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Councilmember Sophie Hahn, Mayor Jesse Arreguin and Kate Harrison celebrate on Tuesday night
Rob Wrenn
Councilmember Sophie Hahn, Mayor Jesse Arreguin and Kate Harrison celebrate on Tuesday night
 

News

Two suspects arrested in Berkeley after standoff in Elmwood

Alex Kekauoha (BCN)
Thursday March 16, 2017 - 10:49:00 AM

Police arrested two suspects who led officers on a pursuit Wednesday night that began in Oakland and ended in Berkeley, police said. 

At 6:50 p.m., two Oakland police officers attempted to conduct an investigative vehicle stop in the area of 14th and Harrison streets in Oakland. Inside the suspect vehicle were two adults and a firearm, police said. 

According to police, the driver of the suspect vehicle intentionally struck the police vehicle. As a result of the collision, one of the officers suffered a broken wrist and was treated at a local hospital. 

After the collision, the suspect vehicle fled the scene and was followed by Oakland police units. The pursuit continued outside of Oakland city limits, at which point other agencies became involved, including Berkeley police, San Leandro police, and the Alameda County Sheriff. 

The pursuit ended when the suspect vehicle collided with two uninvolved civilian vehicles in the area of College and Ashby avenues in Berkeley. The two suspects exited the vehicle and fled on foot, police said 

Police detained and arrested one suspect, and recovered a stolen and loaded firearm. Police then set up a perimeter, closed the intersection to traffic and searched for the second suspect, who was quickly located and arrested in the 2900 block of College Avenue. 

Both suspects were taken to a local hospital for medical evaluation. No additional injuries were reported, police said. 

At 11:08 p.m., the area around College and Ashby avenues was cleared and all roads reopened, police said. 

This incident is under investigation and police are asking anyone with information to contact the Oakland Police Department Felony Assault Unit at (510) 238-3426.


Flash: Oakland suspect apprehended in Berkeley's Elmwood after Oakland police pursuit

Daniel Montes (BCN)
Wednesday March 15, 2017 - 09:52:00 PM

A suspect who fled into Berkeley tonight after a police pursuit that began in Oakland, in which an officer suffered minor injuries, has been apprehended, according to police. 

The suspect then fled in their vehicle and ended up in Berkeley, near College and Ashby avenues. 

According to a Berkeley police dispatcher, the suspect was on a rooftop with a gun. 

The incident began at about at about 6:50 p.m., near 14th and Harrison streets in Oakland, according to an Oakland police dispatcher.  

During a vehicle pursuit, the suspect allegedly rammed their vehicle into the officer's patrol vehicle, according to the dispatcher.  

The officer suffered minor injuries. 

It was not immediately clear what caused the pursuit.  

At about 8:30 p.m., Berkeley police had asked people to avoid the intersection, as they sought the suspect, along with help from Oakland police. 

At 8:52 p.m., Berkeley police said the suspect was taken into custody. 

The intersection remains closed at 9:30 as police investigate a collision connected to the incident. 

Further information was not immediately available.


Berkeley law firm featured in "Water and Power" documentary

Monday March 13, 2017 - 04:06:00 PM

Do you wonder where California’s water has been going, and why? A documentary which will be shown on the National Geographic channel (on UVerse 265/1265 at 6 and 7:30 and on Comcast/Xfinity 273 at 9:00 and 10:30) will provide many of the answers.

And there’s a Berkeley connection: Rossmann and Moore LLP, a law firm now located on Shattuck in downtown Berkeley, brought the successful challenge to the "Monterey Amendments” that form the subject of the film, which previewed in Sacramento last Tuesday night. It’s a documentary exposing California’s secret water agreements of the 1990’s. These have led to depleted aquifers, land subsidence and loss of fresh drinking water for entire communities in the Central Valley. Attorney Antonio Rossmann told the Planet that his firm has "a small part in the film, but played a major role in being the first to challenge these questionable deals.”


Kate Harrison defeats Ben Gould in the District 4 Council race (News Analysis)

Rob Wrenn
Friday March 10, 2017 - 04:58:00 PM

With the vote count completed, Kate Harrison has defeated Ben Gould in the special election for the District 4 City Council seat.

Kate Harrison: 1607 (61.8%)

Ben Gould: 992 (38.2%)

Harrison’s margin of victory, 24%, is the largest margin recorded in any District 4 Council race without an incumbent in the race.

This is the first special election for a City Council seat since the City began electing councilmembers by district in 1986. Jesse Arreguin represented District 4 from 2008 until his election as mayor in November. Before Arreguin, the District was represented by Dona Spring from 1992 to her death in July 2008, and before that by Ann Chandler from 1986 to 1992.

District 4 is composed of downtown, North Shattuck to Cedar (except for one block), a small part of the Northside, and the area west of downtown between University and Dwight extending to Sacramento (or to Acton near University). Tenants outnumber homeowners in District 4.



Turnout

The turnout was low. Only 2620 ballots were cast, a turnout of 28% of the 9453 registered voters. This compares to a turnout of 3769 voters in District 4 in the 2014 general election, which was 43.5% of that year’s 8668 registered voters. Turnout was much higher in the recent presidential election when 7089 voters were cast in the district, a turnout of 74.9%.

Low turnout is not surprising. In the past, runoff elections for mayor and city council, with nothing else on the ballot, have also had lower turnouts than general elections. In addition, as a result of redistricting, District 4 has a higher percentage of student residents than in the past and students tend not to vote in non-presidential elections. Much of the recent growth in the city’s population has taken place in downtown and many of the new residents living in the apartment buildings built since the late 1990s are students, particularly the new buildings in District 4 which are mostly within walking distance of campus. In runoff elections, drop off in voting in student precincts has always been much higher than in other precincts.

Ben Gould is a graduate student at UC, but the chance to vote for a student apparently did not inspire very many students in District 4 to return their vote by mail ballots. Gould was endorsed by ASUC and Graduate Assembly officers, but Kate Harrison had the support of students who were active in the Sanders campaign and in Jesse Arreguin’s mayoral campaign last year, as well as the support of the Cal Berkeley Democrats.

District 4 in past decades included more blocks north of Cedar and west of MLK and those areas had more homeowners and fewer students. In the 2010 Council race in District 4, which took place before the redistricting increased the percentage of students in the District, 4715 votes were cast for one of the four Council candidates on the ballot.

Campaign Contributions

Based on campaign filings and information on the City Web site, Kate Harrison had 270 donors who gave $50 or more while Ben Gould had 107 such donors. Kate Harrison raised a total of $45,716 and Ben Gould raised $20,048. Both candidates reported sending 3 campaign mailers to District voters. In addition, Harrison was supported by independent mailings done by the Wellstone Democratic Renewal Club (WDRC) and Berkeley Working Families, an independent expenditure committee supported by the Service Employees International Union, which represents many city employees. Developer contributions were not a factor in the election. Mark Rhoades and another member of the Rhoades Planning Group did make late contributions to Gould, but that was about the extent of contributions from the developer community to Gould’s campaign.

Both candidates waged vigorous campaigns, with lots of yard signs and contact with voters. A majority tenant district, District 4 has always elected progressive candidates to the Council. This year, Kate Harrison had the support of progressive organizations and elected officials, including recently elected Mayor Jesse Arreguin. Arreguin defeated his principal opponent for mayor, Laurie Capitelli, by a 27% margin (1691 votes) in District 4 in November. Ben Gould, who also ran for mayor before running for Council, had received 291 votes for mayor in District 4. Gould was endorsed by the Berkeley Democratic Club (BDC), but that club has never had much influence with District 4 voters. BDC has also been supplanted by WDRC, which is now clearly the most active Democratic club in Berkeley. WRDC supported Bernie Sanders in last year’s Democratic primary, while BDC did not.


Note: Rob Wrenn makes no claims about being neutral in this race. He actively supported Kate Harrison. 


Kate Harrison has big lead in Berkeley's District 4 election

Jeff Shuttleworth (BCN)
Wednesday March 08, 2017 - 02:41:00 PM

Berkeley's city government could be moving even further to the left with the likely victory of veteran activist Kate Harrison in a special vote-by-mail election in City Council District 4.

In results that were released on Tuesday night, Harrison has an overwhelming lead of 63.7 percent to 36.3 percent over University of California at Berkeley graduate student Ben Gould, or 1,278 votes to 728 votes.

The special election was needed because incumbent Councilman Jesse Arreguin was elected to be Berkeley's new mayor in November and took office in December, leaving the District 4 seat open. The district is in downtown Berkeley.

The vacancy means that currently there are only eight votes on the Council instead of the usual nine, and that fact has resulted in at least one deadlock.

