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News

People Living in Vehicles at Berkeley Marina Ordered to Move

Janis Mara (BCN)
Monday May 28, 2018 - 11:02:00 PM

People living in their vehicles at the Berkeley Marina left Marina Boulevard when ordered to do so by police this morning, one of the vehicle dwellers said this afternoon. 

The 20 to 25 people living in vehicles have relocated to the parking lot of the Hs. Lordships restaurant at 199 Seawall Drive, according to a vehicle dweller who goes by her first name, "Amber." 

"The police came and told everybody we had to leave right then or they would start towing peoples' homes, so we had to move as quickly as we could," Amber said.  

The vehicle dwellers were living in about a dozen large recreational vehicles lined up on Marina Boulevard. 

Most of them have moved to the Hs. Lordships parking lot. Hs. Lordships is closing July 2, according to the restaurant's website. 

Amber said she has heard that if the group doesn't leave the Hs. Lordships parking lot by 11 p.m., the vehicles will be towed. 

The officers said the vehicle dwellers had to move to get out of the way of construction, Amber said. 

Amber described the group of vehicle dwellers, who she said had lived at the Berkeley Marina for many months, as "an unintentional community." She said the community includes families with children. 

Berkeley police did not respond to a phone message and an email requesting comment by press time.


Beloved East Bay Restaurant Salute e Vita Closing Because of Rent Dispute

Janis Mara (BCN)
Saturday May 26, 2018 - 02:10:00 PM

One of Richmond's most beloved restaurants, Salute E Vita, run by a black woman immigrant known for her charitable activities, is closing because of a landlord-tenant dispute.

The waterfront restaurant, which has been open 25 years, is slated to close July 6. On July 5 and 6, proprietor Menbere Aklilu is offering a free meal at Salute in exchange for donations to benefit the 40 employees left jobless by the closure. 

"I will miss my loyal employees. I am successful because of them," Aklilu said in a telephone interview today. "It's about all of us."  

She added, "I am confident it will all work out for the best." 

Since taking over the restaurant 15 years ago, Aklilu provided more than 30,000 meals to homeless people and others in need, through annual Thanksgiving dinners and other events. Salute became a community hub, hosting the 2014 wedding reception of then-Police Chief Chris Magnus. 

Richmond Mayor Tom Butt announced the closing in his email newsletter, heaping praise on Aklilu, who goes by the nickname Menbe. 

"Menbe has not only become Richmond's best-known restaurateur but is also Richmond's best-known philanthropist, raising and donating hundreds of thousands (maybe millions) of dollars and services to homeless youth, and a shelter for girls in her native Ethiopia, to name a few beneficiaries," Butt said. 

In 2016, Aklilu was served a 30-day notice to vacate. 

"The community saved me," she said. "The people came to rally for me." 

More than 100 people, including Butt, showed up at a rally at the restaurant, and the Penterra Company under the leadership of Richard Poe rescinded the eviction notice. 

However, Aklilu has been running on a month-to-month lease for 11 years, she said. In his widely circulated newsletter, the mayor said the rent Aklilu was charged was "twice, or more, the comparable local market rent," leading to her giving up on the restaurant after running it for 15 years.  

In a phone interview, Poe said, "We tried to negotiate a lower-than-market rate rent with her (Aklilu)." 

He said the kitchen needed repairs and had outdated equipment, that the landlord agreed to replace the kitchen floor and that rent would go "up a little bit to cover the cost of repairs."  

Poe said Aklilu was unwilling to bear the cost of replacing the kitchen equipment. 

In a story familiar in the annals of immigrants, Aklilu, a native of Ethiopia, moved to the United States from Italy 23 years ago, a single mother and domestic violence survivor. 

"I was homeless. I lost my mother when I was 11 years old," Aklilu said. "My brother raised me. I gave birth to my son in the womens' shelter when I was in Rome. I came to America in 1995 with a young boy."  

Living in the Oakland projects, she got a job at Salute at $7 an hour. 

Aklilu worked at Salute under the previous owners as a hostess, working her way up to supervisor and manager. She bought the restaurant in 2002. 

"A lot of people didn't believe in me. 'Oh my God, Menbere Aklilu? A black woman and immigrant, and she wants to run this beautiful restaurant? She can't do it,'" Aklilu said. 

"But I did it," she said. "And I am proud of it." 

She added, "I am blessed, and there is no doubt in my mind I will be blessed again."


Opinion

Editorials

The Daily Planet Voting Guide
or a reasonable facsimile thereof

Becky O'Malley
Friday June 01, 2018 - 01:07:00 PM

From a long-time reader and contributor: “Voter Guide? Will the Planet offer one for June 5?”

Yes. Pertinent question. It seems to be June 1, with election day on Tuesday. Undoubtedly our most opinionated and confident readers have already returned their ballots, the written kind that used to be called absentees. But for the rest of us, the game is still in play.

The reader in question is someone I’d happily consult before making up my own mind. That’s how I do it myself—just asking around among people whose opinion I respect, and using the rough consensus of their opinions. I also look at the candidate’s claimed endorsements and try to avoid those candidates endorsed by people I don’t respect.

What I don’t do: Watch television. Watch ads on social media. Follow endorsements of the corporate press: San Francisco Chronicle, East Bay Times, East Bay Express (The Voice of the Cannabis Industry). I do look at what’s now called the San Francisco Bay Guardian endorsements, still orchestrated by my friend Tim Redmond, who was once the print Guardian editor and now edits 48hills.org. But I don’t follow even those slavishly.

Really, it’s a crap shoot, particularly for these June under-the-radar pseudo-primaries. I’m slowly realizing that this top-two system, which has been around since 2010, is a godsend to the big money neo-liberal crowd. The profile of such donors is broadmindedness on social issues coupled with a touching belief in the efficacy of markets on economic topics like for-profit charter schools and market rate housing development.

