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News

New: Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Thursday April 26, 2018 - 04:06:00 PM

Doncha love it? Our Guv is such a master of the Art of the Deal that he outmaneuvered Darn Ol' Trump on that troops-on-the-border business! 

Trump tweeted that Brown's disinterest in deploying National Guard troops on the border would fan the state's "high" crime rates. So Trump had no defense when Jerry accepted the Federal funds and announced that the money would be used exclusively to fight gun-running and drug-smuggling -- real crimes, not immigrant harassment. 

Checkmated, Trump was not pleased. 

My favorite summation of Trump's reaction came from KCBS reporter Doug Sovern who offered this characterization of Trump's angry DC-to-Sacto tweet: "Donald Trump just blew a Twitter gasket!" 

Earth Day: Something to Chaat About 

The day before Earth Day, I found myself driving behind a van with a license plate that read "ECOFUEL." It turns out, the driver was an employee at Vik's Chaat, a certified Green Business in West Berkeley. ("Biodegradable utensils." "Waterless urinals.") The truck was emblazoned with the words "Powered by Vik's Chaat" so it's fair to assume the vehicle runs on biodiesel derived from the food store's recycled cooking oil. So Vik's environmental practices are like its dahl pakori and pani puri—well done. 

 

[Photo: StopWithFlowersBDP.jpg] 

Stop and Smell the Roses 

For several weeks now, some anonymous urban angel has been brightening up a North Berkeley intersection. Since at least March, one of the stop signs at Oxford and Eunice has been festooned with an array of colorful flowers carefully poked into the holes in its metal pole. They aren't plastic. These flowers are the real deal. 

Trumper Tantrums 

Trump must be worried: he's even losing the ability to lie. Two examples, drawn from recent tweets: 

  1. When Stormy Daniels produced a sketch of a man she alleged threatened her to keep quiet about her fling with Trump, The Donald replied by calling it "a total con job" about a "nonexistent man" but then shot himself in the foot by adding that the drawing was created "years later." That's like saying: "What she says never happened. And besides, it happened years ago."
  2. With investigators closing in on his personal lawyer, Trump tweeted his belief that Michael Cohen would never "flip" on him. That's like saying: "There was no collusion and, anyway, the people who know what really happened would never turn 'states' evidence' on me."
Here Comes "The Judge" 

Fans of Dogtown Redemption, the powerful documentary that profiled the tribulations and triumphs of Oakland's feisty street recyclers, will be excited to learn about a new film that is coming to Bay Area movie screens. According to Amir Soltani, one of Dogtown's directors, Erika Cohn's The Judge will begin a one-week run at SF's Roxie and Berkeley's Elmwood theaters on April 27. According to Soltani's note, The Judge offers a portrait of Kholoud Al-Faqih, the first woman appointed as a judge in a Shari'a court. Cohn's film offers "rare insight into both Islamic law and gendered justice" while revealing "some of the conflicts in the domestic life of Palestine—custody of children, divorce, abuse." Director Cohn will be present at the opening night for a Q&A session following the screening. Here is a trailer for the film: 

 

War of Words 

Former Congressmember Gabby Giffords and Mark Kelly recently sent out companion cover letters to raise funds for their gun-control PAC. Giffords wrote: "This year, 34,000 people will die from gun violence. And this year, Congress and the President . . . will try to make it easier to buy guns." 

But Kelly's background as a Desert Storm combat vet seemed strangely out-of-sync with his call for a less-violent world. Kelly repeatedly (seven times) used the phrase "fighting back," as he urged readers to "refuse to tolerate" the gun industry, insisting that fellow citizens should "stand with us" to engage the Gun Lobby in "legislative battles" that would "put them on notice that you are watching them." 

"[W]e sent an unmistakable signal," Kelly wrote: "We are here to fight . . . . Politicians defy us at their peril . . . . [A]nd the gun lobby will find us waiting." Kelly called on readers to continue to exercise "force" in "the fight against gun violence" until "we beat them." 

Yelling 'Fire' in a Crowded Library 

The film "Elephant's Dream" offers an entertaining portrait of several employees in three state-owned institutions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The interwoven stories include a female clerk in the dilapidated Central Post Office, two bored security guards at a rural railway station, and a group of firefighters in the only fire station in the capital of Kinshasa, Africa's third largest city. 

Ten minutes into a recent screening of the documentary in Doe Library on the UC Campus, the event was interrupted by a fire alarm—complete with flashing ceiling lights and a disembodied voice repeating: "A possible fire has been reported in the building. Please evacuate immediately." 

Everyone rushed for the exits and gathered outside as sirens began to approach—a police van and two fire trucks (one a hook-and-ladder) soon arrived. 

The crowd waited about 15 minutes before the building was declared safe to re-enter. During the disruption, I consoled the documentary's creator—an affable young Belgian filmmaker named Kristof Bilsen—who had been in the middle of an introductory talk when the alarm sounded. 

I suggested that he could tell his colleagues that the film received a "wam reception" in Berkeley. And, waving my hand around at the chatting crowd of would-be viewers, I suggested that he also could boast that the event was "standing room only."  

Bilsen laughed and handed me his smartphone so I could snap a picture of him smiling alongside the flashing lights of a BFD fire-truck. 

All We Are Saying Is Give Peace a Change 

Poet, pontificator and cultural provocateur Arnie Passman has long been a promoter of the Peace Symbol. It was 60 years ago, that England's Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament introduced the now-familiar circle bisected by a vertical line with two shorter lines down either side. The symbol was inspired by the old-time British semaphore-flag signals for N (nuclear) and D (disarmament). 

Over the years, the Peace Symbol has been called the "Cross of Despair" and "The Droopy Cross" and some pacifists have protested that the symbol resembles a ground-mounted missile, waiting to be launched.  

Passman posits that now might the time to consider flipping the Peace Symbol—turning its downward lines upwards. Instead of two arms drooped in despair, two arms rising upwards for good. 

But the proposal raises a semaphoric quandary. 

Instead of "ND," the new, upended lines would flag the semaphore letters "DU". Since Depleted Uranium is not a pleasant association in the peace community, what else could DU stand for? 

"Disarmament, Universal"? "Demilitarized Unification"? Suggestions welcomed. 

Dam the Dems Who Voted to Doom Social Security 

The Social Security trust fund currently contains $2.9 trillion and, as Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works notes, it "does not add even a penny to the [federal] deficit." But on April 12, "in the guise of a so-called balanced budget amendment," 233 members of Congress essentially voted to expropriate the worker-donated funds that Al Gore once famously promised to protect inside "a locked box." 

The vote was 97% of Republicans in favor of stealing the funds while 96% of Democrats voted to safeguard these benefits.  

Sad to say, seven Democrats voted with the GOP majority to pillage the Social Security trust. Checking the list of the 233 Soc. Sec. Trust Busters reveals the name of one California Democrat. Stand and be counted, Rep. Jim Costa (District 16). 

According to GovTrack, Fresno's Costa is one of seven Dems most likely to vote with the Republican majority. Other useful information from GovTrack: Costa gets a 100% approval rating from Planned Parenthood, a 48% rating from the League of Conservation Voters, and he's up for re-election in 2018. 

As luck would have it, the vote fell short of the two-thirds majority required to advance the bill, so our Social Security funds are still secure—for now. 

