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Opinion

The Editor's Back Fence

New: There's Still Time to Vote for Your Latest Choice

Becky O'Malley
Monday March 02, 2020 - 04:40:00 PM

Have you been supporting Steyer, Buttigieg or Klobuchar? Did you get an absentee ballot? Are you afraid that now your vote won’t count on Super Tuesday? Fear not, or at least take hope.

I ran into my longtime neighbor Doris, who was a poll worker for many years, on College Avenue today.

She quickly sketched out a menu of options, depending on your circumstances, which she had researched since the three departed the race. It was too late for me to check with the County Clerk, but I trust Doris.

  1. You haven’t filled out your absentee (“vote by mail”) ballot yet. Just throw it away and vote in person, or fill it out at home for your new choice and deliver it yourself, or mail it as usual.
  2. You have already filled out your ballot, but you haven’t turned it in yet, either by mail or in person. No problem, just throw it away and go in to vote in your local polling place. The in-person vote is the one which will be counted.
  3. You have already mailed or delivered your ballot. You can still go to your polling place and vote in person for your new choice. This will give you a fighting chance, because whichever vote is counted first by the officials will be the one that is recorded—but there’s no way to know.


Me? I always vote in person and I’m still voting for Elizabeth Warren. I talked to my friend Carol in North Carolina about this today. She’d been out canvassing for Warren with her daughter, and (an exact quote) she said that they’d be “mighty pissed if it came down to nothing but another choice between two Old Straight White Guys.”

Don’t get me wrong, some of my nearest and dearest are in that demographic, but isn’t it time to try something else? Especially if the best qualified candidate is a woman. 

 

 


Public Comment

"Affordable" Housing: Affordable for Who?

Steve Martinot
Friday February 28, 2020 - 03:46:00 PM

In cities undergoing gentrification, like Berkeley and Oakland, many communities form organizations that demand affordable housing to counter rising rent levels, and to end the displacement of low income community members that accompanies the process. A seeming battle emerges between city councils and developers. Developers wish to avoid including affordable housing units, which are not as profitable, and are willing to pay mitigation fees to do so. And cities invent “Below Market Rate” (BMR) schedules and "inclusionary" housing standards to create the appearance of promoting low income housing development. But the latter requires a building owner to agree to the discounts. And city councils refuse to set mitigation fees high enough to produce enough on-site affordable units.

In short, cities promise "affordable housing" units while allowing the juggernaut of gentrification to proceed. And the neighborhoods respond with a sardonic “Bronx cheer,” “Affordable? Affordable for who?” After all, market rate housing is already affordable for those who can afford it. 

Insofar as “Affordable for who?” becomes a slogan, it serves as a vocal battering ram to knock down the rhetorical assurances by cities that corporate control gentrification is not absolute. Among that slogan’s many meanings, it expresses outrage at the pretended concern by officials for a community, while they feed community interests to financial gluttony. It contains an unstated demand to end “business as usual” and include neighborhoods at the planning tables (more than mere "input" or “public comment”). It implies that “affordable housing” units should be affordable for those who live in the vicinity of the buildings to be constructed. That is, the neighborhoods themselves should be the yardstick by which new housing rates were to be measured, not an impersonal "market" in which prices and rents are out of control. As a slogan, it thus becomes a protest against the specter of impoverishment, a desperate recognition that those who have maxxed out their cards and only get a 3% raise where they are employed still face a doubling of rent and possible homelessness. 

It also recognizes, in its protest, that there is no recourse for low income people. The legal system is designed to protect property rather than human well-being. California, for instance, has outlawed rent control (the Costa-Hawkins Act), which allows landlord willfulness concerning rent levels, and against which those who are harmed by rent gouging, and thrown on the street, are helpless. Entire communities have been decimated by this process. It is responsible for reducing Berkeley’s black community to 25% of its former size in the last 20 years. The law has given developers the legal power to refuse low income units in the absence of state subsidies of their envisioned profit margins (the Palmer Decision). Because housing is productive of profit for an owner of the building, the law protects the "right" of a developer of multiunit apartment developments to get the same market return (profit) as other landlords. 

