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News

Updated: Man found dead in Berkeley identified

Bay City News
Tuesday February 03, 2015 - 09:08:00 PM

A man who was found dead near a walking path two blocks from the North Berkeley BART station on Sunday afternoon has been identified by the Alameda County coroner's bureau as 70-year-old Gary Skupa of Berkeley. 

Berkeley police found Skupa on the West Street pathway near Delaware Street at about 4:30 p.m. on Sunday after they responded to a report that a person was down there. 

Arriving officers found a man, later identified as Skupa, who was pronounced dead at the scene. 

Berkeley police spokeswoman Jennifer Coats said, "Initially, the investigation was classified as suspicious because it appears the victim passed away, unattended in a public area." 

Coats said, "We have to gather as much information as possible to try and determine what may have occurred. It appears the victim may have been riding his bicycle and collapsed." 

Berkeley police said anyone with information about the incident should call them at (510) 981-5900. 

 


Berkeley Police are investigating 'suspicious' death of man found near the West Street pathway

Erin Baldassari (BCN)
Sunday February 01, 2015 - 06:51:00 PM

Berkeley police are investigating a body found this afternoon near a walking path as a suspicious death, a police spokeswoman said.

Berkeley police spokeswoman Officer Jennifer Coats said police received a report around 4:30 p.m. of a person down on the West Street pathway near Delaware Street. 

Berkeley police responded and found a man, who was pronounced dead, Coats said.  

Coats said there do not appear to be any signs of foul play but police are classifying it as a suspicious death. 

Anyone with information about the incident is encouraged to call Berkeley police at (510) 981-5900. 0643p02/01/15


Berkeley Police seek suspect in Iphone robbery

By Bay City News
Friday January 30, 2015 - 03:49:00 PM

Berkeley police Thursday asked the public for help in identifying a suspect who allegedly robbed and injured an 83-year-old man for his new iPhone.

The strong-arm robbery occurred on Friday, Dec. 26 around 1 p.m., just after the victim left the Apple store at 1823 4th St. 

He was walking with a family member on 4th near Hearst Avenue when the suspect forcibly took the new iPhone from the victim and injured him. 

The suspect then fled in a silver Audi with paper plates.  

Surveillance video of the suspect released today shows a black male in his 30s with short hair and an average build wearing a red zip-up Gap hooded sweatshirt and light blue jeans.  

Anyone who recognizes the suspect or has information on this incident should call robbery detectives at (510) 981-5742 or the non-emergency line at (510) 981-5900. Anonymous tips can be made by calling Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-TIPS (8477).


Opinion

Editorials

On the Berkeley-Oakland border, the Safeway monster threatens to devour neighboring merchants

Becky O'Malley
Friday January 30, 2015 - 01:42:00 PM

Email from those who live and work near the new Safeway-anchored strip mall at the corner of College and Claremont, astride the Oakland-Berkeley border, has been burning up the figurative wires this last week. I call it a strip mall because the Safeway corporation has snuck in some number of new retail store fronts on a corner which formerly housed a useful neighborhood-serving supermarket and gas station. New tenants are rumored to be competitors for the previously thriving locally owned businesses on the west side of College: a cafe with fancy coffees, a florist and others.

Competition or not, the Safeway project has so far proved to be a disaster for the local merchants. To make room for the new stores, Safeway has moved the parking lot up to the roof. The ramp which provides access on and off College discharges a steady stream of cars into an already-crowded block.

This project was originally flacked to the neighborhood by Safeway’s contracted fixing firm AJE Partners, headed by former Assemblymember Dion Aroner (previously the administrator for Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates when he formerly held down that job, which was subsequently occupied by his wife Loni Hancock, who preceded him as Mayor of Berkeley, and then… but you get the idea.) The point person on the Safeway expansion is partner Elisabeth Jewel, a sweet-talking lady whose job it was to make sure that it happened regardless of opposition.

One example of what how what was promised didn’t materialize: the small businesses on the west side believe they were told that autos exiting the roof would only be allowed to turn right, not left, so that they would not block access to the parking which these stores depend on.

Nope. Left turns are happening there every day, and it’s, as predicted, a mess.

But that’s bupkes as compared to the latest manifestation of the eternal-seeming construction mess, which peaked earlier this week. 

Here’s excerpts from a letter to Elisabeth Jewel from Bophavi Pak, one of the owners of Yasai Produce, on the corner of College and 63rd street: 

Needless to say, the scope of the job to make the ramp [on the corner intersection] ADA compliant is beyond what we were told and I would not have inconvenienced my staff had I known. This morning I had to send everyone home upon finding that the entire frontage of my business was blocked and ripped up by jackhammers, disrespectful construction workers, and large equipment and trucks. Dust and noise is everywhere making it impossible for customers to come and shop and I could not have my staff endure the deafening noise level that is going on a few feet away from the entrance and our checkout counter. 

I was told during our walk through on Friday that the project would entail the corner sidewalks on my end, and at Cole Coffee, in addition to a few feet of blockage that would be detoured to the right of the fire hydrant, still making it possible for customers to walk up to and enter the store front. As the pictures show, obviously that is not the case. 

We have been more than agreeable and tolerant of what came our way these past 18 or so months so that the Safeway project could be completed, but as Anna [of the Floracultural Society flower shop] has stated, everything has been done [for] Safeway's progress without [regard] to our hardships, loss of business, and inconvenience to our loyal customers. Those pictures, which I have also documented speak volumes. No one will be bothered to cross over and shop with us no matter how devoted they are to our business due to the mess and safety hazards imposed. During the day, many of our customers are also seniors and we would not even think to operate and endanger them in anyway by simply trying to trek to our store! 

My husband Mike and I wish there was more information, and honest communication at the very least, so that we could be prepared. We were not prepared and it is just not professional for those of you involved to undermine and downplaying the scope of the project at our inconvenience and loss! 

Had we known or were advised correctly, we would have prepared our staff and posted signs and informed our customers that we would not be able to operate business. This was not done and customers had to be turned away, again greatly inconvenienced! Deliveries, vendors and sales reps had to be turned away, and phoned at the last minute to postpone our daily deliveries and orders. 