Voting by mail began on Feb. 6 and ended on Tuesday. Ballots received by Friday will still be counted and the Alameda County Registrar of Voters will provide updated results late Friday afternoon. 

Registrar of Voters Tim Dupuis couldn't immediately be reached for comment today on how many ballots remain to be counted. 

Harrison, 58, who works as an international justice advisor, said today that if she maintains her lead and is formally declared the victor, it will be "an extension of what happened in November in Berkeley," which she described as "a sea change" in favor of a progressive city government. 

Harrison was endorsed by Arreguin, who said when he was sworn in as mayor in December that Berkeley is moving to the left even as the country is moving to the right. 

Harrison said if she wins, six of the nine Berkeley City Council members will be progressives. 

Gould, 25, who finished fourth in the mayoral election in November with only 2.93 percent of the vote, was considered to be somewhat more moderate than Harrison and was endorsed by councilmembers Lori Droste and Susan Wengraf. 

Harrison said the progressive majority on the City Council won't stop development in Berkeley but instead will seek to have developers include more community benefits in their projects. 

"We need a balance," Harrison said. 

Gould, who is finishing up master's degrees in public policy and environmental engineering and also works as a policy analyst and previously worked as an environmental engineer, couldn't immediately be reached for comment today. 

Gould said in his ballot statement that, "With my experience as an environmental engineer and as a policy analyst I bring a rational, non-ideological approach to addressing Berkeley's challenges."


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits and Pieces

Gar Smith
Friday March 10, 2017 - 11:28:00 AM

Why We Need a Travel Ban

Not on all Muslims: on all Trumps.

In his first month in office, The Donald's weekend escapes to his Mar-a-Lago retreat in Florida cost taxpayers S11.3 million (more than Obama racked up in an entire year). At this rate, Donald's golf outings will cost America $136 million a year. (When Obama was in the White House, Trump tweet-shrieked about "taxpayer-funded vacations [costing] . . . millions of dollars." Now . . . not so much.)

And then there's son Eric who jetted down to Uruguay to promote a new Trump Tower (with rooms renting for up to $8 million a year). Because Trump's family enjoys federal protection, that two-day fling cost the U.S. Treasury nearly $100,000—mostly to rent rooms for Eric's secret service detail. The bodyguards stayed at the Trump Tower, of course, so the tax dollars wound up enriching the Trump organization.

 

 

The Cost of Stay-at-Home Trumps 

Even if the Trump clan were denied these unprecedented travel perks, we would still be massively enriching the self-proclaimed billionaire because wife Melania refuses to relocate to the White House. That means, the Secret Service has to protect New York's Trump Tower 24/7, even when Trump is in DC. Or FL. 

The Pentagon also has to pony up $1.5 million a year to rent Trump Tower rooms to be close to the Commander-in-chief. New York pays another $183 million a year for police to protect the surrounding streets. 

Oscargate Envelops Hollywood 

Thanks to the Academy Awards for offering a bracing change of pace: 

For the first time in a month, the greatest purveyor of "fake news" was not Donald Trump. It was Warren Beatty. 

To be fair to Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway, the "fake news" error was not theirs: It was the sloppy work of PricewaterhouseCoopers. 

As Tim Ryan, U.S. chair and senior partner of PwC put it: "At the end of the day, we made a human error." I guess this is just proof that "corporations are people." 

And it could all have been so easily avoided: When Faye spotted Emma Stone's name on the card, she should have simply Dunaway with it. 

And here's another on-air flub: 

Sunday, February 26, reporting from Washington, DC, NBC's Mark Murray began a sentence by referring to "President Chump . . . , er, Trump." 

Another unfortunate media misstatement: 

MSNBC's Morning Joe co-host Mika Brzezinski reflecting on Donald Trump: "He is trying to undermine the media and trying to make up his own facts. And it could be that while unemployment and the economy worsens, he could have undermined the messaging so much that he can actually control exactly what people think. 

"And that, that is our job." 

(I believe she meant to say something more like "think about.") 

Headline of the Week 

The March 1 Chronicle carried the headline: "New Chapter" for U.S. 

You bet. Chapter 11. 

My Favorite Lead Sentence of the Year (So Far) 

Full credit to Nancy Benac and Mary Clare Jalonick of the Associated Press 

Trump Escalates Attacks on Media at Activist Forum 

WASHINGTON (February 25, 2017) – President Trump unloaded on the news media Friday for using anonymous sources – just hours after members of his own staff insisted on briefing reporters only on condition their names be concealed. [Emphasis added.] 

Related Joke 

Q. Why does Trump keep obsessing about the "lying press" spreading "fake news"? 

A. He can't stand the competition. 

Turn Your Channel to Trump TV 

The Trump White House made a big deal of inviting America to watch Trump's joint-address to the House and Senate—by not watching the "lying media." 

Instead of switching on the network broadcasts, the Oval Officers advised America to watch the proceedings on the Trump Network. 

Here's the White House email press release: 

TONIGHT President Donald J. Trump will step up to the Speaker's rostrum and give his first address to a Joint Session of Congress and to all of America.
 

You won't want to miss this historic event. To see it live, you can go to www.whitehouse.gov. You can also follow the address on Twitter @WhiteHouse and @POTUS, or by visiting the White House Facebook. The address begins at 9 p.m. Be sure to tune in tonight! 

The White House followed up this shameless plug with an email command that was so blunt it might have embarrassed Big Brother. It read simply: "Watch NOW!" 

Franken Has Fun with His Fundraising 

Minnesota Senator (and former SNL alum) Al Franken continues to send out the most unique and amusing fund-raising pitches. 

His latest begins with a Trump-inspired pitch: 

Look, I know emails, okay? I have the best emails. They're tremendous emails, and y'know, you look at these other emails, and they're a mess. A total disaster! 

 

Does it feel as weird for you reading those words as it felt for me writing them? I hope so, because I need your help. The scientists at the Franken Center for Innovation in Fundraising Emails are looking at President Trump's rhetoric, and they want me to see if it will work. 

The scientists at the Franken Center are insistent, so let's try it their way: 

Every other email fundraising campaign is failing. Totally falling apart, folks, totally falling apart. Sad! Give money now, because I'm a billionaire who doesn't need your money, and that's why you should give me your money, okay? 

Please believe me when I say that this hurts me at least as much as it hurts you. 

Moscowgate? Putingate? Rublegate? 

Someone recently came up with a catchphrase to describe the lingering suspicions of unreported Trump/Russia canoodling. The word? "Kremlingate." It does have a certain lasting resonance. 

Grammar Bag 

If it's a bad thing to be "disgruntled," would it be a good thing to be "gruntled"? 

Google says yes: synonyms for "gruntled" include humorous, pleased, satisfied, and contented. To "gruntle" someone means "to make them happy." 

So go out and gruntle a friend today. 

A Poem for Scott Pruit 

No surprise here, we all knew it 

EPA pick Scotty Pruitt 

is bad news, bears, so let's review it: 

Climate change? "There's nothing to it." 

The Clean Air Act? "We must undo it." 

Clean Water law? "We can't renew it." 

Lead in water? "Learn to chew it." 

On wilderness? "I'll drive right through it." 

Oil and coal? "I'll get right to it." 

Polar bears? "I won't rescue it." 

Atomic waste? "I don't intuit." 

Stewardship? "I shall eschew it." 

Sierra Club? "I plan to sue it." 

Your legacy? "I think I blew it." 

Our planet's future? "Don't care! Screw it!"


Opinion

Editorials

The Berkeley City Council should really get stuff done now

Becky O'Malley
Friday March 10, 2017 - 04:29:00 PM

With the election of Kate Harrison to fill new Mayor Jesse Arreguin’s City Council seat, Berkeley has entered firmly into a new era. She's smart, energetic and independent. The distinguishing characteristic of the newly elected council majority is that they were all elected without the fiscal sponsorship of the building industry—they’re not beholden to any developers, or even to any great extent to the Building Trades unions.

They are the vanguard of a realistic progressivism that doesn’t believe that we can build our way out of the environmental crisis which is both the cause and the effect of climate change. It’s been almost 20 years since Vice-President Al Gore started promoting what he thought would be a sure-fire campaign winner for 2000, smart growth. It didn’t turn out to be exactly an election winner (though many of us think he actually won that race), but it has endured in one form or another as doctrine for many sincere but poorly informed environmentalists.

What’s changed in recent years is the previous certainty that urban sprawl was the only enemy. In Berkeley and elsewhere many politically active citizens now realize that jamming more and more people into older cities, at least here in Northern California, has failed to prevent movement into the undeveloped periphery. Even worse, it has turned the most desirable cities like San Francisco into enclaves for the wealthy who can afford luxury highrises, and at the same time has pushed the urban poor into former farming communities like Antioch, Tracy and Brentwood, whose residents are forced to drive long distances daily for jobs serving the needs of the city elite. 

