Los Angeles County Orders Inspection Of Marina City Club Towers In Marina Del Rey

Condo boards nationwide have put off repairs because of cost concerns. Or to put another way high cost of repairs causes delays in needed repairs in homes, condos and townhouses.

I don’t live in a condo so I personally am not concerned with condominium maintenance.  My mother lived in senior community that maintained the outside of the buildings and the grounds.  The management company provided hotel vouchers when all residents were required to leave when the exterior of buildings needed painting.

I’ve known a few people who have had water leaks in their units.  Both were resolved but it did require involvement of building management.

Now that we have viewed the events in Surfside Florida everyone is concerned about their condo and townhouse homes.   Just one day after an investigation by CBS2’s David Goldstein exposed potential problems at a Marina Del Rey condo, building inspectors were on the scene Thursday to survey the property. This property consists of two 65 story buildings. That brought out county public works department to conducts an inspection.

It might be frightening but everyone living in shared facilities throughout the country are likely to demand repairs.

Amazon Is Not a Monopoly

Monopoly is defined as the exclusive possession or control of the supply of or trade in a commodity or service.

I heard the discussion about Amazon being a monopoly on my local NPR station  The question was whether the company should be broken up because it is so large and controlling the economy.  The facts way that if any company should be broken apart it should be Walmart.

My family buys lots of things through Amazon. 

Walmart emerged as the top global retailer of the year, according to a new global ranking from the National Retail Federation.

The Top Global Retailers of 2021 retail sales reported to date

  • Walmart ($120B)
  • Amazon ($75B)
  • Schwarz Group ($85B)
  • Aldi ($85B)
  • Alibaba ($23B)
  • Costco ($44B)
  • Ahold Delhaize ($61B)
  • Carrefour ($43B)

Schwarz Group, Ahold Delhaize and Carrefour are European retailers. Alibaba sales are in Asia.

Sears Valley Plaza, North Hollywood, California

Historically Sears department stores were everywhere in the United States. From shoes to tools they sold everything.  My family loved Sears stores and their super catalog.  I recall my mother buying a stereo combo (radio and record player) through the catalog.  No one ever thought Sears was a monopoly.

Arizona Recount is an Extension of “The Apprentice”

To Matt Masterson, the review of 2020 ballots from Maricopa County, Ariz., that’s underway is “performance art” or “a clown show,” and definitely “a waste of taxpayer money” reports NPR.

Copies of some of the voting system data being analyzed might not still be in Arizona at all. A report from CNN last week confirmed that the data had been shipped more than a thousand miles away, to Montana via truck.

Every other news media outlet from the New York Times to ABC News to the Washington Post are calling this “audit” a charade.

We can accurately guess the outcome will be.  The Arizona Republicans will claim proof of a stolen election.  Their next step will be to present their proof to the courts.  If they do not do that the exercise will be pointless.

Donald Trump believes he will be reinstated as president as soon as August.  That would wake extraordinary acts by the Supreme Court.

The problem for Trump is that after the president and vice president cannot serve the next in line is the Speaker of the House.

Donald Trump is a master at reality show entertainment.  His television program The Apprentice was lasted 14 seasons.  It only stopped when he announced his candidacy for president. The Arizona audit is just an extension his ability to entertain.  If the auditors don’t find fraud will they be fired?

The Filibuster is Anti-Democratic – Authoritarians Love it!

“Is my job secure? Can I expand my business? Can we afford college? What about health care? When can I retire? Is my community safe?”

All good questions asked by Arizona Democratic Senator Kyrsten Sinema in a Washington Post opinion piece.  Unfortunately she goes on to defend the filibuster and doesn’t write any answers to the questions she ask at the beginning of her commentary.  It does look good to show concern for those issues.

Senator Mitch McConnell gloating

The filibuster rule in the Senate gives the minority power over the majority to block legislation.  Sinema believes democracy works best when the minority is able to block legislation.  There can be no compromise that she wishes for when Republican leader Mitch McConnell says he will block every piece of legislation proposed by President Joe Biden.

