I see so often.

When I asked USFL Exec VP/Football Operations Daryl Johnston what constitutes success for the new league, he said: The rally cry here is getting to Year 2." That seemingly simple ambition has eluded just about every pro football league that has launched in recent memory.

If the USFL is to become the first 11-on-11 spring league to have a sophomore year in nearly four decades, it must do two things:

With spending in mind, consider a few points that really stand out compared to most startups:

Birmingham's Protective Stadium will house all USFL games in the league's debut season

In terms of the product, execs from the USFL, Fox and NBC will be thrilled if there are eight QBs who can remain vertical and consistently hit a receiver in stride, and four games each weekend that are still up for grabs in the fourth quarter.

But Johnston does hope for some innovation value-adds. The USFL will use sensors -- not chains -- to measure for first downs, and the games will have more production elements than any game Fox has ever broadcast, aside from Super Bowls, Johnston said. Theres going to be so many unique and good things to talk about when this thing is over, its really going to be something that grabs the viewers attention, grabs the football fans attention, he noted.

Also, Fox Entertainments Blockchain Creative Labs is launching an NFT marketplace, and players will be allowed to create and profit from their own NFTs. Players who wear helmet-cams will be able to use that video too. Empowering players to be entrepreneurial with their own brand and identity is key to the plan. I wouldnt be surprised if we have a couple guys who make more money in the marketplace than they do in salary, Johnston said.

The first game is Saturday at 7:30pm ET, on both Fox and NBC. Three more games are on Sunday (NBC, USA Network and FS1).

After this weekend, the USFL will be back in court with some officials of the original USFL, who claim the new league has no rights to the league and team IP. I dont predict the thinking of a judge Ive never met before, but industry sources dont consider this suit a serious threat.

If the USFL does make it to Year 2, it will have competition in the form of a new-look XFL. The USFL has its players under effective two-year contracts, hoping to block out its stars from considering the XFL.

Late last month, Chiefs CMO Lara Krug and VP/Corporate Partnerships Kim Hobbs joined a contingent of six other team employees and two retired players for an eight-day trip to Germany, where the team now has marking and media rights under the NFLs international program.

One day, they convened a focus group of about 25 local NFL fans over beer and Bavarian cuisine at Paulaner Nockherberg, a large beer hall in Munich. Krug passes on two key learnings:

Along with the focus group, the Chiefs met with potential sponsors and media partners, and also started generating Germany-specific content. Accompanying them on the trip was Bayern Munich VP/Marketing & Communications for the Americas Dee Kundra (the Bundesliga club has a partnership with Hunt Sports Group).

Former players Dante Hall and Tim Grunhard pose with Munich residents at an outdoor market

The platform, from 6Connex, allows Rams fans to gather together virtually in various rooms

Rams

Read more from the original source:
SBJ Football: The USFL steps up for its turn in the spring spotlight - Sports Business Journal

"Minx" is a breezy good time reminding the left to reclaim the lost politics of pleasure – Salon

Scratch a libertarian and you will find a prude. It's a truth beautifully illustrated in the season finale of "Minx," HBO's breezy-yet-sharp comedy about a fictional '70s-era magazine that combines Ms.-stylefeminist editorial with dicks-out Blueboy-esque nude male centerfolds. The show's two "shock jock" characters, Willy (Eric Edelstein) and Franco (Samm Levine), use their airtime titillating drive-time listeners with stories about how much they love sex and partying. But Willy's wife Wanda (Allison Tolman) gets her hands on a copy of "Minx" and decides to stand up for her own right to enjoy her life, instead wasting her time giving her husband joyless hand jobs between serving him meals. Suddenly the libertarians aren't so pro-liberty anymore.

The politics of equality are useless, unless joined with a politics of pleasure.

Instead, the shock jocks interview Bridget Westbury (Amy Landecker), a Phyllis Schlafly-esque city councilwoman to announce a new partnership combining "men's rights" with this religious right-tinged war on pornography. With the studio's prominent nude painting of woman looming over the scene, the councilwoman rants about how she plans to clean up San Fernando Valley, and the two men eagerly join in with the anti-porn sentiment they discovered the second they found out that women have sexual fantasies, too. The whole scene is very reminiscient ofDonald Trump smirking next to a smug Amy Coney Barrett, the "libertine" and the Bible-thumper joining forces to crush the hope of women's liberation.

RELATED:Stop feeding Joe Rogan's trolls: Progressives must reclaim the politics of pleasure

It's a hilarious satire of the sort of men who vote Trump and listen to Joe Rogan, and like to imagine they're "pro-freedom," despite having political views that stifle the much more real freedom struggles of women and LGBTQ people.

Amy Landecker in "Minx" (Photograph by Katrina Marcinowski / HBO Max)But this bit also serves a larger, more pointed message aimed directly at the American left, which needs to hear it more than ever: The politics of equality are useless, unless joined with a politics of pleasure. "Give me bread, but give me roses, too" was a feminist slogan in the early 20th century, but it resonates across the 1970s and today for a reason. People aren't moved by dry political treatises about justice. What moves people is imagining what a better life would be like. That means talking about pleasure.

Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.