This effect is clearly visible in Berkeley, where the University of California is the biggest employer, but doesn’t pay its service and clerical workers enough to live here. These employees typically must drive into town from two hours or more away. 

There used to be a good housing stock of working class family houses in the Berkeley flats, one-story bungalows with two or three bedrooms and a small yard, affordable homes for U.C. employees and also grad students with families. Now these modest houses are being gobbled up by better-paid commuters who work in San Francisco or Silicon Valley but can’t afford to live there. Yes, some of them can crowd onto BART in the morning, but many or most need to drive to work elsewhere. 

Faculty members used to live in the Berkeley hills, but they’re being pushed out by upper-middle class out of town executives and snowbirds who might also have Manhattan or Cambridge pieds-à-terre. Some academics have bought the small houses in the flats which used to be for workers—but others have gone to Lamorinda where they can afford bigger houses with room for gardens. 

The previous now-replaced councilmembers were led (or pushed around) by ex-Mayor Tom Bates and funded by builders and their allies. Voters were fooled—twice—by developer-funded ballot initiative campaigns which persuaded those who didn’t live in downtown Berkeley that it was their civic duty to build, baby, build. 

The main myth in this scenario is that adding “luxury” apartments near BART stops will free up working class housing somewhere in town. (Ironic quotes are mandatory for anyone who’s ever been in one of these so-called “luxury” units.) Face it: they’re aimed at single suckers and students. Anyone with any sense, taste or kids will still prefer a bungalow with a yard. 

The Berkeley voters who bought into the original downtown plan pitched in the original Measure R 1.0 were fooled once by rogue City of Berkeley planner Mark Rhoades and his former colleagues in the city administration. Then they were fooled again into voting down the attempted repealer, Measure R 2.0, well-intended but inartfully-drafted by Jesse Arreguin and Sophie Hahn. 

But when the supremely ugly products of the council-enacted Downtown Plan started to pop up all over town, voters finally realized they’d been had. The last straw was the Bates council’s approval of the monstrosity proposed for 2211 Harold Way. The citizens’ unsuccessful struggle to head it off did have the salutary effect of introducing a lot of people who previously hadn’t known one another, and they came together to win these last two elections as the new Berkeley Progressive Alliance. Most of the BPA candidates were elected in November, including the now-vindicated Arreguin and Hahn, and adding Harrison in this election has solidified their voting bloc into what should be a reliable 6-3 majority. 

Of course, this is still Berkeley, so it’s to be expected that each of the nine will cast the occasional out-of-bloc vote. Bates surrogates Susan Wengraf (District 5) and Lori Droste (District 8) have a majority of voters in affluent areas who typically disdain the travails of those who are feeling urban pressures in the denser, less wealthy downtown districts. Wengraf won handily in November for four more years, but Droste will have to run again in 2018 if she wants to stay on the council. Linda Maio will also be up then, and she will feel even more pressure from the flatlands dwellers in her District 1. And Worthington? Let’s just say he’s voted oddly lately, possibly misjudging what he’ll need to win in 2018. 

The new council has plenty of challenges. Maintenance of public property deferred or abandoned by the Bates regime is everywhere: the Maudelle Shirek Old City Hall, the Berkeley Community Theater, Willard Pool, the Veterans’ Building, Aquatic Park, the Rose Garden, the sewer system…the list is endless. Meanwhile the employee pension system is seriously askew. 

The need for low-income housing for people who already live and work in Berkeley, including our homeless population, continues, though the myth of trickle-down market-rate development has been rejected by the electorate. Berkeley council would do well to follow the example of Berkeley High alumnus Aaron Peskin, now a San Francisco supervisor, who is successfully pushing for substantial percentages of affordable units in every project rather than letting builders get away with in-lieu fees. These have traditionally been leveraged to build city-backed low income housing, but with the Republicans in the driver’s seat in Washington matching funds will be hard to find

There’s a big threat on the horizon that will have to be addressed: the burgeoning move on the state level to take zoning control away from local governments, with affordability as a bogus rationale. It’s innocuously titled SB-35 Planning and zoning: affordable housing: streamlined approval process. It’s the successor to a similar attempt by Governor Jerry Brown, introduced by former S.F. Supervisor Scott Wiener on Day 1 of his new term in the state Senate. Our very own State Senator Nancy Skinner, who is backed by the trailing edge of the Bates apparatus, voted Wiener’s bill out of the Senate’s Transportation and Housing committee last week

Watch this space for more about this bad bill, and tell the Council to take a stand against it. 

And don’t forget to watch the Berkeley City Council meetings (streamed online, viewable afterwards as video) to see what’s being done in your name by this very promising new bunch. If they don’t seem to be getting what the voters wanted right, let them know about it. Come to the meetings, usually on Tuesday nights, or at least write to council@cityofberkeley.info

 

 

 


The Editor's Back Fence

Another Rolling Release

Friday March 10, 2017 - 02:36:00 PM

Again, I'm pushing the "publish" button as soon as I have critical mass, but warning readers that there's more in the works. This seems to be a reasonable schedule. Many readers are on our "subscribe" list, which means that they get periodic emails telling them what's new, often on Fridays. If you'd like to be a subscriber (it's free), just send an email to subscribe@berkeleydailyplanet.com.


Deplorables battle to a draw in Berkeley

Becky O'Malley
Thursday March 09, 2017 - 11:04:00 PM

My sister in Southern California called me on Sunday night because she’d seen reports of violence in Berkeley on Saturday and she was worried. Knowing me for many years as she has, she thought I might have been there.

Well, we did go to the variously named Provo /Martin Luther King, Jr./Civic Center Park as we do on many Saturdays, mainly to buy tangerines at the Farmers’ Market (Brokaw, Gold Nugget, the best). And yes, we knew the Trumpistas would be there for comic relief, and no, we were not disappointed.

Really, there’s just one sobriquet that fits many on their team, “deplorables”. Unfortunately that also fits many on our team. The two groups, or at least those who came spoiling for a fight, deserved each other. Losers, all of them, and deeply pathetic.

Except for the black costumes and kerchief masks on some of our deplorables you’d have trouble telling the tribes apart. Each had a remarkable percentage of oddly decorated participants. Many, many variously ugly tattoos. At least one man in a skirt on each side. Lots of hair-dye, though theirs tended to unreal orange and platinum where ours ran to blue tones, probably not because they were Dems however. Braids and tie-dyes everywhere, both sides. Motorcycle jackets and boots for both.

Each side also had a reasonable number of seemingly peaceable hangers-on urging their cohorts to “be nice, don’t fight, eat a piece of fruit”. A self-labelled Grandmother for Trump was matched by someone of a similar age I recognized as a hardcore supporter of Berkeley’s Unitarian-Universalist Social Justice Committee.

I decided I wasn’t there to do neutral reporting, since the reliably impartial Bay City News would supply that for the Berkeley Daily Planet, and I saw Tracey Taylor from Berkeleyside snapping pictures. In fact, it appeared that the media outnumbered the demonstrators, both the pros with the fancy cameras and the amateurs with their cells. The reporters took to interviewing each other, because frankly it was pretty boring most of the time. 

As a non-reporter for the day, I allowed myself to be interviewed by both Italian and Korean video crews, who seemed confused when I simply repeated the tried-and- true ACLU/FSM party-line: I don’t like what they say, but I’ll defend their right to say it. Not to the death, though, I thought, as I repeatedly had to back off when folks with sticks started snarling and poking at one another. 

In between dodging some ineffectual skirmishes and one-punch fist fights I made a vain attempt to talk some sense into both sides, as did the daughter who was with me. Just for fun I started a few conversations with the Trumpettes with barely-remembered college Russian for “do you speak Russian”, a tip of the hat to the latest news about who their guy was hanging with. They just looked puzzled, and even more puzzled when I explained why I was speaking Russian, because clearly they hadn’t heard about that stuff. That’s not the guy they voted for. 

They were, most of the pro-Donald protesters, such an old-timey California crowd. They came from the tin-hat wing of the Republican Party, formerly the John Birch Society, dried-up wearers of bolo ties, diehard opponents of water fluoridation, homeschoolers, vaccination deniers. 

Oh, wait. That could describe some of the anti-Trumpers who showed up too, couldn’t it? A friend on the scene described how he’d gone to Sacramento before the election and worked a block, converting at least one Trumper to a Bernieite. Some such converts later voted for Dr. Jill, another vaccination-denier, not necessarily a plus for our team, but very Old Cal. At 500 paces, it was hard to tell them apart. 

