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Why Defined Contribution Translates to Defined Loss — Laurens R. Hunt

Why Defined Contribution Translates to Defined Loss.

 

Nearly all workers of today know the term 401k.  401k is a retirement plan.  It is structured under what some know as defined contribution.  What defined contribution means is that the employee and enrollee in this plan contributes an agreed upon dollar amount or percentage, normally a set percentage of the income or paid salary.  The allocation of this contribution can be distributed in many different ways.  Depending on the investor preference it can go to treasuries and relatively secured bonds with low yields.  The bond market is better known as fixed income in the financial markets.

Fixed can denote a set percentage of income, or there can be an assigned dollar amount regardless of the size of the investment.  For equities the return is much more variable (and volatile).  This means that returns change much more quickly and frequently.  The more typically speculative and volatile investment comes from equities more commonly referred to as stocks.  Stocks are open to any range of gain or loss; some stocks may outperform the overall stock market or underperform where they grow less than the rate of return on the stock market. Conversely some stocks may lose less nominal value simply known as the stock market in a down day or stock market that has lost more point value than some individual stocks.  The overall level of volatility surrounding one particular stock is defined as a beta factor.

 

The stock market is up by a full per cent in one day where the market has increased by one percentage point in measured point value.  Some stocks have jumped more than 10% during this very same day.  This is a beta factor of roughly 10 or 10% return on one single equity (stock) divided by the 1% return on the stock market.  The next day nearly the opposite happens.  The stock market slides (or some will say plunge) more than the same one percent.  Some stocks are slammed and pounded; they tumble by double digit percentages.  This means that they consists of a beta factor higher than 10 on the downside.  It is clear that some stocks can be very reactive based on the overall performance of the equity market.  Some stocks outpace the rest of the equities market by such large multiples that who can say no to investing in these particular securities (also equities and another term is financial instruments)?

 

What faster way to get a quick buck and grow your wealth?  This is such a lucrative return that every investor will be guaranteed success in obtaining the dollar amount and rate of return that they thought they can only dream of, except that not so fast.  I just noted that some stocks behave much more erratically than the stock market as a whole and can also slide faster.  The reality is that there is only limited potential for upward ascention in the price of a stock, and there is also plenty of room for the downward diminution.  It is always illegal to guarantee to an investor a preset rate of return in percentage value or specified dollar amount.  That does not lessen the legitimacy of being realistic about how these returns occur.

 

The best performing of companies will inevitably plateau, and the stock will hit its ceiling (the highest pinnacle that the stock price is able to climb to).  It is indicative of the adage “What Goes up Must Come Down”.   This will occur in varying degrees.  Companies with more stable personnel practices and management structures will be able to limit downside risk better than those companies with more frequent turnover and unreliable job training practices.  This still does not mean the upside potential is limitless or forever.  That will never be the case.  Therefore in the most profitable and optimistic of circumstances losses can occur.  Without question a company where the job training is deficient, a high turnover rate, and morale is strained here the downside risk can be a plunge almost straight to the bottom.  Continually elevated and/ or climbing stock prices present another set of concerns worth thinking about.

 

While I just addressed the life lesson of “What Comes up Must Come Down”, another question to ask is simply why does the stock keep going up when this is not the case for competing firms or other industries altogether?  An upward trajectory in the stock price can be subverting managerial and in some cases accounting problems.  If an equity price is exceedingly high and it remains that way continuously this at the very least obviates a high rate of return.  High rates of return at least could mean that there is a lot of risk and hence a lack of stability.  This begs the question how much higher will the stock price go and for how long?  Often times these are the equities where the prices tumble the fastest and with the greatest percentage in lost market value.

 

This may mean any number of things.  Some of the possibilities include an erratic management, e.g. high turnover, mismanagement of funds, poor accounting, chronic personal difficulties such as tardiness, calling in sick, missed project deadlines, and lack of quality control among others.  A high stock price and rate of return are only beneficial when the company structure is in place to support it.  Otherwise when the situation unravels it unwinds very quickly with hardly any warning.  This has the investor ‘holding the bag”.  As discussed here stock prices can rise and fall for countless reasons, some impossible to explain and also to greatly varying degrees.  Previously I talked about bonds as the fixed income side of the market and investing.

 

Although bonds are stated to have a fixed income stream or flow of funds (also known as liquidity), bonds have their own risk.  There can be issues with individual creditors.  Their funding might be unreliable and unstable.  Just as liquidity has to do with the flow of funds, the other component is whether or not funds are fungible.  Fungible refers to the ability to transfer the funds.  If funds are problematic for transfer and they are difficult to access in terms of liquidity this means that the bonds will be more risky and hence susceptible to default.  Therefore as with stocks there is a higher rate of return because investment is more speculative.  Additionally bonds have 2 major categories.

 

One is GO (general obligation/ municipal), and the other is revenue bonds.  General obligation bonds are backed by the full faith and credit of the tax payer.  They fund municipal structures such as public libraries, public schools, police stations, and the county court houses.  Revenue bonds are funded by what are known as covenants.  Covenants have to do with the reputation of the borrower or company.  Unlike general obligation bonds revenue bonds are about the underwriting and capital funding of a new structure.  Broadly speaking this has to do with office space, but it also includes an extensive gamete of businesses.  There are multiple examples of structures that are funded in this manner including malls, corporate centers, doctor’s offices, warehouses, factories, incinerators, car manufacturing plants, bridges, tunnels, and much more.

 

The funding streams are very complex regarding the above entities I have mentioned.  There is the question of how reputable the individual funder is.  It is widely known about some of our cities having filed for bankruptcy.  Detroit has been in the news throughout this past month about that.  Harrisburg, the Capital of PA, is another city that has faced this.  Many of these cities have had decades of mismanagement.  It is often contended that the pension liabilities are driving this.  That argument is only true insofar as those who are on the top of the management ladder getting in extreme multi-million pension payouts each year.  For everyone else the overwhelming majority of retirees are living very modestly or are in poverty altogether.  The cost of doing business, both in the public and private sectors, is blamed largely on retirement pensions because pensions have what are known as legacy costs.

 

Legacy namely means that the costs are ongoing and permanent.  The longer a retiree lives the longer the pension payout.  While it is true that pensions can last decades depending on the individual pension holder, there are many other examples of legacy costs that also must be examined.  Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid constitute this cost structure.  There is the expression that these entitlements are on ‘autopilot.”  They happen automatically, and they can’t be controlled.  Much of the reasoning behind that argument is false.  They are paid into through income, payroll, and other taxes.  These expenditures recur each year because they are paid into, not because they exist on their own.  Legacy costs pertain to our infrastructure including roads, bridges, and tunnels, but also transportation including bus, rail, and the airports.  Businesses and real estate have legacy costs due to the property value of corporations and private residences alike.  Wars have these permanent cost structures because of indebtedness to other countries.  The expense structure related to our pension is only one element.

 

As reflected above legacy costs come in many forms, and occur for a wide range of reasons.  Regardless of how large the dollar amount maybe, pensions and also medical benefits, only make up so much of the equation.  What has occurred in the 2 cities I have mentioned, Detroit most recently and Harrisburg, PA, is poor planning and management.  This has come from a culmination of unsecured business deals with private contractors, tax abatements which put pressure on property taxes, and lack of coordinated planning with developers regarding traffic flow and its impact of commerce.  These reasons would not be the only explanations for the need to obtain bankruptcy protection.  Lack of building maintenance leading to non-compliance with fire codes, weak emergency management, and poor plumbing leading to frequent flooding shutting down entire roadways eventually shuttering some local businesses entirely have caused the costs of running these cities to simply become insurmountable.  Funding pensions through 401k rather than 403b only adds these costs.

 

Because 401k’s are based on defined contributions they are also based on speculative funding and the rate of return.  The financing comes from corporations with funding streams that are tied to rate covenants.  The relationship with respective contractors and developer is often unclear and not established.  While feasibility studies are designed to address this they never can and never will eliminate the cost of unsecured contracts and irresponsible underwriting.  403b pensions are based on and funded by entities funded through the full faith and backing of the taxpayer including libraries, the police precincts, fire houses, publics schools, the post office, and other public facilities.  This is why we need the old retirement and pension restored.

 

I noted at the opening of this piece that a 401k is a defined contribution plan because the employee contributes to it.  403b is a defined benefit, which means that it is fixed in dollar amount or rate of return.  Therefore 403b pensions have a guaranteed payout whereas that’s not the case for a 401k plan under a defined contribution system.  403b pensions are funded through public facilities that build reliability and trust in communities, not private contractors and corporations within unknown reputations that are often negative as with the 401k pension system we now have.

