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Sally K. Sachs
1934-2020

Thursday September 03, 2020 - 12:38:00 PM

Sally K. Sachs was born in Buffalo, NY, in September 1934, and died on June 26, 2020.

She received her primary and secondary education in Buffalo public schools and was valedictorian of her high school class. She was awarded a scholarship to Syracuse University in New York State. In addition to her academic work, she starred on their College Quiz Bowl team.

In 1955 she married Rainer Sachs and they went on to have four daughters, before divorcing in 1978.

After completing her studies, she and her family spent some years in Hamburg and London , but returned to the U.S, where they lived in New Jersey – first on an army base and then in Hoboken. They then spent four years in Austin, TX, ultimately settling in Berkeley CA. Sally appreciated Berkeley, and was active for 30 years in the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association, serving as president for 2 years.

Sally was employed by the IRS where she worked until her retirement.

Sally had many talents. She liked to sketch and draw, and continued
this hobby throughout her life. She was knowledgeable about music and attended many concerts. She enjoyed gardening and grew fruits and vegetables in her yard. She read a lot and retained a great deal of what she read and learned. Sally was independent in her thinking and her actions. She was very straight forward, principled and a good citizen.

She enjoyed travel and made trips within the US, to Europe and to Mexico.

Sally's youngest daughter, Margaret, died in 1995. She is survived by 3 daughters: Anna Magda Sachs, Eliza Sachs and Carol Sachs, grandchildren Olaf Davis and Iona Marsh, a sister Barbara K. Zain and her partner of more than 30 years, Luis Flores.

Sally's life will be celebrated on Monday, September 7. For details of the online event, email sallysachsmemorialATgmailDOTcom

Donations in Sally's name can be made to Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association http://berkeleyheritage.com/ or to

ACLUaction.aclu.org/give/now


Opinion

Editorials

Build Back Better with a Berkeleyan

Becky O'Malley
Saturday August 29, 2020 - 04:14:00 PM

Joe Biden’s announcement that he’d chosen Kamala Harris for his running mate prompted this email from Congresswoman Barbara Lee:

“When I think about my start in politics, I remember the unbossed and unbought Shirley Chisholm inspiring me to fight for what I believe in. She was the first African American woman to serve in Congress and the first Democratic woman to run for president.

“Shirley set us on a path toward progress and now we must continue her fight for equality, fairness, and dignity for all Americans.

“That’s how I know Kamala Harris would make a fantastic Vice President— the first Black woman Vice President.”  

Me, I backed Elizabeth Warren for both president and vice-president, and I still think she’d do an excellent job in either office. But she’ll also get a lot done in the Senate, maybe more than she would have as vice president, given her policy-making and advocacy skills. And as I watched Harris recite her back story in her acceptance speech, I warmed to her candidacy.  

In these days of the televised pre-revolution, every candidate needs a heart-warming back story with an elevator-pitch one sentence summary. Here are a few:  

Joe Biden: Commuted by train to Congress so I could be a good dad.  

Bernie Sanders: Still not a Dem after all these years as a kinda-sorta Socialist.  

Elizabeth Warren: Couldn’t be here without my Aunt Bea’s help with child care.  

And Kamala Harris? Per her details in that speech: Just a Berkeley girl at heart. 

As someone who’s spent the better part of sixty years in Berkeley on and off, I recognized her story. Kamala is a contemporary of my three daughters, the same age as my middle daughter, both of them born in 1964. That’s the year that the Mississippi Freedom Democrats tried to get seated at the Democratic Convention in Atlantic. I went there for a day as a very pregnant ally, not a delegate, and was thrilled to shake Reverend King’s hand. 

Like many Berkeley girls, Kamala was born in Oakland because Kaiser’s there, but she’s Berkeley through and through. Like my daughters, she went to demonstrations in a stroller. Those were civilized early-'60spickets and marches, mainly directed at shaming slightly liberal Democratic officeholders of the Kennedy-Johnson decade. 

In Ann Arbor, where I lived then, our social change goals in the years when Kamala and my daughters were toddlers were modest. We were simply trying to persuade moderate Republicans on the Ann Arbor City Council to support a law prohibiting housing discrimination based on race. It took us two or three years of picketing city hall every Monday with babies in strollers and backpacks to accomplish that goal, aided by the 1965 election of the first African-American City Council member since Reconstruction, whose campaign I managed. 

Mixed marriages like that of Kamala’s parents were still illegal in many states in the'60s. Parents of biracial kids born in the ‘60s, some of them my good friends, needed to make a conscious effort to ensure that their offspring were comfortable with both sides of their heritage. 

I had a couple of friends in those days who were very much like her mother: Indian women from privileged backgrounds who came to the United States for graduate school to broaden their horizons. Lately I’ve learned from the Indian press that her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, was what they call a Tambram—a member of the elite Brahman caste from the Tamil Nadu area. Going abroad to study was quite daring for Indian girls like that in the early 1960s. 

One Indian journalist points out that for a girl from a Brahmin family—" a caste that fetishized light skin and went to extraordinary lengths to argue that it was racially distinct from the non-Brahmin Tamil population in which it was historically embedded”— to marry someone of African descent was even more daring, just as it was for Americans of European descent to do that. 

Though Kamala Harris’s parents eventually separated, her mother made sure to become part of the Black community. She took her place in the East Bay’s vigorous African-American upper middle class-- I’m told by a reliable source that Shyamala was even admitted to the exclusive bridge club maintained in those days by and for female members of Oakland’s Black elite. 

It’s likely that Kamala’s decision to attend a historically Black university was strongly influenced by the way her mother brought her up. At Howard she joined a national African-American sorority which is highly respected for members’ traditional lifetime record of public service. 

And then there was Shirley Chisholm. She was not only African-American, she was Afro-Caribbean like Kamala’s father. 

Here’s the current Wikipedia take on what Shirley Chisholm meant to many: 

“Chisholm has been a major influence on other women of color in politics, among them California Congresswoman Barbara Lee, who stated in a 2017 interview that Chisholm had a profound impact on her career.[81] 

Shirley Chisholm’s 1972 run for President, the first African American and the first woman to do so, seems to have made as much of an impression on young Kamala, all of eight years old, as it did on Barbara Lee and on our family. I was on the Michigan steering committee for the Chisholm primary campaign. My daughters took part in it, especially enjoying handing out “Shirley Chisholm for President” balloons on the University of Michigan campus. 

Wikipedia again: 

Kamala Harris recognized Chisholm's presidential campaign by using a similar color scheme and typography in her own 2020 presidential campaign's promotional materials and logo.[82] announcing Harris's run for president.  

" Harris launched her presidential campaign forty-seven years to the day after Chisholm's presidential campaign.[83] 

Just this week, Harris has done an expert job of standing up to the excesses of the Republican ticket—Berkeley can be proud of her. Congresswoman Lee’s been a staunch supporter of Kamala Harris from the beginning of her presidential campaign. And as the perennial bumper sticker says, Barbara Lee speaks for me. 

 

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The Editor's Back Fence

Technical Problems Persist

Becky O'Malley
Sunday August 30, 2020 - 01:02:00 PM

We're still having problems with users of our site, including both the editor and readers, intermittently being denied access and given error messages. We've been working with our system host, LMI, to figure out what's happening and fix it, but so far no luck. Readers could help by sending email reports when this happens to editor@berkeleydailyplanet.com, and if that doesn't work to support@lmi.net. And then try again after just a few minutes, because it is intermittent, not permanent.


Public Comment

The US Senate: Where Is Democracy?