CODEPINK Targets BofA for War Profiteering 

CODEPINK Bay Area will be deploying its pink-tinted activists to mass outside the Bank of America's annual shareholders meeting in San Francisco (4PM at 1525 Market Street) on April 25. CODEPINK wants the BofA to divest from the military-industrial complex. CODEPINK excoriates BofA for its role as "the fifth-largest institutional investor in the merchant of death, Lockheed Martin, holding 8.8 million shares worth over $2.8 billion as of March 2018." 

BofA is one of the small band of powerful banks entrusted to invest San Francisco's taxpayer revenue. In addition to investing in the weapons that power the Pentagon's foreign wars, BofA also invests in fossil fuels, the Dakota Access Pipeline, gun manufacturers, predatory mortgage loans, and the prison-industrial complex. 

To its credit, CODEPINK comes to the table with a solution: "Wall Street's time is up. City officials need to divest from the war machine and act quickly to create a People's Bank." 


Sidewalk Laws Redux - Speak Out Thursday Night -

Carol Denney
Monday April 23, 2018 - 05:52:00 PM

Sidewalk laws are a political stunt. But that's not stopping the Berkeley City Council from breezing past common sense and heading straight for a plethora of fresh regulations aimed at people with all their belongings with them and nowhere to go, including:

  • the invention of a "path of travel" which varies from six to 10 feet wide depending on the width of the sidewalk
  • a prohibition on objects on sidewalks "except for authorized objects and objects in transit"
  • special rules for those parklets once described as open to anyone that preclude having any "unauthorized" objects there
  • prohibitions on having any objects within three feet to either side of a building entrance or from the building wall to the edge of the sidewalk "except between 10:00 pm and 7:00 am
  • prohibitions on lying down in a BART access corridor
  • prohibitions on lying down "on sidewalks in all residential and mixed use residential districts[1] which vastly expands the prohibited area to most of downtown
  • Prohibitions on lying down on sidewalks in all commercial districts and in the manufacturing, mixed manufacturing and mixed-use light industrial zones (MULI) between 7:00 am and 10:00 pm Monday through Saturday, 10:00 pm and 6:00 pm on Sundays and holidays
Are you following this? Because most people won't be able to. If they don't fit the preferred profile, they'll get ticketed, bench warranted, jailed, you know the game. This city council got into office promising not to do this, while the entire Homeless Coalition watched.

The proposal is on the City of Berkeley website here. 

There's some pretty funny stuff in there, like absurd descriptions of "cushioning material." It gives merchants a chance to argue that the poor are having an impact on their business, as if that was something new. But the most important aspect of new anti-homeless laws is that these laws are used in a discriminatory way, and that the criminalization of poverty is not just immoral - it's pointless and much more expensive than simply housing people in the first place. The Downtown Berkeley Association is in the best position to situate people in empty spaces and provide people who can with work. 

Thursday night at 6:00 pm at Longfellow Middle School, 1500 Derby Street in Berkeley, the Downtown Berkeley Association will show up to plead for relief from the burden of having to see homeless people downtown. Again. Please let them know you'll shop elsewhere if the poor are made unwelcome. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



[1] https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Planning_(new_site_map_walk-through)/Level_3_-_General/LandUse[1].pdf  

 

 

 

 

 


Press Release: BAHA Sponsors House Tour of Berkeley Woods

Daniella Thompson
Friday April 20, 2018 - 03:32:00 PM

The Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association (BAHA) will hold its 43rd annual Spring House Tour and Garden Reception on Sunday, May 6, 2018, from 1:00 to 5:00 pm.

Twelve open houses in a variety of architectural styles will be open on this year’s house tour in Berkeley Woods, the bucolic, village-like neighborhood at the top of Marin Avenue, adjoining Tilden Regional Park.  

Open houses include a large English manor house built in 1917; four Spanish- and Italian-inspired residences built between 1923 and 1930; an innovative International Style house from 1939; two Mid-Century Modern houses designed by leading architects of the genre in the 1950s; two one-of-a kind modern houses; a Craftsman Revival house from the 1970s, and more. 

Several glorious hidden gardens will be open, including one created by a famous iris hybridizer. 

Tour map, illustrated guidebook, and refreshments will be provided. General admission $45; BAHA members $35. 

For tour information and reservations, visit the BAHA website http://berkeleyheritage.com, e-mail baha@berkeleyheritage.com, or call (510) 841-2242.


Press Release: Community's Assistance Sought with Sexual Assault Investigation

Berkeley Police Department
Friday April 20, 2018 - 03:40:00 PM

The Berkeley Police Department is asking for the community’s assistance with a sexual assault which occurred on April 19, 2018 between 11:00 and 11:30am. The victim (a lone high school-aged minor) was walking on the 1500 block of Addison Street when she was grabbed from behind. The victim said the suspect covered her mouth and pressed a gun into her side while telling her not to scream. The victim said the suspect walked her eastbound on Addison Street and into the side yard of a residence where he sexually assaulted the victim. After the assault, the victim sought help and Berkeley Police were notified and the investigation began.  

Officers and detectives have been on scene canvassing the neighborhood for possible witnesses or homes with exterior video surveillance cameras. 

The Berkeley Police Department is asking for the community’s assistance with this crime. Anyone who lives in the area and has surveillance cameras is asked to review their footage. If they witnessed the crime or have information regarding the case, they are asked to contact the Berkeley Police Sex Crimes Detail at (510) 981-5716


Opinion

Editorials

Berkeley Must Wait for Data from SF's Tall Building Study Before Authorizing Any New Highrises

Becky O'Malley
Friday April 20, 2018 - 03:52:00 PM

“San Francisco lives with the certainty that the Big One will come. But the city is also putting up taller and taller buildings clustered closer and closer together because of the state’s severe housing shortage. Now those competing pressures have prompted an anxious rethinking of building regulations. Experts are sending this message: The building code does not protect cities from earthquakes nearly as much as you might think.”

Talk about your scary nut graf!

For those of you who aren’t news junkies, that’s the paragraph that tells you why you should really, really care about finishing reading this story. The article in question where this appeared was a big front page splash in the New York Times, San Francisco’s Big Seismic Gamble, by Thomas Fuller, Anjali Singhvi and Josh Williams .

It was scary in print, and it’s even scarier online with interactive graphics showing all the Very Tall Buildings which have been built on shaky fill subject to liquefaction when the big one hits.

The picture is frightening for San Francisco, and in light of a just-released study from the United States Geologic Service it might be even worse for Berkeley. We need to act now to avoid catastrophe. 

According to the reporters, the right questions have been being asked only since the Millenium Tower started sinking. It’s now about a foot and a half down, 14 inches lower on one side, possibly because it’s next door to the even bigger Salesforce Tower (known to the literati as the Phallus Building). 

How come no one asked before? 

“The developer and city officials knew of the building’s flaws for years, but kept them confidential until 2016, when news leaked to the public,” says the Times report, 

All in all, “At least 100 buildings taller than 240 feet were built in areas that have a ‘very high’ chance of liquefaction.” 

What? Why? 

Well, you’ll have to read the rest of the NYT story for all the gory details, but the short answer is that the builders of the recent boom buildings in San Francisco have paid scant attention to the gradually accumulating evidence of the very real danger that they’ll collapse in the inevitable major earthquake, or at least become totally unusable. Building codes have failed to deal with the new data. 

Another quote: 

 

 

“In light of the problems with the Millennium Tower, there are now increasing calls in California for a reassessment of earthquake risks, much of it focused on strengthening the building code.  

“Right now the code says a structure must be engineered to have a 90 percent chance of avoiding total collapse. But many experts believe that is not enough. 