Even establishment Democratic party endorsements have a better record of producing effective candidates than top-two, though the two systems all too often echo each other. We have a great example of how the “top-two + DCCC” method works right here in California Assembly District 15, where one candidate (enough of her name already!) has both big-name big-Dem endorsers from out of town and “dark money” from a state PAC funded by the corporate finance crowd.

But we’ve complained about all this before, so on to the work at hand. Which candidate would give the corporate candidate a run for her money in the fall, and how about the other races? 

Here’s where I’m going, relying often on advice from the SFBG and Margot Smith of the Grey Panthers. If I’ve skipped something it’s likely I haven’t been able to find out enough to form an opinion. 

FEDERAL  

Senator: Kevin de Leon. As an old lady myself, I don’t like the ageist criticism of Feinstein, but on the other hand she’s always left a lot to be desired politically. 

Representative: Barbara Lee. Of course. 

STATE 

Governor: Delaine Eastin. It’s doubtful that she has a chance to get into the November primary, but the other two are Democrats-lite, each annoying in different ways. She’s got the best position on the important issues. One of the others will win in the end, maybe two for November—it doesn’t really matter which. 

Lieutenant Governor: Gayle McLaughlin. Again, one of the others will win, but here’s a Green Party protest vote you can feel good about. 

Attorney General: Dave Jones 

Secretary of State: Alex Padilla (SFBG) or Ruben Major (Margot) 

State Controller: Betty Yee  

State Treasurer: Fiona Ma 

State Superintendent of Public Instruction: Tony Thurmond  

State Assembly AD15: Jovanka Beckles, Here we’re looking for the anyone-else candidate to oppose the corporate Democrat Buffy Wicks in the top two race. I think I’ll vote for Beckles, who as an African-American immigrant gay women is the kind of candidate who should be representing this diverse district. I don’t think she’s perfect, and I think several others are fine, but she’s done a good job campaigning and would provide a vigorous contest in November. 

Judge: Tara Flanagan 

STATE PROPOSITIONS
68--YES--Parks and road improvement,
69--YES, Infrastructure repair
70--NO, raises passing votes on green expenditures from 50% to 66%.
71--YES, technical correction of legislation
72--YES, promotes water conservation 

ALAMEDA COUNTY 

Assessor: Phong La
Auditor: Irella Blackwood
District Atty: Pamela Price. Incumbent Nancy O’Malley (no relation) is better than many D.A.s, but I know of at least one case where her staff pursued a spite prosecution to ridiculous and expensive lengths before losing in court. Also, the two hit pieces I got from her campaign this week are scurrilous, truly disgusting and untrue, so I could never vote for her after seeing them. Price would push the office in new and positive directions. She probably won’t win, but she’s showing leadership on the issues.
Sheriff: WRITE IN "No Confidence” suggests Margot.

MEASURES 

I’m voting no on both Alameda County Measure A, sales tax for childcare and Regional Measure 3, increased bridge tolls. I think both are too vaguely drafted and might not end up paying for real programs but just for administration. They are both regressive, taxing the poor for things that should be paid out of general funds. 

Herewith the usual disclaimer: these recommendations are nothing more than my own somewhat informed opinion. It’s only Friday—I could change my mind before Tuesday. If you know something I don’t know, please write to opinion@berkeleydailyplanet.com about it. 

 

 


The Editor's Back Fence

New Schedule!

Friday May 25, 2018 - 12:27:00 PM

New issues will now be published on Saturdays and will be online until the next Saturday. If you'd like a preview of what's being posted, use the Next Issue button. Articles submitted mid-week can be added to the current issue if they're time-sensitive, but will be held for the next new issue if not. New editorials will be added mid-week and will run until the middle of the next week. If you don't want to miss anything, become a a subscriber by emailing subscribe@berkeleydailyplanet.com, which will put you on the list to get an email with new links as articles are added.


Public Comment

New: Gaza and the State of Exception

Joanna Graham
Monday May 28, 2018 - 05:11:00 PM

Over a five-week period (so far) the Israeli army, in full sight of a world viewership, has killed more than 100 and injured more than 13,000 unarmed demonstrators positioned behind a security fence and mostly several football fields away from the firing line (although some approached the fence). How can Israel do this and suffer no repercussions whatsoever? Perhaps to ask this is to ask how Israel can do what it does in Gaza all the time. 

Of course, the international status of Israel is unique, for many complicated reasons. But I believe there is also something unique about Gaza. 

I’ll ignore the clearly absurd word “clashes” as in the frequently repeated “border clashes” and focus on the word “border.” In political usage, “border” denotes the demarcation between contiguous sovereign states. Although Israel has unusual characteristics, I have no trouble granting that it is a sovereign state. But what, on the other side of the so-called “border,” is Gaza? 

Technically it and the West Bank comprise the Occupied Palestinian Territories (as designated by the UN), and there are rules governing occupations, including the requirement that the occupying power is responsible for the welfare of the occupied. However, a 51-year “occupation” stretches the meaning of the term almost beyond recognition, and Israel has never agreed to it anyway, calling the West Bank “the disputed territories” and—in the aftermath of Sharon’s 2005 unilateral “disengagement” from Gaza, when he withdrew both the settlers and the army—refusing to acknowledge that the strip is still occupied and part of the OPT. 

Oslo also muddied the waters by creating the Palestinian Authority, beginning a now-25-year-long fiction that “Palestine” is a state-in-waiting, generally treated as if it were an actual state—capable, for example, of negotiating (although it lacks any of the attributes of actual states, such as defined territory, sovereignty, and the capacity to defend itself): thus the fiction of “borders” which trips so lightly from so many tongues. 

Finally, a rupture between Hamas, which won the last election held in the Palestinian territories (in 2006) and Fatah, which controls the PA and the West Bank, left Gaza not only physically but also politically isolated. 