Why the balanced Budget Amendment is not Balanced — Laurens R. Hunt

Why the balanced Budget Amendment is not Balanced

 

The term Balanced Budget amendment is misleading.  This is a full US Constitutional addition; it is not simply another US House and Senatorial vote.  That means that 2/3 (must be 67 or more US Senators voting Yea) in order to pass it.  Then it gets sent to the states where ¾ (38 out of 50 or more) agree to ratify it.  What balanced stipulates is that all annual US budgets as assigned by the US Congress must be revenue neutral.  There are several steps required to getting there.

 

The first is known as a committee vote.  In the US House it starts with The Ways and Means Committee where the agreement must be approved by the committee Chairman and someday Chairwoman.  In the US Senate it is the Budget Committee.  Individual spending appropriations are established under the US Senate through a Congressional Budget Authority (CBA) with the minimum of a 60 vote majority in favor in this case.  Bicameral adjustments between the US House and Senate are known as budget reconciliations, which then become combined into what is known as an omnibus bill with respective budgetary appropriations under multiple government agencies.  A short time frame for approval is still several months, and sometimes can be year or more.  Adding a balanced budget provision will also require a vote by The US Judiciary (Supreme Court).

 

This will lengthen the process for sure often times resulting in a whole additional debate on whether the full omnibus budget is considered constitutional or not.  Although the Supreme Court is charged with interpreting the US Constitution there are repeated criticisms about the court legislating from the bench.  Do we really want the US Supreme Court to add to the budget approval process?  We just had the fiscal trauma of the fiscal cliff voted on roughly 2 years ago along with the debt ceiling debacle in August 2011.  As costly and timely as all of this has been The US Supreme Court has not till date been an added layer in the final step of the process where under balanced budget mandates it will be.  The US has had its very first ever credit downgrade due to the exceedingly contentious debt ceiling negotiation nearly 2 years ago.  Adding the Supreme Court to this discussion means one more step in the process leading to more economic uncertainty and hence more cost.

 

The longer the delay in budget appropriations the longer revenues are strained and lost because this costs thousands of jobs and hurts business growth.  We know plenty about this currently with the fiscal cliff and budget sequesters fight where mandatory budget cuts kick in automatically.  For those who only want to talk about spending amounts they neglect to note that lost revenue can in fact be more costly than additional spending or appropriations.  In other words budget outlays cannot be lessened by enough to offset the lack of income revenue.  Also no deficit spending is permitted under this arrangement.

 

Zero deficit spending during a recession is a sure recipe for putting the country into an outright depression.  This can quickly result in a loss of over a trillion dollars in revenue and very easily as well.  During the final 3 months or quarter of 2012 the economy slowed to nearly negative growth because of the extended uncertainty and anticipation resulting from this current fiscal cliff fight (it is reported to be a tiny gain but still very worrisome).  2 quarters or more of economic GDP (Gross Domestic Product) contraction are what define a recession.  The one US credit downgrade has not been known to increase short or long term interest rates, but future downgrades will no doubt drive up the cost of borrowing harshly stifling business growth.  With no debt financing allowed during a declared recession revenues will be greatly lessened, and almost no amount of budget cuts will be enough to offset this loss in revenue for a revenue neutral budget deal.  Hence the budget outflows will continue to exceed the inflow where a balanced budget will simply never occur.  This will add more pressure on the individual states because they will have to adjust their budgets without future help from the US Government, which has never been done the extent that there are no appropriations granted to the states.  This will drive up property taxes displacing families and shutting down local businesses.  These loses will lead to future credit downgrades driving up interest rates further and causing deeper erosion in the value (purchasing power) of the US dollar because foreign nations will pull more and more of their international and business investments out of the US dollar.  This is a whole additional layer. The economic model is that when interest rates go up the US dollar also strengthens and then the dollar is worth more in purchasing power, not less.  This would mean that a rise in commodity, food, and energy prices would reverse where these items then cost less each month for the home owner and renter.  Here instead higher interest will sour the value of the dollar all the more because they will be rising as a result of no investor confidence.  A deteriorating dollar will lead to higher commodity prices, likely double digits which would indicate hyperinflation.  This all but choke off all purchasing power on the part of the consumer and severely limit any business growth.  Businesses will not borrow at even the lowest interest rates because there will be no growth potential.  Some of this is plenty prevalent right now since the financial meltdown nearly 5 years ago.

 

Much of the economic loss from this most recent crisis is already not retractable or reversible.  If this current trend continues more and more of our business financing will be based on bailout agreements and not investment.  Higher interest rates will simply be all about the inflated costs of these artificial funding streams.  Liquidity (flow of money) will continue to tighten, and there will be a permanent credit crunch where even the wealthiest and most credit worthy of borrowers can no longer do so.  This is why there is so much now being spent on stimulus packages and retaining near 0 interest rates.

 

The economy has now become reliant on the corporations initiating their own investments rather the consumer going out and spending.  Therefore job creation is at best weak, and it is staying that way.  Investment in public sector jobs restores communities.  This includes expanded mass transit, facelift of road surfaces and bridges with full realignment of plumbing and sewage.  Building upgrades and updated construction to satisfy necessary fire code standards are part of this.  Building more hybrid cars with more electrical outlets for them are other jobs in demand.  Non-manufacturing and non-construction jobs including more teachers, guidance counselors, nurses, paramedics, and police being hired for emergency personnel and the public schools are other professions very much needed.

 

This is true in individual municipalities and well as entire countries throughout each of our 50 states.  This would amount to a few million more permanent paid jobs throughout the full US every year.  Disposable income would be a few hundred billion dollars more annually with a reliable cash inflow stream because these jobs will be permanent.  The demand and need for them is only intensifying.  This is why debt financing needs to be available during recessions and economic expansions alike.  This does require government spending, but consumer demand will add to the federal revenue eventually erasing the deficit and ultimately resulting in budget surpluses because the economic growth will be sustainable and able to last.  A Balanced Budget Amendment will just entangle the budget appropriation process making it all the more political and confusing for consumers and producers alike.  A balanced budget amendment is the worst possible policy prescription for the budget deficits and our cumulative national debt.

 

The mentality of this Tea Party is to end all government spending. The US Senate Tea Party Leaders such as Rand Paul of KY, Mike Lee of UT, and Ted Cruz of TX will have us believe that any and all government spending is bad for business.  They are not even stopping at austerity.  They want all government spending to stop.  The trouble with this way of thinking is that it fails to recognize that our corporations rely on government contracts and government expenditures in order for business to be able to operate.  This is why I have emphasized earlier that fewer budget expenditures and outlays will not be revenue neutral.  The loss of cash inflows and revenues will invariably outpace any purported savings from lesser spending, thus making our deficits even larger adding all the more to our accumulated national debt.

 

Repealing all Right to work Laws — Laurens R. Hunt

Repealing all Right to work Laws

Repealing all Right to work Laws goes to the heart of much of what I have been discussing about the need for a higher minimum wage.  Right to Work Laws is about the right to fire and the right to work for lower wages. Right to work provisions cost jobs because they lead to the outsourcing of jobs. When companies can run roughshod over its workers the decreased wages lead to diminished purchasing power causing a loss of jobs because of lower demand for goods and services. Right to work leads to sector and industry instability resulting in divestments. This propels mistrust stifling investment because of the ravaged consumer confidence and hence lesser consumer spending hampering job growth. This lack of confidence and investment lead to further difficulties in capital budgeting and financing also driving up borrowing costs and interest rates. Having civil service job protection, collective bargaining, organized labor, and union representation builds trust and in turn grows communities.

 

Small and large businesses alike function better in the presence of unions because there is heightened accountability and transparency making business planning more straight forward and predictable. Right to work laws have shut down many factories and manufacturing plants that have been in existence as far back as the Great Depression of the 1930’s and WWII. This destroys entire communities and countless livelihoods also causing higher property taxes because of less ratable. Higher property taxes are the single biggest expenses in many households hampering consumer spending power. We need a higher minimum wage that is also indexed for inflation, which allows purchasing power to grow with the expansion of the economy. More vocational training and education will help our manufacturing sector for skilled and unskilled labor alike. Our job market will only improve when union labor is strong. There needs to be a moratorium of these job killing measures. The more solvent the consumer is the more solvent are our job growth and economic activity.