“' Ten percent of buildings will collapse,' said Lucy Jones, the former leader of natural hazards research at the United States Geological Survey who is leading a campaign to make building codes in California stronger. 'I don’t understand why that’s acceptable.' ” 

 

 

I’m with her. That’s not acceptable. 

 

 

And let’s be clear: this is a piece mostly about San Francisco, but here in Berkeley it could be even worse. We’re sitting plumb on top of the Hayward Fault. 

On Wednesday the United States Geological Survey (USGS) released a terrifying prediction about what this might mean for us. 

From the NPR account of their findings

 

 

“The U.S. Geological Survey released a report Wednesday predicting that there could be dire consequences if a major earthquake hits the second-largest fault in Northern California.  

“The USGS simulated a 7.0 magnitude earthquake on the Hayward Fault, which runs up and down the East Bay Area through Berkeley, Oakland, Hayward, Fremont and Milpitas. The results show that an earthquake of that scale could kill up to 800 people and cause more than $100 billion in total damage.” 

 

 

And yet, and yet, the City of Berkeley’s Downtown Plan, hustled through adoption by the developer-friendly Bates City Council, provides for building at least five of the kind of tall buildings which are now being viewed with alarm in San Francisco, a city which isn’t even athwart the Hayward Fault, which is probably the next to go. 

 

 

Three such structures are already in the pipeline, all approved, like those in San Francisco, without adequate data regarding earthquake risk. Berkeley’s building code is just as inadequate as San Francisco’s. 

From the NYT article : 

 

 

“Newer high rises across California, which are typically built around a concrete core, are designed using computer modeling.  

“This raises concerns among experts such as Thomas H. Heaton, the director of the Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology and perhaps the most prominent skeptic of building high rises in earthquake zones. 

“ ‘It’s kind of like getting in a new airplane that’s only been designed on paper but nobody has ever flown in it,’ he said.” 

 

 

Berkeley’s Harold Way project—an 18 story building fronting on Shattuck—was viewed with alarm by local citizens who were aware of the earthquake risk posed by the stream bed with landfill soil known to be under the site and the adjacent Shattuck Hotel. 

 

 

Nevertheless, both the inadequate EIR and the flawed project were enthusiastically accepted by the bespoke councilmembers who were in office when it was approved. Citizen demands for a better seismic study were ignored. 

This project is now stalled because of financing problems, but the outgoing city planning director gave backers an extension on the time limit for commencing construction under the current entitlements, so it could still be built. The entitlement holders are trying to flip the project to another builder. 

In San Francisco, historically, says the Times, “ the objection to high rises was largely cultural and aesthetic — critics deplored ‘Manhattanization’ and said high rises were not in keeping with the ethos of the city.” 

That’s been true in Berkeley too—perhaps our critical focus on culture and aesthetics, both debatable topics, distracted attention from the inadequate engineering analyses which should have been fact-based but weren’t. 

The “hotel” (plus luxury apartments) development planned for a corner on Shattuck now occupied by the Bank of America seems to be moving toward commencement. It has faced little or no civic opposition on cultural or aesthetic grounds, and again seismic risks were minimized. 

A third big building is now in the approval process, another 18 story luxury apartment development chock-a-block with the Harold Way behemoth and the Shattuck Hotel. This one still needs to come back to the Zoning Adjustment Board for final approval, so this is a good time for city officials both elected and employed to take a fresh look at newly recognized data about both construction standards and earthquake risk before rubber-stamping it. 

After the Millenium Tower started sinking, San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee belatedly commissioned an independent safety investigation, the Tall Buildings Study, which will for the first time create a detailed database of that city’s high rises which can be studied for the benefit of other cities. 

From the Times: 

“ Ayse Hortacsu, the structural engineer who is leading the study, has deployed Stanford graduate students to pore over blueprints and records at the San Francisco Department of Building Inspection. 

“It would have been great to do this before this building boom in San Francisco,” Ms. Hortacsu said. “But we are going to seize the moment and make the best out of it.” 

In light of this new study, the Berkeley City Council should immediately rethink the provision in the Downtown Plan that authorizes the construction of up to five high rises there. 

The five extra-tall buildings are optional under Berkeley’s Downtown Plan, not mandatory. And even shorter buildings, six stories and above of all-concrete construction, might be riskier than previously considered. 

Berkeley should seize this moment before our own planned tall building boom takes off to figure out what we should be doing. 

It’s still possible for us to avoid the highrise tsuris that San Francisco is now experiencing, and the even worse grief that will accompany the big quake if we have collapsing buildings downtown. 

Mayor Arreguin and his Berkeley City Council majority, who after all were elected with the support of development doubters, should immediately enact a moratorium on approving tall buildings, at least until San Francisco’s Tall Building Study has been completed. 

Berkeley doesn’t need any more big luxury apartment buildings, not if they come with the risks the Times article describes so vividly. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Public Comment

No Experiments on Kids- Just Say No to a Taxpayer-funded Tiny Homes Proposal

Carol Denney
Friday April 20, 2018 - 03:47:00 PM

A friend of mine caught the mayor of Santa Rosa on the radio talking about the fire that ravaged through the area last fall "without respect for boundaries" of race, wealth or class. My friend then wrote a song quoting the mayor which then goes on to wonder who - which class, which race, which group - could possibly deserve the monstrous experience of burning to death or watching one's life or family go up in flames.

People probably knew what the mayor meant; fire is indiscriminate, wind-driven, unpredictable. The rich are just as likely, in an explosive 80 mile an hour wildfire, to suffer as the poor. But the housing policies which follow in the wake of such a disaster are unlikely to be so. They are much more likely to be riven with bizarre human prejudices.

Berkeley's tiny house obsession is a case in point. Although "tiny" houses are not cheaper, or greener, than renovated apartment buildings, and although they violate California habitability standards if they don't have heat, or windows, or a place to wash up, they remain the darling of a crew that often doesn't care that they're being used as a front group for developers hoping for a code-free world. 

Forcing people to live in glorified lunchboxes is easy in a world where the only alternative offered is hanging out behind the dumpster. I spoke to a city council representative a couple of days ago who is getting roped in to the latest tiny house proposal, and she cited the city's housing emergency declaration and the age of the target group to be served as the special sauce greasing her wheels. 

T'was ever thus. When local developer Patrick Kennedy wanted to snooker the city council for special breaks on his project requirements he rounded up local disability advocates and offered them housing - the hearings were full of talented, impassioned people with disabilities pounding podiums for his project to address an admittedly serious deficit in accessible units, people who were situated at the front of the line if the projects were approved. 

But there are better ways to address the immediate needs of unhoused or marginally housed people of any age which don't require building a thing. The most environmentally sound, cost-effective approach to housing people doesn't involved absurd miniaturization at all - just the renovation or utilization of buildings sitting empty, or empty for most of the time. 

Many libraries and schools have already repurposed themselves to provide showers, storage, and even shelter to people in need. The Homeless Commission is patiently waiting for the City of Berkeley to do the even more obvious thing - utilize empty storefronts and commercial spaces as shelters and day centers so people have someplace to sit other than the public sidewalk and a place to store belongings if they choose. These spaces have bathrooms, electricity, lights, etc., and often break rooms with small kitchens - no port-a-potties or wash stations necessary. 

Many storefronts have sat empty for years, and are more of a burden to a commercial district than some old fart sitting in the sun, the Downtown Berkeley Association's (DBA) favorite claim. It makes more sense to create shelter spaces in manageable numbers throughout town than to build something artificially separate - the "homeless" camp - or artificially small - the "tiny house" village - for people whose needs are neither separate nor small. Marginalized groups tend to have a high ratio of specialized needs which are not best served by bizarre or miniaturized housing experiments. But they are no different than the rest of us, and don't deserve to be put in what amounts to a policy zoo. 

