![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: die, ready, uscf |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
I would not favor the Erik Anderson proposal to turn control of the
USCF over to a bunch of money-men. This proposal has been made many times in the past and has always been rejected. Changing the USCF from a 501c4 to a 501c3 has been on the agenda of numerous boards. I do not know the reasons but it has been found impossible to do. Also, remember that there are a bunch of people and groups who have been circling around overhead like vultures waiting to dive down and eat up the pieces as soon as we die. We should not be quick to give up on the USCF. It still has 86,000 members, $3.2 million in annual revenues and until 1999 it had $2 million cash and equivalent in the LMA. We have recently suffered from bad management and bad boards but prior to that we had 60 good years. We are still stronger and better off than any comparable organization that I know of. Sam Sloan |
| Ads |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
We should not be quick to give up on the USCF. It still has 86,000
members, $3.2 million in annual revenues and until 1999 it had $2 million cash and equivalent in the LMA. We have recently suffered from bad management and bad boards but prior to that we had 60 good years. We are still stronger and better off than any comparable organization that I know of. Sam Sloan --- what are you doing posting in the middle of the night - you crazy? OTOH, uscf has had no major sponsors for a long time, nor seems capable of financially containing one [which might be Anderson's point] and as above, is now very reduced in ready assets and influence. Moskow seems to think the same. According to Horowitz in 1968 [?] uscf was in greenwich village and had less than 10,000 members. the 'boom' was entirely fischer-effect, which boosted it to 50,000+ by mid-late 70s. the past 40 years have added about 30,000 members, and the main increment is from the high turn-over scholastic scene, which in terms of membership is simply a ratings-market requirement a failing therefore, is that in the 60 years cited above [more pertinently the past 35 years] uscf has failed to be more than that outfit in greenwich village, a devoted amateur level organisation whether this means that another outfit is necessary to cogently contain and process another level of chess, enabling it to escape its annual rotations of members, without significant increase in numbers, all seem to be the point these chess entrepreneurs are addressing and indeed, that is the chat on 'the other circuit' to which uscf-only folks are deaf, blind and dumb. it is not a raid on uscf resources as much as a resource of necessity phil innes vermont |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Oct 20, 4:28 am, "Chess One" wrote:
whether this means that another outfit is necessary to cogently contain and process another level of chess, enabling it to escape its annual rotations of members, without significant increase in numbers, all seem to be the point these chess entrepreneurs are addressing and indeed, that is the chat on 'the other circuit' to which uscf-only folks are deaf, blind and dumb. it is not a raid on uscf resources as much as a resource of necessity phil innes vermont Of course, Innes and his side-kick, Rob ("the Robber") Mitchell, are just two examples of those "people and groups who have been circling around overhead like vultures waiting to dive down and eat up the pieces as soon as we die". Innes and Mitchell are two examples of those who think that if the USCF fails the former members will flock to join their organization. They have as much said so in their postings to the New York Times Gambit Chess Blog. However, I somehow do not see anybody flocking to join them, no matter what happens. Sam Sloan |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Oct 20, 8:04 am, samsloan wrote:
....[They] are two examples of those who think that if the USCF fails the former members will flock to join their organization. They have as much said so in their postings to the New York Times Gambit Chess Blog. However, I somehow do not see anybody flocking to join them, no matter what happens. Sam Sloan As I've pointed out before, the fact they don't have an organization for people to flock to is a small flaw in their hopes. These individuals don't have a clue about building one. |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
save the USCF, not destroy it. The Fake Sam Sloan was elected to a four year term in August. If the Fake Sam Sloan is allowed to sit on the board sending out dozens of obscene and personal attacks on USCF members, every day for the next four years, do you think the USCF will survive? Sam Sloan |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Oct 20, 3:28 am, "Chess One" wrote:
