I’m
sure there have been a lot of opportunities I’ve missed, but not because I
didn’t want to gamble on them if there was even a decent chance to be successful.
I was more than willing to take that
chance. I got burned on a lot of my decisions but I did well on the others. Not
one time have I ever said “If I’d only.”
I’ve taken chances. I’ve been delighted by the ones that are successful
and I have no regrets on the ones that were not successful.
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
October 23, 2013
Any time an opportunity came up, even if it
even smelled close to being good, I took a very close look and if it had merit
I did it. I’m 75 years old. When I look back, there’s nothing I didn’t do that
I wished I had done. I remember as a kid, and I must’ve heard the story
20 times, people saying, “When Coca-Cola started, my father had the opportunity
to buy into the company for nearly nothing.” When a salesman came through town
selling Coca Cola stock all of my friends didn’t want to take a chance and buy.
They later joined in unison to say “If I’d only bought $20 worth of the stock
I’d be a millionaire.” I don’t want to hear those words and I don’t like the
stories. I don’t like them because they only show that the person telling them
was short of confidence and character.
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
If I’d Only
The worst words in the English language: If
I’d only. I get so tired of hearing people say, “If I’d only bought that
stock,” or “If I’d only gone to school,” or “If
I’d only taken that job” and so on. All my life, I made a conscious
effort never to put myself into a position where I would later say “If
I’d only.”
Monday, September 16, 2013
Yesterday I Turned 75
Yesterday I turned 75, and I took the opportunity of a captive audience to again expound the importance of education in Nevada. Without a well-educated work force, without a citizenry capable of critical thinking and clear communication, America has little chance of competing on a global scale. And make no mistake--we are a global economy and a global citizenry. Education is not a privilege; education is not a luxury; education is the basis of every civilized society. Let's show the world we care, and we can. Support education in any and every way you can.
Friday, September 13, 2013
Less?
My family didn’t have
two cars until I was 14. Our house had a one-car garage with no plans
or ability to make it a 2-car garage. My father had
an excellent job that paid good wages and mother didn’t work until I
entered the 7th grade. Under today’s tests for determining
success, my family was a failure. Yet looking back over those one car,
one garage, one parent working and one parent
staying at home, it seems to me my family was far more successful than
its counterpart today, which must have both parents working, often more
than a 40 hour week, both parents being stressed to the limit, and their
children being denied the necessary time
and attention from the parents. How can we have more, and at the same
time, less?
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Take Inventory
I want you to do
yourself and me a favor. I want you to ask yourself why you are so
ineffective in persuading others around you that if they don’t
spend at least 20% of their time participating in government, education
or health initiatives, that it won’t be long until the government,
education and health care systems completely fail. When I graduated
from law school in 1962, I took the bar review course
in Arizona which was taught by a Chester Smith. He also was probably
the best professor I had in my nine years of college. He made the
following point over and over, and though I’m not sure that his
mathematics were accurate, his concept of how one should
spend his or her time was sound. He said, spend a third of your time
working, a third of your total time involved with your family and a
third of your time involved in the activities of your community. I’ll
bet a survey of Americans would show that they
spend 90% of their time thinking only of themselves, 7 ½% of their time
thinking and being involved with their families, and 2 ½ % of their
time being involved with the communities in which they live. It seems
to me that’s a recipe for failure. May I suggest
you take inventory of your own life to see how you invest your time,
your money and your energy.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Wednesday, September 11th, 2013
Luck has been a major
contributor to my financial success. My net worth far exceeds the
aggregate of my intelligence, efficiency,
productivity and ambition. My family has given more than 80% of its
net worth to education. It did so with the thought and belief that we
could help raise the standard of living, even if by a little bit, of
those around us. But I have to tell you, it’s
very discouraging to see what poor use is made of our financial
support. It depresses me to the point where I’d simply like to stop
sending the checks and start building my bank accounts. Yet for some
reason, I keep putting our family’s money into an education
system that seems destined to implode.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Tuesday. September 10, 2013
There must be someone,
some group, some political and some economic conspiracy that spends all
of its time trying to ruin your life, making it impossible
for you to succeed financially, while at the same time refusing to
educate your children, provide adequate healthcare for you and your
family, and will fulfill its purpose only when we’re all dead and
buried. If those people or those groups exist, I haven’t
been able to find them. We are our own enemy. All the damage we
suffer is caused by us. I’d like to see a plan adopted by all of our
citizens who are just turning 21 that would lay out the solutions to our
health, education and general well being over the
next 20 years.
Monday, September 9, 2013
Complaining
Bitch, bitch,
bitch—during the next two weeks do a quick analysis of how much time you
spend each day complaining about how miserable your life is
and accusing others of ruining your life. I’ll bet at least 90% of
your time is spent complaining and possibly 10% of your time is spent
trying to make your life better.
