3/08/2016

Notations On Our World (Special Edition): An #Outsider Newsflash On the Latest on The US Political Scene (Updated)

The Trump juggernaut is continuing as we went to press. He has won a number of pivotal states and earlier tonight took the podium as one of his properties in Florida. It was interesting how he made it a point of showcasing the steaks, the Water and the Magazine in direct refutation of the pointers made by Mitt Romney in his speech. He also said he plans to resurrect Trump University after he wins his lawsuit.    He also was in his element as he repeatedly referred to Ted Cruz as "Lying Ted".  

 Here is the breakdown as reported by Real Clear Politics within the past hour--Although Idaho and Hawaii had not come in yet, it is increasingly becoming a two-person race for the Republicans (Updated:  Ted Cruz has Won the Idaho Republican Primary).   

Truly interesting times.....

Election 2016 March 8th

Notations On Our World: On the US Campaign Trail


Washington Constitutional Convention 1787


The voters in Michigan, Mississippi & Idaho  are voting today.     This is as the stop Trump movement continues to gather steam in a major way with all the others trying to be a viable second as the Republican National Convention comes closer.  

The annual World Forums sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute was done at a private resort off the Cost of Georgia.   There were tech giants there--including Apple's Tim Cook, Sean Parker of Napster and Facebook fame along with Elon Musk of Telsa and SpaceX.   Karl Rove was apparently there along with Senator Mitch McConnel and House Speaker Paul Ryan.    Based on reporting we saw, the topic of discussion was how to stop the Trump juggernaut.     This is as Lindsay Graham has apparently come around to being behind Ted Cruz as an alternative to Mr Trump during an interview of NBC's Meet the Press over the weekend.   Please click on here on the reporting done on this from
the Huffington Post.   

As this was going on, Mr. Trump released this Tweet on his status in Idaho yesterday:





As Mr. Trump continues his ascent, though, this was just reported on the Daily Beast which is available by clicking here.   It undermines what Senator Cruz noted about how certain media outlets are withholding reporting on Mr. Trump's Business Dealings.  This was as the President of Mexico likened Trump to Hiter--although Mr. Trump was dismissive of the comparison.   

Senator Graham was asked about Senator Cruz' achievements while in the Senate by the New York Times' David Brooks.    The answer was interesting--only noting reitrating how Cruz was a "true conservative".   Senator Graham was also asked about the Supreme Court Vacancy--and his response was quite curious:  I am my favorite person and I would not vote for me.     

It was in this context that our team found Professor Jonathan Turley's USA Today Column that was also published to his Website quite extra ordinary.   Here is the link on the need for a new "Revolution" as he called it.

With Mr. Bloomberg noting he has no chance, the roadmap is becoming a bit clearer.   Over 140 Delegates are at stake today as the pivotal March 15 comes about with Ohio and Florida.

What we find clear is this:  Truly interesting times...... 

3/07/2016

Notations On Our World (Special Edition): How People Strive to Make a DIfference

It is a rainy day here in our HQ in Southern California as El Nino has come out "swinging" today.   We wanted to begin the new week in #Outsiders with this very perceptive analysis from the Fortune's Geoff Colvin which we view as vital which we will work to explore further in the #Outsider Vision Property over the ensuing weeks and months:

Fortune Power Sheet By Geoff Colvin.
Daily insights on leaders and leadership
By Geoff Colvin
 FOLLOW  
  
 
Sometimes – oftentimes – leaders face no good alternatives. An excellent example of how they cope is Brian O’Keefe’s extraordinary portrait of the world cocoa trade, which I urge you to read. It’s more than just a revealing look at a business you may not have known you cared about; it’s also a case study of leaders who want to do some good in the world and learn how extremely difficult that can be.
Imagine that you’re Mars chief Grant Reid or Mondelez CEO Irene Rosenfeld or NestlĂ© CEO Paul Bulcke. Your company sold between $12.5 billion and $14.7 billion of chocolate candy last year, and most of the cocoa you need comes from West Africa. Some 2.1 million children there do the exhausting, dangerous, machete-wielding work of harvesting it. Some of them – no one knows how many, but thousands – are “forced labor,” meaning slaves. You obviously don’t want your company to be supporting any of this. But how do you stop it?
As Brian reports, the big chocolate makers long ago agreed, after some prodding, to eradicate the worst forms of child labor by mid-2005. They missed that deadline, which got pushed back to 2008, then 2010. They missed those too. Now the industry has pledged to reduce child labor in Ivory Coast and Ghana, the world’s largest cocoa producers, by 70% by 2020.
Why on earth can’t the leaders of the world’s biggest cocoa-buying firms influence their suppliers? Because cocoa isn’t produced by big agri-business companies with which the major buyers could negotiate. It’s produced by nearly two million cocoa-growing households in Ivory Coast and Ghana on tiny farms (average size: less than ten acres). Those farmers are desperately poor; the average cocoa farmer in Ghana made 84¢ a day in the 2013-14 growing season, and in Ivory Coast 50¢. Which means that while many children in the industry are forced labor, far more are not. As Brian explains, “Hundreds of thousands of children are used as free labor by their own families and often asked to take on dangerous tasks like harvesting with machetes or hauling 100-pound bags of beans.” If those farmers didn’t employ their children, their families would be even poorer.
Ivory Coast has laws forbidding forced labor and last year enacted a law requiring all children age 6 to 16 to go to school. But if you’re President Alassane Ouattara, a Ph.D. economist from the University of Pennsylvania and a former senior official at the IMF, how can you defy your constituents’ unforgiving financial reality?
The big cocoa buyers have realized they can reduce child labor only by changing the basic economics of cocoa farming, which they’re trying to do by helping the farmers be more productive. That’s a very long-term project. For now, those unfortunate children are surrounded by at least some leaders who want to do the right thing. But each can manage only part of the solution. Sona Ebai, former chief of the Alliance of Cocoa Producing Countries, observes that the problem will be solved only when all sectors of the society work on it together. “And there,” he tells Brian, “you really need leadership.”
You can share Power Sheet with friends and followers here.