Re: [FairfieldLife] FF Mayoral Race, from Eva Norlyk Smith

2019-10-31 Thread Marty Davis martybigisl...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]
Thanks Rick,
Very I formative even though I don’t live there anymore,

Sent from my iPhone

> On Oct 31, 2019, at 8:31 AM, Rick Archer r...@searchsummit.com 
> [FairfieldLife]  wrote:
> 
> Hi Everyone,
> 
>  
> 
> In case you're wanting more info about the mayoral election, here is a great 
> summary from one of my friends. 
> 
>  
> 
> You can also see forum video here if interested! 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNEwylgjEMM&fbclid=IwAR2mK7FAR5-qI2kNEWr9FRtiylFHV__fPbUm7QQCaU_d64pgZK7hMqtbAlA
> 
>  
> 
> FORUM TAKE AWAYS
> 
>  
> 
> I'm sharing this with all of you in case you are interested. I wrote this up 
> as a Facebook post reply to someone asking about what I thought of the forum 
> with the mayoral candidates (hence the weird formatting). 
> 
> 
> Here's my takeaway: I'm voting for Halley.
> 
> Noyes came across like the love child of Trump and Marianne Williamson: 
> dropping words like “blessed,” “love” and “nurture” while also throwing out 
> grandiose claims: only 37% of kids can read, in 30 days you can learn block 
> chain technology that will make you $75 an hour, etc. etc. 
> 
> Michael made it clear that several of Ed’s promises were in domains entirely 
> beyond not only the Mayor but the city itself (e.g. decisions made at state 
> level or by other entities), but Ed kept saying that that “we can do 
> anything” and talking about how we needed to take back our “unalienable 
> rights.” He came across as someone with a huge vision (that sometimes I 
> agreed with, e.g. getting away from Aliant) and literally zero idea of how 
> anything works.
> 
> Connie started strong, but her answers on an LGBTQ youth question (she 
> basically dodged it) and her response to the CAFO question were significant 
> red flags to me. (NOTE: The CAFO thing is often thought of a complex because 
> there are families benefitting from the model. Connie herself says, “ I am in 
> support of successful farmers.” I’ve thought a lot about this, and I’m no 
> longer swayed by that reasoning. Far more people (not to mention the 
> livestock and downriver ecosystems) are harmed by CAFOs, esp. when you 
> consider the antibiotic resistance issue. There are many families that 
> benefit from organized crime. There are successful criminals. But we 
> recognize that more people are significantly hurt by those actions and that 
> the benefit does not outweigh the cost.)
> 
> Michael actually straight-up impressed me (and I was not expecting to be 
> impressed last night): he was just 100% the voice of reason. Ed would have no 
> idea about something, Connie would come in with a 3/4-baked idea or something 
> riffing off of whatever got Ed applause, and then Michael would quietly (I 
> think he had a sore throat) explain how things worked and what he proposed. 
> He kept to the facts, and he knew all of them.
> 
> But as important as his grounded approach was, more important for me was the 
> fact that when it came to governing the city, his values most aligned with 
> mine. For example, he was not shy about his support for LGBTQ youth. On the 
> CAFO issue, he was also not shy about the fact that he would push for the 2 
> mile extra-territorial zoning (the only thing the city really can do, he 
> explained). Connie had said “I think the city council should have a 
> discussion.” Michael said they’d already had that discussion but had never 
> followed up with it. (He was much more specific on this point, but I don’t 
> recall the details so I’m being vague).. Bottom line: things were ready to be 
> pushed forward and he was ready to facilitate that.
> 
> Connie kept talking about growing our population (as this grows the tax base 
> and really is the only viable way to reduce taxes), but the only idea she 
> clearly laid out as to how was, “Tell your kids to come back home.” Michael 
> went into the nuances of how the city has grown: a non-insignificant 
> percentage of that growth includes people from Illinois who came here to 
> avail themselves of our aid programs. What we really need to do in the name 
> of sustainable growth, he explained, is grow specific demographics (namely, 
> young professionals). He explained that he intends to use the targeted 
> approach that Des Moines successfully used as a model for that.
> 
> I had some sincere reservations about Michael going in there, but my only 
> practical reservation now is that by voting him to Mayor, I’m effectively 
> voting him off city council where I’m glad he’s been a voice.
> 
>  
> 
> 


[FairfieldLife] FF Mayoral Race, from Eva Norlyk Smith

2019-10-31 Thread Rick Archer r...@searchsummit.com [FairfieldLife]
Hi Everyone,

In case you're wanting more info about the mayoral election, here is a great 
summary from one of my friends.