Friday, September 6, 2013
Buzz Of Excitement
I went through my yearbooks from my four years at Las Vegas High School.
I made a rough calculation that 90% of those who started, graduated. I
look at my fellow Las Vegas High School graduates--Dick Brian, Charlie
Thompson,
Cheryl Purdue, Carolyn Sparks, Bill Wortman, Bob Miller, Larry Ruvo—and
even though it was 50 years ago that we left school, when we see each
other, we still have the buzz of excitement from growing up and living
in Las Vegas. I don’t see that in Nevada High
School graduates who finished school in the last twenty years.
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Community
I know it’s much easier to understand the workings of your community
when it has less than 25,000 residents. When my family moved here in
1951, the population of Las Vegas was 21,000. It was a town—though
controversial
with certain material flaws—that seemed to work together and made every
effort to develop a common pride in the community. Do you think that
growth, by itself, has killed that closeness? Or do you think times
have simply changed so that everyone wants to
be only part of himself and not part of any greater community?
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Does It Frighten You?
I do interviews each noon of people who have serious effects on all of
our lives. I am shocked and dismayed when I get phone calls from
viewers who say they couldn’t care less about what the county commission
is doing
or what the superintendent of schools is doing, and they don’t want to
listen to anyone who talks about anything that is more important than
the soap opera they watch. That frightens me. Does it frighten you?
Call me and we’ll discuss it. My office number
is 657-3142, and my home number is 222-2298.
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Why Do You Think We Don’t Care?
Did you ever ask for directions from someone who claimed to be a
resident of Las Vegas for thirty years but had no idea where to send
you? Even worse, these long term Las Vegas residents have no knowledge
about any member
of the county commission, the city commission, the lieutenant governor
and even the governor. I don’t understand this—all of these people
affect every Nevadan’s life. Why do you think we don’t care?
Monday, September 2, 2013
Curiosity
Curiosity may have killed the cat, but Americans these days have no fear
of being injured in any way by being overly curious. I’m no
psychologist or
psychiatrist or sociologist,
but I have lived through an era where my fellow students, fellow
lawyers, fellow businessmen and fellow educators were driven by
curiosity. I don’t
know about you, but I think curiosity suffered a long, slow, painful
death.
Friday, August 30, 2013
Ask Yourself One Question
There are those who think I’m crazy. There have always been those who
thought I was crazy. There are those who believe that it’s lunacy for
me to really report news that goes right to the core of your values and
those
issues that truly affect your successes and those of your family. Our
increase in news over the next two years, that is, an hour of news at 7
PM, an hour of news at 3 PM, and an additional hour of news sometime
between 11 AM and 3 PM, is using a sledge- hammer
to drive in a tack. It’s my belief that even the sledge-hammer won’t
give you enough information to successfully plan the next
year of your life, let alone the next 20 years of your life. Ask
yourself one question: Am I going to have enough money to feed my self
and my family when I can no longer work past 55 or 65, but I’m likely
to live to be 85?
Thursday, August 29, 2013
News With Substance
Substantive news: news that’s more than an
inch deep and 4 miles wide; news that really affects your life; news
about more than whose house burned down, who was shot during a fight,
and which politician is on the take.
I call it news with substance. And I don’t see a lot of it on
television. I may be making a big mistake in believing that the public
understands that present news coverage of nearly all events that really
do affect our lives is so shallow that it is of no
importance.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
When we ceased broadcasting Judge Judy, a television show that I find
repulsive and an insult to the legal problems of this country, I got
calls from many people protesting my decision. I was both amused and
shocked by
the response. But after some consideration, it began to trouble me
greatly that the Judge Judy solutions seemed to be the guide for solving
all of our problems. I believe that if you think the Judge Judy and
her approach is the one that all of us should
use as our guide to success, then we’re all in big, big trouble.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
August 27, 2013
I’m told by some (not by all) that there simply isn’t enough news or
written analysis that’s worthy of broadcasting to require more than
local newspapers and local television stations to produce now. It’s my
belief that
those who hold this belief have either given up on trying to direct and
influence the economic and intellectual policies of this country, or
that they simply have no understanding of what’s going on around them.
Whatever the reason, people had better begin
to be engaged in the direction their government’s going, or the first
thing they’ll know is that they’re falling off a cliff.
Monday, August 26, 2013
Sampling
Sampling may work in buying cookies, ice cream, vegetables and
automobiles, but sampling of the news does not work as a guide to what’s
happening in the rest of the world. Americans have become samplers in
everything they
do, and sampling is not working to help the public know what policies
to support that come from each of the two major political parties.
