"The group’s Nashville victory followed a roller-coaster political campaign, including a sex-and-spending scandal that led to the mayor’s resignation."
Oct 2017 - Unveils $5.2bil plan
Mar 2018 - Pleads guilty to felony and resigns; interim mayor (vice mayor appointed)
May 01 2018 - Vote on plan
May 24 2018 - Vote for new mayor (vice mayor wins with 55% of vote)
"This proposal does not seek to change how Mozilla is governed, only how we talk about how Mozilla is governed, which may be reasonably be regarded as contentious."
...said another way?...
"It is reasonable to expect a few questions after we emphasize the importance of changing how we talk about x while we also emphasize that changing x is not the objective."
The reasoning in this part of the email is pretty good.
IIS, AppFabric, Windows Workflow Foundation services (WF). Leverage there for orchestration, persistence, error handling, etc. Considering the demise of AppFabric, do you mind if I Ask HN: How would you handle these long-running workflows in the long-run (and keep IIS and WF)?
Transcript at the bottom. Coincidentally, Reich offers anecdote regarding Soros and taxes at about 30 minutes into interview. However, I'm posting this for its general coverage of the topic. (edited to clarify)