The stadium ruse

Houston%20Dynamo%20stadium%20013108.gifSomething to think about in regard to the City of Houston’s latest stadium boondoggle.
Skip Sauer over at The Sports Economist notes this Rick Eckstein op-ed on the myth of economic benefits from the public financing of sports stadiums:

. . . [M]y colleagues and I studied media coverage of 23 publicly financed stadium initiatives in 16 different cities, including Philadelphia. We found that the mainstream media in most of these cities is noticeably biased toward supporting publicly financed stadiums, which has a significant impact on the initiatives’ success.
This bias usually takes the form of uncritically parroting stadium proponents’ economic and social promises, quoting stadium supporters far more frequently than stadium opponents, overlooking the numerous objective academic studies on the topic, and failing to independently examine the multitude of failed stadium-centered promises throughout the country, especially those in oft-cited “success cities” such as Denver and Cleveland.

Meanwhile, Houston is bidding on another Super Bowl (XLVI in 2012). Get those yachts lined up, folks.

The wisdom of U.S. Presidential campaigns

president-logos-2008.jpgMuch is wrong with U.S. Presidential campaigns. They last much too long, are far too expensive and the rhetoric is mostly mind-numbing.
However, for all its faults, the messy process does have a way of eliminating the candidates that need to be weeded out (see also here and here).
By the way, Megan McArdle has the New York City perspective on Giuliani’s withdrawal.

What time is it over there?

Clock-11892TCH.jpgWhen I’m going to be involved in telephone conferences with folks overseas, I am constantly wondering what time of the day it is for them. This website helps me.