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Better Lives for Our Grandchildren: A Plane Crash Survivor's Perspective on Politics and Life , by Bill Robertson (Author)

A retired marketing executive of a $40 billion corporation, Bill Robertson has led an interesting life. Growing up in Niles, Michigan, he attended Harvard Business School, ran a marathon, scaled Mt. Rainier, played a round of golf with Neil Armstrong, met President Reagan, and made six holes in one. He also survived a devastating airline disaster aboard United Airlines Flight 232, which crashed in Sioux City, Iowa. The crash changed his priorities and his life. Spending time with a growing family became his top concern, and he worried for the future of his six grandkids. The future looked bleak. His grandkids’ generation might be the first to have a lower standard of living than their parents. This book, Better Lives for Our Grandchildren: A Plane Crash Survivor's Perspective on Politics and Life, shows how he applied his extensive marketing experience to examine the direction of the country by taking the reader on the journey that led to the election of Donald J. Trump as president. The country wanted change, and Bill’s book identifies why there was so much angst and what the country is doing to change direction.

April/14/2014 5:22AM
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President Obama is rolling sevens in his latest public misinformation campaign. Following up on “if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor”, is hard, but not for this president. First, there’s the seven million who have enrolled on ObamaCare. If you believe this, maybe your can keep your doctor, even after the insurance Read the full article…

April/10/2014 5:58AM
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If you happen to live one place in the winter and elsewhere the rest of the year you get to appreciate our money losing postal system. You have to manage having your mail forwarded from one place to another, then reversed. You can do this on line, amazing that our post office is better than Read the full article…

April/07/2014 5:41AM
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One of my teen-aged granddaughters left a magazine here last week with a cover story: Lee Ann Rimes is broke. Don’t you wonder how a young country music star who has been earning millions since she was 14 years old can go broke? Or, a pro athlete who made $20 million a year for 10 Read the full article…