We should not be quick to give up on the USCF. It still has 86,000 members, $3.2 million in annual revenues and until 1999 it had $2 million cash and equivalent in the LMA. We have recently suffered from bad management and bad boards but prior to that we had 60 good years. We are still stronger and better off than any comparable organization that I know of. Sam Sloan --- what are you doing posting in the middle of the night - you crazy? OTOH, uscf has had no major sponsors for a long time, nor seems capable of financially containing one [which might be Anderson's point] and as above, is now very reduced in ready assets and influence. Moskow seems to think the same. According to Horowitz in 1968 [?] uscf was in greenwich village and had less than 10,000 members. the 'boom' was entirely fischer-effect, which boosted it to 50,000+ by mid-late 70s. the past 40 years have added about 30,000 members, and the main increment is from the high turn-over scholastic scene, which in terms of membership is simply a ratings-market requirement a failing therefore, is that in the 60 years cited above [more pertinently the past 35 years] uscf has failed to be more than that outfit in greenwich village, a devoted amateur level organisation whether this means that another outfit is necessary to cogently contain and process another level of chess, enabling it to escape its annual rotations of members, without significant increase in numbers, all seem to be the point these chess entrepreneurs are addressing and indeed, that is the chat on 'the other circuit' to which uscf-only folks are deaf, blind and dumb. it is not a raid on uscf resources as much as a resource of necessity phil innes vermont Phil You wrote "what are you doing posting in the middle of the night - you crazy? " The status of Permanent Delegate of St Kitts and Nevis to FIDE means that I sometimes need to post in the middle of the night. If you look at a globle, you will see that the sun is always UP in some part of the world. I freqently send e-mails to ASIA and EUROPE. So, if I post in the middle of the night, please excuse me. If you deal with FIDE, you will be up all night more than one night, reading e-mails from all over the world. There is going to be a FIDE Ethics investigation if St Kitts and Nevis gets admitted. We went to WAR over Paul Troung. Marcus Roberts |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
whether this means that another outfit is necessary to cogently
contain and process another level of chess, enabling it to escape its annual rotations of members, without significant increase in numbers, all seem to be the point these chess entrepreneurs are addressing and indeed, that is the chat on 'the other circuit' to which uscf-only folks are deaf, blind and dumb. it is not a raid on uscf resources as much as a resource of necessity phil innes vermont Of course, Innes and his side-kick, Rob ("the Robber") Mitchell, are just two examples of those "people and groups who have been circling around overhead like vultures waiting to dive down and eat up the pieces as soon as we die". **Pieces of what? Vultures want to know. Will we know you from the pieces? BTW, Mitchell prefers to be called Lex, as in Luther. Innes and Mitchell are two examples of those who think **We thank you for noticing, someone has to do it if the USCF fails the former members will flock to join their organization. **What organisation? True, we go to Super-Heroes Anonymous, [mostly to be able to get into the old tights again, and do a bit of chest beating with a couple rare steaks] but those are public meetings and anyone can fly in, free of charge They have as much said so in their postings to the New York Times **As much? But I didn't know Lex had been posting there - now I'm good and angry - he was supposed to be taking over a small central American country this weekend - according to Plan #7. Gambit Chess Blog. However, I somehow do not see anybody flocking to join them, no matter what happens. **Eagles don't flock? Since this latest [hilarious] reporting by Sam Sloan on our attempt to take over the known chess world [no quotes of course] I think it is entirely justified to ask Mr. Sloan to flock off. **Sincerely, Phil Innes, Fortress of Solicitude, Vermont --- Sam Sloan |
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
OTOH, uscf has had no major sponsors for a long time, nor seems capable
of financially containing one [which might be Anderson's point] and as above, is now very reduced in ready assets and influence. Moskow seems to think the same. *** My local pizza store has no sponsors -- it does just fine on a "pays its own way" basis. Well that is very nice Eric. But does it get on national tv, into mainstream education, or 'push-pizzas' for their no doubt efficacious merit, to the nation? You see, that is the function of a non-profit organisation for chess [not for pizzas]. And while being a private member's club is very well, would you mind if anyone else had a bash at the Mission Statement? *** My local club has no sponsors, yet has done fine for 17+ years on a "pays its own way" basis. Just like a pizza joint! *** The single largest source of fund-raising for a membership organization is...the membership! But if the pizza-hut or chess-hut is self sustaining, what fund-raising needs are there? In fact, why have a central Chess-hut at all, since pizza/chess is fine all by its own? *** Why are there no fund-raising campaigns -- in a time of financial need -- asking the members to contribute? Because surely the members have no idea what any money has been spent on since there are no published financials. But that isn't the main reason! When I was the publisher at the World Learning Institute we had lots to do with Save The Children [administering, supporting or otherwise coordinating some of their programs, etc] and SAVE had a countribution to overhead of 29%. That was the lowest of all major NGOs in the US and in the world. People gave to the kids, often disaster related, but no one