But that isn't the only option. Zillow, when I checked today, has 32 single family rental listings in Berkeley. Trulia has 36. If you take Zillow's list the average monthly cost of a bedroom is $2,226. If you share a bedroom, as most of us have learned along the way to do, the cost is reduced to $1,113. This is a room in a house with a kitchen, a bathroom (sometimes more than one), porches, backyards, front rooms, privacy, and this is market rate, no city-driven special bargain. Trulia's list is equally eye-opening; the simple math shows that the City of Berkeley could contract tonight for shelter for 180 people for $798 a month. That's $26 a day, no construction required. If the DBA kicked in some of its $1.3 million contract it could be even less, and less still if its well-heeled board of directors, who claim to want people off the street, considered it important. 

So don't be fooled when the latest tiny house-promoter waves around a list of "religious leaders" who are on board an experimental "tiny house" proposal for more temporary placements kids will age out of and which will implicate the City of Berkeley in undermining hard-won tenant protections and habitability standards. They are understandably willing, in the light of a crisis, to try almost anything except the obvious; decriminalizing poverty and opening their own doors. Low-cost housing providers, on the other hand, can tell anyone who's listening that renovated boarding houses, single-room occupancy hotels, and shared apartment spaces are the most cost-efficient and environmentally sensible approach to housing. 

Miniaturization inappropriate to human need has no particular benefit in and of itself - just ask any good cook trying to harbor all the elements of a Thanksgiving meal for family and guests around holiday time. 

If we care about the most efficient use of our tax dollars, we'll eschew the boutique experiments on kids and the cruelty of separate facilities and take the advice of those groups right here in the Bay Area who have spent decades actually providing real, full-size, cost-efficient housing to people of all ages and with the cross-section of needs that comes with any human population. Because people on the street didn't deserve the health crisis or job loss that put them there any more than anyone in Calistoga or Santa Rosa deserved to have their house burned to the ground. People without houses are exactly that: people. 

 


Gang Rape

Jagjit Singh
Friday April 20, 2018 - 01:30:00 PM

The brutal rape and murder of an 8-year-old girl from a semi-nomadic Muslim community has sent shock waves in India. What caused such outrage was not only the heinous crime but the attitude of India’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party who defended the men accused of the crime. 

The young girl was abducted and imprisoned in a Hindu temple where she was drugged, starved and gang raped repeatedly before being murdered. 

One of the accused, a police officer asked his co-conspirators to delay the killing so he could rape her one more time. The police charge sheet suggested that this was not a random killing but followed a pattern of politics of criminal behavior where Muslims are being targeted in increasing numbers since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s election in 2014. According to the police the brutal murder was premeditated to terrorize the Bakarwals, a hill tribe, and drive them out of the area. The bereaved parents fled the area unable to bury their child. 

A newly formed extremist group called Hindu Ekta Manch, or Hindu Unity Forum organized a protest march defending the accused. The co-founder of the group is Vijay Sharma a senior official of Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (B.J.P) in the region. Two B.J.P. ministers in the state government attending the march were dismissive of the crime commenting, “So what if a girl died? “Many girls die every day.” The BJP organizers want the case to be transferred to the federal Central Bureau of Investigation, a delegitimized institution which serves at the behest of the ruling BJP where the case will surely die. 

The girl’s lawyer was physically threated from filing charges against the accused. As the details of the crime trickled down to social media people responded with mounting outrage demanding the two ministers who backed the perpetrators of the crime, resign. Modi finally responded from his deep slumber and meekly denounced the perpetrators’ and fired the ministers who organized the march. 

A spokeswoman for Mr. Modi’s party, Meenakshi Lekhi, attacked opposition protests, suggesting that they were selective and opportunistic.  

“You see their plan,” she said. “First shout ‘minority minority’, then ‘Dalit Dalit’ and now ‘women women’ and then try to somehow fix blame of state issues on the center.” 

An open letter by an ex-civil servant accused Modi of investigating such violence and held him directly responsible for “this terrifying state of affairs.” Another B.J.P. official accused Muslim Rohingya of instigating the violence in Burma. 

A youth activist posted a Facebook comment that the “rape must have been fun”. Many who voted for Mr. Modi are disappointed for his failure to condemn sectarian and sexual violence and hate speech by his party colleagues and ministers. It is entirely possible that the BJP will further stoke these ethnic and religious tensions in the run-up to the next election.


Columns

DISPATCHES FROM THE EDGE: The Great Game Comes to Syria

Conn Hallinan
Tuesday April 17, 2018 - 01:33:00 PM

An unusual triple alliance is emerging from the Syrian war, one that could alter the balance of power in the Middle East, unhinge the NATO alliance, and complicate the Trump administration’s designs on Iran. It might also lead to yet another double cross of one of the region’s largest ethnic groups, the Kurds.

However, the “troika alliance”—Turkey, Russia and Iran—consists of three countries that don’t much like one another, have different goals, and whose policies are driven by a combination of geo-global goals and internal politics. In short, “fragile and complicated” doesn’t even begin to describe it.

How the triad might be affected by the joint U.S., French and British attack on Syria is unclear, but in the long run the alliance will likely survive the uptick of hostilities.

But common ground was what came out of the April 4 meeting between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Meeting in Ankara, the parties pledged to support the “territorial integrity” of Syria, find a diplomatic end to the war, and to begin a reconstruction of a Syria devastated by seven years of war. While Russia and Turkey explicitly backed the UN-sponsored talks in Geneva, Iran was quiet on that issue, preferring a regional solution without “foreign plans.”

“Common ground,” however, doesn’t mean the members of the “troika” are on the same page. 

Turkey’s interests are both internal and external. The Turkish Army is currently conducting two military operations in northern Syria, Olive Branch and Euphrates Shield, aimed at driving the mainly Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) out of land that borders Turkey. But those operations are also deeply entwined with Turkish politics. 

Erdogan’s internal support has been eroded by a number of factors: exhaustion with the ongoing state of emergency imposed following the 2016 attempted coup, a shaky economy, and a precipitous fall in the value of the Turkish pound. Rather than waiting for 2019, Erdogan called for snap elections this past week and beating up on the Kurds is always popular with right-wing Turkish nationalists. Erdogan needs all the votes he can get to imlement his newly minted executive presidency that will give him virtually one-man rule. 

To be part of the alliance, however, Erdogan has had to modify his goal of getting rid of Syrian President Bashar Assad and to agree—at this point, anyhow—to eventually withdraw from areas in northern Syria seized by the Turkish Army. Russia and Iran have called for turning over the regions conquered by the Turks to the Syrian Army. 

Moscow’s goals are to keep a foothold in the Middle East with its only base, Tartus, and to aid its long-time ally, Syria. The Russians are not deeply committed to Assad personally, but they want a friendly government in Damascus. They also want to destroy al-Qaeda and the Islamic State, which have caused Moscow considerable trouble in the Caucasus. 

Russia also wouldn’t mind driving a wedge between Ankara and NATO. After the U.S., Turkey has NATO’s second largest army. NATO broke a 1989 agreement not to recruit former members of the Russian-dominated Warsaw Pact into NATO as a quid pro quo for the Soviets withdrawing from Eastern Europe. But since the Yugoslav War in 1999 the alliance has marched right up to the borders of Russia. The 2008 war with Georgia and 2014 seizure of the Crimea were largely a reaction to what Moscow sees as an encirclement strategy by its adversaries. 