Authoritarians around the world love this kind of debate in America.  They point to our inability to pass laws as proof that democracy doesn’t work.  Our government voting rules are proving they are correct.

The Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth

This is all about keeping Americans in the dark about America’s history of bad behavior of things our leaders don’t want us to know about.

My education was in public schools. Philadelphia, Inglewood California, and Los Angeles.  I wasn’t the smartest student but I wasn’t the dumbest.  History and geography were the subjects I liked most but teachers provided scant facts.

We learned there was slavery but no one explained what that meant.  One person owning another person.  Counting slaves as 3/5 of a person in the census but the reason was never explained.  Jim Crow laws were never even mentioned in school.

In practice, Jim Crow laws mandated racial segregation in all public facilities in the states of the former Confederate States of America and in some others, beginning in the 1870s. Jim Crow laws were upheld in 1896 in the case of Plessy vs. Ferguson, in which the U.S. Supreme Court laid out its “separate but equal” legal doctrine for facilities for African Americans. Moreover, public education had essentially been segregated since its establishment in most of the South after the Civil War in 1861–65.

Black Wall Street, former byname of the Greenwood neighbourhood in TulsaOklahoma, where in the early 20th century African Americans had created a self-sufficient prosperous business district. The entire community was burned to the ground in 1921.  I never learned of this until this year.

I was taught that American Indians were savages and they had no right to anything. Custer’s Last Stand was part of the fight against those savages. the federal government forced them to leave their homelands and walk hundreds of miles to a specially designated “Indian territory” across the Mississippi River. This difficult and sometimes deadly journey is known as the Trail of Tears. President Andrew Jackson had long been an advocate of what he called “Indian removal.”

The group of settlers known as the Donner Party resorted to cannibalism while snowbound in the Sierra Nevada mountains, for the winter of 1846–1847.  Schools I attended never spoke one word of the event.  When I learned of this there was one line in Britannica Encyclopedia, “cannibalism, necessity of” but no explanation.  Britannica Encyclopedia has corrected that error.

There are people who deny the Holocaust ever happened despite the stories and photographs.

Today we have members of the Republican Party claiming that the January 6 insurrection at our Capitol never happened.     

The Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth? Probably not going to happen.

Juneteenth

By EUGENE DANIELS of Politico Playbook

For 156 years , June 19th has been celebrated by millions of Black folks in the U.S. to mark the real day that many of our ancestors were actually freed from slavery — when 2,000 Union troops went to Galveston, Texas, two years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed to make clear that Texas’ 250,000 enslaved people were free.

It’s been called by many names over the years: “Emancipation Day,” “Jubilee Day,” “Freedom Day.” And now, following a ceremony on Thursday when President JOE BIDEN signed a bill with overwhelming bipartisan support, it’s a federal holiday for everyone.

Which makes it an appropriate time to check in on Biden’s promises to put issues of equity, civil rights and social justice at the forefront of his administration.

How are civil rights leaders grading Biden’s record so far? I reached out to a few to ask. They were pleased by the progress on the easy lifts (like having the most diverse cabinet in history, from Vice President KAMALA HARRIS on down) and optimistic about the tonal shifts (like the way Biden has spoken out about racism with language about as forceful as anyone to ever occupy the office).

But they are growing tired of Biden’s penchant for bipartisanship in Congress, which they see as getting in the way of making real legislative strides on issues like voting rights and police reform.

Here’s what they said.

— Rev. AL SHARPTON told me that while he understands and respects that Biden wants to reach out to Republicans in the name of bipartisanship, “when you keep seeing that [the other side] is not going to reach back, you can’t continue to [try and win over Republicans] at the sacrifices of those that reached up and put you in office. … I think that the time has come for us now to say, ‘Let’s go on to Plan B, and that is to do what we need to do to get these bills passed.’”

“Can we change the access and the oratory into legislative results?” Sharpton asked. “To remember Tulsa is heartening, to finally get the Juneteenth holiday is great. But we are still, in both cases, talking about what people in the past did.”

