Friday, November 28, 2014

Police brutality greatest hits


If ISIS released video like this, we would rightly call them deranged barbarians. I know these incidents may be "taken out of context", but is there a reasonable explanation for all of them (each suspect unarmed and no imminent threat to anyone)? You can see the officers have a predatory/chase mentality - they are hunting prey and need to dominate their suspects (low-brain functions vs. higher reasoning/ethics). It's not about upholding the law and protecting public safety anymore. Heck, it's not even about their own safety, as they are engaging unnecessarily closely with the suspects.  

These people are the menaces to society, not the Oscar Grants and Trayvons of the world. It's also a shame that taxpayers have to fund their salary, equipment, and pension. We are clearly not getting our money's worth. How the laws are written, it's very hard to get an excessive force conviction.

You might say, "there are good cops out there." That is true, and I hope they would be pissed to see some of their comrades behaving like this and hurting the public. I would hope they clean out the rot from within their departments. But they don't, because "the brotherhood in blue" protects its own even when fault is clear (just like other corrupt, opaque orgs like the Catholic Church). And maybe they don't enact tough police conduct laws because they don't want to be the subject of an investigation some day.

----

A coworker who grew up in NYC told me that the NYPD acts like an occupying army at times. This could be a reflection of that.

https://news.vice.com/article/anger-grows-as-nypd-blasts-protesters-with-controversial-and-painful-noise-weapon?utm_source=vicenewsfb
The Pentagon previously commissioned research into "non lethal" mass urban pacification weapons, and I guess LRAD is one of the results. I think it was originally meant for Iraq, but now they are using it against US residents and citizens, some of whom are not breaking any laws and assembling peacefully. Supposedly there are longer-term effects of the weapon, such as headaches and head ringing for up to a week. Who knows if it contributes to mental illness, brain/ear damage, or worse? I suspect the vendor and Pentagon did not really do much safety testing. It reminds me of Agent Orange in Vietnam. The brass just told soldiers to use it, and didn't know about the health risks or didn't care.

"We want to know did they have training? Do they have a written formal policy? A Freedom of Information Law request was done in 2011 and we got the results in 2012. As of then the NYPD claimed not to have any written documents."

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Happy Thanksgiving and happy Buy Nothing Day

This weekend, we can expect the usual parking lot & store fights, stampedes, cold/fatigue related injuries, debt spending, and such. All this to keep our consumer economy humming and shore up retailers' financials. Or we can boycott the insane, unnecessary, perverted-capitalism process.

If you are troubled by the recent trend that some retailers are opening on Thanksgiving (and staying open like 40 straight hours into Black Friday), you can also boycott them all year-round, divest from their stocks, and let their management know that you disapprove of their operating decisions and worker treatment. These employees deserve (hopefully paid) time off just like the white collar workers and others who are their customers - esp. because they will have to suffer through the longer, uglier hours in Dec anyway.



It's not just retailers, but also the public services, entertainment, food, and convenience industries. If workers must/choose to work (i.e. we need some gas stations and hospitals open), they should get OT/bonus pay. SD is trying to enact a law that would require 2X pay during TG and Xmas - not sure how it will pan out and there is no federal bill of course. Retailers may claim that they are just responding to customer demand; maybe so but that is also what a drug dealer would say. Sure, no one is expecting us to spend 24-7 with our families without going crazy, but there are other things to do besides consuming with the herd: enjoy the outdoors, catch up on chores/studies/sleep, volunteer at a kitchen, etc.



It's all especially sad/ironic because TG/Xmas are holidays where we are supposed to be good to each other and reflect on our blessings (usually blessings that can't be bought in a mall). Do we still have or remember what people gave us 3 years ago? We are the best shoppers for ourselves anyway. Holiday gifts are not that important, so why do we continue to stress and waste effort over gift buying year after year? Unless it's a Lexus with a big red bow on it (who actually does that?), or you need to impress someone with a gift, what's the point? And even still, if you need to give gifts to make someone like/accept/remember you, then maybe that relationship isn't meant to be. There are plenty of other ways to express your feelings, and the most precious gifts can't be bought anyway (sharing special moments together). Many Americans' homes are overflowing with stuff already; why not celebrate Buy Nothing Day instead?