We should note also that Israel wants/intends to incorporate the West Bank, which it has now annexed in every way but formally, but does not want the Gaza Strip, which is basically a holding tank for nearly two million Palestinians, who do not need to be counted. As for Gaza’s offshore gas deposits, Israel simply takes them as it takes West Bank water. 

What then is Gaza? Many have described it as the world’s largest prison, and perhaps this is accurate, although since prisons exist (usually) within the territories of states, those confined within them enjoy—at least theoretically—the legal rights and protections to which citizens are entitled. 

I have tended towards the idea that Gaza exists permanently in a state of exception, or state of emergency, a concept originated by the German Carl Schmitt and explored most thoroughly by the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben. Agamben sees the entire Nazi period as a state of exception and the concentration camps in particular as places where the stripping of citizenship and the rights thereof which the state of exception permits was enacted. 

In Black Earth: the Holocaust as History and Warning, historian Timothy Snyder argues that before Jews could be killed, they had to be deprived of citizenship, and to accomplish that, state structures had to be dismantled. Wherever states remained intact, mass murder did not occur. 

About President George W. Bush’s November 2001 military order, Agamben has written, “What is new about President Bush’s order is that it radically erases any legal status of the individual, thus producing a legally unnameable and unclassifiable being. Not only do the Taliban captured in Afghanistan not enjoy the status of POWs as defined by the Geneva Convention, they do not even have the status of people charged with a crime according to American laws.” 

In Spiral: Trapped in the Forever War, Mark Danner also posits the “state of exception” to explain how the US government came to permit itself torture after 9/11, arguing, sadly, that while President Bush imposed the state of exception, President Obama normalized it. 

This stripping of protective legal status which political thinkers struggle to define has happened, I would argue, to the people confined to the Gaza Strip, not suddenly through a military order, but over time, through a succession of redefinitions which has left them “unnameable and unclassifiable”—with biological (“bare life”) but neither social nor juridical being. 

The writer of the leader in this past week’s issue of The Economist ignored all this highfalutin analysis and cut to the chase. He wrote: “Gaza is a human rubbish heap that everyone would rather ignore.” 

I think, by the way, The Economist is only partly right. Although Israel does not want 

Gaza, it has uses for it: as a shooting range [note 1]; a weapons testing ground [note 2]; and—perhaps—as a laboratory in which to discover just how far it can push slow genocide before the liberal democracies object. 

Note 1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyLzRv_kNXU 

Note 2. Saar Koursh, CEO of Magal Security Systems, Ltd., which built the Gaza fence, noted that Gaza has become a showroom for the company’s “smart fences,” as customers appreciate that the products are battle-tested. Bloomberg News, 4/10/2018.


New Report Finds San Francisco Voters Effectively Use Ranked Choice Voting -- and it’s Getting Better

Pedro Hernandez
Saturday May 26, 2018 - 11:18:00 AM

Voters find few challenges in using ranked choice voting ballot; more voters are ranking multiple candidates, while voter errors decline; new machines to allow improvements

SAN FRANCISCO – Ahead of San Francisco’s June 5 mayoral election, a report released today by FairVote California reveals that city voters interact effectively with ranked choice voting (RCV) ballots. Findings indicate that voters are increasingly ranking multiple candidates and that voter errors like skipped rankings and overvotes (when voters rank more than one candidate for each choice) are rare.

The report, which draws on data from elections that took place in San Francisco between 2004 – 2016, finds that city voters have used RCV ballots well from the start and more effectively each year. The report divides the elections into categories based on how competitive they were and analyzes the rates at which voters ranked candidates, the rates at which they skipped the election entirely, and voting errors. 

Voters have become more likely to rank second and third choices, while skipped rankings -- especially in competitive races with three or more candidates -- are rare and become rarer over time. Likewise, overvotes are rare, and issues with overvoting are comparable with non-RCV elections. 

“Ranked choice voting is a key narrative in this year’s competitive mayoral election in San Francisco, and this report shows that voters are easily able to use ranked choice voting to cast their votes,” said Pedro Hernandez, deputy director of FairVote California and an author of the report. “RCV allows San Franciscans to vote for the candidates they prefer as opposed to wasting time trying to figure out how to game the system, so their vote isn’t wasted.” 

The report also reviews the growing body of evidence on the impact of RCV on voter choice and voter turnout. Authors of the report also modeled cost-estimates savings for runoff elections, estimating that the city of San Francisco saved more than $10 million by electing leaders in one election. They also identify a sharp increase in electoral success by candidates of color in the 53 city offices elected by RCV in the Bay Area. 

“One way to understand the impact of RCV is to contrast the mayoral election in San Francisco with California’s current top-two system in place for state and federal elections,” Hernandez said. “Having eight mayoral candidates is not a problem when using RCV in San Francisco, but having only one vote with top-two sanctions vote-splitting and is less representative of the state’s electorate.” 

The report does provide evidence suggesting that RCV will work all the better with two changes that will be in place in 2019 due to leasing of new voting equipment: allowing voters to rank more than three candidates, and having a ballot design proven in other cities to make ranking more candidates easy. In its first mayoral elections this spring, Santa Fe, N.M. experienced a significant rise in turnout and nearly two-in-three voters choosing to rank all five mayoral candidates. 

The full report can be found here

Background
San Francisco has used RCV to elect 18 city offices: its Mayor, Board of Supervisors, and six other citywide offices since 2004. At least 14 other cities will be using RCV in upcoming elections, and Maine will be using it for statewide primaries in June. Using RCV permits voters to rank candidates on the ballot rather than voting for a single candidate, which can limit voter participation and contribute to an uneven playing field for diverse and underrepresented voices in cities like San Francisco. More information about ranked choice voting can be found here

# # # 



 


Gun Violence

Tejinder Uberoi
Friday May 25, 2018 - 01:04:00 PM

In the wake of yet another mass shooting in Texas, many Americans are asking, what will it take for Congress to restrict access to guns? The inconvenient truth is most lawmakers have a pervasive fear of the NRA and wish to maintain their charmed life style uninterrupted, a generous salary, Cadillac health care and virtually no accountability especially if they live in “safe” Congressional districts. 

