Wednesday, November 04, 2020

You Will Be Caught—Arizona

Valley Metro November 4, 2020 TMC/RMC Meetings

City Council Meeting - 11/02/2020

Council Study Session - 11/02/2020

Mesa Moves 2020 > The Saints Had A Plan in 2012

Here's the scoop in an earlier post on this blog:

The Saints Have A Plan:
THIS IS WHAT THAT $135M LAND DEAL - OR LAND SWINDLE OR STEAL?? - FOR THEIR VISION ON THE 11,447 ACRES THAT WERE ONCE THE MESA WATER FARM ...Nice buy: $135M 11,400+ ACRES
Watch where this story goes and note that the buyer in  2012, a company in Scottsdale, is now called Saints Holdings Company. They agreed to buy the land in three 5-year phases.
Let's do some numbers first: a recent city auction for 132 acres, without water rights, went for $21.1M (that's $5M above the appraised price) . . .or $159,848 per acre.

"According to Natalie Lewis, assistant to city manager Chris Brady, and also lead negotiator on the deal, Mesa purchased the land in 1985 for more than $29 million for its water rights to create a water farm. Eventually, the city found more cost-effective means to provide the city water. OH REALLY? DID THEY?
The city expected it would take 20 years or more to sell the land. But two years ago, PLH approached the city with interest in purchasing the land in phases over five years.

PHOENIX—A deal for nearly $135 million and 11,400 acres was struck between the city of Mesa and Scottsdale-based Pinal Land Holdings LLC (PLH).
The land, to be purchased by PLH in three phases, is located between Coolidge and Eloy, making it an extremely attractive purchase for an entity interested in developing central Arizona. The property is currently used as farmland.

“We chose this site for many reasons including the existing infrastructure, the current and planned transportation access and the existing sense of community born through its agricultural heritage. This really and truly is the center of Arizona,” said Jackob Andersen, PLH president. . . "

 

 

RELATED CONTENT IN POSTS ON THIS BLOG SITE:

GM ends its operations at Mesa test track 

by Gary Nelson - Jun. 12, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic
. . . there was an eastward-rolling tsunami of suburban sprawl. As early as the mid-'90s, developers were coveting GM's land and surrounding areas near the former Williams Air Force Base, now Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport, for new housing projects. . . In 2004, GM sold the southern portion to Phoenix businessman William Levine. Two years later, the northern 5 square miles was sold to Scottsdale-based DMB Associates for $265 million.
Featured in the article: Roc Arnett and Jack Sellers, a Chandler councilman at that time
Read more >>  AZ Central Archives 

 
"Heritage is a multi-generational community with immediate developability that is unmatched in scope. . . . Just 45 minutes from the fifth largest city in the United States Heritage spans over 11,438 acres of prime development land in Pinal County, Arizona. With Arizona’s population set to double by 2030, developable land is quickly becoming a scarce commodity. The Phoenix to Tucson corridor has been and is expected to be one of the fastest growing megaregions in the U.S. in the next decades. More than one million people currently work and reside within 35 minutes of Heritage. It is projected that more than 100,000 jobs will be created in the region in the next decades. Welcome to Heritage. See more > http://www.heritagearizona.com/ 
MORE SAINTS HOLDINGS: You can easily see where this starts at the top: Salt Lake City, part of The CanaMex Corridor now called The Sun Corridor  and sometimes The Mormon Corridor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Chuck Berry - C'est la vie (1972) Live

Dumbing-Down America:: Too Many Brainy People Can Be Dangerous

now


Too early for a Wake-Up Call? Think . . .It's never too late even after four long years of Donald Trump taking-over this exceptional stage of  American politics with his own brand of Reality TV -  con-man style. We've all gotten punked and played for fools; some for all of the time. That's where we are right now while all the votes are being counted, suspended in the interim by instability and chaos.

We have been there before twenty years ago when a decision by the Supreme Court stopped counting-the-votes in the state of Florida. It is not improbable that is theTrump tactic this time around - tricky it may be in the game-of-politics if the rules of gaming theory apply. However, we now have both Chaos Theory and Auction Theory to shine some light and open our eyes:

Can too many brainy people be a dangerous thing?

Some academics argue that unhappy elites lead to political instability

TENYEARS ago Peter Turchin, a scientist at the University of Connecticut, made a startling prediction in Nature. “The next decade is likely to be a period of growing instability in the United States and western Europe,” he asserted, pointing in part to the “overproduction of young graduates with advanced degrees”. The subsequent surge in populism in Europe, the unexpected votes in 2016 for Brexit and then for President Donald Trump in America, and a wave of protests from the gilets jaunes to Black Lives Matter, has made Mr Turchin something of a celebrity in certain circles, and has piqued economists’ interest in the discipline of “cliodynamics”, which uses maths to model historical change. Mr Turchin’s emphasis on the “overproduction of elites” raises uncomfortable questions, but also offers useful policy lessons.

As far back as ancient Rome and imperial China, Mr Turchin shows, societies have veered from periods of political stability to instability, often at intervals of about 50 years. Consider America. Every pundit knows that Congress has become gridlocked, with Democrats and Republicans unwilling to compromise with each other. Fewer know that it was also highly polarised around 1900, before becoming more co-operative in the mid-20th century

What causes these lurches from calm to chaos? Mr Turchin views societies as large, complex systems that are subject to certain patterns, if not laws. That is an entirely different approach from much of academic history, with its preference for small-scale, microcosmic studies, argues Niall Ferguson of Stanford University. In a paper published this year Mr Turchin (with Andrey Korotayev of the Higher School of Economics in Russia) examines the prediction of instability he made in 2010. His forecast model contains many elements, but like Karl Marx Mr Turchin seems to believe that “the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.” Where Marx focused on the proletariat, though, Mr Turchin is more interested in the elite—and how its members struggle against each other. . ."

Predicting an earthquake

Mr Turchin’s theories predict that political tremors eventually subside. “Sooner or later most people begin to yearn for the return of stability and an end to fighting,” he argues. Already the data show that support for both left- and right-wing populist parties in Europe is waning. Polls suggest Mr Trump will soon be voted out of office. Another option for those looking to avoid instability is to reduce the number of aspiring elites. Boris Johnson, Britain’s prime minister, has pressed for better vocational education, saying that “We need to recognise that a significant and growing minority of young people leave university and work in a non-graduate job.”

Yet enlightened elites can prevent the emergence of political instability in more effective ways. In the early 20th century American reformers raised inheritance taxes to prevent the emergence of a hereditary aristocracy, and engaged in massive trust-busting. Modernising urban-planning systems could lower housing costs, and deregulating labour markets would help create good jobs for “excess” elites. Mr Turchin’s analysis of the structural forces governing societies is an intriguing explanation of political unrest. But cliodynamics need not be destiny.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline "Graduates of the world, unite!"

_https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2020/10/24/can-too-many-brainy-people-be-a-dangerous-thing

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