Not sure if it's just a few stores or company-wide, but struggling chain Kmart, as well as Wal-mart, are mandating that its staff work on TG (no time off requests will be honored). I guess those mgmt teams think their workers should be thankful to even have crappy minimum-wage retail jobs.



Here is a list of retailers that will be open and closed on Turkey Day:


http://www.ijreview.com/2014/10/193996-big-retailers-open-thanksgiving-good-bad-thing/

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Cleveland child shooting by police

http://gawker.com/video-cops-shot-12-year-old-two-seconds-after-arriving-1663814827

Re: the Cleveland shooting - the video doesn't tell the whole story (at least there is a video though) and I am not familiar with all the facts, but...

The initial 911 caller told police that he/she thought the firearm was "probably fake", but that info never got to the officers on scene. The shooter was a rookie cop on the job less than a year (of all the officers in the area, why dispatch him to a potential firefight situation?). So lapses in police procedure seem to be contributing. If the officer killed the kid within 2 sec of the vehicle coming to a stop, when exactly did they ask the kid to put his hands up and observe that he didn't comply? Maybe they asked him from their loudspeaker before 0:21? Either way, to me it makes no sense for the other officer to drive the car into the park within 10 feet of the potentially dangerous suspect. Again, that is an act of escalation rather than diffusion that frankly is putting his partner on the driver's side at undue risk. What is the benefit of doing that? I don't mean to be a Monday morning QB, and I am ignorant on police rules-of-engagement, but it doesn't seem logical/effective. So is poor training/procedure also to blame (in addition to poor judgment)?

Why not use their loudspeaker at distance (handgun shooters generally have low accuracy beyond 25 yards) to ask any bystanders in the area to withdraw? Then from behind cover, they can have time to converse with the suspect, evaluate the risk, and discuss with HQ if needed. Why the need for such immediate violent response; the suspect was seated and not posing a threat to anyone at the time (i.e. there was no Hollywood style hostage standoff)? Shouldn't deadly force be the last resort? All of this seems to be circumstantial evidence supporting the theory that black life is not valued by some Americans (esp. in law enforcement). They wouldn't act this way if the suspect was a relative or friend, right? 

For perspective, the Richmond PD has not killed anyone in 7 years, despite the fairly dangerous climate in their city (but that PD is known for good community outreach). And they average  less than 1 officer shooting incident per year. So obviously there is a choice and violence is avoidable, unlike what Wilson claimed.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Ferguson grand jury decision and police use of force with blacks

This was a pretty good panel discussion about the Ferguson decision. To be clear, based on how our laws are written, what evidence was available, and how our justice system "works", Zimmerman and Mesherle were not guilty, and there was not enough here to indict Wilson. Whether that is right or acceptable is another story.

No one really expected an indictment of Wilson, however there was some concern about how the process unfolded: the prosecutor seemed to focus on the officer's perspective, the prosecutor's dad was a cop killed by a black suspect (and didn't recuse himself), Brown's family was not called to testify (but Wilson was - highly unusual), the convenience store crime footage was released, and AG Holder was indirectly involved. There is also the over-arching issue of the proximity between law enforcement and the DA's office, and whether impartial oversight of alleged police misconduct is possible. Was this g. jury just a "show trial" as justice theater, to go through the motions when no one really wanted to investigate Wilson. And maybe Wilson in fact broke no laws.

We've spoken about these issues before, but obviously if police were not armed (like in the UK, Norway, and many other places), that precludes the risk of violent altercations. We know that's not going to happen, so maybe police resources could be allocated to community outreach and rules-of-engagement/de-escalation policy analysis and training rather than ridiculous military exercises that they will never (or should never) use domestically. And instead of buying tanks and sniper rifles, maybe law enforcement could invest in officer and vehicle cameras - which have been shown to deter violence and misconduct from both officers and public. Convictions were possible in the Rodney King case because of footage, otherwise we all probably believe that the verdict would have been different.

There are "ambiguous" cases where an officer can rightfully shoot or not shoot - it's up to their discretion. The data show that when the suspect is black or brown, shooting is a lot more likely outcome. Assuming that minority suspects are no more dangerous than white suspects, this may be a manifestation of traditional racism, lack of sensitivity training, and/or unconscious fear (particularly of large black urban men). Ferguson's police force is under 10% black, yet the community is 2/3 black. Why was the actual white cop-killer in PA apprehended with little harm to him (and maybe no shots fired), but kids, mentally challenged, and unarmed/poorly armed minorities are beaten to a pulp or shot 10 times?

