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Explore more posts
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Andrew McMillen
Eric Idle interview: ahead of an Australian tour, the Monty Python co-founding writer, performer and musician reflects on comedy, genius, libido and facing life’s final curtain with a bow. Q: Do you have any strategies for lifting yourself out of a funk, when you become sad? A: You have to face life as a privilege every day. It’s not going to last. George Harrison told me all about that: you can have the most money in the world, you can be the most famous person in the world, but you’re still gonna have to die. And that is, of course, the great equaliser for all of us. We spend a lot of our time in denial. I worked out you only have 30,000 sunsets if you live to be over 80. That’s a good thing to remember, I think. Because we tend to forget that we’re on a planet, and we’re going round, and we’re buzzing through space – and all of this is going on while we worry about whether the mail has arrived (laughs), or whether our TV’s working. We tend to forget where we are in the larger view of things. To remember (that) is to just consider how amazingly unlikely it is that we are here, and able to communicate and think, and actually see photographs of the beginning of the universe, which was about 13.5 billion years ago. I find all that very exciting. Q: I’m 36. Have you found an upside to growing older that might surprise me? A: Yes, I think so. I think your dick drops out of controlling you. That’s always a good idea – eventually, about 50 or 60 – you stop being led around by your dick. Men, in particular (laughs). There are very many consolations with age. It’s not the end of the world, quite – but it’s close (laughs). I mean, I’m 81 and I look forward to being 82. That becomes the big achievement. Read the full interview (~16 minute read) at The Australian: https://lnkd.in/gewngc54 #ericidle #alwayslookonthebrightsideoflife #montypython #montypythonsflyingcircus #theaustralian
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Peter Vanham
Meta seems ready for redemption in the 2024 election cycle. If so, it's thanks to its Oversight Board. My latest CEO Daily for Fortune. With the U.S. presidential election less than six months away, and elections also happening in the EU, U.K., India, and many more countries, now is a good time for CEOs to reflect on their company’s relationship to democracy at large. One company that has done so, and seems ready for redemption, is Meta. Meta has come a long way. Eight years ago, the Trump campaign used improperly obtained Facebook data to build voter profiles for 50 million users, and Russia weaponized Facebook to undermine the integrity of the U.S. elections. The scandals led to Facebook’s darkest hour, and forced its founder, Mark Zuckerberg, to testify before Congress. But 2024 isn’t 2016. A crucial part of Meta’s response since then has been the creation of an “independent” oversight board. And last week, that group released its key lessons in a historic election year. These are my takeaways: – A company should think about its principles vis-à-vis democracy and not react only to specific instances. Meta learned this lesson when it blocked former President Donald Trump’s Facebook account after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, which was seen as arbitrary. When it reinstated Trump’s account in 2023, Meta did so based on more broadly applicable protocols. – Almost no company can be entirely apolitical. Some of the most divisive societal issues concern foundational democratic principles—freedom of speech, equality, limits on government interference—written up in constitutions and human rights charters. A company must know where it stands on such values. – Efforts to interfere with elections often start small or in inexpensive markets. They then move to more expensive markets. Some interference campaigns are subtle, using deep fakes or somewhat credible fake claims. A company must study its weakest points of entry to ensure it’s not a vehicle for such schemes. – Finally, oversight boards are a good idea for almost any organization. Meta’s self-governing board can be critical of the company, and its supervision ensures Meta is caught off-guard less often by user protest or complaints. Meta didn’t get it 100% right. One shortcoming of its oversight board is that it still depends on Meta for funding. Over time, that’s bound to lead to problems. But Meta’s approach nevertheless benefits the company—and society—in myriad ways. For Meta, it lowers the likelihood of future PR crises. More broadly, it makes Meta act as a more responsible corporate citizen. That’s in everyone’s interest, and a model to follow. Thanks to my old classmate Simona Sikimic-French for providing very useful background, and Claire Zillman for another excellent edit. #elections #socialmedia #corporateresponsibility https://lnkd.in/e3Dq6F9D
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Glenda Nevill
While not as clear-cut as roads, clean water, and air, the democratic value to society of public interest journalism is, in my book and many others, a public good, writes Daily Maverick's Styli C.. "The recent tsunami of bad news about the news has raised an interesting question. Are we seeing the effects of a market failure playing out, or are we seeing the death of an industry that failed to innovate and keep up with the times?" #journalism #publicinterest #news #publishing
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David Bank
