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misterearl
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1/23/2009  10:53 AM
Jan 09

'I'm still clinging to my BlackBerry,' Obama said in a recent interview, adding, 'they're going to pry it out of my hands.'

Marketing experts quoted in the Times's story said that if someone of Obama's visibility and popularity were to be paid for such an endorsement, it could be worth more than $50 million.

- Forbes
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jrodmc
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1/23/2009  12:11 PM
Posted by misterearl:

Jan 09

'I'm still clinging to my BlackBerry,' Obama said in a recent interview, adding, 'they're going to pry it out of my hands.'

Marketing experts quoted in the Times's story said that if someone of Obama's visibility and popularity were to be paid for such an endorsement, it could be worth more than $50 million.

- Forbes

And don't think the new Chief Executive Knuckahead doesn't keep that thought in the back of his mind.
Knicksfansince94
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1/23/2009  2:00 PM
50 million? What the hell is Forbes smoking? I'm not a financial paper or magazine, but to my everyman eyes it is a 250$ million dollar deal at least.
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misterearl
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1/23/2009  10:10 PM
Oh Canada


RIM should be a huge donor to the Obama 2013 campaign






once a knick always a knick
misterearl
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1/23/2009  10:43 PM
(It's Good To Be Smart)


The President Orders Transparency

Published: January 22, 2009 NYT

President Obama wasted no time in moving to roll back the Bush administration’s disgraceful strictures on open government.


In a welcome series of orders, Mr. Obama directed federal agencies to err on the side of transparency, not the Bush-era default of secrecy and delay, in releasing records to the public. He also undid the executive order signed by President George Bush that lets past presidents and vice presidents sit indefinitely on potentially embarrassing records that belong in the public domain.

And Mr. Obama issued some of the toughest limitations yet on the power of lobbyists to influence government from within. Under the new rules, anyone who leaves the Obama administration will be barred from lobbying the executive branch for the remainder of Mr. Obama’s time in office, rather than the yearlong ban Mr. Bush employed. In addition, no one may serve in the Obama administration if he or she lobbied an executive agency in the preceding two years.

The new president’s actions provided a burst of executive sunshine that Washington badly needs.

This is particularly true for Mr. Obama’s order reversing a memo from Mr. Bush’s Department of Justice that hobbled agencies in fulfilling the Freedom of Information Act’s promise of accountability. A healthy democracy needs to know what is going on in its government. Small wonder historians instantly hailed Mr. Obama’s reversal of Mr. Bush’s order, which gave veto power to past presidents, vice presidents and their heirs over which executive archives are made public.

President Obama’s new orders go well beyond the standards of his predecessors, particularly in shutting, not slowing, the revolving-door path from well-connected government veteran to high-salaried corporate lobbyist. The promise of transparency is heartening (though the Obama White House’s initial opening day action in crimping photographers’ traditional access to ceremonies was not). The president has vowed “a clean break from business as usual,” with transparency at the core. The nation welcomes this promise and will be tracking its fulfillment.
once a knick always a knick
misterearl
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1/23/2009  10:45 PM
Obama's Priorities: Quick Wins and Momentum


Not since President Roosevelt arrived in the Oval office in the depths of the Great Depression has so much ridden on the success or failure of a Presidential transition. Like Roosevelt, President-elect Obama takes power at a time of extraordinary economic distress. Writing of the dark times when Roosevelt took power, historian Arthur Schlesinger captured the mood in a famous passage: "It was now a matter of seeing whether a representative democracy could conquer economic collapse. It was a matter of staving off violence even (at least some so thought) revolution." It doesn't take much imagination today to conjure scenarios that are equally dire.

Like Roosevelt, it's therefore essential that Obama get off to a great start and rapidly build momentum during the first 90 days of his administration (given the speed of the times, Obama gets 10 fewer days). In the decade I've spend studying and writing about executive transitions, all my research has confirmed this essential point - that what happens at the outset matters a great deal. If the new Administration is successful in creating momentum during the transition, then early wins likely will propel it forward through the new President's first term. But if there are too many early reverses, if key initiatives stall in Congress for example, then critical momentum will be irretrievably lost.

Based on my initial observations, the nascent Obama Administration is off to a good start in this transition. It has moved rapidly to fill the most senior positions with experienced, pragmatic leaders; let's hope the many appointments to come are of similar quality. It has sent up a rigorous process to assess current policy and to transfer knowledge in order to avoid dangerous discontinuities. In this, it has been aided by the dedicated work of the Bush Administration and the Civil Service to ensure a smooth transfer of power.

But all this hard work is but a prelude to what comes next. In its first 90 days, the Obama administration must be able to (1) craft a legislative agenda that strikes the right balance between good policy and good politics and (2) mobilize the potential of the Federal bureaucracy to flesh out and implement key initiatives. If it does these things, then our chances of recovery are reasonably good. If not, then years of stagnation and hardship probably await us. And our nation's standing in the world likely will suffer irreparable harm.

- Michael Watkins is a leadership transitions expert, HarvardBusiness.org blogger, and author of The First 90 Days.
once a knick always a knick
misterearl
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1/24/2009  9:57 AM
The Answer Man, In A Rare Serioius Moment, Begs Your Forgiveness


Please pardon the cut and paste postage. I am offering these selected pieces, and quotes from experts, as perspective on the Obama/American challenge.


"Conditions are eroding far more rapidly than anyone anticipated," said Mark Zandi of Moody's Economy.com, one of three economists who addressed Senate Democrats on Thursday. "The job market is now consistently losing 500,000-plus jobs per month, something you couldn't have envisioned eight to 12 weeks ago. Losses in the banking system over the last week or two have been much larger than people had been expecting. We're coming to the realization that these things are self-reinforcing and the problems aren't developing in a linear way. They're getting worse very rapidly."

The escalating crisis has pushed the days-old Obama administration to a critical point: Obama must quickly choose a course of action, and he must choose correctly because the options are so expensive that he is unlikely to get a second chance, lawmakers and economists said.

Perhaps the greatest challenge facing Obama's team is how to stem losses piling up at banks that hold huge sums in toxic assets backed by failing mortgages and other troubled loans. As the economy weakens, assets that financial firms once thought were safe are swiftly declining in value, including securities backed by credit cards, auto loans and commercial mortgages.

- Washington Post
once a knick always a knick
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