Turkey has been at odds with its NATO allies around a dispute between Greece and Cyprus over sea-based oil and gas resources, and it recently charged two Greek soldiers who violated the Turkish border with espionage. Erdogan is also angry that European Union countries refuse to extradite Turkish soldiers and civilians who he claims helped engineer the 2016 coup against him. While most NATO countries condemned Moscow for the recent attack on two Russians in Britain, the Turks pointedly did not

Turkish relations with Russia have an economic side as well. Ankara want a natural gas pipeline from Russia, has broken ground on a $20 billion Russian nuclear reactor, and just shelled out $2.5 billion for Russia’s S-400 anti-aircraft system. 

The Russians do not support Erdogan’s war on the Kurds and have lobbied for the inclusion of Kurdish delegations in negotiations over the future of Syria. But Moscow clearly gave the Turks a green light to attack the Kurdish city of Afrin last month, driving out the YPG that had liberated it from the Islamic State and Turkish-backed al-Qaeda groups. A number of Kurds charge that Moscow has betrayed them

The question now is, will the Russians stand aside if the Turkish forces move further into Syria and attack the city of Manbij, where the Kurds are allied with U.S. and French forces? And will Erdogan’s hostility to the Kurds lead to an armed clash among three NATO members? 

Such a clash seems unlikely, although the Turks have been giving flamethrower speeches over the past several weeks. “Those who cooperate with terrorists organizations [the YPG] will be targeted by Turkey,” says Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdag said in a pointed reference to France’s support for the Kurds. Threatening the French is one thing, picking a fight with the U.S. military quite another. 

Of course, if President Trump pulls U.S. forces out of Syria, it will be tempting for Turkey to move in. While the “troika alliance” has agreed to Syrian “sovereignty,” that won’t stop Ankara from meddling in Kurdish affairs. The Turks are already appointing governors and mayors for the areas in Syria they have occupied. 

Iran’s major concern in Syria is maintaining a buffer between itself and a very aggressive alliance of the U.S., Israel and Saudi Arabia, which seems to be in the preliminary stages of planning a war against the second-largest country in the Middle East. 

Iran is not at all the threat it has been pumped up to be. Its military is miniscule and talk of a so-called “Shiite crescent”—Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon—is pretty much a western invention (although the term was dreamed up by the King of Jordan). 

Tehran has been weakened by crippling sanctions and faces the possibility that Washington will withdraw from the nuclear accord and re-impose yet more sanctions. The appointment of National Security Advisor John Bolton, who openly calls for regime change in Iran, has to have sent a chill down the spines of the Iranians. What Tehran needs most of all is allies who will shield it from the enmity of the U.S., Israel and Saudi Arabia. In this regard, Turkey and Russia could be helpful. 

Iran has modified its original goals in Syria of a Shiite-dominated regime by agreeing to a “non-sectarian character” for a post-war Syria. Erdogan has also given up on his desire for a Sunni-dominated government in Damascus. 

War with Iran would be catastrophic, an unwinnable conflict that could destabilize the Middle East even more than it is now. It would, however, drive up the price of oil, currently running at around $66 a barrel. Saudi Arabia needs to sell its oil for at least $100 a barrel, or it will very quickly run of money. The on-going quagmire of the Yemen war, the need to diversify the economy, and the growing clamor by young Saudis—70 percent of the population—for jobs requires lots of money, and the current trends in oil pricing are not going to cover the bills. 

War and oil make for odd bedfellows. While the Saudis are doing their best to overthrow the Assad regime and fuel the extremists fighting the Russians, Riyadh is wooing Moscow to sign onto to a long-term OPEC agreement to control oil supplies. That probably won’t happen—the Russians are fine with oil at $50 to $60 a barrel—and are wary of agreements that would restrict their right to develop new oil and gas resources. The Saudi’s jihad on the Iranians has a desperate edge to it, as well it might. The greatest threat to the Kingdom has always come from within. 

The rocks and shoals that can wreck alliances in the Middle East are too numerous to count, and the “troika” is riven with contradictions and conflicting interests. But the war in Syria looks as if it is coming to some kind of resolution, and at this point Iran, Russia and Turkey seem to be the only actors who have a script that goes beyond lobbing cruise missiles at people. 

 


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

 

 

 

 

 

 


ECLECTIC RANT; The Allied Strike on Syria

Ralph E. Stone
Friday April 20, 2018 - 01:39:00 PM

On April 12, 2018, the U.S., Britain, and France launched a strike against Syrian research, storage, and military targets to punish Syrian president Bashar al-Assad for his suspected use of his air power to drop chemical weapons in an attack in the Damascus suburb of Guouta, where between 40 and 70 people were reported to have been killed by banned chlorine and sarin gases. The key word here is “suspected.” Assad and Russia have vigorously denied the allegations. 

Meanwhile, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the world's chemical weapons watchdog, landed in Syria on April 14 to begin a fact finding investigation to determine whether Syria did indeed use banned chemical munitions. 

There is no doubt that Syrian Assad, like his father before him, is a brutal dictator, who caused a civil war which has shattered his nation. But why would Assad use banned chemical weapons of no tactical significance to provoke international outrage and military intervention against him when his Syrian army is winning the battle against the opposition forces and has surrounded the last town held by them? Could it be to distract the U.S. media and the public away from his sex scandals, James Comey’s new book, or the Russia investigation? 

The Trump administration should have stepped back until there was definitive proof of Syria’s use of chemical weapons and then, even if true, rethink whether a military response was even in U.S. interests. The possible use of chemical weapons by Syria may be morally wrong, but from a practical point of view, the possible use of chemical weapons by Assad presents no immediate danger to U.S. interests. 

Trump taking the moral high ground is a bit laughable, isn't it? 

The allied attack on Syria dramatically illustrates Trump’s schizophrenic approach to the Syrian conflict. Remember, in 2013, before he was president, Donald Trump tweeted: 


@realDonaldTrump  

We should stay the hell out of Syria, the "rebels" are just as bad as the current regime. 

WHAT WILL WE GET FOR OUR LIVES AND $ BILLIONS?ZERO 

5:33 PM - Jun 15, 2013 


And on October 2016, in response to a question during a debate with Hillary Clinton about his plan for Syria, he asked, "How stupid is our country?" lamenting the lack of "sneak attacks.” 

On April 3, after becoming president, Trump instructed military leaders to withdraw U.S. troops from Syria as soon as possible, and told them he wanted Arab allies to take over and pay for stabilizing and reconstructing areas liberated from the Islamic State. Then a day later, Trump backtracked on his insistence that the troop exit was imminent, now that the militants were “close to 100 percent” defeated. Then after signaling an attack was imminent, the allied forces launched a not-so-sneaky attack against Syria. 

On April 15, UN Ambassador Nikki Haley said the U.S. would impose more economic sanctions against Russia after its repeated support of Assad and his apparent use of chemical weapons on his own people. A day later, Trump told his national security team to hold off on implementing the sanctions after the Russia complained the sanctions were overly harsh. 

As Jim Arkedis, a former Department of Defense counterterrorism analyst, put it, "This unstrategic inconsistency is not a doctrine.” 

We should expect a more coherent Syrian foreign policy from our president.


THE PUBLIC EYE: Where’s the Strategy?

Bob Burnett
Friday April 20, 2018 - 01:27:00 PM

Many Trump supporters voted for Donald because they believed he was a successful businessman -- rather than a reality TV star. These Trump adherents thought he would bring business acumen to the White House. Trump backers believed Donald had a strategic vision to "make America great again." Turns out they were mistaken. 