Would white America think it was OK if the tables were turned? Imagine if blacks were 60% of the population, had all the wealth/power (and Obama would still be president because he's half white), and most of the guns. Would they be OK with young white man after young white man (unarmed) killed by black cops or black neighborhood watchmen, with no convictions or even indictments? And all of this met the letter of the law?

----

Maybe there has been some sensationalism and race baiting by the media and others over Ferguson, but this crap isn't much better:


I guess Wilson is on his PR tour, and lucky for him he's the only one left alive to tell the world what happened that day. He took a punch from Brown, and then "feared for his life". He is 6'4" 210 lbs, but he said he was like a boy vs. "Hulk Hogan" - that's how big that "man" was (Brown was 6'4" 292 lbs). Either Wilson's stupid or melodramatic, but it's pretty hard to die from one or two punches. He was in a motor vehicle. If he feared for his life, why not just hit the gas and escape (assuming the car was running)? Only when he went for his gun did it become a "life and death" struggle. During his grand jury testimony (when he was not subject to cross-examination), he said Brown was a "demon". Is that to evoke sympathy and/or an admission of his hysteria?

Wilson's recounting of the incident could be accurate, but it's quite peculiar. I don't know their stories, but I believe that Brown did not have a history of violence, erratic behavior, or aggression. I am not sure about Wilson's record on duty. But the way Wilson described Brown, the kid seemed to be crazy. I'm not saying it's impossible, but why would a teen, when ordered by a cop authority figure to get off the road and then approach the patrol car, suddenly attack the armed officer without provocation? It's like Trayvon - did he suddenly just decide to kill an adult stranger on a whim? Then instead of finishing Wilson off in close quarters, somehow the hulk-demon Brown ends up 35-40 feet away from the police car, turns around, and charges back at Wilson - ostensibly with intent to kill (even though the kid already passed up an easier opportunity to kill Wilson)? At that point, Wilson said that the thought in his mind was, "Legally can I shoot this guy? I have to." If he was attacked by a "demon" and fearing for his life before, it's not likely that Wilson could be so conscientious and analytical in that moment. This makes me really suspicious of his version of events.

Wilson repeated that he has a clear conscience because he followed his training to the letter and did nothing wrong. To me, that's like Bush saying that he can't think of a mistake he made as president. Honest people can always admit they could have done something better - it doesn't require deep introspection and intellect. And if you are truly in the right, that doesn't mean that you are not allowed to be sub-perfect. Any time someone kills someone else, something obviously went wrong. But for Wilson to be so sure and culpability-free, that suggests he is on the defensive and hiding something. Maybe he is (rightfully) worried that if he is open and contrite, his words will be twisted and turned against him. He is not out of the legal woods yet. However, I don't think it's very persuasive to neutrals or skeptics when you show very little to no empathy or remorse, and just keep maintaining that you did everything right and you are actually the victim.

Wilson is the professional peace officer with the firearm and the training. He has the power of life and death, not Brown. Maybe he wielded that power in accordance with the laws of the land, but don't tell us that all this was 100% unavoidable and 100% of the blame is on Brown. Is conflict ever so black and white?

"Is there anything you could have done differently that would have [avoided the killing]?"
"No."
"Nothing?"
"No."

----

When you speak of intellect and police, please keep this in mind:


Bottom line:  They're smart enough to know their own limits, which makes them feel inferior.  Give him a gun and that inferiority goes away.  The police are poorly trained and intellectually ill-equipped to do a job like policing.  Police (in a civilized society) need to read a situation and determine the way to de-escalate it to protect everyone, not just themselves.  Instead, they exacerbate and intimidate.
If Brown was a 'demon', a police officer should know how to deal with them.  You cannot tell me that Brown wouldn't understand that if he punched a cop in the face, he'd be killed.    Every black child is told that he is perceived as a threat in society just because the color of his/her skin.  It is the 'talk' black parents have to have with their kids in order to hope they might not land in jail or get killed. 
Once again, it's bullshit cop story and because the american society is so racist, they believe it.
How long ago did we watch Rodney King get beaten?  Same as it ever was.  