Harry Brill
Saturday August 29, 2020 - 05:48:00 PM

There have been many volumes written about the failure of our public and private institutions to abide by the principles of the American constitution. Among the serious concerns, for example, have been the violation of voting rights. But the constitution itself is also an imperfect document. Among the problems is the voting pattern of the US Senate. As you know, each state elects two senators -- no more, no less. ---despite the substantial state differences in voting population. For example, California has about 30 million registered voters compared to about 800,000 in Rhode Island. So the ratio is about 30 to 1. Yet in practice the difference is completely ignored. 

In contrast, the House of Representatives is appreciably more democratic because the number of seats of representatives is proportionate. 

Isn’t there something wrong with a political system which penalizes voters in larger states by allowing each of these states only two senators? Despite the tremendous number of voters in the highly liberal states of New York and California, shouldn’t these states have a lot more representatives?  

Not only are liberals penalized by underestimating the influence of both New York and California as well as other large states. Moreover, conservatives in the Senate enjoy a slight plurality. For 18 states are rated as highly conservative. This rightward tilt of the Senate is due to allocating the same number of votes to every state regardless of their population size.  

The Senate is particularly important with regard to the appointment of the judiciary. The president makes the nominations, which must then be approved by a majority of the Senate. Sounds reasonable. But is it? The problem is he failure to take into account the population of each state. 

The reality of course is that presidential nominations are generally rubber stamped. Just recently, two out of three judges in the ninth circuit court voted to support the shipment of coal to Oakland despite the enormous health risks to residents. Reflecting the bias of the Republican Party, one of the judges was appointed by Trump. Another by former Republican president Bush.  

The problem of course is that the present system of allocating exactly two senators for each state tends to assure that the president’s recommendation will be confirmed. But what may be good for the president may not be best for democracy and the voters.


Why White People find it Difficult to Talk about Race

Steve Martinot
Sunday August 30, 2020 - 09:50:00 AM

(a four part series)

Part 1 – Racism is a relation between white people

Introduction

In the midst of a pandemic, most people simply wish for a vaccine, a shot in the arm to make the threat of disease go away. These days, people adopt a similar attitude toward that other pandemic of racism and police brutality, the one that doesn’t go away. Many people are wishing there was a vaccine for that as well.

Rayshard Brooks got shot in the back because he fell asleep in a drive-thru line and the cops who woke him wanted to handcuff him. Breoona Taylor got shot by assault rifles getting out of bed to see who had just broken down her door; it was cops serving a faulty warrant. George Floyd, handcuffed and compliant, gets his neck squashed into the pavement. All were cowardly acts of killing. In each, a black person acted as any self-respecting human would.

A thousand black and brown citizens are murdered by agents of their government every year. We see them in videos on Youtube. It is the demonstrations that have wracked cities across the country demanding justice that are trying to be the vaccine.

It is with irony that many now remember the moment, four years ago, when Colin Kaepernick refused to stand for the national anthem because of police killing black people. He was intentionally misinterpreted by detractors, though he stated clearly why he did it. How can you honor the anthem of a government that kills its own people? He was punished by blacklist for raising that issue. After watching Floyd die under direct police malice, some people wondered whether Floyd might be alive today if Kaepernick had been heard, and enough of us had taken his gesture against lethal racism to heart. In 2016, all he wanted was that people talk about what was happening, talk about race and whiteness, and how to stop the killing.

Is it out of line to desire a government that respects the humanity of its citizens? Or is the desire for death so deep-seated in US culture that only social justice movements know how to talk about it? During the three months that cities experienced uprisings, massive protests, marches and building occupations after the murder of George Floyd, the police kept on killing (from Tony McDade (5/27/20) and Sean Monterrosa (6/2/20), to Trayford Pellerin (8/21/20) and Jacob Blake (8/23/20)). It is as if killing more black people were the deliberate response of the police to the demand by the people that they stop. (Cf. Steve Martinot, “On The Epidemic of Police Killings,” in Social Justice, Vol. 39 (4), 2014) It has gotten to the point where professional sports teams are refusing to play in protest, following Kaepernick’s four year lead (NBA playoffs, 8/26/20). 

Black people don’t have much trouble talking among themselves about race. In general, it means talking about white people, and how people of color are beset by a white sense of entitlement and supremacy. And they talk about themselves with respect to self-defense. Conversely, when white people talk about race, it means talking about black people. "Race" is a synonym for “the other.” But white people have difficulty talking about their own role in the problem. 

How does one initiate a discussion of race with white people, without falling into the pit of specific cases, statistics, and data? How do you talk about anti-racism in the first place? A white person will of course say racism is wrong. Some, those who are allies of the uprisings against police brutality, understand “Black Lives Matter” to be a demand: “stop killing black people.” But will white people say something about white complicity? Surely the police could not be doing what they do without some kind of support among the populace. What is the difficulty in demanding a government that really values justice? 

This will be a four part series on this question: 

1- Racism is a relation between white people 

2- "Race" is not a noun, but a verb 

3- The paradoxes of white racialized identity 

4- What does it mean to “act white” and how to stop 

The Question of Race

Against the pandemic of "racism," a variety of cures or vaccines have been rejected. Affirmative action programs were passed and then defunded, Anti-discrimination laws were passed and then made hopelessly bureaucratic. The right to vote was legislated, and then parts were repealed. Since the murder of Amadou Diallo, the beating of Rodney King, the murder of Oscar Grant, police racial profiling and brutality (aka “use of force”) have been debated and banned. Yet police practices have not changed. 

 

When we demand the cops stop their brutality toward black people, what aspect of race are we talking about? Do we point out that they are making themselves a “role model”? Are we talking about institutional (systemic) racism? Or are the cops individually racist? When the white cop knelt on Floyd’s neck, though Floyd was already in custody and cuffed, it represented a clear intention to kill him. The cop knew the other three on his team would not stop him. Was he therefore acting as an institutional agent or an individual? Was he not the practical proof that the two, individual racism and institutional (systemic) racism, were inseparable? 

In his act, and in his confidence in his team, he was making it clear that the ability of white people to be racist is always in relation to the institutional, to the systemic. "Racism" names the structure of that social confidence, not only that there is institutional back-up, but that, as a white-identified person, one can get away with it anyway. Remember the original refusal to arrest Zimmerman? White people can enact their racism because social institutions grant them that power, along with a certain impunity to do so. Individual white people exemplify standards of comportment, but social institutions provide the ethical role models. 

Black people are denied all this. They don’t have such institutions to empower a "racism" for them. In effect, racism only runs one way. That’s what it means that institutions, political parties, courts, corporations, and even trade unions, are "white" structures. 

How is an ordinary white person to address the issue of "race" when caught between those two modes, the individual and the institutional, and only able to speak about one at a time? 

On being found out – the psychology of addressing whiteness

Let us listen in on a white person. He approaches white anti-racist activists because he wants to rethink his attitude to black people. He wants to learn something about himself, his whiteness, and his culture. He considers himself an ally of the movement because he knows the killing has to stop. When he attempts to speak about race, however, he stutters and mumbles, trying hard not to say anything too directly. What terrorizes him is the idea that he will blurt out something humiliatingly racist. He fears that others will jump on him – “don’t you know better that to say something like that?” So he is careful, afraid he will be "found out." He succeeds in suppressing his reactions, rather than examining them. He uses language that accords with the tenor of anti-racism, while aware that the social justice movement has developed a new language, one that overrides what he had originally been taught, long ago when he was a child. Is it a circle he is caught in, or a riptide? 

He stutters that he knows he is prejudiced. He is fearful in the presence of black people. and is afraid to touch their skin because it appears alien. He knows racism is wrong, but he doesn’t know why. He fears he will simply be replacing one form of prejudice with another. And he doesn’t know how to make sense of that. 

