The Dallas Morning News published an editorial, "Make the Iran nuclear deal better, but don't scrap it" that I found to be, well, muddled.
Editorial board member Mike Hashimoto expanded on the editorial in a blog item, "Where does the ed board come down on Obama’s Iran deal? Read on." Sadly, I was no better off understanding the News's position after reading this. And even a Twitter conversation with Mike Hashimoto failed to enlighten me.
Friday, August 28, 2015
POTD: Saigon Motorbike Chic
| From 2015 03 21 Saigon |
Thursday, August 27, 2015
Richardson's Budget - Black or Red?
It's August and that means it's time for Richardson budget roulette. Will the proposed city budget be balanced? You'd think that would be a simple question. Isn't the city required by law to have a balanced budget? Well, yes, but it all depends on the meaning of "balanced".
Last year when I looked at this question, I concluded that the city's 2014-2015 budget was indeed balanced and didn't require use of that sneaky asterisk ("plus reserved fund balance and other financing sources").
After the jump, reviewing that conclusion and looking ahead at 2015-2016.
Last year when I looked at this question, I concluded that the city's 2014-2015 budget was indeed balanced and didn't require use of that sneaky asterisk ("plus reserved fund balance and other financing sources").
After the jump, reviewing that conclusion and looking ahead at 2015-2016.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
Point and Shoot (2014)
|
| IMDB |
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Debt is Good
The Richardson City Council voted to hold an election in November to issue new bonds totaling $115 million. The four propositions residents will vote on:
I haven't studied the details, but the numbers seem to be in the right ballpark for my support. Should the total be a little more...or less? Perhaps. The total seems to be of a size that doesn't require a tax increase. That's important to many. Should buildings get less money and streets get more? Perhaps, if the money for streets goes not to building more streets but goes instead to filling potholes and reconfiguring existing streets to improve walkability. That's important to me. I'll have my ears open for discussions along these lines, but I expect that I'll support all four bond propositions regardless whether the numbers are exactly what I would have come up with myself.
There are some people who don't just want to fiddle with the numbers. They want to cut the numbers to zero. For them, debt is evil, or at least bad. This attitude provides us with another opportunity to challenge conventional wisdom. Public debt isn't evil. It's not even bad. In fact, debt is good.
- Public Buildings - $67,000,000
- Streets - $38,570,000
- Parks - $7,230,000
- Sidewalks - $2,200,000
I haven't studied the details, but the numbers seem to be in the right ballpark for my support. Should the total be a little more...or less? Perhaps. The total seems to be of a size that doesn't require a tax increase. That's important to many. Should buildings get less money and streets get more? Perhaps, if the money for streets goes not to building more streets but goes instead to filling potholes and reconfiguring existing streets to improve walkability. That's important to me. I'll have my ears open for discussions along these lines, but I expect that I'll support all four bond propositions regardless whether the numbers are exactly what I would have come up with myself.
There are some people who don't just want to fiddle with the numbers. They want to cut the numbers to zero. For them, debt is evil, or at least bad. This attitude provides us with another opportunity to challenge conventional wisdom. Public debt isn't evil. It's not even bad. In fact, debt is good.
Monday, August 24, 2015
POTD: Ben Thành Market
| From 2015 03 21 Saigon |
Friday, August 21, 2015
POTD: Opéra de Saigon
| From 2015 03 21 Saigon |
Thursday, August 20, 2015
Gone Girl (2014)
|
| IMDB |
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
POTD: Louis Vuitton in Ho Chi Minh City
| From 2015 03 21 Saigon |
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Antarctica: A Year on Ice (2014)
|
| IMDB |
Monday, August 17, 2015
Review: The Reluctant Fundamentalist
![]() |
| Amazon |
|
Come, tell me, what were you looking for? Surely, at this time of day, only one thing could have brought you to the district of Old Anarkali -- named, as you may be aware, after a courtesan immured for loving a prince -- and that is the quest for the perfect cup of tea. Have I guessed correctly?"
