Thanksgiving comes early to Huddleston Elementary

Students at Huddleston Elementary School in Peachtree City got a jump on the Thanksgiving holiday Nov. 21 while dressing for the occasion that reflects America’s heritage. Photo/Special.

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-01-2013/thanksgiving-comes-early-huddleston-elementary

Cheerleaders lend a hand for a cure

Newnan High School’s cheerleading squad recently organized their annual “Cougars for a Cure Pink Out” to benefit Piedmont Newnan Hospital’s Cancer Wellness program.

The cheerleading squad sold t-shirts and raised funds at a regular season football game, resulting in a $3,000 donation.

Because of philanthropic support such as the “Cougars for a Cure Pink Out,” Cancer Wellness at Piedmont Newnan offers free, with comprehensive services and programs to anyone in the Coweta community affected by cancer at any phase in his or her cancer journey.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/12-01-2013/cheerleaders-lend-hand-cure

Coweta sets rules for retirement communities

Future retirement communities establishing in Coweta County now have guidelines to follow. The Coweta County Commission on Nov. 19 unanimously adopted an ordinance amendment creating a new zoning district specific to those communities.

The Residential Retirement Community and Care District (RRCC) guidelines restrict communities to a minimum of 80 percent of households including a resident who is 55 years of age or older. That requirement is in line with federal standards adopted in 1995.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-29-2013/coweta-sets-rules-retirement-communities

Auto Makers’ Channel Stuffing Highest Since 2005

While the abundance of commercials for cars across all media this time of year is nothing new, the manufacturers (and even more so the dealers) are likely getting more desperate. As Bloomberg reports, inventory climbed to almost 3.4 million cars and light trucks entering November – at 76 days of supply, that was the highest for the month since 2005. This should come as no surprise as we previously noted GM's post-crisis highs in channel stuffing as hope remains high that the recent slowdown in sales does not continue. The question, of course, is, "will manufacturers be responsible and curb production to keep inventory in check, or are some going to resort to old, bad habits and churn it out and then throw incentives on them." We suspect we know the margin-crushing answer.

 

Via Wards Auto,

the levels harken back to early in last decade when steep price discounting was used to prop volumes,…

 

Excluding 2008 when the industry was heading into recession, LV inventory totaled 3.397 million at the end of October, highest for the month since 3.803 million in 2004. October’s 76-day supply, was the highest for the month since 77 in 2005.

 

By comparison, sales in 2013 mostly have run at highs dating to 2007, suggesting inventory is getting ahead of the curve.

GM just saw the biggest two month jump in inventory in the restructured company's history.

 

 

Via Bloomberg,

Carmakers have boosted production to meet demand that has left the industry on pace for the best sales year since 2007. Swelling supply raises the stakes for sales in November after deliveries missed estimates in October and slipped in September for the first time in 27 months. If buyers don’t absorb enough inventory, more automakers, including Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) and Honda Motor Co., may need to follow Ford Motor Co.’s lead by trimming production to avoid margin-slicing discounts.

 

“Inventory has been so tightly managed, and it has been because demand has been there and production hasn’t been able to keep up,” Jeff Schuster, an analyst with researcher LMC Automotive, said in a telephone interview. “If you change that scenario around, the question is, does the discipline that we’ve seen the industry operate with lately stick around?”

 

 

“As the market begins to slow down and begins to peak, it’s going to get tougher for everybody,” Joe Langley, the head of North American vehicle production analysis for IHS Automotive, said by telephone. “Are manufacturers going to be responsible and curb production and keep inventory in check, or are some going to resort to old, bad habits and churn it out and then throw incentives on them? That’s what’s going to be interesting, to see how that plays out.”

 

 

Wesley Lutz, a Chrysler dealer in Jackson, Michigan, said his store has about 120 days supply of vehicles in stock, roughly double what he usually likes to carry. Lutz cited his anticipation of strong winter and spring selling seasons and his ability to borrow at less than 2 percent to finance the inventory on his lot.

 

“I’m probably not managing my inventory as well as I do at 8 percent, but I’m willing to roll the dice and stock some inventory in December and January, because I think we’re going to have a great market in February,” Lutz said by telephone. “We’re borrowing money so cheaply.”

 

 

“If it’s an underwhelming month, we’ll need to look to see if there are any decisions to start to ratchet back” production this month or in January, LMC’s Schuster said. “It could end up being the first real test that the industry’s faced since the restructuring.”

