- November 4, 2025, Joint General & Special Election;
- Houston-area Labor Day protests planned as part of nationwide ‘Workers Over Billionaires’ demonstrations;
- Newly proposed ordinance would ban standing in medians in Houston;
- “There Needs To Be Justice”: 22-Year-Old Law Graduate Passes Away After Routine CT Scan;
- Parents sue Houston ISD over child’s use of different pronouns;
- Nexstar Seals Merger With Tegna in $6.2 Billion TV Mega Deal;
- Trump says DOJ will sue California over redistricting as he celebrates similar Texas effort;
- Trump admin’s new anti-renewables rule rooted in fossil-fuel misinformation;
- Trump admin pulls nearly $62M in solar grants from Utah, leaving rural towns in the dark;
- Some on Fox question Trump’s efforts to hinder new renewable projects as power demand and electricity bills skyrocket;
Tag Archives: business
For A Price, You Can Get Behind the Closed Doors of Fort Bend Business, by Steve Miller (Houston Press)
When you get to a certain level, this is how things ‘get done’. This Houston Press story is about the Greater Fort Bend Economic Development Council. At its root, that’s a local story, but roots are the invisible part. Replicate this story by the many thousands of counties, cities and miscellaneous business groups in the United States and you see on an escalating scale how, behind closed doors, things ‘get done’.
Mike
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For A Price, You Can Get Behind the Closed Doors of Fort Bend Business
Tuesday, October 11, 2016 at 6 a.m.(Houston Press)
At just after 7 a.m. on a mid-September day, a visitor made it no farther than just inside the glass doors of the development council. About 30 or so directors, mostly white, male, in their fifties, wearing dark suit coats and with the tops of their Men’s Wearhouse dress shirts open, wandered about inside a meeting room off the main office, sipping coffee from paper cups. On each high-backed leather chair, both around large tables and around the sides of the room, sat meeting agendas emblazoned with the Greater Fort Bend Economic Development Council’s logo.
“May I help you?” a woman asked in the tone of someone addressing a homeless person seeking a seat at Fleming’s. She summoned council CEO Jeff Wiley, a cool-headed, well-coiffed gentleman with a brunette shock of hair. “This is a private meeting,” Wiley advised, not unpleasantly. He is friendly but serious.
Why? Aren’t these people doing the work for the public? Some of the people in there are employed by the cities and the school districts and the county. “Yes, but they are business leaders,” Wiley said. Okay, but can’t we just hear what they’re talking about? After all, isn’t this to benefit the whole county? What is so secret? “There is nothing secret. It’s a private meeting,” Wiley said.
Millions of dollars are spent and generated by the Fort Bend economic development group, which draws up a legislative agenda and advises local municipalities and school districts on political stances and strategies. It is often the first group to greet prospective corporate leaders who may be looking to come to the county.
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Repost from 9/10/2010: What Is Labor Day Really About? (Commentary, Oct. 1, 2010) [AUDIO]
I like to to run this piece on Labor Day. First published 9/10/2010
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ThinkWing Radio with Mike Honig, 10/1/2010, 100110-FULL SHOW Audio GUEST: Becky Moeller, president of the Texas AFL-CIO Topic/Commentary: Why We Celebrate Labor Day.
It’s been just a few weeks since Labor Day, and we all celebrated it after our own fashion.
Some of us visited friends and shared their barbeques, or had our own. Some of us went to the beach for maybe the last time this year. Our kids enjoyed their last long weekend, a last faint shadow of their summer vacations, before the months of school until their next holiday.
So we all celebrated in our fashion. But what is it we were celebrating?
Like most national or state holidays, the reason for the holiday gets lost and forgotten. It becomes just the “day off” or “long weekend” which we’re REALLY celebrating.
So Washington’s birthday and Lincoln’s birthday become “President’s Day”. A day to remember what, exactly? Store sales?
A Business Can Improve Profits & Productivity At The Cost Of Laying Off Half Their Employees. What Should They Do: The ‘Smart’ Thing or the “Responsible’ Thing?
What would you do (as posed by Frank Lipsky)? “I own a small manufacturing business with 100 employees. My company makes a $1 000,000/year profit or $10,000 per employee.I have a proposal to automate my production line that when implemented will produce more product at less cost and eliminate 50 employees; i.e., my profit per employee will double to $20,000 per year.I will get richer, but 50 employees will lose their employment.”
My take on Frank Lipsky’s intriguing question (see below, with responses) is that it is possible to do both the ‘smart’ business thing and the ‘responsible’ thing.
A business owner would be a fool not to do the thing that reduces his costs and increases his productivity and profits. So, he must do the ‘smart’ thing.
In also doing the ‘responsible’ thing, he should raise the wages of the remaining workers so that they share in the increased productivity (which, with the help of unions, is what was done for a good fraction of the 20th century). He might pay for training some of the laid off workers to maintain the new equipment, thus rehiring them in new and necessary positions as skilled workers. He can further aid the remaining laid off workers by paying for some job retraining so they have skill-sets to sell to future employers.
