Dan O'neill

Public Comment

Trump's View of Blacks and Whites

Harry Brill
Friday November 13, 2020 - 03:44:00 PM

President Trump claims that he is proud of all he has accomplished on behalf of African Americans. In fact, he boasts that he has done more for the American community than any president with the exception of Abraham Lincoln. If his boast is accurate in our race conscious society , isn’t it surprising that the overwhelming number of whites voted for him.

Let’s take a brief look at his actual record, He claimed that his policies kept black unemployment low and he improved household income. Obviously, these are important achievements. However both these claims are inaccurate. Actually, joblessness for African Americans actually increased slightly to 16.8 percent. Also, their median household income had declined. -more-


Can UC Berkeley Win a Trifecta?

Harvey Smith, President, People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group
Friday November 13, 2020 - 03:48:00 PM

UC Berkeley staff is making the rounds of Berkeley’s City Council and commissions presenting its Long Range Development Plan (LRDP). After its presentations, UCB staff have gotten a lot of critical comments, for example, being accused of attempting to devour Berkeley and turn it into another Irvine, CA, with its ghastly array of glass-box high rises. UCB’s Project #1 was skewered, a proposal to build a multi-story housing and commercial block on Oxford Street between University Avenue and Berkeley Way, which would unnecessarily destroy three historic buildings and displace residents of 1921 Walnut Street – a rent-controlled building with many longtime tenants. -more-


Health Care Incorporated

Jim Powell
Sunday November 15, 2020 - 08:22:00 PM

During one of the so-called debates staged by the Democratic Party National Committee last fall another candidate asked Bernie Saunders -- in a tone implying the absurdity of the idea -- how he expected to fund a universal national health care system which was projected to cost half a trillion dollars over ten years. In a real debate Saunders would have had time to ask why the United States, though among the wealthiest nations, is the only "developed" country in the world that (supposedly) cannot afford universal health care -- while its cizizens pay twice as much per capita as other developed nations' for a private for-profit health care system which delivers third world public health rates. As John Kenneth Galbraith wrote in 1981, "no one should assume that American election campaigns are conducted in a context that allows candidates any inconvenient freedom of speech." But while America infants and mothers die in childbirth at levels worse than Turkey's or Cuba's or over 30 other countries, because America "can't afford" to do better, earlier this year, a few months after those "debates," Congress, without substantive discussion and in a matter of hours, voted six trillion dollars to buoy up Wall Street after its latest and largest funny-money bubble collapse thus adding over a half trillion dollars to the wealth of a few dozen billionaires in a few weeks. -more-


Trump Rants On

Tejinder Uberoi
Friday November 13, 2020 - 03:51:00 PM

President Trump mocked environmental activist, Greta Thunberg, the Swedish environmental activist and told her to “chill out” when she denounced governments for their lack of action on the threats of climate change. Greta offered President Trump the same advice when he was roundly defeated in the Presidential election. -more-


Editorial

New: Dems Must Shut Down That Circular Firing Squad Before The Shooting Starts

Becky O'Malley
Tuesday November 17, 2020 - 04:05:00 PM

Gee whiz! We’re barely two weeks past Election Day, and the Democrats have already formed their circular firing squad. In order, clockwise, we have the dreary Conor Lamb on the right, about at one o’clock. On the left, up there at 11 and counting, we find Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the darling of the left. They’ve both laid claim to the soul of the Democratic party, newly on offer after Joe Biden took back the presidency and six assorted congresspersons lost their seats to Republicans.

As usual, the newsies are eager to turn the circle into a football game: two teams facing each other and fighting to reach the goal on the other side with some combination of cleverness and brute force. A nice demonstration of how this works can often be found in the New York Times, which disgraced itself in 2016 by pumping up a foolish and pointless discussion of Hillary Clinton’s email server into a game-changer in the last week or two of the campaign. Yes, it probably was clickbait, but look what mischief they wrought. -more-


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: 2020 Presidential Election: Cleaning Up Loose Ends

Bob Burnett
Friday November 13, 2020 - 04:18:00 PM

We've had more than a week to consider the election results and several things jump out:

1.It was a big win: The Biden-Harris campaign brought out a huge vote. 538's Nate Silver estimates: "Extrapolating out from current vote totals, I project Biden winning the popular vote by 4.3 percentage points and getting 81.8 million votes to President Trump’s 74.9 million, with a turnout of around 160 million." To put this in perspective, no previous candidate has ever garnered more than 70 million votes. (Biden's win was the largest popular vote margin since Barack Obama defeated John McCain in 2009.)