In the past, low income families were able to afford housing. The present situation is characterized by a predatory and impersonal economic system which functions like an impoverishment machine. Against that, because it focuses on prices and rents, the slogan appears weak. It is a cry in the wilderness for city officials to end their complicity with the predatory. It doesn’t call for communities to organize locally to create autonomous zoning (through overlays) of their neighborhoods in accord with their own local needs. 

In other words, as an expression, “Affordable for who?” sits suspended between two languages. Rent is stated in terms of price. That means the rental unit is a commodity. One purchases the unit for a time period (lease). But it is not like buying a cell phone, or a car. A housing unit slips away, back to an owner. Before it does, however, it serves as a means of production. It produces "residence" in a city and a state. Its center and focus is on humans who reside. The human is its other language. 

What is confusing is that developers make money from a tenant by setting a real human being in the unit to make it productive of "residence." Instead of being paid, however, like productive factory workers, the tenant pays the owner. Affordability refers to the price of a “housing commodity,” but the owner never relinquishes control over the unit. It becomes a funnel to the owner into which the resident, the producer of "residence," continually throws more money. 

Because of this inversion, an entire spectrum of people gets priced out of housing by gentrification. Many hold on, "affording" their housing by choosing whether to put food on the table or pay their electric bill. When the situation reaches crisis proportions, government produces a resolution (like BMR, or a density bonus, or mitigation fees) that leaves the source of the crisis intact. Thus, it creates a treadmill on which crisis and resolution cycle around to each other endlessly. And it uses its confusion of languages (commodity vs. people) to disguise its character as an impoverishment machine. 

Cities and developers deal with the economics of price – the price of construction, the price of labor, the price of borrowed money, etc. That forces residents, when they wish to speak to cities or developers, to use the language of price, and not the language of residence or production. The confusion of language is a political one. And hiding the operation of the impoverishment machine hides the relation between wealth, produced by the machine, and the victimization of the many from whom that wealth is taken. Wealth does not exist out of relationship. When one individual or corporation gets rich, it means others have gotten poorer. In preventing rent control, the government serves to fill the needs of that machine. It also does this with police racial profiling, employment offices, surveillance technologies, etc. 

If there is a politics of ownership language, then a neighborhood language of democracy must also eventually stand opposite.. After all, democracy insists that those affected by a policy should be the ones who make the policy that will affect them. For housing, this would mean a community participation not only in defining what is affordable for itself, but in having a place at the table where buildings are designed and prices are defined. Without that, one is left with corporate despotism. 

 

A change in the slogan  

In face of the fact that “Affordable for who?” doesn’t focus on low income families, many community activists have changed the slogan’s demand from “affordable housing” to “low income housing.” But there is a confusion in that as well. The expression “affordable housing” already refers to low (and very low) income people because it refers by definition to those who can’t afford market rate housing. In addition, to say “build low income housing” still speaks the language of price and of housing as a commodity (like a car or a cell phone). It asks the economic machine, in a vaguely pleading way, to “please bring the price down.” 

But there are several levels of low income (a defined by HUD using the Area Median Income as a standard of calibration). Low income is 50% to 80% of AMI. Very low income is below that. Berkeley claims its AMI is $99,000 a year. A family earning $65,000 a year (65% of AMI), and paying $2400 a month for rent, would be paying 43% of their income for rent (market rate for the apartment would be much higher for 2 bedrooms). A family earning $55,000 a year, also low income, in the same apartment would be paying 60% of their income. The first family is living in hardship. The second is outrageously on the edge of crisis. 

In other words, an apartment at any "affordable" low income level will still be unaffordable for tenants at lower income levels. The impoverishment machine is nothing if not discriminatory. It does not provide equity for human beings. “Low income housing” will discriminate against others who are at lower income. And finally, even if different affordability levels are defined so that different rents could be charged in each stratum of renters, these levels are imposed rather than determined by the people and neighborhoods assessing their own economic needs. 

Thus, to add “we need low income housing” to the slogan “affordability for who?” still does not respond to the inequities of “affordability.” Instead, it dilutes the power of rejection in the slogan by again giving credence to market dominance. 