I ask that you please act and communicate in a professional and ethical manner because us "small people" are enduring much hardship financially and otherwise while accommodating you all in ‘getting the job done’! “ 

Similar outraged letters were sent by other merchants on the block. The owner of one of the commercial buildings on the block, John Chalik, put it this way: 

“Not only were the businesses not informed, they were MISINFORMED! In reliance on the information provided just late yesterday afternoon, workers were told to come to work, merchandise was ordered, deliveries were scheduled and the corner of College and 63rd St. is a war zone! Now, who among Safeway, Eleven Western Builders, and our city officials (who are supposed to be controlling this work) will be the first to step forward and accept accountability for this latest failure to properly inform the merchants, pedestrians and shoppers?” 

And from Nancy McKay, a founder of Concerned Neighbors of College Avenue: 

Our neighborhood's 8 year battle against this expansive Safeway project on College Ave. in Rockridge continues. This is just the most recent example of Safeway's predatory tactics. If you know of any investigative reporter who would like to know how pervasive Safeway's long reach is they could also contact Tara of TARA'S ORGANIC ICE CREAM as well as CASKE on the corner of Alcatraz and College Ave. Tara's and Caske are on the Berkeley side of this small commercial neighborhood and have been affected even more insidiously by Safeway's expansion. There was a very enlightening meeting at last week's Berkeley Transportation Commission as these Berkeley small businesses pled their case. 

Our neighborhood continues to be very concerned about all of our local small businesses. This continues to NOT be a case of NIMBYism.” 

I’ve been by the location to see what’s up many times in the last week, and it’s at least as bad as the letters copied to me (and there were many more) have made it seem. It’s obviously a case of a giant corporation riding roughshod over small town competitors, aided and abetted by well-wired political facilitators 

Safeway is no longer a locally owned company.. It was acquired in March in a deal said to be $9.4 billion dollars by Cerberus Capital Management, a huge holding company appropriately named for the many-headed dog in Greek mythology, described in Wikipedia as “a ‘hellhound’with a serpent's tail, a mane of snakes, and lion's claws…[who] guards the entrance of the underworld to prevent the dead from escaping and the living from entering.” 

That could almost be a description of who seems to have been running this development . . . 

Sadly, the Berkeley Daily Planet no longer has any investigative reporter to tackle this story any further, so I’ll just say what old-school newspapers used to put at the end of obituaries, before they changed from a public service to a monetizing opportunity: Other Papers Please Copy. Someone, indeed, needs to figure out exactly why this horrendous debacle happened. . 

 


Public Comment

February 10 March and Rally for Black Lives

#Black Lives Matter
Wednesday February 04, 2015 - 08:32:00 PM

It takes community power to end the war on Black communities. Join us Tues, Feb 10th @ 5:30pm to demand Berkeley City Council take legislative action to address police brutality and militarization of the Berkeley Police Department.

We will meet at Oxford Ave and Center St. at 5:30PM.
We will march to the city council and rally for black lives.
We need the city of Berkeley to act RIGHT NOW and be in solidarity with the growing movement for Black Lives. 

Background:

There is a growing movement for Black Lives which escalated when the people of Ferguson took to the streets in response to Officer Darren Wilson’s murder of Mike Brown. Back in December, Berkeley joined the national call to disrupt business as usual to elevate the declaration that #BlackLivesMatter.

The police responded to the peaceful protesters with high technology military grade weaponry. As a result, women, children, students and community members were tear gassed and beat with over the shoulder baton strikes and jailed by the Berkeley Police. Community members often say Ferguson is everywhere, and we felt that in December with the grotesque police response to peaceful protesting in Berkeley. 

We also felt this back in 2013 when the police brutally murdered Kayla Moore, who was a black transgender woman with schizophrenia. Kayla Moore was experiencing a psychiatric emergency when police pinned her down and suffocated her to death in her own home. She was a Berkeley resident living on Allston Way apartments.

Additional Information


The city council will be voting on two resolutions dealing with police brutality & militarization and Ferguson's National Demands.

The first item is a resolution of Ferguson's National Demands. The second item is in regards to the December protest that erupted throughout the nation, including in Berkeley, CA.

The motion will prohibit police forms of violence such as over the shoulder baton strikes and use of tear gas against protesters until the Police Review Commission makes a recommendation to the council.

The mayor has delayed this item since December. He hoped that the energy would dissipate, that people will stop paying attention. After months of delay, the resolution is finally up for a vote. The police are fighting back against this simple policy.

The Berkeley City Council has a choice on Tuesday. Which side will they stand on? We are on the freedom side.


#BlackLivesMatter
#DecarcerateBerkeley
#Ferguson2Cal
#CalBSU #AfroHouseCal
#OnyxExpress

ASUC EAVP Action Page
https://www.facebook.com/events/931190813559938/

Ferguson National Demands
http://fergusonaction.com/demands/

Berkeley City Council Agenda http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/Clerk/City_Council/2015/02_Feb/City_Council__02-10-2015_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx


New: Sterilization Program of Mares in Wild Horse Herds Involving the BLM (Bureau of Land Management)

Nina Council
Tuesday February 03, 2015 - 10:32:00 AM

It is vitally important for all of us to educate ourselves on the plight of the wild horse, for they are being rounded up by the thousands. Lets not have any more brutal round-ups. If after five years of giving the birth control medication PZP to wild mares and they become sterile, perhaps in some cases that may be all right. Most of we humans love and respect our wild horses and see them as iconic figures, and absolutely want no more round ups, or any part of these terrific tragedies involved.  

It is difficult for me as a horse owner and horse lover to give my trust to the BLM after discovering that the BLM looked the other way as many healthy horses were cheaply sold to a man named Jim Davis who immediately sent them to slaughter. These were criminal sales, and were secretly done without the approval of the public. These kinds of secret sales by the thousands, of wild horses continue today without the public's knowledge. Thousands of horses have now been sold into slaughter for meat production, and the meat then sent to many countries such as France ,Japan, Belgium and others. This is repugnant, horribly cruel, and very secretive. This is indeed not fair to us as (tax payers) we who support the BLM, and lands, expecting them to do the right by the horses. 