He fears he is disguising a reaction with a prejudice, and disguising a prejudice with a reaction, with no hint of how to escape that circle. So he concentrates on being civil, and at the same time militant about the police and the prevalence of their brutality. He is able to relate to people of color because he has a sense of what to suppress in himself. But he also realizes that, as white, he has entitlement and privilege, which provide a comfort zone for him, behind which he can retreat if necessary. 

Other people tell him he must substitute an ethic of justice for an ethic of entitlement or supremacy, but he doesn’t really know what an "ethic" is. Perhaps that is part of the difficulty. 

On knowing what one sees

Police brutality has brought the issue of ethics, and the confluence of individual and institutional racism, into focus. People of color, who are marching to defend their lives and communities against it, live the inseparability of individual attitudes and institutional violence. It is what they see passing in its cruisers. White people can’t see the institutional aspect very well. They don’t live it. They have to read about it in newspapers and court procedures. They may see its individual expressions, but that might not fully depict the problem for them. 

Does the difficulty white people have in talking about race result from not knowing about this conjunction? Does it help that they realize they can no longer afford not to know? 

From the depths of US history, the last 400 years, this killing by "cops" has had the character of a genocidal act. "Genocide" is a term that signifies the killing of a culture. It applies to the destruction of a community. Africans were ripped out of their homelands, away from their traditions of philosophy, science, technology, and governmental systems. They had their languages banned, their musical instruments barred, and they were permitted only to speak the words belonging to the colonialist language that enslaved them. And now, they are the targets of arbitrary murders as a cultural phenomenon. 

How can a white person understand the problem of race as a cultural phenomenon? How can a white person uphold a desire for justice from within a culture that confers genocidal power on their whiteness? Can they even see it? 

That is a problem. How can a white person see their own whiteness when their whiteness is what they see with in the first place. The eye cannot see itself seeing. For the eye to see the eye seeing, it has to look in a mirror – that is, to make itself "other" to itself. It is in that sense that white people are blind to their own white privilege. They do not have the privilege of seeing their own privilege. White privilege does not appear as privilege, but as the "normal." 

Where can one find a mirror in which to look and see one’s whiteness? That mirror is in the faces, the statements and gestures, of those beset by white racism. It is in the books, the speeches, the angers, the looks and the deadpan expressions of people of color. They are the ones who see the privilege white people grant themselves and cannot see. 

White people and people of color live in different worlds. People of color, and especially black people, have to out-maneuver and defend themselves against white supremacy every day of their lives. And that is not true for white people. White people breathe the air differently, do not have to think about what is walking down the street toward them at every moment, and can move about freely – except when dominated by a complex racial paranoia, like that young white woman in a park, back in June 2020, who freaked out when a black man politely asked her to keep her dog on a leash. Like the invisibility of privilege, paranoia is a form of blindness. Most white people are blind to the fact that no black community has not lost some members, young and old, to police and white violence. 

Blindness enacts a number of assumptions, one being that a basic social ethics is sufficient for getting by. But if a basic social ethics is racialized, which means it has social institutionality behind it, then it is an ethics of inequality. The right of self-defense, for instance, is an ethical proposition. It is the first thing that was racialized in the US, long time ago. 

Can a white person speak against either the individual or institutional dimension of the race problem while ignoring their own membership in it? How is one to simply live one’s own life if its fundamental condition is an unavoidable injustice generated by an unnoticed privilege? Isn’t that the fundamental nature of entitlement? 

The paradox of white racism

One learns what it means to be white from other white people. It comes in stories and warnings and descriptions as part of childhood. Most of those stories are about black people. For white racialized consciousness, black or brown people become characters in a system of narratives, anecdotes, and images. In later life, white people relate to black people through those stories. And they relate to other white people who see those stories the same way. They enter into friendships and find social residence in their common understanding language and attitudes of those stories. In effect, it is not black people they relate to as they become white, but the white people who tell them the stories, and to their a white community. 

In sum, racism is not a relation between white people and black. It is a relation between white people for which “black people” are the means. (As Simone de Beauvoir used to say in a parallel vein, marriage is a relation between men for which women are the means.) How is a white person to talk about race if they look at it as a black-white relation? 

There is no reciprocity with respect to black people. The power, gratuitous hostility, domination, inferiorization, patronizing attitudes, etc. that characterize racism only go in one direction. The stories are just there to teach white people how to do it. Violence also only goes in one direction. White people kill, harass, patronize, and renarrativize black people as part of racializing them. They know they are dealing from the bottom of the deck. It is a power given them by white supremacist institutionalities. Thus, racism provides the terms by which white people can take each for granted. 

When black people appear to reciprocate, to fight back, to scorn, to ignore, to placate, those are not gestures of violence but of self-defense and possibly rebellion. When done individually, the deck is stacked against them.i 

If racism is a form of street-level solidarity among whites, it will often be enforced by various means, even those of violence. The solidarism among segregationists, for instance, can take the form of enlistment to action, sometimes as a racializing project, and sometimes as “behavior modification.” Against the segregationists, the liberals argue that a hard exclusionary stance against black people will only cause trouble and rebellion. The better path is to integrate with its subtle long-range stratifications. Both see themselves looking out for the stability of white society, while preserving different forms of black subordination. 

Both segregationists and liberals are fulfilling duties of membership in whiteness. And neither will disown it. Perhaps they refused to hear Kaepernick’s gesture of revolt out of a premonition that it would require them to deny their whiteness. But that is not the question. If one learns one’s whiteness from other white people, from whom could one learn to unlearn it? 

In closing, we might mention one great vulnerability in whiteness, the esthetic dimension. It resides in the recognition that the difference in color between people is actually beautiful. The contrast between a white arm and a dark brown one set alongside each other is imminently pleasing if seen in its reality, free of the imposition of “good vs. evil.” The early colonists in Jamestown saw this immediately when the first Africans arrived in 1619. The colony quickly tried three times to outlaw mixed marriages, each time with harsher penalties. And each time it failed miserably. (Cf. Steve Martinot, The Rule of Racialization, Temple UP, 2003, pp 54-57) 

The fundamental importance of the anti-racist movements is that they are the place where white people can find that mirror through which to see their whiteness in its relation to racism. That is where one can learn some of the counter-stories about justice, human consciousness, and unlearn the fictional dogmatics of white race superiority. It is in the broad dialogues around this that people can learn how to ensure the freedom and respect of those they encounter and address. For many white people, that is a hard transformation to muster. To arrive at the ability to assume the autonomy and sovereignty of all other human beings is a cultural transformation. At present, US culture does not know how to make such assumptions. 

Anti-racist movements, because they threaten to make the US an actual democracy based on actual equality between people, with equal equity in social participation, have been in existence for four hundred years. Those today are standing on the shoulders of a lot of people. 

In sum, the real difficulty in speaking about race for whites does not primarily arise from psychological problems or a sense of guilt. It has to do with the convoluted way the concept of race exists, its paradoxes, its structure, and its identities. To think that the problem lies in individual prejudices rather than the culture of whiteness and the raciality it imposes is to be looking at effects rather than causes. It is a form of misdirection. 

We shall address this in the next article.


Trump’s realty RNC show

Jagjit Singh
Sunday August 30, 2020 - 12:59:00 PM

Maryanne Trump Barry, President Trump’s sister, the retired Federal judge warned Americans that her younger brother is a pathological liar. This warning was echoed by Trump’s niece, Mary Trump and Jon Bolton, Trump’s former national security advisor. 