A few offered the same insane remedy – arm the teachers! 

A terrifying statistic, 82 percent of teenagers are more likely to die from violence than their peers in the developed world. 

These apathetic, laissez- faire, attitudes need to change. 

Here are a few suggestions. 

1. Vote out any member receiving NRA funding. 2. Parents allowing their children access to firearms which are used in the commission of a crime must be regarded as accessories and charged a heavy fine commensurate with the gravity of the crime - and possible jail time. 3. Concerned citizens are urged to write or call the IRS and demand the NRA lose its 501©(3) non-profit status and pay back taxes from the date of their incorporation in 1975. 4. As John Paul Stevens, the eminent former Supreme Court Justice, opinioned recently in the New York Times, it is past time to repeal the Second Amendment which currently allows Americans to purchase unlimited quantities of weapons. 70 percent of Americans do not possess weapons which mean a majority of Americans are held hostage to the whims of a small minority.


Change In Work Schedule: When Did Your Employer Tell You?

Harry Brill
Friday May 25, 2018 - 12:56:00 PM

It is shameful that federal labor law does not include any provision that curtails the right of an employer to impose last minute changes on work schedules. So the lives of a substantial number of workers, particularly in food service and retail business, can become problematic because they do not receive sufficient notice. This neglect in the labor laws is particularly burdensome for women, who need a stable work schedule to plan how their children will be taken care of in their absence. Generally speaking, unpredictable schedules in low wage jobs interferes considerably with the ability of working woman, especially single parents, to care for their families.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 41 percent of hourly workers (ages 26-32) find out about their upcoming shifts a week or less in advance.

Working people need consistency in their lives. Many obligations and activities that working people engage in depends on knowing well in advance what their work schedule will be. They should not have to cancel an appointment with their doctor, for example, because the employer on very short notice changes their hours of work. And parents should not be shocked when they learn that their child sitter would be on vacation just when the new schedule takes effect. The Economic Policy Institute found that haphazard scheduling not only reduces job satisfaction. It increases work-family conflict.  

In the absence of federal legislation, it is up to the states and local communities to enact worker friendly scheduling laws. But only one state, Oregon, has done so. Employees must be given at least 7 days notice of their schedule. In July 2020 the notice period increases to 14 days. However, only employees who work in retail, hospitality, and food service companies with 500 employees worldwide are covered. Obviously, the vast majority of workers are not. Unfortunately, Oregon's law is essentially window dressing. 

In the Bay Area, only two cities require employers to notify employees of their schedule well in advance. --San Francisco and Emeryville. The San Francisco ordinance, which was enacted in 2014, requires employers to give their schedules to employees two weeks in advance. With regard to how many employees are covered, the law is stingy. It applies to workers at chain stores with at least 11 locations worldwide or that employ 20 or more employees and have 20 or more locations worldwide. Clearly the law benefits only a very small fraction of workers in San Francisco. 

Emeryville passed a scheduling ordinance that obligates far more businesses than the San Francisco law allows. All retail and food services businesses with at least 56 or more employees worldwide are covered under the law, which requires employers to provide employees an advanced scheduling notice of at least 14 days in advance. About applying the law only to firms with at least 56 employees, isn't that too high? Why not apply the law to businesses with half that number of employees? Nevertheless, by enacting a scheduling law that allows employees to plan their activities, Emeryville has moved in the right direction. 

It is very disappointing that very few cities in the United States have adopted a worker oriented scheduling law. Working people need not only decent wages, but humane working conditions, which protect employees against volatile working conditions. Employees should be able to plan their lives beyond work. But the local legislatures and mayors in the bay area cities have so far not been interested. However, a real possibility is that the progressive majority of the City Council in Berkeley will take up this issue. One council member, Kate Harrison, has already indicated her support for predictive scheduling legislation. 

 

Progressives and Labor unions in the various bay area towns must demand that their city councils act. And certainly organizations that represent women should be very concerned about and active on this issue. It is vital for all progressives to remind employers that working people are not things. That is, employees are not only the means to an employers' ends.  

 


Columns

DISPATCHES FROM THE EDGE: Iran: Sanctions & War

Conn Hallinan
Friday May 25, 2018 - 01:00:00 PM

The question is: has the Trump administration already made a decision to go to war with Iran, similar to the determination of the Bush administration to invade Iraq in the aftermath of the 2001 attacks on New York and Washington? 

Predictions are dicey things, and few human institutions are more uncertain than war. But several developments have come together to suggest that the rationale for using sanctions to force a re-negotiation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) is cover for an eventual military assault by the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia aimed at regime change in Teheran. 

As clueless as the Trump administration is on foreign policy, the people around the White House—in particular National Security Advisor John Bolton—know that sanctions rarely produce results, and unilateral ones almost always fail. 

Sanctions aimed at Cuba, North Korea, Iraq and Libya did not dislodge any of those regimes and, in the case of North Korea, spurred Pyongyang into producing nuclear weapons. Iraq’s Saddam Hussein and Libya’s Muammar al-Qaddafi were eventually overthrown, but by American firepower, not sanctions. 

The only case in which sanctions produced some results were those applied to Iran from 2010 to 2015. But that embargo was multi-lateral and included China, India, and one of Iran’s major customers, the European Union (EU). When the U.S. unilaterally applied sanctions to Cuba, Iran and Libya in 1996, the move was a conspicuous failure

This time around, the White House has made no effort to involve other countries. The Trump plan is to use the power of the American economy to strong-arm nations into line. Back our sanctions, threatens the administration, or lose access to the US market. And given that the world uses the dollar as its de-facto international currency, financial institutions may find themselves barred from using the Society for Worldwide Interbank Telecommunications (SWIFT), the American-controlled network that allows banks and finance centers to transfer money from country to county. 

