Jerry Brown's Concerns Reflect Hillary Clinton's Vulnerability

Governor Jerry Brown has signed another California budget essentially along the lines he proposed, once again thwarting the designs of some legislative Democrats for expansive new and renewed programs. Not that Brown hasn’t had some expansive programs of his own, especially in education, health care, energy and the environment, and new infrastructure for a sustainable new economy.

“This solid budget makes responsible investments in California and sets aside billions of dollars to prepare for the next recession,” Brown declared in a signing statement.

That last is the tell, the reminder of why Brown has been loathe to restore a number of social welfare programs which he and predecessor Arnold Schwarzenegger cut back in the period in which the now four-term governor inherited a $27 billion state budget deficit. Why not? Because they’re the sorts of programs that grow and grow. And Brown is more convinced than ever that the next economic downturn is already on its way.

This, despite the fact that California’s economy during Brown’s governorship has grown into in the world, trailing only those of China, the US as a whole, India, Japan, and Germany.

Russia? Just behind California. Britain? Back in 11th place, even before the exit from the European Union which continues to roil the world economic landscape (and has just turned into a real-life ‘House of Cards’ in both the Conservative and Labour Parties).

Brown, who has continually, in the view of many analysts, low-balled California revenue forecasts, even doubled his new state budget rainy day fund. Though of course any big downturn will probably require significant future budget cuts. That’s the only actual “spending limit,” as I’ve noted with regard to other governors, which works in a democratic society, and is well within the broad constitutional powers of the California governorship.

Brown’s longstanding and growing concern about an economic downturn reflects one of the key eventualities that could lead to the defeat of the Democrat he ended up successfully backing earlier this month in the California primary, former Secretary of State of Hillary Clinton.

Despite a month of woe, the execrable de facto Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump only trails Clinton by, on average, a mid-single digit margin.

The continued danger of a Trump presidency, which if anything has increased again in the wake of Brexit, added a sense of urgency to Brown’s hosting of the first ever Clean Energy Ministerial held in the US. Brown hosted what has become an annual summit of major world energy ministers in his home town San Francisco a few days before the California primary.

The two-time runner-up for the Democratic presidential nomination also created a second global organization on renewable energy and climate change, the Subnational Clean Energy Ministerial, representing subnational governments in key energy-producing nations. office/2016/06/02/fact-sheet-us-hosts-worlds-energy-ministers-scale-clean-energy-and-drive

Trump is a notorious climate change denier who has vowed to push an energy strategy which would take America back — though hardly in the way he meant it last week when he appropriated Brown’s 1992 presidential campaign slogan — at least half a century, relying on coal and other fossil fuels to the extent that the cooking of the planet would not only not be reversed, it would be accelerated.

Clinton, in sharp contrast, has committed to major steps forward along the renewable energy path that California is blazing into the future.

Brown also just wrote a powerful article in the New York Review of Books, discussing former Defense Secretary William Perry’s new book, ‘My Journey At the Nuclear Brink.’

In it, Brown says that Perry, a defense technology insider for more than half a century, “As much as anyone, is aware of the ways, secret and public, that technical innovation, private profit and tax dollars, civilian gadgetry and weapons of mass destruction, satellite technology, computers, and ever-expanding surveillance are interconnected. But he now uses this dark knowledge in an effort to reverse the deadly arms race in which he had such a pivotal role.”

As it happens, Clinton takes a more conventional view, and, among other things, has long backed the NATO expansionism which has alarmed Russia since the ’90s and may drive a new nuclear arms race as Brown and Perry point out. I’ll have more on this going forward.

Trump, however, has views on nuclear weapons which are frankly terrifying.

He blithely recommends an increase in nuclear proliferation and has spoken of using nuclear weapons as though they are just another military option, holding out the prospect of nuking the terrorists of Isis. In the American system, the president has quite stunning and immediate direct power over the nuclear button.

If Hillary Clinton is elected, there’s room for debate and improvement on nuclear weapons along the lines advocated by Perry, Brown, and others.

But if Trump is elected, there can be nothing but opposition to a profoundly dangerous mindset and temperament. And perhaps prayerful hopes for the best.

In which case Brown’s Jesuit background might come in handy.

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Check Out This Affordable 1080p Full HD Car DVR

1080p Full HD Car DVR

Record all the stunning scenery while you’re on the road with this 1080p Full HD car DVR. Available over at Chinavasion, this affordable car DVR is equipped with a 1/4-inch CMOS sensor, a 170-degree wide-angle lens, a 4.0-inch LCD display, a microSD card slot (up to 32GB), a mini-USB port, an AV out and built-in microphone/speaker.