----

Yeah, "the talk" is a good point; most black American men know not to do anything remotely aggressive towards the cops. Yet Wilson admitted to firing his gun 12 times at the unarmed Brown. As you said, I am pretty sure Wilson did/said something offensive to provoke Brown, who responded like a testosterone-fueled teen might, and then Wilson probably escalated because he felt that his petty ego/authority was challenge and he wanted to put this punk in his place. Like Jack Reacher said, people join the armed forces either because they're legacy, unable to get a better job, or want to legally kill people. I think some people become cops because they have inferiority complexes and want to wave the gun/badge around and intimidate (like Denzel's depiction in Training Day).

Maybe I'm way off base about Wilson, but I know this applies to some cops over the years based on the long record of misconduct and corruption (and those are only the cases that saw the light of day). Teachers and gov't workers get blasted by the right all the time, but they always apologize for the cops. They are all supposed to be public servants, but yes, there are structural and psychological reasons why they may put their own interests over the public's at times. But when cops do that, people can get hurt and justice suffers.

The way Wilson, Zimmerman, and some in right-wing media/politics describe, young black men are a ticking time bomb of primal rage that can't be reasoned with. That is racism to me, with tragic effects. Same thing with some Muslims - they are accused of embracing a culture of martyrdom and death. "We love life and freedom, they hate it." They're barely human, so they need to be caged and killed like dogs. So sure, when a psychotic 300 lb black guy wants to tear you limb-from-limb, of course you regretfully have to protect yourself with deadly force. Poor Wilson. I acknowledge that some blacks and Muslims fit these descriptions, but the vast majority don't. And plenty of whites exhibit this behavior and worse (the majority of mass murderers in US history were white men, often educated and not that poor). So we're profiling all wrong. But maybe the error stems from, and is reinforcement of, the centuries-old stereotypes about white man's burden and black savages.

One thing I also wanted to comment on was the criticism over the rioting and looting in black neighborhoods in the wake of Ferguson, Rodney King, Watts, Katrina, etc. This is somehow validation for conservatives that blacks are the problem. I am not condoning the behavior, but when people are given no better outlets for redress, and day-after-day subject to mistreatment and negativity all around, they are going to react poorly during times of strife. It is not inherent to blacks - it is what happens when you marginalize people and leave them with no hope/future. The discrimination, harassment, and violence (economic violence too) that some black people face (often from non-blacks) are significant disadvantages that others often dismiss because they haven't experienced it themselves. I also think Obama was too dismissive and unsympathetic of the protesters' perspective in Ferguson (esp. compared to Trayvon), but I assume he is being extra cautious so as to not get blamed/associated with the racial anger/violence.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

A scathing indictment of US lotteries

Like most enterprises involving a lot of $, the lottery has been pretty crooked in the US from the start. And it doesn't really make sense for the state to prohibit sports betting and other gaming, while it holds a monopoly on a $68B business that contributes only 1% to education (with untold billions in social costs).

Lastly, several states (CA, IL, etc.) have or are considering (NJ, others) selling stakes in their lotteries to private investors, in order to shore up their shaky budgets. Like many public asset sales, this usually works out to the detriment of the public. Investors want ROI, and will find new, unhealthy ways to increase the number of players/losers (an idea floating around is online sales).

Campus sexual assault - an indictment of the college system and US society?

The Cosby stuff was bad enough, but this just made me want to puke:

http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/features/a-rape-on-campus-20141119?page=5

College sexual assault has been in the news fairly often in the last few years, and unfortunately the stories keep getting worse. The issue may affect a shocking 1/10 to 1/4 of all college women in the US. It got so bad that Obama had to address the nation about it this year, and 76 problem schools are under investigation (and let's remember that rapes still happen on the exempt campuses too).

Unfortunately rape has been with us since the dawn of humanity, and I don't know if our current justice system has processes and harsh enough penalties on the books to properly deter it. But what also really bothers me is the attitude of the "enablers" or bystanders that let this criminality persist (or even suppress/cover it up). As the RS article described, some students seemed more concerned about the "reputation" of frats and UVA over the welfare of the victims (and justice/human decency). "Keep your mouth shut, or you will find yourself an outcast and give our school a bad name." Unfortunately, we've heard about the same crap in the military and Catholic church (and the Paterno-Sandusky tragedy).

