Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Serendipity: A Story Smack-Down | Mesa Farmers Market & Flea

There's something about East Valley Tribune Staff Reporter Jason Stone's story that really 'bugs' your MesaZona blogger. Here's the simple story line: The City of Mesa has wanted to revive a downtown farmers market for years. The owners of a successful downtown sandwich shop have wanted to create one . . . OK.  Other Arizona cities [close-by Gilbert for example]have made their Farmers Markets success-stories. The City of Mesa never got it right . . . and they think that partnering-up with two owners of a casual sandwich can?
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It's "a unique blend" for sure and it is funny:
“It’s actually funny,” said Kelsey Strothers, co-organizer of the market with her husband, Jim Bob.We met with the mayor’s office and some of the people there to say, ‘Hey, we want to put on a farmers’ market.’ And they said, ‘We are literally putting out an RFP for a farmers’ market right now.’”
HEY! HEY! Just a serendipitous moment. NOT
"They’re all hoping that serendipitous moment is the beginning of a successful, long-running weekly community event".
Who's the "They" ? Whomever the they might be, they're throwing elements of anything usually included in street fairs. Farmers Markets are Green Markets for agricultural products: grains, freshly-harvested vegetables and fruits, fibers, nuts and oils, herbs-and-spices, chicken and duck eggs, dairy products like fresh milk, yogurt and cheeses, meats and poultry and farm-raised fish or products locally-grown or processed: honey, baked goods, salsas and condiments - all of which are perishable. Health-and-nutrition and wellness and well-being.
Local artisans and hand-crafters who use locally-originated materials are showcased:  gems and minerals and fossils and petrified woods, metal workers, weavers, furniture, pottery and ceramics, blankets and bowls, embroidery and stitchery, hand-crafted metals.
Flea markets are for "collectibles" and a mish-mash of stuff.
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According to Jason Stone's article on 17 January 2019
Farmers market to fill big downtown Mesa void
Jeff Robbins, a Mesa management assistant in the City Manager’s office, said the creation of a farmers’ market to rival those in nearby communities was among the top responses out of 10,000 they received in a 90-day online social media campaign last year for citizen engagement named Imagine Mesa.  Actually it started way before that and it had nothing to do to rival farmers markets in nearby communities:
“We really took that [online survey] and ran with that,”  Robbins said. It's Mesa's latest attempt at establishing a farmers' market presence. . . "I'm not quite sure why they stopped operating, but it's been a little while," Robbins said. ? HUH? HUH?
If Robbins did his research he would have found out.
The reasons why:
1. Hardly anyone shops for farm-produced goods in downtown Mesa.
Downtown Mesa is considered a "Food Desert" by many, with a few small neighborhood markets the exceptions. Supermarkets in shopping centers have taken over. 
2. Residents in downtown Mesa were not attracted to either the locations chosen or the quality of the products presented by vendors or the day chosen - Friday. 
3. Complaints about high prices
4. Vendors stopped showing up due to lack of sales and low customer turn-out.
Robbins said “We did a lot of research in the market – what works, what drives traffic,” Robbins said. “We wanted to create an event with multiple activities."
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People can go and have an experience at a farmers’ market.”
OK....but do the people mentioned really have the experience to pull this off?
 "The city felt strongly that they wanted to have a farmers’ market presence. So, it put out a request for proposals since that was something we were already passionate about.”
OK. Many people for many years have wanted any kind of a market downtown for years - - years way before that  "Imagine Mesa" campaign.
Three years ago an on-site tour here in Downtown Mesa by the President of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank John Williams [he's now the President of the New York Federal Reserve], noted that there is a lack of a fresh food market downtown that's open 7 days a week.
The mayor and his chief-of-staff were somewhere in the 24-member group .
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Back to Jason Stones article
"That passion extends to the Strotherses, two Evergreen District residents who own Worth Takeaway at 218 W. Main St. They have turned the sandwich shop, which is about a mile from Pioneer Park, into a huge success in less than three years. . .
OK. . . Is making sandwiches a successful small-time business in some way a qualifier to develop a farmers market where one person has a degree in "dietetics"??  
The Strotherses’ plan was exactly what the city was looking to establish. . ."
Robbins said.
So what does the city do? Turn to two sandwich-shop owners: Kelsey and Jim Bob Strothers - to scale-up their small casual made-to-order sandwich success at 118 W Main Street into a one-day weekly seasonal Pop-Up event Mesa Farmers Market & Flea in Pioneer Park on 526 East Main Street opposite the Mesa LDS Temple that is closed for a 2-year renovation. Essentially, it’s a business for us,” Kelsey said. We personally felt passionately about operating it as a business and operating it from the standpoint we thought would be the most successful.”
O yeah [see the sign] LET'S GET THIS BREAD
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The Strotherses originally said it was all a dream and they wanted to give back to the close-knit downtown community by opening up a market designed for families who weren’t only interested in buying fresh foods but also wanted a place to gather. “Our goal was to create some fun culture in the area and provide another option for entertainment and dining,”
OK. How:  
The organizers’ private LLC is paying for the majority of the cost to put on the market.
(See that sign on the wall in the image above right: LET'S GET THIS BREAD)
No mention of who - the organizers - are. Just "a private LLC" Limited Liability Corporation created to partner with the city supposedly to stage a weekly seasonal one-day a week event in a public park for which they will rent for $100 per day.
The city's newsroom had this to say as part of a public relations push after city approval of the RFP in October 2018. Different reasons are stated to start off the presser.
 
