Public Comment

Letters to the Editor

Thursday December 04, 2008 - 09:57:00 AM

GOLDEN GATE FIELDS 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

Golden Gate Fields race track may go into bankruptcy; UC Berkeley needs a football stadium. The City of Berkeley needs to reduce autos on its streets. Let’s bail out all three by putting the new and bigger football stadium at the Golden Gate Fields track. For a greener environment and for a better quality of life for residents move the stadium to Golden Gate Fields. 

Ray Quan 

 

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THANKSGIVING SPIRIT 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

I didn’t go over the river and through the woods to Grandfather’s House this Thanksgiving. Instead, I took BART over to San Francisco for my annual visit to St. Anthony’s Dining Room, where I helped serve dinner to over 3,000 of the city’s homeless, displaced persons. Walking along Golden Gate Avenue, I passed long, long lines of people who had waited for hours in anticipation of a warm holiday meal. What a meal it was—turkey with dressing, cranberries, mashed potatoes, yams, green beans, rolls and butter and pumpkin pie topped with whipped cream. 

The dining room was packed to the gills—all ages, all races, some neatly attired, others unshaven and poorly dressed. They came in wheelchairs, on walkers and crutches, mostly men, but a few women with children who were seated at their own tables in the back of the huge dining room. My job was to carry trays to the row after row of tables, picking up yellow meal tickets, welcoming our guests and, most importantly, treating them with respect. While ill at ease, not conversing with each other at first, as the afternoon wore on the room was alive with laughter and animation, very much a festive holiday occasion. 

This happy scene of friendship and giving was repeated all over the Bay Area. Indeed, I could have helped with dinners here in Berkeley or Oakland, but I have a special place in my heart for the St. Anthony Foundation. I also have respect for the great work of Glide Memorial Church. It’s reassuring to know that in these troubled times, with the economy affecting so many, we Americans are a nation of generous and compassionate people, reaching out to those less fortunate. 

Dorothy Snodgrass  

 

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‘ART OF DEMOCRACY’ 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

The “Art of Democracy” show was not seen in the Addison Street Windows Gallery but the resulting discussion, as admirably represented in the pages of the Daily Planet, has been a healthy thing. Despite protests by some members of the Arts Commission, the commission seems to have accepted that the First Amendment does indeed apply to art. 

This particular case involved the representation of guns, and those in favor of censorship argued that guns were a special case that could be censored. The argument was not about depictions of violence, or incitement to violence but simply the presence of guns. In this case the images that were censored were portraying opposition to state-sponsored violence. It seems to me that when rules ostensibly made to “protect” us are used to prohibit speech that is critical of the state, then censorship has indeed become a serious issue that rises to the level worthy of opposition. 

I am pleased that the Arts Commission has acknowledged this in principle and I hope that the discussion continues as to the value of protected speech. Restrictions placed on speech by those who claim to protect us from immorality or from indecency do a disservice to art when they claim that it is a special case that cannot be protected by the First Amendment. 

Art Hazelwood 

Organizer for “Art of Democracy” 

 

 

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POINT MOLATE 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

Thank you for your recent article outlining the pros and cons of developing the waterfront at Point Molate. I live in Richmond, and I’m still scratching my head at all the purported attributes a casino brings to our community. Crime around the San Pablo casino is dense in relation to other parts of our community. We’re grateful to live somewhat far from all the action. 

Mr. Levine’s thinking out of the box and contributing a whole list of do-gooding is applauded in my opinion. He’s covered every possible argument with a solution that would supposedly counter ill effects in the community. He’s offering a lot of green eggs in that basket. But, I stop short of his promise that “undesirable” casino types will not set foot on his resort. I hate to rain on his parade but, Richmond is not a “destination location” and never will be. That particular property is outlying heavy industry, and it smells like industry when you’re downwind from it. If it were located across the bay in San Francisco, yacht parking would be a feasible plan for a destination casino. But it’s not San Francisco. It’s the shipyards of Richmond, and as much as I love our city, let’s not get carried away. Just visit all the little towns surrounding each refinery in the East Bay. They’re big “non-destinations” (but serve an important purpose, no doubt.) The ole’ adage is tried and true when it comes to real estate development—location, location, location. Not that Point Molate can’t come of age with a development plan and shed its former shell bit by bit, but, it takes more than casino promises of saving the city (please note: Chevron’s already promised that and everyone’s still waiting for it to happen) to accomplish a renaissance of a former naval refueling station. Many converging elements are needed to drag an area out of the doldrums and promising huge bags of money will not make Richmond a more desirable place to live. 

So what happens when the rich and famous don’t pull up in fancy limos and spend fun money as hoped for? After all, it is Mr. Levine’s first casino venture and he lacks experience (he just fired Harrah’s for the folks up in Yolo County). How does he pay for the hundreds of millions in loans? Invite undesirables? If Plan A doesn’t exactly work (and my gut says that Plan A is not realistic), then here come our country cousins and all their low-wage gambling, drunken shenanigans, theft, and other ill effects on our community. After all the glossy, green lipstick, it’s still a pig, and a huge business risk like any other. 

So, a question for Mr. Levine: With all due respect for thinking out of the box, what’s Plan B? We need to hear your thoughts and scenarios about how the operation will sustain itself and its promises to the good people of Richmond if Plan A doesn’t go as planned.  

Natalie McNamara 

Richmond 

 

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WHAT IRONY! 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

On Saturday, Nov. 22, an event took place in Colorado that says something about present-day America. A farm couple decided to do something for their neighbors. They opened their farm fields after the harvest to allow people to glean the fields. Gleaning is the ancient practice of picking up farm crops after the regular harvest. Typically some of the crops are left in the fields by machines or harvesters and this gleaning eliminates waste, while feeding people at the same time. I grew up in Iowa and some of my relatives that lived on farms would do this each year. Usually a hundred people or less would show up at the gleaning on my relatives’ farms. 