Powered by a built-in 350mAh li-polymer battery, this car DVR can capture both 1080p@30fps Full HD video in MOV format and up to 3MP still images. Other notable features include G-Sensor, Motion Detection Recording, Parking Monitor, Loop-Cycle Recording and Ignition Auto Start Recording. Price itself is set at just $39.33. [Product Page]

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These homemade wheels let you maneuver your car as you please

Your regular old car’s wheels can probably only go in a finite number of directions. One crafty YouTuber took it upon himself to create a set of wheels that would allow his trusty Toyota Echo to handle moving around in just about any direction you ca…

Nintendo t-shirt design contest will be judged by Shigeru Miyamoto

In case you didn’t own enough gaming tees, Uniqlo has opening its annual tee design competition, this time centered around Nintendo. The UTGP’17 comes with a healthy $10,000 prize pot and the contest is open to global entries. (Yes, even from you.) N…

Expert Oriented Radeon RX 480 Graphics Card Launched

Expert Oriented Radeon RX 480

Expert Oriented is pleased to launch their newest graphics card, the Radeon RX 480. Driven by the new AMD Polaris architecture, this high performance graphics card is packed with 2304 Stream Processors, a 256-bit memory interface, a core clock of 1120MHz, a boost clock of 1266MHz and an 8GB of GDDR5 memory set @ 8000MHz.

Codenamed RD-RX480-E8GB, the Radeon RX 480 utilizes a PCI-Express3.0 (x16) bus interface and a dual-slot single-fan cooling system, and provides 1x HDMI and 3x DisplayPort output ports. The Expert Oriented Radeon RX 480 (RD-RX480-E8GB) is available now for 30,000 Yen (about $292). [Product Page]

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Don't Confuse Political Incorrectness with Authenticity

Don’t Confuse Political Incorrectness with Authenticity

The world hungers for authenticity.

At a time of economic uncertainty, security fears at home and abroad, and accelerating social and cultural shifts, citizens long for leaders who can make sense of, and provide clear-cut answers to, the questions borne out of our rapidly changing global landscape.

From politics to business, civil society to faith, people seem to gravitate more and more toward those they view as genuine and unscripted, those with the perceived courage to set aside talking points and speak plainly to the needs and concerns of everyday folks.

However, a desire from the public for an unscripted and “genuine” leader can often lead to simple proposals for a complex world. This is dangerous.

Societal desire for leaders who speak their minds and bare their souls is understandable. We all want to feel as though we’re getting a straight deal – now more so than ever. Yet, our desire for realness has become so strong that we seem to have started conflating political incorrectness to match authenticity.

True authenticity from our leaders means having an actual and realistic plan to execute and deliver on promises. It means taking a long-term view and having a strategy, mission, and vision for how to get something done for constituents, customers, shareholders, and communities. It means being consistent, staying focused, and following through on commitments.

Yet, today, many leaders are not being authentic about promises being made. Unrealistic solutions are being offered when they have enough knowledge to know better. Candidates play for points by trying to shout the loudest or land the most crippling blow on political foes. Whereas it was once substance, shrewdness with civility, and statesmanship that connoted talent among our political class, today, anger, rudeness, vulgarity, and disrespect are worn and seen as badges of honor.

We live in a time when people demand – and social media enables – instant gratification. Citizens expect leaders to solve their problems in minutes. Bloggers move at the speed of light. Delayed response is perceived as weakness or ineptitude.

In the 24/7 news cycle, substance is an afterthought. More deliberate approaches to problem-solving and communications too often get overshadowed by bluster and bombast. This is now leading to inauthentic promises being made by leaders in an effort to appease their stakeholders and constituents.

The great irony is that, in our rush for real-ness, our thirst for sincerity, our quest to move beyond the talking points and get at something earnest, we have missed, or at least lost sight of, what real authenticity is all about.

If authenticity is something we desire, the lessons for leaders and citizens are three-fold.

First, let’s get beyond the expectation that success and solutions are quick and simple. In reality, to succeed in life, we would do well to heed Malcolm Gladwell’s lesson that true mastery requires 10,000 hours of practice.

That is as true in business as it is in public service. Most so-called “overnight successes” are years in the making. Most political breakthroughs are the product of pragmatic compromise forged over the course of months, and even years. Leaders need the patience to hone mastery and progress; the public needs to allow space for that to occur. It is our responsibility to do so.