There are several attributes of a successful businessman. One of these is Vision: the ability to see the big picture and to propose a plan to focus the business and achieve its long-term goals. A successful President also needs vision. 

Trump holds up an image, "make America great again," but doesn't have a coherent vision of what it will take to accomplish this (noble) objective. Trump doesn't have a reasoned domestic or a foreign policy. There is no strategy; instead Trump presents a random set of assertions -- "China is taking all our jobs!" -- or tactics -- "build the wall!" 

The absence of strategy has dire consequences for America's domestic and foreign policy. So far, Trump has presented four domestic policy initiatives. He promised to "repeal and replace Obamacare," but in reality, he supported repealing Obamacare and designing a replacement later. 

Trump promised to create good-paying jobs by a combination of tax cuts and trade policy. He passed the tax cuts but there's no evidence they have generated better paying jobs. So far his tough talk on trade has not produced results. 

Trump also promised to create good-paying jobs by a far-reaching $1.5 Trillion plan to rebuild America's infrastructure. It hasn't gotten off the ground. Fifteen months of the Trump presidency have established that Trump doesn't have a job-creation or economic strategy beyond helping the rich get richer. 

Finally, Trump promised to "protect" America -- and coincidentally create jobs -- by building a multi-billion dollar wall along the southern border. Once again, nothing has come of this. 

So far, Trump's domestic policy failures haven't hurt the country. Trump inherited a strong economy and it seems to be growing in spite of him. Foreign policy is a different matter; Trump's lack of vision endangers us. 

Trump doesn't have a big picture vision of America operating in a world where there are several strong nations and our relationship to them changes depending upon context. Consider China. We're in a "trade war" with China. Nonetheless we need their help dealing with North Korea. We have a multifaceted relationship with China. 

Because he doesn't have a realistic vision of world politics, when forced to make a foreign-policy decision, Trump relies upon his instincts. And his instincts are isolationist. His slogan, "America first," means, "America alone." 

We can see this in his handling of global climate change and the Paris climate agreement. Trump wants the US to withdraw from this treaty in November 2020, "unless we can re-enter on terms the are more favorable for our country." (Trump has assigned a delegation to renegotiate terms but so far there has been no progress.) If the US withdraws, we will be alone in opposition to this deal. 

Trump's position on most foreign-policy issues goes through these two stage: first he wants to withdraw and then he backpedals to, "We'll withdraw unless we can renegotiate on more favorable terms." That's his position on NAFTA. And his position on Syria. 

To say the least, Syria represents a complicated and dangerous situation. The United States has military personnel in Syria as part of a coalition to eradicate ISIS. On March 29th, Trump announced that the US would be withdrawing from Syria "very soon." Next came Assad's use of chemical weapons in Douma; then the US and it British and French allies responded by bombing Syria. While emotionally gratifying, the bombing wasn't a strategy; as a result, Americans still do not understand what the US plans to do in Syria and the Middle East, in general. 

Russia stands in contrast to most foreign countries because Trump doesn't want to cut off relations with the former Soviet Union; instead he wants the two nations to get closer. He muses that "getting along with Russia is a good thing" and “I think I could have a very good relationship with President Putin.” Most foreign-policy experts believe that Russia is the number one threat to the United States and predict that the former Soviet Union will attempt to meddle in the US mid-term elections. Nonetheless, Trump remains sanguine. But he doesn't have a US-Russia strategy beyond his "cutting a deal" with Vladimir Putin. Trump's ego has shoved aside his isolationism. 

That's what's happening in North Korea. Trump is getting ready for personal negotiations with Kim Jong-Un the North Korean leader whom he once derided as "little rocket man." It's not clear what Trump's strategy is but it is clear that he sees this as an opportunity to cut a historic deal. 

In addition to vision, one of the characteristics of a successful businessman is collaboration -- the ability to work effectively with a team. Trump doesn't possess this attribute. He is negotiating the troubled waters of foreign policy on his own guided only by his erratic instincts. 

Donald Trump endangers the United States. And the world. 


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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: More Effort is Not Always the Solution

Jack Bragen
Friday April 20, 2018 - 01:55:00 PM

f we do not make an effort in life, and fail to act when needed, we will either not survive, or we will be considered mentally defunct, and people might "take care" of us in a manner that suits them. If we do not do the basics that are expected, people might be good enough to place us in a special home. 

Or, perhaps, what is needed to minimally succeed at something doesn't get done, and we reap the rewards of that: nothing. 

The above is hypothetical. Many affluent people attribute homelessness and other misfortune to a lack of adequate effort, or some other form of turpitude. This is not really what I am talking about. 

There are those who are not dealing with basic survival, and who do not have hunger pangs, lack of shelter, and other threats to their existence, who do not have that massive incentive that they had better do something to keep oneself alive. If one has income due to parents, an inheritance, or disability payments, effort may not come as swiftly; a comfortable body makes a person likelier to wish for "something more" yet fail to realize that this entails effort. However, effort is not everything. 

Some of the really "successful" ones have the ability to convince, cajole, or frighten others into working on their behalf, netting them the rewards of the work of flocks of employees. Others may do very high level honest work that is valuable enough to compensate them well. This would include being a medical doctor, an attorney, and engineer, and so on. 

Success requires more than sitting in front of the television and believing that you deserve it. You need to do things to be a success, and this entails making an effort. 

I have a lot of understanding of how not to succeed in a typical job situation. One way to achieve not succeeding is to call in sick to work. 

Lack of sufficient effort is one of the numerous ways that people can get into trouble. Yet, there is something to be said for taking a rest break. If we have too much of a "can do" attitude, we might fail to stop for a moment and figure out whether or not what we are doing is making any sense. 

If we put too much effort into things, we could end up doing sloppy work, we could overstrain ourselves to the point of damage, or we might overshoot the goal, which could also be to our detriment. If effort is a little bit less but is well directed and sensible, the result could be a lot better. Sometimes it is when we are not trying that we do our best work. Obsessive effort can cause the body and mind to become overly tense, and this reduces efficiency. 

If we are working at something and trying to get something accomplished, and if things appear to be falling short, piling on more effort isn't always the answer. Instead, maybe we need to rethink how we are approaching the various tasks. And maybe we should rethink the "what" that we are doing as well as how we go about it. 

Continually trying harder at something could generate resistance from the environment. Karma is like the Newtonian Physics of the spiritual realm. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction. Thus, if we push forcefully, it may sometimes generate an opposing force. Perhaps we need to make Karma work for us instead of against us. If we slip into some type of work, while accepting the work activity, and even surrendering to it, we may not generate opposition. 

If you own a Porsche that can do two hundred miles an hour, does that mean that you should always drive two hundred miles an hour? No. Thus, just because we may have the capacity for more effort does not necessarily mean in all situations that we should deploy that. If we go two hundred miles an hour in heavy traffic, it inevitably will create a nasty car wreck. But enough of that analogy... 

When we are working toward a goal and someone is telling us we need to slow down, maybe we had better heed that. Too hard of work, despite the good intentions we may have, can wreck other relationships. If someone needs our attention and we view this as an effort to thwart or derail us, we could be undermining a relationship, and this can cause repercussions that in fact, do thwart us in our goal. 

Excessive obedience is another behavior that can lead to trouble. 

