Monday, November 19, 2018

Cheers For The Holidays: The World Inequality Data Base

The American Dream Is Alive. In China.

China is still much poorer over all than the United States. But the Chinese have taken a commanding lead in that most intangible but valuable of economic indicators: optimism.
In a country still haunted by the Cultural Revolution, where politics are tightly circumscribed by an authoritarian state, the Chinese are now among the most optimistic people in the world — much more so than Americans and Europeans, according to public opinion surveys.
What has changed?
Most of all, an economic expansion without precedent in modern history.
Eight hundred million people have risen out of poverty. That’s two and a half times the population of the United States.
1.2 billion people
1.0
Not in poverty
0.8
0.6
0.4
In poverty
0.2
2015
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
Source: The World Bank. People in poverty live at or below $1.90 a day.
Not only are incomes drastically rising within families, but sons are outearning their fathers. That means expectations are rising, too, especially among China’s growing middle class.
Life expectancy has also soared. Chinese men born in 2013 are expected to live more than seven years longer than those born in 1990; women are expected to live nearly 10 years longer.
“It feels like there are no limits to how far you can go,” said Wu Haifeng, 37, a financial analyst who was born to a family of corn farmers in northern China and now earns more than $78,000 a year. “It feels like China will always be strong.”
China used to make up much of the world’s poor. Now it makes up much of the world’s middle class.
Source: World Inequality Database
There are risks, of course, and no guarantees that China’s rise will continue indefinitely.
Yet for now, the economic arc seems ever upward.
Like the United States, China still has a yawning gap between the rich and the poor — and the poorest Chinese are far poorer, with nearly 500 million people, or about 40 percent of the population, living on less than $5.50 a day, according to the World Bank.
But by some measures Chinese society has about the same level of inequality as the United States. Here are the world’s major countries ordered by inequality and income mobility.
Finland
More
mobile
Denmark
20%
Norway
Germany
Canada
How much a child’s
income is determined
by their parents’
Sweden
Netherlands
Japan
40%
Spain
China
Italy
United
Kingdom
United
States
60%
Brazil
South Africa
India
80%
Egypt
More equal
60
50
40
30
100%
Level of inequality
(Gini coefficient)
Source: The World Bank, Fair Progress, Economic Mobility Across Generations Around the World; World Development Indicators
Today, the economic output per capita in China is $12,000, compared with $3,500 a decade ago. The number is far higher in the United States, $53,000.
Yet few analysts doubt where the bigger increases will come. Here’s how modern China’s per-capita G.D.P. growth compares so far:
United States
$50k per capita G.D.P.
$40k
Japan
South Korea
$30k
$20k
China
$10k
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Number of years since each country reached China’s per-capita G.D.P. in 1993
In 2011 U.S. dollars. |Source: Maddison Project.
China’s progress is especially remarkable given how the government has used social engineering to restrict where people live and how many children they have. Loosening those constraints could accelerate income growth.
This is why many people now talk about “the Chinese Dream.”
Xu Liya, 49, once tilled wheat fields in Zhejiang, a rural province along China’s east coast. Her family ate meat only once a week, and each night she crammed into a bedroom with seven relatives.
Then she attended university on a scholarship and started a clothing store. Now she owns two cars and an apartment valued at more than $300,000. Her daughter attends college in Beijing.
“Poverty and corruption have hurt average people in China for too long,” she said. “While today’s society isn’t perfect, poor people have the resources to compete with rich people, too.”
Iris Zhao contributed research.
An earlier version of a chart on economic inequality used an older estimate of inequality in China. Based on the most recent World Bank data, economic inequality in China is roughly the same as in the United States, not slightly less.
 