Sadly, there it is – due to intervention-driven low rates, mal-investment occurs from the bottom-up – and now we have the most inventory in 8 years… car makers and dealers (perhaps more so) will be hoping hard this season… the 'field of dreams' economy continues

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/UZVRiwUQC_A/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Auto Makers' Channel Stuffing Highest Since 2005

While the abundance of commercials for cars across all media this time of year is nothing new, the manufacturers (and even more so the dealers) are likely getting more desperate. As Bloomberg reports, inventory climbed to almost 3.4 million cars and light trucks entering November – at 76 days of supply, that was the highest for the month since 2005. This should come as no surprise as we previously noted GM's post-crisis highs in channel stuffing as hope remains high that the recent slowdown in sales does not continue. The question, of course, is, "will manufacturers be responsible and curb production to keep inventory in check, or are some going to resort to old, bad habits and churn it out and then throw incentives on them." We suspect we know the margin-crushing answer.

 

Via Wards Auto,

the levels harken back to early in last decade when steep price discounting was used to prop volumes,…

 

Excluding 2008 when the industry was heading into recession, LV inventory totaled 3.397 million at the end of October, highest for the month since 3.803 million in 2004. October’s 76-day supply, was the highest for the month since 77 in 2005.

 

By comparison, sales in 2013 mostly have run at highs dating to 2007, suggesting inventory is getting ahead of the curve.

GM just saw the biggest two month jump in inventory in the restructured company's history.

 

 

Via Bloomberg,

Carmakers have boosted production to meet demand that has left the industry on pace for the best sales year since 2007. Swelling supply raises the stakes for sales in November after deliveries missed estimates in October and slipped in September for the first time in 27 months. If buyers don’t absorb enough inventory, more automakers, including Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) and Honda Motor Co., may need to follow Ford Motor Co.’s lead by trimming production to avoid margin-slicing discounts.

 

“Inventory has been so tightly managed, and it has been because demand has been there and production hasn’t been able to keep up,” Jeff Schuster, an analyst with researcher LMC Automotive, said in a telephone interview. “If you change that scenario around, the question is, does the discipline that we’ve seen the industry operate with lately stick around?”

 

 

“As the market begins to slow down and begins to peak, it’s going to get tougher for everybody,” Joe Langley, the head of North American vehicle production analysis for IHS Automotive, said by telephone. “Are manufacturers going to be responsible and curb production and keep inventory in check, or are some going to resort to old, bad habits and churn it out and then throw incentives on them? That’s what’s going to be interesting, to see how that plays out.”

 

 

Wesley Lutz, a Chrysler dealer in Jackson, Michigan, said his store has about 120 days supply of vehicles in stock, roughly double what he usually likes to carry. Lutz cited his anticipation of strong winter and spring selling seasons and his ability to borrow at less than 2 percent to finance the inventory on his lot.

 

“I’m probably not managing my inventory as well as I do at 8 percent, but I’m willing to roll the dice and stock some inventory in December and January, because I think we’re going to have a great market in February,” Lutz said by telephone. “We’re borrowing money so cheaply.”

 

 

“If it’s an underwhelming month, we’ll need to look to see if there are any decisions to start to ratchet back” production this month or in January, LMC’s Schuster said. “It could end up being the first real test that the industry’s faced since the restructuring.”

Sadly, there it is – due to intervention-driven low rates, mal-investment occurs from the bottom-up – and now we have the most inventory in 8 years… car makers and dealers (perhaps more so) will be hoping hard this season… the 'field of dreams' economy continues

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/UZVRiwUQC_A/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Watch the Pro-Gun, Daniel Defense Ad the NFL Won’t Run During the Super Bowl

 

According to Guns & Ammo magazine, the ad
above, for gun-seller Daniel Defense, was submitted to the NFL for
consideration to run during the Super Bowl. It was shot down:

The NFL’s Advertising Policy addresses several Prohibited
Advertising Categories
, including guidelines for ads featuring
alcohol, video games, movies, prescription drugs, and, of course,
firearms.

The firearms portion of the NFL’s Prohibited Advertising
Categories states:

“5. Firearms, ammunition or other weapons are prohibited;
however, stores that sell firearms and ammunitions (e.g., outdoor
stores and camping stores) will be permitted, provided they sell
other products and the ads do not mention firearms, ammunition or
other weapons.”

According to these guidelines, Daniel Defense’s Super Bowl
commercial does not violate NFL policy for two reasons:

  • Daniel Defense has a brick-and-mortar store, where they sell
    products other than firearms such as apparel.
  • The commercial itself does not mention firearms, ammunition or
    weaponry.

While Daniel Defense’s commercial does not mention firearms, it
does include a logo of their DDM4 rifle at the very end.

