Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Artist Networking

http://www.musicthinktank.com/blog/3-areas-of-networking-that-successful-artists-master.html


It’s not what you know, it’s who you know.
You’ve heard this worn out cliché before.
Now, I won’t disagree (that much) with it, but I will say that we give waaaay too much credence to the last half of the phrase and exactly zero to the first half.
If I changed it to suit my purposes it would be “It’s not what you know, it’s what you know about who you know.
I realize this sounds creepy - like ‘sitting-in-a-tree-watching-through-someone’s-windows’ creepy - but before you get all weirded out, come up in the tree for a moment and see what it looks like from my perspective.
You see, I believe the original phrase neglects the fact that knowing someone is really hard work.  It takes years of interest, dedication and follow-through to get to know someone, especially…
  • What their interests are
  • Where they spend their time
  • What groups/institutions they belong to
  • Their phone number even
  • The names of their spouse, girlfriends or kids
  • What makes them tick
We see the “it’s who you know” and immediately fill ourselves with excuses.  We say about the guy who got the private gig we didn’t, “He cheated, he knew the business owner.”
We scream, “I’ve been robbed!” when a band hires their friend to play drums for the tour instead of choosing you - even if you were a long shot.
But this is EXACTLY what networking in music is about; building friendships with a purpose.
This might be hard to hear but the people who got what you wanted simply played the game a little bit better than you.
That’s not a reason to be angry.
It’s a reason to take notes and be motivated.
So, in that vein, I’m going to show you 3 areas that successful independent artists need to master and then I’m going to give you an opportunity to see a behind the scenes video on the system I use to manage my contacts.  Make sure you read all the way to the end.

Networking with Venues

For indie artists, venues are initially the most fruitful connection…
  1. They’re good for getting you a gig on a regular basis, which helps you build a fan base and credibility.
  2. They become an opportunity for ‘trust builders’ with other artists.  This helps you build relationships with artists, which we’ll get into later in this post.
I also generally throw booking agents and promoters in with venues on this one - basically anyone in a professional music capacity that means they spend a lot of time out at shows. These people are great to have in your back pocket as they have a long list of contacts themselves and a long list of potential opportunities flowing their way. Truthfully the more people you have who book and schedule shows in your contacts the more opportunities you’ll have as a result.
Using your venue contacts to line up a gig for another band is single-handedly the best way to build relationships with other artists.  When I look back at the work I’ve done with artists, I see the following flow time and time again…
  1. Venue needs 1 or more artists for an upcoming gig
  2. Venue reaches out to me
  3. I can’t do the show but I specifically mention someone that I know who would be a great fit
  4. Venue/promoter/etc. wants to save time and almost always takes recommendations
  5. The artist plays the show and then returns the favour later down the road
Use your venue contacts to build relationships with other independent artists.
Lastly, building relations with venues opens up the door for the “we need an artist pronto!” emergency. The ones where you can shine by jumping into the line-up at a moment’s notice.  We’ve all heard of big acts rolling through town and the opener comes down with larengitis, gout or something equally gross , forcing the promoter into an immediate frenzy.  They rifle through their Rolodex looking for a replacement.
Wouldn’t it be great if you were top-of-mind in this scenario?

Networking with Artists

Some artists treat music as a competition…
  • Who can get the most fans
  • Who can 1-up your last show
  • Who can sell more albums
It’s either arrogance or fear that drive these misguided people.  Successful artists recognize that collaboration will get you muuuuuch further than competition.
Those that treat the space as collaborative…
  1. are happier people and better spoken about in the scene,
  2. are more successful at landing gigs,
  3. are able to efficiently reach the right fans,
  4.  and have less body fat and a more active libido.*
*this one isn’t real. 
Think of it this way; who do you want to share a bill with? Generally it’s…
Build your network of artists and you’ll have a lot of friends to share bills with. This means you’ll have more people calling you to play with them - increased exposure to paying gigs - and more people to call when it’s your turn to set up a gig.
So how do you fill your contacts with artists?
1. Be intentional about building relationships with bands by meeting at least 1 person from each band you play with - Get to know the people who are playing the same sized venues and to roughly the same crowds as you.  These are your “peers.”
2. Make a list of bands/artists that are at the next level above you and create ways to network with them - Starting in your home town, make a list of artists that are playing at the next level and creatively find ways to network with them.  One of the best ways I’ve found is to work with a venue to set up a gig and offer to line up the artists.  Reach out to big names on your list and invite them to headline, then throw your band on as an opener.
3. Please, for the love of all that is good, follow up with your contacts - I’m pretty sure this is the cardinal rule of networking.  If you don’t actually maintain relationships with your contacts, then what good is having them?
And don’t forget the little tip from above: the fastest way to build relationships is to set someone up with a sweet gig.