Design: Matt Ruby, Rumsey Taylor, Quoctrung Bui Editing: Tess Felder, Eric Nagourney, David Schmidt Photo Editing: Craig Allen, Meghan Petersen, Mikko Takkunen Illustrations: Sergio Peçanha
Iris Zhao contributed research

 

Another Lawsuit Claim: Public Safety or Excessive-Use-of-Force Beatings & Killings By Mesa PD

This is not the universe of international media attention that the City of Mesa wants when yet another multi-million dollar claim is made. These incidents of excessive officer-involved force have been piling up in pending litigation for more than the last two years. In addition to the victims included in recent reports inserted here today, the incidents include a grandmother, the homeless, and the killings of dogs. By far the largest settlement yet-to-be made is the killing of Daniel Shaver close to three years ago in a claim for $75-$130 Millions of  dollars during a Command-and Control hit.
Story image for mesa police department lawsuits from BuzzFeed News
 
BuzzFeed News-Aug 31, 2018
For the Mesa Police Department in the suburban city of Mesa, Arizona, it's a ... Archer, meanwhile, has since filed a federal lawsuit against the department.
Story image for mesa police department lawsuits from Daily Beast
Daily Beast-Aug 30, 2018
... the use of force by police in the beating of an unarmed black man in Mesa, ... do a fair investigation and help clean up the Mesa Police Department's culture of .... General Noel Francisco announced the decision in connection with a lawsuit ...
Story image for mesa police department lawsuits from NBCNews.com
 
NBCNews.com-Aug 29, 2018
The FBI will investigate the use of force by police in two arrests in Mesa, Arizona, ... The other case centers on the arrest of a 15-year-old boy who the Mesa Police Department said was arrested on ... Taylor said he intends to file a civil lawsuit.
 
Story image for mesa police department lawsuits from AZCentral.com
AZCentral.com-Aug 29, 2018
In the letter, the FBI requests that the Mesa Police Department turn over files, ... She has filed a civil claim against the city, which is a precursor before a lawsuit.


Story image for mesa police department lawsuits from Phoenix New Times
Phoenix New Times-Sep 17, 2018
Mesa Settles With Family of 2015 Police Shooting Victim for $1 Million ... members of Ivan Krstic's family agreed to drop a wrongful death lawsuit against the city  


Story image for mesa arizona from News One
News One-Nov 16, 2018
Black Man Who Was Beat Unconscious By Arizona Police Files $1.97 Million ... beat a Black man in the lobby of an apartment complex in Mesa, Arizona in May ...
 
Story image for mesa police department lawsuits from ABC15 Arizona
ABC15 Arizona-Nov 15, 2018
Mesa police released the report, along with footage from police-worn ... The notice of claim, which is an initial step toward a lawsuit against the city, states ...
 
Story image for mesa police department lawsuits from AZFamily
AZFamily-Nov 15, 2018
Robert Johnson's lawyers filed a notice of claim, a precursor to a lawsuit, on ... The City of Mesa and the Mesa Police Department said they can't comment on the ...
 
Story image for mesa police department lawsuits from azcentral
azcentral-Nov 13, 2018
MORE: Mesa police chief is a no-show at town hall on police use of force .... to lawsuits, over allegations that officers used too much force in the past four years

Downtown Mesa Is The Center of The Universe



 
Give a politician a microphone and that's what you get - a somewhat over-blown statement and a pep rally no matter what the occasion is. However, the congregation of The First United Methodist Church of Mesa was gathered to celebrate and mark the milestone of its local start-up in 1893 with humble beginnings inside a barn on Main Street and Stapley Drive. The Church has now grown and prospered into a 14-acre complex here in downtown at the SEC of Center Street & First Avenue.
That is the reason to celebrate a church that is open for everyone, not just a chosen few. A politician was not the center of attention at yesterday's 9:00 a.m. special worship service for the gathering of hundreds of the congregation inside the majestic interior of the The First Methodist United Church >
As you can see, it's one of downtown's not-so-small wonders with a soaring pipe organ behind the altar where the choir, pastors and Bishop Bob Hoshibata raised the spirits of  joy inside the sanctuary.
Mesa Mayor John Giles and his wife Dawn were part of the congregation of parishioners gathered on November 18th. He spoke afterwards at an 11 o'clock luncheon.
http://firstchurchofmesa.com/
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Here's a 04:37 streaming video uploaded to YouTube 3 days ago that was shown in the program preceding lunch inside Fellowship Hall
First United Methodist Church celebrates 125 years
Published on Nov 15, 2018. Join us on a journey through the last 125 years of First United Methodist Church of Mesa history
 

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RELATED CONTENT:
In case you missed it 12 days ago, here's a well-written Special to The East Valley Tribune
Mesa church ringing in 125 years of worship
 

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Great Turkey Tuesday For The Less Fortunate?