When the NFL denied the ad, Daniel Defense immediately offered
to replace the DDM4 logo with an American flag and/or the words
“Shall not be infringed.”

The NFL replied with another non-negotiable denial.


Read the whole story.

And so an industry
that is built on guys slamming into each other and inflicting
damage – and that runs ads for all sorts of violent action movies,
video games, and whatnot – pulls the plug on a gun ad that doesn’t
mention guns.

I support the NFL being allowed to choose to run whatever they
want (or not) during their games, assuming that such
decision-making is part of its contracts with the network airing
the game. I also support the right of Daniel Defense to create an
ad that they almost certainly knew would be banned, thus generating
an enormous amount of publicity (the point of advertising) while
also saving huge amounts of money (last year,
30 seconds reportedly cost $4 million
). And I certainly support
the move toward liberalized gun-ownership laws, which is both
constitutional and has correlated
with declines in gun-violence rates
.

Hat tip: Brad Thor’s Twitter feed,
Hot Air.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/02/watch-the-pro-gun-daniel-defense-ad-the
via IFTTT

Watch the Pro-Gun, Daniel Defense Ad the NFL Won't Run During the Super Bowl

 

According to Guns & Ammo magazine, the ad
above, for gun-seller Daniel Defense, was submitted to the NFL for
consideration to run during the Super Bowl. It was shot down:

The NFL’s Advertising Policy addresses several Prohibited
Advertising Categories
, including guidelines for ads featuring
alcohol, video games, movies, prescription drugs, and, of course,
firearms.

The firearms portion of the NFL’s Prohibited Advertising
Categories states:

“5. Firearms, ammunition or other weapons are prohibited;
however, stores that sell firearms and ammunitions (e.g., outdoor
stores and camping stores) will be permitted, provided they sell
other products and the ads do not mention firearms, ammunition or
other weapons.”

According to these guidelines, Daniel Defense’s Super Bowl
commercial does not violate NFL policy for two reasons:

  • Daniel Defense has a brick-and-mortar store, where they sell
    products other than firearms such as apparel.
  • The commercial itself does not mention firearms, ammunition or
    weaponry.

While Daniel Defense’s commercial does not mention firearms, it
does include a logo of their DDM4 rifle at the very end.

When the NFL denied the ad, Daniel Defense immediately offered
to replace the DDM4 logo with an American flag and/or the words
“Shall not be infringed.”

The NFL replied with another non-negotiable denial.


Read the whole story.

And so an industry
that is built on guys slamming into each other and inflicting
damage – and that runs ads for all sorts of violent action movies,
video games, and whatnot – pulls the plug on a gun ad that doesn’t
mention guns.

I support the NFL being allowed to choose to run whatever they
want (or not) during their games, assuming that such
decision-making is part of its contracts with the network airing
the game. I also support the right of Daniel Defense to create an
ad that they almost certainly knew would be banned, thus generating
an enormous amount of publicity (the point of advertising) while
also saving huge amounts of money (last year,
30 seconds reportedly cost $4 million
). And I certainly support
the move toward liberalized gun-ownership laws, which is both
constitutional and has correlated
with declines in gun-violence rates
.

Hat tip: Brad Thor’s Twitter feed,
Hot Air.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/02/watch-the-pro-gun-daniel-defense-ad-the
via IFTTT

A.M. Links: Democrats Look For Someone Other Than Obama to Blame for Obamacare, Hillary Clinton Run May Be Hastening Obama Lame Duck Status, Amazon Testing Drones

  • ben who?Former NSA and CIA director Michael Hayden says
    Edward Snowden’s disclosures about US spying practices have been
    catastrophic
    to the intelligence community.
  • White House staff are the latest people Democrats have
    turned
    to to blame for Obamacare’s disastrous rollout.
  • Hillary Clinton’s potential 2016 presidential run may be

    causing
    President Obama to arrive at lame duck status sooner
    than he otherwise would have.
  • The Syrian National Council
    plans
    on attending international peace talks in Geneva in
    January, but the rebel government may not hold much
    sway
    among opponents of the Syrian regime. The Free Syrian
    Army, a rebel outfit,
    meanwhile
    , will not be attending the Geneva talks. Israel says
    its troops
    fired
    into Syria after Syrian forces shot at them in the Golan
    Heights.
  • A 280,000-year-old stone-tipped javelin was
    discovered
    in Ethiopia, predating fossils from modern
    humans.
  • Amazon is
    testing
    the use of drones to make faster deliveries.

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from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/02/am-links-democrats-look-for-someone-othe
via IFTTT