In the age of KALJUG, criminals, like Roger Stone, Michael Flynn, Paul Manafort, , , , are pardoned while scores of African-Americans are languishing in jail charged with extremely minor offenses or the inability to post bail. I hope Americans will examine objective fact-checking that occurred during the convention where there were so many obvious and blatant lies. In addition, we must remember that the White House is a national symbol. It is the “People’s House,” paid for by all Americans; it does not belong to a political candidate like Donald Trump and Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, and others who blatantly violated the provisos of the Hatch Act which forbids Federal property being used for political purposes. 

Glaringly absent from Trump’s reality show was any reference to the raging pandemic which has taken the lives of 180,00 Americans resulting from his incompetent leadership. Earlier Trump dismissed the deadly virus as a hoax, his favorite four letter word he uses constantly to dismiss unpleasant news critical of his failed leadership. 

Right on cue, the sycophants clicked their heels and saluted their leader terrified they might offend him which would trigger a Twitter tirade and end their careers. The tragic unprovoked shooting of Jacob Blake in the presence of his 3 young children by a racist cop was not mentioned. But the 17 year old white supremacist ist, Kyle Rittenhouse who killed two protesters was lauded as a hero. VP Pence dutifully echoed his master’s racist tirade. 

The great spiritual leader, Nanak defined GOD as “TRUTH”. but the truth was absent in the war of ugly words uttered at the RNC.  

If a buzzer rang or a bleep machine masked out every time a lie was uttered by President Trump or his obedient minions I wonder how much of the speeches would be heard. Perhaps the TV networks could use the same rating approach to monitor FACEBOOK, Qanon conspiracy theories and FOX News, which more closely resembles Pravda, the former propaganda arm of the Russian Communist Party. 

For more go to, http://callforsocialjustice.blogspot.com/ 

Jagjit Singh


Russian Interference in 2016l

Tejinder Uberoi
Sunday August 30, 2020 - 12:56:00 PM

A bipartisan report by the Republican-controlled Senate Intelligence Committee cut through1, 000 pages of chaff to reach a very predictable conclusion, namely Russia interfered in the 2016 election to ensure the election of Donald Trump. 


The former Russian spymaster instructed his trolling brigade to cultivate a favorable image of a mythical man as a future president negating Trump’s many human failings by exploiting the power of social media, and his reputation as a pathological liar and bully. Like most autocrats, Trump didn’t tolerate independent thinkers but craved sycophants who sang his praises incessantly. In hindsight, the sheer chutzpah of molding the reality TV star crippled with a string of failed businesses, as the future President of the United Sates boggles the mind but the mythical man has shown remarkable
resilience. 


It appears Russian oligarchs provided much of the funding to project the myth that Trump was a successful businessman and a “master of the art of the deal.” Ina an unguarded moment, Don Jnr boasted that a major source of Trump’s revenue came from Russia.Perhaps, this may explain Trump’s cozy relationship with Putin and his reluctance to reveal his tax returns. This also gives credence to Christopher Steel of British intelligence, MI6 who alleges Putin has a choke hold on Trump. 


The Senate report revealed the Trump-team team secretly provided Russian officials with key polling data and coordinated the timing of the release of stolen information to hurt Hillary Clinton’s campaign.Mueller’s team, the Justice Department’s inspector general and now the Senate Intelligence Committee ALL came to the same conclusion. Russia interfered in the 3016 election. Meanwhile the Trump team left the door wide open hoping for a repeat performance in 2020. 


Finally, the Senate Report issued a timely rebuke to the un-American Attorney General, William Barr, who been hawking that “Russia gate” is a “bogus” scandal. 


For more go to, http://callforsocialjustice.blogspot.com/


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE:2020 Republican Convention: 10 Takeaways

Bob Burnett
Saturday August 29, 2020 - 05:43:00 PM

One week after the Democratic convention came the Republican gathering. If the underlying theme of the Dems convention was "Unity: we are in this together," the underlying theme of the GOP conclave was "Only Trump can save us." An early speaker described Trumps as the “bodyguard of Western civilization” It was in all regards the Trump show. There were 10 takeaways. 

10. Conventional Convention: As compared to the Democratic convention, which was a technological tour-de-force, the GOP convention was your usual convention -- without an audience for the preliminary speakers. (Nonetheless, several speakers -- notably Kimberly Guilfoyle and Donald Trump Jr -- felt obliged to shout as if they could not otherwise be heard over crowd noise.) 

Starting on the second night, the headliners spoke before an audience: Melania Trump, Mike Pence, and Donald Trump. On the fourth night, the grand finale featured Trump speaking to at least 1500 on the South Lawn of the White House. 

9. No Platform: The Republican National Committee said the reason the party has no new platform is the COVID-19 pandemic, which necessitated a scaled-back convention. In other words, Trump is the platform. 

Question: What do Republicans stand for? Answer: Four more years of Trump. And unabashed cultural conservatism: "law and order," "anti (all) forms of abortion," "school choice" (money for Christian schools), and defense of "your second amendment rights." 

8. The Pandemic is over: After blaming COVID-19 for the diminished convention, Republicans largely ignored the pandemic. They praised Trump's initial response to what he called, "the China virus." There was no mention of the 6 million Americans who have been infected with the coronavirus and no acknowledgment of the 185,000 deaths. On Tuesday night, presidential economic adviser Larry Kudlow referred to the pandemic in the past tense: "It was awful. Health and economic impacts were tragic. Hardship and heartbreak were everywhere. But presidential leadership came swiftly and effectively with an extraordinary rescue for health and safety to successfully fight the Covid virus.” 

Republicans have no plan to deal with the pandemic. And, no plan to equitably distribute the COVID-19 vaccine, whenever it arrives. 

7. Democrats are the problem: Rather than talk about the obvious national problems -- coronavirus pandemic, economic recession, racial injustice, and global climate change --Republican warned that Biden was actually the return of Fidel Castro; the GOP said he would usher in anarchy, socialism, and (perhaps) communism. Kimberly Guilfoyle claimed "[Democrats] want to destroy this country and everything that we have fought for and hold dear. They want to steal your liberty, your freedom.” Donald Trump, Junior, amplified this: "[Democrats are] attacking the very principles on which our nation was founded: freedom of thought, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, the rule of law.” 

Mike Pence called Biden, "a Trojan horse for a radical left," adding, "Joe Biden would double down on the very policies that are leading to unsafe streets and violence in America’s cities." Donald Trump called Biden, "the destroyer" and claimed "you won't be safe in Joe Biden's America." 

6. It's Difficult to Humanize Trump: Although Republicans paid more attention to Joe Biden than they did to Donald Trump, they did make a few feeble efforts to to humanize Trump. Several members of Congress -- Jim Jordan, Rand Paul -- noted nice things Trump had done for their family members. Trump's daughters, Tiffany and Ivanka, asked viewers to "[make] judgment based on results, not rhetoric." 

Melania Trump said: "We all know Donald Trump makes no secret about how he feels about things. Whether you like it or not, you always know what he’s thinking... He wants nothing more than for the country to prosper and he doesn’t waste time playing politics." No one described Trump as "a nice guy" or "my friend" or even "a decent human being." 

5. Republicans set a bad example. Through day one and two, Republicans showed four videos of Trump meeting with various groups. In none of these gatherings did Trump or the participants wear masks; neither did the practice social distancing. On day two, Melania Trump gave a speech, in the White House Rose Garden, to approximately 100 guests. Melania, and Donald, did not wear masks; nor did the vast majority of the observers. The audience was not properly dispersed. On day three, Mike Pence gave a speech, at Fort McHenry, before approximately 150 guests. Pence, Donald Trump, and the guests did not wear masks and were not properly dispersed. On day four, Donald Trump gave a speech, at the White House South Lawn, to approximately 1500 guests. None wore masks; the guests were packed together like a regular rally. (It was a "super-spreader" event.) 