 

This goes to my work arrangement about having civil service protection.  Those of us as government workers know that union contracts are hardly lucrative at all.  Therefore our purchasing power is barely sustaining rather than growing because we are now lucky if we can get pay raisers that cover the cost of inflation.  Previous contracts used to outpace the cost of living where the pay increase was higher than inflation.  When union membership was higher there was more money flowing through the economy because much more of the workforce knew what to expect.  The contentions about Right to Work defy all this.

 

Increasingly in the public and government sector workers can be fired without prior warning.  This precludes decision making and planning.  Any individual spending that does occur happens in a reactionary fashion, and does almost nothing to help grow the economy.  Those who continue to work in this sector as I do are working to educate the voting public that union labor is not a drag on the local economy and a burden to taxpayers.  I see a lot of this evidenced by the chronic homelessness in this county.

 

If more of these very same residents were put to work, crime would be down along with drug use, and there would be more marketable skills, making the labor force more competitive.  Many of the computer and job training centers have shut down due to virtually zero enrollments.  Another cost comes from unused space and capital.  More work must be done to convince the surrounding community that this is not a cost savings but a waste of finite resources.  All Right to Work Laws do is foment instability and distrust subverting and masking systemic community problems due to many residents being left untrained and especially in the present labor market chronically unemployed.  Wal-Mart gets a lot of bad press and protest about abuse of its workers and also flagrant discrimination, but this is also a small symptom of a much larger problem.

 

All of the emphasis is on satisfying the bottom line, but how do we obtain the bottom line?  For one Right to Work provisions do nothing to answer and address this.  In a related piece I have discusses why thorough job training boosts the profitability of companies through improved performance.  Job training must never be ignored for countless reasons. While improved worker morale may just sound like a state of mind it translates into a better corporate atmosphere for multiple reasons.  There is less turnover, less presenteeism (physically being at work, but in too poorer health to do any of the work), less calling in sick, fewer transactional errors and hence fewer returned goods, faster and more concise problem solving plus other areas of improvement.  The Right to Laws creates a work environment whereby the bottom line is just about shareholder wealth and gain.

 

While an optimal performance is priority number one the emphasis is less about efficiency and more directed at shareholder wealth, e.g. a higher stock prices and higher earnings per share.  Quality control and customer satisfaction is not discussed while all of the emphasis and capital budgeting is on cutting medical benefits, hours, overtime, and any of other form of compensation to lend the appearance of sustained profits.  As I have indicated the horror stories described about Wal-Mart apply to much of the rest of the retail industry as well.

 

Much of the merchandise is manufactured at nearly no cost in 3rd world factories while the mark up on the sale price is 10 times or more.  Product returns are common place.  I see this with many of the local merchant in Jersey City, NJ where I live.  In many of the cafeterias where I frequently get breakfast and lunch sometimes dinner I see this all of the time.  Turnover is constant.  Problem solving is about crisis management rather than about prior job training and emergency preparedness.  This is similarly true about the clerical support staff in many of the doctor’s offices I utilize. Many workers last for just weeks no more than months at a time.  This causes quality to suffer.

 

Therefore output is not being maximized.  The units of output are stained by the lack of emergency preparedness and problem solving skills.  Many items are returned that are already broken, don’t work, and in the case of perishables being thrown away.  What this is illustrating is that both quantity and quality are suffering.  All of this helps Wall Street?  If quality control and output was truly being maximized Wall Street would in fact be much more profitable.

 

Higher rates of output coupled with better quality increase profit margins thus boosting stock prices and earnings per share.  We are painfully learning that stagnant and falling wages, absence of medical benefits, and loss of pension payouts are placing companies in a permanent financial stranglehold.  Companies thrive and grow in turn helping Wall St. with competitively livable wages, reliable medical benefits, secure pensions, and lastly but of course not least comprehensive and thorough job training.

How the minimum creates jobs — Laurens R. Hunt

How the minimum creates jobs.

A minimum is adjusted and set by the US Legislative Branch.  This means that it has to receive majorities both in the US Senate and House of Representatives.  The legislation about changing the assigned wage is known as HR for House Resolution and S for Senate Resolution.  Wages are measured by a rate per hour.   In the labor market is known as the price of labor.  This is because this is the minimum hourly compensation an individual firm or entire company can pay.  Final adoption requires the US Legislature (legislative branch), and being signed off by the sitting President (Executive Branch).  Since the assigned rate is initiated by the US Legislature and signed into federal law by the current president, it is a minimum baseline standard that all 50 of the United States must adopt.

What minimum baseline means is that all states must pay at the federally adopted wage rate and never any lower.  Conversely some states have made their minimum wages rates higher than that of federal law.  Currently it is at $7.25, but some states have agreed to bring theirs to over $9 per hour.

The following hyperlink is a state by state schematic of the United States map as follows:

http://money.cnn.com/interactive/pf/state-minimum-wage/

There are many states with the minimum allowable rate of $7.25 per hour, and the highest current state rate is $9.19 in Washington (State).  Because wages are measured as a rate and also intervals they are considered microeconomic.  Wages and prices are measured on an individual basis.  Therefore any future increase in the minimum wage will impact each industry and each firm within that industry differently.  This is most closely reflected on a firm’s balance sheet as accounts payable, or in some cases the account ledger maybe itemized as wages payable.   I am providing below another hyperlink about sample balance sheets as follows:

http://www.google.com/search?q=balance+sheet&hl=en&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=tEtkUfuvJs-64AOElYGYDQ&ved=0CD4QsAQ&biw=1280&bih=561

 

The ledger known as accounts payable or wages payable is less than 10 % of the budget.  If a firm’s budget is $10,000,000 then paid wages would be $1,000,000 or even less than that.

$                         1,000,000.00

0.1

 $  0,000,000.00

 

 

Let’s use the current wage rate of $7.25, and a proposal of $9 an hour as recommended by President Barack Obama.  This translates to:

$1.75

0.241379

 

$7.25

 

0.241379 is just below .25 hence just under 25%.

 

This results in an increase in paid wages of

0.24137931

0.024138

 

.1

 

 

This is less than 2 ½ % more spent in paid wages.

If the minimum wage was to fully double then $1,000,000 spent on paid wages would be raised to $2,000,000.  Still this would be only $1,000,000 out of a $10,000,000 budget and hence would be 10%.

This additional $1,000,000 spent on paid wages can more than be paid for with improved productivity (units of output), reduced absenteeism, lower turnover of the workforce, and fewer customer complaints on the part of the external clientele.

One way to know this is that more of the budget is spent on inventory purchases than paid wages.  If sales improved by a full $1,000,000 this would already cancel out any cost increased cost from the higher payroll expenditures.  This is barring better attendance, less turnover, and fewer administrative and/or transactional errors.  With even a full doubling of paid wages the company can easily add to its profits by lessening these other costs.  Less worker turnover, tardiness and missed days, and fewer employee errors can easily yield another $1,000,000 in revenue.

Another factor to consider is less time spent on these personnel matters.  Less time will be spent in the byte room about sour morale and frequent client complaints.  Time spent offline would be more allocated to job training.  Proper job training is partially about job enlargement where there is benchmarking.   Bench marking measures prior output targets and results against future goals.  Performance reviews address output levels and just how satisfactorily or unsatisfactorily the expectations had been met.

There are qualitative as well as mathematical measurements weighed about the workers performance.  Could the performance be suffering because of an unprofessional tone?  Was incorrect information provided about the product or service?  Customer loyalty cannot in of itself fully indicate why sales and / or transactional benchmarks are improving or deteriorating.   This is why job enlargement must be complimented with job enhancement and job rotation.

Job rotation simply means having exposure and involvement in other departments and work units.  Job enhancement has to do with the variety of tasks, and it is not exclusively about enlarging them.  These other job training components are necessary for a multitude of reasons.  Job enhancement allows for different ways of meeting output targets.  This can also allow for discerning what issues are problematic with respect to organization and application of the task.  This is where making the necessary corrections and changes can make meeting the agreed to output targets not only tenable but also a reality.  Still job rotation must also be part of the training equation.

Rotating from one department and work unit to another is critical for two major reasons.  One is communication as well as experience.   Are certain departments having distinguishably more difficulty with proper management than others?  Are the personnel matters of tardiness, absenteeism, lack of teamwork, and high error rates especially glaring in certain areas of the firm as compared to every other section?  Better communication also begets more transparency.  More involvement in other facets of the business allow a worker to help identify what personnel issues are potentially and even likely weighing down on the company’s output and production.  What this demonstrates is that the cost of labor only emanates from the wage in very limited measure.