And on "Minx," that means talking about dicks. "Minx" is primarily the story of the unsubtly named Joyce Prigger (Opehlia Lovibond), a feminist Vassar grad who reluctantly agrees to helm a male nudie magazine for porn publisher Doug Renetti (Jake Johnson). Joyce wants to publish a rather strident feminist magazine originally called "Matriarchy Awakens" but finds, understandably, no one in "respectable" publishing is willing to bet on such an obvious money-loser. But Doug is willing to back her with his company Bottom Dollar. He believes women want to see pictures of sexy naked men and he hopes padding the porn with more high-minded writing will make it an easier sell on the newsstand. Joyce hates the idea of porn and finds the whole subject of sexual pleasure uncomfortable. Still, she goes along, because otherwise, she's never selling her magazine.

Sexy photos are more than just the sugar that helps the feminist medicine go down.

What Joyce soon finds out, with the help of her sister (Lennon Parham) and Bottom Dollar employees Bambi Jessica Lowe) and Richie (Oscar Montoya), is that sexy photos are more than just the sugar that helps the feminist medicine go down. On the contrary, pleasure is central to the feminist project. One reason that sexism chafes so hard is that it deprives women of their right to pursue happiness. But if women don't even know what happiness could look like, it's hard to convince them to fight against the forces that keep them from having it.

Ophelia Lovibond, Lennon Parham, Jessica Lowe, Oscar Montoya and Idara Victor in "Minx" (Photograph by Katrina Marcinowski / HBO Max)

As I've written about before, in recent years, progressives seem to have forgotten about the importance of pleasure. Much of the discourse on the left has taken on a hectoring tone, focused on pressuring people to give up stuff they enjoy, rather than imagining all the new joys that await us if we can liberate ourselves. The pandemic bears much of the blame, of course. The right wing resistance to emergency measures like social distancing and mask-wearing caused far too many on the left to start seeing these misery-inducing behaviors as moral signifiers instead of temporary inconveniences. Truth told, however, the turn to the grim on the left had started well before the pandemic, fueled by the way that social media rewards self-righteous posturing and the politics of showy self-sacrifice over the politics of pleasure.

RELATED:Why "Bridgerton" probably won't make Benedict queer (but should)

It's been especially troubling for me, as I came up as a late third wave feminist and was part of the early aughts explosion of feminist blogging. We early feminist bloggers married the transgressive politics of pleasure to our demands for equality. We didn't just say rape was bad. We had pro-pleasure actions like Slutwalk. We argued that the ever-present threat of rape constrains women from enjoying their lives, by preventing us from doing everything from taking early morning jogs to having late night sexual adventures. We didn't just talk about reproductive rights in terms of coat hangers and young mothers damned to poverty. We talked about how contraception and abortion allowed women to having fun dating and to experiment sexually, instead of being tied down to the first guy you ever slept with.

Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.

"Minx" is set in the '70s, but very clearly speaking to the social dynamics of our time. The joyless progressivism one finds on Twitter is reimagined on the show as a New York City dinner party. Joyce's pretentious Manhattanite friends sneer at her little porn magazine and trot out ignorant assumptions about how Bottom Dollar employees must be a bunch of lost souls and losers. That's probably not how people talked at dinner parties then, but is very reminscient of lefty social media now, with its focus on over-the-top trauma talk and tendency to treat fun as an embarrassing waste of time. Joyce ends up sneaking out to have a drink and make out with a cute guy at a bar. In a sign of how much she's grown, she refuses to apologize for wanting to have a good time. She doesn't even try to justify it by calling it "self-care."

Ophelia Lovibond and Taylor Zakhar Perez in "Minx" (Photograph by Katrina Marcinowski / HBO Max)

As "Minx" cleverly demonstrates, this kind of pleasure-centered feminism has real power. If nothing else, it exposes how the supposed "libertarian" right is no such thing. Evensupposed hedonists like Trump are happy to pass all sorts of draconianrestrictions on sexual freedoms and even free speech, just to keep women and LGBTQ people from enjoying the pleasures that come from equality.

As "Minx" cleverly demonstrates, this kind of pleasure-centered feminism has real power.

Unfortunately, all the grimness on the left these days has served Trump and his acolytes well, allowing them to portray themselves as the "fun" ones opposed to "cancel culture." This, even though Republicans are trying to cancel your sex life, your ability to read what you want, and now even Oreos and Disneyland. The right's is a mean and narrow view of pleasure, mostly about cheap insults and lame trolling. Even figures like Joe Rogan only appeal as some counterpoint to the supposed scolds of the left, but don't really have much on offer in terms of actual fun, especially for anyone who isn't a cis straight guy.

"Minx," in keeping with its pro-pleasure ideas, is a fun show, with lots of laughs and plenty of genuinely sexy stuff. (Though the comically fake penises are a rare misfire.) Freedom is a great idea in the abstract, but to make it worth fighting for, you have to remind people what it looks like in practice. On "Minx," that's lots and lots of dicks. But it can be anything you want, as long as you give yourself permission to enjoy it.

More stories to read:

Original post:
"Minx" is a breezy good time reminding the left to reclaim the lost politics of pleasure - Salon