Keep in mind that every single thing the business owner can do as listed above is also tax deductible as either a depreciable or straight-expensed tax write-off.
At the end of the day and after having done all these things, the business owner should make more money, while wages also rise and even laid-off workers are given a chance to continue making a decent living.
Thus, a “Virtuous Cycle” prevails.
IMHO.
Mike
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Comments from: “Polling Trajectory Shows Bernie Sanders Winning the Democratic Nomination. It’s Time for America to Notice.”, By H. A. Goodman (www.hagoodman.com),Posted: 09/01/2015 9:33 am EDT (as seen in TheHuffingtonPost.com)
COMMENTS [re-formatted and edited for clarity – Mike]:
Frank Lipsky, Lehigh University: Here is gigantic gift from me to for [sic] Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. Read and study closely and forward if you agree:
“I own a small manufacturing business with 100 employees My company
makes a $1 000,000/year profit or $10,000 per employee.I have a proposal to automate my production line that when implemented produce more product at less cost and eliminate 50 employees i.e my profit per employee will double to $20,000 per year.I will get richer but 50 employees will lose their employment”
By [virtue] of the free enterprise system as espoused by Republicans[,] I should proceed!!
Is their anyone out there that does not understand that the benefits/ (profits) of higher productivity/profits via automation(forget outsourcing[,] which is worse) should be shared by [individual] and general public services
Frank Lipsky Lehigh University
PS Why is our educational system so bad that this example is not an exam question for graduation from high school
David Sandler: This “example” is facile. It reflects basics economics, not political leanings. This is the process of increasing productivity per worker which any business would pursue. Doesn’t even rise to “trickle down”….
Joseph Anthony, Dublin, Ireland: What will the remaining 50 employees have to do? Will they now need to know how to run those machines? Repair them? Maintain them? Or will the remaining 50 employees be unskilled workers?
Boise State U. Prof. Nancy Napier Awarded Vietnam Medal of Honor for Educational Contributions
Dr. Napier has been a guest on our radio show. You can hear her interview from August 23, 2010 on this page.
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The Speech Obama SHOULD Give: Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Speech at Madison Square Garden (October 31, 1936)
Last night (September 1, 2011), Lawrence O’Donnell’s The Last Word ran part of a speech given by President Franklin D. Roosevelt just before the 1936 election. The most striking thing about his speech was the political fearlessness of it. One line in particular could be lifted by President Obama and cited in his speech to Congress: “Never before in all our history have these forces been so united against one candidate as they stand today. They are unanimous in their hate for me—and I welcome their hatred.”
If only he would…
Below is the link to the page with the transcript, and the introduction written there.
Continue reading
An Appeal From Your Local Merchant
In today’s email, I received an appeal to customers from a local restaurant owner. His remarks could apply to any local business anywhere, and that’s why I’m reproducing it for you below.
His letter isn’t just specific to him. and he makes some good points about supporting local merchants. Continue reading
6 Basic Differences Between Democrats and Republicans
Democrats: Scandals are about sex and drugs.
Republicans: Scandals are about money and abuse of power. (Although they’ve progressed. They now include sex.)
Democrats: Tax and spend.
Republicans: Borrow and spend.
Democrats: Emphasis on personal freedom and privacy, regulate business.
Republicans: Emphasis on business freedom and privacy, regulate personal freedom and privacy.
Democrats: Healthcare rationed by availability.
Republicans: Healthcare rationed by wealth.
Democrats: War on Poverty
Republicans: War on the poor.
Democrats: Have no spine
Republicans: Have no shame.
Barry, Read “Give ‘Em Hell, Harry!”
When politics generally and Republican/Rightwing policy proposals make you want to rip your hair out, read Truman’s “Give ‘Em Hell” speech (Oct 1, 1948) today, and be inspired. www.trumanlibrary.org/publicpapers/index.php?pid=1973
This believed to be the speech that turned the 1948 election for Harry Truman.
It took me about 2 hours to find an authoritative source for this transcript, so I can vouch for its accuracy.
The speech was given in Charleston, West Virginia. Here’s the text: Continue reading
What Is Labor Day Really About? (Commentary, Oct. 1, 2010) [AUDIO]
ThinkWing Radio with Mike Honig, 10/1/2010, 100110-FULL SHOW Audio GUEST: Becky Moeller, president of the Texas AFL-CIO Topic/Commentary: Why We Celebrate Labor Day.
It’s been just a few weeks since Labor Day, and we all celebrated it after our own fashion.
Some of us visited friends and shared their barbeques, or had our own. Some of us went to the beach for maybe the last time this year. Our kids enjoyed their last long weekend, a last faint shadow of their summer vacations, before the months of school until their next holiday.
