The Week

New Mural is Berkeley's Biggest
Gar Smith
New Mural is Berkeley's Biggest
 

News

UC Data Attack Risks Personal Information

Bay City News Service
Thursday April 08, 2021 - 10:47:00 PM

Staff and students at the University of California at Berkeley and other UC campuses statewide are being advised to take immediate steps to protect their personal information, including credit and identity theft monitoring, in the wake of a national cyberattack announced last Wednesday. -more-


The American Dream is dying a slow death in California

Bob Silvestri
Monday March 29, 2021 - 03:23:00 PM

It’s easy to become numb to warnings about the future, these days. Every minute of every day the mainstream media bombards us with shrieks about some new “crisis” or another “war on…” whatever, to the point of exhaustion. However, every once in a while, the fire drill is for real.

This week, I watched an extraordinary analysis of two new California housing laws coming up for a vote in Sacramento: SB-9 and SB-10. The presentation was the work of Maria and Jeff Kalban, the founders of United Neighbors in Sherman Oaks, California. It would be an understatement to say that, if passed, this legislation will bring about the biggest changes to zoning law and city planning in California, in the past 100 years… and none of it for the better. -more-


Help Save People's Park

Sunday March 28, 2021 - 11:32:00 PM

Please help save People's Park! Please sign the open letter below! (And if you'd like to read a short history of People's Park in the 1960s, please see: Unforgettable Change: 1960s: People’s Park Fights UC Land Use Policy; One Dead, Thousands Tear Gassed | Picture This (museumca.org) ).

So, if you're okay with signing, please let the People's Park Committee know by emailing them ASAP, at: peoplesparkhxdist@gmail.comPlease include your "affiliation" -- and if you're a Berkeley resident, UC alumnus, or hold an advanced degree, please include that too. Also, if you can forward this message to others who might consider signing, that will also be a great help! (Especially Berkeley residents, those who hold advanced degrees, and UC alumni or faculty). -more-


Opinion

Editorials

Happy Spring

Becky O'Malley
Saturday April 03, 2021 - 07:47:00 PM

The calla lilies are in bloom again. It's hard to believe that a whole year has drifted past us since last they bloomed, and that it might soon be possible to get on with our lives. Young people will soon be eligible for vaccinations, and then we can all finally breathe a sigh of relief. The Spring holidays in many religions which celebrate renewal, rebirth, rescue and resurrection are upon us, and many families are gingerly rejoining one another (with proper precautions of course). In light of all this, we taking Easter mostly off, though I will try to find time to post the submissions which have come in from our esteemed contributors. Happy Spring Days to everyone, religious, spiritual and cynical alike! -more-


Public Comment

Spare People's Park: an Open Letter to the UCB chancellor, the mayor of Berkeley , State Legislators, the Regents of the University of Californa and the Governor of California

Sunday April 04, 2021 - 05:45:00 PM

No northern city was more affected by the great social and cultural movements of the ‘60s than Berkeley and no event in Berkeley history brought together more of the diverse forces of that era than the conflict over People’s Park in 1969. That is why the park is designated as a landmark by the City of Berkeley and the State of California and is deemed eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.

And that is why the People’s Park Historic District Advocacy Group and the undersigned call upon the University of California to work with the Berkeley community to protect and enhance People’s Park. Just as the nation preserves the great battlefields of the Civil War of the 1860s, so should it preserve places like People’s Park that commemorate the great social and cultural conflicts of the 1960s.

Instead, the university proposes to destroy the park in order to build a 17-story student housing structure. UC argues the destruction of the park is necessary to respond to its housing shortage, yet the university has identified several other possible sites for student residences. Of all the jurisdictions dealing with the Bay Area’s regional housing crisis, only UC Berkeley proposes to destroy a public park of national historic importance. UC’s development plan would also destroy the view from the park and overshadow the surrounding other distinguished local, state and national landmarks, e.g., Maybeck’s Christian Science First Church. -more-


UC’s Plan for Berkeley Gridlock

Charles Siegel
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 05:26:00 PM

University of California Long-Range Development Plan (LRDP) increases the number of employees and students dramatically but does nothing new to shift them out of their automobiles. The result will obviously be gridlock, but UC’s Environmental Impact Report (EIR) takes advantage of a technical change in California environmental law that lets it ignore the congestion that the plan will create.