ever made a grant to the organisation itself. The 29% was the most compelling factor in chosing an NGO [Catholic Relief, BTW, are also very good]. USCF's C-to-A must be in the 90th percentile. That's why people don't give to organisations - and what major donors and foundations look at when they make their decisions of disbursement of grants. Not a passive advertisement in the magazine, not a "buy a brick" for the building" but a real "we need you now" financial campaign. Burn up th phone lines and call the members and the affiliates. Rebuild the LMA by RENAMING it the USCF endowment fund. 100,000 members each sending $10 is $1 million. The beneficiaries of the LMA are? We seem to have departed from our pizza-hut analogy, which was self sustaining by direct user support. Now - I do not disagree with you that major funding would help chess in the USA, funding for which is flat. But just like venture capital, people do not give to ideas - they give to amplify an idea that is already proved to work, so that it can work at a greater level. No such organisation feature now exists to so sustain any major grant of money, nor any general fund contribution from members. As I understand him, this is what Mr. Anderson indicated with his references to type of 501 structure. Secondarily, post Fischer boom, 35 years is a bit sleepy-headed to get that together, no? According to Horowitz in 1968 [?] uscf was in greenwich village and had less than 10,000 members. the 'boom' was entirely fischer-effect, which boosted it to 50,000+ by mid-late 70s. the past 40 years have added about 30,000 members, and the main increment is from the high turn-over scholastic scene, which in terms of membership is simply a ratings-market requirement **** Which tells me that people need to adjust their notions of "success" and "failure" accordingly. according to... ? who actually thinks that 3 nice ladies, almost anywhere couldn't run the ratings system with a couple of computers and an 8 ball? a failing therefore, is that in the 60 years cited above [more pertinently the past 35 years] uscf has failed to be more than that outfit in greenwich village, a devoted amateur level organisation whether this means that another outfit is necessary to cogently contain and process another level of chess, enabling it to escape its annual rotations of members, without significant increase in numbers, all seem to be the point these chess entrepreneurs are addressing ""How can I join Phil Innes' organization? What implication does 'join' have in your sentence? Do you mean you agree with the goals stated above, and take your own advice and send in a cheque? Or do you mean you would use the services resulting from this organisation. After all, one 'uses' pizza-hut, one doesn't join it. How many members does it have? You mean, like, don't go into an empty restaurant - there is a reason its empty? But if we posit a new organisation for the specific purposes stated above [which are incidentally similar to USCF's own mission, but suitably structured to execute that mission] wouldn't it need users more than members? In other words, starving children are not 'members' of Save the Children, they are beneficiaries of it What events does it run? What are its annual revenues? Hmmmm I thought so. You thought USCF annual revenues can make Anderson and Moskow [to name but 2?] You think it would run interesting events - heck, lets have another Lone Pine or Cambridge Springs -the world used to show up here for those. And that I think would produce revenue from expenditure. and indeed, that is the chat on 'the other circuit' to which uscf-only folks are deaf, blind and dumb. it is not a raid on uscf resources as much as a resource of necessity phil innes vermont **** There is no "necessity" to raid a membership organization's assets. I personally don't want a penny of USCF's money, I want to get after its mission - which it has abandoned - very largely because it would rather **** about with boy-wonder here, Sam Sloan the Hero, and his tragic attraction to you know who )))If there is such a need, go raid the National Geographic Society Thank you. But there is no necessity to continue business as usual, and let us have some light and air, and even ethics too! Phil Innes ECJ |
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
|
Please stop crossposting material to rec.games.chess.computer that has nothing to do with chess computers. -- Guy Macon http://www.guymacon.com/ |
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
|
Guy Macon wrote:
Please stop crossposting material to rec.games.chess.computer that has nothing to do with chess computers. Lead by example. -- Kenneth Sloan Computer and Information Sciences +1-205-932-2213 University of Alabama at Birmingham FAX +1-205-934-5473 Birmingham, AL 35294-1170 http://KennethRSloan.com/ |
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Answer by Sam Sloan to Ethics Complaint by Grant Perks | samsloan | alt.chess (Alternative Chess Group) | 0 | January 27th 07 03:54 PM |
| Ernie Schlich brings on Four Controversies, part 3 | Sam Sloan | rec.games.chess.politics (Chess Politics) | 2 | April 29th 06 12:17 AM |
| Ernie Schlich brings on Four Controversies, part 3 | Sam Sloan | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 2 | April 29th 06 12:17 AM |
| The Year of the USCF Election Fraud | samhsloan@yahoo.com | alt.chess (Alternative Chess Group) | 30 | March 13th 05 12:26 AM |