Mesa Farmers Market and Flea [click the underlined link to open the press release]January 3, 2019 at 8:53 am
Starting January 19, Pioneer Park will host the new Mesa Farmers Market and Flea on Saturdays. The market is designed to help Arizona small businesses flourish by providing a fun and inviting sales environment and to make fresh, healthy options...

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Take-Away from the city's press release:
". . . Mesa Farmers Market and Flea was developed by downtown Mesa business owners Kelsey and Jim Bob Strothers, from Worth Takeaway, which was named the 2018 Best Sandwich Shop by the Phoenix New Times.
"We are excited to bring Mesa Farmers Market and Flea to Pioneer Park," Kelsey Strothers said. "There will be a unique blend of local farmers, food vendors, artists, home goods, apparel and other makers participating each week."


Yup that "unique blend" makes it official.
Signed, sealed and delivered 
They're all hoping.
Good luck!

Breitbart News Exploits An Angel Mom In The Mendoza Family Here In Mesa

Re-Visiting Mayberry RFD Today in Downtown Mesa


It was just for a while to honor the Martin Luther King Holiday
Here's Mayor John Giles with his wife-and-family in the back of an old pick-up truck that he used in a re-election campaign.
It's driven by his son-in-law and business-partner in a private law practice to settle claims for personal injuries and accidents.
The Grand Marshall of the Martin Luther King Day Parade walked-on-foot in front of them heading down Center Street.

A few people showed up on Center Street on both sides.This was the scene taken just minutes before the parade headed down to make a turn on First Street. X marks the spot
Here's the Mesa City Council in a vintage fire truck 
In the driver's seat: Mark Freeman, 31-year Fire Captain
Seated to his left: David Luna, 27-year veteran MPS
On-board:
Kevin Thompson, Jeremy Whittaker, Jennifer Duff and Francisco Heredia


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It wasn't all happy-day time all over again for just a short time. This story came out:
On Monday, Arizona Republicans showed casual contempt and a dismissive attitude towards racial equality, and the public in Mesa, AZ saw it.
The East Valley Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Parade and Festival is a public-private partnership, with the City of Mesa officially involved in organizing and sponsoring the event. I will post photographs later, illustrating the parade as I did for Veterans’ Day, but what I saw, and did not see, prompts me to write before the day is gone.
What follows is a first-hand report from https://ricochet.com/590324/gop-losing-race-by-not-entering/ of the parade: organization, the crowd, parade entrants, and the festival following the parade.
GOP: Losing Race by not Entering
By  
The Next part:
Parade Organization:
Unlike the Veterans’ Day parade, where a non-profit group has had primary responsibility for organization and funding over the years, today’s parade was a public-private partnership event.
The City of Mesa takes lead responsibility:

The Crowd:
The crowd looked like Mesa. There were young families and senior citizens. Most of the people who lined the parade route, standing or sitting in folding camp chairs, were white or Hispanic, with apparently more blacks marching in the parade than lining the route. This reflects Arizona’s demographics, . .