Productivity and proper management don’t lessen the payroll expenditures.  They do however make a place of business profitable or unprofitable based on their practices.  Cutting costs does not in turn saved cost unless revenues are maximized.  Output often times will double with some of the training issues being more closely examined.  Lower turnover saves on costs because more sales will be completed, and there is more consumer loyalty.  There will be fewer instances of workers calling in sick.  Therefore more units can be produced with more of an established team.  The learning lesson is that higher wages and payroll expenditures don’t drive up the cost of labor.  The loss of productivity and lack of skills training are what make the wages unaffordable.

Why there must always be a federal minimum wage law and why turning it over to the states is unnecessarily costly

An argument that some opponents of a federal minimum wage will make is that it should be left up to the states.  States can better set their own wage rates.  The cost of living varies greatly from one state to the next, and states from one region have a much different cost of living than other regions do.  This argument is not that concrete.

The basis for this claim is that it arises from differences in rent and also home prices.  If it costs twice as much to rent or home values are twice the price for a home owner’s mortgage, then the cost of living is purportedly twice as much.  In fact it is not that simple at all.  Rentals and mortgages are determined based on demand; that is true.  Cheaper rates either for a home owner or renter only indicate a lower cost of living in limited measure.  Market demand maybe a lot lower in blighted neighborhoods, but there are often other reasons for this.

Rural areas cost less in terms of these monthly payments than in major cities.  Therefore it is much cheaper to live in these places.  In fact this is not necessarily the case.  The higher cost of food, utilities, and travel often cancel out these savings or at the very least will great lessen them.  For instance the average apartment rent is $1,000/ month in one state and only $500/month in an adjacent state or a different region.

This means that $500 a month only costs half as much.  This is false.  Rents can be lower in poor neighborhoods and in rural areas.

Here is why $500 a moth is not half the price as $1,000.  Longer commutes often add $100 or more to the cost of gas consumption.   Wider extremes in temperatures put upward pressure on the cost of utilities both with respect to heating and air conditioning.  Temperature extremes are categorized in 2 ways.  One is how much the rises during the day and then drops back off at night.  This is known as the diurnal range because of the contrast between day and night.

The other measurement has to do with the overall monthly mean.  For some communities well inland the monthly means changes by more than 50 degrees (sometimes 60 to 80 degrees) from the summer to winter and vice-versa.  This places extensive pressure on the use of utilities during the summer and winter alike regarding air conditioning and heating respectively.  As with gas consumption the continually elevated need for heating oil and ventilation can add easily $100 to $200 a month and in some cases more than that.  Food prices are another factor.

This can be true for fruits, vegetables, meat, poultry, dairy, cattle, livestock, and other food related produce.  Due to the extensive variability of both altitude and latitude, different sources of food require different climate conditions for proper growth.  This is also true about livestock, cattle, and farm animals.  Some function best in the hot dessert while others also thrive in the heat but also require more moisture as is the case in tropical and humid subtropical climates.   Other species need very cold weather while others still need very high terrain, sometimes an altitude of 10,000 ft. or more.

All of these topographical, meteorological, and biological factors affect transportability.  This means that certain food related products cannot be produced in that town or city.  They need to be imported or transported from elsewhere.  Changes in elevation are one consideration.  Long distances are no doubt another.  It would seem that traveling long distances on flat open road is easier than ascending or descending in a mountainous valley.  The flat open road is known for major and common weather hazards that clearly refute this notion.  Tornadoes, pummeling thunderstorms, hailstorms, and dust storms can occur on uneven terrain, but they are very much common place in flatlands.  The culminations of these factors affect one more layer, insurance rates.

The price of insurance is determined by volatility and variability.  This is true for car payments, mortgages, and rentals.  Some vehicles may cost a lot more to ensure than others not just because of size but also how prone they are to collisions and what they are used for.   Homes and dwellings frequently pounded by violent weather cost thousands a year more to insure hence costing a few hundred a month more to insure.

The price contrasts I used were between $500 and $1,000 a month.   In more expensive markets the difference maybe $1,000 versus $2,000 a month.  The wider the separation in price from one locale to another the greater are the likelihood that the lower rate will yield some savings.  The $1,000 a month location may not lead to $1,000more a month in expenditure outflows regarding these other variable expenses.  Still $1,000 per month is very unlikely to cost $1,000 less than $2,000 given the broad depth of these other budgetary outlays.  This is why the cost of living is a relative and not a nominal measure.

Monthly rents and mortgage payments are nominal figures.  They are agreed to prices by the rental office or bank as in the case of a mortgage.  These other variable expenses and cash outflows are variable and not fixed by a signed contract.  This is why it is unrealistic to conclude that much lower rents or mortgages payment translate into proportionate savings.  These monthly contracted rates are usually much lower because the living standards are also a lot less desirable.  Services are often much further from the place of residence and hence more costly to provide to the community.  Everything discussed here has to do with outflows as confronted by the renter and mortgage holder.  There are also administrative reasons why letting each state set its own minimum wage rate is problematic.

Many of the personal budget items discussed above pertain to small business and corporate offices as well.  Letting all of the 50 states set its own wage rate would lead to complete mayhem for the employer and employee alike.  This will lead to confusion about applicable labor laws and ultimately be a headache for the worker.   This is because places of businesses will not able to adjust to the lack of concrete regulations.

One state has a minimum wage that is twice that of a neighboring state, or perhaps the adjacent state has no set minimum wage whatsoever.  This is confusing for employers and employees alike.  Fliers can be posted all over the office.  Labor laws can be explained in the personnel handbook as well as the Department of Labor Manual.  With this much printed material transparency is still lacking.  It leads to repeated questions about how this is possible.  This is not just a hardship for the worker because hiring managers are also left wondering why is there so much contrast in labor laws within possibly as little as a few miles when considering interstate borders.

This level and type of confusion also emanates more litigation.  The complaints from both management and support staff become consternation as to why are some businesses lucratively rewarded for a lack of wage compensation while savagely punished over another state line.  The best public relations campaigns about these contrasts will not eliminate litigation.  All this can possibly do is lead to management/ worker strife where excessive expenditure will be lent to answering questions about these practices.  Morale will always be strained and productivity will in turn suffer.  All of this serves to show that the cost of labor is most correctly measured by productivity.  Here is one more distinction that must be made.

Productivity and output is not necessarily the same thing.  Like the hourly wage and price per unit, the rate of output and cumulative units produced are concrete and quantitative numbers.  Therefore they are not qualitative pinnacles.  The most number of units produced can also be the most profitable if they are also the most efficient.   Customer loyalty may not answer everything about the level of efficiency.  Still this dependability will do a lot to help a business discern how well are the units produced and not merely how many of them are there.  Often times the fixation on quantity leads to many items being returned.

When items are returned the cost is not just a lost sale.  This disrupts future production.  For example if the item originally cost $25 and it is returned that now becomes $50 because another sale of $25 is lost.  High rates of return will drive these loses into the hundreds and thousands of dollars very quickly.  This is why maximum productivity and quality of output will best determine the cost of labor rather than wage rate.  This issue is better simply viewed as quality control.  Quality control will be the most beneficial and meaningful through well- developed product knowledge and job training.   As discussed earlier there are several sub-parts to proper job training.

This needs to include not just enlargement of the tasks but also enhancement and rotation.  Having interdepartmental exposure facilitates transparency both with respect to troubleshooting and updates about any known changes.  Job enhancement allows for the worker to respond to sudden changes in production, irate clients, and customer complaints.  This will make it more possible for those customers who are dissatisfied to continue conducting future business because the place of business will be accepting greater responsibility for the errors committed and allay ensuing confusion.  Hence the worker will be much better equipped to communicate with the external clientele and garner future consumer trust.  Taking these steps will foment better working relationships with consumers rather than the funds being directed at resolving elongated and unresolved worker grievances.  This can best be illustrated by the topography of our landscape in 2 key ways.

It is almost immediately apparent what the bad area of city looks like, e.g. empty buildings, closed store fronts even during rush hour, rancid odors from the emissions, traffic bottlenecks, and lastly but of course not least neighborhood violence.  Then there is the rural poverty and many desolate towns that are dozens sometimes hundreds of miles from the nearest metropolis.   The state of South Carolina speaks largely to this very point.  Closer to the Atlantic Coast are cities such as Myrtle Beach, Florence, Charleston, and also Hilton Head Island.  Inland communities include the state capital Columbia, Greenville-Spartenburg, and Aiken.   This are of the state has many non-union jobs with low skilled workers.  There is little if any of a tax base to support public schools and other municipal structures including public libraries and post offices.  Here there have been many shut down factories and textile mills.  The following article outlines some of this

http://www.postandcourier.com/article/20130210/PC16/130219990

SC Governor Nikki Haley touts how SC is leading in private business growth in her state.  It is no wonder why she would never talk about this side of it.   While we know that the federal minimum wage is $7.25 Governor Haley does not believe in any minimum wage.  There is little or no collective bargaining, and at least many hourly workers receive no medical benefits.  This is also often no OSHA protection.  The high cost of crime and abject poverty places constant strain on municipal budgets.  This environment is no different than the poverty stricken cities often spoken about in other countries.  This is true in the Appalachian Mountains as well.

