Best Cup of Joe in Forsyth?

Brian Leon has a post about the coffee situation here in Winston-Salem/Forsyth County.  He points out that the Moby's in the Liberty Plaza building is under new management and is now called the Sands Coffee House.  He also writes about Confluence Coffee House in his neck of the woods near the intersection of Peters Creek Parkway/150 and Old Salisbury Road in South Winston, and he seems to like it quite a lot.

This got me to thinking: what's the best coffee shop in Forsyth?  Yes it's a highly subjective question, and I also think that it depends on what you're looking for and what particular mood on any given day, so maybe a better question is "What is your favorite coffee shop in Forsyth and why?"

Anyone that knows me knows that I L-O-V-E coffee so I'm going to sacrifice here and do my own research.  If you know of a great place to get a cup of joe just let me know and I'll check it out, and some time in the next couple of weeks I'll publish a guide to the great coffee joints in Forsyth.  I'll also write up each experience as they come along.  Yep, it's a sacrifice.

In Search of Bible Toting Amway Reps

MyFox WGHP has a piece on the decline in the hospitality business that Winston-Salem is experiencing this holiday season.  There really aren't any surprises in the report given the economic climate we're in, but this statement from Visit Winston-Salem caught my eye:

For the new year, Visit Winston-Salem officials said they will focus on
attracting religious conventions and multilevel marketing
organizations, groups they say tend to be recession proof.

Ought to be fun.

Want to Know Where All Those Textile Jobs Have Gone?

People in these parts have become accustomed to hearing about textile plant closings and mass layoffs by textile companies.  We also know that those jobs went overseas, but do we know exactly where all those clothes we're wearing get made now?  If you're curious check out  whereamiwearing.com which is a blog written by a guy named Kelsey Timmerman who decides to travel the world to see where his clothes are made.  There's also a book by the same title and truth be told the blog has a lot more than just his exploration of where his clothes are made. Still, it's a site that might be of particular interest to the folks here in the Piedmont Triad who have been so directly impacted by the textile industry's massive shift to overseas production.  Here's a link to his page with posts categorized as Where I'm Wearing Today: Adventures of an Engaged Consumer, which is as good a place to start as any.

Lewisville Photo Blog

Not sure how I missed this until now but we have a (relatively) new blog here in Lewisville called LewisvillePhotos.com.  Actually, calling it simply a blog does it a disservice since it's very well designed and features lots of photos by the site owner Deb Phillips. Deb has a long and rich family history here in Lewisville (her GrandPa bought the roller mill in the 1920s) and she provides a nice retrospective piece here.  She also has historic photos of the Lewisville Roller Mill here.  Good stuff.

Winston-Salem Fitness

Gold's Gym of Winston-Salem has a nice blog going called Winston-Salem-Fitness.com.  They do a great job of covering fitness issues without necessarily shilling their own service. If you're looking for tips and clues for your fitness routines then I'd definitely recommend bookmarking the blog or subscribing to the RSS feed.

Recent posts include:

  • Getting Over Your Fear Of The Gym!
  • How Exercise Can Improve The Quality Of Your Sleep
  • Winston Salem Fitness:Physical Activity and Exercise for a Healthier Spine
  • Winston Salem Fitness:The Truth About Training the Abdominal Muscles
  • Winston Salem Fitness:Strengthen Your Swing
  • This is a great example of how to use a blog to promote your business.  Concentrate on showing your expertise, help inform people and allow your reputation to speak for itself.  It's really the same idea of doing a presentation at a conference: don't do a sales pitch because you'll immediately lose your audience.  Simply concentrate on delivering value, clearly identify who you are, and in the end you'll end up with plenty of customers.

    Yes! Weekly’s Barber Asks ‘Who cares about homeless and hungry?’

    Yes! Weekly's Keith Barber asks if it's wise for the city of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County to spend public funds on the new baseball stadium considering that our social services are stretched to the max.  From his piece:

    The official unveiling of the Winston- Salem minor league baseball team’s new name at the Millennium Center on Dec. 4 seemed a world away from the harsh realities facing many of Forsyth County’s residents. The general gaiety of the event enjoyed by an estimated 700 people felt like a scene out of the Roaring ’20s, like the day before the stock market crash of 1929…

    At the end of October, the NC Employment Security Commission reported Forsyth’s unemployment rate at 6.3 percent. The number of unemployed individuals in Forsyth has risen 35.4 percent since the same period in 2007. Since Jan. 1, 2008, nine Forsyth employers have reported layoffs and 30 area businesses have shuttered their doors, putting more than 1,000 people out of work. And those are just the ones that have been reported.

