• Park outside of NBC Tower

    March 23,2019
  • Reading

    March 23,2019
  • Current iPad Pro Status: Giant battery pack.

    March 23,2019
  • The Chicago Tribune building, by request.

    March 23,2019
  • Reading

    Book Review: Democracy, Inc. 📚

    I saw this book on sale on the iBooks Store and was immediately drawn into the content. We’ve heard stories over the years of Members of Congress increasing their personal net worths over their terms in office, and so my expectation was that this book would explore that topic. The book was a waste of time, which can be perfectly summed up by the authors themselves,

    The Post analysis did not turn up evidence of insider trading. Instead, the review shows that lawmakers routinely make trades that raise questions about whether members of Congress have an investing advantage over members of the public.

    The book itself is a compilation of news stories published in the pages of The Washington Post in 2012. The reporters conducted extensive reviews of public records and financial disclosures, uncovering dozens of examples of lawmakers personally benefiting from information that they had and earmarks they requested.

    When it came to the stock trades, universally, each story had the same ending. The Member of Congress didn’t make or request the specific trade, but rather their investment broker executed the transaction. This section of the book was the weakest.

    The earmarks section was a bit more compelling. In many cases, Members of Congress secured earmarks for projects in their districts that appeared to directly benefit them. For members of the House, whose congressional districts are limited, often with only one or two main areas of population, I found the earmarks to not pose a particular problem. For Senators, the earmarks that improved infrastructure or economies where they lived, there was an appearance of impropriety.

    The main thrust of the article is that Congress sets the rules for personal disclosure for itself and all other members in federal public service. Time and again, they hold others to a much higher standard than then do themselves. The authors used their reporting to suggest that an equal standard of disclosure be applied to all members of government. In that respect, they were persuasive.

    Rating: ★ ★

    ISBN: 9781626810044

    March 23,2019
  • Haiku

    A Quick Vacation

    Trip is now over.

    A break from my little ones.

    I will hug them soon!

    March 22,2019
  • Columns are awesome.

    March 22,2019
  • Cancer Survivor Park section of Millenium Park.

    March 22,2019
  • ChetCast

    Episode 70: Grant Park Is Closed

    I headed down to check out Grant Park, but it was closed for event preparations. So I took a stroll in Millennium Park seeing the parts that I missed this morning.

    March 22,2019
  • Brexit. Oof.

    March 22,2019
  • Reading

    Finished reading: Democracy Inc.: How Members Of Congress Have Cashed In On Their Jobs by The Washington Post 📚

    March 22,2019
  • Sun soaked.

    March 22,2019
  • Extreme Content on Social Media

    Last week’s attack in New Zealand was repugnant. Even worse, the terrorist’s use of social media was representative of a new breed of horror.

    We’ve lived with two decades of jihadists beheading hostages and posting the video on the Internet, but this new era of live-streamed violence is particularly troublesome. Facebook and YouTube worked feverishly to remove copies of the attack video, but they are now reporting actual numbers. Facebook counted 1.5 million attempted uploads, 1.2 million of which were blocked automatically. That still left 300,000 copies online for a period of time. The initial video was up on the site for over 30 minutes, despite having been flagged within 15 minutes of posting.

    Video was supposed to be the next level of social networks. Like any technology, it was a feature that was quickly perverted. Sadly, we will never be rid of extreme and violent video content on the Internet. It’s here, and no amount of AI or curation will stop it. We need smaller cities on the Internet, not massive countries. While Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter are not inherently evil, its hard to ignore the hate to which they give safe harbor.

    There’s still a place where the promise of the Internet is still alive: the open web. People every day are registering their domain and setting up their own website, where they share their thoughts, ideas, and lives. This is the best of the Internet, and it represents a much brighter future for the global online community.

    March 22,2019
  • Nice view for coffee and a dash of writing.

    March 22,2019
  • Can’t get over the blue sky.

    March 22,2019
  • Made it to the end of the pier!

    March 22,2019
  • Shoreline view.

    March 22,2019
  • Very walkable.

    March 22,2019
  • Complex interchange.

    March 22,2019
  • Navy Pier.

    March 22,2019
  • ChetCast

    Episode 69: Lakefront Trail

    I’m exploring the Chicago city public parks this morning.

    March 22,2019
  • I made it to the Lake!

    March 22,2019
  • Brilliant sunlight.

    March 22,2019
  • Fewer tourists at 8am.

    March 22,2019
  • City parks are so fun.

    March 22,2019