The Appalachian Mountains have been known about the severe and chronic poverty for decades.  In other mountainous area throughout the western United States the only difference is geography and altitude to some extent.  There are many shacks with no commerce for dozens of miles.  Much of the land is baron.  This is especially prevalent in the Rockies where the weather is very extreme throughout the entire year and also where transportability of resources is very limited in this region.  Government facilities including post offices, libraries, hospitals, and community centers lend some stability and reliability in employment.  Then higher terrain towns would become much more inhabitable.  During this past year’s presidential campaign former one-term governor of MA Mitt Romney was the Republican frontrunner who had the hope of defeating Barack Obama for reelection.

Mr. Romney’s private business experience in MA came from a venture capital firm known as Bain Capital.  Mr. Romney talked about how he created over 100,000 jobs, and Barack Obama knows nothing about the private sector because of being a Community Organizer.  This was virtually all we heard from Candidate Romney with nothing concrete to facilitate this argument. The farcical success story didn’t just come into question during last year’s national campaign.  When the now late Senator Ted Kennedy ran for one of his reelection cycles in 1994 Mitt Romney had his first known foray at trying to enter politics.  1994 was among one of the worst years for the Democratic Party.  Ted Kennedy had a great chance of losing his US Senate seat, and Mitt Romney would have his victory.

All of this was true until Mr. Kennedy successfully asked about Bain Capital/ Venture Capital what job creation?  It turns out there were net job losses from Bain Capital, not gains.  This was especially bared out because it was not just the Democrats who called Mitt Romney’s bluff.  Other Republican challengers have included former US House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former PA US Senator Rick Santorum.  Both of these Republicans have noted that venture capital is not about job creation.  In fact even Rush Limbaugh has made mention of this.  This refutes Mitt Romney’s premise much less any concrete numbers behind his purported job creation.  It also helps to explain another big employment miracle myth which is that of Governor Rick Perry’s TX.

Everyone wants to run to TX to work and do business there.  Business taxes are among the lowest and government is very much out of the way.  The oil and energy boom are second to none.  Really?  This is how TX actually focuses on job creation.  TX is always stealing from other states.  The link to this article below compares the state economies of TX to CA.  TX produces little for itself and borrows off other states besides CA as well.  This article reveals just why Texas is far behind in California regarding development and innovation.  It also exposes why the economy in TX is not much better than in CA.

http://www.thomhartmann.com/forum/2013/02/texas-job-myths

This next link below also explains why the TX employment miracle is temporary.  The lack of investment in both infrastructure and education along with severe income disparity and lack of attention to climate change will turn this concept right on its head.

http://www.texasobserver.org/erica-grieder-praises-the-texas-miracle-in-big-hot-cheap-and-right/

For obvious reasons our former President George W. Bush and preceding governor to Rick Perry is not mentioned.  What Rick Perry is doing is an extension and acceleration of his predecessor’s policies.  It is a matter of time before there will be even more job loses under Rick Perry than George W. Bush.  The labor market in TX is hardly ideal for many workers.  Many earn minimum wage or just barely above it with many workers having no medical benefits at all as in SC.

 

URGENT ALERT: Military Sexual Assault Legislation Gaining Momentum

July 22, 2013

 

URGENT ALERT: Military Sexual Assault Legislation Gaining Momentum! Ask Your Senators to Add Their Support So Bill Passes on Senate Floor!  

 

For the first time in decades, we have a real chance to reform the military justice system and address the epidemic of sexual assault! Senator Gillibrand’s legislation, ensuring that professional military prosecutors are responsible for investigating and prosecuting sexual assault cases, is gaining momentum!

 

Here is what you need to know: every 21 minutes, a service member is assaulted. In 2012 alone, there were 26,000 cases of unwanted sexual contact. Only 9.8% of victims ever report these devastating crimes, citing fear of retaliation, and the majority of those who do report experience social, administrative or professional retaliation within their unit. For decades, military leaders have promised to try harder to end this scourge of violence but sexual assault in the military remains an epidemic.

 

Senator Gillibrand’s (D-NY) Military Justice Improvement Act (S. 967) has 36 bipartisan co-sponsors and 2 more Republican Senators, Senator Cruz (R-TX) and Senator Paul (R-KY), pledged their support to her bill! This legislation would reform the military justice system by authorizing professional military prosecutors to make decisions about which cases should proceed to trial. Under the current system, commanding officers, not trained legal experts, have the sole authority to decide whether a case is brought to trial. Senator Gillibrand plans to offer her bill as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that could be considered by the Senate as early as this month! We need every single Senator, especially those who have not yet signed onto the bill, to co-sponsor this measure and support it as an amendment on the Senate floor.  The vote could occur in the next two weeks before Congress goes home for their August recess.

 

Please take urgent action now to ensure that Senator Gillibrand’s bill passes the Senate when it is considered in the coming weeks!

ACTION ITEM 1): CONTACT YOUR SENATORS ON THE TARGET LIST BELOW AND URGE THEM TO CO-SPONSOR THE MILITARY JUSTICE IMPROVEMENT ACT!

Senate Target List (Senators not yet on the bill or openly in support):

Arkansas: BOOZMAN, John (R-AR) SH-320 202-224-4843

Colorado: BENNET, Michael F. (D-CO) SR-458 202-224-5852

Connecticut: MURPHY, Christopher (D-CT) SH-303 202-224-4041

Georgia: ISAKSON, Johnny (R-GA) SR-131 202-224-3643

Idaho: CRAPO, Mike (R-ID) SD-239 202-224-6142

Idaho: RISCH, James E. (R-ID) SR-483 202-224-2752

Illinois: KIRK, Mark (R-IL) SH-524 202-224-2854

Illinois: DURBIN, Richard J. (D-IL) SH-711 202-224-2152

Indiana: COATS, Daniel (R-IN) SR-493 202-224-5623

Kentucky: McCONNELL, Mitch (R-KY) SR-317 202-224-2541

Louisiana: LANDRIEU, Mary L. (D-LA) SH-703 202-224-5824

Montana: BAUCUS, Max (D-MT) SH-511 202-224-2651

Montana: TESTER, Jon (D-MT) SH-706 202-224-2644

Nevada: REID, Harry (D-NV) SH-522 202-224-3542

North Carolina: BURR, Richard (R-NC) SR-217 202-224-3154

Ohio: BROWN, Sherrod (D-OH) SH-713 202-224-2315

Oklahoma: COBURN, Tom (R-OK) SR-172 202-224-5754

Pennsylvania: TOOMEY, Patrick J. (R-PA) SR-248 202-224-4254

Rhode Island: WHITEHOUSE, Sheldon (D-RI) SH-530 202-224-2921

Texas: CORNYN, John (R-TX) SH-517 202-224-2934

Virginia: WARNER, Mark R. (D-VA) SR-475 202-224-2023

Wyoming: ENZI, Michael B. (R-WY) SR-379A 202-224-3424

 

When you call, be sure to ask to speak to the staff person who handles military/defense legislation and say:

·       I am a constituent from [city and state] and my name is _________.

  • I urge Senator [insert name] to co-sponsor S. 967, The Military Justice Improvement Act, which will hold perpetrators of sexual assault accountable for their actions and provide victims of military sexual assault access to safety and justice.
  • Thank the staffer for their time.

Don’t forget to call back and contact your other Senator if they have not yet signed on!

