Friday, May 12, 2017

Wimp, Mad-Hatter or Tough Guy?

Tough Guy Sessions: Shameful and Stupid on Street Crime, Soft on Corporate Crime
Robert Weissman, Contributor President of Public Citizen
Tough Guy Attorney General Jeff Session has announced that federal prosecutors will charge low-level drug offenders and others with the most serious crimes possible, despite overwhelming evidence and a bipartisan agreement that this approach is racially discriminatory and counterproductive.
The Sessions approach will throw thousands of people – especially Americans from communities of color or with low-incomes – into prison needlessly, sabotaging their life chances and increase post-release criminality.
It is shameful and stupid. Shameful because there is overwhelming empirical evidence that this approach unfairly targets and damages young people of color. And stupid because there is, equally, overwhelming empirical evidence that it will create a cycle of crime.
At the same time that Sessions is announcing a clampdown on nonviolent, low-level offenders, Session’s Department of Justice is expected to announce resolution of a longstanding major corporate crime case: Fill-in the blanks ______________________.
it appears Tough Guy Attorney General Sessions is only tough on the poor and vulnerable. (That conclusion comports with Sessions’ performance as Alabama attorney general, as we explained in a January report on Sessions’ tenure in that post.) When it comes to the rich, powerful and connected, it seems that Sessions is soft on crime.
This is a moral and policy disgrace. The moral element should be self-evident. . .
Read more: HuffPost

Trump Tips The Scales: Time to Check-Out of The White House

Rule of Law vs. Rule of Men
May 10, 2017
Source: Rogue Columnist  
"Let's be clear about James Comey. He was fired by the president who he was investigating for ties to Russia, in other words treason. Comey's FBI must have been getting close, so Donald Trump acted through his Attorney General Jefferson Beauregard Sessions, who had already recused himself from the Russia probe.
All the rest, about Comey and Hillary's emails (for God's sake), is a distraction or another of Trump's many lies.
At risk is the rule of law and a chilling future. Most immediately, it means Trump can install a crony as FBI Director (Rudy Giuliani?), as he has done in other federal agencies, to wreck from the inside. The independence of the premier federal law enforcement agency would be politicized and compromised. . .
Why? First, congressional Republicans fear Trump's base, which doesn't care what he does as long as he preserves white majoritarianism and stops what it sees as unending lefty cultural victories. This is an incredibly powerful force of identity politics and, as in Hitler's rise, "respectable conservatism" has made common cause with the leader.
The second reason: Trump will serve as a rubber stamp for everything on the nihilistic GOP ideological wish list. Taking health care away from 24 million people, setting loose Wall Street, wrecking the EPA from the inside, and ensuring no action on climate change is only the start. As I have warned for months, things will get worse than almost anyone can imagine.
As a result, checks and balances have broken down. . . Trump has violated norm after norm. His mental health is questioned by professionals. He is running multiple businesses out of the White House, has embedded corrupt family members as his closest aides, and is in violation of the emoluments clause of the Constitution. But Congress won't stop him. Neither will the courts, soon, as he has begun to pack them with right-wing extremist judges and one (so far) Supreme Court Justice. . . behind him is a party intent on wrecking America.

 

REAL NEWS > The Need-To-Know: Arizona = A News Desert

Once again the prevalent state-of-mind here in The Great State of Arizona appears to be a lack of appetite for education and information at least in hard-copy newspapers - with 2.3 papers per every 100,000 residents Arizona has the fewest papers per capita.

Source: Columbia Journalism Review

Just Deal With It: Disruptive Technology

Analysis predicts extremely disruptive, total transition to EV / autonomous vehicles in 13 years
May 9, 2017 by Christopher Packham
(Tech Xplore)—RethinkX, an independent think tank that analyzes and forecasts disruptive technologies, has released an astonishing report predicting a far more rapid transition to EV/autonomous vehicles than experts are currently predicting.
 