The first priority needs to be that public lands which are indeed public lands be given to our wild ones, horses, and others. Why does the BLM give priority to the huge Cattle Industry, it’s not the cattle industries land. It is public lands and belongs to our wild life.  

We tax payers support those public lands and are entitled to have our say as to their usage. Humans might eat less beef, it is now a fact that 51% of green house gasses are created from the grazing of the cattle, which in turn adds to the serious problem of global warming. Many things must change, and there is much work to do to improve humanities ethics and values.  

Herds of wild horses are iconic, healing for those who experience these natural beings, and we humans need much healing, and less focus on the almighty dollar. We must remember what the horse did for humans, they helped build this country. Human arrogance and greed are huge problems creating many of today’s catastrophic situations. Thank for reading my words with hopes that many will give serious thought to the survival of our wondrous wild horses.


New: Netanyahu’s planned US visit

Jagjit Singh
Monday February 02, 2015 - 09:48:00 AM

In a serious breach of established protocol, Speaker John Boehner launched a sneak attack on the White House by inviting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to speak before a joint session of Congress. Jewish Voices for Peace vehemently denounced the planned visit stating that under his leadership, “the Israeli government has ramped up illegal settlement building, increasing the population of Jewish settlers by over 23%, made the biggest land grab in a generation, committed countless human rights abuses and killed thousands of civilians in the West Bank and Gaza, and done everything possible to maintain the status quo of Israeli occupation and domination”. 

Critics in Israel have also blamed Netanyahu for Israel’s growing isolation and for deteriorating relations with Washington. “It’s a huge miscalculation,” said Eytan Gilboa, a professor at Bar Ilan University. 

“It’s proven again that what we export best as Israelis is chutzpah,” said Mitchell Barak, a Jerusalem political consultant and pollster. Nahum Barnea, a leading Israeli columnist, said Mr. Netanyahu “lost the major benefit” of the speech because “the whole idea is now contaminated.” 

Tzipi Livnia, a former foreign minister, called the planned speech “gravely irresponsible.” 

Yair Lapid of Yesh Atid, a centrist, was equally critical. Michael B. Oren, former Israeli ambassador to Washington, called on Mr. Netanyahu to cancel his speech to Congress. Finally, Amos Yadlin, a former military intelligence chief denounced the event as “irresponsible.” Netanyahu should heed the advice of his many detractors and cancel his visit.


New: Federal Police Militarization Starves Peoples’ Basic Needs

Gene Bernardi, SuperBOLD
Monday February 02, 2015 - 09:44:00 AM

We need money for affordable housing, food stamps, universal health care, education and job creation. By reducing the military budget for foreign wars and for the militarization of our police, money can be freed up for those forced into poverty and then terrorized by the police so they fear to protest their condition. 

The corporations and their republican allies are not going to voluntarily cut the military budget and the Homeland Security programs which are militarizing our police. But we can start at the grass roots City Council level by demanding that our City Councils opt out of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Urban Areas Security Initiative (UASI) program, which includes the Urban Shield convention and urban warfare training; and its companion program the Northern California Regional Intelligence Center (NCRIC) coordinated by the FBI’s Bay Area Joint Terrorism Task Force. 

NCRIC is the Fusion Data Center to which our local police send Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs). Examples of reports sent by the Berkeley police who stopped persons for traffic violations showed SARs were sent to NCRIC not for a raggedy tail light, but because these persons made anti-government remarks. This is a violation of their constitutionally lawful right to free speech. 

Berkeley City Council, Santa Clara, Alameda County and other jurisdictions have discontinued cooperating with the US Department of Homeland Security’s Secure Communities program, under which jailed undocumented persons are held beyond their release date so that the U.S. Immigration Department can pick them up, detain them indefinitely and/or deport them. If City Councils can do this, they also can opt out of these other Homeland Security programs: UASI and NCRIC. 

Moving the Urban Shield convention from one location to another will not stop police departments from shopping for free military equipment and taking part in urban warfare training. Demand that your City Council cut ties with this Police State apparatus. 


Press Release: The Berkeley City Council and Police Brutality

From Caitlin Quinn, External Affairs Vice President, Associated Students of the University of California
Wednesday January 28, 2015 - 03:31:00 PM

Last night [Tuesday], the Berkeley City Council voted to postpone for two weeks consideration of three items introduced by Councilmember Jesse Arreguin in response to the police response during last December’s protests, despite the fact that students and members of the community had been waiting for eight hours over two separate council meetings to speak on these items. I am extremely disappointed in the Berkeley City Council for once again refusing to address police brutality. The City Council impeded students from voicing their opinions to them on this matter on multiple occasions: the Mayor unilaterally canceled the meeting following the protests; a majority of the City Council voted to delay a special meeting until January 17, ostensibly in order to allow students to speak, despite the fact that the students would not be back from Winter Break for that meeting; and, the Mayor brought up agenda items out-of-order, which further delayed consideration of these items. As a result of the City Council’s latest delay, it will now be more than two months since the Berkeley Police Department’s unwarranted use of force on December 6 before a single introduced item has been discussed, let alone voted on.

My Office supports the three items introduced by Councilmember Arreguin. The first item endorses the National Demands of Ferguson Action, such as the demilitarization of the police and eliminating the use of military technology and equipment. The second item would refer amendments to the Berkeley Police Department’s general orders on crowd control, use-of-force, and mutual aid based on common-sense changes made to the Oakland and San Francisco PD’s general orders after events such as Occupy Oakland to the City Manager and the Police Review Commission. It would also implement a temporary moratorium on the use of crowd control techniques, such as the use of rubber bullets and tear gas, until after the Police Review Commission presents amendments and conducts an independent investigation. The third item would direct the Police Review Commission to conduct an independent investigation of BPD’s response to the December protests. 

At the next City Council meeting, the Berkeley City Council must take-up and vote for these items. Any attempts to further delay or water-down these measures would represent another sign of disrespect to students, particularly students of color who are overwhelmingly affected by police brutality. My Office will continue organizing to bring students to City Council meetings to demand the Berkeley City Council implement immediate and substantive reforms to protect students and other residents of Berkeley who are practicing their First Amendment rights


What do Americans want, anyway?