According to the EIR, the number of UC students and employees will increase by a bit more than 20% (Table 15-7), and the amount of automobile traffic generated will also increase by about 20% (Tables 15-4 and 15-9). All the added cars would obviously make Berkeley’s streets more dangerous for everyone, would worsen traffic congestion throughout the city, and would create gridlock at a number of intersections in downtown,

Until recently, the EIR would have had to analyze the effect of all these extra trips on congestion, which planners call the Level of Service (LOS) of intersections. But a recent law, SB743 passed in 2013, says that EIRs must now analyze the Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) that projects generate rather than the Level of Service at nearby intersections. -more-


GITMO Prisoner Released After 14 years

Tejinder Uberoi
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:52:00 PM

The U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, the graveyard of empires, is a tragic tale. Sadly, our politicians are not students of history and their actions invariably play to their domestic audience. Following the attack on 9/11, the U.S. military and the C.I.A followed the playbook of previous wars and used overwhelming force to catch and kill their illusive enemy, Osama Bin Laden and his followers. America even pressured our NATO allies to join the fight. Twenty years later the new Biden administration understands there is no easy path forward. The Taliban are convinced they have the upper hand. If America withdraws its forces it will be yet another humiliating defeat for the “great Satan” and red meat for the Republicans. If U.S. forces stay, more Americans and Afghans will surely die. -more-


The US Military’s Bloated Budget

Jagjit Singh
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:48:00 PM

While our politicians continue their routine diatribe against the Chinese military threat, a recent report revealed the United States has nearly 20 times the number of nuclear warheads than China. It dwarfs China’s tonnage of warships at sea including 11 nuclear-powered aircraft carriers compared to China’s less sophisticated, two. It has 2,000 modern jet fighters than China’s 600. The US deploys its vast military power across some 800 overseas bases compared to China’s three. The US triples China’s military budget of $250 billion.

The former British colonial power adopted a two-tier standard at the height of its power when it ruled a quarter of the world’s population. The government mandated that its Royal Navy had to be twice as large as its next two competitors to ensure dominance at sea.

U.S. military spending remains larger than the next 10 countries combined, six of which are close American allies. Makes sense? America's intelligence budget alone around $85 billion, is much larger than Russia's total defense spending and has a long history of insidious, destabilizing covert operations.

So what does America show for its outsize military spending? It suffered a humiliating defeat in Vietnam poisoned Vietnam, and neighboring Laos and Cambodia with millions of gallons of the dioxin, Agent Orange and littered the landscape with landmines. Unexploded ordinances are the major cause of devastating injuries to children. Multi-general birth defects have occurred in all three countries. The US offered no apologizes or reparations. Many US vets complained of serious illnesses returning home from Vietnam.
Vice-President Cheney and his “junior partner”, President GW Bush “the decider” invaded Afghanistan in 2001 after the 9/11 attacks and are still hunkered down in the mother of all quagmires facing another humiliating defeat in spite of spending at least 10,00 percent more than the Taliban. If they quit they will invariably face the wrath of Republicans, if they stay more Afghans and Americans will surely die. Meanwhile prisoners languish at GITMO without trial, brutally tortured in black sites, victims of Bush-Cheney’s war of terror. Each prisoner costs the US taxpayer $13million each year. Why? Because America never admits it’s appalling mistakes.

Buoyed by his “success” invading Afghanistan the Cheney-Bush duo invaded Iraq accusing Saddam Hussein of hiding weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Saddam’s elite guard were dismissed without pay and seething with anger coalesced and formed ISIS. Well done George and Dick! In a perfect world you would be charged with war cries. Meanwhile the US military and the CIA continue to be rewarded with obscene budget increases. They now swallow 64.5 percent of discretionary spending! A new cold war is rapidly emerging with China and Russia which will be used to justify $trillions more $’s being squandered. Meanwhile, cyber-attacks have caught America totally unprepared and will take months and $billions to recover.

Defense contractors will continue to manufacture their killing machines and through their armies of lobbyists in Congress will ensure sales to despotic regimes like the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt will continue. The spiritual law of karma is rapidly descending on America. Democracy is under great threat and mass killing continues to be hostage to the archaic Second Amendment.

Christians have long abandoned their savior and replaced him with the new messiah, Donald Trump who still continues to snarl and growl, even in defeat. Good Samaritan Acts of kindness such as handing water and food to voters standing in line are outlawed in states like Georgia. America has long lost its moral compass and is rapidly descending into darkness.