Those threats have not exactly panicked the rest of the world. China and India, which between them buy more than 1 million of Iran’s 2.1 million barrels per day production, say they will ignore the sanctions. According to Federica Mogherini, the EU’s foreign affairs minister, “The European Union is determined to act in accordance with its security interests and protect its economic investments.” 

Adding up all the countries that will go along with the sanctions—including South Korea and Japan--will cut Teheran’s oil exports by 10% to 15%, nothing like the 50% plus that Iran lost under the prior sanctions regime. 

In short, the sanctions won’t work, but were they really meant to? 

It is possible that the White House somehow thinks they will—delusion is a characteristic of the Oval Office these days—but other developments suggest the administration is already putting in place a plan that will lead from economic sanctions to bombing runs. 

For starters, there is the close coordination between the White House and Tel Aviv. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s April 30 speech shortly before Trump withdrew from the Iran agreement was tailored to give Washington a casus belli to dump the agreement. Virtually all of what Netanyahu “revealed” about the Iranian nuclear program was old news, already known by US, Israeli and European intelligence services. 

Four days before Netanyahu’s speech Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman met with his American counterparts and, according to Al Monitor, got a “green light” for any military action Tel Aviv might take against Iran. 

The same day Liberman was meeting with the Pentagon, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompao told Saudi Arabia to end its campaign against Qatar because the Americans wanted the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) to be united around a campaign against Iran. 

Each of these moves seems calculated to set the stage for a direct confrontation with Iran involving some combination of the US, Israel and the two most aggressive members of the GCC, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The latter two are currently waging war on the Iranian-supported Houthis in Yemen. 

It is almost impossible to imagine what the consequences of such a war might be. On paper, it looks like a cakewalk for the anti-Teheran axis. Iran has an antiquated air force, a bunch of fast speedboats and tanks that date back to the 1960s. The military budgets of the US, Israel and the GCC are more than 58 times those of Iran. But, as the Prussian military theorist Karl von Clausewitz once remarked, the only thing one can determine in war is who fires the first shot. 

Military might does not translate into an automatic win. After almost 17 years of war, the US is still bogged down in Afghanistan, and it basically left Iraq with its tail between its legs. Indeed, the last time the American military won a war was in Grenada. As for the GCC, in spite of more than two years of relentless warfare in Yemen, the monarchs are no nearer victory than they were when the war started. And Hezbollah fought Israel to a stalemate in 2006. 

While Iran does not have much in the way of military force, it has 80 million people with a strong streak of nationalism who would certainly unite against any attacker. It would be impossible to “win” a war against Iran without resorting to a ground invasion. 

But none of Iran’s antagonists have the capacity to carry that out. The Saudis have a dismal military record, and the UAE troops are stalemated in their campaign to take Yemen’s capital, Saana from the rag-tag Houthi militia. The Israelis don’t have the troops—and, in any case, would never put them in harm’s way so far from home—and the Americans are not about to send in the Marines. 

Most likely this would be a war of aircraft and missiles to destroy Iran’s military and civilian infrastructure. There is little that Teheran can do to stop such an assault. Any planes it put up would be toast, its anti-aircraft weapons are obsolete, and its navy would not last long. 

But flattening Teheran’s military is not winning a war, and Iran has other ways to strike back. The Iranians, for instance, have shown considerable skill at asymmetric warfare in Iraq, Syria and Yemen, and it does have missiles. 

The real damage, however, will be the fallout from the war. The price of oil is already on the rise, and hostilities in the middle of one of the world’s largest petroleum repositories will likely send it through the roof. While that will be good for the GCC, high oil prices will put a dent into the economies of the EU, China, India, and even the US. 

What a war will almost certainly do is re-ignite Iran’s push to build a nuclear weapon. If that happens, Saudi Arabia will follow, and the world will be faced with several new nuclear powers in one of the most volatile regions of the world. 

Which doesn’t mean war is inevitable. 

The Trump administration hawks broke the JCPOA because they hoped Iran would then withdraw as well, giving the anti-Iranian axis an excuse to launch a war. Iranians are divided on this issue, with some demanding that Teheran re-start its uranium enrichment program, while others defend the agreement. Europe can play a key role here by firmly supporting the Joint Agreement and resisting the American sanctions, even if it means taking a financial hit. Some European firms, however, have already announced they are withdrawing their investments. 

The US Congress can also help stop a war, although it will require members—mostly Democrats—to put aside their anti-Iranian bias and make common cause with the “stay in the pact” Iranians. This is a popular issue. A CNN poll found that 63 percent of Americans opposed withdrawing from the agreement. 

It will also mean that the Congress—again, mainly Democrats—will have to challenge the role that Israel is playing. That will not be easy, but maybe not as difficult as it has been in the past. Israel’s brutality against Palestinians over the past month has won no friends except in the White House and the evangelical circuit, and Netanyahu has made it clear that he prefers Republicans to Democrats. 

Lastly, Congress should cut the arms pipeline to the GCC and stop aiding the Saudis in their war on Yemen 

If war comes, Americans will find themselves in the middle of an unwinnable conflict that will destabilize the Middle East and the world’s economy, and pour more of this country’s resources into yet another quagmire. 

 


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


THE PUBLIC EYE: All The President’s Men: Mike Pence

Bob Burnett
Friday May 25, 2018 - 12:52:00 PM

The Trump Administration is so dreadful they've made the George W. Bush Administration seem almost acceptable in comparison. Dubya surrounded himself with qualified staff. As awful as Bush Vice President Dick Cheney was, he had notable Washington experience: he'd served as White House Chief of Staff and as Secretary of Defense. In contrast, Mike Pence went from conservative talk-show host to Ineffective congressman (and governor) to Trump's Vice President. 