Republicans are acting as if the pandemic is over. They are setting a dangerous example for their constituents. 

4. The White House became a prop: Breaking with tradition, on night one Donald Trump used the White House as a prop, filming two videos -- conversations with the President -- in White House conference rooms. On night two, Donald Trump used the White House for three events: first he used an office as the background to his pardon of a convicted bank robber. Next, Trump used a conference room to hold a naturalization ceremony with the assistance of the White House marine guard. Later on night two, Trump used the White House rose garden as the setting for a speech by Melania Trump. On night four, Trump used the White House south lawn for his acceptance speech. 

These actions violated the Hatch Act of 1939. Trump was breaking the law in plain sight. (MSNBC anchor, Nicolle Wallace, referred to these actions as "the audacity of the grift.") 

3. Melania Trump: On convention night two, Melania Trump gave a speech in the White House rose garden. It was low key, compared to the other speeches, and notable because she expressed sympathy for those Americans who have suffered from COVID-19: "I want to acknowledge the fact that since March, our lives have changed drastically. The invisible enemy, Covid-19, swept across our beautiful country and impacted all of us. My deepest sympathy goes out to all of you who have lost a loved one and my prayers are with those who are ill or suffering. I know many people are anxious and some feel helpless. I want you to know you are not alone." This was remarkable because previously the pandemic had either been ignored or treated as if it was a past event. 

Melania also made a notable pitch for civility: "I urge people to come together in a civil manner so we can work and live up to our standard American ideals." 

2. Donald Trump: Speaking from the South Lawn of the White House, Trump delivered a long speech -- 69 minutes -- read from a teleprompter and punctuate with cheers and applause. For Trump, it was an unusually flat effort. 

The speech had three parts. Trump talked about his accomplishments, peppering the list with distortions and falsehoods. (Rachel Maddow delivered an epic factcheck of Trump's list (https://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/watch/maddow-corrects-litany-of-falsehoods-in-marathon-trump-rnc-speech-90768453569 ).) 

Second, Trump lambasted his opponent: "Biden's record is shameful." "Joe Biden's plan is a surrender to the virus." "Joe Biden's agenda is made in China." "Joe Biden is a Trojan Horse for socialism." 

Third, Trump talked ever so briefly, about his plans for a second term: miraculously end the pandemic, cut taxes and regulations, create millions of jobs, and keep America safe. 

1. The missing Republican Agenda: America is confronted with four crises: the COVID-19 pandemic, the economic recession, racial injustice, and global climate change. In the 2020 Democratic convention, these crises were addressed. In the 2020 Republican convention, these crises were largely avoided. 

COVID-19 pandemic: The GOP treated the pandemic as if it was a crisis that had been solved. In their public events they did not insist on masks or proper social distancing. Trump promised a vaccine by the end of the year. Trump expressed no sympathy for the 6 million COVID-19 victims or the 185,000 deaths. (By the way: by November 3rd, 250,000 Americans will have died from the virus.) 

Economic recession: Republicans refused to acknowledge the 40 million Americans who are unemployed. They act as if the economy is growing but last quarter it shrank at a rate of 32.9 percent. They pretend we are in a V-shaped recovery but it's actually a K-shaped recovery where only the richest 1 percent are benefitting. Republicans don't appear to care about the millions who are losing their unemployment benefits or facing eviction. Trump's only plan was to cut taxes, 

Racial Injustice: Republicans condemn Black Lives Matter. They refused to acknowledge the tragic death of George Floyd and the maiming of Jacob Blake. They deny the reality of systemic racism -- on night one, Nikki Haley said, "America is not a racist country." After that, Republicans ignored racism and focused on "rioters and looters." Trump said America was beset by "rioters and looters and Democrats call them peaceful protestors." 

Climate Change: Remember that? On night three of the GOP convention, a major hurricane slammed into Louisiana, while wildfires torched the west. But no Republican speaker mentioned climate change. 

Summary: The 2016 Trump campaign theme was "Make America great again." Mike Pence has suggested the 2020 theme should be, "Make America great again, again." (Really.) But it's clear that Republicans believe their 2020 theme should be: "Donald Trump will keep us safe." 

On November 3rd, there will be a clear choice: Democrats believe in "E Pluribus Unum." Republicans believe, "In Donald we trust." 


 

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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: I Am Not Your Lab Rat

Jack Bragen
Saturday August 29, 2020 - 10:51:00 PM

I do not want to offend rat enthusiasts. Modern, domesticated rats as pets are usually friendly and very smart. One of them injured her eye and we took her to the vet and got that treated. Later in her life, she was of exceptional intelligence, and she would run up my arm and put her nose in my ear. She would chase our Russian Blue cat, named Boris, and bite him on the butt. Her name was Emily. My wife was a rat enthusiast for a number of years. However, they became too hard to care for and too messy in our dwelling.

Scientists have a long history of cruel animal experimentation, and of unethical experimentation on humans. Heinous acts are perpetrated on animals. And deceptive, cruel things are done to human beings without our knowledge--in the name of "science."

Yet, it may not really be science when the objective is to prove one's pre-drawn conclusions. 

I've recently been subjected to a treatment practitioner's bad demeanor toward me. I could not tell you that I was truly being experimented on. Yet, I was left with the feeling that I had been treated as a lab specimen under a microscope. I am not at liberty to give you the specifics. 

When something like that happens to me, I am left traumatized; I have not developed immunity. Yet, my options for rectifying the situation are limited. 

One option could be the empathy route. It is possible that the individual on the other end feels unequal, as do I. Perhaps they feel a need to employ their power to insulate them from what they perceive as a scary individual. While I am not a threat to anyone, I've met many people who feel threatened by me. In that case, I could make adjustments on my end, to accommodate the treatment practitioner. 

Additionally, I need to keep in mind that my thinking is continually subject to distortion due to my condition, and I can't assume that all of my perceptions are accurate. 

Trying to switch practitioners is a difficult process in today's mental health treatment system. When in my position, if I have a viable practitioner, no one else will be willing to see me. And if I did switch, there is never a guarantee that the new person will be any better. 

We, as persons who have mind altering brain disorders, can't refuse treatment--it is not an option. We might be able to get away with it one or two times. If we relapse too many times, it takes a toll on brain condition and on our ability and permissions to live independently and with dignity. 

If we feel that a practitioner has given us a raw deal or bad treatment, we need to go through proper channels to address the problem. 

To change tack: When a scientist, pseudoscientist, and/or perpetrator intends to enact abusive practices, the first step is to dehumanize their intended victim. In the infamous and widely known Tuskegee Experiment, a large number of Black men were infected with syphilis without being informed of this. The doctors involved probably believed it was okay to do this because, in their warped thinking, they were dealing with Black people, not people. 

In my situation, as a mentally ill man I sometimes feel dehumanized because I carry the label "schizophrenic." 

Also, I sometimes feel criminalized; sometimes I am approached by people who feel the need to get in my face with accusations, when I've done nothing to that person, and may not have ever seen him or her before. Usually such a person, in their thinking, presumably wants to find out what wrongdoing I am up to. I'd like to know: where the heck does this come from? 


Jack Bragen is author of "Schizophrenia: My 35-Year Battle," and "Revised Short Science Fiction Collection of Jack Bragen" and lives in Martinez with his wife, Joanna Bragen.  