Biden flipped the 2016 results and garnered 306 electoral votes. This included the key Democratic objective of carrying the mid-West "blue Wall" states (Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin) along with Arizona and Georgia..

Trump joined the infamous "one-term" President club, alongside Herbert Hoover, Jimmy Carter, and George H.W. Bush. -more-


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Friday November 13, 2020 - 03:53:00 PM

Election 2020: Winners and Losers

Car horns started blaring at 9AM on November 4, prompting me to wonder "Could it be…?"

And then I saw people dancing in the street.

Yep, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were on their way to claiming the largest number of votes in the history of US presidential politics.

The good news is that Joe and Kamala won by a 5 million-vote margin. The prospect of a Trumpless White House seemed assured. (Barring GOP lawsuits, trickery, manipulations of the Electoral College, and flirtations with "faithless electors.")

But now we're left with the question: How much damage can a vindictive, lame-duck Trump do in his remaining days in office? More billion-dollar arms deals with the Saudis? A war with China? An attack on Iran? Firing Dr. Fauci? The possibilities are endless.

The next question is: What will Joe do? Look for his cabinet choices. Will there be a spot for Elizabeth Warren (Secretary of Treasury) or Bernie Sanders (Secretary of Labor)? -more-


ECLECTIC RANT: Where’s Donald?

Ralph E. Stone
Friday November 13, 2020 - 03:44:00 PM

The United States again shattered pandemic records, reporting more than 153,000 new coronavirus cases on Nov. 12 as some 66,000 people were hospitalized nationwide with the highest daily death toll of 1,893 since May. It was the seventh time in nine days that reported U.S. infections reached new heights. -more-


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: How to Face Loss

Jack Bragen
Friday November 13, 2020 - 03:55:00 PM

A person can harness a great deal of energy and power by becoming hyper-attached to something. It can cause immunity to much of one's emotional and physical suffering, it can allow a person to bulldoze over opponents and perceived enemies. and it can enable a person to do seemingly superhuman feats. However, there are many downsides, including for someone who is strictly self-interested.

In 1981, I tried to harness the power that comes with hyper-attachment. Hyper attachment was one of many contributing factors to becoming mentally ill at the beginning of my adulthood.

(There were a number of other problems, not of my making, that contributed to becoming ill. I am not going to dredge them up.) -more-


AN ACTIVIST'S DIARY: Week endin Nov.15

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday November 15, 2020 - 09:19:00 PM

It is hard not to be drawn into the pandemic that is raging across the country and it is disappointing to hear Berkeleyans planning social get-togethers thinking somehow all this concern about coronavirus doesn’t apply here. This is exactly the kind of thinking that leads to exponential spread of COVID-19.

It was even more disappointing to hear our Health Officer say last Monday that celebrating Thanksgiving with up to three families all of whom are “bubbled” and not socializing beyond that group would be fine. The problem is not everyone defines what it means to “bubble” the same way. I am not confident that current luck of low incidence in Berkeley will hold.

This column is about what happened locally in city meetings and community group, so let’s get to it. -more-


Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Nov. 15-21

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday November 14, 2020 - 09:59:00 AM

Worth Noting: -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

Editorials

New: Dems Must Shut Down That Circular Firing Squad Before The Shooting Starts 11-17-2020

Public Comment

Trump's View of Blacks and Whites Harry Brill 11-13-2020

Can UC Berkeley Win a Trifecta? Harvey Smith, President, People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group 11-13-2020

Health Care Incorporated Jim Powell 11-15-2020

Trump Rants On Tejinder Uberoi 11-13-2020

Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE: 2020 Presidential Election: Cleaning Up Loose Ends Bob Burnett 11-13-2020

SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces Gar Smith 11-13-2020

ECLECTIC RANT: Where’s Donald? Ralph E. Stone 11-13-2020

ON MENTAL ILLNESS: How to Face Loss Jack Bragen 11-13-2020

AN ACTIVIST'S DIARY: Week endin Nov.15 Kelly Hammargren 11-15-2020

Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Nov. 15-21 Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition 11-14-2020