Ron Lowe
Friday January 30, 2015 - 03:29:00 PM

Economic prosperity is back, the unemployment rate has steadily gone down, millions of uninsured people now have medical insurance, the auto industry is healthy again, the stock market has hit an all time high - which in turn has improved 401(k) holdings of the middle class - gas prices keep going down, and Ebola is under control. 

So why did voters give Republicans a lopsided victory in the midterm elections? 

Were voters unhappy that there are millions of more jobs, that the President has stimulated economic growth, worked at boosting wages, improving infrastructure, controlling health care costs?  

Do the Republicans with their base of anti-abortion, anti-gay marriage, anti-immigration and Tea Party reactionaries, represent mainstream America?  

Were American voters saying they want continued Tea Party Republican obstruction, gridlock and dysfunction? Were American voters saying they wanted more Republican voodoo economics? Where were the American voters coming from?


Smoke Harms

Carol Denney
Wednesday February 04, 2015 - 11:16:00 AM

“Concerning tobacco's harmful effects, the argument doesn't hold water that pot smoke is just as bad for your lungs as tobacco smoke. This is because marijuana can be put in olive oil, baked in brownies and so on. While the only way of getting tobacco, in a manner that "does the trick" for us, is to smoke it.” – Jack Bragen

Jack Bragen should do a little research before he writes such nonsense. Both tobacco and marijuana smoke is extremely harmful to lungs, and both substances are listed as carcinogens on the California Department of Health’s website. Both substances can also be used in non-smoke-producing ways; patches, lozenges, chewables, edibles, the list goes on.  

The “help” Bragen implies nicotine is to people with schizophrenia has been long since debunked; non-tobacco-funded studies repeatedly show that people with mental illness are no less capable of quitting smoking, no less interested in quitting smoking, and quit smoking at approximately the same rates and in the same ways as anybody else. 

I hope Jack Bragen will take a look at several very good UCSF studies on this subject. 


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE:Republicans Try To Bully US Into Attacking Iran

By Bob Burnett
Friday January 30, 2015 - 03:25:00 PM

So far, the Republican-controlled 114th Congress has attacked women’s reproductive rights and savaged undocumented immigrants. Now they want to bully the Administration into attacking Iran. 

A classic Psychology Today article summarized the voluminous research on bullies. Usually they are hotheads who believe that aggression is the best way to resolve conflicts. Often they perceive provocation where it does not actually exist. They start fights. They have a strong need to dominate and typically pick on those perceived as weaker. Longitudinal studies indicate that while bullies may start out with normal intelligence levels, their aggressive behavior ultimately impairs their intellectual functions. One psychologist observed that bullies “are experts at using short-term payoffs. They’re not very good at long-range things that are in their best interest.” 

The Republican congressional behavior is classic bullying: “repeated, aggressive behavior intended to gain power over another.” Research suggests that bullies typically have low self-esteem. Republicans act the way they do because they’re deeply insecure; they doubt their masculinity. This explains why the GOP-dominated Congress, mostly white men, bully women, racial and ethnic minorities, and most anyone who doesn’t agree with them. It also explains their adoration of “manly” leaders such as Arnold Schwarzenegger, Vladimir Putin, and Bibi Netanyahu. 

Now Speaker of the House, John Boehner, has scheduled bellicose Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu to speak before a joint session of Congress on March 3rd. Netanyahu will provide his opinion of US negotiations with Iran – why they won’t work. It’s an attempt to bully the Obama Administration into attacking Iran. 

Congressional Republicans don’t like President Obama because he’s black, liberal, and because they believe he’s “soft.” Therefore, Republicans have dogmatically dismissed his domestic policy initiatives, whether for job creation, gender equity, immigration, or healthcare. During the President’s second term they’ve expanded this to include foreign policy, particularly initiatives in Iran and Syria. Boehner isn’t happy with the negotiations with Iran and, therefore, took the diplomatically unprecedented move of inviting the hawkish Netanyahu to speak before a joint session of Congress. 

On November 24, 2013, an interim agreement was signed by Iran and the six western negotiating nations: China, France, Germany, Great Britain, Russia, and the United States. Iran rolled back part of its nuclear program in return for some relief from economic sanctions (that had crippled its economy). The parties agreed to extend the talks until July 1, 2015. At issue are the numbers and capabilities of Iran’s centrifuges, the size of a uranium stockpile, verification processes, and the duration of the agreement. The intent is keeping Iran from building a nuclear bomb. 

Republicans (and Netanyahu) believe that President Obama and the other negotiators are too accommodating. Therefore, they propose levying new sanctions on Iran before the July 1, 2015, deadline for negotiations. 

In his State-of-the-Union address President Obama responded: 

Between now and this spring, we have a chance to negotiate a comprehensive agreement that prevents a nuclear-armed Iran; secures America and our allies – including Israel; while avoiding yet another Middle East conflict. There are no guarantees that negotiations will succeed, and I keep all options on the table to prevent a nuclear Iran. But new sanctions passed by this Congress, at this moment in time, will all but guarantee that diplomacy fails – alienating America from its allies; and ensuring that Iran starts up its nuclear program again. It doesn’t make sense. That is why I will veto any new sanctions bill that threatens to undo this progress.
Obama stood up to the Republican bullies. 

 

Nonetheless, Speaker Boehner invited Netanyahu to speak before a joint session of Congress without consulting the President or the Democratic House and Senate leadership. It was an unprecedented move. Israeli opposition leaders said Netanyahu’s invitation, “contradicts protocol and rules of propriety.” Secretary of State John Kerry observed: 

In Israel… one of the top intelligence personnel within the Israeli intelligence field… was asked directly by a congressional delegation that visited there over the weekend what the effect of sanctions would be. And this person answered that it would be like throwing a grenade into the process.
 

But Republicans don’t care about protocol and the rules of propriety. They are bullies and, with their invitation to Netanyahu, have expanded their “field of play” to the entire scope of Administration policy. We can expect a series of similar speeches criticizing Obama’s foreign policy. Republicans have long admired Russian premiere Vladimir Putin for his manly image and bare-knuckles political style. Perhaps he will be the next invitee to the Boehner speaker series. He could speak about Russian policy to quench dissent, suppress ethnic minorities, and repress members of the LGBT community. 