So begins a conversation between a young, bearded Pakistani and an unidentified, nervous American at a cafe in Lahore. After the jump, my review.
Friday, August 14, 2015
POTD: Check out the Rolls
| From 2015 03 21 Saigon |
This isn't your father's Vietnam. It's hard to tell that the US didn't win the war. South Vietnam may have fallen, but the dominoes didn't. Look around Saigon today. Western culture is pervasive, not Russian or Chinese. Free market reforms are everywhere.
Thursday, August 13, 2015
What Happened, Miss Simone? (2015)
|
| IMDB |
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
POTD: Cambodian School Bus
| From 2015 03 20 Tonle Sap Lake |
Tuesday, August 11, 2015
Ida (2013)
|
| IMDB |
Monday, August 10, 2015
Review: The Sleepwalkers
![]() |
| Amazon |
|
The European continent was at peace on the morning of Sunday 28 June 1914, when Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie Chotek arrived at Sarajevo railway station. Thirty-seven days later, it was at war. The conflict that began that summer mobilized 65 million troops, claimed three empires, 20 million military and civilian deaths, and 21 million wounded. The horrors of Europe's twentieth century were born of this catastrophe."
It's impossible to overestimate the importance of World War I. It's also impossible to wrap your head around how the five Great Powers allowed themselves to march into a disastrous war that all could see coming, yet none could find a way out of. No one had an exit strategy for the escalating July crisis. Christopher Clark writes the definitive account of how the crisis led to war. After the jump, my review.
Saturday, August 8, 2015
OTBR: A Bug in the New Mexico Desert
Longitude: W 106° 49.950
![]() |
A child on a road trip with his family asks, "Where are we?" and the father answers, "Let's check the map. We're off the blue roads [the Interstate Highways marked in blue on the road atlas]. We're off the red roads [the US and state highways]. We're off the black roads [the county highways]. I think we're off the map altogether." It was always my dream to be off the map altogether.
After the jump, a few of the random places (and I mean random literally) that I visited vicariously last month that are "off the blue roads".
Friday, August 7, 2015
POTD: Cambodian Commute
| From 2015 03 20 Tonle Sap Lake |
Thursday, August 6, 2015
Multi-Use is not Mixed-Use
We've been through this before, but it's kinda my pet peeve, so here we go again. Steve Brown, real estate editor of The Dallas Morning News, breaks this news:
The new shopping center in the works at Richardson’s $1.5 billion CityLine development is getting a second phase. Developers of the project at the northeast corner of Plano and Renner roads have filed plans with the City of Richardson to add more than 20,000 square feet to the retail center which is already under construction. It's part of the 186-acre mixed-use development that includes State Farm Insurance's 4-story regional office campus.
Source: Steve Brown.
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
POTD: Floating Banana Trees
| From 2015 03 20 Tonle Sap Lake |
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Nightcrawler (2014)
|
| IMDB |
Monday, August 3, 2015
The Wheel Award for Excellence in Motion Pictures
Oscar night is five months gone. "Birdman" was the Academy's pick for "Best Picture." I couldn't say at the time that it would be my pick for "best" movie of 2014 because I hadn't seen it yet. I hadn't seen most of the nominees at that time. Well, now that it's summer, I can finally say I've seen all of the Oscar nominees for "Best Picture" of 2014 and I can pick a winner. Can I get a drum roll?
Sunday, August 2, 2015
Repeat Tweets: Instilling My Religious Liberty
Repeat tweets from July, 2015:
- Jul 1 2015: "We are not issuing them because I am instilling my religious liberty in this office." Hood County Clerk Katie Lang star-telegram.com
- Jul 2 2015: "3 reasons the American Revolution was a mistake." History you probably weren't taught in schools. vox.com
- Jul 4 2015: Into the Woods (2014): Musical mashup of fairy tales. By the numbers. Who is target audience? Kids? Adults? Maybe Stephen Sondheim fans. C-
- Jul 8 2015: "What we learn [from Greece] is that fiscal austerity plus hard money is a deeply toxic mix." krugman.blogs.nytimes.com
- Jul 9 2015: Meanwhile, on Tea Party planet, @PeteSessions is "too willing to compromise on critical issues." trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com
After the jump, more repeat tweets.
