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Russell Hampton
National Awards Services Inc.
ClubRunner
Upcoming Events
Bus to Joint Meeting with Minneapolis #9
Feb 16, 2018
11:00 AM – 2:30 PM
 
Joint Meeting with Minneapolis #9
IDS Center, 50th Floor
Feb 16, 2018
12:00 PM – 1:30 PM
 
Speakers
Jan 23, 2018
Monsters in the Hallway
Jan 30, 2018
Feb 06, 2018
Feb 16, 2018
(Friday) Joint Meeting with Club 9
Feb 20, 2018
Feb 27, 2018
View entire list
Happy Birthday!
Member Birthdays
Kristin Montpetit
January 1
 
Darrell D. Butterwick
January 2
 
Corey Edmunds
January 6
 
Larry M. Morgan
January 7
 
Charlton Dietz
January 8
 
Heidi Fisher
January 8
 
Matt Magers
January 12
 
Todd Nicholson
January 13
 
Thomas G. Skalitzky
January 15
 
Carla Hauge, D.D.S.
January 16
 
William J. Nielsen
January 18
 
Daniel McKeown
January 19
 
Margaret R. Preska
January 23
 
John J. Overland
January 31
 
Stories
CHANGE IN MEETING LOCATION

Reminder, the January 16th meeting will be held at the DoubleTree by Hilton (411 Minnesota Street).  Below is a map of Public Parking nearby.

www.stpaul.gov/parking-saint-paul

 

JANUARY 16, 2018 PROGRAM: 
 St. Paul Super Bowl Events
While the game itself will take place in US Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, the ten days of festivities leading up to the game will take place throughout the state.  Come hear from representatives of Visit Saint Paul about the things planned in the capital city – both official and unofficial – and how the tourism bureau will be targeting the more than 5000 members of the media anticipated to be in state for the big game.
 
 
Adam Johnson is responsible for marketing Saint Paul as a meetings and tourism destination along with developing the company’s social media strategy, media relations plan and special events planning.
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JANUARY 9, 2018 ROTARY IN REVIEW:  David Schultz
Trixie Goldberg, Lifetrack Resources, was in command of the podium in the absence of President Jerry Falletti. As requested, these minutes reflect that meeting started promptly at 12:15.
 
David Laird led the club in God Bless America in B flat with Bob Jones on the real baby grand.
 
James Delameter offered an inspirational thought on gratitude inspired by the book Strength of the Journey by Renee Miller.
Thanks to Bob Cardinal of Calhoun Realty for warmly greeting our wonderful members, and to Susan O’Neill, St Paul Fire Foundation, for filling in for Jodi who was sick. Today’s scribe was Michael-jon Pease, Park Square Theatre.
 
 
President’s Remarks:
 
Chuck Standfuss, Protocol 46, offered a rousing promo for the upcoming Thursday Fellowship Meeting. Trixie reminded the club that we would once again be meeting the Doubletree Hotel next week. Ken Schaefer, Drake Bank, introduced visiting Rotarians and guests, including several who had their membership applications in.
 
Jay Pfaender offered a promo for next week’s speaker, Adam Johnson of Visit St Paul.
 
Ken Schaefer collected happy dollars from Jay Pfaender, John Guthmann (now finally an empty-nester), Steve Young (in honor of Melvin Carter, St Paul’s first mayor of color), Linda Mulhern (with the news that our outbound exchange student landed in Jakarta, Sumatra to 85 and raining), and Ken Crabb (a reminder of the upcoming Rotary Disctrict mid-year conference)
 
Trixie Golberg introduced long time friend of the club, David Schultz, Hamline University Professor of Political Science to speak on Political Polarization in America: How Bad is it REALLY?
 
Are we more politically polarized than ever? David first assured us it could always be worse – take the Civil War as an example!
David framed this question through the filter of the last 40 years – from the 1976 election of conservative Democrat Jimmy Carter vs. liberal Republican Gerald Ford to the bitterly contested race of 2016. Over those 40 years, each party has had the White House and/or control of the congress about half the time.
 