 

Rent based on income  

If it is as a commodity that housing economics can exile families from their communities, then some alternative to reliance on “the market” has to be found. This suggests we need a different measure for "affordable," one that looks at it from the people side rather than the market side. The existence of an Area Median Income points us in a different direction. 

According to HUD, tenants should not have to pay more than 30% of their income for rent. Rent related to income would be a great equalizer between low and very low income tenants with respect to the same apartment. The rent would vary according to who rented the apartment, and go down if a family with less income moved in. 

Setting a standard like that would entail a complete shift of perspective on life itself. Housing would cease to be part of an impoverishment machine, and the market would be removed from its throne of sanctity. The production of residence for which housing would be the instrument would render housing a human activity rather than a submission to economic forces. . 

Two things would have to be changed in order for a system maximizing rent at 30% of income to be possible. The first is that, until those most in need of housing had been housed – namely, the homeless, those evicted by rent increases, and those with very low incomes – housing would be withheld from moderate and upper income people (the wealthy can always manage affordability for themselves). Those with money would still want to rent a lower rent unit. So priorities would have to be made clear. Those who do not face the stress of displacement and impoverishment that low income families do would have to wait for low income housing needs to be fulfilled first. 

A second problem arises because even an income-related rental system still exists in a commodity economy. The means of maintenance would be market oriented. One of the reasons laws were passed prohibiting “rent control” was that landlords claimed they could not maintain their property and still earn money from it if rents did not rise along with all other prices. This means that there would have to be subsidies for maintenance. But it is going to cost money if government is going to resolve the problem of homelessness, or displacement. Rather than put money into the treadmill of resolving a crisis and then facing the next crisis to be resolved, it would be wiser to put an end to the treadmill and simply guarantee housing maintenance for truly affordable housing. 

Clearly, this would be an earth-shaking shift in economic perspective. People would stop dying on the streets. Housing would truly be implemented as a human right. As long as housing is a commodity, survival itself cannot even be taken as a human right. Relating rent to income would mean an end to economic victimization. And the response to the question, “Affordable for who?” would be “affordable for all.” 

 

This marks a cultural transformation  

Relating "affordability" to income defines a cultural difference. Humans themselves become the focus of economic processes, rather than simply the actors in it. And this reveals the false (mythic) nature of market universality. One can only buy what one can afford. In relation to survivability, as evidenced by the existence of homeless communities, that universality is intolerable. It is as intolerable as “murder for hire.” No just society would fail to charge a person who hires a killer as an accessory to the crime. The social institution that allows death on its streets cannot hide behind universality. It is accessory to those deaths. Housing is a life and death matter. And relating rent to income would be a step toward removing housing from market universality to the self-determination of human rights. 

We see another example of this distinction in the term “sanctuary.” California has declared itself a sanctuary state, as have many cities within it. The term implies protection from danger, as well as refuge or shelter. It raises the analogous question, “sanctuary from what?” 

California provides sanctuary for immigrants, chiefly from Latin America, but also from Islamic countries. The term has been disparaged and twisted by the federal government, however. For Trump, sanctuary and refuge refers to people running from justice, and who therefore can be considered criminals. We know, however, that the immigrants from Mexico are here because US corporate control of Mexican commodity markets has impoverished Mexican farmers (e.g. by underselling corn). They come to the US to get jobs to send money back for their families. The federal government attempts to track them down and deport them back to their impoverished conditions. In response to the injustice of that, California gives them sanctuary from the federal government. Thus, the term contains a similar dual meaning. It means refuge from justice for the US government and its corporate marketing. And it means refuge from US government revictimization for those escaping their impoverished communities. A market oriented political power drives the corporate impoverishment machine, and a people-oriented culture seeks to provide escape from that government’s oppressiveness. 


Is Karma Haunting Britain’s Future?

Jagjit Singh
Friday February 28, 2020 - 03:54:00 PM

The sun has long set on Britain’s former empire. Its comeuppance is long overdue.

The bungling pinstripe-bowler hat brigade of elite British public schools and universities have long poured over world maps searching for ever greater conquests.