Friday, July 31, 2015
POTD: Tonle Sap Lake
| From 2015 03 20 Tonle Sap Lake |
;-)
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Hybrid, Urbanized-Suburbs
I've long promoted growth in Richardson that's walkable, mixed-use, transit-oriented. To me, that's more Uptown/Bishop Arts/Oak Lawn than anything in Richardson, whether it's old like Richardson Heights or new like CityLine. Now Peter Simek in FrontBurner gives me something to think about.
As we have seen in places like Addison and Legacy Town Center in Plano, the suburbs now offer a kind of hybrid, urbanized-suburban situation that can satisfy millennials loves of hikes and bikes and coffee shops without having to give up the suburban conveniences of larger dwellings at more affordable prices.
Source: Peter Simek.
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
POTD: Rural Cambodia
| From 2015 03 20 Tonle Sap Lake |
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
American Sniper (2014)
|
| IMDB |
Monday, July 27, 2015
Remembering Rodger Jones
According to CultureMap Dallas, soon some big names will be leaving The Dallas Morning News in an employee buyout of the newsroom. The purpose, according to top editor Mike Wilson, is to convert the newspaper into "a website which delivers vital information to North Texas quickly and also curates and produces a great city newspaper." For that, the News is "going to need new skill sets, which are now mostly print and need to be mostly digital." In short, the old guys with ink-stained fingers need to be encouraged to retire.
Friday, July 24, 2015
POTD: Angkor Wat
| From 2015 03 19 Angkor Wat |
Today's photo-of-the-day is from Angkor Wat, a 12th century temple in Cambodia. "It was originally founded as a Hindu temple for the Khmer Empire, gradually transforming into a Buddhist temple toward the end of the 12th century." You can see the process of that transformation to this day, as carvings of Hindu gods were chiseled into carvings of the Buddha. Sound familiar? Today, the whole complex of temples is more a world heritage historic site than a center of religious activity.
Thursday, July 23, 2015
Q&A: Strategizing in Secret
I read somewhere that the North Texas Municipal Water District (NTMWD) had agreed to discuss the method used to determine how much member cities pay for water. Then I read that the Richardson City Council went into closed session to consult with the city attorney to discuss the "1988 North Texas Municipal Water District Regional Water Supply Facilities Amendatory Contract."
Question: Are those two things related? And why would consultation with the city attorney on a water issue not just be done in open session?
Question: Are those two things related? And why would consultation with the city attorney on a water issue not just be done in open session?
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
POTD: Ta Prohm
| From 2015 03 19 Angkor Wat |
Today's photo-of-the-day is from Angkor Wat in Cambodia. Technically, it's from Ta Prohm, a 12th century temple about a mile from Angkor Wat, the main temple in the area. What's unusual about Ta Prohm is that it hasn't been restored (much), meaning that the jungle still encroaches and tree roots still climb over the temple buildings. Here I am obliged to say that Ta Prohm was used as a location for the filming of the 2001 action movie Tomb Raider with Angelina Jolie as Lara Croft. Good times -- the temple, not the movie.
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Q&A: Take or Pay
Question: Richardson has to pay for a minimum amount of water whether it's used or not. Where is the incentive to conserve? Isn't this like the stupidest thing you ever heard of?
Monday, July 20, 2015
Q&A: Water, Water Everywhere
Question: With all the reservoirs full, why is Richardson still in Stage 2 (or Stage 3 or whatever) water conservation plan?
Why impose water restrictions at all when you have to flush water towers to keep the water from going stale?
Why impose water restrictions at all when you have to flush water towers to keep the water from going stale?