Networking Via Self-Promotion

In all my experience I’ve never understood why independent artists don’t see self-promotion as a networking tool.
Think about it this way; networking with venues and artists is active networking while self-promotion is passive networking.  Self-promotion is a way for potential contacts to find you.
Maybe the reason most of us don’t promote ourselves well is that we’re taking the humble route (or maybe it’s just because you’re Canadian like me) and we’re bread to think that self-promotion is arrogant.  Or perhaps you’re the opposite and see self-promotion as a weakness.
But when done right, it’s a very effective networking tool.
I think of self promotion as raising my hand and saying “I’m here.”
So, how do you promote yourself for better networking opportunities?
A lot of this is tied to how you promote yourself as an artist to fans and the way you use your social media and your website.
  • Communicate that you are open to opportunities on your social media pages
  • Start an artist networking group for your town on Facebook
  • Offer to teach other artists something you’ve learned
  • Do something consistently that showcases your abilities and post it to social media
Here’s an excellent example:  One person that I’m coaching had the simple idea  - that is also proving to be incredibly effective - of posting 15 seconds of video to his Instagram feed EVERY DAY of him playing a different beat on the drums.
It shows a) how awesome of a drummer he is and b) how seriously he takes his profession.  After only a couple weeks doing it, he has added 100 followers to his account.  It’s simply a matter of time before some interesting opportunities pop up because of this little consistent action.  (I haven’t asked him permission to link to it yet, but I will and if he says yes I’ll link to it here).

Provide Value

In all aspects, networking is about providing value.  If you can consistently provide value to other artists and venues while looking valuable in your self-promotion your network will blow up in no time.

How to network better

Alright.  You’ve read this far and it was a lot of information.  You must be one of those unicorns that takes networking seriously.
 Here are the bonuses I’ve put together for you:
  1. A video walk-though showing my system for storing and managing contacts (a system that is free and anyone can use)
  2. A networking check list that takes this post and makes it hyper-practical




    The Key to Artist Connection ..... Owning the Fans 

Whatever the platform - from The Grateful Dead's letters to fans to Facebook Custom Audiences - Make sure the RELATIONSHIP belongs to you ......................make sure the relationship belongs to you
I made my start in the music business mainly working with social media; something I called “web presence management.” A fresh-faced university graduate, recently arrived in London from Nashville, with a BBA focused on the music business under my arm. I was ready to talk about revenue streams, royalty splits, performing rights, mechanicals and a whole host of other topics covered in business school. But when I started at my first position with Nettwerk Records I was asked the question, “That’s great, but what can you do?
I once again rattled off the list of music business courses and the knowledge I had gained about the industry. My boss at that time, Mike McNally, stopped me and asked again, “Right, but what can you do for us?” Puzzled I thought through my arsenal of knowledge and limited experience and landed on, “Well, I know some HTML, used to build websites, and I have a US Facebook account so I can book ads there.” (Bearing in mind that at this time you could book ads globally, but only if you had a US registered account.)
His eyes lit up, and we were off. I spent the next months customising MySpace pages, making digital banners of all shapes and sizes, and most importantly began using Facebook ads as a tool to find new fans for artists.
The idea was simple: a cohesive and well-designed web presence that quickly allowed any fan to dig deeper into an artist while encouraging new fans to take a journey of discovery. A “tiered interaction process” I called it, with clear calls to action throughout. One of the first steps in this journey was always connection. On MySpace there were friends, but it was difficult to communicate to them en masse, so we’d always be sure to install some kind of mailing list signup widget, sometimes for a free download, as front and centre as possible. The same was true for an artist’s website, and it was even my advice for bands on tour. “Get out there with a clipboard and sign people up!”
Facebook, however, was a new beast. With its self-serve ads platform, and the ability to target people based on the music they liked (which pretty much everyone gave up freely) we’d hit a communication gold mine. Hitting “like” had much less friction that typing in an email, and those likes were meaningful. Your fans on Facebook would then get pretty much all your updates, whether it be about an upcoming tour, new song or video, or just a general sharing of what was going on.
For the first time there was an easy way to find new fans based on similar interests, send them to a BandPage tab on Facebook, and offer them exclusive content for a like or an email signup.
Like all good things, of course, it didn’t last. As the platform matured, the amount of content multiplied, and soon we all found ourselves limited by “reach”. Now likes didn’t mean nearly as much, as you’d only ever reach a percentage of fans organically. It was a natural progression of course, with only so many posts a person could see per day, and more and more of those being taken up by friends and family alongside those willing and able to pay to reach an audience.
We found ourselves back to a place where email was gold, while tweets drift by and Facebook posts barely peek out of their pages into fans’ news feeds. But the long and short of it was“communication”. The ability for artists to communicate with fans who have put their hand up, so to speak, and said I want to be kept informed. Gmail did make this a bit more difficult with its promotions tab, losing many artist’s newsletters out of people’s main inbox, and yet it remains the most reliable tool for communication.
Of course, this artist-fan communication is not a new thing. The Grateful Dead communicated with their fans via mail, like many artists of the 60’s and 70’s. By signing up to the mailing list, fans got first access to tickets and news about the band. This direct communication allowed them to move away from their label, to their own imprint, and keep fans in the loop by simply posting them a letter. This “direct to fan” approach allowed them to sell out tours and release charting records with just the cost of some stamps.
The real lesson here is owning that communication. As new platforms open promising to streamline this connection, we must remember the Facebook conundrum: building an audience on someone else’s platformThe key is to own the relationship, so that no matter what happens to the social media and other connection platforms in the not so distant future, artists will maintain the ability to connect with fans.
Services like Hive.co allow you to connect all these dots, creating a fan profile across social networks, and even incorporating phone numbers and email address, as well as messaging services like Snapchat. (Which are a whole new area of communication themselves.) Facebook is not a lost cause either, although you do have to pay to reach people, and it can be money well spent (bear in mind that when you get beyond about 500 email addresses, you’ll have to pay to reach them too). There’s also the social features of SpotifyApple Music and other digital music services that allow you to share playlists and releases with fans who follow you there. Even YouTube is rumored to be improving the ability for musicians and creators to communicate with fans. But the key to all of this is owning the conversation, and making it easy for fans to connect. Building a base of core fans, who want all the updates and news an artist has to share, is building a client base that can carry you through a long career.
I would even consider advertising as a fanbase communication tool these days, especially with technologies like retargeting. This allows you to build a list of people who visit your website, click on links you share, or interact with you on YouTube. It used to be a tool only available to the professionals, but with services like Found.ee and companies like Gupta Media, artists are able to take advantage of this and serve highly targeted ads to people who actually want to see them.
With so many avenues to chose from, which is right for you? Email is still of great importance, as we still see some of the highest conversion rates there. As for other platforms, it’s about being where your fans are and doing what’s comfortable to you as an artist. But always bear in mind that if you can own that relationship a bit more directly, then that’s the place to be. Beware of new platforms popping up that attempt to own the relationship, and always encourage fans to follow, like and connect where they can (sometimes you can even do this with incentives like free downloads, exclusive streams, or a chance to win some special merch).
As this connection and communication matures, it allows us to communicate smarter. And as new tools and technologies emerge, messaging can become more targeted, and the amount of noise is reduced. By segmenting your fans you’ll then be able to communicate with them more effectively. Targeting offers, releases, and live events to those most likely to respond.
Custom Audiences on Facebook are a great example of this, allowing you to segment fans based on their behaviour elsewhere. Have they been to your website in the past week? Then you probably don’t need to tell them about the release that came out 2 weeks ago. The same can be done on YouTube with AdWords retargeting lists, ensuring you promote your new video to all people who watched previous ones, but leaving out the folks that have already watched it. The combinations go on and on, but making use of clever communication not only saves in wasted spend but ensures you don’t wear your audience thin with untargeted messaging.
So keep your fans close, and keep the communication flowing. In music we have the unique position that fans generally want the content we have to offer, it’s just a case of effectively communicating that to them. As new tools come on the scene, like many that will be taking part in this year’s Midem, seek out the ones that are the best fit for you and your audience, allowing for low friction / high impact messaging to fan and super-fan alike.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

