
Thanks to Nick DeMelas for the quip!

Thanks to Nick DeMelas for the quip!
Click the photo to see it at full size.
Anitra ordered a dozen eclipse-viewing sunglasses months ago, so I’m prepared. I even have a spare pair to share with my officemates!
Luckily for me, the Sourcetoad office setup is such that I have to only walk fifteen paces to get outside:

So far, the weather looks like it’s going to cooperate. Here’s one view looking out from the front of the office:

Here’s another view, featuring the smoker’s gazebo:

Want to know how the eclipse will travel across the U.S.? Watch this video:
In today’s edition of the Tampa Bay Times, local hero Roberto Torres — owner of the Blind Tiger Cafés, Black & Denim Clothing Company, and CoWork Ybor — talks about immigration, its clichés, the need to dispel the notion that immigration is bad, and how Tampa became his home. I’ve had the privilege of hanging out with Roberto, and he’s a wonderful guy and one of Tampa’s greatest human assets. I hope to hang out with him more!

FYI, the actual “14 words” — which the Anti-Defamation League calls “the most popular white supremacist slogan in the world” — is “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children”. It was coined by David Lane, of the white supremacist terrorist group known with a made-for-TV-movie name: The Order. He died in 2007 while serving 190 years’ worth of prison sentences for racketeering, conspiracy, and violating the civil rights of Jewish talk radio host Alan Berg (Lane was the getaway driver for Berg’s murder).
Whenever you hear some bigot using the phrase “14 words”, that’s what they’re talking about.

I’m sure that even Owen thinks this is a bad idea.
Found via my current favorite Twitter account, You Had One Job.
Photo by Joey deVilla. Click to see it at full size.
Every Friday morning at 8:00 a.m., some of Tampa Bay’s most engaged citizens come to the main room in Oxford Exchange’s Commerce Club to attend Café con Tampa, a weekly gathering where guest speakers talk about issues that the Bay and the world beyond. It’s attended by an interesting audience that’s often a mix of movers and shakers from the worlds of arts, business, academia, and government, and put together by local heroes Del Acosta, President of the Historic Hyde Park Neighborhood Association, and Bill Carlson, President of the communciations agency Tucker/Hall. Over the past little while, I’ve had the chance to attend, enjoy Oxford Exchange’s delicious breakfast buffet (it’s part of the $12 admission), and see some interesting speakers, including:
Yann Weymouth, architect and designer of the Salvador Dali Museum in St. Pete, and chief designer for I.M. Pei on the Grand Louvre Project in ParisTomorrow’s (Friday, August 18) speaker is Dr. Todd Willis, and he’ll be talking about the Physician’s Assistant Program at the USF and the expanding healthcare workforce. If you’d like to attend, the admission is $12 (cash only), and it includes a nice breakfast spread including fruit, Oxford Exchange’s fantastic bacon/egg and egg sandwiches, bread, a really good granola cereal, coffee, and tea. There’s even a deal for students or other grassroots community leaders who can’t afford the meal; talk to Barbara at the door for details.
Rick Baker. Creative Commons photo by BAJohnson — click to see the source.
Last Friday’s guest speaker was Rick Baker, mayor of St. Petersburg, Florida from 2001 to 2010, and one of the two leading candidates for St. Pete’s 2017 mayoral election (the other is the current mayor, Rick Kriseman, making this election the Battle of the Ricks).
At the time of writing, the election’s going Baker’s way; the polls from last week say that he has a 6-point lead over Kriseman, and in their July 28th editorial, the Tampa Bay Times endorsed him for mayor. Bill Carlson introduced him by talking about times when he and Baker went for neighborhood walks around St. Pete. “Where most people see the empty lot,” Bill said, “Rick would point out the newly-renovated house, or the fixed sidewalk.”
Here are my annotated notes from his talk:
Photo by Joey deVilla. Click to see it at full size.
Photo by Joey deVilla. Click to see it at full size.
Photo by Joey deVilla. Click to see it at full size.
Photo by Joey deVilla. Click to see it at full size.
Photo by Joey deVilla. Click to see it at full size.
You have repeatedly said the mayor is a non-partisan position. Will you state for the record that you won’t campaign for the Republicans if you become mayor?
St. Pete has been a welcoming place for the LGBT community. What will you do to continue support of that community as part of the city’s economic development?
Note: Baker’s use of the word “seamlessness” is most likely a reference to an idea he put forth in his 2011 book The Seamless City: A Conservative Mayor’s Approach to Urban Revitalization That Can Work Anywhere.
How will you increase taxes to improve public transportation?
What will you do to keep St. Pete affordable for small businesses and homeowners?
Would you commit money to continue the Cross-Bay Ferry pilot project?
Assuming Tropicana field became available, how would it fit with your plans for the city?
How do you view light rail?
I don’t want to make this a partisan question, but back in the 80s it never occurred to me to ask what party a mayor belonged to. But with the current political situation and St. Pete’s “strong mayor” system, and a largely Democratic city council, it does. If you become mayor, there will be hard feelings. How might you end the divide?
Photo by Joey deVilla. Click to see it at full size.
Café con Tampa runs on a fairly strict 8:00 a.m. – 9:00 a.m. schedule since in takes place within a private club, and as the organizers like to say, “the lease runs out at 9”. This means that the Q&A ends at 9 and most attendees file out and make their way to the rest of their day, but there are always a number of stragglers who stick around to network and ask the guest speaker one-on-one questions. Between my recent attendance and the accordion, I’ve gotten to know some of the regulars, and stayed to catch up with them as well as ask Baker a question. While waiting to have a moment with him, I listened as other people asked him their questions.
Having come from the city that elected Rob Ford, who used to rails about “the war on the car” and against cyclists, it’s unusual for me to hear a conservative mayoral candidate talk about the importance of walkable cities, and how people really come to appreciate places that they walk to and through. To one person, he recommended that they read Richard Florida’s writings on the Creative Class and the value they bring to cities. To another, he talked about how it wasn’t always obvious to taxpayers that putting money into cultural and liveabilty was actually economic development. He also talked about how municipal governments more often can’t change a city for the better through direct means, but often do so indirectly by putting the right elements into place.
I asked him one question: With your involvement and influence in the community as a private citizen, why run for mayor again? I’ve talked to a number of people who’ve had similar positions, and while they enjoyed their leadership stint, they say they’d do it only once, and never again. His answer was simple: there’s only so much he could do as a private citizen, and that current mayor Rick Kriseman’s mishandling of a number of issues — including the sewage debacle, in which 200 million gallons of sewage was dumped into Tampa Bay — inspired his run.
I’d be remiss if I didn’t point you to SaintPetersblog’s coverage of Baker’s talk.