Also on the scene as observers were quite a few Berkeley regulars that I knew, some like me attempting to speak sense to nutsos, with little success. One told me that she’d seen an anti-Trump woman stab a pro-Trump woman with an umbrella. Mrs. Pro then bashed Ms. Anti with the pole from her sign, causing some small amount of blood to flow, which was greeted enthusiastically by colleagues who’d brought bandages.  

Both sides were observed with canisters of pepper-spray, and some on each side appeared to have been sprayed. The Black Bloc-heads seemed to have smoke bombs and the Bikers for Trump firecrackers, with some of each deployed from time to time causing the crowd to scream. 

We picked up a couple of nasty-looking poles, one with nails sticking out of it, but we couldn’t decide if it was supposed to be a weapon or was just incredibly poor carpentry. 

Toward the end of the afternoon a smallish contingent took off to march around the block. I couldn’t figure out which set started out first, but by the time they got back the two groups were intermingled and indistinguishable. 

I’ve frequently been critical of the Berkeley Police, but on this occasion they acquitted themselves admirably. They maintained a constant non-violent uniformed presence, moving in a line toward the participants when things started to get contentious, but as BCN reported there were only ten arrests and seven minor injuries.  

I can’t speak to that myself, since we got really bored about 4:30 and just went home. Reports of violence, I was happy to reassure my sister, were greatly exaggerated. 

 

 

 


Public Comment

SQUEAKY WHEEL: Community Workshops on Infrastructure

Toni Mester
Friday March 10, 2017 - 11:30:00 AM

The public is invited to three upcoming Saturday meetings on spending the $100 million raised by bonds approved by the voters in November to “repair, renovate, replace, or reconstruct the City’s aging infrastructure and facilities.” 

The first is scheduled for March 18 at the Frances Albrier Community Center, 2800 Park Street in San Pablo Park, from 10 am to 1 pm and will focus on Parks and City Buildings. 

The second meeting will be held on March 25 from noon to 3 pm at the Live Oak Community Center, 1301 Shattuck Avenue, and will pay attention to the condition of the streets and storm drains. 

The last meeting is planned for April 8 at the Terea Hall Pittman South Berkeley Library, 1901 Russell Street (corner of MLK) from 10 am to noon and will be an open discussion on proposed projects. 

The City has posted a Measure T1 webpage with many links for those who want to read staff reports that detail projects, some completed, and others underway as well as those on the to-do list. A fairly comprehensive analysis of the projects including their cost, can be found in the October 18, 2016 update presented to the Council by Scott Ferris, the Director of Parks, Recreation, and Waterfront, and Phil Harrington, Director of Public Works. 

Not all the parks projects are funded through City bonds. Other sources include the parks tax, Measure WW from the Regional Parks, and grants. Streets and other infrastructure maintenance and repairs are primarily paid by the general fund, which contributes almost a quarter of its budget to public works. The money raised by Measure M, a $30 million bond for streets and green infrastructure, approved by the voters in November 2012, is running out. 

The $100 million raised by the Measure T1 bonds will only cover a portion of the needed projects, which are estimated to cost at least $400 million. Hopefully these upcoming discussions will help the City staff prioritize. Please prepare for the meetings by visiting the T1 webpage and reading the reports. An interactive story map is a special feature that shows 34 of the major projects like the pier, Aquatic Park tide tubes, the Rose Garden, Live Oak Park, and Grove Park and their location. 

Those who cannot attend or wish to contribute in writing, can email their comments to: T1@cityofberkeley.info

 

Toni Mester is a resident of West Berkeley. 


Stolen election?

Jagjit Singh
Friday March 10, 2017 - 10:59:00 AM

The Russian-Trump smoke is becoming thicker and thicker threatening to explode into a roaring conflagration and bring down the presidency. 

Consider the following sordid saga. 

Prior to the 2016 election, Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign chairman, made frequent contacts with a Russian contact with deep ties to the Kremlin. 

J.D. Gordon, a member of Trump’s security team, met with Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak and removed language critical of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. 

Jason Greenblatt, special international negotiator at the White House met with Rabbi Berel Lazar, the chief rabbi of Russia and a close ally of Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin. 

Perhaps, the most damaging evidence of possible collusion is the phone records and intercepted calls which show conclusively that members of Trump’s 2016 campaign had repeated contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials prior to the election. Why were so many Trump officials cozying up to America’s arch enemy?  

If the FBI and other intelligence agencies find the “smoking gun”, then Trump and his associates should be charged with high crimes and removed from office. The 2016 elections results should be voided and Hillary Clinton sworn into office as early as possible to stop the hemorrhaging of our democracy. 


The Privatization of Public School

Harry Brill
Friday March 10, 2017 - 01:28:00 PM

Our society is moving rapidly in a dangerous direction. Government is increasingly playing the role of assisting business to maximize profits instead of attempting to improve the quality of life of the public. The strategy is privatization, which Trump has just indicated he supports. He is seeking legislative approval for funds to provide opportunities for private schooling to "disadvantage young people". Among the public institutions that are becoming increasingly privatized are K-12 educational institutions. Called charter schools, they are rapidly increasing at the expense of public schools. In Washington, D.C. 44 percent of the students are enrolled in charter schools. In some cities, including Detroit and New Orleans, a majority of the students are educated in charter schools. 

Charter schools are defined as public schools that operate independently from local school boards and other public schools. But the only thing that is really public about them is that they get their money from the public sector, which as a result financially bleeds the public school Those who are interested in exploring why educators and progressives generally are disappointed with charter schools should go to the internet site, Charter School Scandals. You will read about how in many instances the funding of public schools are being cut to feed the predatory interests of charter school proprietors and managers. You will also read about their lack of transparency and accountability. In California, for example, the charter schools do not favor transparency for good reasons. State authorities have found that many of its charter schools have been responsible for over $80 million in wasteful and fraudulent spending of public money. 

President Trump appointed the billionaire Betsy DeVos as Secretary of Education. She has very close ties to the conservative wing of the Republican Party. She served as the Republican National Committeewoman in Michigan. DeVos has worked very hard and successfully to expand the number of charter schools in Michigan. She has supported these schools no matter how poor their record of accomplishments are. For example, although students of the charter school in Detroit, Hope Academy, have continually experienced very low test scores for more than a decade, its license was nevertheless renewed. 

It would be a serious mistake, however, to assume that all charter school advocates are interested in only profit. On the contrary, many progressives have been concerned about the shortcomings in public schools and accordingly, want to find a way of improving the quality of K-12 education. Among the advocates was Albert Shanker, who was head of the American Federation of Teachers union. In 1988 he proposed what was soon after called charter schools. He offered a vision of setting up alternative schools that gave teachers much greater freedom to teach and develop the curriculum. Many prominent educators agreed. 

h The first charter school opened in St. Paul Minnesota with about 35 students in 1992. There are now over 6,700 charter schools in the United States who teach more than two and a half million students. Unlike the orientation of progressive educators, the charter schools, instead of cooperating with the public schools, have been competing with and attempting to replace them. Instead of involving teachers in the task of improving and developing curriculum, how to shape these schools is now completely in the hands of management. Because of the very vigorous efforts of charter school administrators, only 10 percent of the charter schools are unionized. In public schools, 49 percent of the teachers are union members. Unlike public schools, the main interest of charter schools is to make money. In fact, it is about making lots of money. 

But it was progressives like Shanker, not conservatives, who first proposed charter schools. Their model favored democratic decision making along with giving teachers an opportunity to develop different approaches to educating K-12 students. Certainly there were problems with the public schools that needed to be addressed. But by proposing alternatives to the traditional public schools they legitimated the unfortunate development that followed. The progressives did not realize that ambitious entrepreneurs would take advantage of the opening that Shanker and others provided. 

In retrospect, it might have turned out differently if progressives instead had focused exclusively on the existing public schools rather than seeking to support alternative educational institutions. The most serious problem confronting the public schools has been inadequate funding. Without a decent budget there are serious limits to what can be accomplished. Particularly important, teachers needed more autonomy to improve the performance of the schools. Although Shanker and other progressives supported a benign kind of privatization, they later regretted what has actually emerged. But as the private sector became more active in building support for charter schools that they would completely control, it was too late to contain this development. Those who craved profits had immense political and economic advantages, including the strong support of Clinton when he was president, and President Obama, who embraced Charter Schools and favored their expansion. 

Nevertheless, progressives have seriously attempted to address the serious problems of charter schools. Last year in California a coalition of community groups, parents, and state leaders banded together to persuade the state government to enact a charter school transparency bill. Charter schools would have to comply with the same state laws governing open meetings, open records, and conflict of interest laws that are required of traditional public schools. However, Governor Brown not only vetoed the bill. He included in the budget $20 million for charter schools. He explained in a letter to the legislature that these schools have benefited from "the strong commitment of dedicated individuals". The governor does not only support charter schools. He financially benefits from the two charter schools that he purchased and owns. 