(10) Ten shocking lessons a huge Texas conglomerate has foisted on Texas public school students

Hopefully all parents with kids in Texas Schools are aware of this and are protesting! 

From - The Daily Caller - http://dailycaller.com -

By Eric Owens On 4:06 AM 02/21/2013


CSCOPE is the acronym-sounding name — that is not actually an acronym — for the oft-criticized, all-embracing K-12 educational curriculum that is used in 80 percent of the school districts in .

“CSCOPE’s high quality curriculum, assessment, and instructional components assist schools in meeting the high standard of rigor and relevance” ostensibly required by various assessments administered by the Lone Star State, touts the nonprofit entity’s website.

Most — though not all — of the critics of CSCOPE are politically conservative. They charge that the controversial curriculum is a radical, backdoor way for progressives to circumvent both the Texas legislative process and the desires of local school boards and communities. They also charge that the creators of the curriculum operate secretly and do not make it easy for parents or even school board members to see the material.

The flood of criticism has likely been responsible for a handful of significant, recent changes. CSCOPE meetings will be public now, and content will be a lot more accessible to the general public. Also, a content review system involving parents, teachers and school administrators is in the works.

Complaints about CSCOPE have been many, though. The most common complaints are probably that the curriculum is riddled with cultural relativism and downright leftist assumptions, particularly in social studies. Critics also say that CSCOPE coursework is short on facts and way too long on giving students opportunities to give their uninformed opinions.

Below, The Daily Caller presents 10 of the most egregious examples of the curriculum’s inadequacies and absurdities.

1. Islam is awesome

In a unit of high school world history, the online material students are given is essentially a paean to the greatness of Islam and its founder, Mohammed.

One portion involves open-ended discussion of the merits of the hijab — the face and body covering worn by many Muslim women (and under threat of arrest in Saudi Arabia and Iran). Perhaps high school students think the hijab is “freeing because it prevents others from making them into sexual objects.” Or perhaps they think the hijab suggests that “women need to be obscured so as not to arouse male desire.” Either way, it’s fine.

The widespread and ordinary mistreatment of women in Islamic countries — particularly Arab ones — is ignored. Texas high schoolers don’t learn, for example, that Jordan and other Islamic kingdoms have laws that pardon rapists if an arrangement can be reached for rapists and their victims to get married.

2. Christianity is a cult

Another portion of the materials on Islam lists several specific lessons that Muslims take from the example of Islam’s founder, such as “Be respectful of other religions.” Strangely, there does not appear to be any such lesson focused on, say, Moses or Jesus Christ.