Second, tactics move us forward, and serendipity creates new options. But, in the end, if one’s practice is not vetted with vision and mission and rooted in long-term strategy, gains will prove temporary and leaders will do a disservice to themselves and those they serve.

For the public, there is a need to transform what is expected from business and political leaders, to allow them to set forth real strategies with lasting impact, and to understand that the rewards of strategic approaches may not show up in the next quarterly report.

Third, know your history, and surround yourself with mission-driven colleagues. A failure to do so poses a real danger to society.

We have seen and suffered from that danger time and time again throughout human history, when people were taught to fear and group themselves off from one another. And the rapid march of technology makes the weapon of division more potent and scalable than ever. Leaders and the public must work intentionally to resist the siren song of social schisms.

Inauthentic “leaders” don’t have a thorough plan beyond stoking fear and preying on anger and frustration. This problem needs to be properly monitored by us, the public.

The world faces unprecedented challenges for which only true authenticity offers a cure. Some will argue that one can be authentic by truly believing in his or her words, even if those words do not provide a realistic and long term solution to a problem. This point cannot apply to the category of leaders I have in mind. Current leaders have enough information to know what can and cannot be done. To cure our ills – be they political or commercial, cultural or religious – demands more than hollow words.

From societal leaders, it demands depth, breadth, and a plan to actually get things done. From the public, it demands a patience and wisdom to look past sound-bites, to surmount the allure of diatribe, to forsake simplistic solutions, and to respect and demand the merit of thoughtful strategy.

***

Alan H. Fleischmann​ is ​Founder, President & CEO​ of ​Laurel Strategies​,​ a global business advisory and strategic communications firm for Leaders, CEOs, and their C-suite.

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Hindu Priest Hacked To Death In Bangladesh

DHAKA (Reuters) – A Hindu priest was hacked to death on Friday at a temple in Bangladesh, police and senior administrative officials said.

Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation of 160 million people, has seen a surge in violent attacks in few months on liberal activists, members of minority Muslim sects and other religious groups by Islamist extremists.

Police said they did not know the motive behind the killing of the Hindu priest and no one had been arrested.

Shaymanonda Das, 45, was hacked to death in front of a temple in Jhinaidah district headquarter, 300 kms (188 miles) south west from the capital Dhaka.

“He was preparing morning prayers with flowers at the temple early in the morning and that time three young people came by a motor bike and killed him with machetes and fled away,” said Mahbubur Rahman, the chief of Jhenaidah district administration.

“The nature of killing was similar with the local militants, but we can not say more at the moment,” Mahbubur told Reuters by telephone.

Islamic State has claimed responsibility for some of the recent killings although the government denies the Sunni militant group has a presence in the country, saying homegrown extremists are behind the attacks.

(Reporting by Serajul Quadir; Editing by Michael Perry)

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<i>Royal Pains</i> Gets Discharged, But Should Leave Everyone Feeling Pretty Good

It’s no big shock or spoiler to say there are a lot of good outcomes in the last-ever episode of USA’s Royal Pains.

But while the show is a medical drama, creator and executive producer Andrew Lenchewski says the real victory has always resided not just in finding a bad heart valve, but in finding a family.

Royal Pains winds up its eight-season run Wednesday, July 6, leaving USA with one less light-and-breezy character drama and leaving the Hamptons without the doctor everyone wishes they could have.

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That would be Hank Lawson, played by Mark Feuerstein (above with Cloris Leachman).

Hank was unjustly fired from his ER job in New York and landed in the Hamptons as a personal doctor to the wealthy Boris Kuester von Jurgens-Ratenicz (Campbell Scott), mercifully known only as Boris.

Hank turned that foothold into a living by founding HankMed, a small operation that gave wonderful care to everyone. His partner and CFO is his brother Evan (Paolo Costanzo).

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Divya Katdare (Reshma Shetty) (above) is his physician assistant and Dr. Jeremiah Sacani (Ben Shenkman) joined the staff in season four.

Jill Casey (Jill Flint) was Hank’s sporadic girlfriend in the first four seasons and Paige (Brooke D’Orsay) is Evan’s girlfriend who became his wife.

The final season has marched each character toward where he or she wanted to go.

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Evan and Paige (above) want a baby. Divya wants to become a doctor, gently shedding the restrictions of the limited role her traditional Indian upbringing allowed her. Jeremiah struggles to interact with other people.

