Friday, September 16, 2022

EFFECTIVE ALTRUISM: The Planet Earth is now the company’s “only shareholder.”

Intro: Patagonia was one of the earliest companies to become a b-Corp, submitting to certification as meeting certain environmental and social standards, and recently it changed its mission to state: “We’re in business to save our home planet.”


 

www.theguardian.com

Patagonia’s billionaire owner gives away company to fight climate crisis

Erin McCormick
4 - 5 minutes

"Setting a new example in environmental corporate leadership, the billionaire owner of Patagonia is giving the entire company away to fight the Earth’s climate devastation, he announced on Wednesday.


Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard, who turned his passion for rock climbing into one of the world’s most successful sportswear brands, is giving the entire company to a uniquely structured trust and non-profit, designed to pump all of the company’s profits into saving the planet.

“As of now, Earth is our only shareholder,” the company announced. “ALL profits, in perpetuity, will go to our mission to ‘save our home planet’.”

✓ "... Some years he spent more than 200 nights sleeping outside, and claims not to have owned a tent until he was almost 40. In 1962 he was arrested for riding a freight train in Arizona and spent 18 days in jail on a charge of “wandering around aimlessly with no apparent means of support”. 


...“As of now, Earth is our only shareholder,” the company announced. “ALL profits, in perpetuity, will go to our mission to ‘save our home planet’.”

Chouinard, 83, worked with his wife and two children as well as teams of company lawyers to create a structure that will allow Patagonia to continue to operate as a for-profit company whose proceeds will go to benefit environmental efforts.

“If we have any hope of a thriving planet – much less a thriving business – 50 years from now, it is going to take all of us doing what we can with the resources we have,” said Chouinard in a statement. “This is another way we’ve found to do our part.”

Yvon Chouinard is shown in his surfboard shaping room in Ventura, Calif.
‘I was in Forbes magazine listed as a billionaire, which really, really pissed me off,’ said Chouinard. Photograph: Victoria Sayer Pearson/AP

✓ Chouinard’s family donated 2% of all stock and all decision-making authority to a trust, which will oversee the company’s mission and values. The other 98% of the company’s stock will go to a non-profit called the Holdfast Collective, which “will use every dollar received to fight the environmental crisis, protect nature and biodiversity, and support thriving communities, as quickly as possible”, according to the statement.


Each year, the money Patagonia makes after reinvesting in the business will be distributed to the non-profit to help fight the environmental crisis.

The structure, the statement said, was designed to avoid selling the company or taking it public, which could have meant a change in its values. . ."

www.theguardian.com

Yvon Chouinard – the ‘existential dirtbag’ who founded and gifted Patagonia

Rupert Neate
6 - 7 minutes

The publication of a magazine article in 2017 “really, really pissed off” Yvon Chouinard, the mountain climber turned reluctant businessman and founder of outdoor clothing company Patagonia.

In the article, Forbes crowned Chouinard as a billionaire and added him to its list of the world’s richest people. While many people daydream of achieving a nine-zero fortune, for Chouinard it was a sign he had failed in his life’s mission to make the world a better and fairer place.

The Forbes article set him on a journey to find a way of giving away Patagonia, the company he founded almost 50 years ago with a mission to help fellow climbers. This week he achieved that aim, announcing that he was giving away all of the shares in Patagonia to a trust that will use future profits to “help fight” the climate crisis.

“Earth is now our only shareholder,” Chouinard, 83, said in a message to staff and customers. “Instead of ‘going public’, you could say we’re ‘going purpose’. Instead of extracting value from nature and transforming it into wealth for investors, we’ll use the wealth Patagonia creates to protect the source of all wealth.” . . .




Top stories

✓ MORE RELATED CONTENT 

The Earlier Days: Envisioning Mesa as The New City of Zion

Here's a brief time-capsule verbatim from https://saltriverstories.org/items
In 1887, Mormon leader Brigham Young sent out the Lehi Company to settle the Salt River Valley. A year later, another group of Mormon settlers arrived under the banner of the Mesa Company and camped approximately five miles away from the Lehi settlement.
Just a few months later, the settlers filed for possession of the land now known as Mesa’s Town Center.
In 1880, a third group of Mormon settlers established a community approximately one mile away from the town, near what is now Alma School Road.
When constructing the town that would eventually grow to become the city of Mesa, the settlers made sure to follow the layout that Joseph Smith had initially envisioned for his City of Zion.