Instead, the materials in another world history lesson inform students that Christianity is a cult that parallels the death and resurrection in the story of Osiris, the Egyptian god of the dead. The same material takes pains to point out that early Christians were accused of incest, cannibalism and other atrocities.

3. Communism is awesome

An illustration in a CSCOPE high school world history handout shows a figure with a trekking pole climbing steps made out of money. A chart immediately to the right concerns “big ideas” in 18th- and 19th-century economic thinking. At the bottom of the chart is free-market capitalism, where “all people strive to fulfill their own needs and wants,” and where government control and planning are low.

In the middle is socialism, where “the big things” in society (e.g., “telephones, roads, airports”) are “owned by the people.” “Can you think of other big stuff that should be covered?” the chart asks. (Note the loaded verb, “should.”)

At the top of the chart is communism, which the CSCOPE creators innocuously describe as “the idea of living together in a ‘commune’ where all people work together for everyone.” The chart manages to insult the Marxist vision of communism as well, by suggesting that government control and planning is highest under the system.

There is no mention of the nearly 100 million people who died in the 20th century under various self-described communist regimes around the world.

4. Hey kids! Let’s make communist flags

“Imagine a new socialist nation is creating a flag and you have been put in charge of creating a flag,” read the instructions from an activity that directs sixth graders to design a socialist or communist flag. “Use symbolism to represent aspects of socialism/communism on your flag.”

In the same lesson, students are also instructed that socialist utopian Robert Owen wanted to “give every child born into the world an equal chance to live and grow and to lead a happy life.”

No mention is made of the two socialist utopias Owen attempted to create, or how they ended up disastrously failed and disease-ridden.

5. The Boston Tea Party was a terrorist attack

A CSCOPE high school world history lesson plan depicts the Boston Tea Party, the famous protest against taxation without representation, as an act of terrorism.

“A local militia, believed to be a terrorist organization, attacked the property of private citizens today at our nation’s busiest port,” the part of the curriculum pertaining to the Boston Tea Party reads. “Although no one was injured in the attack, a large quantity of merchandise, considered to be valuable to its owners and loathsome to the perpetrators, was destroyed. The terrorists, dressed in disguise and apparently intoxicated, were able to escape into the night with the help of local citizens who harbor these fugitives and conceal their identities from the authorities.”

6. Terrorism: what do you think?

The broader world history lesson that calls the Boston Tea Party as an act of terrorism is entitled simply “Terrorism.” “What is it that terrorists hope to achieve?” it asks students. “What are the long term goals of terrorism?”

There is substantial discussion concerning Guantanamo Bay. The lesson explains that the United States government holds “known and suspected terrorists” at the American military base in Cuba. The lesson flatly asserts that “prisoners are being held without legal council [sic],” thus grossly simplifying a very complex issue of constitutional and international law, not to mention misspelling counsel.

Additionally, the lesson asks whether the prohibition in the Bill of Rights against cruel and unusual punishment should be extended to “non-citizens (or prisoners).” This question is ludicrous on many levels. Non-citizens are most certainly protected under the Bill of Rights. So are prisoners. “Enemy combatants” is likely the phrase the writers of the lesson were grasping for, but it appears nowhere in the lesson.

Finally, hilariously, the lesson — which must have been initially created around 2008 — notes that “President Obama has now ordered Guantanamo to be closed within a year.” Hope and change!

7. Christopher Columbus was an eco-warrior

A third-grade social studies lesson removes vast swaths from Christopher Columbus’s journal entries to make it appear that the explorer was a Darwin-esque environmentalist.

“This is so beautiful a place, [with] species so new and dissimilar to that of our country,” Columbus writes in the cherry-picked CSCOPE version. “The diversity in the appearance of the feathered tribe from those of our country is extremely curious. A thousand different sorts of trees, with their fruit were to be met with, and of a wonderfully delicious odor.”

The writers omit large portions of the journal in their effort to transform Columbus into a tree hugger. Gone are multiple references to God and Christendom, for example. Also left out is the part where Columbus says he is arbitrarily detaining seven native inhabitants so he can parade them in front of the King of Spain.

8. CSCOPE writers pointlessly disparage Paul Revere

A high school social studies lesson on the Bill of Rights allegedly portrayed students to “identify which amendment would apply” to a dozen hypothetical situations. For some bizarre reason, in #9, the CSCOPE curriculum creators decided to have police kick in the door of American patriot Paul Revere’s home to search for illegal drugs. 

9. Help Ban Ki-moon and his U.N. cronies prevent a Malthusian population catastrophe

A document used in science courses on environmental systems is a letter with mock United Nations letterhead. Addressed “Dear High School Ambassador,” the letter explains that world population is approaching “seven billion people.” Secretary General Ban Ki-moon “would like you to participate on an international roundtable to discuss the issues.”

The letter asks students to take “a position whether to support or oppose the pending resolution that the world must achieve zero population growth by the year 2060.” Students should also consider “alternative measures to limit impact of growth.”

Nowhere in the document is there any suggestion that more people might be a good thing. The notion of more human beings in the world is presented in an inherently negative light.

