Monday, April 30, 2012

Build Your Homebase


Free Photo - Intersecting Wires


Build your base during the Facebook/Google+ wars



I really like this posting by Christopher S Penn. In it he reminded me of what happened to MySpace. It's pretty much a ghost town. Lot's of marketing effort went into MySpace and the efforts paid off until Facebook took over. There are already rumblings that Facebook is past its peak. Has the downward decline begun. Is Facebook (social media) the hoolahoop, or better yet, the CB radio of the early 21st century?

As far as social media is concerned probably not. Blogging was considered passe for a while. Marketers point out that it's importance is still high. Twitter was considered to be leveling off early last year. That turned out to be premature according to the stuff I'm reading. Facebook may be suffering from speculation of failure because it is so successful. It's just not as cool as it used to be among the early adopters.

This stuff all comes and goes.  Penn reminds us to take care of our home base...our content. When the next big thing comes about, we'll still have something to share. We'll still have our network.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Autistic Children Bullied - Parents Bear Costs




Children With Autism Are Often Targeted By Bullies

The story aired on NPR is not s surprise to any parent of an autistic child. What you may not know is that the parents of autistic children are left the bear the costs.

In this article the bullying endured by Abby got so bad that her mother pulled her out of school and replaced that with home schooling. Patricia Mahoney says the home schooling went well but, she understood that Abby was not getting the social skills she needed. Mahoney says the school has helped a lot.

Home schooling Abby and then finding a school that actually helps autistic children learn is a key issue. There are extra costs associated. There was an article about the cost of autism and how mothers of autism found themselves at an economic disadvantage. 

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania found "Mothers of children with autism earned 56 percent less money - almost $15,000 per year - than moms of children who didn't have a health problem, and 35 percent less money -nearly $7,200 - than moms of a child with a health issue other than autism."

A few people are blessed with the resources to stay at home and afford the costs associated with caring for an autistic child. Most of us are not. The drag on family resources is significant and it affects a significant segment of the population with one out of just over 80 children in this country diagnosed as being on the Autism Spectrum.

There are places you can go for help. I'm on the board of one of those places. I serve on the board for the FOCUS Center for Autism. Another is Autism Speaks.

Monday, April 23, 2012

SuperPACs and dirty politics


Free Photo - Washington D.C. Famous Landmarks

Chris Weigant's article in the Huffington Post gives us a quick historical guide to dirty politics. Dirty Politics is nothing new but, it is being taken to a whole new level by the money being spent by SuperPACs. Weigant says in his article, "The only real difference in 2012 may be the sheer amount of money being spent on the outside groups. Citizens United has opened the floodgates for such money to pour into these "unofficial" campaign organizations, and they will be spending hundreds of millions of dollars before we all head off to the polls in November."

I once had a discussion with the head of NPR news about the possibility of using interns to gather news. He pointed out that in Washington everything is spun. Without professional journalists there would not be a way to discern the truth. Since then journalism has fallen on hard times. Newspapers have become shells of their former selves as they lay-off staff and in many cases just close shop. Fewer journalists are watching and, there are many who prefer that.

Planet Money had a two part series on money and politics last week. Especially revealing was the second segment where a lobbyist was pulled into a congressman's private office. He was asked about a contribution to the congressman that was late. The money was buying access.

Bill Moyers recently wrote about his efforts to get media outlets to reveal who's paying for these ads. Right now you can go to the station and look at the public file. He wants easier access to make the process more transparent. "The FCC is scheduled to vote on their proposal on April 27, and on Monday its chairman, Julius Genachowski, walked into the lion's den -- the really nice one in Las Vegas -- and addressed the NAB's annual convention. He noted that, "Using rhetoric that one writer described as 'teeth-gnashing' and 'fire-breathing,' some in the broadcast industry have elected to position themselves against technology, against transparency, and against journalism."

The negative ads are effective and have a huge influence on opinions and how we vote. Most of these ads at best promote a point a view. At worst they are deliberately inaccurate.



Thursday, April 12, 2012

Fringe Politics Takes Over

Saluting W Free PhotoIf this wasn't so scary...it would be laughable. 


Fringe politics has a firm hold on election rhetoric. And there are plenty of people who believe this stuff.  I read in the Huffington Post and Blogs from the Washington Post and CNN about  Republican Rep. Allen West. He says he believes 75-plus House Democrats are members of the Communist Party. The 75+ he refers to are a part of the Progressive Caucus. It's the same rhetoric used by Joe McCarthy in the 50's. There are plenty of citizens in Wisconsin who think Joe was right. (I grew up in Wisconsin) .  


And, according to a David Horsey in the LA Times, Allen West is not the only Republican embracing this.  "Throughout the primary campaign, GOP presidential candidates from Michele Bachmann to Rick Santorum have talked as if the 2012 election is the nation’s last chance to save the United States from becoming a clone of the Soviet Union."


The Congressional Progressive Caucus core beliefs are:


1. Fighting for economic justice and security for all;
2. Protecting and preserving our civil rights and civil liberties;
3. Promoting global peace and security; and
4. Advancing environmental protection and energy independence


You can find out more at their Website.
Congressional Progressive Caucus