— “When you talk about compromise, you can only sit down and compromise with people who believe there’s a problem,” said Reverend WILLIAM BARBER , co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign, sounding a similar note. “Some people don’t believe there’s a problem with poverty or a problem with voting rights. So you can’t compromise with people like that. You have to use the power that you have and let the chips fall where they may.”

“What politics [dictates that] he can do is fundamentally different than what he should do,” said Barber. “The pain of Covid has opened up the possibility of him being an FDR or Lincoln. [He] can’t allow the people who just want to play politics [stop] him from being the president that does the things we need.”

— “He says he wants to be bipartisan. However y’all do it, we need to have real bold changes,” said MELANIE CAMPBELL , president and CEO of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation. “On social justice, on the racial justice, those were the things that got Black people, Black women, young people out to vote. So we need to see those things come to fruition because a lot of this is about life and death. I would say that they have the building blocks. They’ve got to keep building those blocks.”

Still, Campbell said that while she “would like to see more, but we’re not living in a perfect political reality.”

There are NO Poor People in America

This is a shocking reality reported in the April-May AARP magazine.  The median retirement nest egg among retired people in the United States is $50,000 reports the Federal Reserve.  Just to review median is not average.  In statistics the median is the mid-point separating the higher half from the lower half of a data sample.  In other words half the retired population has less than is $50,000 in their retirement account.  This data goes along with the frequently reported fact that many people do not have enough money to pay a $400 unexpected expense tells me how poor most Americans are.  In the AARP article titled “Protecting Your Nest Egg” the author goes on to offer suggestions on how to save money.

Meanwhile Jeff Bezos’ wealth grew by $99 billion from 2014 to 2018.  Bezos is not the only super wealthy citizen of the United States. Michael Bloomberg, Mark Zukerberg, and Elon Musk have wealth in the billions.

This is not the first Guilded Age. The industrialists of the later 19th century and early 20th century Gilded Age lived high on the hog, but most of the working class lived below poverty level. As time went on, the income inequality between wealthy and poor became more and more glaring. Cornelius Vanderbilt, John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie were all part of that early 1900s world of super wealthy and 12 hour starvation wage working class.

It was that glaring difference between the super wealthy and the rest of us that gave rise to communism. 

What is “middle class?”  Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich suggests that the middle class should be defined as households making between 50% below and 50% above the median. Pew Research Center, a non-political organization, on line posting says “About half of U.S. adults (52%) lived in middle-income households in 2018, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of government data. Roughly three-in-ten (29%) were in lower-income households and 19% were in upper-income households.”

My own opinion is that the idea of the words “middle class” are the wealthy’s definition of everyone who is isn’t part of the super wealthy.  No one is poor.  Peasant in an unacceptable word.  Too demeaning. We are all part of the upper middle class or the lower middle class.  So the janitors and house cleaning people are lower middle class.  In other words there are no “poor people” in America.

The 2021 federal poverty level (FPL) for a single person residing in the 48 contiguous states or Washington, D.C. is $12,880.  Today’s $7.25 an hour minimum wage is below poverty level and low pay for the so called middle class of today is the motivation that results in revolutions.

Is this a Bubble or a Long Term Period of Inflation?

Since 2009:
– Food and beverage costs have increased by 18%
– Transportation costs have increased by 16%
– Housing costs have increased by 23%
– Medical costs have increased by 32%

Austin, Texas, is arguably the hottest real estate market in the country, with home prices up more than 40 percent since last April. According to Zillow the estimate of my home’s value in the San Fernando has increased by 5.1 percent in the past 30 days.

Car dealer lots have only a fraction of the vehicles — both new and used — that they typically have. That’s helping send prices to record levels and lifting the nation’s overall inflation rate. About two-thirds of car buyers paid within 5% of the sticker price in May, with some even paying above sticker.

Your next Costco run could be more expensive as the company warns of expected price hikes for key goods, including trash bags, cheese, plastic plates, and beef. My favorite Choice tri-tip steak has increased from $8.00 per pound to $11.00 per pound in the past six weeks.

Whether this is a temporary price bubble or a new long term period of inflation, one fact remains unchanged. The Federal minimum wage is $7.25 per hour. That wage was set on July 24, 2009.