There is a Senate bill aimed to hold college admins more accountable and increase punishments. There is also backlash from big, brave, anonymous voices on social media about this. They piss and moan, blame the victim, and such. Maybe there are some imbalanced women who do cry wolf and just want attention, but if there is even 1% legit victims out there from all the accusations, I think rape is one of those subjects where over-reactions is totally warranted. There are some mitigating circumstances where a defendant can justify a theft, lie, or even murder. But rape is 100% unjustifiable, end of story. I know our discussion group tries to be open to diverse opinions and ambiguity, but I really don't see how that is possible here. A person is not going to die without sex. No bad will come to young lovers if she is a bit tipsy tonight and he tries to make his move another time. The only costs are their "reputation" among peers and how they may measure up to juvenile notions of manliness (warped by media and unchecked by other adults who should know better).
The US rightfully slams fundamentalist Muslim societies for how they abuse women, and we were all disgusted by the stories coming out of India. But are we any better? I would say that the US is fairly strong on child protections, but what about women - who are 50% of our country? I know the vast majority of women are treated decently by men and thankfully never have to go through this hell. But just 1 case is too many.

What is even more disturbing is that these incidents happen at college, and often at good schools. College is where our best and brightest learn to be productive adults, where America (and the world's) future is being cultivated. I don't mean to be a prude, tisk tisking our young people for being so much worse than we were. I regret how I misbehaved, goofed off, and didn't fully capitalize on my precious time in school. Maybe this horrible stuff was going on but kept under raps when we were students, or maybe it is actually worse now. Technology makes casual sex a lot easier (or at least more visible) for young people, and egotism, hedonism, and entitlement seem to be bigger issues with Millennials vs. Gen X'ers (maybe I'm biased).

College is becoming more and more of a haves vs. have-nots game, and fierce competition (or family/wealth connections) make it more about status than learning/meritocracy, so these factors could be exacerbating the problem. "You are a UVA man and a Kappa Sig man; the world is your oyster and no one can hold you back." Just like the celebs that some kids idolize. And these folks will graduate, go to work, and perpetuate the attitude to their kids. Maybe some will actually mature and teach others from their experience (if I could, there is hope for anyone).

Sorry that I keep repeating TR's quote, but it keeps being relevant! At college, we educate kids in book knowledge, but not about life and morals. Well to be honest, I wouldn't want most university employees to teach my kids about those subjects (but they could hire qualified "life coaches" instead). Also, coddling parents may cry foul if the school dares to insinuate that their perfect angels don't already know how to behave. Most airline passengers are not a danger, but everyone still has to go through the metal detector. So even if many college kids are pretty mature and know how to treat others, unfortunately there are still bad apples in the bunch, so everyone has to go through training - sorry. What we learn in college is mostly useful for grad school, but is really not that valuable for the rest of our lives. Therefore, why waste our kids' precious time on that, and instead teach them about life? It's such a wasted opportunity if all they get are equations, exams, football, and spring break. I am not well versed in the classics and ancient Greece, but isn't the origin of the university system rooted in philosophy, ethics, and such? The humanities are dying at US colleges, but maybe we should bring some of that back in order to avoid generation after generation of "menaces to society." Maybe then, kids would learn about and practice empathy, respect, and honor, instead of becoming the next Wolf of Wall Street. Maybe then we'll come to value or fellow humans over peer pressure, ego, and tribalism.

I think most of us (especially men) would agree that we were kind of idiotic assholes at age 18-20. Maybe that is just the natural growing up process, and we have a lot of bad social influences. Is 18 too young for American kids to go off on their own to school? Maybe we should have post-secondary, gender-segregated, college prep for 2 years like the Europeans do? Because it's a dangerous time when you get a lot of adult rights and freedoms, but you are still operating on juvenile judgment and experience. This is nothing new, but clearly we haven't figured it out yet if thousands of women's lives continue to get ruined, during what should be a great time in their lives. Zero tolerance for Greek orgs (who really provide no constructive value to colleges or greater society) - one rape conviction or other serious crime, and they are banned from the school for a decade. Three convictions nationwide and the frat is shut down for good.

I know I sound like a square, and I really wish it didn't have to come to this, but if Americans behave like children and savages, then unfortunately we should be treated as such until we show improvement.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Uber behaving badly

I know Uber is by nature an aggressive, controversial company, but maybe you've been following - their messaging and PR practices have been a bit suspect too. They even hired Obama campaign mgr. David Plouffe to improve their voice. But like we've discussed before, if you're so in the right, why do you need to go to such lengths to convince people? Or is it just a case of arrogant, quasi-autistic tech geniuses being such terrible communicators?