ECLECTIC RANT:On the Trump National Convention

Ralph E. Stone
Sunday August 30, 2020 - 09:47:00 AM

The Republican Party has become Trumps party. The Trump National Convention was Trumps attempt to rewrite the history of his failed presidency with a tsunami of untruths. It included a lot of speakers named Trump except, of course, his niece Mary L. Trump and his sister Maryanne Trump Barry. He is hoping the electorate will forget his habitual lying, adultery, fraud, misogyny, and racism.  

Trump had the gall to claim his mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic saved millions of lives,” conveniently forgetting that May 2020 estimates from Columbia University disease modelers show that if Trump had enacted social-distancing measures a week earlier than he did — in early March rather than mid-March — about 36,000 fewer Americans would have died. Thats more than one-third of the current death toll, which is rapidly approaching 180,000. If the measures had been taken two weeks earlier, on March 1, the death toll would be 54,000 lower. Trump didnt save millions;” rather his inaction cost the unnecessary deaths of thousands of Americans. The Conventions last nights crowded party at the White House was lacking of pandemic precautions: few masks and little social distancing. 

The Convention failed to mention the Trump Administrations zero tolerance” immigration enforcement policy, a cruel and immoral policy that separated children from their parents and placed them in jail-like cages. On January 18, 2020, The Los Angeles Times reported that the official government count of children separated from their parents or guardians under the family separation policy was 4,368. Instead, Trump presided over a naturalization ceremony, hoping to show that his administration was open to immigrants when his zero tolerance” immigration is anything but welcoming. The display was exploitive and hypocritical.. 

No Convention speaker mentioned the unchecked police brutality against people of color in this country, the peaceful protests, police reform, or the Black Lives Matter movement. Rather, the focus was on law enforcement, opposition to defunding the police, and those small group of individuals who turn peaceful protests into riots during which they destroy public and private property, loot stores, and where injuries often occur. Will this law and order focus resonate with voters? 

In short, If you put lipstick on a pig, its still a pig.”  

Notice there is no Platform as Trump never had a set of principals and the Republican Party lost theirs. Rather, Trump hopes to ride voter suppression to victory in November. 

In summary, the Conventions revisionist view of Trumps presidency was unconvincing. Trump is unfit to be president. Michelle Obama summed up his presidency nicely, "Donald Trump is the wrong president for our country. He has had more than enough time to prove that he can do the job, but he is clearly in over his head. He cannot meet this moment. He simply cannot be who we need him to be for us. It is what it is.”  

If you were paying attention these past four years, why then would anyone consider voting for this person without one iota of human decency? Unless, of course, you still live in Trump's alternative universe. 


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Saturday August 29, 2020 - 05:27:00 PM

Wake Me When It's Over

I've been having some odd encounters with sleepwalking lately. A by-product of aging, apparently. Most recently, I started dreaming that I had overheard someone outside the house trying to sneak inside, I responded by creeping to the door and making sure it was securely bolted.

That's when I woke up and found myself at the foot of the bed, trying to bolt down the controls on the bedroom TV.

And then there was the dream where I found myself beneath a towering metal derrick. A long cable on a pulley at the top of the tower suddenly snapped. The friction of the metal scrapping over the pulley began generating sparks. I realized that, if I didn't get out of the way, the heavy cable would fall straight on me. At the last minute, I rolled quickly to the left, avoiding certain doom.

And that's when I woke up to find myself on the floor next to the bed, clutching a broken alarm clock in my hand.

And, most dramatically, there was the night I dreamed I was in a James Bond flick, edging my way through a darkened factory when, suddenly, an assassin jumped out from behind a wall and prepared to strike. In a flash, I morphed from James Bond into Bruce Lee and executed a perfect, spinning, karate kick that sent the attacker sprawling.

And that's when I woke up to the sound of furniture crashing. Somehow, I had managed to kick over a wooden ladder propped against a nearby bunk bed. But this time, at least, I managed to stay beneath the covers.

I think I'm getting better at this but I'll understand if you have reservations about having me as an overnight guest. 

"I Have to Evacuate

I've been wondering how long it would take before someone I actually knew was swept up in the wreath-of-fire that's been encircling the Bay Area these past weeks. The answer came in an email on August 22, 2020. 

"My home office is in Sonoma County, California, and our area is threatened by a very dangerous wildfire. If you are reading this, I have been forced to evacuate and I will be offline for at least a few days. . . . I shall return." 

The message came from the managing editor of Reader Supported News whose name just happens to be . . . Marc Ash. 

Has Google Maps Gone to the Devil? 

Recently, while researching an article, I needed to identify a location in California. So I went to Google Maps, typed in the name of the nearest address, and clicked. The result looked like site had been hijacked by Beelzebub himself. It read: 

Headfi, Ave Dermentum, Onsectetur Adipiscing Tortor Sagittis, CA 880986. 

If that's supposed to be Latin, this is the best translation I've been able to find: Hail, Dermentum, onsectet importantly tormentor arrows. 

Google provided one added bit of spooky advice: "Just north of Gravesboro & South of Avocado Lake Park." 

We Can Dispense with Pence 

On August 26, Vice President Mike Pence offered his convention speech from the historic site of Fort Henry. “The hard truth is, you won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America,” Pence warned. “Under President Trump, we will always stand with those who stand on the Thin Blue Line.” As opposed to, one was left to surmise, those leftist rioters and people of color on the other side of The Line. 

On August 27, The Washington Post printed a critical summary titled "All the Glaring Contradictions in Mike Pence's Speech" but apparently failed to fact-check Pence's reference to "Dave Patrick Underwood, an officer in the Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Protective Service who was shot and killed during the riots in Oakland, California.” 

Pence directed his comments to Underwood's widow (prominently seated in the audience) and then proclaimed: "America will never forget or fail to honor officer Dave Patrick Underwood." 

But Pence outright lied when he implied that Underwood was killed by "leftist protestors." The truth was just the opposite. The man accused of killing Underwood turned out to be an active duty US Air Force sergeant named Steve Carillo, a fellow with links to the far-right extremist "Boogaloo Boys," a pro-Trump, white supremacist movement that has called for a "race war" in the US. 

Only a few media outlets managed to call Pence out on this lie. Kudos to the New York Times, Buzzfeed News, Vox, Democracy Now! and local TV station, ABC7 News

One especially chilling moment came when Pence appeared to "join the dark side." Quoting Trump, Pence declared: "Where Joe Biden sees America's darkness, we see America's greatness." Make America Great—And Dark—Again! 

Kenosha Killer Joins Trump in Photo-op 

The law-and-order 17-year-old charged with shooting and killing two people in Kenosha, Wisconsin, turns out to be a huge Trump fan. Kyle Howard Rittenhouse’s social media posts depict him posing with his personal arsenal amid pro-police “Blue Lives Matter” posters. He proudly posted his video footage from the Trump rally he attended in Des Moines, Iowa, on January 30. Photos and news footage of the event shows Rittenhouse in the front row, mere feet from Trump. Rittenhouse posted the video of his "Trump moment" on TikTok, but don't bother looking for it: it's been removed. 

EBMUD Comes Clean

The July-August edition of EBMUD's Customer Pipeline contained a wonderful list of all the trails available for physically-distanced hiking on the utility district's well-forested 57,000 acres. It also contained a presentation on "The Science of Water" that praised EBMUD for its well-deserved reputation as a trusted purveyor of clean tap water that performs "more than 20,000 lab tests each year" to assure water purity. The article concluded with the observation: "It's what's not in the water that makes it so wonderful." 

Sorry to be a killjoy, but there are two items in our water that EBMUD's Pipeline didn't mention. 