The Parade Entrants: [Hit the link for Ricochet above]
Historically black churches were well represented in the parade, still core institutions in community life. Music radio stations were represented, while conservative talk stations were not, differing from the Veterans’ Day radio station contingent. A highlight of this parade, which was not in the most recent East Valley Veterans’ Parade, was a group of Buffalo Soldier reenactors, on foot and mounted.
There was little overt ideological messaging, except for a few hand-crafted signs and a few standard leftist chants. Police officers walked the route shaking hands and giving children “junior police” stickers. The overall atmosphere was positive and celebratory, complemented by a wonderful Arizona January day, shirt sleeves, a few fluffy clouds, and sunshine.
[Blogger Note: after this I just couldn't follow contributor Cliff Brown's thinking or reasoning if there were any of that to start with!]
A Tale of Two Parties:
Witnessing today’s parade, seeing who showed up to march, or set up a booth, and who did not, brought to mind Justice Clarence Thomas’s indictment of the national GOP in My Grandfather’s Son . . .
Brown ends his report like so:
"Laziness leads to losing. You can’t win if you don’t play. The fastest way to lose a race is by not showing up at the starting line."
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About the author:
Retired from the U.S. Army Reserve as a Colonel after 30 years of active and reserve assignments.
M.A. Political Science
M.S. Strategic Studies, Army War College, JD.
Served
In the 1st Armored Division in West Germany when the Berlin Wall came down
In the 2nd Infantry Division in South Korea during the regime of Kim Il Sung
Commanded a logistics battalion in Iraq 2003-2004.
Wide-ranging public policy interests.
Occasional home brewer and infuser of alcohol spirits.

Monday, January 21, 2019

Controversy. Account Suspended. Real Story. Real News

Run that headline by again please . . . 3 days in a Friday-to-Monday news cycle.
HUH?
All this from a one-minute encounter - and it went viral > viewed at least 2.5 million times and retweeted at least 14,400 times. 
Someone later realized that a network of anonymous accounts were working to amplify the video
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INFORMATION WARFARE  
EXAMPLE OF INFLUENCE MARKETING
BEWARE
"This is the new landscape: where bad actors monitor us and appropriate content that fits their needs. They know how to get it where they need to go so it amplifies naturally. And at this point, we are all conditioned to react and engage or deny in specific ways.
And we all did."
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Getting social on Social media. The 1-minute encounter went viral. Why? So many reasons
A word: DISRESPECT
Look: Make America Great Again
Story: Read it
Kaya Taitano was at Friday's Indigenous Peoples March in Washington, DC, and filmed this confrontation between a teen in a Make America Great Again hat who stood directly in front of a Native American elder, who chanting and beating a drum. Other teens were taunting him and shooting video in the distance. The elder was identified as Nathan Phillips of the Omaha Tribe. He's a Vietnam veteran. title: KC🇬🇬🇺🇬🇺🌴🇬🇺🌴🌴 on Instagram: "The amount of disrespect.... TO THIS DAY. #SMH #ipmdc19 #ipmdc #indigenousunited #indigenouspeoplesmarch #indigenouspeoplesmarch2019" duration: 00:00:00 site: Instagram author: null published: Wed Dec 31 1969 19:00:00 GMT-0500 (Eastern Standard Time) intervention: no description: null
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The Caption from Instagram:
© Instagram/Kaya Taitano Kaya Taitano was at Friday's Indigenous Peoples March in Washington, DC, and filmed this confrontation between a teen in a Make America Great Again hat who stood directly in front of a Native American elder who chanting and beating a drum. Other teens were taunting him and shooting video in the distance. The elder was identified as Nathan Phillips of the Omaha Tribe. He's a Vietnam veteran.
title: KC🇬🇬🇺🇬🇺🌴🇬🇺🌴🌴 on Instagram: "The amount of disrespect.... TO THIS DAY. #SMH #ipmdc19 #ipmdc #indigenousunited #indigenouspeoplesmarch #indigenouspeoplesmarch2019" duration: 00:00:00 site: Instagram author: null published: Wed Dec 31 1969 19:00:00 GMT-0500 (Eastern Standard Time) intervention: no description: null
The Headline from CNN Business
Twitter suspends account that helped ignite controversy over viral encounter
That version of the video was viewed at least 2.5 million times and was retweeted at least 14,400 times, according to a cached version of the tweet seen by CNN Business.

Way-Too-Easy: "Fake News", Big Fat Hoax, TLDR + Alternative Facts

< Can you read this?
[Just the big print please. Don't sweat the small stuff]
Hmmm. . . not so easy-to-read. Take your time.
Not so easy-to-read even though it's in black-and-white.
If you're still paying attention, here's what two shrinks have to say: "The main factor explaining the acceptance of fake news could be cognitive laziness, especially in the context of social media, where news items are often skimmed or merely glanced at . . . "   Too Long Didn't Read. Stop. Pause.
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The good news:
The good news is that psychologists and other social scientists are working hard to understand what prevents people from seeing through propaganda.
Damn. They are working hard to understand. Get this [or not]
The bad news:
The bad news is that there is not yet a consensus on the answer.
WHY DO PEOPLE FALL FOR FAKE NEWS?
Are they blinded by their political passions?
Or are they just intellectually lazy?
By Gordon Pennycook and David Rand [ Dr. Pennycook and Dr. Rand are psychologists.]