As a link in the above article describes, the big investors don't hold Uber leadership to account because of all the billions riding on them. People don't want to upset the money-printing machine, so they kowtow and condone their antics. And the sad part is, most of their offensive, sexist practices have nothing to do with rideshare social technologies. Is it just another manifestation of the self-absorbed "bro culture" that we've already seen from the Street? Only this time the nerds get their chance. Like with most major tech companies, I am pretty sure Uber is nearly devoid of female and minority leaders. I am not saying that a company has to be an affirmative action Utopia, but different viewpoints and backgrounds at the table help keep bad behaviors and terrible ideas in check.

In this particular case, Uber's SVP of Business Emil Michael suggested during a private dinner (where press was in attendance but he thought he was off the record) that the company should conduct "opposition research" and defame critical journalists. In particular, he was alluding to using some family dirt on PandoDaily's editor Sarah Lacy (who has written about women's issues and Uber in the past). From a business standpoint, it's pretty stupid for them to be so dismissive re: the concern that some women customers have about the safety of their service (a usually male stranger with only a cursory background check & regulation drives a solo woman customer to her home late at night). And to top that off with sexist comments and Vendetta is beyond me.

These braniacs may have huge IQs, but what about their EQ? This is obviously not how dignified adults should behave. When word got out, of course Michael apologized and the company distanced itself from his statements. And to be fair, this is nothing new; "traditional industries" have been doing this for centuries (and still do, a la Chevron in Richmond), but you'd think these Masters of the Universe would be a bit more enlightened now? Or are they just the 21st Century Rockefeller and Carnegie bullies? Well, most of the top industrialists in US history have one thing in common - they are monopolists who get rich by screwing everyone else in the value chain (incl. customers).

Over dinner, [Michael] outlined the notion of spending “a million dollars” to hire four top opposition researchers and four journalists. That team could, he said, help Uber fight back against the press — they’d look into “your personal lives, your families,” and give the media a taste of its own medicine.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Is this what it takes to make "startup millions?"

A friend of mine recently left a mobile-social startup called Tango. This person didn't tell me much, but said a few things like the CEO is a dictator and was recently making the engineers work 2 out of 4 Saturdays each month (arbitrary and no exceptions, even if they were on top of their projects). I know one bad case is not an indictment of the industry, but it might be too representative for comfort.

And Tango is supposedly a promising firm with 200MM user registrations and a huge recent round of funding ($280MM from Alibaba and Warner affiliates), which suggest a valuation likely above $1B. As usual, I'm pretty sure Tango's actual value to society is not that high. And let's remember that a major exit is pretty rare; WhatsApp/Google/FB are outliers. I think over 90% of tech startups become "zombies" - meaning they are dead firms to investors, and their shares will never be exchanged for real money. To be fair, this is about the failure rate for SMBs in other industries. But the big difference is that VCs and F500 firms are not plunking down millions on Joe's Garage or Betty's Bakery.
Here are some highlights from the Glassdoor employee reviews. I know review sites are biased towards really happy/upset folks, but the story is an interesting reflection on the crap of startup life that may not be captured in "Silicon Valley". There are 51 reviews posted for a 5-year-old company with a current headcount of 160.

  • Lots of turnover, and the people who stay are only doing so for visas (if they can trust Tango's cut rate lawyers to file properly).

  • CEO and CTO own half the company shares. They had offers to sell, but are holding out because they believe the company's potential is 10X if they can show more growth (or is their best growth behind them?).

  • Engineers are unclear on what their options are worth and what %ownership they constitute. Pay is below market with the promise of equity cashout some day.

  • Mgmt. changes its mind a lot on product strategy and vision (creating a lot of wasted work and firedrills), and the CEO just over-rules everyone and switches course on a whim anyway.

  • The company supposedly has "great benefits" like unlimited PTO and free dinner, but dinner is served at 7 and people are scared to ask for time off because of the workaholic culture.

  • Probably under pressure from investors or his own impatient ambition, the CEO recently mandated 9.5 hour days and weekend work. He just wants to see butts in seats, and cares more about "doing time" than productivity.

  • Enough people complained about this policy so that the head of HR spent money to create an employer profile on Glassdoor to respond to the reviews.