    Despite the hard times in Forsyth, the show went on at last week’s ceremony to announce the new name of the team formerly known as the Warthogs. Baseball Downtown and Mandalay Baseball, the managing entity of the minor league franchise, spared no expense at the event called “Baseball New Year.” When the team’s multi-millionaire owner, Billy Prim, and Winston-Salem Mayor Allen Joines unveiled the team’s new name — the Dash — the crowd roared its approval. All of this left me to wonder: Why would the city and the county agree to loan a multimillionaire upwards of $24 million to build a downtown ballpark when those funds could be more wisely spent on the needs of the homeless, the jobless and the hungry in Forsyth County? The Winston-Salem City Council agreed to put up $12 million toward the construction of the downtown ballpark in November 2007. In March of last year, the Forsyth County Commissioners approved a resolution allowing Prim’s company, Sports Menagerie LLC, and Brookstown Development Partners to receive economic development incentives up to $12.5 million to be paid in annual installments over a 25-year period. At that time, the economic outlook in Forsyth wasn’t as bleak as it currently is, but the picture wasn’t rosy by any stretch. In fact, Joines and the city council are four years into a 10-year plan to fight chronic homelessness. Andrea Kurtz of the United Way of Forsyth County is tasked with implementing the plan. Kurtz said the recession has pushed the resources of Forsyth’s social service agencies to their breaking point.

    I've never liked the idea of public funding for ball parks that benefit private companies or individuals and my thinking on the Winston-Salem ball park has focused mainly on my disagreement with the philosophy of the use of public funds in this way.  Until now I hadn't thought of the opportunity costs associated with the city's decision to fund the stadium, but when you do think about it they are substantial.  Yes the city is due to get its money back eventually, but as Barber points out in the mean time the money could have been used to bolster social services now that it's really needed but it's tied up in the stadium project.

    Since we've come this far I truly hope that the project is a success and that we see a revitalized downtown come out of this, but as a community we need to have a serious discussion about how tax dollars are used for private enterprise.  What happens the next time an entrepreneur comes calling with an idea for a new theater, entertainment complex or indoor stadium that will be used as a cornerstone for some new revitalization effort in some other part of town?  Do we whip out the checkbook or do we say "Good luck" and then provide as much help as we can to make it a reality  by expediting permits, assigning someone to help them work through the red tape, etc.?  As you might guess my vote would be for the latter.

    In the News: Obama’s Grandpa’s Private Parts

    I received my Harpers Weekly Review email this morning and as always it contains a ton of interesting info in just a couple of paragraphs.  To give you an idea of how they do it I've included one paragraph below and put in bold what I found to be the most interesting item:


    It was reported that Barack Obama's grandfather was imprisoned and tortured by the British in 1949 during the Mau Mau uprising. "They would sometimes squeeze his testicles with parallel metallic rods," said Sarah Onyango, 87, called "Granny Sarah" by the president-elect. "That was the time we realized that the British were actually not friends."
    Tony Blair praised Obama's choice of Hillary Clinton as secretary of state. Aleksy II, Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, died at 79, and after nearly 28 years in a coma Sunny von Bulow died at 76. Psychiatrist Robert Zajonc–who correlated birth order with I.Q.–died at 85, and Oliver Selfridge, a student of Norbert Wiener and an artificial-intelligence researcher who invented "intelligent agents," which he called "demons," died at 82. Scientists at Berkeley found that as compared to rich-child brains, the brains of poor children are often more like those of stroke victims, with less response in the prefrontal cortex. "This is a wake-up call," said a
    neuroscientist. Researchers studying Canadians found that older brains are less efficient at filtering out distractions, while researchers in Brazil found that medical students are often depressed. A statistician in California said that humans would soon reach their maximum running speed. "Men are still on the upward trend," said Mark Denny of Stanford University, but "they are getting near that plateau." Horses and dogs are already running as fast as they can.

    It tells you something about me that I find it more interesting that the British put Obama's grandpa's balls in a vice than that poor kids might have different brains than rich kids.  BTW, I'd totally understand if Obama chills relations with the Brits.

    If you'd like to subscribe to Harper's Weekly you can do so here.

