Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Taking A Look Re:Tithing | Medieval Practice or Mormon Flat-Rate Income Tax?

Just getting my "daily dose of Mormonism" via inbox from The Mormon News Report 3 hours ago at 7:01 a.m.
Yours truly was busy getting other posts up here on this site, but went back to scan the inbox to keep up-to-date on what's getting published online from Salt Lake City and learning more about that interesting religion.
Way-back-when, your MesaZona blogger and his brother were "altar boys" passing the basket to the congregation in a place of worship. Most people gave what they wanted or could afford to give. Having the pleasure to meet and talk with a few LDS members here, they all made a point to say they paid the 10% obligation to the Mormon Church. [A detail like that would never be asked by me since it's a matter of practicing one's faith].
Nonetheless, the mystery remains ... maybe it's like being required to pay dues if you belong to a union? Maybe it's some kind of income tax levying an exact percentage on what you earn? Are there credits and loop-holes and deductions? . . .
Today there was on Page Two a featured link
Letter to the Editor:
 Utah’s flat tax rate like LDS tithe rate
The Salt Lake Tribune

2016’s Best & Worst Cities to Find a Job > Tools in The Economic Development Tool-Box

Let's start off with an assumption that five cities in the Valley of The Sun - Phoenix, Mesa, Chandler, Scottsdale and Gilbert - all have access to and use all the same tools in their economic development Tool-Box. [see image to left]
Mesa's Director of Economic Development Bill Jabjiniak writes that it's a competitive environment.
"Today, competitiveness encompasses more than being low cost. Companies focus on regions with features that enhance their productivity and ability to compete in a global marketplace."
He goes on to say that cities in the region are competitors reinvesting and creating economic development tools that they have and use against us [?]
Use this link to access the newsletter >>
http://www.mesaaz.gov/business/economic-development/news-room/economic-reporter-newsletter/first-quarter-2016
A fundamental change is underway in the practice of economic development and in the very ways in which regions compete for economic growth.
As the global economy shifted from manufacturing to innovation, geography was supposed to matter less. But the pundits were wrong. A new map is being drawn and it's not about red versus blue or rich versus poor. The rise of American brain hubs is causing huge geographic disparities in education, income, life expectancy, family stability, and political engagement. Dealing with this split—encouraging growth in the hubs while arresting the decline elsewhere—will be the challenge of the century, and The New Geography of Jobs lights the way
Publisher Houghton Mifflin http://www.hmhbooks.com/newgeographyofjobs/

 . . . so how's that working out for Mesa in this region?

Let's take a look at one metric: job creation

The business website WalletHub recently published a study you can find here >> https://wallethub.com/edu/best-cities-for-jobs/2173/ about job creation that starts out like this
"Now that 2015 is behind us, it’s time to start thinking again about fresh starts. But whether that entails making a small change or a complete life overhaul, finding a new or better job will be a top New Year’s resolution for many Americans . . . Your luck of finding employment, of course, depends on where you live. In order to assess the relative strength of local job markets, WalletHub’s analysts compared 150 of the most populated U.S. cities across 17 key metrics. They range from job opportunities to employment growth."
The results: Mesa is ranked the lowest of the five cities. [Overall rank numbers are added]
Scottsdale 59.83 #16
Chandler 58.74 #20
Gilbert 57.19 #28
Phoenix 53.08 #47
Mesa 52.75 #50

Room for improvement? .....yes and the questions remain who, how and what strategies can deliver the results and outcomes?







 

Here This Weekend: 26th Annual High Noon Winter Antiques Show

Photos courtesy of Brian Lebel
Over 350 lots of authentic western art, artifacts and collectibles will cross the block at this annual auction taking place here iat the Mesa Convention Center.
To look at this month's events and upcoming events please go here >> http://apps.mesaaz.gov/events/calendar.as
Those going to the show and auction on Saturday can cross directly on Center Street to see two homes featured in
The 16th  Annual Historic Home Tour in Mesa from 10am to 4pm.
Tickets will be available the day of the tour at 9:30 a.m. at a location in neighborhood (stay tuned for details) or tickets may be purchased in advance, online with a credit card.
Until January 22, you can buy tickets online, or in person at the museum. On the day of the tour, you can buy tickets in the historic district.
More details and information can be found in the following link >> http://www.valleyhistoryinc.com/2016-home-tour/
Tickets are $20 and all proceeds benefit the Mesa Historical Museum

Why not make a day or over-night stay for antiques and history in the New Urban DTMesa?  
On/Off Main Street you can Find History by George and antique and collectibles at shops and plazas, The Old Brick House Vintage Market, Primitives at Pole Barn, toys for kids and adults at Lulubell's and Power Pill vintage arcade + salons and boutiques for men and women, cookie and ice cream shops, pizza, coffee shops/galleries and fast-food joints all within blocks of each + blockbuster attractions like Mesa Arts Center, The Arizona Museum of Natural History - and you can find more!