That's at least a recognition that there are thousands of families who live here in Mesa are in need of food - one of the basic necessities here in one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States. If it makes you feel good at least once a year to 'Throw a Turkey' on a food truck, by all means do it if that's what you think helps the short-sighted goal for the City of Mesa to collect 1,500 turkeys for those "Less-Fortunate" - thousands way more than just 1,500 families - who are  in need of more than food or experience food insecurity, lack of good jobs and affordable housing all-the-time not for only one Holiday observed once a year in times of growing INEQUALITY.
Great Turkey Tuesday Nov. 20
PRESS RELEASE FROM THE CITY OF MESA NEWSROOM:
November 14, 2018 at 9:48 am
Help us reach our goal of 1,500 turkeys to help the less fortunate this holiday season. The City of Mesa is partnering with United Food Bank for Great Turkey Tuesday, Nov. 20 at the Mesa Convention Center, 263 N. Center St., from 6:30 a.m. to 10:30...

Saturday, November 17, 2018

'Smart Cities' > The Pros (Procurement Companies) & The Cons

WHY is your MesaZona blogger posting about this??? Simply because there is no robust discussion about the subject here in Mesa.
"Mesa, Arizona, is developing a smart city strategic plan to better serve its citizens. The city is currently soliciting input from citizens and local businesses and the objective is to focus on public safety, transportation and responsive services."



Input from citizens here in Mesa where the public is dis-engaged?
Now how does that work? Not at all . . .
A Citizen Innovator Workshop ? >>
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The quotation above is an excerpt from a report saying that the massive collection of personal data is now the norm.
It  was originally published by Strategic Partnerships, Inc. on Nov 7th 2018. You can scroll down farther and read more)
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Let's layout some of what's been published before on that subject first in The Atlantic and The Guardian 
Tech and the city 
The truth about smart cities: In the end, they will destroy democracy'
Cities is supported by
The smart city is, to many urban thinkers, just a buzz phrase that has outlived its usefulness: ‘the wrong idea pitched in the wrong way to the wrong people’.
So why did that happen – and what’s coming in its place? . . .
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The digital techniques that smart-city fans adore are flimsy and flashy—and some are even actively pernicious—but they absolutely will be used in cities.
 They already have an urban heritage.
When you bury fiber-optic under the curbs around the town, then you get internet.
When you have towers and smartphones, then you get portable ubiquity.
When you break up a smartphone into its separate sensors, switches, and little radios, then you get the internet of things.
These tedious yet important digital transformations have been creeping into town for a couple of generations. At this point, they’re pretty much all that urban populations can remember how to do.
Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent - these are the true industrial titans of our era.
That’s how people make money, . . . it will be how they make cities.
However, the cities of the future won’t be “smart,” or well-engineered, cleverly designed, just, clean, fair, green, sustainable, safe, healthy, affordable, or resilient. They won’t have any particularly higher ethical values of liberty, equality, or fraternity, either.
The future smart city will be the internet, the mobile cloud, and a lot of weird paste-on gadgetry, deployed by City Hall, mostly for the sake of making towns more attractive to capital.