Resources for your phone call:

http://4vawa.org/military-sexual-assault

Gillibrand website info

http://servicewomen.org

http://www.protectourdefenders.com

Below are the Senators who have already co-sponsored the bill.  If you have a moment, call and thank them:

Co-sponsors of S. 967:

BALDWIN, Tammy (D-WI) SH-717 202-224-5653

BEGICH, Mark (D-AK) SR-111 202-224-3004

BLUMENTHAL, Richard (D-CT) SH-724 202-224-2823

BOXER, Barbara (D-CA) SH-112 202-224-3553

CANTWELL, Maria (D-WA) SH-311 202-224-3441

CARDIN, Benjamin (D-MD) SH-509 202-224-4524

CARPER, Thomas R. (D-DE) SH-513 202-224-2441

CASEY, Jr., Robert . (D-PA) SR-393 202-224-6324

COLLINS, Susan  (R-ME) SD-413 202-224-2523

COONS, Christopher A. (D-DE) SR-127A 202-224-5042

FEINSTEIN, Dianne (D-CA) SH-331 202-224-3841

FRANKEN, Al (D-MN) SH-309 202-224-5641

GILLIBRAND, Kirsten E. (D-NY) SR-478 202-224-4451

GRASSLEY, Chuck (R-IA) SH-135 202-224-3744

HARKIN, Tom (D-IA) SH-731 202-224-3254

HEINRICH, Martin (D-NM) SH-702 202-224-5521

HEITKAMP, Heidi (D-ND) SH-502 202-224-2043

HIRONO, Mazie K. (D-HI) SH-330 202-224-6361

JOHANNS, Mike (R-NE) SR-404 202-224-4224

JOHNSON, Tim (D-SD) SH-136 202-224-5842

LEAHY, Patrick J. (D-VT) SR-437 202-224-4242

MARKEY, EDWARD (D – MA) SR-218 202-224-2742

MENENDEZ, Robert (D-NJ) SH-528 202-224-4744

MERKLEY, Jeff (D-OR) SH-313 202-224-3753

MIKULSKI, Barbara A. (D-MD) SH-503 202-224-4654

MURKOWSKI, Lisa (R-AK) SH-709 202-224-6665

PRYOR, Mark L. (D-AR) SD-255 202-224-2353

ROCKEFELLER, John. (D-WV) SH-531 202-224-6472

SANDERS, Bernard (I-VT) SD-332 202-224-5141

SCHATZ, Brian (D-HI) SH-722 202-224-3934

SCHUMER, Charles E. (D-NY) SH-322 202-224-6542

SHAHEEN, Jeanne (D-NH) SH-520 202-224-2841

UDALL, Tom (D-NM) SH-110 202-224-6621

VITTER, David (R-LA) SH-516 202-224-4623

WARREN, Elizabeth (D-MA) SH-317 202-224-4543

WYDEN, Ron (D-OR) SD-221 202-224-5244

 

Senators who have pledged their support for the bill:

CRUZ, Ted (R-TX) SD-185 202-224-5922

PAUL, Rand (R-KY) SR-124 202-224-4343

 

Voted for Gillibrand in Armed Services Committee (3)

 

DONNELLY, Joe (D-IN) SH-720 202-224-4814

HAGAN, Kay R. (D-NC) SD-521 202-224-6342

UDALL, Mark (D-CO) SH-730 202-224-5941

ACTION ITEM 2): USE SOCIAL MEDIA TO CONTACT YOUR SENATORS!

Find your Senators’ Twitter handles here and use our sample tweets below:

Lend your voice to victims of military sexual assault & join @SenGillibrand’s @Thunderclapit in support of #MJIA: http://bit.ly/1dCJudg 

[insert Twitter handle] Protect those who protect our country! Support the Military Justice Improvement Act. #militarysexualassault #EndMilitaryRape #MJIA

[insert Twitter handle] Victims of sexual assault in the military deserve safety & justice. Support S. 967 #militarysexualassault #MJIA #NotInvisible

Thanks to @SenatorVitter @tedcruz @RandPaulSenate for supporting @SenGillibrand bill to combat military sexual assault! #MJIA

 

Sample Facebook post:

 

Please contact your Senators today and urge them to support Senator Gillibrand’s Military Justice Improvement Act that would reform the military justice system to finally protect victims of sexual assault! By authorizing trained, professional military prosecutors, not commanding officers, to make decisions about sexual assault cases, victims will finally see the justice they deserve. This legislation could come to a vote on the Senate floor as early as next week- and we need every Senator’s support. Service men and women have fought hard to defend our country- now we have a chance to stand up for them. #MJIA

 

###
For more information, fact sheets, press coverage, support letters and Updates: www.4vawa.org.

Follow us on Twitter at @NTFVAWA and “like” our Facebook page.


If you aren’t on one of the VAWA email lists or want to add members of your staff or state/community leaders to our grassroots alerts e-mailing list, send names and contact information including email to
ntfvawaalerts@icasa.org. For more info, go to www.4vawa.org.

“When I said I DO, I didn’t mean LAUNDRY!” — Gracelee Lawrence

 

 

I was recently house sitting and as I wandered through the house searching for one of the cats, I looked up to find a sign hanging from the laundry room wall. “When I said I DO, I didn’t mean LAUNDRY!” it said, in a bold black typeface. While I feel certain that it was supposed to carry a certain amount of humor, I stopped in my tracks, appalled at its connotations of inequality and traditional gender roles. It also happened to fit in perfectly with a question that I’ve been pondering recently. What does marriage mean in 2013?

was recently house sitting and as I wandered through the house searching for one of the cats, I looked up to find a sign hanging from the laundry room wall. “When I said I DO, I didn’t mean LAUNDRY!” it said, in a bold black typeface. While I feel certain that it was supposed to carry a certain amount of humor, I stopped in my tracks, appalled at its connotations of inequality and traditional gender roles. It also happened to fit in perfectly with a question that I’ve been pondering recently. What does marriage mean in 2013?

Fortunately, I’m not the only one who has been wondering. In April, the New York Times printed two articles about marriage that caught my attention. The first,  “When Love Is Not The Wedding’s Only Theme” focuses in on the new trend of theme weddings, and excessive weddings in general. The second, “In the Season of Marriage, a Question. Why Bother?” really hit the nail on the head for me. While it is less remarkable than ever to have a child out of wedlock, demographers still project that at least 80 percent of Americans will marry at some point in their lives. Why will they marry and will they stay that way? Well, that’s another question altogether.

Marriage, what was once the first step into adulthood, now has yet another role as the last step that a successful couple takes as a capstone of their personal life. Even how weddings are paid for shows a huge shift. What was once planned and paid for by the parents is more and more often being completely funded by the couple themselves. In 2012, 36 percent of couples footed their own bill while another 26 percent at least contributed to the cost. This in itself shows that the central meaning is shifting away from a union of families and instead is completely focused on the couple. While the meaning and frequency of marriage may have changed, and continues to do so, it is also clear that is still carries an important role in American society. But at the same time, it is also possible to have a perfectly respectable life without marrying. Have we found the best of both worlds?

Maybe. Cohabiting before marriage (or for the long term) has increased more than 1,500 percent in the past half century, now more than 7.5 million Americans are in a cohabitation arrangement. From the sexual revolution to birth control to economics, young people have more reasons than ever to live together. But unfortunately, it seems to “just happen” more than it is planned. And that becomes problematic, as those folks are more likely to divorce than couples that did not cohabit. Especially since two thirds believed that moving in together before marriage is a good way to avoid divorce. But is it really?

Now more than ever, alternative relationship styles are embraced. From being in an “open relationship” to polyamory, I know more and more folks who choose to set up their love lives in ways that wouldn’t have been accepted in the not-so-distant past. My only concern is that, for some people, it is a trend rather than a true calling. For others, I readily see how it fits in with their personalities. Just as some people really don’t see marriage as the right fit for them.

While not many of my close friends are married, I’ve had an inside view of a few weddings that do certainly fit the “cherry on top” purview. They can be lavish, excessive, and completely bride (maybe groom too, if they’re lucky) centric, these events don’t even resemble the quaint weddings of olde. Looking back at family wedding pictures from the 1960s and 70s, I see a completely different landscape. It was the time of the “mints and nuts” table rather than banquet consisting of a carving station and mashed potato bar, two bridesmaids rather than twelve. The way that some people choose to celebrate now is very different from that of the past. But does it make the difference in their relationship and marriage? Does it create a relationship that is sustainable and equal? That is what it is supposed to be about in the end.

Links to the articles:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/28/opinion/sunday/why-do-people-still-bother-to-marry.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/21/fashion/weddings/theme-weddings-grow-more-popular-field-notes.html?pagewanted=all

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/15/opinion/sunday/the-downside-of-cohabiting-before-marriage.html

5 Easy Ways to Celebrate Momentous Occasions — Sasha Wilson

5 Easy Ways to Celebrate Momentous Occasions

Life is full of milestones and people often look for new ways in which they can celebrate them. These days there are a lot of choices out there for people who want to find a unique way of celebrating something. Graduation, religious sacraments, birthdays and other occasions are all going to warrant a celebration of some sort. Many people may want to take a look at a few different ideas that can be used for this. These ideas are not set in stone, however. If there is something else that you would like to try then you can try to incorporate it into your overall plan. A celebration is supposed to be a personal event with friends and family. It is therefore important to come up with something that you know your loved ones are going to enjoy.