If you are bi-coastal and deep-pocketed you can also attend The Park Avenue Armory Winter Antiques Show that runs for a week
January 22–31, 2016


Park Avenue Armory
The Winter Antiques Show in New York City is the leading art, antiques, and design fair in America, where curators, designers, and collectors vie for the best works on the market, from Antiquity through the present.

Highlights for fhe High Noon Winter Antiques Show here in DTMesa include:
  • 50 years of western pulp art from three important collections
  • The contents of the classic Arizona saddle shop, Carlock Saddlery
  • Art and artifacts from the collections of Iron Eyes Cody and his neighbor, artist Clarence Ellsworth
  • Great Meanea saddles and other Meanea material
  • Roy Rogers' boots
  • A massive and elaborate Mexican bridle that belonged to Buck Jones
  • Spectacular Native American beadwork from the collection of Bob & Lora Sandroni;
  • An extensive collection of saloon barback bottles; and much, much more.
Live, online, phone and absentee bidding options available.

SHOW: Saturday, January 23, 2016
9:00 am - 4:30 pm
Sunday, January 24, 2016
9:00 am - 3:00 pm

$10 daily or purchase online and save.
Under 12 free. Free parking.

Show Location:
Mesa Convention Center
263 N. Center Street
Mesa, AZ 85201


Dealer set-up Friday, January 22nd. VIP and early entry tickets available.

AUCTION:
Saturday, January 23, 2016
5:00 pm

Preview Hours:
Thursday, January 21: 3:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Friday, January 22: 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Saturday, January 23: 9:00 am - 4:30 pm
Both the Auction and Preview are free and open to the public


Auction Location:
Phoenix Marriott Mesa
200 N. Centennial Way
Mesa, AZ 85201

Next door to the show; free parking.

Host hotel and accommodations:
Phoenix Marriott Mesa
200 N. Centennial Way
Mesa, AZ 85201
800.835.9873 or 480.898.8300
or visit them
online

The 4th Industrial Revolution > Ready or Not // Why we need a public cloud for the public good

What do you, dear readers, tune into for the news?
Shocking headline stories yesterday here in Mesa about child abuse/sex trafficking and a gunman pointing a rifle out of a hotel window? or Trump and Palin [what a pair, huh?] attracting viewers like flies to cow-shit? ...
You might have missed what's happening in Davos Switzerland at the World Economic Forum, the annual meeting of business and political leaders.
If those people are all too much to wrap your heads around, there are celebrities speaking also.
Leaders there are focusing on issues impacting the world in the fourth industrial revolution, a digital transformation brought about by ubiquitous, powerful, mobile and networked technologies. It’s not the next technological revolution – it’s already here.
Here's some context - that most mass media don't  provide - As with the three industrial revolutions that came before, this is about more than fancy new technology. The Spinning Jenny of the first industrial revolution didn’t just make it faster and easier to produce textile products – it fundamentally altered the Western world’s social landscape, from one dominated by small, rural craftsmen to one of factory workers and machine manufacture.
The third industrial revolution wasn’t just about personal computers and mobile phones –  research shows it increased the amount of time children spent studying and professionals spent working, breaking down the age-old barrier between public and private life.
Similarly, the fourth industrial revolution will transform everything from how we learn, work, live and socialize, to the way we see the world and our role in it. What distinguishes this revolution from those of the past is its scale and speed. With previous industrial revolutions, change came slowly, sometimes leaving entire countries and continents unaffected. Not this time.
THIS IS NOT A FAST-READ OR A QUICK-JAB > readers will hopefully choose to interact with this page to access and process more information in some links provided.
 
One of the links provided is to the blog that announced yesterday at Davos what Microsoft is doing. [Hey! Satya Nadella, Microsoft's Chief Executive Officer blogs ]
Today Microsoft Philanthropies, the recently-announced expansion of our commitment to global giving, is making a big statement. We will donate $1 billion in cloud computing resources over the next 3 years to 70,000 non-profits and NGOs worldwide.
 
World Economic Forum Annual Meeting
20-23 January 2016 Davos-Klosters, Switzerland
Live Speakers
Agenda-Events-Reports-Projects and webcasts!