_______________________________________________________________
Because of persecution driving the Mormons to the frontier, many western towns and cities share this layout, most notably Salt Lake City.
Here's the smaller - scale 22st Century Vision of City Creek next to a recent renovation around The Mesa Temple on Main Street



Smith's design called for streets 132 feet wide on a one square mile grid.
Each block contained eight rectangular lots one and one-quarter acre in size.
Though Smith's plan called for three public squares, only two were included in the plat of Mesa.
The organizational structure of the Mormon Church dictates the formation of membership units known as wards and stakes. A ward is the local congregational unit in the LDS church, with membership in each one ranging between 300 and 600 people. Members of each ward live within prescribed geographic boundaries. Alma Ward was the ward associated with the third community of pioneers.
As the Alma Ward membership grew, the community made plans to construct the Alma Ward meeting house, which was built in 1908. Eventually, the Mormon church outgrew the building and the meeting house changed hands numerous times over the decades. In 1962, it served as the very first campus of Mesa Community College, tying the building to Mesa’s educational history as well as its religious history. Today, the Alma Ward Meeting House hosts wedding planning and reception business.

Growth Gasms For Hizzoner Mesa Mayor John Giles

Just have some ____ fun ahead of the highly-anticipated over-hyped annual State-Of-The-City extravaganza at a time when Mesa is growing fast again  

More Google cost-cutting cancels half of the Area 120 projects

From Fudzilla: "...Employees whose projects will not continue were told they'll need to find a new job within Google by the end of January 2023, or they'll be terminated, we assume they mean jobwise.


Google slashes Area 120 projects

by on15 September 2022

Area 120 lead Elias Roman said that the division was focused to only AI-first projects which will have a limited shelf life in other Google areas.

The other six projects being canceled weren't yet launched, but included a financial accounting project for Google Sheets, another shopping-related product, analytics for AR/VR, and, unfortunately, three climate-related projects. These latter projects had focused on EV car charging maps with routing, carbon accounting for I.T., and carbon measurement of forests.

"Area 120 was reorganized only a year ago, when it was sucked into the newly created "Google Labs" division under veteran Googler Clay Bavor. The Labs team handles Google's AR and VR work, and it even has a blockchain project. There's no word if any of Google's other experimental work is being shut down as part of the cost-cutting initiative, but this sort of news is now coming at a fairly reliable pace."

arstechnica.com

More Google cost cutting cancels half of the Area 120 projects

by Ron Amadeo - Sep 15, 2022 5:09 pm UTC
3 - 4 minutes

The group has launched several successful projects, but now it's focusing on AI.

Google

Google CEO Sundar Pichai seems to be on a cost-cutting mission. After he said that the company's productivity was "not where it needs to be" in July, Google axed the Google Hardware laptop division and spun off what was left of Project Loon to try to survive as an independent company. The latest move is aimed at Google Area 120 "idea incubator" group, which Bloomberg reports is being cut by half.

Area 120 launched in 2016. The motto on the group's website says, "At Area 120, we work on 20% projects 100% of the time." Google gives employees 20 percent free time to work on interesting projects, and it sounds like if they land on a good idea, Area 120 spins up a group project around it. . .Bloomberg reports that "some teams at Area 120 were notified this week that their projects had been reorganized or canceled." The outlet spoke to some of the affected employees and said that "one of the people estimated that half of the teams at Area 120 had been affected," and these people will need to find other work inside Google. In response to the report, a Google spokesperson admitted that "Area 120 is winding down several projects to make way for new work" and that the group will "be shifting its focus to projects that build on Google's deep investment in AI and have the potential to solve important user problems."

 


RELATED CONTENT

2 days ago · TechCrunch has learned, and Google confirmed, the company is slashing projects at its in-house R&D division known as Area 120.
Missing: cost | Must include:cost
2 days ago · Google is making cuts to Area 120, its in-house incubator for new projects, according to people familiar with the matter, as the tech giant ...
2 days ago · TechCrunch has learned and Google confirmed the company is slashing projects at its in-house R&D division known as Area 120.

TEMPEST OVER MARTHA'S VINEYARD: Cheap One-Way Charter Flight Ticket Political Stunt

 Cost-effective deliberate gambit by Florida's Governor to grab more than a few headlines ...