Obedience on automatic or on autopilot can cause you to be taken over by another person's wishes or demands. If the other person isn't always making sense, you must at least have a filter for that. There is no reason to surrender your body and mind to someone else's will. Gender isn't always relevant. Men are ordered around, and not just women. Obedience is the cornerstone of the military. What would happen if soldiers worldwide refused to kill people? Obedience can also cause you to take on someone else's problems and make them your own. When extreme levels of effort are combined with obedience, you have a bad recipe. 

Obedience also creates resentment. Sometimes the individual giving orders isn't at fault--they may be unconscious of what they are doing. Even if the order giver enforces their will by a habit of escalating when the submissive person objects, it is the same. When this happens, a person wanting to be free must understand the situation, and may need to hold their ground in spite of escalation. What would happen if incarcerated people worldwide refused to cooperate? 

This week's column has strayed somewhat from psychiatric illness, stigma, and treatment. I sometimes do this when I need to say something else. However these boundary issues are probably very common among persons with mental illness. Yet, non-afflicted people also have these problems. 

If disabled, it may be a sign of a bad fit if we need to create so much effort that we become massively stressed-out. Having a disability check ought to mean that we could choose a job to do that interests us, or at least one that we don't heavily dislike. There is no reason to torture oneself. 

But, this also applies to almost any task. The concept of pushing oneself to the max should not be applied to mentally ill people or those with PTSD. If everything seems too difficult, maybe we ought to look at how things could be easier. The answer isn't always forthcoming. Life is not always supposed to be easy. 

 


Arts & Events

Berkeley Arts Calendar

Tom Hunt and Bonnie Hughes
Saturday April 21, 2018 - 05:03:00 PM

To learn what's happening on Berkeley's arts scene, you can now reach the Berkeley Arts Festival Calendar directly from the Planet. You can then click on an individual date for a full description of every event on that day.

To reach the calendar, click here.


Ravel & Debussy: Orientalism & Exoticism

Reviewed By James Roy MacBean
Saturday April 21, 2018 - 04:59:00 PM

It is no secret that Debussy first, then Ravel, were greatly impressed with music from the Orient -- Debussy with Javanese gamelan music, and Ravel with Gypsy music, gamelan music, and the musical possibilities of the tales in Arabic of Sinbad the Sailor. Ravel, of course, was also greatly influenced by music from his mother’s Spanish roots, involving a musical tradition dating from the Moorish conquest of Spain in the 1400s. So it was that Maurice Ravel, already having achieved his first success with the poignant Pavane pour une Infante défunte (1899), became intrigued with the idea of composing his version of the tales of Shéhérazade. Using Tristan Klingsor’s poems as a base, Ravel chose to compose music in three parts: the first, a long poem of orientalist evocations of Asia; the second, a brief evocation of a magic flute; and the third, a tribute to the mysterious indifference of the East toward westerners. 

Over the weekend of April 19-21, San Francisco Symphony presented Jan Pascal Tortellier conducting the orchestra in a program of works by Ravel and Debussy. Ravel’s Shéhérazade was admirably sung by mezzo-soprano Susan Graham, whose diction in French was exquisite, as was her vocalism. Preceding Ravel’s Shéhérazade were two short works by Debussy – Sarabande (1894/1922), and Danse (1890/1922). The latter, a very lively Tarantella, was particularly effective, though I had never before encountered the suggestion in the program notes that this upbeat, even frenzied dance music originated as a response to a snakebite or other reptile bite from a poisonous viper.  

After intermission, Jan Pascal Tortellier returned to conduct the San Francisco Symphony in Ravel’s ballet music for Daphnis et Chloe, first written for Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. The music for Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloe is richly orchestrated. It opens quietly with a harp, a flute, and murmuring strings, followed by a clarinet. Styled as a Choreographic Symphony in Three Parts, this work evokes the pastoral world of ancient Greek Arcadia, where a simple shepherd, Daphnis, loves a nymph, Chloe, and despite difficulties, their love ends well. The most famous moment of this work comes at the beginning of Part III, when a daybreak scene ensues. Here harps, flutes, and clarinets flutter softly over muted strings to depict the breaking of dawn over Arcadia. Earlier, Chloe has been abducted by pirates, and Part II involves the god Pan who is summoned to rescue her. Pan’s intervention leading a band of fauns sends the pirates reeling. Part III opens with the aforementioned Daybreak music, then launches into a full-fledged celebration of the reunited love-couple of Daphnis and Chloe. Conducting throughout without a baton, Jan Pascal Tortellier did a fine job of bringing out the exotic orchestration of Ravel’s innovative score.


Souad Massi’s Set at Fort Mason

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Saturday April 21, 2018 - 04:59:00 PM

It’s almost hard for me to write objectively about Algerian-Berber singer and songwriter Souad Massi. Her voice moves me at a very deep, instinctual level. I can’t find words to describe why this is so. All I can say is that I find her voice deeply moving. So it was with great pleasure that I finally encountered Souad Massi in person on the day of her April 20 performance at Cowell Theatre, Fort Mason. We had already spoken by phone while she was on tour in Boston, and we had arranged to meet at Fort Mason between 3:30 and 4:00 on the day of her performance there. Arriving a bit early on Friday, April 20, I walked out to the end of the Fort Mason pier, hoping to spot a seal or two. At the end of the pier, I found Souad Massi and her tour manager, Manu Kirinek, sitting with their backs against the wall enjoying the view of the Golden Gate Bridge while eating a pizza. I introduced myself and was invited to share their pizza, which I gratefully declined, and sat down beside them. “This view is the gift of our tour in America,” Manu exclaimed. I mentioned to them that seals are occasionally seen swimming along these piers. And, sure enough, in the course of our conversation, a seal suddenly appeared in the waters below us; and Souad, leaping to her feet, squealed with delight and proceeded to throw bits of pizza to the seal, who remained indifferent and soon dove out of sight. Thus was the auspicious beginning of my personal encounter with Souad Massi. 

Later, after a sound check, Souad invited me backstage for a fairly lengthy interview. I began by asking her about the musical heritage of her Berber people and how she placed herself in relation to that tradition. “Well, I credit that tradition and pay homage to it, but I do so in my own modern way.” When I asked about the troubles she had with death threats she received in Algeria around the year 2000, she said it was a crazy time full of civil war. She was happy to get out and move to Paris. However, she still has family in Algeria and visits them every year, and she has even given concerts in Algiers in recent years, so things are improving. Nonetheless, Souad says she considers herself a citizen of the world, not of this nation or that. Music, she hopes, bridges all nations and all peoples. We talked a bit about politics; and I told her that though I’m an American I’m very anti-American in our global and even internal politics. Souad expressed concern over the poverty and homelessness she and her troupe had just experienced during their tour of North America. Over the course of our long conversation, I came to know Souad Massi as a deeply caring, very intelligent human being who also happens to be a supremely gifted songwriter and singer. 

Friday evening, Souad Massi’s set was a combination of songs from her early albums, Raoui and Deb, and more recent music. Her acoustic troupe on tour consisted of a brilliant oud player and an equally brilliant percussionist. Without any program, I obtained only the first names of her accompanists – Mehdi on oud, and Ibrahim on percussion. Ibrahim, who performed an amazing solo on tabla in one piece, also joined in occasionally on vocals. Many of this group’s songs were greeted by an adoring audience with North African ullulations. Souad Massi is in my humble opinion a beautiful ambassador from the healing, peace-loving realm of global music. May we all take heart, as I surely do, from Souad Massi’s loving inspiration.


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, April 22-29

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday April 21, 2018 - 04:42:00 PM

Worth Noting - A lot going on this week April 22 – April 29, 2018.