Dialing back the pages of history, novelist, Paul Scott reminds us of the utter decadence and destructive nature of the former architects of the British Empire who hastily withdrew and partitioned India into illogical member states. The handsome but ethically challenged last viceroy Mountbatten was accurately described by historian Andrew Roberts as a “mendacious, intellectually limited hustler.” Britain looted India of much of its wealth, destroying its garment trade to promote the sale of inferior British goods.

It’s ironic that Mountbatten, who was derided in British circles as “Master of Disaster,” was put in charge of the “jewel in the crown” robbing India of its enormous potential.

It is mindboggling to understand the callousness of how Britain chose to dismember India. 

Originally Britain announced its exit from India on June 1948. But Mountbatten hastily preponed the date to Aug. 15 1947. In an unguarded moment he admitted that it was a “ludicrously early date.” It was left to a little known lawyer, Cyril Radcliffe to draw up the boundaries of a country he had never visited. The result was sheer insanity. Punjab lost much of its former territory and historic temples to Pakistan. Pakistan was further subdivided into West Pakistan inhabited by Punjabis and East Pakistan inhabited by predominantly poor Bengalis. The ‘Blood telegram” sent by US diplomat, Archer Blood accurately describes the massacre in east Pakistan by General Yahya Khan with weapons supplied by the US. 

In a stunning turn of events, following its messy divorce from the European Union Britain now faces the prospect of its own partition. 

Following decades of bloodshed between northern and southern Ireland, religious passions have cooed and the desire for unification is growing. Scottish nationalists are also agitating for independence. 

The Brexit debacle was started by former Prime Minister, David Cameron who recklessly gambled in a disastrous referendum to pacify rebels in his own party. The opportunist Remainder Boris Johnson, sensing the winds of change, quickly switched to become an ardent Brexiteer winning a thumping majority in the recent election.Following the Trump charade, “Make Britain great again” is quickly morphing into a looming economic and political disaster. 

Are the British being punished for their past misdeeds? The law of Karma is unforgiving.


Coronavirus

Tejinder Uberoi
Friday February 28, 2020 - 03:46:00 PM

The Trump administration’s decision to fire the U.S. Coronavirus pandemic response team in 2018 to cut costs was ill-advised. The CDC’s stark warning on the dangers of the virus came on the same day that White House’s economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, dismissed the threat telling CNBC the virus was “contained.” His re mark echoed President Trump’s assessment that the coronavirus was “very well under control.” The cost-cutting measures were made by his administration gutting the nation’s response to the virus’s looming threat. 

Funding cuts to the CDC forced the agency to abort efforts to help countries to prevent infectious-disease threats from becoming epidemics in 39 of 49 countries in 2018. Among the countries abandoned was China. Disease-outbreak prevention had been cut by a staggering 80%.  

Clearly embarrassed by the conflicting messages from the White House, the President appointed Vice-President Pence to be his point man, a man who has no experience on health issues. There seems to be more concern with tightening the massaging of the Coronavirus than trying to prepare for its impending invasion of the US. His Twitter fingers were busy blasting CNN and other networks for stoking fears of the virus which he continues to downplay. 

If the markets continue their downward slide it may adversely impact Trump’s reelection prospects. He is clearly more concerned about the virus’s economic impact than the welfare of the American people and the world at large.


New: In response to Gar Smith's op-ed: Pacifica Restructuring Project

Carol Spooner
Monday March 02, 2020 - 10:37:00 PM

KPFA and Pacifica Radio, once one of the most important resources for progressives, in these troubled times is in trouble. It has the potential to change the direction of our nation, but it is nowhere near living up to its potential. We, a group of concerned members and activists, are asking for your support for a critical step to correct this right now.

One of the major difficulties Pacifica faces is an unwieldy and contentious governance system that has crippled its management in addressing serious issues such as the changing media landscape, the changing fundraising paradigm of younger generations, and the necessity for first rate programming to inform, educate and inspire listeners and supporters in this critical time. 

Quite frankly, Pacifica stations have not produced local or national boards of directors capable of addressing these issues without such destructive polarization that management cannot make and carry out plans of action without the board countermanding those plans or stifling them or micromanaging them to the point of complete breakdown and inefficacy. 