Although the recent bill was supported by a majority of the legislators, it lacked the two thirds vote that is required for an override. However to understand how California state government actually works it is important to realize that even if the bill enjoyed a two thirds majority to override the veto, an override would not have happened. In the last two sessions, the legislature sent to the governor bills that it approved by at least a two thirds vote. Although Brown vetoed about 250 of these bills, the legislators nevertheless made no attempt to override any of them even though they could have.  

What is going on? In short, Brown plays the flack catcher role, which allows many legislators to appear more progressive than they really are. They can tell their constituency that they voted in favor of their interests despite the opposition of the governor. Nor did the Democratic Party legislators attempt to override any veto even when the Republican Schwarzenegger was governor. The advocates of the transparency bill mistakenly thought that they lost only because the bill failed to achieve a two third majority. But the reality is that once the governor vetoes a bill the chance that it would be overridden is exactly zero. 

The problem for progressives is coping with the combined resistance of business and government, both of whom erect barriers that are very difficult to overcome. For progressives to stand a chance of improving the odds, they must not only be well organized. They must be openly and consistently adversarial and outraged. And most of all, they must do whatever they can to nominate and elect a progressive governor


Columns

DISPATCHES FROM THE EDGE: A Foreign Policy of Delusion

Conn Hallinan
Friday March 03, 2017 - 10:56:00 AM

In trying to unravel the debates over U.S. foreign policy currently being fought out in the editorial pages of the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and the magazine Foreign Policy, one might consider starting in late December on a bitter cold ridge in northern Wyoming, where 81 men of the U.S. Army’s 18th Infantry Regiment were pursuing some Indians over a rocky ridge.

The year was 1866 and the U.S. was at war with the local tribes—Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho—in an attempt to open a trail into the Montana gold fields. The fighting was going badly for an army fresh from the battlefields of the Civil War. Oglala Sioux leader Red Cloud and his savvy lieutenant Crazy Horse did not fight like Robert E. Lee, but rather like General Vo Nguyen Giap a hundred years in the future: an ambush by attackers who quickly vanished, isolated posts overrun, supply wagons looted and burned.

The time and place was vastly different, but the men who designed the war against Native Americans would be comfortable with the rationale that currently impel U.S. foreign policy. In their view, the Army was not fighting for gold in 1866, but was embarked on a moral crusade to civilize the savages, to build a shining “city on a hill,” to be that “exceptional” nation that stands above all others. The fact that this holy war would kill hundreds of thousands of the continent’s original owners and sentence the survivors to grinding poverty was irrelevant.

Is that very much different than the way the butcher bills for the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, the overthrow of Libya’s government and the Syrian civil war is excused as unfortunate collateral damage in America’s campaign to spread freedom and democracy to the rest of the world? 

“We came, we saw, he died,” bragged then U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about the murder of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. Libya is now a failed state, wracked by civil war and a major jumping off place for refugees fleeing U.S. wars in Yemen, Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan. 

In his book “The True Flag: Theodore Roosevelt, Mark Twain, and the Birth of American Empire,” author and former New York Times reporter Stephen Kinzer traces the roots of this millennium view that America’s mission was to “regenerate the world.” That this crusade was many times accompanied by stupendous violence is a detail that left unexamined by the people who designed those campaigns. 

Kinzer argues that this sense of exceptionalism was developed during the Spanish-American War (1898) that gave the U.S. colonies in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Guam and the Philippines. But, as John Dower demonstrates in his brilliant book on WW II in the Pacific, “War Without Mercy,” that sentiment originated in the campaigns against Native Americans. Indeed, some of the same soldiers who tracked down Apaches in the Southwest and massacred Sioux Ghost Dancers at Wounded Knee would go on to fight insurgents in the Philippines. 

The language has shifted from the unvarnished imperial rhetoric of men like Roosevelt, Henry Cabot Lodge and Senator Albert Beveridge, who firmly believed in “the white man’s burden”—a line from a poem by Rudyard Kipling about the American conquest of the Philippines. 

Today’s humanitarian interventionists have substituted the words “international” and “global” for “imperial,” though the recipients of “globalism” sometimes have difficulty discerning the difference. At the ideological core of exceptionalism is the idea that American, in the words of former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright—and repeated by presidential candidate Hillary Clinton—is the “one essential nation” whose duty it is to spread the gospel of free markets and democracy. 

On the surface there appear to be sharp differences between what could call “establishment” foreign policy mavens like Zbigniew Brzezinski, Paul Wasserman, Jonathan Stevenson, and Robert Kagan, from the brick tossers like Stephen Bannon, Sebastian Gorka, and Stephen Miller. To a certain extent there are. Bannon, for instance, predicts a major land war in the Middle East and a war over the South China Sea. Next to those fulminations, liberal interventionists like Kagan, and even neoconservatives like Max Boot, seem reasoned. But the “old hands” and sober thinkers are, in many ways, just as deluded as the Trump bomb throwers. 

A case in point is a recent article by the Brookings Institute’s Kagan entitled “Backing Into World War III,” in which he argues the U.S. must challenge Russia and China “before it is too late,” and that “accepting spheres of influence is a recipe for disaster.” Kagan has generally been lumped in with neo-cons like Boot, Paul Wolfowitz, Elliot Abrams, and Richard Perle—the latter three helped design the invasion of Iraq—but he calls himself a liberal interventionist and supported Hillary Clinton in the last election. Clinton is a leading interventionist, along with former UN representative Samantha Power and President Obama’s natural Security Advisor, Susan Rice. 

Kagan posits, “China and Russia are classic revisionist powers. Although both have never enjoyed greater security from foreign powers than they do today—Russia from its traditional enemies to the west, China from its traditional enemy in the east—they are dissatisfied with the current global configuration of power. Both seek to restore hegemonic dominance they once enjoyed in their respective regions.” 

Those “regions” include Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia for Russia, and essentially everything west of the Hawaiian Islands for China. 

For Kagan this is less about real estate than “The mere existence of democracies on their borders, the global free flow of information they cannot control, the dangerous connection between free market capitalism and political freedom—all pose a threat to rulers who depend on keeping restive forces in their own countries in check.” 

There are times when one wonders what world people like Kagan live in. 

As Anatol Lieven, foreign policy researcher, journalist and currently a professor at Georgetown University in Qatar, points out concerning Russia, “A child with a map can look at where the strategic border was in 1988 and where it is today, and work out which side has advanced in which direction.” 

The 1999 Yugoslav War served as an excuse for President Bill Clinton to break a decade-old agreement with the then Soviet Union not to recruit former members of the Warsaw Pact into NATO. In the war’s aftermath, the western coalition signed up Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Romania. For the first time in modern history, Russia has a hostile military alliance on its borders, including American soldiers. Exactly how this gives Russia “greater security” from her enemies in the West is not clear. 

Of course, in a way, Kagan has a dog in this fight. His wife, former Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Eurasian Affairs, Victoria Nuland, helped organize the 2014 coup that overthrew Ukrainian President Victor Yanukovych. Prior to the coup, Nuland was caught on tape using a vulgar term to dismiss peace efforts by the European Union and discussing who would replace Yanukovych. Nuland also admitted that the U.S. had spent $5 billion trying to influence Ukraine’s political development. 

As Lieven argues, “Russia’s intervention in Ukraine is about Ukraine, a country of supreme historical, ethnic, cultural, strategic, and economic importance to Russia. It implies nothing for the rest of Eastern Europe.” 

Kagan gives no evidence of Russia’s designs on Central Asia, although one assumes he is talking about the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. Since that trade and security grouping includes China, India and Pakistan, as well as Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan—Iran has applied for membership—exactly how Russia would “dominate” those countries is not clear. 

Kagan’s argument that “accommodation” with Russia only encourages further aggression is, according to Lieven, a “view based upon self-deception on the part of western elites who are interested in maintaining confrontation with Russia as a distraction from more important, painful problems at home, like migration, industrial decline and anger over globalization.” 

As for “free market capitalism,” the fallout from the ravages that American style capital has wrought on its own people is one of the major reasons Donald Trump sits in the Oval Office. 

According to Kagan, U.S. allies in Asia—he presents no evidence of this—are “wondering how reliable” the U.S. is given its “mostly rhetoric” pivot to Asia, its “inadequate” defense spending,” its “premature” and “unnecessary” withdrawal from Iraq, and its “accommodating agreement with Iran on its nuclear program.” 

One wonders through what looking glass the Brookings Institute views the world. The U.S. has more than 400 military bases in Asia, has turned Guam into a fortress, deployed Marines and nuclear capable aircraft in Australia and sent six of its 10 aircraft carriers to the region. It spends more on defense than the rest of the world combined. The illegal invasion of Iraq was an unmitigated disaster, and Iran has given up its nuclear enrichment program and its stockpile of enhanced uranium. 