US foreign policy should be determined by adults not by bullies. America ended up fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq because of the bully politics of the Bush administration. Enough is enough. Republicans need to back off and disinvite Bibi Netanyahu. 


Bob Burnett is a Berkeley writer. He can be reached at bburnett@sonic.net


DISPATCHES FROM THE EDGE:The Greek Earthquake

Conn Hallinan
Friday January 30, 2015 - 03:21:00 PM

Almost before the votes were counted in the recent Greek elections, battle lines were being drawn all over Europe. While Alexis Tsipras, the newly elected Prime Minister from Greece’s victorious Syriza Party, was telling voters, “Greece is leaving behind catastrophic austerity, fear and autocratic government,” Jens Weidmann, president of the German Bundesbank, was warning the new government not to “make promises it cannot keep and the country cannot afford.”

On Feb. 12 those two points of view will collide when European Union (EU) heads of state gather in Brussels. Whether the storm blowing out of Southern Europe proves an irresistible force, or the European Council an immovable object, is not clear, but whatever the outcome, the continent is not likely to be the same after that meeting. 

The Jan 25 victory of Greece’s leftwing Syriza Party was, on one hand, a beacon for indebted countries like Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland. On the other, it is a gauntlet for Germany, the Netherlands, Finland, and the “troika”—the European Central bank, the European Commission, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF)—the designers and enforcers of loans and austerity policies that have inflicted a catastrophic economic and social crisis on tens of millions of Europeans. 

The troika’s policies were billed as “bailouts” for countries mired in debt—one largely caused by the 2008 financial speculation bubble over which indebted countries had little control—and as a way to restart economic growth. In return for the loans, the EU and the troika demanded massive cutbacks in social services, huge layoffs, privatization of pubic resources, and higher taxes. 

However, the “bailouts” did not go toward stimulating economies, but rather to repay creditors, mostly large European banks. Out of the $266 billion loaned to Greece, 89 percent went to investors. After five years under the troika formula, Greece was the most indebted country in Europe. Gross national product dropped 26 percent, unemployment topped 27 percent (and over 50 percent for young people), and one-third of the population lost their health care coverage. 

Given a chance to finally vote on the austerity strategy, Greeks overwhelmingly rejected the parties that went along with the troika and elected Syriza. 

Now it gets tricky, starting with the internal situation within Greece. 

Because Syriza fell two seats short of controlling the Greek parliament, it has gone into coalition with the small, right wing Independent Greeks party. While initially it seems an odd choice—the Pan-Hellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) and the Greek Communist Party also have deputies, and Syriza is only two seats short of a majority—Greek politics are, if nothing else, complex. 

The Independent Greek party—a split from the former ruling conservative New Democracy Party—is an odd duck by any measure. It has a streak of racism and xenophobia, and its leader, Panos Kammenos, believes that jet contrails are chemicals used to control people’s minds. But it is staunchly anti-austerity and will not likely waver in the face of the troika or German Chancellor Andrea Merkel. 

What would seem like a more compatible alliance with PASOK, however, is precluded by that fact that the Socialists supported the austerity package. There is a new party, To Potami, but it has yet to publish its program, and it is unclear exactly what it stands for. As for the Communists, the Party’s leadership says they have no intention of working with the “false hope” of Syriza. 

As convoluted as Greek politics are, the main obstacle for Syriza will come from other EU members and the Troika. 

Finnish Prime Minister Alex Stubb made it clear “that we would say a resounding ‘no’ to forgive loans.” Merkel’s chief of staff, Peter Altmaier, says, “We have pursued a policy which works in many European countries, and we will stick to in the future.” IMF head Christine Lagarde chimed in that “there are rules that must be met in the euro zone,” and that “we cannot make special exceptions for specific countries.” 

But Tsipras will, to paraphrase the poet Swinburne, not go entirely naked into Brussels, but “trailing clouds of glory.” Besides the solid support in Greece, a number of other countries and movements will be in the Belgian capital as well. 

Syriza is closely aligned in Spain with Podemos, now polling ahead of the ruling conservative People’s Party. “2015 will be the year of change in Spain and Europe,” tweeted Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias in the aftermath of the election, “let’s go Alexis, let’s go!” Unemployment in Spain is 24 percent, and over 50 percent for young people. 

Gerry Adams of Sinn Fein—now the third largest party in the Irish Republic—hailed the vote as opening “up the real prospect of democratic change, not just for the people of Greece, but for citizens right across the EU.” Unemployment in Ireland is 10.7 percent, and tens of thousands of jobless young people have been forced to emigrate. 

The German Social Democrats are generally supportive of the troika, but the Green Party hailed the Syriza victory and die Linke Party members marched with signs reading, “We start with Greece. We change Europe.” 

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi—who has his own issues with the EU’s rigid approach to debt—hailed the Greek elections, and top aide Sandro Gozi said that Rome was ready to work with Syriza. The jobless rate in Italy is 13.4 percent, but 40 percent among youth. 

The French Communist Party hailed the Greek elections as “Good news for the French people,” and Jean-Luc Melenchon of the Parti de Gauche called for a left-wing alliance similar to Syriza. French President Francois Hollande made a careful statement about “growth and stability,” but the Socialist leader is trying to quell a revolt by the left flank of his own party over austerity, and Paris is closer to Rome than it is to Berlin on the debt issue. 

While the conservative government of Portugal was largely silent, Left Bloc Member of Parliament Marisa Matias told a rally, “A victory for Syriza is a victory for all of Europe.” 

In short, there are a number of currents in the EU and a growing recognition even among supporters of the troika that prevailing approach to debt is not sustainable. 

One should have no illusions that Syriza will easily sweep the policies of austerity aside, but there is a palpable feeling on the continent that a tide is turning. It did not start with the Greek elections, but with last May’s European Parliament elections, where anti-austerity parties made solid gains. While some right-wing parties that opportunistically donned a populist mantle also increased their vote, they could not do so where they were challenged by left anti-austerity parties. For instance, the right did well in Denmark, France, and Britain, but largely because there were no anti-austerity voices on the left in those races. Elsewhere the left generally defeated their rightist opponents. 