A Dinner Party

For events like graduation from high school or college a dinner party can be a great affair. Why not try to come up with a unique recipe, or take a look online for different dishes from around the world? A diverse menu is going to be a good choice to make if you are trying to create a memorable event. Depending on the people that you invite to the event, you may need to take a look at their dietary issues. If someone is allergic to something or is a vegetarian then you will have to take these points into consideration.

 

A Garden Party

Garden parties are great for when the weather is good. Some people may decide to get a catering company to do the food, or they will make it themselves. If you want then you can do a barbecue as well. There are plenty of places where you can get marquees and outdoor tents. If the party is going to be going on into the evening, then see if you can get a DJ for the event. This will certainly help to mark it out.

 

Sushi Night

Try something different and see what a sushi night can do. A lot of people enjoy sushi and if you want you can theme the evening. Decorate your living room Japanese-style by placing a few Japanese-style decorations around the room. Add a trickling fountain. Making sushi can be a little difficult so if you want then you are going to have to practice. Overall, however, you will be able to get the hang of it. If you do not have the time, however, then it is probably better to get someone else to make it.

 

Book a Hall

For large parties this is the best idea. Those whose homes may not be big enough to accommodate the event will want to see if there are any venues that they can get. This will give you the opportunity to create the party you want.

 

For Children

A children’s party is going to have to have all the things that children love. This will include things like clowns, games and a bouncing castle. Bouncing castles are great for when the weather is good, so make sure to book one early.

 

Author Bio:

Sasha Wilson is a freelance writer and blogger. As well as writing about Janie Wilson handmade birthday cards, she writes on a range of other topics. These include alternative energy, career advancement, travel and more.

Book review—Gendered: Art and Feminist Theory — Heather Saunders

Book review—Gendered: Art and Feminist Theory

 

Gendered: Art and Feminist Theory, Tal Dekel, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013, 205 p., ill., ISBN 9781443842198

 

Gendered: Art and Feminist Theory (http://www.c-s-p.org/flyers/Gendered–Art-and-Feminist-Theory1-4438-4219-2.htm) by Tal Dekel could be considered three books in one with its focus divided between 1970s American feminist art; contemporary Israeli feminist art; and Post-Partum Document (http://www.marykellyartist.com/post_partum_document.html) (1973-1979), an installation by then London-based US artist, Mary Kelly. The structure could be chocked up to the fact that the book is an outgrowth of the author’s dissertation (at Tel Aviv University, where she currently lectures).

 

Feminist art was one Wave behind the women’s liberation movement, which is to say that it only emerged during the Second Wave. As art critic Lucy Lippard observed, no self-aware woman wanted to be reduced to her body parts, and this attitude formed the basis of early feminist art in the US. Dekel feels this era needs more scholarly attention, because the 1970s feminist artists were thrown under the proverbial bus by artists and critics in the next two decades. Its detractors found the art of American feminists woefully narcissistic and unsophisticated for its exclusion of queer, racial, postcolonial, etc. politics. Dekel argues that many aspects of the first generation of American feminist art were postmodern and only became appreciated once they were articulated in literature.

 

She distills a complex and prolific period into nine categories, which would be a valuable excerpt for a course on gender and art. None of the following are meant to be mutually exclusive: performance art; representations of the female body; cunt art; video art; great goddess art; pattern and decoration art; collaborative community art; lesbian art; and protest art, which is subcategorized into resistance against pornography, racism, military/violence, and class oppression.

 

Dekel then delves into a detailed analysis of Mary Kelly’s Post-Partum Document. From verbal development to weight gain, what today’s mother would capture in an ‘app.’ Kelly painstakingly tracked in charts, alongside rhetorical questions like, “Why don’t I understand?” and reflections on Dr. Spock and psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan. Kelly also explored the fetishistic side of mothering by displaying relics from the first six years of her son’s life—ranging from diaper liners to biological specimens he collected—but not, as Dekel notes, the more obvious choices like his first pair of shoes. Dekel sees Kelly as having challenged society’s perception of child development by exposing the mother’s experience, a point of view that was ignored by the (male) Establishment. She argues that between the Establishment and anti-family radical feminism, Kelly was caught between a rock and a hard place as an artist-mother, an identity hidden by many. Dekel briefly outlines the reasons for mothering being an uncommon subject in art, but readers wishing to know more may want to check out Reconciling Art and Mothering, a collection of essays published last fall by Ashgate.

 

Mary Kelly is presented as a unique case, as an American who addressed bodily issues like breastfeeding without using—and arguably exploiting—her own body in her work. To Dekel, this captures the dichotomy between early feminist art in the US and Europe (where Kelly was based when she produced the series). However, unless I missed any examples, the only European contemporaries of Kelly she describes hardly shied away from using their bodies: Catherine Elwes bled in a white box during her period as a performance, Cosey Fanni Tutti posed pseudo-pornographically in photos, and Marina Abramović so frequently performs without clothing that when critic Jerry Saltz saw her take off her belt and shoes during Jay-Z’s musical performance at Pace Gallery (New York) on July 10, he thought, “Oh God! She’s going to get naked again.” (1)

 

Kelly’s lasting influence is seen in works like Israeli artist Sheffy Bleier’s What Remains (http://www.sheffybleier.com/whatremain.aspx) (1997), featuring parental notations and personal objects from her young son. The afterword focuses on contemporary Israeli art produced by feminists, which didn’t emerge until the 1990s and when it did, it constituted a ‘quantum leap.’ While some themes from 1970s American feminism are less apparent (goddesses, for instance), others like lesbianism and militarism continue to be relevant in the Israeli art scene.

 

This book will appeal to the average Joe and the interdisciplinary academic, given that social change and comprehensible critical theory frame artistic developments. An index, bibliography, and endnotes are included. Images are all in black and white, which is a shame: it would be preferable to see the fleshy hues of Judy Chicago’s vulvic ceramics in The Dinner Party (http://www.judychicago.com/gallery.php?name=The+Dinner+Party+Gallery) (1974-1979); the unmuted sexual rawness of Ariela Shavid’s post-mastectomy self-portrait as a swimsuit model (Calendar series, 1996); and in Betye Saar’s The Liberation of Aunt Jemima (http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/feminist_art_base/gallery/BetyeSaar.php) (1972), to read the black fist as symbolically black rather than appearing as merely high contrast.

 

(1) Source: Saltz, Jerry. “‘Picasso Baby’ Live: Jerry Saltz Goes Face-to-Face With Jay-Z.” Vulture, 11 July, 2013, http://www.vulture.com/2013/07/jerry-saltz-face-to-face-with-jay-z.html

A Real Encounter with Rape Culture — Jennifer Ha

I recently had the amazing opportunity to spend five weeks in a French immersion program at a university in Quebec City. I met amazing people, learned a lot of French, ate delicious food, and had an incredible time. It was a life-changing experience to say the least, but not always in the best way.

I go to a small liberal arts college in a calm, small city. I know most of the people in my school and adore the deep sense of community that I have there. I know that if I walked home after the bar, it would not only take me less than five minutes to get from any bar in town to residence, but that I would be safe. Being ingrained with rape culture, however, I do make sure I have a charged phone, some sort of weapon, and well-lit paths when I’m venturing alone. It was a change of scenery to go from that setting to a bustling campus with thousands living on residence, an overwhelming majority of whom were strangers. My residence was always open, featured glass walls, and had separate wings with their own elevators and staircases.

My second Wednesday in the program, I was coming home from a fun night of karaoke at a little past one in the morning. My friends, who lived in other residence buildings made it a point to stop at my residence despite their far walk so I didn’t have to walk alone. I walked across the lobby and down a hallway until I got to the elevator for my wing, tucked away in the corner of the square building. As soon as I pushed the button, I noticed footsteps pacing towards the elevator. Figuring it’s somebody who wanted to get home as well, I didn’t think much of it and began texting on my phone, telling my friends I got home safe and that I’ll see them tomorrow.

The man who started to wait for the elevator with me started talking to me. He asked me my name, to which I responded. Noticing I was an anglophone, he asked me if I was here for the immersion program and other related questions, to which I curtly answered. The elevator finally came and I got in and pressed my button. I asked the man what floor he was on and he said, “Whatever floor you’re going on.” As the door closed, my heart dropped. I froze.