But in a world of “alternative facts,” the only thing that counts is that the U.S. no longer dominates the world as it did in the decades after World War II. “Only the United States has the capacity and unique geographical advantages to provide global security and relative stability,” writes Kagan, “there is no stable balance of power in Europe or Asia without the United States.” 

The fact that the “security” and “stability” that Kagan yearns for has generated dozens of war, a frightening nuclear arms race, growing economic inequality and decades of support for dictators and monarchs on five continents never seems to figure into the equation. 

Where the politics of Trump fits into all this is by no means clear. If the President goes with Bannon’s paranoid hate of Islam—and given conspiracy theorist and Islamophobe Frank Gaffney has just been appointed special advisor to the President that is not a bad bet—then things will go sharply south in the Middle East. If he pushes China and follows Bannon’s prediction that there will be a war between the two powers, maybe its time to look at real estate in New Zealand, like a number of billionaires—40 percent of whom are Americans—are already doing. 

But no matter which foreign policy current one talks about, the “indispensible nation” concept—born out of the Indian and Spanish-American wars “weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living,” as Karl Marx wrote in the “18th Brumaire. 

A century and a half ago on a snowy Wyoming ridge, a company of the 18th Infantry Regiment discovered that not everyone wanted that “shining city on a hill.” From out of a shallow creek bed and the surrounding cottonwoods and box elders, the people whose land the U.S. was in the process of stealing struck back. The battle of Lodge Pine Ridge did not last long, and none of the Regiment survived. It was a stunning blow in the only war against the U.S. that Native Americans won. Within less than two years the Army would admit defeat and retreat. 

In the end the Indians were no match for the numbers, technology, and firepower of the U.S. Within a little more than three decades they were “civilized” into sterile, poverty-ridden reservations where the only “exceptionalism” they experience is the lowest life expectancy of any ethnic group in the United States. 

The view that American institutions and its organization of capital is superior is a dangerous delusion and increasingly unacceptable—and unenforceable—in a multi-polar world. The tragedy is how widespread and deep these sentiments are. The world is not envious of that shining “city on a hill,” indeed, with Trump in the White House “aghast” would probably be a better sentiment than envy. 

 


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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


THE PUBLIC EYE: Indivisible: Social Action Startup

Bob Burnett
Friday March 10, 2017 - 10:43:00 AM

Some of the most exciting days of my life occurred in the late 80's when I was involved in a technology startup, Cisco Systems. 29 years later I'm involved in another exciting startup, Indivisible. There are fascinating similarities between my experience at Cisco and Indivisible. 

I moved from IBM to Cisco. I left a secure position where I managed several hundred folks to run a ten-person engineering team. Obviously there were incentives -- stock options -- but the primary reason I left IBM was my belief that their perspective on technology had become obsolete. 

In the eighties, IBM was by far the world's biggest Information Technology (IT) company. It had 400,000 employees and income of $70 billion. Although it had several product lines, IBM executives held tight to the belief the mainframe computer was the center of the IT universe. 

I became a nonbeliever, a heretic in an social system where orthodox belief was valued and rewarded. I was convinced that there had been an irrevocable shift in the IT world and the network was now the center of the universe, the Internet. That shift didn't mean that mainframe computers would go away but that they would lose status, take a smaller role in information processing, stand along side workstations and personal computers and other intelligent devices. One might characterize the IT shift as moving from an oligarchy to a democracy. 

Now, there's been a comparable shift in the political world. The cognoscenti continue to believe that Washington DC is the center of the US political universe; that everything important happens in DC, whether it's Trump's latest Tweet or congressional action on healthcare or the organization of the Democratic Party. But out here in the real world we don't agree because we think the system is broken. At the moment, that's the belief that unites Republicans and Democrats and Independents and disgusted non-voters: the system is broken and DC doesn't get it. 

IBM is to DC what Cisco is to Indivisible. Cisco represented a fundamental shift from orthodoxy. Indivisible represents a similar seismic shift. 

Individual Indivisible -- that's a mouth full -- groups are inherently decentralized. (Fun facts: there 990 Indivisible units in California; at least two in each congressional district; 10 in Berkeley.) In my area there are Indivisible units that are study groups, others that make phone calls, and mine -- Indivisible Berkeley -- that functions as a clearing house for direct action. 

Imagine these Indivisible group as cells in a vast progressive network that includes more than 6000 Indivisible chapters plus MoveOn, OFA, Resistance.Org, 350.org as well as Sierra Club, ACLU, Planned Parenthood, Immigrant rights organizations, AFSC, and on and on. 

In the eighties, Cisco never took a position on which network traffic was most important; our routers didn't prioritize data from mainframes over data from work stations or whatever. We didn't prioritize data for any reason. Our job was to make sure that messages got delivered by the fastest route possible; and that devices that spoke different (network) languages could communicate across the Internet. 

The new progressive network doesn't prioritize one organization or issue over another. We are united resisting Emperor Trump. 

Because we are united by this resistance, plus the values of inclusivity and nonviolence, we exchange information and expertise. We're democratic with a 21st century flair. 

In the eighties, when IBM reigned supreme, the technology press didn't understand that the IT world was undergoing a radical shift. They continued to glorify the dinosaurs: "They're so big and powerful! They will rule forever." Meanwhile, down on the ground, technologically advanced campuses were building local-area networks, plugging work stations into them, and linking campus to campus with the Internet. (When we did the IPO road show for Cisco, we had to explain what the Internet was to the money guys. When we added that Cisco built an essential component, the multi-protocol router, a typical question was, "Is this like the router in my home workshop?") 

Now, the mainstream media doesn't understand that US politics is undergoing a radical shift. The cable TV shows continue to interview the same tired Washington faces. Meanwhile, out here in the real world we are organizing. We are talking to our members of congress -- when they show up - and letting them know how feel about the ACA and the rights of undocumented aliens and so forth. In purple districts, we are registering voters and preparing for the midterm election -- 605 days away. We are communicating with the other cells on the network and raising money. And, professional politicians aren't involved. 

In retrospect, the IT shift -- that happened in the eighties -- was for the best. The Internet is more flexible and affordable than the mainframe model ever was. (Even though there are problems such as hacking and pornographic websites.) 

I believe the shift in US politics will also be for the best. Most of the country feels that the current system is broken and US democracy is slipping into oligarchy. If Washington DC is part of the problem, then the solution has to be grassroots activism in the form of Indivisible and similar groups. 

I'm excited. Democracy is starting up. 

 

 


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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: How Delusions Snowball, and How People Follow their Leader

Jack Bragen
Thursday March 09, 2017 - 11:07:00 PM

The human mind, that of the ordinary, non-afflicted person, is good at fooling itself. If this weren't so, things in society would not be as they are.  

The human mind makes an assumption, and then it works to prove its assumptions. However, there are inroads that allow reality to enter human thought, so long as a person hasn't slipped too deeply into illusion. 

The mind of a person who suffers from psychosis may lack some of the safety valves or "failsafe" mechanisms that most people probably have.  

When the mind of a psychotic person produces a delusion, and when this delusion is incorporated into the fabric of thought, this introduces an error. In some instances, a delusion becomes an assumption. When this happens, most of the thoughts that follow from this assumption are going to be incorrect. 

Non-afflicted people absorb their version of reality from those around them. Most people are taught what to think and how to think based on what they see and hear other people doing. Independent thought is not the norm. Most people remain "sane" by means of social mechanisms. (Our current President is using this to his advantage.)  

People who become psychotic often are isolated. This isolation could be invisible, meaning they could exist among others, yet not connect. Or, the isolation could be obvious, such as someone who works alone and/or lives alone. This gives the mind the opportunity to feed on its own thoughts. This is usually not healthy, unless you are part of a meditation community--in which case you would periodically have a chance to interact with other meditation practitioners. And there are other exceptions.  

We see a number of examples of how cults that are fragmented from most of society can split off from reality, and the members share common erroneous beliefs. Usually the individual who heads the cult has the ability to project beliefs onto others, beliefs that allow that person to take advantage of his or her followers. 

The President has the biggest "cult following" we have seen. He is able to project a warped version of reality to his followers; and it appears as though millions of people believe everything he says. Most people must be told what to think. Many are unable to distinguish on their own whether their source is accurate, a deception, or a contagious delusion. They may simply listen to the loudest voice or the strongest projection. 

(Dr. Drew Pinsky, shortly before he was canned from CNN for saying he didn't believe Trump is mentally ill and for expressing concern over Clinton's health, said it very well. In an interview with Don Lemon, he said [and these are not his exact words] that rather than calling Trump crazy, we ought to be looking at why so many people are following Trump.)  