To fix this problem we are proposing changing the Bylaws to change the governance structure. Under the new structure the Pacifica National Board of Directors would be reduced in number from twenty-two (22) to eleven (11) members. Five (5) of the Directors would be elected directly by the members at each of the five Pacifica radio stations, and six (6) “At-Large” Directors would be elected by the board itself. The “At-Large” directors would be chosen for their skills and leadership in areas including alternative media and movement work, financial planning and fundraising work, and their commitment to Pacifica’s peace and justice mission and purpose since its establishment in 1949. 

Local Station Boards would be eliminated, but Community Advisory Boards at each station would be emphasized and supported to bring listener concerns and views into station programming decisions. 

Today, facing mounting debt (on account of hard decisions not taken years ago, and because of declining listenership), Pacifica will sink below the waves if it does not make a major course correction in its structure and leadership. We ask for your help in making this happen. 

We ask your support for a Pacifica structure that can rise to the challenge of these times. 

This can only be achieved by the membership of the foundation, and that is you! Your YES vote for the new Bylaws will be transformative.  

For more info, visit our webpage at: www.pacificarestructuringproject.org 

By Carol 707-526-2867, 1136 Wild Rose Drive, Santa Rosa, CA 95401 

The Pacifica Restructuring Project is the work of three current Pacifica Board members, Bill Crosier, Donald Goldmacher, and Mansoor Sabbagh; four former Pacifica Board members, Sherry Gendelman, Carol Spooner, Akio Tanaka, and Carole Travis; and former Chair of the KPFA Local Station Board Susan da Silva.


Columns

Bernie Sanders: Pro and Con

Bob Burnett
Friday February 28, 2020 - 03:37:00 PM

It appears that Bernie Sanders will win the Democratic Nomination -- the 538 website rates his chances as "1 in 2." Bernie is not my favorite candidate; nonetheless, if he wins the Democratic nomination, I'll work hard for him. Here's my assessment of Bernie's strengths and weaknesses.

The latest Real Clear Politics summary of national polls shows Sanders beating Trump by an average of 4.7 percent. Nonetheless, we remember all too well that Clinton led Trump throughout a long and agonizing campaign and then lost the election, courtesy of the electoral college. Bernie can beat Trump but it's far from certain. (https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/02/24/who-would-win-trump-sanders-election/)

Sanders' strengths: 1. Enthusiasm. If you've followed the 2020 Democratic nomination process, you've probably noticed that Bernie Sanders' followers are the most enthusiastic. There are a lot of reasons for this, but Sanders' rallies have the most energy.

It isn't always the case that follower enthusiasm translates into get-out-the-vote energy, but it is a major consideration; in my experience, 2008 Obama election workers were more enthusiastic than 2016 Clinton workers. Enthusiasm is an important factor because, at the moment, Democratic voters, in general, are more enthusiastic than Republican voters. (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-enthusiasm-exclusive/exclusive-ahead-of-2020-election-a-blue-wave-is-rising-in-the-cities-polling-analysis-shows-idUSKBN20D1EG )

Imagine two campaign rallies in Ohio: one for Trump and the other for the Democratic nominee. Only a Bernie rally would match the enthusiasm at the Trump rally. This makes sense because both candidates rile up their audience with a populist, "blow up the establishment" message.

2. Broad Coalition: Bernie appears to be able to build the broad coalition that Democrats have been yearning for. The Nevada Democratic caucus exit polls (https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/politics/entrance-polls-2020-nevada-caucuses/) indicate that Sanders carried most Demographic groups; for example, all age groups except those voters aged 65 and over. (Sanders carried 29 percent of White-non Hispanic voters and 51 percent of Hispanic voters.)

A lot of concerns that we might have had about Bernie's ability to build a broad coalition have been assuaged in the last couple of weeks. His core message resonates with all segments of he Democratic Party -- although he needs to do more to reach out to women who were once ardent Hillary supporters. (Bernie's core message is "the system is rigged:" "Bernie has fought tirelessly for working families, focusing on the shrinking middle class and growing gap between the rich and everyone else.")