Nonetheless, the primary criticism of Pence isn't that he doesn't possess the cojones to perform the job of President, if need be. The Vice President -- who has touted his "Christian credentials" -- is castigated because he could act as a moral check on Trump. Instead, Pence has chosen to be Trump's primary cheerleader. His fawning buddy. His toady

When Trump selected Pence as his running mate, none of us expected them to be equal partners in a Trump Administration; it was unrealistic to expect Pence to compliment Trump's imbecility with thoughtful insight. Most observers recognized Pence for what he was intended to be: an empty suit with impeccable conservative Christian credentials who had the blessing of Republican oligarchs such as the Koch brothers and Robert Mercer. (In July 2016, Trump was leaning towards choosing New Jersey Governor Chris Christie as his running mate; Trump Campaign Manager Kellyanne Conway persuaded Trump to choose Pence -- for the stated reasons plus the fact that Pence would be better as the liaison to congressional Republicans. By the way: Conway got her position because of the influence of Robert Mercer.) 

Now, Pence has a limited portfolio within the Trump Administration: he placates big donors, such as the Koch brothers and Robert Mercer, and also reassures the religious right. (In July 2016, the 538 website noted that Pence was the most conservative Republican VP candidate in forty years (http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/mike-pence-would-be-a-really-conservative-and-mostly-unknown-vp-pick/ ).) When there's a Trump imbroglio, Pence declares fealty to Trump and the religious right is assuaged -- this first happened with the October 2016 release of the notorious Trump "Access Hollywood" tape and has continued to the present day with Pence's support for Trump in the Stormy Daniels scandal. (Uncharacteristically, on May 21st, Pence spoke out on North Korea, threatening it with "the Libya model." In response, a high-ranking North Korean official called Pence, "a political dummy," characterizing his remarks as "ignorant and stupid.") 

Nonetheless, because of Pence's high-visibility Christianity, many political observers believed he would provide a moral framework for Trump; they expected that when Donald Trump became president he would soften his behavior and that Pence would play an important role in this process. That is, they expected Trump would begin to act presidential. This hasn't happened and part of blame must fall on the shoulders of Mike Pence. 

In his May 9th Washington Post oped (https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/trump-is-no-longer-the-worst-person-in-government/2018/05/09/10e59eba-52f1-11e8-a551-5b648abe29ef_story.html? ), conservative columnist George Will criticized the Vice President: "The oleaginous Mike Pence, with his talent for toadyism and appetite for obsequiousness... is the authentic voice of today’s lickspittle Republican Party, he clarifies this year’s elections: Vote Republican to ratify groveling as governing." George Will noted that Pence frequently claims he is "deeply humbled" to be able to serve in the Trump Administration. 

George Will castigated the President: "Trump is what he is, a floundering, inarticulate jumble of gnawing insecurities and not-at-all compensating vanities, which is pathetic." But Will savds his most ferocious commentary for the Vice-President: "Pence is what he has chosen to be, which is horrifying." 

Why has Mike Pence become Trump's toady? 

There are two possible explanations; neither of which is flattering to Pence. The first is that the Vice President has realized that the only way to work closely with Trump is to continually flatter him; that Trump is so insecure that he only will tolerate close relations with those who proffer their unwavering love. This suggests that Pence -- realizing that Trump threatens the United States -- has decide to dampen his personality and pander to Trump, believing that only this behavior will mollify him. 

The second explanation is that Pence actually lacks a moral core; he is a hollow man ("Shape without form, shade without color, paralyzed force, gesture without motion", T.S. Eliot) The Vice President is not able to stand up to Trump because Pence is a weak person; he's playing a part in a political play and only reads the lines that he's been given -- he's been instructed to be Trump's toady and that's what he is doing. 

Since Trump became President there have been calls for his impeachment. Many observers have warned that if Trump was removed from office, we'd get Pence as President and he would be worse. 

What we know about Pence suggests that if he were to become President he would be different from Trump. Nowhere near as crazy. (No demented early morning tweets.) Pence would be a more conventional Republican President; an actor, content to read the lines written for him by Republican oligarchs. Instead of being Trump's toady, Pence would grovel at the feet of the powerful men who control the Republican Party. 

Trump or Pence. Not an appealing choice. 


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


ECLECTIC RANT:Trump cancels U.S.-North Korea summit

Ralph E. Stone
Friday May 25, 2018 - 12:51:00 PM

Like two alley cats facing off, Trump and Kim Jong-un have hissed at each other for quite some time. By pulling out of the summit, Trump has slinked off in defeat. Perhaps, Trump realized that his diplomacy by a 140 character Tweet was not going to be good enough to reach a satisfactory deal with the wily Kim. Rather than be embarrassed at the summit, Trump canceled it. 

By canceling, Trump won't get the instant satisfaction he longed for, but the summit should still take place to avoid further misunderstandings. If nothing else, a face-to-face meeting is better than trading insults via Tweet and the North Korean state media. Negotiations are better than war. 

Now Kim wins the face-off and Trump looks like, well . . . a dotard. 

Now maybe the two Koreas can reach their own peace agreement and be rewarded with co-Nobel Peace prizes.


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: There is No Predicting a Person's Outcome

Jack Bragen
Friday May 25, 2018 - 12:35:00 PM

There are many stories of recovery from mental illness. No one should presume that a person is hopeless, either based on statistical data, or on observing someone for a day or for a couple of weeks. There is nothing written in stone that says a particular person has a bad prognosis, just because a doctor or clinician has made that evaluation. 

Science is limited in its ability to foretell the outcome of a person considered mentally ill. Just because statistics exist that might seem to support a doctor's or clinician's evaluation, it doesn't change the fact that some of the time, these mental health professionals are wrong. 

Human ignorance is boundless. Abraham Lincoln said "Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power." 

Clinicians sometimes fail this test. Just because the mental health treatment system isn't offering any hope, based on their supposed 'science', does not mean that you should give up. 