However, a person suffering from psychosis who winds up in the mental health treatment system generally gets the delusions from himself or herself. This doesn't make common thought any more accurate. However, a person deemed psychotic has separated from common beliefs and this makes it unlikely that they can exist among others.  

Schizophrenia, however, is an actual illness. If the problem could be characterized only as the presence of delusions, it might be harder to call it a disease. However, a person with schizophrenia may be paranoid and/or grandiose, and, in addition to being delusional, the person's thoughts will be very disorganized. The person loses the ability to take care of himself or herself, and in some instances may pose a threat to oneself or others.  

Medication to treat psychosis works partly through slowing down the brain, and partly through increasing the emphasis of one's immediate surroundings. Both of these things make it easier, not only for thinking to get back on track with what others believe, but also for thinking to make more sense. 

This doesn't mean that a mentally ill person in treatment has been rendered incapable of independent thought. Look at me as an example… 

*** 

Jack Bragen is author of "Revised Short Science Fiction Collection of Jack Bragen."


Arts & Events

Dazzling Divas are back at Le Bateau Ivre on Wednesday

Friday March 10, 2017 - 04:53:00 PM

This Wednesday, March 15, Le Bateau Ivre features The Dazzling Divas. Opera singers Pamela Connelly, Kathleen Moss and Eliza O’Malley light up the hall with arias, duets and trios from celebrated operas of Puccini, Verdi, Bellini, Bizet, Delibes and more plus some St. Pat's specials from these three Irish lasses. 

Indulge yourself in an evening of opera’s top hits with these Bay Area favorites, accompanied by delicious food, dinners, desserts, and beverages of all kinds.  

* DINNER SEATING: Begins at 5:00pm * PERFORMANCE: 7:00 - 9:00pm - No Cover Charge. Come early for a nice seat. 

Le Bateau Ivre is at 2629 Telegraph Avenue,Berkeley . Bring a friend for an intimate evening of enjoyable music.


Gautier Capuçon Shines in Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 1

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Friday March 10, 2017 - 01:27:00 PM

Dimitri Shostakovich wrote his Cello Concerto No. 1 for cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, to whom the score is dedicated. Upon receiving the finished score, Rostropovich reportedly learned the entire work by memory in only four days and then played the work brilliantly for an “astounded” Shostakovich at its premiere with the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra on October 4, 1959 with Eugene Mravinsky conducting. A few months later, Rostropovich recorded this work with the New York Philharmonic under Leonard Bernstein, and this recording has remained the authoritative version of the Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 1. Now, however, along comes cellist Gautier Capuçon, whom I find a likely heir apparent to the late Rostropovich. Capuçon shares with Rostropovich the same vigorously physical playing style along with an intensely emotional commitment to the score. The results, as we heard Saturday evening, March 4, at Davies Hall with San Francisco Symphony led by Michael Tilson Thomas, were intensely gripping. 

The opening movement, marked Allegretto, offers a four-note theme that recurs repeatedly, surfacing again in the final movement. The cello begins in the high range of the instrument, and the constantly shifting dynamics of this opening movement create a certain moody suspense. The orchestra chimes in with dark, brooding rumblings from the contrabassoon and contrastingly shrill woodwinds. The second movement, marked Moderato, opens with a solo horn, beautifully rendered by Bruce Roberts, backed by strings. Then the cello offers a subtle, darkly melodic theme, exquisitely played by Capuçon. This theme and a second one build toward a climax, which is quickly followed by a reprise of the work’s initial material. This transitions into the third movement, a cadenza thoroughly written out by Shostakovich as a separate movement. Here Capuçon produced wondrous music, with vigorous attacks and virtuoso double-stops as well as pizzicato plucking. This entire cadenza is played with no orchestral accompaniment. It is a prodigious show-stopper for a virtuoso cellist! When the orchestra eventually chimes in, we have transitioned to the work’s finale, a fast movement marked Allegro con moto. Here the wok’s initial four-note theme returns, this time aggressively fast-paced; and the concerto steams ahead at full speed to a rousing close. For any cellist who plays as ferociously as Capuçon and Rostropovich, there may be occasional intonation issues. But I’ll happily take any minor intonation problems over a technically precise rendition lacking the searingly emotional involvement of a Capuçon or a Rostropovich. At the close of this San Francisco Symphony performance of the Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 1, soloist Gautier Capuçon and conductor Michael Tilson Thomas took their bows to thunderous applause from an appreciative audience. 

The work that opened the program, a rarely heard piece with the unlikely title The Jewish Orchestra at the Ball of Nothingtown, was a glib, ingratiating work by Mikhail Fabionovich Gnesin, a Russian pioneer of Jewish art music. Consisting of a brief overture and five dances, this work shared some affinities with klezmer music, though it avoided the mad, almost demented frenzy of much klezmer music. On the other hand, it remained shallow throughout. Perhaps MTT chose to program this obscure and eminently forgettable piece because he heard in it some of the music his Russian forebears might have listened to or even played.  

After intermission, MTT returned to lead the orchestra in Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 6 in B minor, “Pathétique.” When I first heard this symphony in a live performance back in the late 1960s with the Oakland Symphony under Gerhard Samuel, I was taken aback by the alternations between lovely melodic passages and boisterous, bombastic passages. The work as a whole did not seem to adhere in any cohesive way, to my mind. Over the years, however, I have come to understand the general architecture of this symphony; and while I still deplore the stretches of bombast, I cherish the achingly beautiful melody of the opening movement and the broad, sweeping melody of the finale. In between, there are two movements constituting a kind of intermezzo. The Allegro molto vivace offers a mad scherzo, played at full throttle, with demanding passages for the timpanist. Here too there is bombast aplenty, but I’ve learned to accept it in this work. The loud march at the beginning of the final movement has its share of bombast as well, but at least here there is a sardonic humor involved. When the march ends with a bang, a broad, sweeping melody ensues, and this melody unfolds with great beauty and solemnity. Gradually, however, it fades away, ending on a softly dying note that audiences initially found utterly strange as a conclusion, but which took on prophetic meaning when, nine days after this symphony’s premiere in St. Petersburg, Tchaikovsky suddenly died in mysterious circumstances at age 53. Here in San Francisco, under the baton of Michael Tilson Thomas, Tchaikovsky’s Pathétique Symphony received a taut, utterly convincing performance, one that was recorded on Saturday evening and will be issued as a CD in the near future. I look forward to hearing it, as this work continues to grow on me. 


Takács Quartet’s Beethoven Cycle Continues

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Friday March 10, 2017 - 01:26:00 PM

On Saturday-Sunday, March 4-5, the Takács Quartet resumed its series of the complete Beethoven string quartets in Berkeley’s Hertz Hall. Begun in October of 2016, this series presents all of Beethoven’s string quartets in six concerts, from October 2016 to mid-April 2017. This weekend, I attended the Sunday afternoon concert featuring Beethoven’s Op. 18, No. 3 Quartet, the Op. 59, No. 2, “Rasumovsky” Quartet, and the Op. 127 Quartet.  

As always, the Takács Quartet demonstrated superb musicianship and a profound comprehension of Beethoven’s achievements in the string quartet format. Few of the world’s current string quartets can bring as much experience and knowledge of these works to bear in their performances as the Takács Quartet; and one that could, and did, the Cypress String Quartet, has recently decided to disband and move on individually to other things. Thus we are doubly indebted to the Takács Quartet for offering at this moment an in-depth exploration of the string quartet repertoire that played such an important role in the career of Ludwig van Beethoven. 

Throughout this concert series, the Takács Quartet strives to offer in each concert a string quartet from each of the main periods of Beethoven’s career, the early, middle, and late periods. In Sunday’s concert, they offered Beethoven’s early Op. 18, No. 3 Quartet, his middle period Op. 59, No. 2 Quartet, and his late period Op. 127 Quartet. The Op. 18, No. 3 Quartet was actually the first string quartet Beethoven composed. It is in D Major, and it begins in a most unusual way, with two long unaccompanied notes on the violin, arching upwards, as the program notes specify, to a minor seventh, just a whole tone short of an octave. It’s as if Beethoven, in the first of his string quartets, sought to assert an original voice.  