10. Murder and extortion were just “protest strategies” used by the Black Panthers

A question on a CSCOPE history exam allegedly listed four groups: the NAACP, Martin Luther King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and the Black Panthers. The exam then asks: “Which of the above used protest strategies unlike the other groups to achieve equal rights?”

The credited answer is the Black Panthers. Members of the militant socialist organization tortured and murdered 19-year-old Alex Rackley. Nine police officers were killed in confrontations with the group. The Black Panthers also funded their activities by shaking down bar owners and petty criminals in Oakland.


This link is to a CSCOPE Operation Tutorial:  http://www.slideshare.net/shawndaphipps/cscope-tutorial-13952826

Posted via email from Global Politics

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

What the Hell Happened To America?

Who knew it was a crime to let minor children, age 3, pump gas?  No it's not a great idea, but, it seems today, all we do is waste law enforcement valuable time on items like this.  How about just a good chewing out and moving on?  But, jail time?  

As I have written a few times, both my mom and dad would have been locked up because they just didn't ask for respect from their kids to do the right things and worship God, THEY DEMANDED IT!!  If we didn't, the consequences of not doing what they demanded were spankings, not time outs; not grounding.  Oh, same thing at school .... spankings were part of school and part of learning to respect teachers and your fellow students. AND, it didn't matter if you were male or female.....equal punishment for all of us.  

But, guess what?  Back then we never had fights at school; we never had shootings at school, and many of us had pistols and rifles in our vehicles on school property. Most of those weapons were visible.  Back then, most of us were very mature and responsible!!! I remember when I got toy cap guns for Christmas ..... heck we wore them to school so we could play cowboys at recess.  

But, my main question is: What the hell has happen to America? 

Posted via email from Global Politics

Saturday, February 9, 2013

National Day of Prayer Speech by Dr. Carson

Dr

The following is a loose transcript. The video is 27:32 minutes long. If you want to read the transcript rather than watch the video, I suggest you view the video for a couple of minutes to get the flavor and tone of how Dr. Carson speaks. He has great energy, and speaks with passion and humor.

1. The paragraphing is mine.
2. The Paragraph Titles are mine.
3. The transcript is "loose." Not every word is here, but most are.
4. Any and all emphasis is mine.

This is a transcript your child can read and understand. It should give every parent courage to challenge their child to be as good as they can be. Show your child the paragraph about Responsibility and how long it takes to count to 16 trillion.

Dr. Carson began with the following four scriptures and then moved into his address. I've summarized the first few minutes, then the transcript begins.

Proverbs 11:9 With his mouth the Godless destroys his neighbor, but through knowledge the righteous escapes.

Proverbs 11:12 A man who lacks judgement derides his neighbor, but a man of understanding holds his tongue

Proverbs 11:25 A generous man will prosper. He who refreshes others will himself, be refreshed.

2nd Chronicles 7:14 If my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sins and heal their land.

Dr Carson said he has many opportunities to speak before people, and to speak with people, and he often asks what is their greatest concern about the spirituality and the direction of our Nation and our world. He says he speaks with very prominent Democrats and very prominent Republicans:

I was surprised by the uniformity of their answers and those have informed my comments this morning. Now it is not my intention to offend anyone...

...and he chats about how political correctness (which he says is dangerous and he thinks it's a "horrible thing," it "muffles" us from saying what we really mean. He says we must start talking about the things that were important in the founding of our Nation. As he gets going Dr. Carson says what he means, and does so respectfully.

Begin transcript:

Education:

Here we are at a time in the world, the information age, the age of technology and yet 30% of those who enter High School in this country do not graduate. Forty-four percent of those who start a 4-year college program do not finish it in 4 years. What is that about?

Think back to a darker time in our history, 200 years ago when slavery was going on, it was illegal to educate a slave, particularly to teach him to read. Why do you think that was? Because when you educate a man, you liberate a man.

And there I was as a youngster placing myself in the same situation that a horrible institution did because I wasn't taking advantage of the education. I was a horrible student. Most of my classmates thought I was the stupidest person in the world. They called me Dummy. I was the butt of all the jokes. Now, admittedly, it was a bad environment.

Family and Education:

Single parent home. You know my Mother and Father had gotten divorced early on. My mother got married when she was 13. She was one of 24 children. Had a horrible life. Discovered that her husband was a bigamist. Had another family. She only had a third grade education. She had to take care of us in dire poverty. I had a horrible temper, poor self-esteem. All the things that you would think would preclude success.

But I had something very important. I had a mother who believed in me. And I had a mother who would never allow herself to be a victim, no matter what happened. Never made excuses and she never accepted excuses from us. If we ever came up with an excuse, she would say, do you have a brain and if the answer was yes, then she said, you could have thought your way out of it. It doesn't matter what John, or Susan or Mary or anybody else did or said. It was the most important thing she did for my brother and myself because if you don't accept excuses pretty soon people stop giving them and they start looking for solutions. That is a critical issue when it comes to success.