The man began telling me that he could “show me a good time” and teach me French. He started inching closer. The elevator finally stopped at my floor, and I didn’t get off. I didn’t want to go to my room and have this guy knowing where I lived. Instinctively, I pushed the button back to the main floor, wanting to be where there were people. Although I was clearly uncomfortable, this man took that as a desire to go home with him and asked if I was coming with him. I told him no, that he should get off, and he grew visibly angry. When the elevator reached the lobby, he muttered foul things and stormed off. I immediately pressed the button for my seventh floor again, looked out for him when I got off, and ran immediately to my room and did not come out for the rest of the night, despite needing to use the bathroom. I was too scared to leave my room to pee in the school residence. Not being able to sleep, I laid awake the rest of the night and chewed over how messed up what I’d just experienced was.

This was the first time in my life where I experienced the consequences of patriarchal entitlement. This man made it clear that he didn’t leave in my wing, and I’m not sure if he even lives in my building- thankfully, I never saw him again after this incident. Although he had no business being there, this man chose to follow me from somewhere in the building to the elevator leading to the place I lived. This man might have been a stranger from the city because the residence had zero security features that would prevent non-residence students from wandering in. This man invaded my privacy and violated my sense of security by making advances and ignoring my obvious discomfort and somehow felt entitled to feel angry about my saying no. It infuriates me when I think about how he believed he deserved to be let into my room. I did not feel safe on campus for the rest of my stay. I was very uncomfortable every time I was in the elevator with somebody I didn’t know and was always antsy about having a similar experience.

I was very overwhelmed with what to do right after this incident happened. I was scared. What if people respond with victim-blaming comments that I would not be able to handle? Would people be indifferent because nothing physical happened? Is this a normal occurrence here? How would I be able to retell the story in French?

I decided that I did want to an authority figure about this but realized I lacked the resources to do so. We were given emergency security numbers and equipped with a red “in case of emergency” phone on every floor, but was never told of any other resources we could turn to for non-urgent but still dangerous situations like this. Then I remembered a presentation on the harassment prevention department in the beginning of the school year, and receiving a sheet. When I found the sheet and read it over, I couldn’t believe the “harassment prevention tips” that were given: consider what kind of a message you’re sending people, make sure you’re not dressed suggestively, control your drinking. All of these “tips” were slut-shaming, victim-blaming ideas presented as though the victim has a part in whether they get harassed or not. There was nothing along the lines of: if somebody does not reciprocate interest, leave them alone, make sure you’re creating a comfortable atmosphere for people, do not become aggressive to people, or anything that holds the harassers responsible and actually prevents rape.

I was pretty defeated at the lax and rape-apologist behavior that the school held, and when I expressed these concerns to my group of friends, not many of them seemed to recognize this as a problem. I did, however,I find out that several other girls had similar experiences within the residence building, from different men.

This incident was disturbing and unfortunate, but it did open my eyes to the fact that rape culture and the subsequent victim blaming and male entitlement do not merely exist but thrive, even in young minds. It was painful to have to describe my “not too bad” outfit to people and being dismissed when explaining that that it is an unimportant detail. People who heard what had happened even asked me what I was wearing, what time it was that night, and why I had talked to him if I wasn’t interested.The most upsetting comment I’d gotten was from a well meaning friend, who’d said “At least do anything serious.” That statement implied several things. A man invaded my security and tried to follow me home against my will and I am supposed to be glad he didn’t try to break in or physically assault me. What happened to me is not considered “serious” despite the fact I didn’t feel safe enough to leave my room the entire night.

Although that Wednesday night was definitely a dark part of my trip and tainted a lot of my experience overall, it helped me recognized the reality of rape culture and patriarchal entitlement and left me with a lasting impression. I plan on contacting various university officials regarding their ineffective wording and lack of resources. Truthfully, I am unsure of what more to do because of the omnipresent problem that is rape culture which goes beyond one school or one encounter.

Idle No More — Jennifer Ha

In November 2012, four women began a movement in protest of the Canadian government’s policies regarding treaty rights and environmental laws. These women, Nina Wilson, Sheelah Mclean, Sylvia McAdam and Jessica Gordon were the sparks that ignited the Idle No More movement, which has gained momentum and solidarity worldwide.

As a resident of Saskatchewan,where the movement first began, and a woman of colour, I have supported this movement from its beginning, which began with small, local protests and rallies, as well as workshops held by the founding women and like-minded people. The movement was a response to the Canadian Conservative government’s introduction of Bill C-45, which, among budget laws, included laws that stripped treaty rights and ripped away environmental protection.

The protests grew in size and began spreading across Canada and in parts of the United States. Soon, people from all over the world, including indigenous* people from various parts of the globe, expressed great support and solidarity. Flash round dances, speaker events, and bigger rallies began being organized and the grassroots movement grew into something international. What I found remarkable as I watched the movement take flight was the connectedness of oppressed people all over the globe– the photos of signs held in solidarity were sent in from Afghanistan, Japan, England, and countless other nations from people of all backgrounds. There was an immense amount of solidarity expressed for indigenous people of Canada, who have been neglected to be treated justly for far too long.

Idle No More’s relevance to feminism is apparent: it is another movement that hopes to bring justice and equality to a social minority, started by women. From Native Studies classes and Idle No More speakers, I have learned that women in indigenous communities traditionally play a prominent role. While every First Nation has different roles and expectations it has of women, it appears that culturally, indigenous communities have a sense of gender equality. Idle No More brings to light the power of women, not only in an indigenous context but in global, political contexts as well.

This women-driven movement is also one of the very few times I’ve seen indigenous people represented in a positive light. First Nations people of Canada face an overwhelming amount of racism and prejudice. Idle No More disproved stereotypes of laziness and dependency as it took off and demanded that human rights of the indigenous people are protected. Despite its small roots, the movement eventually received a good amount of deserving media attention.

One of the biggest stories regarding Idle No More was the Attawapiskat First Nation’s Chief Theresa Spence’s hunger strike. Chief Spence announced a hunger strike on December 11th, 2012 as a public demand for prime minister Stephen Harper and governor general David Johnston to meet with her about the relationship between First Nations and the Canadian government. Her hunger strike lasted six weeks and ended on January 24th, 2013.

Because it was the most talked-about issue regarding the Idle No More movement, support poured in quickly. Many people fasted for a day in solidarity, including several politicians. Amnesty International expressed support for Chief Spence, as did former prime minister Paul Martin. However, there were many appalling features to the hunger strike, as well. The government’s response was slow and inauthentic at best, as it took the prime minister five weeks since the beginning of the highly-publicized protest to agree to meet with Chief Spence. While the government’s neglectful response was upsetting, the most disheartening thing regarding the response to Chief Spence’s protest was the prominence of sexism. Although this woman was risking her health to have her political message heard, people were criticizing her relentlessly. Some said that she wore too much makeup, while others made fun of her for looking haggard. Her hair, clothing, and appearance overall was scrutinized during interviews while she was explaining the critical housing and living situations of her reserves. People had an endless fascination with her weight, trying to figure out how much she’d lost during her political starvation. Chief Spence, because she was a woman, faced the burden of having her looks critiqued, her motives questioned, and her message belittled. Similarly, the women who began the organization had their education and achievements overlooked and had the focus instead on their appearances. It was as though despite the importance of these women in the Idle No More movement, the most important thing about them were their looks. Remember when the members of Pussy Riot received more scrutiny and attention over their looks than they did over their politics and protests? Unfortunately, the sexist and superficial coverage of Idle No More reminded me that most media would rather inform the reader the physique of an influential, political woman than their thoughts.

Idle No More is a movement I’m following closely and supporting wholeheartedly. The media attention has faded, but the passion within the movement has only grown stronger. Youth from central Canada have marched for days towards parliament in protest, more flash round dances were, held, and the sense of solidarity is still strong. Considering the strong value women hold in indigenous cultures overall and the negligence and human rights violations the Canadian government has shown to indigenous communities, Idle No More is an absolutely necessary movement that will hopefully bring change and improved policy. Furthermore, it is a movement started by and held together by women of colour, where their often silenced voices are not only heard but amplified.

In the upcoming fall semester, I will be taking a seminar course on indigenous connections to the land and its relation to current politics, specifically Idle No More. I am lucky to attend a school that recognizes the significance of the relatively new and definitely underrepresented movement. During this seminar, I will be able to meet the leaders of the movement and hopefully will be able to keep Paradigm Shift posted on new insights!

 

 

*Although there are several terms that describe indigenous people, indigenous is the term that was not given through colonialist laws and the one that I, along with most of the Idle No More movement, prefer to use.

 

 

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