If Syriza is to survive, however, it must deliver, and that will be a tall order given the power of its opponents. 

At home, the Party will have to take on Greece’s wealthy tax-dodging oligarchs if it hopes to extend democracy and start refilling the coffers drained by the troika’s policies. It will also need to get a short-term cash infusion to meet its immediate obligations, but without giving in to yet more austerity demands by the troika. 

For all the talk about Syriza being “extreme”—it stands for Coalition of the Radical Left— its program, as Greek journalist Kia Mistilis points, is “classic ‘70s social democracy”: an enhanced safety net, debt moratorium, minimum wage raise, and economic stimulus. 

Syriza is pushing for a European conference modeled on the 1953 London Debt Agreement that pulled Germany out of debt after World War II and launched the “wirtschaftswunder,”or economic miracle that created modern Germany. The Agreement waved more than 50 percent of Germany’s debt, stretched out payments over 50 years, and made repayment of loans dependent on the country running a trade surplus. 

The centerpiece of Syriza’s Thessaloniki program is its “four pillars of national reconstruction,” which include “confronting the humanitarian crisis,” “restarting the economy and promoting tax justice,” “regaining employment,” and “transforming the political system to deepen democracy.” 

Each of the “pillars” is spelled out in detail, including costs, income and savings, and, while it is certainly a major break with the EU’s current model, it is hardly the October Revolution. 

The troika’s austerity model has been quite efficient at smashing trade unions, selling off public resources at fire sale prices, lowering wages and starving social services. As a statement by the International Union of Food Workers argues, “Austerity is not the produce of a deficient grasp of macroeconomics or a failure of ‘social dialogue,’ it is a conscious blueprint for expanding corporate power.” 

Under an austerity regime, the elites do quite well, and they are not likely to yield without a fight. 

But Syriza is poised to give them one, and “the little party that could” is hardly alone. Plus a number of important elections are looming in Estonia, Finland, and Spain that will give anti-austerity forces more opportunities to challenge the policies of Merkel and the troika. 

The spectre haunting Europe may not be the one that Karl Marx envisioned, but it is putting a scare into the halls of the rich and powerful. 

---30--- 

Conn Hallinan can be read at dispatchesfromthedegeblog.wordpress.com and middleempireseries.wordpress.com 

 


ECLECTIC RANT: Greece at a crossroads

Ralph E. Stone
Friday January 30, 2015 - 03:20:00 PM

The far-left anti-austerity Syriza Party has agreed to a coalition deal with the Independent Greeks giving the Syriza Party a majority and thus power in Greece.

Greece had slipped into near bankruptcy primarily because of widespread tax evasion and corruption. The "brutal austerity" imposed on Greece as a condition of $273 billion in Eurozone bailouts since 2010 has actually been working slowly but surely. The economy has been growing and unemployment is down.

On January 26, the Eurogroup began discussing an extension to Greece’s bailout -- which expires on February 28 -- but the Greek government must formally ask for an extension. However, on January 30, Greece's new Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said that Greece's government will not cooperate with the European Union and the International Monetary Fund mission bankrolling the country and will not seek an extension to the bailout program. This sets up a confrontation between the Eurozone and Greece. 

True austerity has been hard on the average citizen slashing household incomes by a third. The election of the Syriza Party was an expected reaction. But what will the Syriza Party do? There has been growing support within the party for an "orderly default" or "grexit" on Greece’s public debt, which would allow the country to withdraw simultaneously from the Eurozone and reintroduce a national currency, such as its historical drachma at a debased rate. However, should Greece take this route, the debts don't just go away. Many pundits argue that grexit would probably lead to isolation from world markets, collapse of its banking system, exploding inflation, and eventually another default. After years of recession and reforms, it would be a sad sight for Greece to follow this course.  

If Greece does ask for an extension of the bailout or tries to renegotiate, the Eurogroup would probably require more austerity. 

Greece and the Syriza Party are at a crossroads -- short term populism or stay the austerity course. 


ECLECTIC RANT: 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau

Ralph E. Stone
Monday February 02, 2015 - 10:02:00 AM

January marked the 70 anniversary of of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau. We have seen newsreels of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps at the end of WW II and a number of movies depicting the horrors of the Holocaust. However, newsreels and movies did not really prepare us for an actual visit to the site of the largest mass murder in history. As many as 1.5 million were murdered at Auschwitz, mainly Polish Jews, but also Soviet prisoners-of-war, Gypsies, Czechs, Yugoslavs, French, Austrians, and Germans. 