  • Sunday the Berkeley Tenants Union selects candidates for the November elections.
  • Monday Assembly District 15 Candidate forum. Sponsored by Contra Costa League of Women Voters at San Pablo Public Library in San Pablo. This is getting critical. There are 12 candidates anything could happen and we need the best 2 to go to the November election.
  • Tuesday and Thursday City Council meetings
  • regular meeting 6:00 pm Tuesday council chambers
  • special meeting 6:00 pm Thursday on encampments (homeless camps) and sidewalk policies (at Longfellow Middle School).
  • Wednesday Police Review Commission votes on charter amendment written by the PRC Reform subcommittee
  • Sunday April 29 BPA-BCA endorsement meeting for City Auditor and Council Districts 1,4,7,8


City Council May 1 meeting available for comments, Council@cityofberkeley.info Agenda: 18. Investment report Oct1-Dec 31, 2017, 20. Continue banking with Wells Fargo thru 2020, 21. Recommendation from Disaster and Fire Safety Commission Fire and Health Departments to Participate in Urban Shield and UASI trainings – anticipate referral to Urban Shield subcommittee, 22. Microbond Blockchain Initiative, 25. Referral to Planning allow 4 Temporary Zoning Amendments to increase student housing, 26 a&b Emergency Outdoor Shelter for the Homeless

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/05_May/City_Council__05-01-2018_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx



The meeting list is also posted on the Sustainable Berkeley Coalition website.

http://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html 

Sunday, April 22, 2018 

Berkeley Tenants Union Convention, Sun, April 22, 12:45 pm – 4:30 pm, 2727 Milvia, Sports Basement. Agenda: candidate forum to select slate of five candidates to fill the Berkeley Rent Board vacancies in the November election. Berkeley’s Rent Stabilization Board serves landlords and tenants and plays a vital role in ensuring fair rent prices and living conditions.  

https://www.facebook.com/events/201725380588950/ 

Berkeley Earth Day – The Wild & Scenic FilmFest, Sun, April 22, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm, 2150 Allston, David Brower Center (free event) http://berkeleyearthday.org/ 

Monday, April 23, 2018 

City Council Closed Session – Mon, April 23, 4:00, 2180 Milvia, Cypress Room, Agenda: Labor negotiations https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/04_Apr/City_Council__04-23-2018_-_Special_Closed_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

Assembly District 15 Candidate Forum, Mon, April 23, 6:00 pm, 13751 San Pablo Ave, San Pablo, San Pablo Public Library, sponsored by Contra Costa League of Women Voters 

Rent Stabilization Board, Budget &Personnel subcommittee, Mon, April 23, 5:15 pm, 2001 Center Street, Law Library 2nd Floor, https://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Children, Youth and Recreation Commission, Mon, April 23, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 2800 Park St, Frances Albrier Community Center at San Pablo Park 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Children_Youth_and_Recreation_Commission/ 

Zero Waste Commission, Mon, April 23, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center http://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Zero_Waste_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Tax the Rich rally – Mon, April 23, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm top of Solano in front of closed Oaks Theater,  

Tuesday, April 24, 2018 

City Council, Tue, April 24, 2134 MLK Jr Way, Council Chambers 

  • 4:00 pm Closed Session: Negotiations BUSD 1231 Addison,
  • 5:00 pm Work Session: Berkeley Microbond, Blockchain Initiative
  • 6:00 pm Regular Council Meeting: Agenda: 31. Allocation Federal Funds, 32. Block Grants, 33. Carbon Free energy, 34. Single use foodware, 36. GoBerkeley Transportation 37. Youth Spirit Artwork Tiny House project, 38 a.& b. Achieving Fair and Impartial Policing, 39. Information – Rapid Rehousing report
https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/04_Apr/City_Council__04-24-2018_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

Housing Advisory Commission U1 Expenditures Subcommittee, Tue, April 24, 6:00 pm, 2000 University, Au Coquelet, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Housing_Advisory_Commission/ 

Wednesday, April 25, 2018 

Civic Arts Commission, Wed, April 25, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: hazardous materials west of train tracks, 5 yr plan, microgrid, residency requirements, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/CivicArtsCommissionHomepage/ 

Disaster and Fire Safety Commission, Wed, April 25, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 997 Cedar St, Fire Department Training Center 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Disaster_and_Fire_Safety_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Energy Commission, Wed, April 25, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: microgrid, East Bay Community Energy (EBCE), EV, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Energy_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Police Review Commission, Wed, April 25, 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm, 2939 Ellis St, South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: 9. Recommendation from Commission Reform Subcommittee Discussion & action on draft. 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Police_Review_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Regular meeting of Commission on the Status of Women is 4th Wednesday 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, however, no meeting/agenda is posted - 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center, check link or call Shannon Allen secretary 981-7071 before going 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Commission_on_the_Status_of_Women_Homepage.aspx 

Thursday, April 26, 2018 

City Council Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Urban Shield, Thur, April 26, 12:30 – 2:30 pm, Cypress Rm 1st Floor, Members: Arreguin, Davila, Hahn, Maio, Agenda: Proposed Worthington letter on Urban Shield, Community Preparedness, recommendation on NCRIC – Northern, CA Regional Intelligence Center 

City Council Special Session – Proposed Policies on Sidewalks and Encampments, Thur, April 26, 6:00 pm, 1500 Derby, Longfellow Middle School, Agenda: sitting, lying, dogs, objects on sidewalks, encampment response policy 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/04_Apr/City_Council__04-26-2018_-_Special_Meeting_Agenda.asp 

Community Health Commission, Thur, April 26, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, 2939 Ellis St. South Berkeley Senior Center, no agenda posted as of 4-20-2018 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Community_Health_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Mental Health Commission, Thur, April 26, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Commissions/Commissions__Mental_Health_Commission_Homepage.aspx 

Zoning Adjustments Board, Thur, April 26, 7:00 pm – 11:30 pm, 2134 MLK Jr. Way, City Council Chambers, staff recommending approval of all projects 

  • 2350 Prospect – construct 3-story 6-bedroom GLA – (group living accommodation) on vacant lot
  • 3028 Regent - convert a 2-story care-facility to a duplex reducing number of bedrooms from 16 to 11
  • 2921 Otis – raise rear yard dwelling unit by 3 feet to add 1-bedroom dwelling in basement
  • 1506 Bonita – raise duplex by 8’-10’ adding 2 ground floor dwellings, increasing units on parcel from 6 to 8 and bedrooms from 6 to 12.
  • 3100 San Pablo – addendum to outpatient center final, 43,000 sq ft office space, 6000 sq ft R&D
http://www.cityofberkeley.info/zoningadjustmentsboard/ 

Friday, April 27, 2018 

No meetings found 

Saturday, April 28, 2018 

Indivisible Berkeley Healthcare Forum, Sat, April 28, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm, 2650 Durant, All Purpose Room, Residence Halls Unit 1 

https://www.indivisibleberkeley.org/event/healthcare-forum 

Sunday, April 29, 2018 

BPA-BCA – City Council Districts 1,4,7,8 and City Auditor - Candidate Endorsement Meeting, Sunday April 29, (registration 1:30 pm) 2:00 pm – 5:30 pm, 1901 Hearst Ave, North Berkeley Senior Center. All invited, only members vote for endorsements. http://berkeleycitizensaction.org/ 

Indivisible East Bay, Sun, April 29, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm, 2727 Milvia, Sports Basement, All member meeting https://indivisibleeb.org/upcoming-events/