3. Swing State Strength: Hillary Clinton lost in 2016 because she faltered in critical swing states: Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wiscconsin. According to Real Clear Politics, in Michigan, Sanders leads Trump by 5.3 percent; in Pennsylvania, Sanders leads Trump by 3 percent; and in Wisconsin, Trump leads Sanders by 1 percent. (BTW: In the last Ohio poll, Sanders was ahead of Trump; they're tied in Florida.)

Sanders' weaknesses: 1. Socialist label: Bernie describes himself as a "Democratic Socialist." This has given pundits a huge opportunity to criticize him. Many mainstream-media talking heads have declared that because of his socialist label, Sanders will never beat Trump. I'm not convinced that the socialist label will make that much of a difference.

First, Sanders isn't really a socialist. New York Times columnist, Paul Krugman, observed: "The thing is, Bernie Sanders isn’t actually a socialist in any normal sense of the term. He doesn’t want to nationalize our major industries and replace markets with central planning; he has expressed admiration, not for Venezuela, but for Denmark. He’s basically what Europeans would call a social democrat — and social democracies like Denmark are, in fact, quite nice places to live, with societies that are, if anything, freer than our own."

Second, there will be two kinds of 2020 campaign ads: vitriol and substance. The Republican vitriol ads will call Bernie a socialist and predict dire consequences. The Democratic vitriol ads will call Trump a pathological liar and a Russian asset. If you already like Trump you will vote for him regardless of the negative ads; if you don't like Trump, you're unlikely to vote for him regardless of what they say about Bernie.

Nonetheless, a recent academic study published in Vox (https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2020/2/25/21152538/bernie-sanders-electability-president-moderates-data ) suggests that a Sanders' candidacy would be problematic: "Our survey data reveals voters of all parties moving to Trump if Sanders is nominated, a liability papered over by young voters who claim they would be inspired to vote by Sanders alone."

2. Weak Coattails: The main reason Democratic pundits are worried about Bernie is because they fear that a "Democratic Socialist" will hurt "down ballot" Democratic candidates. Democratic candidate Michael Bloomberg has made this assertion: "Bernie Sanders would 'jeopardize' the re-election of 42 House Democrats in battleground districts and therefore the party’s majority rule of the chamber if the self-described Democratic socialist becomes the party’s nominee for president."

In 2020, Democrats have to take back both the Presidency and the Senate. If "Moscow Mitch" McConnell remains Senate Majority Leader, he will block most Democratic legislative initiatives. From here, the contested Senate seats are: Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Kansas, Maine, and North Carolina. (Democrats have to win four.)

Consider the situation in Arizona, where there's a contested Senate seat now held by Republican Martha McSally -- a Trump acolyte. In the 2020 Arizona Senatorial election, she'll be opposed by former astronaut Mark Kelly -- husband of former U.S. Representative Gabby Giffords. In 2016, Arizona narrowly went to Trump. Would Bernie Sanders help or hurt Mark Kelly?

I think that having Bernie as the 2020 Democratic nominee will help improve Arizona voter turnout and that will help Mark Kelly. Republicans will run negative ads targeting Bernie and Democrats will run negative ads targeting Trump; those will cancel out.

The Nevada exit polls indicated that the most important issues were: health care, climate change, and income inequality. If these are the most important issues in (neighboring) Arizona, Sanders will help Mark Kelly because Bernie is much stronger on these issues than is Trump. (Actually Trump isn't strong on any issue other than the "economy" and, at the moment, this is teetering because of the impact of the coronavirus.)

I believe that Bernie will help down-ballot Democratic senatorial candidates in Arizona, Colorado, and Maine. I'm not sure about Georgia, Kansas, and North Carolina.

3. Temperament: Like Trump, Bernie offers his own brand of charisma. That attracts loyal followers but masks his irascibility. He really is crochety Uncle Bernie.

Writing in the New York Times ( https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/26/opinion/bernie-sanders.html?referringSource=articleShare), Frank Bruni observes: "[Bernie Sanders] isn’t and has never been popular with his Democratic colleagues in the Senate... I know that because I’ve heard some of those colleagues talk about him, describing him as arrogant, uncooperative, unyielding, even mean."