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There’s even some resolution for Hank’s bad-boy father Eddie (Henry Winkler) ( above), whose sense of responsibility stopped developing when he was about 8.

Hank, well, Hank hasn’t been sure what he wants. He just knows that he’s closer to finding it, thanks to the people around him.

It all sounds a little old-fashioned and even corny in this era of dark television shows, and in several ways, with no apologies, it is.

“This show has always been about family,” says Lenchewski. “A lot of the characters came with complicated backstories and they found an extended family in HankMed.

“We wanted to finish by showing how they had completed that journey. Each character has to find his or her place, a sense of belonging.”

The show’s tone has always been hopeful, despite some tense and dire situations. Lenchewski says there was extensive discussion back in season two, “when we killed our first and only patient. We were concerned that might break faith with the audience. But they accepted it. In a show about life and death, you can’t save everyone.”

As for exactly where Royal Pains wraps up, executive producer Michael Rauch says, “We had some idea early on how it would end, and we mostly stayed on that course – though in a few instances we veered off.

“Brooke was originally planned to do only 3-4 episodes as a guest star, and it worked so well she ended up being a big part of the show. And Evan, we had always thought would probably be the bachelor. Then it felt right for him to get married.”

Hank, oddly, was in some ways the wild card. The other characters all make major life changes before he does and Wednesday that creates a shakeup at HankMed, which leaves Hank himself pondering and rejecting several proposals for his own future.

The final episode never strays, however, from the Royal Pains pocket. The sun always seems to be shining, the water is always clear and the good guys usually win.

Lenchewski calls it a “blue sky show,” a perfect summation that also reflected the USA drama brand when Royal Pains launched in 2009.

Royal Pains fit right in with Burn Notice, White Collar, Psych, Covert Affairs, Suits and In Plain Sight, streamlined character-driven dramas with a serious side and plenty of clever humor.

“We were lucky to get to USA when we did,” says Lenchewski. “The right time, the right network.”

Things are different now at USA. The network has taken a turn toward darker shows, often with a sci-fi element, and with the departure of Royal Pains, Suits is the only survivor of USA’s “Characters Wanted” days.

Lenchewski suggests Royal Pains could conceivably have continued a bit longer, but he stresses he’s not unhappy with how it worked out.

“Shows that are fully serialized, like Breaking Bad, have a finite lifespan,” he says. “At a certain point, the journey is completed. A show like ours, with a procedural element, has more flexibility.

“But I’m grateful we got eight seasons. I’m especially grateful that we got our notification with two seasons left, so we could wrap it up on our terms.”

One of the hardest parts, says Rauch, is breaking up the show family.

“I’m hard-pressed to think of anyone involved with this show that I wouldn’t like to work with again,” he says. “The actors, the crew, production. With only one or two exceptions, everyone was so easy to work with. Mark was the main character and he set a tone that everyone followed.”

In the larger TV picture, the end of Royal Pains deepens the current void for shows that are lighter and upbeat, but still have more edge than, say, Hallmark.

Lenchewski says he thinks that won’t remain a void.

2016-07-01-1467342344-2711960-royal5.jpg

“I sure hope there’s room on TV for lighter dramas,” he says. “Personally, I also love darker shows like The Americans or Bloodline, but I definitely think there’s a place for a show like ours, too. I don’t think the blue sky show is dead.”

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Dell discontinues its Android tablets in favor of Windows 2-in-1s

Another Android tablet maker bites the dust. Dell has decided to end distribution of its Android tabs and will instead focus on Windows 2-in-1 devices. This means several things: One, the company will no longer offer its Venue brand of Android tablet…

Mouse Computer MousePro-T795GP8-EXP Business-Friendly Desktop PC

Mouse Computer MousePro-T795GP8-EXP

Here comes a new business-friendly desktop PC from Mouse Computer, the MousePro-T795GP8-EXP. As part of the MousePro T series, this high-end desktop PC is configured with a 4.0GHz Intel Core i7-6700K processor, an Intel H170 Express Chipset and a GeForce GTX 1080 8GB graphics card.

Not to mention, the system also boasts a 32GB DDR3 RAM (8GBx4), a 480GB SSD, a 2TB 7200rpm hard drive, a DVD Super Multi Drive and a 500W 80PLUS SILVER power supply. For operating system, the MousePro-T795GP8-EXP runs on Windows 10 Pro 64-bit OS.

The Mouse Computer MousePro-T795GP8-EXP is available now for 209,800 Yen (about $2,041). [Mouse Computer]

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