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Thursday, April 30, 2015

Rural Social Media - Growing - Becoming -

“Springhill is growing: …extraordinary.”  
Dr. Dana C. Richardson, Eco Dev. amazingddp.net 
&

Assisting contributor Dr. Steve Broe, author of, “Leaders in Transition” 
mycareerimpact.com

                

          Robin Williams lived an extraordinary life, in the public eye, comedy and laughter falling from his performances, so quickly, that they made Daytona drivers drool.  Robin mastered his art over a career of very successful stand-up comedy in addition to television and movies.  By doing this he helped us see sides of our lives that lay buried under what we force ourselves to swallow;  the delusion of the ordinary.  We know that our lives become this as we constantly choke back chances to take risk.  Each time that we choose no risk, we fall into the unfortunate life lived ordinarily that poets over the centuries have written about.  Robin Williams took that edge of the cliff humor to the point where we had to either listen, or turn him off.  Was he a lightning rod for thought, which when the lighting struck, couldn't actually handle the charge?  In his movie “Dead Poets Society,” he plays a professor at a very conservative school, who wants his conservative students to realize, there is more to life than what everyone else tells you must be.  He uses Keating, “This is a battle, a war, and the casualties could be your hearts and souls.”  Behind the frequent bilge of political correctness we’re on the edge of losing our ability to listen to a Robin Williams. It’s so unfortunate, so unlikely in the U.S., that this fight for your soul may have become our moment extraordinary?  If you choose ordinary, will those around you stand alone and extraordinary?

                Battle, war, these are terms that politicians who depend upon being elected, have tried to put aside, especially locally.  Local voting has dangers.  As Jack Nicholson being Colonel Jessup famously says about grave danger, “is there another kind?” Local politics constitute the breadth of America, and even in the Metropolis life, our country is forged in small units of business at the local level.  Politics, on the other hand, is the art of doing what seems to meet the majority need, that’s how we vote for representation that matches our needs.  The system of electing those who represent what we are doing, however, needs to step up to battle, but those who want to be elected, and especially at the local level, find they often have to choose between being a leader who isn’t going to let fear be their guide; and the tough decisions which will bring our nation home.  Now more than ever small business is being lied to, and the deadly lies involve how it’s going to be funded.  Who will be allowed to succeed who won’t?  The rules to that series of choices changed between 2012 and now, the vast majority of possible loans, are categorically “too risky.”  At this point entrepreneurs’ begin to feel the bite, every time they fill out an application for funds only to be told, “We’re sorry we can’t help you.”  Which is true, banks don’t make any money on loans they can’t make, politicians can’t cash in on votes they don’t get- read that sentence again, it is what is now in control of your country, at the local level, it’s extraordinary.


                This movement toward business which can prove it will succeed before it’s allowed to take the risk isn't new,  the deadly precision which small business must now prove it’s potential beyond surety, is. It means most entrepreneurs’ won’t get to try.  The difference is the fact that in decades past, if an idea were solid and the bank said “the risk is too high,” then we’d go to mom and dad, or friends, or the community.  Today families and friends are strapped with the worst tax standard in all of human history; we pay over 60% of our dollar into taxes; that do?  We have social media based financing groups, such as “Lending Tree,” “Street Shares,” and others; but those people are also strapped to the point that $25 dollar contributions are 70 percent of the time the most contributed amount  to the group effort at financing a small business’s needs.  Guess what, it isn't working; across the board the results are stated to be positive, but when you look deeper at the number of applications and the number and amounts of financing which occur, it’s bleak.  The answer is going to take local leaders with heart and real courage; the fake vote getting, compromising truth kind; won’t get America out of this trap.  The tax and law structure which placed us here didn't happen overnight and won’t cure rapidly. Every person who understands money and its use is going to have to pony up to the battle, or lose the market on small business, and kiss this country good bye.  Banks don’t make any money on loans they can’t make, politicians can’t cash in on votes they don’t get. Politicians and bankers need to get into this fight in a way that cannot be anything but extraordinary, and so, my friend, must we be extraordinary.

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