    Modern Schadenfreude

    Definition of schadenfreude: Pleasure derived from the misfortunes of others.  Greatest opportunity to engage in schadenfreude in at least two generations. Why? Vanity Fair has it here.  Want to know why it's the greatest opportunity in memory?  Here's a taste:

    The new thriftiness takes a bit of getting used to. “I was at the
    Food Emporium in Bedford [in Westchester County] yesterday, using my
    Food Emporium discount card,” recounts one Greenwich woman. “The
    well-dressed wife of a Wall Street guy was standing behind me. She
    asked me how to get one. Then she said, ‘Have you ever used coupons?’ I
    said, ‘Sure, maybe not lately, but sure.’ She said, ‘It’s all the rage
    now—where do you get them?’”

    One former Lehman executive in her 40s stood in her vast clothes
    closet not long ago, talking to her personal stylist. On shelves around
    her were at least 10 designer handbags that had cost her anywhere from
    $6,000 to $10,000 each.

    “I don’t know what to do,” she said. “I guess I’ll have to get rid of the maid.”

    Why not sell a few of those bags?, the stylist thought, but didn’t say so.

    “Well,” the executive said after a moment, “I guess I’ll cut her from five days a week to four.”

    And then there's this:

    Alexandra Lebenthal, a New York–based wealth manager for investors
    with between $2 million and $20 million in assets—the modest to
    mid-level rich—offers a keenly authoritative portrait of a
    thirtysomething Lehman banker, married with kids, in a guest column
    called “What It Costs” on the Web site NewYorkSocialDiary. Blake and
    Grigsby Somerset are fictional, their finances all too plausible.

    Before Lehman’s stock began to plummet, Lebenthal suggests, Blake’s
    annual compensation was $9.5 million—much of that in company stock. He
    was carrying a $2 million loan used for a house in the Hamptons, but
    felt perfectly able to afford his annual expenses: the Park Avenue
    apartment maintenance ($120,000); the Hamptons house mortgage
    ($75,000); the nanny and driver ($100,000); his wife’s clothing
    ($100,000); the personal trainer three times a week ($18,000); food,
    including restaurants ($30,000); charitable benefits and other
    nonprofit causes ($200,000); private school for three children
    ($78,000); Christmas in Palm Beach ($15,000); spring in Aspen
    ($15,000); and a wedding-anniversary diamond necklace for Grigsby
    ($50,000).

    At least Blake has been hired on by Barclays. But his Lehman stock
    portfolio is now worthless. He and Grigsby have to cut their annual
    living expenses from about $1 million to a fraction of that, and do it
    in ways that don’t show, for the worst—the worst—would be the public disgrace of falling out of their social class.

    First to go: vacations, the trainer, the driver, and entertaining.
    No restaurants, no shopping excursions, no new ball clothes for Grigsby
    (last year’s will have to do). But, for now—for appearances—the
    Somersets will scrimp to keep the kids in their schools, and the nanny,
    and the Hamptons house. For now.

    If the Wall Street Geniuses Created a National Health Insurance System

    A sadly realistic take on how to finance a national health insurance program:

    1. Set up a large, well capitalized hedge fund. About $5B should do it.

    2. The prospectus of the fund should note its purpose is to “Seek
    out profit opportunities via arbitraging inefficiencies in the markets
    and health care system of the United States.”  Include standard
    “Socially Conscious” fund language in clauses such as Do well by doing good.

    3. Launch the fund — and promptly max out your leverage. Today’s
    environment makes it difficult to go 50 to 1, but getting 10 or 20 to 1
    should not be much problem.

    4. Use the money to write Credit Default Swaps with a notational
    value of $3 trillion dollars. The premia on these CDS should be about
    10-15% or so.

    5. Rollover the cash premiums — about $350 billion dollars worth —
    into a national fund. Use it to buy health care insurance for all US
    citizens.

    6. Declare that due to current credit conditions, your unfortunately
    must announce to your counter-parties that you will be defaulting on
    these CDS. Note that significant amounts of this paper are held by JP
    Morgan and Citi. Another trillion is held by China and Japan, with
    Sovereign Wealth Funds owning the rest.

    7. Send out a press release announcing “systemic risk.” Tell the
    Treasury Secretary and the Federal Reserve Chief that your imminent
    collapse will wreak global havoc. Apply for bailout.

    The author then says just repeat the process to pay for things like global warming, school vouchers, missile defense, etc.