The water is fluoridated so it contains 0.7 parts per million of fluoride and is treated with chloramine, which is "safe for all pets"—unless your pet happens to be a goldfish

Going Postal 

A surprising number of US mail carriers have gone from hauling envelopes to households to becoming household names. Among those who later became famous was a twenty-some postmaster from New Salem, Illinois, named Abraham Lincoln. If Abe knew someone couldn’t make the hike to the post office, he'd carry the letter to them personally, even if that meant slogging off into a rainstorm. The National Geographic recently published a list of hard-charging postal workers who went on to greater fame. A longer USPS roster includes the following stamp-worthy pioneers: abolitionist John Brown, animator Walt Disney, writers William Faulkner and Richard Wright, actors Rock Hudson and Steve Carell, balladeers Brittany Howard and John Prine, politicians Adlai Stevenson and Harry S. Truman, and gold-medal-winning Olympic swimmer Shirley Babashoff. (So far, only 12 of the 27 notables listed have been commemorated on US postage stamps.) 

GOP or DEM: When Does Wall Street Do Well?  

Are Republicans or Democrats better for the stock market? A recent exercise in economic history (from 1926-2019 and covering 23 presidential elections) suggests that Wall Street's successes are generally non-partisan. According to the number-crunchers, the leaders who presided over the S&P 500's best growth years were: Cal Coolidge (30.57%), Gerald Ford (18.44%) and Bill Clinton (17.20%). 

The 46 years of Republican rule saw a 9.12% rate of return for the S&P 500 Index. During the 48 years of Democratic dominance, the S&P index galloped along at 14.94% per year. The study also reports that the stock market performs best when a president's party does not control Congress. 

Given the current deadlock in DC, it's hard to understand how a divided government can spur economic growth. What the study seems to be telling well-heeled investors is: Vote for Biden but spend your money to keep the GOP in control of the Senate. 

But, if you are a standard, poor person who's not heavily invested in Standard & Poor's, feel free to Ditch Mitch. 

 

EHS Is a Sensitive Issue 

Immediately after filing my previous column, I felt a bit uneasy about having described electromagnetic sickness as a "disorder." Sure enough, I heard from several readers who are electrosensitive. Their feedback follows. 

• "Thank you for recognizing that 'disorder' is a term that makes many of us cringe. Just referring to it as 'electrosensitivity' is most common, but different people have different preferences for self-identification. The official term is electro-hypersensitivity (EHS), but many of us who suffer from it don't much like that either." 

• "As someone who is also chemically sensitive (officially Multiple Chemical Sensitivity or MCS), I've never liked how the concept of 'sensitive' points to the problem being inside me, rather than the toxic agent that sickens me. Many of us in the MCS community refer to ourselves as chemically injured (I sometimes add, and 'sensitized' to connect it to the concept people understand more)."
• "I personally prefer to refer to myself electromagnetically injured, or as disabled by electromagnetic injuries." 

"I’ve also heard/read 'microwave radiation sickness' which I like because it’s self-explanatory and educational. EHS or 'EMF sensitivity' are the terms I’ve heard the most often. The general public still doesn’t know what EMF stands for [but] clearly understands microwave radiation sickness which also sounds more serious than a mere 'sensitivity.'" 

• "Another term some people like to use instead of EHS is 'microwave sickness,' which is what the military called it before the age of cell phones (back when they did their thousand studies in the 60s and 70s, primarily on the biological effects of radars). 

"I like that term because it makes it clear that we are sick because we've been injured by microwaves, rather than that we are hypersensitive." 

• "EMF sensitive, EHS, Electrically sensitive (ES) are the terms I use when explaining what I am dealing with. Power poles can have a lot of dirty electricity, which really triggers my electrical sensitivities." 

• "If you want to hear an excellent brief explanation of dirty electricity (aka Electromagnetic Interference [EMI]), Magda Havas talks about it in the following video (20:50 to 22:20). Magda (a researcher in Canada at the University of Trent) also refers to the condition as 'rapid-aging syndrome'…." 

End the Electoral College: Graduate to Real Democracy  

The New York Times recently asked "How Has the Electoral College Survived for This Long?" Part of the answer, the Times suggested, was that resistance to eliminating the Electoral College is firmly "connected to the idea of white supremacy." Harvard professor Alexander Keyssar makes the parallel point that perpetuating this undemocratic artifact is simply another way of exploiting Black Americans. 

The Constitution’s three-fifths compromise allowed racist Southern states to use the numbers of their disenfranchised and enslaved populations to boost the South's electoral power. This power was used to install pro-slavery presidents who denied Black people the right to vote. 

According to Abolish the Electoral College, this antiquated, anti-democratic system could give Donald Trump a second term — even if he loses the popular election by five million votes! 

While every Senate Democrat has agreed on the need to abolish the Electoral College, all 53 Republican senators are opposed. 

Mitch McConnell has spent decades denouncing the idea of returning to the popular vote, as spelled out by the Founding Fathers. Ted Cruz has dismissed the prospect of direct elections as “devastating.” Rand Paul agrees that the Electoral College is “less than democratic,” but he still supports it. 

On November 15, 2016, Representative Barbara Boxer introduced a proposal to abolish the Electoral College and reinstate the direct popular election of the President and Vice President—by voters in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. A National Popular Vote bill has been enacted into law in 16 states with 196 electoral votes (CA, CO, CT, DC, DE, HI, IL, MA, MD, NJ, NM, NY, OR, RI, VT, WA). At this point, the bill is just 74 votes short of having enough state support to go into effect. For more information, click on National Popular Vote

 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, August 30- September 6

Kelly Hammargren
Saturday August 29, 2020 - 05:24:00 PM

Worth Noting:

Eight City meetings are scheduled for the Week of August 30 – September 6.



Monday – The Council Agenda and Rules Committee 2:30 pm takes up most of the page with the proposed agenda for the September 15 City Council meeting. The Agenda packet is 328 pages. Item 31. No confidence vote includes police stop data that needs follow-up, Item 33. Defines the process for measuring square footage for property taxes, a subject of public comment from multiple Council meetings regarding the inaccuracy of property tax assessments.

Ashby and North Berkeley BART Community Advisory Group meets at 6 pm

Wednesday – The Homeless Services Panel of Experts 7 pm includes panel membership in item 6. “Panel has limited participation from people with lived experience at this time and [Panel] does not reflect racial/ethnic and income group makeup of people who experience homelessness in Berkeley.”



The DEIR scoping session for the Southside Zoning Ordinance is on the Wednesday Planning Commission agenda as a public hearing and also on the agenda for the Landmarks Commission on Thursday.