Whenever that’s done right, it will increase the soft power of the more alert and ambitious towns and make the mayors look more electable.
When it’s done wrong, it’ll much resemble the ragged downsides of the previous waves of urban innovation, such as railways, electrification, freeways, and oil pipelines.
There will also be a host of boozy side effects and toxic blowback that even the wisest urban planner could never possibly expect.
_________________________________________________________________________
Stop Saying 'Smart Cities'
Digital stardust won’t magically make future cities more affordable or resilient
. . . I used to imagine that time was on the side of the internet’s infrastructure providers—that we were in for a flat world of torrenting, friction-free data. That could well have happened, but it didn’t pay off fast enough; instead, today’s surveillance-marketing business model set in, and with it the realization that “information about you wants to be free to us. . ."
This silo-izing and digital balkanizing is sinister and unfair in many ways, but it also tends to add regional character. It’s about as flat and fair as a billionaire’s penthouse. . .
> Smart cities will use the techniques of “smartness” to leverage their regional competitive advantages. Instead of being speed-of-light flat-world platforms, all global and multicultural, they’ll be digitally gated communities, with “code as law” that is as crooked, complex, and deceitful as a Facebook privacy chart.
I didn’t expect to see this, but neither did city planners.
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Back in the internet days, the fact that everybody had broadband and cellphones made it look like city government would become flat, participatory, and inclusive.
You still see this upbeat notion remaining in the current smart-city rhetoric, mostly because it suits the institutional interests of the left.
Community leaders, grassroots activism, the people who want to “participate”—to point, click, and fix the potholes—there are plenty of such people around. However, they’re always the people who think a city-council meeting or a labor-union rally are interesting. They’re not interesting. They’re important, but they’re dull.
That’s why smart cities, in this new digital era of Big Five and China-BAT industry consolidation, drift away from open public websites and popular comments.
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Instead, they’re adopting that new surveillance-marketing paradigm of “data extractivity.” Why trouble to ask the “citizens” what they want from urban life, when you can accurately surveil the real actions of city’s “users” and decode what they’re actually doing, as opposed to what they vaguely claim they might want to do?  
Historically, this is a rather typical drift for a left-wing mass-democratic ideology—from the unwieldy awkwardness of rallying the entire people, and toward the semi-covert vanguard of the revolution. Throw in some engineering degrees and a whole lot of police software, and this is the basic model for modern Chinese cyberspace sovereignty. The new Chinese smart-city model isn’t London at all, but rather “Baidu-Macau,” where the state-approved social-media giant shows up in the sleepy ex-Portuguese gambling town, and offers to ramp up the local action. For instance, embedding Chinese AI facial recognition into all the town’s police security cameras.
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This might be the most alarming:
Collection Of Massive Amounts Of Public Data Is Now The Norm

Smart city spending worldwide is projected to reach about $81 billion in 2018. The best case prediction is that this amount will only rise in the near future.
Tech enthusiasts are elated but a recent IBM assessment of three top smart city vendors found a total of 17 significant vulnerabilities in products from the top three technology firms. Eight critical flaws were also detected
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IoT technology is more than a trend.  It is, unless there are dramatic and immediate changes, the future for the public at large.


Strategic Partnerships, Inc. is one of the leading procurement consulting companies in U.S. 

Can't Swim Release Sophomore Album THIS TOO WON'T PASS

We too well too often use old time-worn-out phrases to help us get-through and deal with all-too-real devastating and un-nerving present circumstances. Sure it's a convenient mental device, but . . .It's time for BRUTAL HONESTY
There are voices out there - one has a concert date here in Mesa: Can't Swim's sophomore album, This Too Won't Pass, is out now through Pure Noise Records.
In anticipation of the album, the New Jersey outfit released three singles: "My Queen", "sometimes you meet the right people at the wrong times", and "Congratulations, Christopher Hodge".
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"Problems haunt you, infect you, and in time become a part of who you are, . . .You might find ways to distract yourself or try and forget but every time you look in the mirror you'll only see reminders of what you hate. Evil surrounds us and in time, becomes a part of who we are. Let this band be a reminder of that."
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This Too Won't Pass is a brutally honest album made by people for whom music means everything and want their music to mean the same to others. In the ten tracks that make up the album, Can't Swim are able to articulate our struggles with the people, places and events that continue to shape our lives and scrape our hearts.
During the recording process, lead vocalist and guitarist Chris LoPorto found himself gravitating towards the meaning of the word 'evil'; a catch-all word that summarized the malevolence he felt about a number of elements in his life, be it the events of a past he continues to be governed by, and the wrongdoing he's observed in his immediate surroundings and society as a whole.
Can't Swim kick off their winter tour with Trophy Eyes, Seaway, Microwave and Hot Mulligan today. Tickets are on sale now.  
November 17 - Mesa, AZ - Nile Half House
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READ MORE on > https://www.broadwayworld.com