We did live in dire poverty and one of the things I hated was poverty. Some people hate spiders, some people hate snakes. I hated poverty. I couldn't stand it. But my mother couldn't stand the fact that we were doing poorly in school, and she prayed and she asked God to give her wisdom. What could she do to make her young sons understand the importance of developing their minds so that they could control their own lives. And you know what? God gave her the wisdom, at least in her opinion. My brother and I didn't think she was that wise, cause it was turn-off the TV. We could watch only two or three TV programs during the week. It was in all that spare time, read two books a piece from the Detroit Pubic Library and submit to her written book reports which she couldn't read, but we didn't know that. She put check marks and highlights and stuff - but you know, I just hated this. My friends were out having a good time - her friends would criticize her. They'd say you can't make boys stay in the house reading books. They'll grow up and they'll hate you. I would overhear them and I would say, Mother, you know they're right, but she didn't care, you know.

After awhile I actually began to enjoy reading those books, because we were very poor but between the covers of those books I could go anywhere, I could be anybody, I could do anything. I began to read about people of great accomplishment, and as I read those stories I began to see a connecting thread. I began to see that the person who has the most to do with you and what happens to you in life is you. You make decisions. You decide how much energy you want to put behind that decision, and I came to understand that I had control of my own destiny, and at that point I didn't hate poverty anymore because I knew it was only temporary. I knew I could change that. It was incredibly liberating for me.

Alexis de Toqueville:

To continue on that theme of education, in 1831 Alexis de Toqueville came to study America. The Europeans were fascinated. How could a fledgling Nation, barely 50 years old already be competing with them on virtually every level. This was impossible. De Toqueville was going to sort it out and he looked at our government and he was duly impressed by the three branches of government - four now because we have special interest groups, but it was only three back in those days. He said, WOW, this is really something, but then he said, let me look at their educational system and he was blown away. See, anybody who had finished the second grade was completely literate. He could find a mountain man on the outskirts of society who could read the newspaper and have a political discussion, could tell him how the government worked.

His Book - America the Beautiful:

If you really want to be impressed, take a look at the chapter on education in my latest book, America the Beautiful, which I wrote with my wife - it came out last year, and in that education chapter you will see questions extracted from a sixth grade exit exam from the 1800's - a test you had to pass to get your sixth grade certificate. I doubt most college graduates today could pass that test. We have dumbed things down to that level and the reason that is so dangerous is that because the people who founded this Nation said that our system of government was designed for a well-informed and educated populace, and when they become less informed, they become vulnerable. Think about that. That is why education is so vitally important.

Five Doctors Signed the Declaration of Independence:

Now some people say, ahhh, you're over blowing it, things aren't that bad, and you're a doctor, a neurosurgeon. Why are you concerned about these things? Got news for you. FIVE doctors signed the Declaration of Independence. Doctors were involved in the framing of the Constitution, in the Bill of Rights, in a whole bunch of things. It's only been since recent decades that we've extracted ourselves, which I think is a big mistake.

We need doctors, we needs scientists, we engineers. We need all those people involved in government, not just lawyers...I don't have anything against lawyers, but here's the thing about lawyers...I'm sorry, but I got to be truthful...what do lawyers learn in law school? To win, by hook or by crook. You gotta win, so you got all these Democrat lawyers, and you got all these Republican lawyers and their sides want to win. We need to get rid of that. What we need to start thinking about is, how do we solve problems?

Celebrating and Encouraging Intelligent Children - Carson Scholars:

Now, before I get shot, let me finish. I don't like to bring up problems without coming up with solutions. My wife and I started the Carson Scholars Fund 16 years ago after we heard about an international survey looking at the ability of eight graders in 22 countries to solve math and science problems, and we came out No. 21 out of 22. We only barely beat out No. 22 - very concerning.

We we'd to to these schools and we'd see all these trophies: State Basketball, State Wrestling, this, that and the other. The Quarterback was the Big Man on Campus. What about the intellectual Superstar? What did they get? A National Honor Society pin? A pat on the head, there, there little Nerd? Nobody cared about them. Is it any wonder that sometimes the smart kids try to hide? They dont' want anybody to know they are smart? This is not helping us or our Nation, so we started giving out scholarships from all backgrounds for superior academic performance and demonstration of humanitarian qualities. Unless you cared about other people, it didn't matter how smart you were. We've got plenty of people like that. We don't need smart people who don't care about other people.

We would give them money. The money would go into a Trust. They would get interest on it. When they would go to college they would get the money, but also the school gets a trophy, every bit as impressive as a sports trophy - right out there with the others. They get a medal. They get to go t a banquet. We try to put them on a pedestal as impressive as we do the All-State athletes. I have nothing against athletics or entertainment. I'm from Baltimore. The Ravens won. This is great - okay. But, what will maintain our position in the world? The ability to shoot a 25' jump shot or the ability to solve a quadratic equation?We need to put the things into proper perspective.

Reading Rooms:

Many teachers have told us that when we put a Carson Scholar in their classroom, the GPA of the whole classroom goes up over the next year. It's been very gratifying. We started 16 years ago with 25 scholarships in Maryland, now we've given out more than 5,000 and we are in all 50 states, but we've also put in Reading Rooms. These are fascinating places that no little kid could possibly pass up. They get points for the amount of time they spend reading, and the number of books they read. They can trade the points for prizes. In the beginning they do it for the prizes, but it doesn't take long before their academic performance begins to improve.