But at this gleaning, 40,000 people appeared at the 600 acre farm 37 miles outside of Denver. Think of it! Forty thousand people had the need to pick up leftover crops. The United States is the richest nation in the world and yet 40,000 people in one area showed up to get the free food. What does this say about the economy? Granted not everyone probably needed the food because they were too poor to afford it. But I am sure thousands of them did. 

It was estimated that the 40,000 people arrived in about 11,000 vehicles. Because of this, many people who came were not able to park legally. The Colorado State Patrol then issued citations to the illegally parked cars. Neighbors helped neighbors and then the state gave out tickets. This also says a lot about the government’s role in the present financial crisis. Hundreds of billions are provided to the wealthy and corporations and the poor are given tickets when they try to pick their own food. What irony! 

Kenneth J. Theisen 

Oakland 

 

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ZIONISM 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

John Gertz’s letter in the Nov. 26-Dec. 3 issue exemplifies Ashkenazi supremacism. Not every person at a demonstration needs to be a member of the sponsoring organization(s). Surely stereotypical, “classically [white/Eastern European ] Jewish,” Zionists accept the presence of non-Jewish supporters at their pro-Israel events. For racist Ashkenazim like Gertz, white people don’t have to establish their Jewish credentials; the massive influx into Israel of white people from the former Soviet bloc was welcomed wholeheartedly, despite the highly questionable Jewish pedigree of many of the new immigrants.  

Compare that to the bigoted treatment of Jews from North Africa and the Middle East (my forebears) who were welcomed to the newly formed state of Israel with DDT delousing, then shunted off to underdeveloped border towns. Gertz’s own racist prejudices are clearly in line with this dominant shtetl-derived and pernicious strain of Zionism, with its insular sub-tribal xenophobia. 

The unthinking parochial racism of Zionists like Gertz is part of what helped lead me away from the Zionism into which I was indoctrinated in my youth. Smug Ashkenazi supremacism in general, however, has been the hallmark of just about every policy of the pre-state Jewish establishment and of the state of Israel since 1948: domestically this is reflected in the various ways non-Ashkenazi Jews (Mizrahim, Ethiopians, and Indians for example) and Arab citizens suffer from discrimination; externally it is reflected in the oppressive policies directed at Palestinians and other Arabs.  

Zionists have pretended to speak for all Jews everywhere since the founding of their movement, incorporating the worst aspects of 19th-century European nationalism: territorial expansionism, ethnic fealty, and racism. Unfortunately Gertz isn’t the only Zionist to epitomize this tendency. It’s high time an organization like IJAM was formed to call into question the facile and false equation, Jews = Zionists. 

Dunash Labrat  

 

EDITOR’S NOTE: The following letter is in response to Dunash Labrat’s letter, which was published on the Daily Planet’s website earlier this week.  

 

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FOR WHAT? 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

Dunash Labrat has called me a racist, probably the nastiest epithet that can be thrown around in Berkeley. And for what? Because I pointed out that in a group photo of a brand new group touting itself as comprised of Jewish anti-Zionists not all its members appeared to be Jews. Labrat admits that this is in fact the case, but that non-Jews have a right to attend their meetings. No problem, let this group have non-Jews for members. But then Labrat cannot say that this is a group comprised only of Jews. Where’s the racism? This is a matter of truth in advertising. I have experienced the let down of going to the grocery store and seeing jugs of juice marked as 100 percent pure, until you read the fine print on the back telling you that it is not. At what point can an anti-Zionist group claim to be Jewish? When it is comprised of 20 percent Jews, 80 percent, or 100 percent. I suppose there are no laws broken here, but, still, consumers have a right to know.  

After calling me a racist, Labrat goes on to point out various mistreatments of Arab Jews some 60 years ago when they first immigrated to Israel. Labrat is right. When, in the aftermath of Israel’s War of Independence, the Arab nations forcibly expelled their Jewish populations and took all of their possessions, Israel’s population doubled almost overnight. The European founders of Israel were culture shocked and really didn’t know what to do with these sudden and unexpected arrivals. Not all of their responses were culturally sensitive by today’s standards. But Arab Jews are fully integrated into Israel now, and have no more of an urge to go back to their countries of origin than, say, American Jews wish to return to the Russia or Poland of their ancestors just because 60 years ago they were subjected to quotas in hiring as well as in schools, and could not even join most country clubs right here in this America. 

John Gertz 

 

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MUMBAI 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

What is the motivating force behind the killing spree in the financial district of Mumbai? There is never good reason to hurt innocent people. What can the thrill of being a world famous terrorist be? Even if these young killers experienced injustice at the hands of their parents or in their schools or from their governments, they are not justified in raining bullets on ordinary civilians going about their lives. What does it take to make a human being blank and mechanical as he slaughters fellow human beings? 

Romila Khanna 

Albany 

 

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ANTI-ABORTIONISTS 

Editors, Daily Planet: 

Anti-abortion groups, harbored in the Republican Party, are going to continue protests, intimidation and harassment of women seeking abortions, even though the abortion foes suffered stinging defeats at almost every level in the recent election. 

The American Taliban, evangelical and fundamentalist anti-abortionists, have never been satisfied with just being able to practice their beliefs, they want to force these beliefs onto the rest of us under the guise of saving society. 

These religious radicals in America are much like the fundamentalists who stalk the rest of the world. They are like unrepentant sinners who practice idolatry, intolerance and hypocrisy. 

Anti-abortionists would have it so that untold numbers of women suffer the devastating effects of an unwanted pregnancy just so that they could revel in their self righteous religious doctrine. 

Ron Lowe  

Nevada City