Sunday, July 19, 2015
POTD: Apsara
| From 2015 03 18 Siem Reap |
Today's photo-of-the-day is from Siem Reap, Cambodia. An apsara is "a female spirit of the clouds and waters in Hindu and Buddhist mythology." "Apsaras are beautiful, supernatural female beings. They are youthful and elegant, and superb in the art of dancing."
Saturday, July 18, 2015
Fifi Howls from Happiness (2013)
|
| IMDB |
Friday, July 17, 2015
POTD: Fish Can Do Massage
| From 2015 03 18 Siem Reap |
Today's photo-of-the-day is from Siem Reap, Cambodia. After a long, hot day walking and climbing around Angkor Wat, what can be more refreshing than a cold beer ($1) and a tickly, nibbling, fish foot massage (also $1)?
Everything's a dollar in Siem Reap. And I mean actual US greenbacks, not the equivalent in the currency of Cambodia, the riel, which you only see if your purchase requires change less than a dollar.
Thursday, July 16, 2015
The Rent is Too Damn High
"All-time Record High Rents." That's the headline in Dallas Business Journal. "The hot apartment market in North Texas is bringing all-time high rent as apartment occupancy continues to remain tight." Former Texas governor and GOP Presidential candidate Rick Perry understands what's going on, at least elsewhere.
What's the solution?In blue-state coastal cities, you have these strict zoning laws, environmental regulations that have prevented buildings from expanding the housing supply. And that may be great for the venture capitalist who wants to keep a nice view of San Francisco Bay. But it’s not so great for the single mother working two jobs in order to pay rent and still put food on the table for her kids.
Source: Rick Perry.
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Q&A: Financing with Bonds
Question: Do you think school districts should sell bonds to pay for capital improvements or do you think they should have a capital improvement savings fund?
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
POTD: Dinner Idea or Ninja Star?
| From 2015 03 18 Siem Reap |
Monday, July 13, 2015
Knocking Down Statues Won't Change The Past
That's what Jacquielynn Floyd said in her The Dallas Morning News column after some vandal spray painted the word "SHAME" on the base of the grand statue of General Robert E. Lee on horseback in Dallas's Lee Park.
How about instead of "knocking down" statues, we just move them to a museum hall of shame? Moving from a place of honor a statue of a man who led a white supremacist army in rebellion against the United States of America won't change the past. But it does quit honoring that shameful past. If you insist on keeping our shameful history on public display, at least put up a prominent plaque explaining that shame. No one would spray paint that.
How about instead of "knocking down" statues, we just move them to a museum hall of shame? Moving from a place of honor a statue of a man who led a white supremacist army in rebellion against the United States of America won't change the past. But it does quit honoring that shameful past. If you insist on keeping our shameful history on public display, at least put up a prominent plaque explaining that shame. No one would spray paint that.
Saturday, July 11, 2015
#@!% Comments
I've switched The Wheel over to a Facebook commenting system. There are some advantages, but there are disadvantages as well. For one, you have to have a Facebook account to comment (or Yahoo! or Hotmail). I hate that, but most people are on Facebook now, right? For another, the "Recent Comments" widget won't show any Facebook comments. I'll be deleting it in due course to avoid confusion.
Going forward, new comments have to be entered using the Facebook comment box. I'm leaving the old style comments visible, but if this is confusing, I might end up hiding the old comments. But I'd rather not do that. Dilemma, dilemma. I know...first world problem.
The rules for commenting remain the same. Comments are welcome, but anonymous comments are not. Keep it courteous, keep it clean, keep it on topic, and always advance the conversation. Comments in violation of that policy may be deleted from this website.
Going forward, new comments have to be entered using the Facebook comment box. I'm leaving the old style comments visible, but if this is confusing, I might end up hiding the old comments. But I'd rather not do that. Dilemma, dilemma. I know...first world problem.
The rules for commenting remain the same. Comments are welcome, but anonymous comments are not. Keep it courteous, keep it clean, keep it on topic, and always advance the conversation. Comments in violation of that policy may be deleted from this website.
