Working from Home is now part of American Life

The fix is in. Working from home is now part of American life and it’s not going away when COVID-19 vaccinations have been given to most of the population.

A neighbor of mine who does video editing no longer drives 30 miles to work. He does his job on-line. Unless his employer demands he drive to the office he will continue to work at home after the virus is gone. For him it means ending his one hour drive each way and reduced ware and tear on his car.

The working from home idea is not new. Even before COVID-19 became a factor, increasing numbers of people have been saying goodbye to their onerous commute to work. Thanks to ever-evolving technologies like Skype, Facetime, Slack, Zoom, Google Hangouts, authenticator apps, and cloud computing—not to mention texting and email—it’s no longer necessary to be in an office full-time to be a productive member of the team. In fact, many kinds of work can be done just as effectively, if not more so, from a home office.

“Consumer Brands Bet Working From Home Is Here to Stay,” by Annie Gasparro and Sharon Terlep: “Consumer-product companies are expanding factories and revamping production lines, wagering that work-from-home habits like growing beards and fixing quick lunches will outlast the coronavirus pandemic. Millions of Americans spent much of the year working from home. While legions of employers are planning to reopen their offices, many have said they would let employees continue working remotely some or all of the time once the pandemic subsides.

“As a result, many food-and-consumer-products companies are investing in factories, equipment and brands to provide more of those items for years to come, seeking to accommodate consumers who are making more coffee, buying more casual clothes and tending beards with trimmers and balm rather than shaving them off.

“Conagra Brands Inc. and Kraft Heinz Co. are buying and upgrading equipment to make more at-home lunch foods. General Mills Inc. has added a manufacturing line for Cinnamon Toast Crunch cereal at a Georgia factory, which the company said is one of its most expensive capital projects ever. Kimberly-Clark Corp. is converting a plant to make toilet paper for homes instead of offices, and Procter & Gamble Co. is adding beard-care products in addition to Gillette razors.”

The work at home employees may not need office space at their employer’s office.  That translates to reduced office space needed by businesses.  If those “employees” are paid as contractors rather than “employees” they can claim a deductible of part of their home as a business expense.

What’s not to like? Comradery, friendships, the lack of a feeling that you are part of a team. All other things being equal, an employee who is physically in an office constructively communicating in person with colleagues and supervisors is better positioned to get a promotion, raise, or new opportunity than one who opts to remain in the comforts of their home.

That’s life in 2021 and beyond.

Another Indoor Mall Bites the Dust

The end of an era.

It was called Crenshaw Center. The first suburban shopping mall in Los Angeles. It was an open-air shopping center that included Broadway and May Company department stores. My mother’s favorite place to shop in the 1950s. Now it is a larger enclosed mall, re-named Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza, that is probably going to close.

It won’t be the first mall to close in the Los Angeles Orange County metropolitan area. The Laguna Hills Mall in southern Orange County closed on December 31, 2018 and is being demolished. The Hawthorne Mall closed in 1999. The Westside Pavilion on Pico Boulevard in West Los Angeles is now being remodeled for Google offices. The Promenade Shopping Mall is Woodland Hills has only four businesses left including an AMC theater is about to be torn down and replaced with housing, offices, and stores and is planned to complete in 2035.

Even after the corona virus has been concurred will we return to the malls? I doubt it.

Companies and People Are Leaving California

Over the past several years, a disturbing trend has been developing in California. Once known as the bastion of commerce, manufacturing, and business growth. The Golden State is saying goodbye to dozens of businesses every year, and the numbers seem to be increasing as companies are leaving California.

California has lost huge players like Toyota, Comcast, and many others is cause for the state to sit up and take note. The exodus is especially dramatic in 15 California counties, with Los Angeles being the worst.

It’s not just businesses. It’s the many rich who are exhausted by the ever higher taxes and the ever increasing cost of living. Elon Musk has decided to move to Austin, Texas. He is the second richest person in the world. His two major companies are still in California but the message is clear. It’s too expensive to live in in this state. I agree.

I know many of the people personally and through social media sites who have moved not only to other states but to other countries.

What I find most disturbing is the shrugs of our elected leaders when they learn of the departure of those big businesses and wealthy people. It seems they have raised taxes to discourage businesses from remaining here.

One can only wonder why our elected leaders are so quiet.

Working on a Coup

A coup or coup d’état is the removal of an existing government from power, usually through violent means. Typically, it is an illegal, unconstitutional seizure of power by a political faction, the military, or a dictator.

CNN report this evening: President Donald Trump convened a heated meeting in the Oval Office on Friday, including lawyer Sidney Powell and her client, former national security adviser Michael Flynn, two people familiar with the matter said, describing a session that began as an impromptu gathering but devolved and eventually broke out into screaming matches at certain points as some of Trump’s aides pushed back on Powell and Flynn’s more outrageous suggestions about overturning the election.

Flynn had suggested earlier this week that Trump could invoke martial law as part of his efforts to overturn the election that he lost to President-elect Joe Biden — an idea that arose again during the meeting in the Oval Office, one of the people said. It wasn’t clear whether Trump endorsed the idea, but others in the room forcefully pushed back and shot it down.

The meeting was first reported by the New York Times.

A “take-over” is a synonym for coup.

Democracy is a Representative form of government. The Antonym is Dictatorship.

Donald Trump dreams of a bloodless coup. It appears he is willing to accept a Coup d’état if he doesn’t get his way peacefully.