🎉 TGIF! Co-founder Zuleyma Bebell reflects on ImpactAlpha’s 10-year anniversary. Raise a glass. In April of 2014, I was about to give birth to two babies. My first child, Sebastian, was due any minute. And David Bank and I were about to push ImpactAlpha.com live. Having your first-born is hard. So is launching a company. The two experiences have something else in common: If my husband and I had waited for the perfect time, we wouldn’t have the family we have now; if ImpactAlpha had waited for funding, we wouldn’t have the company we have today. In this week’s podcast, David shares some moments from our first decade. After thousands of stories, my son and ImpactAlpha are both turning 10. Another lesson from both parenting and building a business: just keep going. All of our kids have grown up with ImpactAlpha, and given us an appreciation of what has come to be called “child lens investing.” In The Brief this week, Essma Bengabsia of the Annie E. Casey Foundation highlights impact investments to fix a broken child care system by helping providers build facilities and parents find day care. Kids also need renewable energy, affordable housing and racial equity, as W.K. Kellogg Foundation's Cynthia Muller points out in her reflections on lessons learned from the foundation’s $310 million in mission-driven investments. Builders Vision's Bruce McNamer sees family offices as crucial in funding the climate transition. We’re looking forward to seeing all of these contributors and partners at the Mission Investors Exchange conference. Amy Cortese had reports on Solar For All and the steep learning curve for community lenders that are leveraging the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. James McIntyre has a compelling proposal to green down payment assistance to create better homes and better mortgages. Louie Woodall dissected the debate over carbon credits that has roiled the Science Based Targets Initiative. Dennis Price keyed in on the “alpha in impact” opportunity in helping reintegrate citizens returning from prison, now visible in FreeCap Financial, Inc’s new “decarceration index.” And we’re watching the impact of AI and the investment in Anthropic by Omidyar Network, Ford Foundation and Nathan Cummings Foundation, which guest authors Lyel Resner and Dr. Wilneida Negrónsee as a signal of impact investor interest in responsible tech innovation. From baby steps, we’ve learned to walk, with the help of Agents of Impact who have filled ImpactAlpha with their innovation, energy and commitment. We’ve grown up, as have many of you, alongside the idea that it’s possible to optimize finance for better outcomes for our kids and for all of us. We’re grateful to be able to play a role in that growth alongside this idea that it’s possible to optimize finance for better outcomes for our kids and for all of us. We’re humbled by the trust you’ve placed in us. https://lnkd.in/gHNM7Bss
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Egberto Willies
Richard D. Wolff: Failed economic system. Thom Hartmann: American Democracy Richard D. Wolff, PhD Economics Prof., discusses the inconvenient truth of our failed economic system. Thom Hartmann discusses, 'The Hidden History of American Democracy.' William 'Dub' Anderson discusses his thoughts on solutions to America's race problem.
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Egberto Willies
Richard D. Wolff: Failed economic system. Thom Hartmann: American Democracy Richard D. Wolff, PhD Economics Prof., discusses the inconvenient truth of our failed economic system. Thom Hartmann discusses, 'The Hidden History of American Democracy.' William 'Dub' Anderson discusses his thoughts on solutions to America's race problem.
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Daniel Brown
The Kids Off Social Media Act is the latest attempt in the US to pass legislation aimed at keeping adolescents off addictive social media. But such political decisions are based on research that is contradictory and sweeping. Professors Shrum and Lowrey examine the scientific studies over the past five years. They suggest a more nuanced approach which could be more impactful and appropriate to a very real challenge. Listen to this podcast and read the highlights. https://lnkd.in/efuDqtSC
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Diane Labrosse
New review: Jennifer Delton on James Traub's _True Believer: Hubert Humphrey’s Quest for a More Just America_. New York: Basic Books, 2024. https://lnkd.in/e9bJsAJ9 "In the past year and a half, there have been five new books on Minnesota Senator Hubert H. Humphrey, all of which seek to rehabilitate the liberal Democrat’s progressive bone-fides. In this era of polarization and Trumpism, there is clearly a market for books about principled politicians who were able to 'reach across the aisle' to pass historic bills that made the US a fairer, more democratic country. Baby boomers are notoriously nostalgic for the moderate, can-do liberalism of the mid-twentieth century and no one practiced that liberalism better than Hubert Humphrey. Consensus builder, cheerful compromiser, and President Lyndon B. Johnson’s hapless vice president, Humphrey believed that government could be a beneficent force for social progress, economic harmony, and racial justice in both the US and the world at large. In countless speeches, Humphrey told voters that they were the government, that strong government was not socialism but democracy in action, that democratically crafted policy, laws, and regulations, when honed through debate and compromise, could make capitalism work for all people, not just the rich and not just whites. A key part of Cold War liberalism, this idea helped build a bipartisan political consensus based on Cold War militarism, labor unions, and highly regulated capitalism, while marginalizing the political extremes...."