Sunday, August 30, 2020  

No City meetings or events found 

 

Monday, August 31, 2020 

Agenda and Rules Committee, 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/Policy_Committee__Agenda___Rules.aspx 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82373336588 

Teleconference: 669-900-6128 Meeting ID: 823 7333 6588 

Agenda Planning for 9/15/20 Regular City Council Meeting: RECESS: 1. Contract $180,000 with Orsolya Kuti, DVM for on-site veterinary services for BACS 2. Contract add $225,000 total $870,304 Measure P Funds with Downtown Streets for low barrier Volunteer Work, CONSENT: 3. 3-year Lease agreement with Berkeley Food Network 1001 University, 4. Ordinance Outdoor Commerce on Private Property, 5. 2nd reading Rezone Rose Garden Inn, 6. Measure T1 Loan $1.2 million ($600,000 Parks Fund, $600,00 Measure BB) in FY 2021 to complete Phase 1 projects, 7. Minutes, 8. Renaming ‘East’ Shattuck to Kala Bagai Way, 9. Civil Enforcement Face Covering Orders, - administrative citations, 10. RFP, 11. Memorandum $775,000 7/1/19 – 6/30/2021 between City of Berkeley and Alameda Co Behavioral Health Care Services for Mental Health Wellness Center, 12. Block Grants CARES Act Funds $373,097, 13. Amend Contract $15,000 total $90,000 thru 6/30/22 with Eikenberg Institute for Relationships to fund Cultural Humility Training Consultant, 14. Amend Contract by $6000 total $82,771 7/1/17 – 6/30/2021 for VoIP, 15. Amend Contract by $51,698 total $146,906 7/1/14 – 6/30/23 with MC Dean Inc for ERMA Uninterrupted Power Supplies (UPS) Maintenance, 16. Amend Contract add $200,000 total $5,905,668 with Mar Con Builders for Live Oak Seismic Upgrade, 17. MOA $290,000 up to $390,000 for Construction of Gilman Sanitary Sewer Line Extension for fieldhouse restroom at Tom Bates Regional Sports Complex, 18. PO TYMCO, Inc for Regenerative Air Sweeper $165,000 19. EBRPD supporting renaming Vollmer Park, 20. Resolution No Police Revolving Door, 21. Oppose Proposition 20 on Ballot which authorize felony charge for repeat petty theft and tougher penalties for parole violations, expand DNA collection, ACTION: 22. Amend 2020-2025 Consolidated Plan accept CARES Act Funds $8,259,408, 23. Annual Housing Pipeline Report (Housing) 24. Contract add $25,000 total $75,000 extend 1 yr with Ascentis Corporation for Biometric Time Card Services, 25. Urgency Ordinance COVID-19, 26. Voting Delegates League of CA Cities, 27. 100% Sustainable Trips by 2040, 50% by 2030, 28. Relinquishments and grants from Councilmember office budgets, 29. Healthy Checkout, 30. Extend Grace Period to 1/1/21for Fair Chance Housing, 31. Vote of No Confidence in Police Chief, 32. Support Vision 2025 for Sustainable Food Policies forming an advisory body on sustainable food policies, Climate Friendly Food Purchasing, reduce 50% animal-based food with plant-based food, 33. Amend Berkeley’s Tax Measures and Restore Tax Equity by Changing Square Footage thru Comprehensive verification process, 34. Centennial Proclamation Honoring 19th Amendment and Women’s Suffrage Movement, 35. Resolution congratulating Kamala D. Harris, 36. Resolution accepting $15,000 grant from UC Berkeley Chancellor’s Community Partnership Fund for paid Internships, INFORMATION REPORTS: 37. City Council Short Term Referral Process – Quarterly Update, 38. FY 2021 Civic Arts Grants, 39. Audit Berkeley Public Library Tax Funds, Referred Items for Review 8. Impact of COVID-19 on Meetings, 9.a.&b. Compiling Homeless Commission Recommendations, 10. Council Rules of Procedures Section C-1 and G-1 such that submitted items from Mayor & Councilmembers go directly to agenda instead of committee, 11. Resolution incorporate 1 minute 46 sections, Unscheduled Items: 12 Commission Reorganization, 13. Expanding Community engagement within work to address Climate Impacts, 14. BERA to prohibit Officeholder Accounts. (packet 328 pages) 

 

Ashby and North Berkeley BART Community Advisory Group, 6 – 8 pm 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/bartplanning/ 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94464446137?pwd=QkF4ZGtQc2I2eTRSRDhVYlovbldEdz09 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 944 64446137 Passcode: 638245 

Community Meeting #1 - Agenda not posted 

 

Tuesday, September 1, 2020 

No City meetings found 

 

Wednesday, September 2, 2020 

Board of Library Trustees, 6:30 pm 

https://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/about/board-library-trustees 

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86042306505 

Teleconference: 669-900-9128 Meeting ID: 860 4230 6505 

Agenda Action: III.A. Audit of Library Tax Fund, B. Onboarding New Library Director 

 

Homeless Services Panel of Experts, 7 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/98911895695 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 989 1189 5695 

Agenda: 6. Discussion and possible action on meeting schedule, reporting and membership 

 

Planning Commission, 7 – 10 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/99383729919 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 993 8372 9919 

Agenda: 9. Public Hearing: Southside Zoning Ordinance and Draft EIR Scoping Session, 10. ZORP (Subcommittee of ZAB and Planning) Phase 1 – Baseline Zoning Ordinance, 11. Public Hearing Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) General Plan Amendment, 

 

Police Review Commission Subcommittee on Police Acquisition & Use of Controlled Equipment Ordinance, 12 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87979306346 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 879 7930 6346 

Agenda: Proposed Ordinance, 

 

Thursday, September 3, 2020 

Landmarks Preservation Commission, 7 – 11:30 pm 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/landmarkspreservationcommission/ 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/93469370475 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 934 6937 0475 

Action: 5. Notice of Preparation of Draft EIR for Southside Zoning Ordinance 

2277 Shattuck – Structural Alteration Permit – Hezlett’s Silk Store Building 

2019 Blake Advisory Comments 

2601 Derby – Landmark or Structure of Merit Initiation 

 

Public Works Commission, 7 – 10 pm 

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

Videoconference: not post 

Teleconference: not posted Meeting ID: 

No agenda posted check after Monday 

 

Housing Advisory Commission, 7 – 9 pm 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/Housing_Advisory_Commission/ 

The Housing Advisory Commission is listed on the Community Calendar as meeting, but there is no agenda or indication of a pending meeting on the HAC website so this is likely an automatic posting that has not been canceled, check after Monday 

 

Friday, September 4, Saturday, September 5, and Sunday, September 6,  

No City meetings or events found 

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Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

1346 Ordway, 10/13/2020 

Notice of Decision (NOD) and Use Permits With End of Appeal Period 

1575 Allston 9/8/2020 

2716-18 Durant 9/1/20 

3116 Ellis 9/1/2020 

2956 Hillegass 9/1/2020 

3053 Hillegass 9/15/2020 

832 Peralta 9/8/2020 

1531 Summit 9/1/2020 

2870 Webster 9/1/2020 

91 Whitaker 9/8/2020 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Planning_and_Development/Land_Use_Division/Current_Zoning_Applications_in_Appeal_Period.aspx 

 

LINK to Current Zoning Applications https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Planning_and_Development/Land_Use_Division/Current_Zoning_Applications.aspx 

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WORKSHOPS 

Sept 29 – Zero Waste Priorities, Vision 2050 

Oct 20 – Update Berkeley’s 2020 Vision, BMASP/Berkeley Pier-WETA Ferry 

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Presentation from StopWaste on SB 1383 

Berkeley Police Department Hiring Practices (referred by Public Safety Committee) 

Systems Realignment 

Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update, 

 

Previously Schedules and Unscheduled Items Removed From Lists 

Sept 22 – Navigable Cities, Crime Report (per Mayor Arreguin the Crime Report will be rescheduled to a regular City Council meeting, the date is not available. The last crime report was in March 2019) 

Ohlone Territory 

 

 

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To Check For Regional Meetings with Berkeley Council Appointees go to 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/City_Council__Committee_and_Regional_Body_Appointees.aspx 

 

To check for Berkeley Unified School District Board Meetings go to 

https://www.berkeleyschools.net/schoolboard/board-meeting-information/ 

 

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

http://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html and in the Berkeley Daily Planet under activist’s calendar http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com 

 

When notices of meetings are found that are posted after Friday 5:00 pm they are added to the website schedule https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html and preceded by LATE ENTRY 

 

If you wish to stop receiving the Weekly Summary of City Meetings please forward the weekly summary you received to kellyhammargren@gmail.com