I know a man who had severe schizophrenia throughout his twenties, thirties and forties, who was also "dual diagnosis" and abused substances, who, when he reached his fifties, came out of it very well, and to this day, does very well with his life. I am not speaking of myself, and I am not at liberty to share with you whom this is. But his brain is far from being wrecked by his past illness. 

When I was in my late twenties and early thirties, professionals and some others presumed I wasn't going anywhere in life, and some weren't interested any more in investing time and energy in me. A therapist decided to stop seeing me, and someone at California Department of Vocational Rehabilitation decided I was unemployable. Many people who thought they knew me may have assumed I was a "has been" at that young of an age. 

Even while others gave up on me, I knew better. 

Twenty-two years ago, when I moved in with my [then] fiancé, I was still very delusional--because this was a time shortly after I was released from a psychiatric ward. 

I began to study myself. I had a little "meditation area" in the bedroom of a tiny, one bedroom apartment, and I would sit in a chair, listen to old rock music, smoke a lot of cigarettes, and write down my observations of what my mind was doing and how it worked, and how it did not work. I did this studying on a regular basis, for a very long time, and I learned many things. And I taught myself cognitive systems for making my mind work much better. 

I did these regular "sessions" in combination with taking high dosages of antipsychotic medication. My mind wasn't going to come back without being medicated. Some others may have a different path. Far be it from me to say medication is a universal need. 

You have to do what works, and not do what doesn't work. Yet, you should never give up; once you give up on life--that could be when it's over. Where there is hope, there is life. Do not too easily relinquish hope. 

 


Arts & Events

Wednesday is Opera Night at the Bateau Ivre

Saturday May 26, 2018 - 12:28:00 PM

Opera singing Divas Kathleen Moss Miller and Eliza O’Malley light up the hall with arias and duets from celebrated operas of Puccini, Verdi, Bellini, Bizet, Delibes and more with special guests Maestro Jonathan Khuner at the piano and his daughter, soprano Charlotte Khuner. Indulge yourself in a dazzling evening of opera's top hits with these San Francisco Bay Area favorites!

The Dazzling Divas, this Wednesday, May 30, from 7-9pm, at the Bateau Ivre restaurant, 2629 Telegraph Ave, Berkeley


Itzhak Perlman Returns to Davies Hall

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Saturday May 26, 2018 - 12:14:00 PM

Over the weekend of May 17-20, veteran violinist Itzhak Perlman returned to Davies Hall to do double-duty as violin soloist and conductor with the San Francisco Symphony. The program featured Perlman with oboist Eugene Izotov in Johann Sebastian Bach’s Concerto in C minor for Oboe and Violin, Piotr Tchaikovsky’s Serenade for Strings, and Edward Elgar’s Enigma Variations. Thus we heard music from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. 

Bach’s Concerto for Oboe and Violin is, in fact, an imagined work, given that no such score remains although a copy exists of this music written in Bach’s hand but scored for two harpsichords. The presumption is, however, that the version for two harpsichords is itself Bach’s transcription of an original for violin and a wind instrument, which latter, was almost certainly an oboe. In any case, as oboist Eugene Izotov points out, “the oboe and violin can sustain notes and use vibrato, which ultimately makes the sound closer to the human voice.” It is this ability to sing that is the distinguishing feature of Bach’s Concerto for Oboe and Violin. Nowhere is this more highlighted than in the lovely second movement, an Adagio, where the oboe and violin trade beautiful vocal melodies. Here Izotov and Perlman were perfectly matched, both technically and expressively, as they exchanged liltingly lyrical melodies. Nor were they lacking in the work’s two outer movements, opening and closing Allegros, which they dispatched with verve and aplomb. 

Following Bach’s Concerto for Oboe and Violin came Tchaikovsky’s Serenade for Strings, Opus 48 (1880). Conducting from the podium, Itzhak Perlman led the orchestra’s string section in a wonderfully expressive account of this work. The Serenade for Strings is in many ways Tchaikovsky’s tribute to Mozart, whose music the Russian composer loved and admired. The opening movement, marked pezzo in forma di Sonatina, emulates Mozart’s classicism. A slow introduction frames the main body of this movement, and the spirit of Mozart is apparent in the second subject with its delightful semiquaver sequences. The second movement offers a gracious waltz, though tinged with melancholy; and the somber third movement, marked Elogie, is richly scored in D Major. The Finale finds Tchaikovsky tossing off his Mozartian cloak of classicism and diving instead into Russian folk melodies. The first subject is derived from a Volga boat-hauling song, and the dance-tune of the Allegro con spirito also derives from Russian folk material. 

After intermission Itzhak Perlman returned to the podium to lead the San Francisco Symphony in Edward Elgar’s Enigma Variations, Opus 36 (1888-9). Elgar intended this work to offer a musical portrait of fourteen close friends, and he appended initials or nicknames to each of the variations. The principal theme is a beautiful and somewhat sad melody played in the strings in the opening measures. The first variation is dedicated to Alice Elgar, the composer’s wife, and the theme is now tender and expressive. Variations II, III, and IV are brief and humorously evocative of the idiosyncrasies of the respective friends. Variation V is, in my opinion, one of the highlights of the Enigma Variations. It offers a tribute to Richard Penrose Arnold, son of Mathew Arnold, who was a great lover of music and a self-taught pianist. Elgar celebrates Arnold’s nobility of mind, hinting at the mixture of introspection and vivacity that characterized his friend. Variations VI, VII, and VIII are in turn formal and discreet, clamorous and maladroit, and gracious and sedate. Variation IX is a tribute to Elgar’s friend August Jaeger, and Elgar wrote that this variation is a record of a long walk during which Jaeger expounded eloquently on the slow movements of Beethoven. Appropriately, Elgar’s music here is slow and soulful yet rising to majestic heights.  