We particularly target Title One schools where the kids come from homes with no books and schools with no libraries. Those are the ones who drop out. We need to truncate that process early on because we can't afford to waste any of those young people. For every one of those people we keep from going down that path of self-destruction and mediocrity, that's one less person you have to protect yourself and your family from. One less person you have to pay for in the penal or welfare system. One more taxpaying productive member of society who may invent a new energy source or come up with a cure for cancer. They are all important to us and we need every single one of them. (carsonscholars.org)

Moral Decay:

Why is it so important that we educate our people? Because we don't want to go down the pathway as so many pinnacle nations that have preceded us. I think particularly about ancient Rome. Very powerful. Nobody could even challenge them militarily, but what happened to them? They destroyed themselves from within. Moral decay, fiscal irresponsibility. They destroyed themselves. If you don't think that can happen to America, you get out your books and you start reading, but you know, we can fix it.

Responsibility in Leadership - Debt and Deficit:

We can fix it because we're smart. We have some of the most intellectually gifted people leading our Nation. All we need to do is remember what our real responsibilities are so that we can solve them. I think about these problems all the time, and my role model was Jesus. He used parables to help people understand things. One of our big problems right now - our deficit is a big problem. Think about it. Our National Debt - $16.5 Trillion dollars - you think that's not a lot of money? Count one number per second, which you can't even do because once you get to a thousand it will take you longer than a second, but...one number per second. You know how long it would take you to count to 16 Trillion? 507,000 years - more than a half a million years to get there. We have to deal with this.

The Parable of Some People More Special Than Others:

Here's a parable: A family falls on hard times. Dad loses his job or is demoted to part time work. He has 5 children. He comes to the 5 children, he says we're going to have to reduce your allowance. Well, they're not happy about it but - he says, except for John and Susan. He says, they're special. They get to keep their allowance. In fact, we'll give them more. How do you think that's going to go down? Not too well. Same thing happens. Enough said.

Taxes:

What about our taxation system? So complex there is no one who can possibly comply with every jot and tittle of our tax system. If I wanted to get you, I could get you on a tax issue. That doesn't make any sense. What we need to do is come up with something that is simple.

When I pick up my Bible, you know what I see? I see the fairest individual in the Universe, God, and he's given us a system. It's called tithe. Now we don't necessarily have to do it 10% but it's principle. He didn't say, if your crops fail, don't give me any tithe. He didn't say, if you have a bumper crop, give me triple tithe. So there must be something inherently fair about proportionality. You make $10 Billion dollars you put in a Billion. You make $10 you put in $1 - of course, you gotta get rid of the loopholes, but some people say, that's not fair because it doesn't hurt the guy who made $10 Billion as much as the guy who made $10. Where does it say you have to hurt the guy. He's just put in a billion in the pot. We don't need to hurt him.

It's that kind of thinking that has resulted in 602 banks in the Cayman Islands. That money needs to be back here, building our infrastructure and creating jobs - and we're smart enough to figure out how to do that.

Health Care and Death Panels:

We've already started down the path to solving one of the other big problems, health care. We need to have good health care for everybody. It's the most important thing that a person can have. Money means nothing, titles mean nothing when you don't have your health, but we've got to figure out efficient ways to do it. We spend a lot of money on health care, twice as much per capita as anybody in else in the world, and yet not very efficient. What can we do?

Here's my solutionWhen a person is born, give him a birth certificate, an electronic medical record and a health savings account , to which money can be contributed, pre-tax from the time you are born, to the time you die. When you die, you can pass it on to your family members so that when you're 85 years old and you've got 6 diseases, you're not trying to spend up everything. You're happy to pass it on and nobody is talking about death panels.

For the people who are indigent, who don't have any money, we can make contributions to their HSA each month because we already have this huge pot of money instead of sending it to bureaucracy - let's put it into HSAs. Now they have some control over their own health care and what do you think they're going to do? They're going to learn very quickly how to be responsible. when Mr. Jones gets that diabetic foot ulcer, he's not going to the Emergency Room and blowing a big chunk of it. He's going to go to the Clinic. He learns that very quickly - gets the same treatment. In the Emergency Room they send him out. In the Clinic they say, now let's get your diabetes under control so that you're not back here in three weeks with another problem. That's how we begin to solve these kinds of problems. It's much more complex than that, and I don't have time to go into it all, but we can do all these things because we are smart people.

The Parable of Just Because You Are the Biggest and Most Powerful...:

Another parable: Sea Captain, and he's out on the sea near the area where the Titanic went down. And they look ahead and there's a bright light right there - another ship he figures. He tells his signaller to signal that ship: deviate 10 degrees to the South. Back comes the message, no you deviate 10 degrees to the North. Well, he's a little bit insensed, you know. He says, send a message, this is Captain Johnson, deviate 10 degrees to the South. Back comes the message, this is Ensign 4th Class Reilly. Deviate 10 degrees to the North. Now Captain Johnson is really upset. He says send him a message, this is a Naval Destroyer. Back comes the message, this is a Lighthouse. Enough said.

An Example of Why Left and Right Work:

What about the symbol of our Nation? The Eagle. The Bald Eagle. It's an intereting story how we chose that but a lot of people think we call it the bald eagle because it looks like it has a bald head. That's not the reason It comes from the Old English word Piebald, which means crowned with white. Why is that eagle able to fly, high, forward? Because it has two wings: a left wing and a right wing. Enough said.