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Peer-To-Peer Sharing > Parallel Universe for 2 Bloggers?

First of all, yours truly wanted to bring up the concept of PTP Sharing that hit me  in the head at that Internet of Things DevFest last weekend at the Elliott/Nesbitt Theater in the Mesa Arts Center. You know - where everything gets connected to everybody and everything, right?
Sometimes yours truly feels like a Neanderthal alien in the fast-emerging IoT universe until starting up a conversation with a BlockChain entrepreneur snagged leaving the fest. He nailed it to me by saying "You know the way email disrupted the world. Right? . . "  ah-Hah!
A parallel universe is a theory of a self-contained separate reality co-existing with one's own. A specific group of parallel universes is called a "multiverse", although this term can also be used to describe the possible parallel universes that constitute reality.
It was one of those revelations that rocked my world for sure.
Anyway ... here's a connection to an urban dude not previously known to me: Richard Layman who lives and works in Washington D.C. The only connection between him and me is that your MesaZona blogger enjoyed four years there at Georgetown University way-back-when.
Richard publishes a blog called Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space   
"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging."
Certainly both this blog and that blog tune in on some of the wavelengths
Check him out >> http://urbanplacesandspaces.blogspot.com/

Friendly Reminder :)) One Week To Go > Poster Design Contest Deadline 29 Jan

The third annual Southwest Maker Fest will come to downtown Mesa on March 12, and your design can help make it a success! Proposal deadline is in ONE WEEK!
Click on the link below to see the design contest guidelines and please consider submitting a design for this exciting, collaborative event. The design will be used for the SWMF 2016 poster and program cover. We would love to feature YOUR creative ideas to promote an event that celebrates the power of creativity for individuals and communities across the region.
http://www.southwestmakerfest.com/

Report From Fronteras The Changing America Desk

To Spanish-English bilingual speakers Fronteras are usually considered the borderlines or border areas between areas [like the westward expanding American Frontier and Manifest Destiny we were taught in history classes].
In recent areas of conflict, the federal government in one case in Oregon is choosing to stand-off and one case from Mormon-dominated towns on the Utah-Arizona border the federal government's Department of Justice is choosing go to trial this week in Phoenix.
[Image from Wikipedia]
Why is such a large geographical area all the way from the state of Oregon to the states of Utah and Arizona a fertile ground for news attention? An answer might be found in the historic settlement patterns and land claims in the West before there were recognized state boundaries on lands
The image to the left from Wikipedia shows boundaries of the provisional State of Deseret (orange with black outline) as proposed in 1849.
Modern state boundaries are underlaid for reference.
Some history is important to note here - The State of Deseret  was a provisional state of the United States, proposed in 1849 by settlers from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Salt Lake City. The provisional state existed for slightly over two years and was never recognized by the United States government. The name derives from the word for "honeybee" in the Book of Mormon.
The provisional state was a bold proposal, encompassing most of the territory that had been acquired from Mexico the previous year as the Mexican Cession.
The proposal encompassed nearly all of present-day Utah and Nevada, large portions of California and Arizona, and parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, Idaho, and Oregon.
Although
The idea of creating a state based on Mormonism began to fade away after the coming of the railroad in the 1860's which opened the territory to many non-Mormon settlers . . . now over 200 years later  those claims on lands and the domination of religious beliefs in the issue of religious discrimination in the function of government are getting attention. To read and listen to the report on the DDOJ trial taking place this week in Phoenix you can go here >> Fronteras Desk Report on January 19, 2016
How all this plays out remains to be seen 
  • in the Bundy Oregon stand-off,
  • in the Department of Justice actions at a trial in federal court starting Wednesday in Phoenix,
  • and here locally in the City of Mesa on the issues of equality and inclusion for all protected classes by the force of law with the passing of a City Ordinance where the minority Mormon religion has dominated government and politics for decades.
Senior Field Correspondent Jude Joffe-Block (Phoenix) caught the radio bug while assisting a radio reporter in Mexico, and has been happiest wearing headphones and pointing microphones ever since. She initiated Fronteras Desk coverage in Las Vegas as the project's first Senior Field Correspondent there. She then joined the Phoenix newsroom in July 2012.
Previously, she contributed stories on immigration and criminal justice to KALW in San Francisco and multimedia content in both Spanish and English to The Associated Press in Mexico.
Joffe-Block is a graduate of U.C. Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism and Yale University, and was a Fulbright Scholar in Mexico.
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NO CAPTAIN ONBOARD