Variation X offers a lovely solo for viola, exquisitely played here by Katie Kadarauch, while the violins simulate the stuttering that marked the speech of this friend of Elgar’s. Variation XI offers what might be called a shaggy dog story about a friend’s bulldog that fell into a river, paddled about frenziedly, and barked upon gaining the shore. Variation XII offers another of this work’s highlights, a slow and majestic portrait of a learned scientist with artistic leanings. There is a lovely passage here for violas and a solo oboe, and another lovely passage for solo cello. Variation XIII evokes a voyage on an ocean liner, and here Elgar uses a drum roll to suggest the humming of the ship’s engine, while a clarinet offers a quote from Mendelssohn’s Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage. The final Variation, number XIV, offers a self-portrait in which Edward Elgar highlights only his confident, ebullient side, glossing over his moodiness and gloomy frustrations. At the close of the Enigma Variations, the audience gave conductor Itzhak Perlman a well-deserved standing ovation.


The Berkeley Arts Calendar

Bonnie Hughes and Tom Hunt
Saturday May 26, 2018 - 10:55:00 AM

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

To reach the calendar, click here.


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, May 27-June 3

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday May 26, 2018 - 10:48:00 AM

Worth Noting:

After Tuesday City Council regular meeting the rest of the week is quiet with only two subcommittee meetings

May 29, ballots on Street Light Assessment and Stormwater fee will be counted. Ballots may be delivered at beginning of City Council meeting to be counted if not already in the mail.

City Council Agenda for May 29 includes initiating the Police Review Commission Charter Amendment. This is the first step. There is a timeline to get the Charter amendment on the ballot. June 29 item 32. Is to start the process. June 12 will be the vote on the Charter Amendment (content).



Want to help get out the vote - there are critical elections in California check out Indivisible Berkeley and volunteer to phonebank, District 10 Tracy/Modesto needs help, https://www.indivisibleberkeley.org/actions



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

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

 

Sunday, May 27, 2018 

Indivisible East Bay, Sun, May 27, 1:00 pm 2727 Milvia, Sports Basement 

https://indivisibleeb.org/upcoming-events/ 

 

Monday, May 28, 2018 – Memorial Day Holiday 

Tax the Rich rally – Mon, May 28 Memorial Day, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm top of Solano in front of closed Oaks Theater, 

Tuesday, May 29, 2018 

Agenda Committee, Mon, May 29 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm, 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Conf Room, Planning for June 12 City Council meeting, Agenda: Consent: Tax rates: 3-7, 13, Debt Service:10-12, Housing: 15. Tie City Maximum income to quality for very low income housing to HUD threshold, 16. Shelter Plus Care Program, 21. Campanile Way notice of decision, 23. Ballot measure – long range sustainable infrastructure plan, 24. Master leasing student housing, 25. Armored Van – emergency response vehicle, 26. Fee waivers Berkeley Rep artist housing, 29. Climate Emergency Declaration, 30. Fossil Free Berkeley, 33. ADU ordinance updates, 34. Standards for views, 36. Double budget for traffic calming to total $100,000, Action: 37. Emergency Housing Building Code, 38. 1449 Sacramento @ University Appeal Hotel rooftop deck 39. Emergency Preparedness training, 40. New City limit signs, 41. Ballot measures, 42. Budget update, 43. Defer impact fees for Center Street Hotel 2129 Shattuck, 44. Charter Amendment Police Oversight, 45. Prohibit new auto uses and sales in C-SA (Commercial South Area) zones, Information reports 47. Low Income Tax Relief Program, 48. Berkeley Pathways 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/Agenda_Committee__2018_Index.aspx 

 

Berkeley City Council, Tues, May 29, 2134 MLK Jr Way, City Council Chambers 

Closed Session, 4:00 pm, Agenda: Labor Negotiations 

Regular Meeting 6:00 pm – 11:00 pm, Agenda: Consent 5. Commissioners Manual, 14. Secure Storage for homeless, support AB 2308 cigarette filter ban, oppose AB 2923 placing BART in charge of local Zoning, 19. Audit Alameda Co Sheriff office, 21. Declare homelessness as CA State emergency, 23. Budget referral: Solar Powered Lights and Signage Paths Pilot Project, 24. Support AB 2874 hospital closure & emergency care, Action: 28. Budget update hearing #2, 29. Ballot Initiatives, 31. Vacancy as Condition of Unlawful Nuisance, 32. Police Review Commission Charter Amendment Recommendations. 34. Home Share Pilot Program, 35. Small Sites Program https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2018/05_May/City_Council__05-29-2018_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

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

Wednesday, May 30, 2018 

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board, - Budget and Personnel Committee Meeting Wed, May 30, 5:00 pm 2001 center St, 2nd Floor 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Housing Advisory Commission – Housing Trust Fund Subcommittee, Wed, May 30, 8:00 am, 2180 Milvia 

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

Thursday, May 31, 2018 

No city meetings found/posted 

Friday, June 1, 2018 

No city meetings found/posted 

Saturday, June 2, 2018 

No city meetings found/posted 

Sunday, June 3, 2018 

Berkeley Sunday Streets, 11:00 am – 7:00 pm, Shattuck Avenue is closed from Haste to Rose, Mayor meet-up at PIQ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm 

http://www.sundaystreetsberkeley.org/ 

__________________________ 

 

Poor Peoples Campaign – A National Call for Moral Revival starts Monday with six weekly themes, Week three May 29, The War Economy, 12:30 pm CA State Capitol West Steps, Sacramento https://www.poorpeoplescampaign.org/ 

 

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 

 

Kelly will continue to post the weekly summary while away for college reunion and family visits. The weekly summary may post early or late around travel Check the website for updates. https://www.sustainableberkeleycoalition.com/whats-ahead.html 

 

To see what happened at Berkeley City Council meetings in bite size by subject videos go to Watch Berkeley Gov, a new YouTube channel and read about the project by Dave Margulius at https://davemargulius.com/introducing-watch-berkeley-gov/