The Turning Poing of the War of 1812:

Two hundred years ago this Nation was involved in a war, the war of 1812. The British, who are now our good friends thought that we were young whippersnappers. It was time for us to become a colony again. They were winning that war and marching up the Eastern Seaboard, destroying city after city, destroying Washington D.C., burned down the White House. Next stop Baltimore. As they came into the Chesapeake Bay, there were armadas of war ships as far as the eye could see. It was looking grim. Ft. McHenry standing right there. General Armisted, who was in charge of Ft. McHenry, had a large American flag commissioned to fly in front of the Fort. The Admiral in charge of the British Fleet was offended, said take that flag down. You have until dusk to take that Flag down. If you don't take it down, we will reduce you to ashes.

There was a young amateur poet on board by the name of Francis Scott Key, sent by President Madison to try to obtain the release of an American physician who was being held captive. He overheard the British plans. They were not going to let him off the ship. He mourned. As dusk approached he mourned for his fledgling young Nation, and as the sun fell, the bombardment started. Bombs bursting in air. Missiles, so much debrie. He strained, trying to see, was the flag still there? Couldn't see a thing. All night long it continued. At the crack of dawn he ran out to the bannister. He looked and could only see dust and debrie.

One Nation Under God, Indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for All:

Then there was a clearing and he beheld the most beautiful sight he had ever seen - the torn and tattered Stars and Stripes still waving. Many historians say that was the turning point in the war of 1812. We went on to win that war and to retain our freedom and if you had gone onto the grounds of Ft. McHenry that day, you would have seen at the base of that flag, the bodies of soldiers who took turns. Propping up that flag, they would not let that flag go down because they believed in what that flag symbolized. What did it symbolize? One Nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. Thank you. God Bless.

End Transcript

Dr. Carson received the Presidential Medal of Honor from President George W. Bush in 2009.

Posted via email from Global Politics

Friday, February 8, 2013

NEW STUDY: DIET SODA MAY CAUSE MORE DIABETES THAN REGULAR SOFT DRINK

LES ECHOS (France)

PARIS - A new French study has found that the risk of diabetes may actually increase more with the consumption of diet or light soft drinks than with sugary ones.  

Researchers at  Inserm, the French biomedical and public health research institution, followed the health and consumption habits of 66,188 women since 1993, with the objective to track the link between sugary drinks and type 2 diabetes, the most common form of the disease.

It was thought that drinking light drinks would reduce the risk of diabetes. But in results presented Thursday in Paris, the study found that the risk of diabetes is actually higher when drinking light drinks than with sugary drinks, French business daily Les Echos reports.

The study, to be published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, shows that women who consume light drinks have a higher consumption rate than those consuming normal sugary drinks (2.8 glasses/week vs. 1.6 glasses/week in average). Moreover, even when consumed in equal quantities, light drinks are associated with an increased risk of developing diabetes: a 15% higher chance for a consumption of 0.5 liters/week and 59% for 1.5 liters/week.

In order to know if the risk is only associated with light drinks, researchers Françoise Clavel-Chapelon and Guy Fagherazzi compared their effects to those produced with pressed fruit juices, but found no direct association with developing the disease.

Fagherazzi said further study is still needed. “We still need a body of evidence," he said, according to Les Echos. "We are not here to say that people need to stop drinking this or this type of drink.”

Among the mechanisms that might explain this phenomenon, they note that sugars contained in sugary drinks cause a spike in insulin and the repetition of such can produce resistance to insulin, an anomaly that causes diabetes. As for aspartame, one of the principal sweeteners used today, it can cause a high glycemic level (spike in blood glucose), and thus an increase in insulin levels, comparable to those caused by sucrose (sugar).

Posted via email from WellCare

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Sam’s Club Free Health Screening Schedule

Sam’s Club Free Health Screening Schedule

February

2/9/2013

Heart Health Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Total Cholesterol, Glucose and HDL Cholesterol (HDL), and Vision

March

3/9/2013

Allergy Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Allergy testing (top 20 allergens), and Vision

April

4/13/2013

Oral Health Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Total Cholesterol, Glucose, Dental Tabs, and Vision

May

5/11/2013

Healthy Weight, Healthy Skin Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Dermascan (limited clubs, indicates skin damage from the sun), Cortisol, Weight, Height, Waist Circumference, and Vision

June

6/8/2013

Men’s HealthBlood Pressure, Body Mass Index, PSA for men (Prostate-Specific Antigen), TSH for women (Thyroid Stimulating Hormone) and Vision

July

7/13/2013

Healthy Aging Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Amsler Grid (Macular Degeneration), Total Cholesterol, Glucose and Vision

August

8/10/2013

Children’s Health and Back to SchoolBlood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Dental Tabs, Take home DNA swab kits, Child Safety ID Kits, and Vision

September

9/14/2013

Diabetes Awareness Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Glucose, A1C (for known diabetics) and Vision

October

10/12/2013

Women’s Health Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, PSA for men, TSH for women, take home gel breast self exam kits and Vision

Posted via email from WellCare