-more-


Twisting the Law

Steve Martinot
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:08:00 PM

The trial of Derek Chauvin is getting started. The press writes articles searching for ways to say something unimportant about it. On Sunday, 3/28, an article in the SF Chronicle wonders if a “snap decision” defense would work, or would the defense be better off with a “trying to do his job well” approach. Six paragraphs go by that way, without ever mentioning that Floyd had already been arrested and was in handcuffs when killed. He was killed in custody. After a decade of massive demonstrations against police brutality, they continue to kill people in custody in the open. How blind does one have to be to suggest one should trust the police? Wouldn’t that be the height of irrationality? -more-


Ricochet: An Invitation to Help Finish Jeff Adachi's Final Film

Gar Smith
Friday April 02, 2021 - 03:36:00 PM

The sudden, untimely death of San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi left a legacy of memories, achievements, and unfinished projects—including a half-finished documentary film. While Adachi was best known for his legal efforts he was also respected for his work as a filmmaker.

Adachi's film documentaries include: The Slanted Screen: Asian Men in Film and Television (2006); You Don't Know Jack: The Jack Soo Story (2009); Racial Facial (2016); and Defender (2017).

Defender documented Adachi's real-life struggle to defend a young African-American man charged with assaulting the police after he was falsely accused of a crime. The film also details the public defender's struggle to represent hundreds of poor immigrants caught up in deportation proceedings.

When Adachi died, he was wrapping up Ricochet, his latest film. Ricochet tells the story of a tragic killing that rocked San Francisco and became a national sensation. -more-


Agent Orange Aftermath

Jagjit Singh
Monday March 29, 2021 - 02:45:00 PM

When Joe Biden called Putin a killer, it brought back memories of the Vietnam War. On arriving to the US in 1967 I was swept up in the drama of the mandatory draft and rioting on college campuses opposing the war. I must confess I was puzzled why America declared war on Vietnam which was just recovering from the yoke of French colonialism. In the communist hysteria at the time this struggle was interpreted by the American political elite as Vietnam’s embrace of communism and therefore presented an existential threat to the US and its allies. This was an easy sell to most Americans except many college students and the Rev. King who spoke eloquently against the war.

In attempting to bring a speedy conclusion to the war the US military, and the CIA used everything in its arsenal with no concern of the enormous collateral damage that would occur to the Vietnamese peasants, American soldiers and later to the people of Laos and Cambodia. B52 bombers continued their saturation bombing around the clock. Cluster munitions and chemical weapons, such as the dioxin Agent Orange, and napalm were used in large quantities on a predominately civilian population raising the spectre of war crimes and genocide. -more-


One Month Unanticipated Delay in Stimulus Payments for Seniors and Disabled is Potentially Devastating

Jack Bragen
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 06:15:00 PM

For millions of disabled Americans who do not file tax returns because we live on disability benefits, the third stimulus payment hasn't yet arrived in our bank accounts.

The federal government under the Biden-Harris Administration is in its early stages of being put together. They've probably had to rebuild many, many things from the ground up--this is because the Trump was too busy golfing and trying to stage a coup to attend to running the U.S. Government.

However, it was a relatively simple task for the Social Security Administration to hand over records to the IRS, so that the payments for disabled and seniors, which happen to be those in the most fragile positions, so that we could be paid. The one-month delay, when we were essentially promised otherwise, could have devastating effects on many, who may have banked on getting this much needed money.

I borrowed eighty dollars from my brother, and that's the limit of it. This is because I had my doubts of whether things would transpire as promised. Yet, there could be thousands of people living on Social Security and/or SSI who believed the government would deliver what was promised, when it was promised, and who may have banked on this. This could lead to falling out the bottom trapdoor built into society, a door that leads to homelessness and/or incarceration, and/or death. Is there an ulterior motive? It would be paranoid to believe that. But is there?

Our system seems to be designed with some built in boobytraps. For example, overdraft on bank accounts. If you do not keep a hawk's eye on banking, and if you are poor, it becomes a real possibility that your account could become overdrawn, leaving you without enough money to pay rent. This is because any overdraft invokes massive fees.

A generalized example: not knowing and following the various laws that can get you in trouble. As soon as you have an arrest record, you are unable to do a number of things. This is partial exclusion, and it may prevent being able to secure adequate employment.