First a little background on the beginnings of the Holocaust. In January 1942, a conference was held in the Berlin suburb of Wannesee, chaired by Reinhard Heydrich, acting under the orders of Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring, to devise a solution to the “Jewish Question.” The result of the conference was Nazi Germany's plan and execution of the systematic murder of European Jews. Heinrich Himmler was the chief architect of the plan, and Adolf Hitler termed it "the final solution of the Jewish question." A surviving copy of the minutes of this meeting was found by the Allies in 1947, too late to serve as evidence during the first Nuremberg Trials. I recommend Conspiracy (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0266425/, a dramatic recreation of the Wannsee Conference, in which actor Kenneth Branagh played Reinhard Heydrich.
In 1940, the SS set up a concentration camp at KL Auschwitz because of overcrowding of the existing prisons in Silesia and because further arrests were anticipated. in Silesia and the rest of German-occupied Poland. Why Oswiecim? Because there already existed an abandoned pre-war Polish barracks in the town and the town was an important railway junction.
The camp had 28 buildings housing between 13-16,000 people, reaching 20,000 in 1942. In 1941, a second camp was built called KL Auschwitz II-Birkenau in the village of Brzezinka about 3 kilometers away. In 1942, KL Auschwitz-III was built iin Monowice near the German chemical plant IG-Farbenindustrie. And in the years 1942-1944 about 40 smaller camps were built in the vicinity of steelworks, mines, and factories, where prisoners were exploited as cheap labour.
KL Auschwitz I and KL Auschwitz II-Birkennau are now maintained as museums open to the public. The Museums include some barracks, the main entrance gates to the camps, sentry watch towers, barbed wire fences, the remnants of four crematoria, gas chambers, and cremation pits and pyres, the special unloading platform where the deportees were selected to be exterminated or used as slave slave labor.
Those deemed unfit for labor, including women and children, were told they would be allowed to bathe. They undressed in the “shower” room. The doors were locked and Cyclon B was poured from special openings in the ceiling. After gold teeth fillings, rings, other jewelry, and all hair had been removed, the bodies were taken to the incinerators. The human hair was used by tailors for lining for clothes. A room full of human hair and some of the prisoners’ belongings are on display at Auschwitz. The human ashes were used as fertilizer.
SS physicians conducted experiments of prisoners. Professor C. Clausberg tested women in an attempt to develop sterilization techniques to create an efficient method for eliminating future ”inferior” persons. Dr. Joseph Mengele experimented on twins and handicapped people. Prisoners were also used as unwilling subjects to test new medical or chemical substances. Toxic substances were rubbed into the skin and painful skin transplants were performed. Hundreds of prisoners died during the experiments or suffered severe physical damage or became permanently disabled. Despite ethical qualms, some of the Nazi research data was used by the Allies and others after the war.
Above the main gate at Auschwitz where the prisoners passed each day after working 12 hours, was the cynical sign “Arbeit mach frei” (Work brings freedom). Most of the prisoners believed that they were being resettled. That’s why they often brought their most valuable possessions with them. In a small square by the kitchen, the camp orchestra made up of prisoners would play marches, mustering the thousands of prisoners so that they could be counted more efficiently by the SS.
SS-Obersturmbannführer (Lieutenant Colonel) Rudolf Höss was the first commandant of Auschwitz. He was hanged in 1947 following his trial at Warsaw. While awaiting execution Höss wrote his autobiography "Death Dealer: the Memoirs of the SS Kommandant at Auschwitz." His memoirs became an important document attesting to the Holocaust.
Höss wrote: “I am completely normal. Even while I was carrying out the task of extermination I led a normal family life and so on.” The commandant’s living quarters were a scant 150 yards away from the barbed wire enclosed concentration camp. We envision Höss, his wife Hedwig and their four children living a “normal” life a short distance from where over a million prisoners were being overworked, starved, and murdered. Just imagine Höss having dinner with his family after a tiring day of supervising the murder of prisoners. We wonder if they celebrated Christmas with a decorated tree and listened to Christmas music.
There has been much written about the banality of evil in connection with those involved in the Holocaust. Hannah Arendt, in a report in The New Yorker, covered the Otto Adolf Eichmann trial in Jerusalem. She wrote, "The deeds were monstrous, but the doer ... was quite ordinary, commonplace, and neither demonic nor monstrous." She further observed, "... the only specific characteristic one could detect in his [Eishmann’s] past as well as in his behavior during the trial and the preceding police examination was something entirely negative: it was not stupidity but a curious, quite authentic inability to think."
On January 27, 1945, the Soviet army entered Auschwitz and liberated more than 7,000 remaining prisoners, who were mostly ill and dying. Poland then traded German occupation for Soviet occupation until 1989. when the independent Republic of Poland was formed.
As a non-Jews, our visit to Auschwitz was sobering. We cannot imagine what a visit must be for a Jew, especially someone who has lost family members at Auschwitz or at another concentration camp.
The term "genocide" was coined in 1944 after WW II. It is defined in Article 2 of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG) of 1948 as "any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the groups conditions of life, calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; [and] forcibly transferring children of the group to another group."
George Santayana wrote, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." Perhaps, the Auschwitz museums will help us “remember the past” so “never again” will have meaning. Unfortunately, since the Holocaust the world has seen mass atrocities in Cambodia, Bosnia, Rwanda, and Darfur.
I highly recommend Elie Wiesel's "Night" about his experience with his father in the Nazi German concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944–1945, at the height of the Holocaust. 


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Schizophrenia, Marijuana and Tobacco

Jack Bragen
Friday January 30, 2015 - 03:55:00 PM

We have a gradual nationwide trend in which laws are being made to restrict or prohibit tobacco use, and other legislation is passing that makes marijuana legal and accessible. These are both addictive substances (especially considering the greatly increased potency of today's pot) and it seems paradoxical that this reversal is taking place.  

Concerning tobacco's harmful effects, the argument doesn't hold water that pot smoke is just as bad for your lungs as tobacco smoke. This is because marijuana can be put in olive oil, baked in brownies and so on. While the only way of getting tobacco, in a manner that "does the trick" for us, is to smoke it.  

I honestly wish tobacco was just made into an illegal drug, rather than peddled and hugely taxed. My budget on Social Security would be so much better if I wasn't paying for these filthy things.  

On the other hand, studies have been done indicating that nicotine can help the minds of people with schizophrenia. Furthermore and probably because of that, it is probably about twice as hard for someone with schizophrenia to quit.  

At one point, I was able to go "cold turkey" for a week. And then I was in the same room as someone who smoked an electronic cigarette, and I was triggered. I was back to smoking the same evening.  

A comedian once said, and this is very true, that cigarettes don't do anything for you (meaning don't get you high) except to satisfy your need for another cigarette. Stephen King, in his book "On Writing" said (and this is not an exact quote) that a cigarette might help you write, but the problem is that it kills you while it is doing so.  

I have met a man whose life was ruined by smoking. His home had giant oxygen tanks that kept him alive, and he had periodic breathing attacks in which the oxygen had to be turned up. He was dying a horrible death of emphysema and lung cancer, and I was applying to work for him in In-Home Support. When I got home I phoned him to decline being considered.  

And yet I am still a smoker. I have said to family who are concerned for my health that in order to get free of the smoking habit I would need to go into an inpatient rehab of the sort used for drug addicts and alcoholics. If I try to quit now, the level of discomfort and the withdrawal symptoms would make me nonfunctional, and I would not be able to maintain most of my responsibilities--I would probably also turn into a werewolf.  