Friday, August 23, 2013
Net Worth
If your present situation in this economy is
such that you’re not in the top 5% of the wealthy in this country,
you’d better start looking to find out what, if anything, you can do to
ensure that your standard of living
when you retire will be sustained and supported by the assets you then
have. If 60% of Americans have no net worth, I will bet that in ten
years that percentage will rise to 85% — Not a very good outlook.
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Information
For those of you who sincerely believe there is barely enough news to
fill 3 half hour television broadcasts each day, let me say this to
you. Your desire to get to the sitcoms and the game shows has become so
voracious
that you don’t even bother to learn about the financial piranhas that
are consuming your house and eating your money and preventing your
retirement when you thought you’d have a few bucks in the bank to live
on. It’s our intention, because we have the ability
to communicate with 97% of you, to provide you with some semblance of
information that will help ensure your economic future. News to us is
not limited to rape, robbery and mayhem, which in reality affects very
few of you. We believe news should educate
you so that when you get to the end of the road you will not find there
is no place for you to sleep, eat or simply enjoy life.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Freeze You Out Of The Economy
I tie Monday’s and Tuesday’s thoughts to today’s thoughts and I will
continue this theme through Friday. The middle class has spent too much
of its time paying little attention to the social and economic factors
that influence
their lives. Americans love to be entertained and Americans love the
seemingly never-ending amount of entertainment provided by a multitude
of sources, including television. Many sitting in front of the
television watching mindless sitcoms and so-called reality
shows that really have no reality in them, believe that if they watch
30 minutes of 30 second news sound bites at least once a week, they will
be able to understand and therefore control the direction of the
American economy. I would say we’re in for a surprise,
but I think the surprise is already very real, and I’m not sure that
its effects will ever be changed. While you sat in front of the
television set being entertained, the rich folks were planning their
next step to freeze you out of the economy.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
This Tells You...
Five years ago the stock market fell like a
man trying to commit suicide by jumping off a thirty-story building.
Today the stock market is over 5% higher than it’s ever been. This
tells you the rich folks are back to
being rich, and yet the poor folks didn’t get to ride along as the rich
made their come-back. If the rich conclude they can remain rich
without the financial support of the middle and lower classes, the rich
will never see the middle and lower classes again
in their rearview mirrors.
Monday, August 19, 2013
A Very Significant Fact
All of you either remember or have heard about the Great Depression of
the late 20s and 30s. Stories of Wall Street millionaires losing all
their money from the time the stock market opened and the stock market
closed on the same day.
I’m no economist, historian or social expert, but one factor sticks out
in my mind: Everyone was affected by the Depression—the rich, the poor
and those in-between. This latest economic disaster, while affecting
many wealthy people, didn’t affect the wealthy
as much as it affected everyone else. I think that’s a very
significant fact and I intend to discuss it further with you this week.
Friday, August 16, 2013
Different World | Different Economy
I cannot imagine working hard for 40 years
and reaching the age of 60+. What it must be like to find yourself
unable to work with 20 years of life left and no savings to sustain your
life. When I was born in 1938, life
expectancy was 59 years; now it’s nearly 79. It is a different world
and a different economy, and we must solve the problem of how we support
those who have done so much, but whose lives now are extended far
beyond their years of production.
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Working Man’s Production
President Obama asserts that people who work a full week should be paid a
minimum wage that is capable of sustaining their lives and their
dignity as human beings. He’s right. This economy is created by every
stratum
of Working People. The rich folks may have been responsible for much
of this economy’s success, but don’t you ever believe that the rich got
rich without the Working Man’s production.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Question
I’m not sure which world the rich folks
live in—especially those who inherited their wealth. I’m mystified
because it seems to me the Working Man who never seems to accumulate any
funds to carry him even one year is vilified
by the rich folks as a parasite. What’s wrong with my thinking?
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
The Working Man Part 2
There are no old brick layers, sheet rock hangers or concrete finishers. Their careers burn up their bodies at an early age. They don’t work for poor people—they work for rich people. And while their careers end before they’re 50, the rich folks’ careers and abilities to produce last into the 70s. It seems to me the rich folks ought to be thankful for the Working Man, for without the Working Man, there would be no rich folks.
Monday, August 12, 2013
THE WORKING MAN
THE WORKING MAN. Don’t tell me the Working
Man doesn’t earn his wages. A hell of a lot of “Working People” work a
hell of a lot more than their rich counterparts whose income far
exceeds their work ethic, abilities, education
or brains. I love construction. I was drawing 20,000 square foot
houses by age 12. At present I’m building a barn at our home in
Montana. Today (Sunday), I watched four men hang sheet rock. It is
work I could never have done. They certainly earn their
wages.
