Opinion

Editorials

Editorial: Keeping an Eye Open By Becky O'Malley

Tuesday March 28, 2006

It’s been three years since the United States invaded Iraq, so the press this month has been full of reminiscences tempered by a pinch of self-doubt. Some of the many high-visibility commentators, both press and politicians, who were dead wrong about what was going on have acknowledged that they were duped by the official story, but many have not. The Daily Planet was in the process of re-inventing itself that same month three years ago, and we’re proud to say we’ve been aware of how bogus this invasion was from our first day, and have told our readers about it (not that many of them were fooled anyhow.) -more-


Editorial: Police Priorities: Are We Safer Yet? By Becky O’Malley

Friday March 24, 2006

One of the few jokes I can remember is the one about the drunk who staggers from the bar to his car, only to realize that he’s dropped his keys somewhere. A friend comes across him two hours later, on his hands and knees under the lamppost on the corner. “Why are you still looking here?” the friend asks. “You must have dropped them nearer to the car.” The drunk responds that it’s too dark to see the keys on the ground near the car, which is why he’s still looking under the lamppost, where it’s easier to see. -more-


Reader Commentaries

Letters to the Editor

Tuesday March 28, 2006

MONSTROSITY -more-


Commentary: Regulation Field Serves Just a Few By MARK McDONALD

Tuesday March 28, 2006

Who could oppose something as apple pie as a baseball facility? Anybody, as long as the impacts and costs are too severe. -more-


Commentary: West Berkeley Bowl: Community Needs vs. Power of the Wealthy By Steven Donaldson

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The approval of the West Berkeley Bowl has turned into an absurd saga, strung out over two years by a hand full of people with the money and time to use the system for their own personal agendas completely ignoring the needs of the local community. It’s the power of the moneyed few over the working families of West Berkeley. -more-


Commentary: Adeline Should Not Be So Wide By DAVID SOFFA

Tuesday March 28, 2006

The prospect of rebuilding the gutted neighborhood at the Ashby BART station brings fresh awareness of older problems in our area. For the new life to take root and grow we have to dig out the gravel in the garden that is stunting the existing growth. Every gardener knows this is where the real work is. It is an essential effort that will enable the whole place to thrive. -more-


Commentary: War Programming II By H. SCOTT PROSTERMAN

Tuesday March 28, 2006

When Bush Jr. first launched the Iraq war three years ago, I published an article titled “War Programming,” which took him to task for the timing of it.” I argued: -more-


Letters to the Editor

Friday March 24, 2006

URBAN LEGEND -more-


Commentary: The Problem with Leadership By KEN STANTON

Friday March 24, 2006

In recent years, academics and consultants have emphasized the critical importance of leadership to the success of government and business enterprises. Leadership conveys an image of military daring, while management has come to be viewed as a technical subject, of interest only to those who have not yet reached positions of leadership. This attitude fits well with the interests of politicians, who are unlikely to have management experience, but may feel well qualified to offer leadership. Moreover, attacks on the failings of government bureaucracy—real or imagined—resonate with voters. -more-


Commentary: Greedy Development Threatens Oakland By Pamela A. Drake

Friday March 24, 2006

I have traveled to far-off places just to visit quaint waterfronts where industrial detritus is turned into quirky outdoor art and the artists live in cohesive communities that also welcome strangers and wayfarers. In these funky enclaves, artisans, bohemians, working-class artists, students, and professionals live comfortably on the leftovers of former times-where recycle and reuse come naturally and beautifully. How does this sort of “organic” development grow and can you still find it in Oakland? You’d better look quickly before it is gentrified, calcified, and homogenized away leaving no open spaces, no gathering places, no real studios or workshops-only darkened patches of private yards. -more-