 



Top stories
nypost.com

Ken Burns compares sending migrants to Martha's Vineyard to rise of Nazis

Lee Brown
5 - 6 minutes

Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns has sparked outrage by comparing the relocation of border crossers to idyllic Martha’s Vineyard to the rise of Nazi Germany before the horrors of the Holocaust.

The Brooklyn-born, longtime Democratic donor made the direct comparison Thursday while appearing on CNN to promote his new film, “The US and the Holocaust.”

Without hesitation, he agreed with host John Berman’s suggestion that the doc addressed “some of the same themes” seen in Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ decision to send “two planeloads of migrants to Martha’s Vineyard.”

“This is coming straight out of the authoritarian playbook,” Burns, 69, insisted of DeSantis’ relocation of around 50 border crossers to the Massachusetts hotspot.

“What we find in our all films is that the themes that we engage in the past are present today.

Ken Burns on CNN Thursday.
Ken Burns told CNN that the relocation of border crossers to Martha’s Vineyard was “straight out of the authoritarian playbook,” comparing it to his new doc about the Holocaust.
CNN

“And so, when you look at the story that we’re telling of the US and the Holocaust, you understand that the time to save a democracy is before it’s lost. We promise you,” he warned.

Sitting alongside co-director Lynn Novick, Burns insisted that sending immigrants to one of the ritziest vacation spots in the US was actually “the abstraction of human life.”

“It’s basically saying that you can use a human life that is as valuable as yours or mine or Lynn’s and to put it in a position of becoming a political pawn in somebody’s authoritarian game,” he insisted.

“This is what’s so disturbing about DeSantis — to use human beings, to weaponize human beings for a political purpose,” he claimed.

Ron DeSantis speaks in July.
“This is what’s so disturbing about DeSantis — to use human beings, to weaponize human beings for a political purpose,” Burns told CNN.
AP

“It’s like when somebody disagrees with him in Florida — like the Walt Disney Company — he punishes them,” Burns continued.

“This is not the actions of a person participating in a democratic process in which there’s an exchange of ideas.

“This is about punishing political enemies, putting on shows, political shows, political theater. And in this case, this is with the lives of human beings.”

His comments quickly sparked outrage and derision online, including memes showing an aerial shot of the exclusive enclave that has long been home to left-leaning celebrities and Democratic pols, including former President Barack Obama.

“This? This is Auschwitz?” the meme asks alongside the postcard-worthy scene.

A writer on Twitter also noted increduously, “Ron DeSantis giving migrants free food, water, and plane tickets to Martha’s Vineyard is like the Holocaust. WHAT?

Some of the new arrivals in Martha's Vineyard Thursday.
The arrival of a handful of border crossers in the ritzy liberal enclave has sparked an apparent “humanitarian crisis.’’
AP

“He sent them to a place that is a bucket list for us little people,” another person tweeted.

“You aren’t allowed to compare vaccine passports to the leadup to the Holocaust but Ken Burns can compare sending illegal immigrants to a vacation island to the Holocaust,” one podcaster tweeted.

Fox News’ host Tucker Carlson also skewered Burns during a monologue on his show late Thursday.

“The horrors! This is genocide!” he said sarcastically.

The border crossers arriving on Martha's Vineyard Thursday.
The border crossers arrived on Martha’s Vineyard on Thursday.
Office of Gov DeSantis

He then insisted, “Martha’s Vineyard may be a modern-day death camp, but compared to where illegal aliens usually go, it doesn’t look that bad.”

He showed footage from this week of dozens of border crossers in El Paso, Texas, saying it showed “chaos, violence and filth” in the border towns “now completely overrun under [President] Biden’s border policy.”

It was followed by footage of Martha’s Vineyard. “It’s hellish, perhaps, but in a very different way,” Carlson quipped of the leftist hotspot.

Keep up with today's most important news

Stay up on the very latest with Evening Update.

“Families eating together on balconies overlooking the water; women doing their shopping in quaint little towns on their bicycles; couples strolling on the boardwalk; sailboats. It doesn’t look that bad,” he said.

Carlson also suggested they house the new arrivals in Obama’s house there.

“There is no reason Obama needs that much space — nobody needs that much space,” he said.

“You can probably fit a dozen immigrant families in Barack Obama’s pool house, and another five or six in the pantry,” he quipped.

“As Biden often reminds us — illegal immigration is a gift,” he said.