Write to the candidates: What would you ask Americans to sacrifice?
I appreciate the positive feedback I've gotten on my post about my letter to Senator Obama about donating blood, etc, and I'll appreciate it even more if you'd chime in and send the same message to him through the campaign's debate feedback form. That will make it more likely someone will take notice. (Feel free to spread the word, and/or link to my post).
While you're thinking about it, what would *you* ask America to do, to sacrifice, if you had the the kind of national attention these candidates can get, both as candidates and potentially as President? Write to them about that too.
In addition to the question of giving blood, one big thing I saw missing from both of their discussions of an energy plan was manpower. George Bush has made some somewhat lame mentions of the fact that some Americans are dealing with the gas price problems by driving less and riding bikes and such. Sure we are! And we should do more! Don't we have a national struggle with obesity and diabetes? We can address that and gas shortages and prices at the same time, by using old-fashioned manpower to get around. By hooking up generators to the stationary bikes and other exercise equipment we use at the home and the gym, so they generate electricity instead of using it up. By building bike-powered drive-in theaters and other such alternative energy solutions. Part of dealing with the energy crisis should include encouraging bike-friendly urban design and rules of the road. Hybrid and electric public transit as well as personal cars.
There are a lot of things they aren't talking about. So go call them on it!
(you can contact the McCain campaign here).
While you're thinking about it, what would *you* ask America to do, to sacrifice, if you had the the kind of national attention these candidates can get, both as candidates and potentially as President? Write to them about that too.
In addition to the question of giving blood, one big thing I saw missing from both of their discussions of an energy plan was manpower. George Bush has made some somewhat lame mentions of the fact that some Americans are dealing with the gas price problems by driving less and riding bikes and such. Sure we are! And we should do more! Don't we have a national struggle with obesity and diabetes? We can address that and gas shortages and prices at the same time, by using old-fashioned manpower to get around. By hooking up generators to the stationary bikes and other exercise equipment we use at the home and the gym, so they generate electricity instead of using it up. By building bike-powered drive-in theaters and other such alternative energy solutions. Part of dealing with the energy crisis should include encouraging bike-friendly urban design and rules of the road. Hybrid and electric public transit as well as personal cars.
There are a lot of things they aren't talking about. So go call them on it!
(you can contact the McCain campaign here).

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As far as the high costs of severage packages: sometimes it is better to pay a CEO a couple of million to leave rather than to have that person mismanage a multi-billion dollar company. You can't just fire them (they have a contract and thus they would tie the company up in litigation expenses, which could also add up to a lot of money). Better to just pay the incompetent to leave.
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*some* executives are no doubt worth a lot, but I don't see why companies should give them tighter contracts than anyone else. 6 weeks' severance plus more depending on period of service ought to be more then enough for someone who is being fired for cause. I think a lot of these golden-parachute deals are simply being put in place by greedy executives in companies that lack oversight because most of their shareholders invested through mutual funds and other such vehicles and take no personal interest in the particular policies of the company that the legal system assumes shareholders will rein in.
The established paradigms of business in this country need to change. They aren't working.
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The board could, of course, include a provision that says: "You will receive nothing if we determine that you are not competent." If you wish for companies to adopt such a policy, contact the ones that you have stock in. But asking Congress to impose national policies in this area is absurd because companies should be flexible to be set up in a way that works, not based upon what is popular or sounds good on the campaign trail.