The report is based on an analysis of the so-called technology-adoption S-curve that describes the rapid uptake of truly disruptive technologies like smartphones and the internet. Additionally, the report addresses in detail the massive economic implications of this prediction across various sectors, including energy, transportation and manufacturing.
Rethinking Transportation 2020-2030 suggests that within 10 years of regulatory approval, by 2030, 95 percent of U.S. passenger miles traveled will be served by on-demand autonomous electric vehicles (AEVs).
The primary driver of this unfathomably huge change in American life is economics:
The cost savings of using transport-as-a-service (TaaS) providers will be so great that consumers will abandon individually owned vehicles.
The report predicts that the cost of TaaS will save the average family $5600 annually, the equivalent of a 10 percent raise in salary. This, the report suggests, will lead to the biggest increase in consumer spending in history.
Consumers are already beginning to adapt to TaaS with the broad availability of ride-sharing services; additionally, the report says, Uber, Lyft and Didi are investing billions developing technologies and services to help consumers overcome psychological and behavioral hurdles to shared transportation such as habit, fear of strangers and affinity for driving. In 2016 alone, 550,000 passengers chose TaaS services in New York City alone.
"Our analysis indicates that 2021 is the most likely date for the disruption point," the report reads. "The TaaS disruption will be what is called a 'Big Bang Disruption': The moment that TaaS is available, it will outcompete the existing model in all markets. We find that within 10 years from this point, 95 percent of U.S. passenger miles will be traveled by TaaS."
In part, the analysis is based on findings that the greater the improvement in cost or utility, the more likely it is that people will adopt it.
The energy sector
The TaaS disruption will crater the value chain of the oil industry as demand plummets. By 2030, the report predicts that oil demand will drop to 70 million barrels per day. The resulting collapse in prices will be catastrophic for the industry, and these effects are likely to be felt as early as 2021.
The report suggests that oil demand from passenger road transport will drop by 90 percent by 2030; demand from the trucking industry will drop by 7 million barrels per day globally. This is, as the report says, an existential crisis for the industry. Current share prices and projections are based on the presumption of a system of individually owned vehicles.
The passenger vehicle value chain
The impact on passenger vehicle manufacturing will be similarly large. The value metrics for this disruptive chain will be completely different from today's measurements. The report says, "From the date at which adoption of TaaS begins (the 2021 disruption point in our model), the key unit of measurement will be miles traveled, with four variants as the key indicators: passenger miles, vehicle miles, dollar cost-per-mile and dollar revenues per mile."
Those manufacturers who adapt to these new metrics are the likeliest to survive. The report estimates that miles will rise by 50 percent to 6 trillion miles by 2030, but revenues for the industry will shrink 70 percent, from $1.5 trillion in 2015 to $393 billion by 2030.
A side effect is the abandonment of internal combustion engine vehicles—around 97 million will be stranded by 2030, creating a gigantic surplus as demand evaporates. Car dealerships are toast—the report predicts that new annual unit sales will plummet by 70 percent. To drive that point home, it also says demand for new internal combustion vehicles as a platform will disappear by 2024. Used cars will plunge to zero, or even to negative value.
The 77-page dives deep into the multiplex issues around transportation technologies and related economics, suggesting a horizon much closer than legislators, regulators and shareholders are currently predicting.
 
Explore more:
Self-driving electric vehicles to make car ownership vanish
, USA TODAY Published 12:02 a.m. ET May 4, 2017 | Updated 1:33 p.m. ET May 4, 2017

Portrait-of-The-Artist: Lauren Lee / Transformative Evolution

Your MesaZona blogger had the pleasure of finding and talking with artist Lauren Lee during one of his walks-around-town back on August 15, 2015 while a monumental mural-in-the-works was in-progress here on Main Street in The New Urban DTMesa.
Here's a link to that post almost two years ago >
Signs of The Times: Lighrail + The Arts

To the left you now see Lauren Lee's updated profile picture on Facebook
Current portfolio > http://www.laurenleefineart.com/

. . . here's the mural she painted on the north side of Le Studio Salon that's become the iconic image for the transformation of The New Urban DTMesa

Yes, works of art can change the visual landscape positively, but how long does it take to change the conservative culture here?

Time will tell

Mesa ArtSpace Lofts: Not Everything We Know > Just Say When

It's been about five years of 'grass-roots efforts' and getting a national developer for art spaces to bring things to this point-time . . . at left is the latest  rendering for Mesa Artspace Lofts, courtesy of Artspace, after other renderings for the design have been published times before.
. . . better late than never.
Read more >>

Ryan Winkle DUI > News You Don't Want to Hear or See

Nice headline, huh? [and police body cam video included]
Mesa politician's wife tries to stop his DUI arrest
Posted 8:01 PM, May 11, 2017 Updated: 8:23 PM, May 11, 2017
ABC15 
MESA, AZ - Tempe police have released officer body camera footage of a Mesa politician's drunk driving arrest. . . .
A woman, who identified herself as Winkle's wife, seemed to try to get her husband off the hook, saying he is a city council member who supports police officers and their union.
“You guys are literally towing and arresting the only council person that’s supporting you guys in the union,” she said.
Winkle is put in handcuffs after he completed a field sobriety test. He refused a breathalyzer, but the video showed him submitting to a blood test. Those results are still being analyzed.