You can also see forum video here if interested! 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNEwylgjEMM&fbclid=IwAR2mK7FAR5-qI2kNEWr9FRtiylFHV__fPbUm7QQCaU_d64pgZK7hMqtbAlA

FORUM TAKE AWAYS

I'm sharing this with all of you in case you are interested. I wrote this up as 
a Facebook post reply to someone asking about what I thought of the forum with 
the mayoral candidates (hence the weird formatting).

Here's my takeaway: I'm voting for Halley.

Noyes came across like the love child of Trump and Marianne Williamson: 
dropping words like “blessed,” “love” and “nurture” while also throwing out 
grandiose claims: only 37% of kids can read, in 30 days you can learn block 
chain technology that will make you $75 an hour, etc. etc.

Michael made it clear that several of Ed’s promises were in domains entirely 
beyond not only the Mayor but the city itself (e.g. decisions made at state 
level or by other entities), but Ed kept saying that that “we can do anything” 
and talking about how we needed to take back our “unalienable rights.” He came 
across as someone with a huge vision (that sometimes I agreed with, e.g. 
getting away from Aliant) and literally zero idea of how anything works.

Connie started strong, but her answers on an LGBTQ youth question (she 
basically dodged it) and her response to the CAFO question were significant red 
flags to me. (NOTE: The CAFO thing is often thought of a complex because there 
are families benefitting from the model. Connie herself says, “ I am in support 
of successful farmers.” I’ve thought a lot about this, and I’m no longer swayed 
by that reasoning. Far more people (not to mention the livestock and downriver 
ecosystems) are harmed by CAFOs, esp. when you consider the antibiotic 
resistance issue. There are many families that benefit from organized crime. 
There are successful criminals. But we recognize that more people are 
significantly hurt by those actions and that the benefit does not outweigh the 
cost.)

Michael actually straight-up impressed me (and I was not expecting to be 
impressed last night): he was just 100% the voice of reason. Ed would have no 
idea about something, Connie would come in with a 3/4-baked idea or something 
riffing off of whatever got Ed applause, and then Michael would quietly (I 
think he had a sore throat) explain how things worked and what he proposed. He 
kept to the facts, and he knew all of them.

But as important as his grounded approach was, more important for me was the 
fact that when it came to governing the city, his values most aligned with 
mine. For example, he was not shy about his support for LGBTQ youth. On the 
CAFO issue, he was also not shy about the fact that he would push for the 2 
mile extra-territorial zoning (the only thing the city really can do, he 
explained). Connie had said “I think the city council should have a 
discussion.” Michael said they’d already had that discussion but had never 
followed up with it. (He was much more specific on this point, but I don’t 
recall the details so I’m being vague). Bottom line: things were ready to be 
pushed forward and he was ready to facilitate that.

Connie kept talking about growing our population (as this grows the tax base 
and really is the only viable way to reduce taxes), but the only idea she 
clearly laid out as to how was, “Tell your kids to come back home.” Michael 
went into the nuances of how the city has grown: a non-insignificant percentage 
of that growth includes people from Illinois who came here to avail themselves 
of our aid programs. What we really need to do in the name of sustainable 
growth, he explained, is grow specific demographics (namely, young 
professionals). He explained that he intends to use the targeted approach that 
Des Moines successfully used as a model for that.

I had some sincere reservations about Michael going in there, but my only 
practical reservation now is that by voting him to Mayor, I’m effectively 
voting him off city council where I’m glad he’s been a voice.



[FairfieldLife] Fairfield in Iowa, A Spiritual Place

2019-10-31 Thread dhamiltony...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]
To Fairfield, Iowa Four decades ago people in a solidarity moved intentionally 
to gather and make a spiritual practice community. In recent migrations 
evidently away from soaring high living costs, climate change, and overcrowding 
in the Western US we have seen people arrive in our little midwest town. Some 
coming without means of support, requiring support, coming only because they 
had heard it is a nice progressive and spiritual place.
 While most who had originally come to make a small progressive spiritual 
community have worked and endured to live here pursuing community living mostly 
as poorer mice to be here. Quite a lot of life-time, resource, human capital, 
and money has been given to the place of the community by folks. 
  Fairfield, Iowa the number one Top City for Meditation.
 30 Top Cities and Towns for Meditation in America
 An article:
 
 http://www.sonima.com/meditation/top-cities-for-meditation/ 
http://www.sonima.com/meditation/top-cities-for-meditation/