  • This HR person claimed that the work hours policy was rescinded (and likely illegal for exempt staff). "There are many ways to make sure we hit our release dates and this was not the right one."

  • "We are sorry you would not recommend Tango to a friend. Although we have some room for improvement, I do believe we are starting to make changes."

  • One reviewer said that Tango went through 6 heads of HR in 2 years. Tango responded that it was actually 4. Why even bother to issue that correction? To me it just makes them look worse. You can imagine why the HR folks leave - it's a crappy culture with unhappy people that they are expected to magically fix, even though the C-levels probably don't recognize the problem and don't respect/empower them to change things. 

  • There are some glowing 5-star reviews. But they are written with perfect English and too many business buzzwords. In other words, they look phony. Other Tango reviewers have said the same - they think the positive reviews were planted by the company to make them look like a more attractive employer. I know this happens with Yelp and other sites, but that just crosses a line to me. Plenty of companies have lousy work conditions, but they don't lie to the outside world about it. It's almost a badge of honor for employees that Apple or Goldman are tough places to work (only the strong survive). They bask in it and don't try to mislead. In fact it's a disservice - they should hire people who like that environment. There's no point to try to bait and switch; the new hire will just get disappointed and want to leave. And we know staff turnover is a huge cost to firms, especially fast-moving and lean startups.

  • But this seems to reflect the desperation of Tango HR. They have very demanding/unreasonable work expectations and demoralizing leadership, yet they don't comp well and need to find talent to replace all those who left. Lovely. All that so the founders and investors can get a phat return, while the entry-level engineers are no closer to early retirement. At best they might be able to afford a Bay Area mortgage with their post-tax shares (all that is assuming a healthy exit of course). 
I wish investors would show more ethical rigor and refuse to invest in companies like Tango that engage in terrible workplace and HR behaviors (Zynga also comes to mind). Some pension funds have divested from companies that heavily contribute to global warming/warfare, or have discriminatory practices/leaders. I wish VCs would do the same, but the problem is they are too damn greedy. Plus, if they don't invest, their rivals will. It's a "frothy" environment now where there is so much money that firms want to invest in the next WhatsApp, but not enough worthy startups (despite their abundance). So investors have to relax their standards and fight to get face time with the top prospects. Yep, it's another bubble.

Another problem is that overwork is the "new normal" in the Valley and some other high pressure industries. Heck, investors may want to target firms where the founders are able to push their people more than the competition. Yes, I realize that there is no free lunch and a startup has to bootstrap and hustle to succeed. But clearly some leaders go overboard and run their firms too hot. When all is said and done, it's people that make the startup go. You can glorify the code and the disruption strategy and the innovation all you want (you can even lionize the founders), but all that probably won't overcome an abused/demoralized/burnt out workforce.

--------

I understand the republicans plan on overturning the 14th amendment, right after they impeach obama.

Seems to me this is the norm.  I work for a state institution and it has the same atmosphere.  Exempt employees are told to lie on their timecards because they are not approved pay for overtime. The department is constantly run on fear and panic.  There's only so long that you can keep up the pace before you break down. Then, they toss you to the curb.  

This unemployment rate isn't real.  It's much higher than they say and everyone deep down knows it.  As one director said to his department during a meeting, 'There's plenty of good talent on the street'.  The fear is instilled in you by your threat of losing your job.  Hell, if you're here on a visa, it's potentially a much bigger loss.

Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, they are personally responsible for this social remodeling in which we are to identify ourselves with our 'company'.  We are to live to make the company better.  We base all of our self worth on how the company does and will do anything asked of us b/c the CEO is god.  We depend on them to get to work they feed us, we re-create with our coworkers, in some cases, they have apartments on sight.  You are isolated from everyone in your real life and only focus on work.  Wonder why there's no talk of religious cults anymore?  Because the model has been implemented by the corporations!

I used to work for a company that mandated you attend a 3 day, alcohol soaked, retreat. At that retreat, I know of 3 extramarital affairs.  One man left his wife (that I know of).  As far as I can tell, this was encouraged-one more way in which the company isolates its workers.  