There are many ways that society has for ejecting people. The one-month delay in the stimulus money qualifies as one of those ways. -more-


Columns

THE PUBLIC EYE:Whatever Happened to Personal Responsibility?

Bob Burnett
Friday April 02, 2021 - 03:32:00 PM

It may be hard to imagine but, a couple of decades ago, Republicans described themselves as "the Party of personal responsibility." The Grand Old Party imagined itself as the Party of rugged individualists, folks who clawed their way to the top with an unstoppable combination of ambition, perseverance, and moral rectitude. Republicans claimed the moral high ground. No more.

In the last year, we've seen Donald Trump, and his Republican cohorts, dodge responsibility for the Coronavirus pandemic and for the January 6th insurrection. Each of these actions was shameful and should be sufficient to tarnish the GOP for decades.

In every regard, Donald Trump mismanaged the pandemic. When he left office, at noon on January 20th, he was responsible for 25 million U.S. Covid-19 cases and 400,000 related deaths. It's an understatement to say that Trump did a terrible job; it's more accurate to say that he made a bad situation much, much worse. The prestigious medical journal Lancet (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)32545-9/fulltext) recently observed: "Trump's mismanagement of the COVID-19 pandemic—compounded by his efforts to dismantle the USA's already weakened public health infrastructure and the Affordable Care Act's (ACA) coverage expansions—has caused tens of thousands of unnecessary deaths. His elimination of the National Security Council's global health security team, and a 2017 hiring freeze that left almost 700 positions at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) unfilled, compromised preparedness... The number of people without health insurance had increased by 2·3 million during Trump's presidency, even before pandemic-driven losses of employment-based coverage increased the number of uninsured people by millions." -more-


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Equality and Care for Mentally Ill People

Jack Bragen
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:44:00 PM

We with psychiatric disabilities have some of the hardest lots in life. These diseases will attack a person from deep within. When consciousness is compromised from the ground up, you should know life can't be easy. At the same time, mentally ill people don't get treated well by most of the public. Most people do not have empathy for mentally ill people, and view us as sick, dangerous, and/or dishonorable. -more-


ECLECTIC RANT:The Latest But Not the Last Mass Shootings

Ralph E. Stone
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:40:00 PM

On March 16, eight people were killed, including six Asian-Americans, at three massage parlors in the Atlanta area. The shooter purchased the handgun legally the same day as the shootings. On March 22, ten people were killed, including one police officer, at a supermarket in Boulder, Colorado. The shooter used an assault weapon he purchased less than a week earlier. On March 28, a gunman killed his parents, two others at a convenience store, and then himself near Baltimore. On March 31, four people, including a child, were killed at an office complex in Orange, California. -more-


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 12:00:00 PM

Now in the Works: Berkeley's Biggest, Block-long Mural

A majestic new mural is being created in West Berkeley on the north wall of the Community Energy Services Corp—near the intersection of Carleton and Ninth. The block-long expanse provides the backdrop for a huge parking lot built to serve Kaiser Permanente's new Berkeley facility, which is set to open in May.

Since the mural is near my West Berkeley office, I've watched it slowly evolve from a vast, black-and-white sketch into a blossoming montage of spray-painted images depicting messages of health and healing. Although I drive by the project every morning and evening, I never spotted the crew of painters responsible for the work.

On Wednesday, I got lucky. I met the entire crew. His art-world name is Desi Mundo.

Mundo explained that he's been working on the wall—all alone and without assistants—for several months and hopes to be finished sometime in May.

The project is being sponsored by KP and the message behind the art is appropriately "Thrive-worthy." As Mundo explained, the images depict the world's fundamental healing sources—sunshine, clean air, clear water, trees, food, music, dance, companionship, natural medicine, traditional healers, and modern doctors.

Mundo was relaxed and affable, referring to detailed illustrations on an electronic tablet before reaching for various cans of spray paint and adding six-inch-long updates to the 30-foot-tall canvas. He revealed that he is a teacher at the Oakland Unity Middle School and is Artist-in-Residence at Freemont High. Mundo kindly agreed to be photographed—but only while wearing his protective breathing apparatus.

While Michelangelo had assistants who helped paint the Sistine Chapel, Mundo is going it alone. But he has one advantage Michelangelo lacked—his own mechanized cherry-picker crane to lift him into position to paint the upper reaches of his monumental mural. -more-


A Berkeley Activist's Diary

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday April 04, 2021 - 05:25:00 PM

“Life is lived looking forward and understood looking backward,” Reverend James Reynold Anderson.