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Matt Day
Amazon's Ring, years into a shift from a self-styled crime-fighting shop to a hub for peace of mind (and pet videos), is getting a new mission statement: "Keeping people close to what’s important" has come a long way from the original pitch, "Reduce crime in neighborhoods." More bits: -Ring boss Liz Hamren tells me the unit recently became profitable, thanks to a subscription push (and a few rounds of price hikes). It's a bet that users would pay to save videos and do more with their doorbells and cameras -It's tough to overstate how single-minded Ring was in its early years. Veterans say projects without a clear home security mandate didn't tend to last long. Employee docs outlined Ring product set like one might describe a fortress. -Ring's Always Home Cam, three years after it was supposed to hit the market, is still in development. Teams are working to enable the drone to navigate unusual home setups -- curved walls, low ceilings, and the like. read the rest here: https://lnkd.in/gAsY_Bcx
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Ed J.
"Trump, of course, has been welcomed back on X and other social networks. And as Navaroli writes, tech companies across the board have slashed their trust and safety teams. “Going into the 2024 election season, that has left social media—and, by extension, American democracy—more fragile than it has ever been in the digital era,” she observes. “We face adversaries hell-bent on destroying the integrity of our elections, forces”—Russia, China, and Iran, among others—“that have used the past two presidential cycles to hone their manipulation strategies.” Many researchers find that it’s now more difficult to map foreign disinformation campaigns than it has been for years. As Nora Benavidez—a senior counsel at Free Press, a media-focused research group—told Golding, “Ultimately, what we see is that democracy is a much lower priority for these companies than making sure they keep costs in line.”' --The Election Issue - Columbia Journalism Review https://lnkd.in/gktJ4iMQ
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El Calabrese
This is truly about the ruling class, which controls our information ecosystem in the United States because our news industry is not state run. If you constrict the numbers of professionals in a field, you turn off innovation, reduce oversight, and lose diversity and industriousness of solutions. In our unique system, that also means dumbing down both the people responsible for making major policy decisions (voting citizens) AND the pool of candidates for which they vote. Remember much like our overall health, our collective emotional and social health is in large part fed by what we feed our brains. If you eat a good diet, your body is healthy. Same is true for our brains both collectively and individually. The information/news you read matters. The mainstream media or legacy outlets everyone is so upset with is in large part responsible for the industry standards and ethics most accepted by journalists. When those large organizations start pulling back affiliates and local coverage and local newspapers turn to digital production that has low value to advertisers and drives journos to churn out aggregated content over making investments in shoe leather reporting, democracy suffers. The news and information you digest matters. It matters to your consciousness and to our collective social consciousness. And in turn, heavily impacts our political process. much like food deserts building sick bodies, information deserts create a a sick body politic. And those of us living under the resulting policies suffer right along with our most beloved value as Americans: our unique American brand of Democracy in motion.
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Mohamed Maher
My latest article on how last Thursday's debate may have already determined the outcome of the U.S. presidential election. The stakes were high, and the debate's impact could make the rest of the campaign a mere formality. "The debate's impact was so significant that it could very well have sealed the fate of this year's election." "Many analysts believe that the performance gaps between the candidates were too large to overlook." 🔗 Read the full article here https://lnkd.in/e9X4tDkt #USelection #Election2024 #DebateImpact #PresidentialDebate
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Greg Bartalos
Had a great conversation with Liz Nesvold of Emigrant Bank and Emigrant Partners on Barron's Advisor's The Way Forward podcast in which she discusses effective ways to hire women and help them advance in their careers. Highlights include: ** The importance of self-advocacy** “Providing an environment for self-advocacy is critically important. That could be helping women to gather, creating and fostering a network effect, which needs to be inclusive. I cannot tell you how important it is to have both male and female sponsors around the table.” ** Retaining employees** “This industry is experiencing a tremendous war for talent. So, it can't be the pitch to get people in. When they do get in, we need to give them some visibility in terms of how they can feel included, how they can see a path forward to level up, and whether they see anybody that looks like them that is in a successful position.” ** The benefits of flexible work environments** “Flexibility has become increasingly important for women to do their best, to bring their whole selves, and also find balance with other objectives.The more we push to require five days a week, I think the more opportunity there is in a negative sense for attrition of the talent we seek to retain.” (registration required.) https://lnkd.in/eksVP-wm
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Andre Tartar
This year's election may be a Biden vs Trump rematch, but it's not the same electorate as four years ago. In a new Bloomberg News / Bloomberg Businessweek story out today (see gift link below), we estimate that at least 10% of most states' 2020 eligible voter population is gone and has been replaced with new potential voters. In some states that number is closer to 15%, including in key swing states like Arizona and Nevada. That level of churn easily dwarfs the 2020 presidential margin of victory in the seven battleground states we're watching. This analysis brings together a lot of government and private datasets to understand not only the impact of the Great American Migration of the last few years, but also the number of deaths (including from the Covid pandemic), those who've turned 18 since 2020, and newly naturalized US citizens. Many factors will likely shape the 2024 presidential result, but knowing how the electorate has changed and what that means for key demographic shifts will be crucial for any serious election watcher. As always, it takes a village: with graphics magic from Elena Mejía, reporting help from Gregory Korte and the work of editor trio Laura Bliss, gregory white and Chloe Whiteaker.
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