Friday, August 9, 2013
Race Relations
As
chancellor, I made every attempt known to me, even though my knowledge
and experience is not sufficient to bring the minorities into the main
stream, to open doors for them to go through
unmolested. I failed. But here I am again enlisting, if not your
support, at least your ear so that maybe all of us (and it will take all
of us) can move race relations in this country forward by more than the
inch and a half it’s moved in the last 60 years.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Crusades
I don’t
often go on major crusades. I tend to be involved in a lot of little
ones. But whatever my concentration has been in these mini-crusades
during the last thirty years, I intend to
use my last years as a crusade to help the minorities and people of
lesser financial means to enjoy a fundamentally secure and healthy life.
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
The Poor
Have you noticed the stock market
lately? It’s over 15,000. And if that indicates to you that the
economy has returned to good health and will prosper indefinitely, I
think you might give
this a thought. It’s the rich that drive the market, and it’s the rich
who have separated themselves from the common man even more. Why
shouldn’t the market go up if it means the rich don’t have to take care
of the poor?
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
This Country’s Race Relations Problems
Hatred based
upon race color and creed doesn’t seem to manifest itself in direct
bloody confrontation. On the surface those direct shots may be the
easiest to fix and the remedies simple
to develop because all you have to do is pass a law that prohibits
specific conduct. But there is no set of laws or policies that will
solve this country’s race relations problems.
Monday, August 5, 2013
Race Relations
Since 2008 I’ve thought the world’s
greatest and only problem was its economy. I saw the banking industry
nearly take down an American economy; and yet, with all our economic
problems, they
pale when we consider the underlying problem of race relations. The
economy can be fixed, new medicines can be invented to make us healthy,
but there seems to be no remedy for the bigotry that dwells within each
of us to some degree.
Friday, August 2, 2013
Real Interest And Commitment
I believe there’s a great need for Las
Vegas television stations to penetrate the minority communities and draw
from those communities their needs for information, news and news
analysis to become more and more part of
our community. A recent poll of Hispanics shows that more than 80% of
Hispanics would rather watch and listen to news in the English language
than in Spanish. That will make our job easier. But we will not forget
that the news needs of the minorities must
be met within in-depth analysis following our news reporters infusing
themselves into the minority communities with real interest and
commitment.
Thursday, August 1, 2013
Useful To All Of You
We will continue to test and experiment on
the news and information needs of Southern Nevada. We know you have to
kiss a lot of frogs to find a princess. But we’re ready to kiss a lot of
frogs. We will be adding considerable
substantive news programming that we hope will inform and educate you
about most of the issues facing all of us. We’ll get it wrong many
times, but given time and your continued suggestions, even though they
sometimes are brutal and filled with four letter
words, we think given a reasonable time, we’ll be able to produce a
product useful to all of you.
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
7PM News
The 7 PM news—I know this is causing Wheel
and Jeopardy great heartburn—that we’ll no longer broadcast those
shows. But as badly as I hate for our viewers to move to Channel 8,
they will be broadcasting those programs
at the same time that we broadcast them. It’s my strong belief that
there are so many Las Vegans who do not reach home in time to see the 6
O’clock news that a one hour news broadcast from 7 to 8 will satisfy
those needs.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Our Next Move
In
the last four years I’ve slowly replaced syndicated programming with
news. Access Hollywood was the first to go and was replaced by
Ralston. Judge Judy was the second
to go and the 4 O’clock news was expanded to an hour. Our 12:00 news
was expanded from one half hour to an hour, as we eliminated paid
programming. Our next move in August will be to begin a 3 PM one hour
news broadcast.
Monday, July 29, 2013
Add Three Hours
When
I graduated from Las Vegas High
School in 1956, NBC and CBS did a fifteen-minute news broadcast each
night. ABC had only become a national network a few years before.
Both NBC and CBS thought long and hard about expanding the evening news
from fifteen minutes to thirty. They were concerned
that there were not enough interesting subjects to fill thirty minutes.
Nearly 60 years later we do news from 4:30 in the morning to 7; 12 to
1; and 4 through 6:30PM that includes NBC Nightly. Ralston Reports at
7:30PM and then news at 11PM. We believe there’s
enough news of substance to add three hours to that.
Friday, July 26, 2013
News Programs
Nevada’s minorities have become the
majority and for some reason the new minority, formerly the majority,
hasn’t wakened to the influence and importance this new majority has in
our society. I need help to develop news
programs that will respond to EVERYONE’S needs. I am open to all
suggestions; my office number is 657-3142 and my home phone is (406)
933-9999 until September 10, and thereafter in Las Vegas at 222-2298.
Don’t call before 5 AM, or after 11 PM.
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