Studies have been done showing that nicotine is good for the brains of those with schizophrenia. Perhaps this is why the mental health treatment system doesn't do anything to discourage smoking. If anything, they accommodate it. This is like saying our lives aren’t valuable, and anything making it easier for us to be managed is a plus.  

Back to the comparison with marijuana, it could be a mistake to legalize it. At least for persons with schizophrenia, marijuana can worsen psychosis. On the other hand, some people who suffer from schizophrenia or other mental illness "self-medicate" with alcohol, and this situation is no better than tobacco or pot.


Arts & Events

Press Release: Classical at the Freight: Kay Stern & Friends

From Margot Smith
Wednesday February 04, 2015 - 12:57:00 PM

A Freight favorite and concertmaster of the San Francisco Opera Orchestra, Kay Stern returns to our stage with a gaggle of SFCO All-Stars in tow, and a program of string quartets guaranteed to warm your cockles and banish your blues. With Jory Fankuchen (violin), Darcy Rindt & Ben Simon (viola), and Robert Howard (cello). Classical at the Freight
Monday, February 9 @ 8pm
Freight and Salvage Coffeehouse

Mozart String Quintet in C minor, K. 406
Brahms String Quintet in G major, Op. 111


This is a ticketed event: $9 in advance/$11 at the door. SFCO members get two tickets for the price of one! Make sure to show your membership card at the door.> Click here for more information


Budapest Festival Orchestra Plays Mozart and Mendelssohn

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Friday January 30, 2015 - 03:32:00 PM

In their second of two concerts at Davies Symphony Hall on Monday evening, January 26, 2015, the Budapest Festival Orchestra, led by Music Director Iván Fischer, presented a program of music by Mozart and Mendelssohn. Leading off the program was Mozart’s overture to The Magic Flute. This familiar work combines seriousness, marked by the three-fold chords that begin the overture and are later repeated, with the giddy high spirits associated in the opera with Papageno. Con-ductor Ivan Fischer led a brisk interpretation of this overture, although to my mind he allowed too long a pause before and between the three-fold chords, especially when they reappear, only in the winds, midway through this overture. Granted, it is traditional to pause here in order to mark the beginning of the ritual ordeals of Tamino and Papageno presided over by Sarastro’s priests. However, in the overture itself these pauses are not usually so long and drawn-out as was here the case. 

After the Magic Flute overture, violinist Pinchas Zukerman came onstage to perform as soloist in Mozart’s fifth and final violin concerto, K. 219, the A-major “Turkish” concerto. Zukerman followed the modern performance tradition of not joining the orchestral opening measures and instead waiting for his solo part to begin playing. Mozart signals this moment by having the orchestra finish a phrase and then simply stop short, at which point the soloist enters playing a rhapsodic phrase above a gently rustling accompaniment. Mozart gives the soloist a melodic theme derived from the rising arpeggios that opened this movement. Violinist Zukerman played this adagio passage with his characteristically warm timbre and consummate musicianship. When he introduced a second theme, this too was a variation of the arpeggios that predominate in this movement. Now Zukerman began in earnest his solo exposition, which ultimately leads to a recapitulation and a cadenza written expressly for Zukerman by a friend.  

The second movement, marked Adagio, is in fact the largest-scaled slow movement of Mozart’s five violin concertos. There is here a mood of quiet intro-spection and a hint of pathos, elegantly suggested in Zukerman’s playing. The third and final movement begins with a light-hearted rondo in the meter of a minuet. After a brief venture into an exotic minor key, the rondo returns, seems to come to an end, but abruptly veers off into Turkish-sounding music that earned this work its nickname as the “Turkish” concerto. This Rondo à la Turk, as it is called, offers a vigorous workout, complete with cellos and basses turning their bows upside down to hit the strings with the wood rather than the horsehair. The cadenza in this movement, unlike those in the first two movements, was written by Fritz Kreisler and is played by many violinists. When the minuet returns, it brings this work to a close with the same rising arpeggios that began the work and saturated it through-out. After Mozart’s 5th Violin Concerto, Pinchas Zukerman returned to play as an encore a Brahms lullaby, in which he invited the audience to sing along. 

After intermission, Conductor Iván Fischer led the Budapest Festival Orch-estra in Felix Mendelssohn’s Incidental Music for A Midsummer Night’s Dream. In-spired by a new German translation of Shakespeare’s works, Mendelssohn at age 17 first penned an Overture to A Midsummer Night’s Dream in 1826. Much later, in 1843, Mendelssohn returned to Shakespeare’s play to compose the multi-movement 

Incidental Music to A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Robert Schumann’s appreciative words about the Overture – “The bloom of youth lies over it” – might equally well apply to the entire Incidental Music, for in this work Mendelssohn captured the fairylike magic of Shakespeare’s play. The overture begins with woodwind chords, followed by softly stirring violins evoking the scampering dance of the fairies. Throughout this overture, the Budapest Festival Orchestra string section dis-tinguished itself with vigorous attacks. The brass section also made its mark with triumphal horns as well as the braying sound, played here on tuba, when Bottom is transformed into a donkey.  

Next came the scampering Scherzo movement’s flute solo to evoke Puck’s encounter with an elf. Conductor Iván Fischer then interpolated a movement not listed in the printed program – the Dance of the Elves. This was followed by the Song for Spotted Snakes, for soloists and chorus. The soprano here was Anna Lucia Richter from Cologne; the mezzo was Barbara Kozelj from Slovenia. Both sang beautifully. After the brief Intermezzo came the lovely Nocturne with its delightful horn solo. The famous Wedding March followed; and here Conductor Fischer astutely placed the two cymbals players at opposite sides of the orchestra, giving an antiphonal quality to this renowned work. Between the Wedding March and the Finale, Fischer interpolated the Funeral March, with its poignant clarinet solo marking the funeral for Pyramus. The Finale itself was beautifully sung by soprano Anna Lucia Richter and the Pro Musica Girls Choir, whose director is Dénes Szabó. All told, I came away from this delightful concert with a profound regard for the Budapest Festival Orchestra and its founding Music Director, Iván Fischer.