Tuesday evening was the Berkeley City Council’s meeting, and this is where history gives insight to the action taken by Mayor Arreguin.

On November 12, 2019, the city council passed the Bird Safe Berkeley Requirements Ordinance as a referral to the Planning Commission and the City Manager to consider-and that is where it has been sitting for sixteen months, sixteen months of inaction while construction of multi-story mixed-use buildings continues at a feverish pace, buildings that need bird-safe glass to protect a bird population in decline. Consider this; North America has lost 2.9 billion birds since 1970. Birds crashing into glass causes the death of an estimated 600 million birds annually nationwide.

The work to get the Bird Safe Ordinance into the November 12, 2019 council agenda began with a presentation by the Audubon Society February 14, 2019 at the Community Environmental Advisory Commission (CEAC). This was followed with five months of committee work at CEAC to develop the Bird Safe Berkeley Ordinance. The proposed ordinance was passed by CEAC June 13, 2019 and sent to council to sit another five months before making it into the council November 12, 2019 agenda. -more-


THE PUBLIC EYE: What’s Wrong With the GOP?

Bob Burnett
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 12:02:00 PM

A recent Gallup Poll found that Americans, in general, are happy with the Biden Administration. Except for Republicans. Another poll indicated that most of us want to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Except Republicans. What's wrong with the GOP? -more-


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Post Election and Pandemic Symptoms

Jack Bragen
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 05:37:00 PM

Emerging from depression is an uphill battle. After a bout with psychosis, often a patient will experience depression. We may mistakenly believe the symptoms of depression are caused by being medicated with antipsychotics. However, this is mostly not so. When we return to tracking reality, the brain needs an extended recovery period, and part of that may include being depressed. The reader should realize that this depression will eventually clear up. -more-


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 06:10:00 PM

Teachable Moments at Trader Joe's -more-


The Activist's Diary, Week ending March 28

Kelly Hammargren
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 09:37:00 PM

From the week that is just ending, the big event was Thursday and not much else mattered. -more-


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, April 4-11 2021

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday April 03, 2021 - 07:40:00 PM

Worth Noting:

The Agenda Committee is still meeting even though City Council is on spring recess from March 31- April 19. Please note that the link to the board/commission/committee webpage is at the end of the agenda instead of below the meeting title. This change is in response to a recommendation that it will make the zoom links to the meetings easier to read. Monday Agenda Committee meets at 2:30. https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89090619617

The deadline for completing the review of the Commission Reorganization is April 19. It is unknown whether the committee will take up the reorganization discussion during this council recess meeting, but it is best to be prepared and attend.

Tuesday – PRC Subcommittee on Warrant Service Policy meets at 6:30 pm. https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84233073529

Wednesday – Planning Commission meets at 7 pm. https://zoom.us/j/95984363204 Anyone who considers the ADU at 2915 Harper hideous (my walk partner’s one-word description) should plan on attending the hearing on Amendments to the ADU Ordinance at the Planning Commission. It is agenda item 9.

Thursday – Reimagining Public Safety Task Force meets at 6 pm. https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81983354907If you have a meeting you would like included in the summary of meetings, please send a notice to kellyhammargren@gmail.com by noon on the Friday of the preceding week.Sunday, April 4, 2021

Easter Sunday and last day of PassoverMonday, April 5, 2021

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


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, March 28- April 4

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Sunday March 28, 2021 - 05:30:00 PM

Worth Noting:

City Council spring recess starts March 31 and extends through April 19.

Sunday – 2 pm rally for Asian Americans at Aquatic Park organized by 7th graders. The Equity Summit is at 7 pm.

Monday – Deadline is at 5 pm to submit an application to be considered for the Police Accountability Board.

Tuesday – The Regular City Council meeting is at 6 pm. The last item on the agenda is The Rights of Nature.

Wednesday – The Homeless Commission meets at 6 pm. The South Berkeley Community safety Town Hall is at 7 pm.

Thursday – The UC Berkeley Long Range Development Plan is on the agenda at the Landmarks Commission. The Public Works Commission Agenda is not available until after Monday.

If you have a meeting you would like included in the summary of meetings, please send a notice to kellyhammargren@gmail.com by noon on the Friday of the preceding week.

Sunday, March 28, 2021 -more-