We are abused, demoralized and this model will not change until we all stand up together, as one force.  How many times did you stand by and watch a coworker get fired and not do anything to defend him/her?  Who will stand up when the black hand of HR comes for you?
--------

Sorry to hear that your org is dealing with unpaid OT too. Yeah I think something needs to be done about the working hours expectations for exempt employees. I guess it's "OK" if companies want workers to put in 60 hours/week and be on-call after hours, but they need to explicitly state that in the terms of employment up front (at my current job, there was a question on the application like "Are you able to work extra hours?" but that was pretty vague/unfair - and I don't know what would have happened if I replied "no"). Then the candidate can decide whether the comp and other factors are worth it for the hours. Other people just like working and would log those hours regardless, but there shouldn't be bait-and-switch or surprises.

Maybe the 40 hour expectation for exempt workers is 20th Century, though I know some managers and HR orgs do want workers to limit their hours and at least try to honor the 40 benchmark. Some might say "don't focus on the hours and think about getting your tasks done." There is some truth to that, but time is the universal currency and it should be respected. On the flipside, if very efficient people can finish their workloads in 30 hours/week, then that should be respected too (but of course companies will just give that worker extra projects to fill the space). Maybe that worker needs to be promoted or transferred to another role where the responsibilities will require them to spend ~40/week, but I don't think most companies have the time or inclination to manage worker time so conscientiously. Everyone is too focused on goals and results, and promotions are unfortunately driven by politics and "commitment" rather than efficiency/balance. Though some recognize that workaholics are not the best candidates for promotion.

You bring up an interesting point how the corporate life has replaced/supplanted a lot of "traditional American life." Religious participation is on the decline in many parts of the US, possibly replaced by company/CEO worship (as well as brand worship, media worship, etc.). Companies are pretty open about the fact that their goal is to "indoctrinate" new workers in the "culture" - using typical religious techniques like an origin story, a noble mission, exceptionalism, tribalism, etc. I don't know how US recreation and family time today compares to last gen, but clearly Americans are having fewer kids, and having them later. Part of that is macro, but part of it is probably work-related (and by extension, university-related since you need more years of schooling to get a good job now). More of the US workforce is corporate than ever before (it's harder and harder to make it as a SMB, including tech SMBs). Also, financial services have reached an all-time high in terms of % of GDP, and that is probably driven by more investment participation from institutions as well as company 401ks (and all that is driven by the performance of publicly-traded firms of course).

So it seems all this is suggesting "the company" is becoming the center of American life. It would be a hard sell to argue that this is a good trend for our country, unless you consider the perspective of the 1%. 

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

The US political merry-go-round

I haven't really been following the midterms, but just wanted to share some general concerns. It just seems like Groundhog Day to me. The incumbents screw up (real or perceived, but the more interesting question is: how was their performance vs. the hypothetical alternative?), supporters are demoralized and fail to mobilize compared to the fired up opposition, and the other party sweeps into power.

If it's a divided gov't, nothing gets done (and it's so unlikely for one party to control 60 Senate seats). If one party has a monopoly on the Executive and Legislative, then they invariably overstep their "mandate", attempt to reverse the recent progress of their rivals, and make their fair share of screw ups too. Then the whole cycle repeats in 2-4 years, and the American people (and the world) are stuck in this futile cycle. For example, the GOP has tried to repeal Obamacare dozens of times, even when they didn't have the Senate. Now that they do, I am sure they will try again, even though it won't get past the Obama veto. And all the while infrastructure, education, climate change, immigration, etc. initiatives just languish while the problems get worse.

The only exceptions to this pattern seem to be (hopefully) rare, unifying security events like Pearl Harbor or 9/11 (Bush's GOP gained seats in 2002), or an especially bullish sustained bubble economy combined with terrible behavior by the opposition legislators (Clinton's Dems gained seats in 1998).
I'm not sure what can be done about this in the short term. Obviously the usual ideas surface: a more active and educated electorate, voting rules reform, a truly popular vote, longer terms and/or term limits, less unlimited dark money in politics, more time on politics and less on campaigning/fundraising, more competitive districts, and frankly better parties and candidates who can behave like gentlepeople and put country first. Clearly our representative gov't is dysfunctional when a majority of the public want tougher gun control, but our leaders are much less amenable. Same goes for bipartisanship, climate change, pot, gay rights, taxes on the rich, even Obamacare (when you peel away the misinformation).

http://billmoyers.com/2014/08/14/a-study-in-plutocracy-rich-americans-wield-political-influence-the-rest-of-us-dont/