So we all celebrated in our fashion. But what is it we were celebrating?
Like most national or state holidays, the reason for the holiday gets lost and forgotten. It becomes just the “day off” or “long weekend” which we’re REALLY celebrating.
So Washington’s birthday and Lincoln’s birthday become “President’s Day”. A day to remember what, exactly? Store sales?
Memorial Day, Martin Luther King’s Birthday, Veteran’s Day … By an act of Congress, these days, once deemed special enough to close the federal government and our entire financial system, are now just a way of creating long weekends and special shopping days.
And so it is with Labor Day, and I’ll plead guilty myself. We all take the weekend, cook the food, splash at the beach, or whatever we do, but we never think about why there is a Labor Day.
American workers today are often anti-union. The irony is that they’re anti-union while working eight-hour days won by unions, five-day weeks won by unions, getting time and a half for overtime and double time on holidays won by unions, vacation and sick days won by unions, and getting health and retirement benefits won by unions.
But trust me … Business owners and corporate executives didn’t award these “normal benefits” to workers out of the goodness of their hearts, and they didn’t give these benefits to workers because some factory worker came hat in hand and asked nicely.
History is rife with violence perpetrated against union members by hired thugs, Pinkerton employees, police and even the U.S. Army.
The first American labor unions are said to have been created as early as the late 1700’s, but the Labor Union Movement started in a big way after the Civil War.
Before labor unions in the United States, workers often put in 12- and 18-hour days, sometimes 7 days a week. Industrial accidents, maiming and deaths were common, though in some industries more than others.
Child labor in factories was beyond anything we can imagine now. Elementary school-age children were working in textile mills, standing on wooden boxes for 10-12 hours per day so that they could reach the controls which operated the machines. Now imagine them breathing in the textile dust and contracting brown lung disease and developing emphysema before they even turn 25.
Imagine pre-teen boys going a mile or more down into coal mines full of explosive coal dust and methane.
Imagine thousands of these boys and men being killed each and every year from mine collapses, or because there wasn’t adequate ventilation to reduce coal dust and methane to safe levels, or because technology was focused on production more than safety or health.
Nor were women safe from life-threatening exploitation. In 1911, the Triangle Shirtwaist fire killed 146 garment workers. The company was on the 8th to 10th floors. The workers had been locked in by their managers to prevent theft. Unable to escape the fire, many of those killed leapt 100 feet to their deaths, rather than burn to death in the flames.
The Triangle Shirtwaist fire, to this day, is still one of the worst industrial disasters in the history of New York City.
To many businesses of the time, these weren’t truly people. They were simply means to an end. If they were killed or injured, sickened or quit, there were plenty more where they came from, because there was no such thing as a living wage and everyone needed brutal hours of work at any job they could find.
The worst part is – and yes there’s a worse part – the worst part is that even the people performing these horrific labors for all these exhausting hours in these dangerous conditions, were sometimes cheated at the end by their employers, and found their pay envelopes short for reasons contrived by the owners.
Workers were sometimes paid in company scrip, good only at the company store. Without cash payments, these workers became nothing more than indentured servants, unable to save any money to find a better life.
In 1955, Tennessee Ernie Ford recorded a song about coal miners and the company store called “Sixteen Tons” (1955).
Here’s a bit of it: [CUE SONG FROM 0:01 to 0:38. Then fade]
Death, injury, dismemberment… These were all routine costs of doing business to the capitalists of the time. Of course the families of the dead, ill and injured felt somewhat more emotional about these traumatic outcomes.
As we know even today, one person can’t go to a manager with a grievance without risking their job. The point of a union, then, is to create a balance of power, just like in world diplomacy.
The fight for unions that could negotiate with owners really was a fight. It involved paid Pinkerton thugs, police, and even troops. People were killed. Companies went to great lengths – life and death lengths — to prevent unions and union organizers from signing up employees.
As I’ve said on this show before, the single purpose of a business is to make money. Balancing that imperative in our society requires other institutions with other purposes.
Unions aren’t perfect, and businesses can’t be held responsible for being what they are meant to be. But as with any negotiation, the fairest outcome is a negotiation between equals.
Unions give individual workers that equality of negotiating power.
The benefits most workers take for granted and enjoy today are the result of at least 150 years of struggles by American workers to organize, create unions, and get companies to agree to collective bargaining.
And these struggles weren’t just paperwork projects fought by blue-collar desk-jockeys. One source calls American labor union history the bloodiest of any industrialized nation on earth.
So today, the average working person’s job benefits are all considered just the normal stuff by most people. It’s always been the way of things in living memory.
Workers created Labor Day on their own in 1882. It became a national holiday in 1894.
On Labor Day and every day, when workers today get the benefits they feel are their normal entitlement, they should remember that they weren’t free. The same as our national freedom, people fought and died for those benefits.
And in the world we live in today, as with our nation’s freedom, constant worker vigilance is required to maintain them.
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