Friday, July 10, 2015
POTD: Fill 'er up with Johnnie Walker Black
| From 2015 03 18 Siem Reap |
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Peering into the Dallas Looking Glass
Dallas city government is dysfunctional. It's not even a provocative thing to say anymore, is it? Everyone knows it's true. It's almost self evident, right?
In case you don't know that (perhaps you don't live within shouting distance of Dallas), you might want to check out this story in The Dallas Morning News by Elizabeth Findell. City council members shout at each other. City Council members shout at city staff. There's a whole lotta shoutin' going on.
But if you knew that already, you can just jump ahead to this story in FrontBurner by Peter Simek. He reads between the lines of Findell's story to understand the structural reasons behind all that shouting.
Peer into the Dallas looking glass and you might have a hard time seeing Richardson. Well, maybe if I cock my head just so, I think I see Richardson's future.
In case you don't know that (perhaps you don't live within shouting distance of Dallas), you might want to check out this story in The Dallas Morning News by Elizabeth Findell. City council members shout at each other. City Council members shout at city staff. There's a whole lotta shoutin' going on.
But if you knew that already, you can just jump ahead to this story in FrontBurner by Peter Simek. He reads between the lines of Findell's story to understand the structural reasons behind all that shouting.
Peer into the Dallas looking glass and you might have a hard time seeing Richardson. Well, maybe if I cock my head just so, I think I see Richardson's future.
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
How Texas is Whitewashing History
The white supremacists might be on the defensive in South Carolina, where there are calls to haul down the Confederate flag from the state capitol, but in Texas the whitewashing of history is standing strong. If you have a child in Texas public schools, he or she is probably being taught shameful lies about American history.
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
How Much is Upzoning Worth?
How much is upzoning worth? A lot. Different stories about different places reveal just how much. Some cities are quicker to recognize that value and take advantage of it for the benefit of the city as a whole, not just the owner of the property that's upzoned. Some cities are a little slower on the uptake. And then we get to Richardson."Upzoning" -- changing zoning laws to allow taller buildings and greater population density -- creates a windfall gain for landowners in high-value areas when the regulatory barrier is removed, and cities can capture some of that (by selling development rights at or near market prices) to defray the costs of the transit infrastructure that makes the higher-density development feasible.
Source: U.S. News.
Monday, July 6, 2015
The Glorious Fourth
| From 2015 07 04 Breckinridge Park |
| From 2015 07 04 Breckinridge Park |
More after the jump.
Sunday, July 5, 2015
OTBR: A Broken Stone Fence in Australia
Longitude: E 145° 07.176
A child on a road trip with his family asks, "Where are we?" and the father answers, "Let's check the map. We're off the blue roads [the Interstate Highways marked in blue on the road atlas]. We're off the red roads [the US and state highways]. We're off the black roads [the county highways]. I think we're off the map altogether." It was always my dream to be off the map altogether.
After the jump, a few of the random places (and I mean random literally) that I visited vicariously last month that are "off the blue roads".
Saturday, July 4, 2015
Into the Woods (2014)
|
| IMDB |
Friday, July 3, 2015
POTD: Cambodia Online
| From 2015 03 18 Siem Reap |
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Repeat Tweets: Our Sophomoric State Senator
Repeat tweets from June, 2015:
- Jun 1 2015: RT @KonniBurton: "No longer Freshmen!" Now merely sophomoric. @DonHuffines
- Jun 1 2015: Headline: "RISD school bus involved in chase, recovered in Louisiana." Yikes! kltv.com
- Jun 2 2015: Headline: "Ratliff not seeking re-election to SBOE next year." No! Please don't let Creationist Don McLeroy back in. trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com
- Jun 7 2015: Is there a way the NBA could redesign their product so that bad officiating isn't an inherent part of the game? Or do they just don't care?
- Jun 8 2015: "The most informed voters are often the most badly misled." Why "citizens' town hall" meetings" will lead you astray. vox.com
After the jump, more repeat tweets.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