Traditionally, string quartets had been conceived as music that might be played by a group of friends gathered in someone’s living room. Even Haydn and Mozart had begun writing string quartets in this light-hearted style convivial to amateur musicians, though later in their careers both Haydn and Mozart wrote far more serious and more difficult string quartets. Beethoven, however, began from the outset writing serious, difficult string quartets in which he explored unusual, often surprising key relations. The unusual opening of the D Major Quartet created problems later, when Beethoven needed to integrate this opening gambit into a cohesive first movement. His solution was brilliant: After a chord of C-sharp Major, the violins cease to play while the viola and cello sustain a C-sharp minor note. Then the second violin enters, allowing the home key of D Major to reassert itself in the third bar. Beethoven later used this same gambit in his Second Symphony.
There are surprises as well in the later movements of Op. 18, No. 3. The slow movement offers a main theme adumbrated by the second violin. A four-note phrase in rising pattern jumps a whole tone higher with each leap. Countersubjects ground the piece, and inversions of the main theme further ground the piece. Event-ually, this music dies away in a pianissimo conclusion. The third movement offers off-beat accents and unexpected tonal shifts. The finale offers a brisk Presto, with an underlying rhythm of a tarantella. Even the ending is a surprise: It is almost no ending at all, merely a reiterated fragment of the main theme, followed by what we expect is a mere pause but turns out to be the final punctuation mark in this highly exploratory string quartet.  

Next on Sunday’s program was Beethoven’s E minor Quartet, Op. 59, No. 2, one of three quartets known as the Rasumovsky Quartets. Count Rasumovsky was the Russian ambassador in Vienna and a great patron of music. The Op. 59, No. 2 Quartet in E minor begins in startling fashion. Two aggressive chords are sounded followed by a softly rising and falling phrase. Then a pause occurs, after which the subdued phrase is repeated a semitone higher. This harmonic shift is quite disorienting. Moreover, the opening chords are dramatically repeated both at the start of the first movement’s central development and again at its climax. These assertive chords thus present a kind of signature, an altogether dramatic and arresting one that grabs the listener’s attention and won’t let go.  

The second movement, a slow Adagio, was considered by J.W.N. Sullivan one of the greatest slow movements Beethoven wrote at this period of his career. Beethoven’s friend and pupil Carl Czerny maintained that Beethoven conceived this slow movement “while contemplating the starry heavens and thinking of the music of the spheres.” To be sure, this music is sublime, radiant and serene. The third movement is a scherzo marked Allegretto. It offers agitated short phrases and an off-beat stress on the second beat of the bar. The work’s finale offers a galloping theme marked Presto, and it is indeed a romp. 

After intermission, the Takács Quartet returned to perform Beethoven’s String Quartet in E-flat Major, Op. 127. Commissioned by Prince Galitzen, himself a competent amateur cellist, the Op. 127 Quartet features the cello quite prominently. The Takács Quartet’s cellist, András Fejér, disported himself royally in this work, particularly in the second movement, where the cello shares the main theme with the first violin, the latter played by Edward Dusinberre. The E-flat Major Quartet opens with a series of assertive chords. Here too, as in the Op. 18, No. 3 Quartet heard earlier, this is a dramatic, portentous opening. Here too, as well, the chords return later in the first movement, though each time in a different key. In the second movement, the cello initiates a series of variations with a throbbing note, which rises steadily as, first, the viola, played here by Geraldine Walther, then the second violin, played here by Károly Schranz, and, finally, the first violin enter one by one. The first variation’s main theme then is shared by the cello and first violin. The second variation offers a dialogue between the first and second violins. The third variation is more serene.  

The third movement, a Scherzo, begins with pizzicato plucking by all four strings. Then the cello introduces a four-note motif, followed by the viola which offers a three-note phrase incorporating a trill. These two motifs then undergo a series of variations in many combinations. The Finale begins with a clanging motif introduced by all four instruments. There ensue choppy phrases, angular in shape. When the coda is reached, Beethoven springs a surprise on us. The coda begins in pianissimo, in C Major, and the pulse slows down noticeably. There is, however, a subdued excitement in this coda, which brings this string quartet to a close.  

The Takács Quartet’s Beethoven Cycle will conclude in April with performances on Saturday, April 8, and Sunday, April 9, in Hertz Hall. 

 

 


Press Release: The Story of Freddie Meeks, A California Resident, and Port Chicago

Friday March 10, 2017 - 01:06:00 PM

Unbelievable… Emotional…Dramatic…Thought Provoking are some words audiences have used to describe Port Chicago 50. Told through the eyes of Freddie Meeks, portrayed by Hal Williams of 227 TV fame. Port Chicago 50 is a must see for everyone and will be a weekend of historical enlightenment! The powerful story is co-written by David Shackelford and Dennis Rowe, and directed by Dennis Rowe. The performances are at the Berkeley Black Repertory Theater in Berkeley: 3201 Adeline Street.

Show dates are:

Friday, March 17th, 2017 @8:00 pm; Saturday, March 18th, 2017 @3:00 pm & 8:00 pm and Sunday March 19th, 2017 @ 4:00 pm.

General seating tickets are only $30.00 and $35.00 for VIP seating with a special Veteran/Student ticket for $25.00. Tickets purchase by Friday March 10th, 2017 will have $5.00 taken off of the ticket price. A VIP ticket includes priority seating and a complimentary glass of wine/champagne. Tickets can be purchased at the theater box office, Brown Paper Tickets at (800) 838-3006 or on-line at www.blackrepertorygroup.com. Service charges are additional. For additional information call (510) 652-2120. Seating is limited. 


A Time In History: Dare to Remember…….

It’s July 17th in Port Chicago, California, a cool summer Friday night at a munitions naval base 30 miles north of San Francisco. The year is 1944 and World War II is in full swing. According to a United States Navy report, “The actual work of loading ammunition and explosives aboard the ships was performed exclusively by Afro-Americans under the supervision of white officers and Afro-American petty officers” and the routine assignment of Afro-American enlisted personnel to manual labor was clearly motivated by race and premised upon the mistaken notion that they were intellectually inferior and thus incapable of meeting the same standards as their white counterparts”. But then the unspeakable happened, explosion after explosion – so fierce, it shook the ground with the force of an earthquake. Knocking out windows and shaking buildings as far east as Boulder City, Nevada. The results of the explosion at the naval facility killed or wounded 710 people, 435 of whom were African American. This single disaster accounted for more than 15 percent of all African American naval casualties during World War II. 

What happening next is even more mind-boggling than the explosion itself? Following the explosion, many of the African American survivors expected to be granted survivors’ leave before being reassigned to regular duty, but that leave was not granted, even for those who had been hospitalized, and all African American men were sent back to work loading ammunition under the same officers as before. Fifty sailors of the United States Navy, all African Americans men, refused to resume loading activities under the same conditions and were ultimately tried and convicted of mutiny for failing to obey orders. Thurgood Marshall, then chief counsel for the NAACP, was reported to state he saw no reason why the men should be tried for mutiny, which implies a mass conspiracy, rather than on lesser charges of individual subordination, and blasted the trial by stating that the defendants were being tried for mutiny “solely because of their race and color”. Virtually all of the convicted sailors were released from prison early in 1946 and were given a general discharge from the Navy “under honorable conditions”. In 1999, Freddie Meeks was pardoned by President Bill Clinton in recognition of the injustice he suffered as one of the convicted sailors, and at the time of his pardon, Mr. Meeks said, “After all these years, the world should know what happened at Port Chicago. It should be cleared up that we did not commit mutiny, and we were charged with that because of our race”. In July 11, 2016 the Assembly Joint Resolution No. 33 was filed with the Secretary of State – it would pardon all of the members of the Port Chicago 50. Additionally it has been presented to President Barack Obama to pardon the reminding forty nine African American Sailors. 

Dennis Rowe Entertainment in association with the Black Repertory Group is proud to present Port Chicago 50, a story of love for Country, the American Dream and a quest for Equality and Fairness. 

 


“Port Chicago 50”uses some strong language. The production is produced under the Broadway N’ Black Theater Series.


Improve the Marin Corridor

Friday March 10, 2017 - 01:13:00 PM

Do you have ideas to improve the Marin Avenue Corridor? Discuss Marin Avenue,from the top, to the Circle, to the Albany border.

When: Thursday, March 15, 2017, 6:00-8:00 pm

Where: Fireside Room,Live Oak Community Center, 1301 Shattuck Avenue

Speaker: Farid Javandel, Transportation Manager City of Berkeley, followed by Q&A


Upcoming Events: Measure T1 Workshops Your Bond Monies at Work!

Friday March 10, 2017 - 01:22:00 PM

Share your ideas about how the City of Berkeley should prioritize voter-approved bond dollars to upgrade aging infrastructure such as streets, sidewalks, storm drains, parks, and community centers.

Measure T1 Workshop #1 - Parks and General City Facilities Saturday, March 18, 10am-12pm Frances Albrier Community Center, 2800 Park Street, Berkeley  

 

Measure T1 Workshop #2 - Streets and Storm Water Saturday, March 25, 12pm – 2pm Live Oak Community Center, 301 Shattuck Ave, Berkeley 

Measure T1 Workshop #3 - Input on City Recommendations Saturday, April 8, 10am – 12pm Tarea Hall Pittman South Branch Library, 1910 Russell Street, Berkeley