In 1976, most candidates were centrists because that’s how the voting public was polling. Additionally, 1/3 of congress represented swing districts that could vote either way, and therefore they were drawn to centrist candidates. And on top of that,  10-15% of the voting public were swing voters, meaning they could vote either way, and often vote across tickets for different races in the same election.
Both parties were ideologically mixed coalitions, much legislation was passed and very few votes fell along party lines.
 
By 2016, voters had become more polarized, there were far fewer swing districts and the definition of “swing voter” referred to those who “swung out” in and out of voting at all. As voters polarized, so did the parties to become more ideologically pure. In today’s politics, you would be hard pressed to find a pro-life Democrat like former MN Governor Rudy Perpich or a pro-choice Republican like Gov Arne Carlson getting his party’s nomination. What was once a “Bell curve” of all voters has changed into two opposing Bell curves based on party lines. In the 2018 election, only 20 seats represent swing districts (and four of those are in Minnesota).
 
Voters have also sorted themselves geographically and even by brand. David shared the example of living in the Summit Hill neighborhood, long a liberal stronghold. When a new neighbor asked if David thought the area would ever elect a Republican and David answered “no,” the neighbor moved to Eden Prairie!
 
The retail market response to this geographic polarization is fascinating. You can sort voters by their brand (who drives a Subaru vs who shops at Gander Mountain, who eats at Chick Fil-A vs. Chipotle).
 
In fact, 30% of voters polled said they would be highly upset if a family member married “outside the party.”
 
Because most voters are now voting along party lines, national elections are decided by 100,000 voters (10% of the voters in 18 counties in 12 states deliver the electoral votes needed to win the White House).
 
David’s biggest concern  in this polarized environment is about the decline in protecting First Amendment rights across the political and age spectrum. Polls are showing that voters would rather be safe from hearing something they disagree with than free to express their views. As he put it, “we seem to have lost faith in the marketplace of ideas.” The increasing polarization also means that fewer politicians are willing to oppose their party platform in order to preserve our core institutions and freedoms, rather they are prone to subverting or undermining our national values in favor of political expediency.
 
There is hope. David sees a shift back to center in the next decade as Millennial voters replace Silent Generation/older Baby Boomers at the polls.
 
The audience was truly engaged in David’s remarks and a vigorous Q&A session followed.
Trixie Golberg closed the meeting by leading the club in the Four Way Test.
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Respectfully submitted,

 
 
 
 
 
 
Michael-jon Pease
Park Square Theatre
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MEMBERSHIP ACTION:
Application for Active Membership

The board of directors has approved the following for membership.

If no written objection stating reasons is received by the board from any member of the club within 10 days following publication of the name, the prospective member shall be considered to be elected to membership.

Carolyn Will
Principal/Owner
CW Marketing & Communications
Proposed by: Sherry Howe and Doug Bruce
Classification “Marketing & Communications”
REGISTER NOW: 
 Joint Meeting with Minneapolis #9

RSVP today for the Joint Meeting with Minneapolis #9, which replaces our Tuesday, February 13th meeting. Guests are welcome!

Speaker

Paul Douglas is a nationally respected meteorologist with over 40 years of television and radio experience. A serial entrepreneur, Douglas is Senior Meteorologist and Founder of Media Logic Group. Douglas and a team of meteorologists provide weather services for various media and corporate interests at Praedictix. Developers and engineers create unique streams of weather data, imagery and API’s via AerisWeather. He files print and online updates for Star Tribune and co-hosts a radio program with Jordana Green weekdays from 3-6 PM on WCCO Radio. His speaking engagements take him around the Midwest with a message of continuous experimentation and reinvention. He is the public face of “SAVE”, Suicide Awareness, Voices of Education, based in Bloomington. He has two sons; Paul and his wife of 34 years live in the western suburbs of Minneapolis.​

Bus

Join your fellow Club Members on the bus chartered to bring us from St. Paul to the Joint Meeting in Minneapolis. For only $10, you can avoid the hassle of parking. Rumor has it, this fellowship time may include a sing-along! There will be two pick-up spots - one downtown and another near downtown with free parking. Follow the link below to sign-up for the Bus.

Meeting: http://saintpaulrotary.org/event/copy-of-joint-meeting-with-minneapolis--9/

Bus:  http://saintpaulrotary.org/event/bus-to-joint-meeting-with-minneapolis--9/​

For more news and background: http://saintpaulrotary.org