Summary: Maybe the 2020 election will come down to "our S.O.B. versus their S.O.B." Personally, I'd hoped that the Democratic candidate would be someone who could make progress on healing the nation. Perhaps that's too much to hope for.


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


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Mental Plasticity

Jack Bragen
Friday February 28, 2020 - 04:06:00 PM

If a behavior doesn't serve a good purpose, maybe it should be changed. (When I say "good purpose" I mean, does the behavior contribute to the happiness and wellness of oneself and others?) A sign of having mental plasticity is being able to change an outmoded or non-useful behavior (I won't use the term "inappropriate," since this is a bigoted terminology.)

Retaining mental plasticity well into middle age does not have to be excluded from the domains of those with mental illness. When we can adapt to changing conditions, to an increasingly demanding environment, to higher and more expectations, and if we can do this without excessive displeasure, this is a major form of success, and almost guarantees that we will do well.

Mental plasticity is where you are still young when you are in your fifties, sixties, seventies, or more. It is the willingness to learn new things and to revise outmoded behaviors. Mental plasticity means that we are not locked-in to one way of doing things, and we are not crystallized in how we react. We are capable of change.

Change is the only constant. If the world changes, we must change to adapt to that. If we can't do that, we become maladapted. If we can't adapt, we can't survive. If we can't survive, we will either become institutionalized, or we will die. 

Many persons with mental illness are institutionalized. This could be because their illness has prevented them from functioning at a high enough level to retain their liberty. In an institution, people do many things for you. The expectations could simply include obedience, taking your pills, and eating and drinking what is put in front of you. The downside to being institutionalized includes, for one thing, lack of purpose. 

Plasticity is not needed if you are institutionalized and acclimated to that. This is because very few challenges are put in front of you, and other people are responsible for your basic needs. On the other hand, if you want to live in the world at large, there are continuous changes, and you must adapt to them. A lot is expected. For example, just driving a car across town is harder than it was ten years ago. Taking a bus to get across town is also challenging, and the fares are periodically hiked. If taking a bus, a person may be better off consulting a smartphone to plan one's route and to know which buses to get on. That brings me to another thing; phones have changed. 

A phone at one time was a bulky thing that plugged into a large, four-pronged plug in the wall. Now a "phone" doesn't plug into the wall and it doubles as a microcomputer, a television, a camcorder, and many other functions. Yet, you still need to pay your phone bill if you want your phone to keep working. To accomplish that, you may need to have a debit card. Thirty years ago, a Visa or Mastercard were fancy things. Now, they are expected of even the poorest people. 

In many instances, change comes in small increments. This makes it easier to adapt. Yet, you can't fight change, and if you refuse to change, you will be flattened by the wheels of society like a cartoon character from the 1960's being flattened by a steamroller. 

Mental plasticity is a good thing. It does not mean that you are soft or weak. It means that you can get up to speed on required or wanted things. It is a sign that your gray matter still works. If you keep getting bitten by the same dog, it means that you are trying something that doesn't work anymore, and you need to change. 


The Coronavirus Pandemic is Upon Us and
Americans Should Worry

Ralph E. Stone
Friday February 28, 2020 - 04:03:00 PM

Although the World Health Organization has not declared the coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic a pandemic, an epidemic of world-wide proportions, with no containment in sight. The virus has spread to at least 49 countries. As of February 26, 2020, there are 80,980 confirmed cases in 39 countries and territories with at least 2,770 deaths.

COVID-19 seems to spread like influenza, through the air, person to person. Unlike Ebola, SARS and MERS individuals can transmit this coronavirus before the onset of symptoms even if they don’t become ill. The fact that mild cases are difficult to differentiate from colds or the flu only complicates the diagnosis. Vaccines are many months away, at the earliest.

Presently, there are 60 cases of the Coronavirus in the U.S. However, Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said in a news briefing that an outbreak in the U.S. is a question of when, not if, and urged hospitals, businesses and schools to prepare.

Laurie Garrett, a former senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations and a Pulitzer Prize winning science writer, writes in Foreign Policy that Trump has sabotaged America’s coronavirus response. 

Meanwhile, President Trump, traveling in India, played down the threat, saying, “You may ask about the coronavirus, which is very well under control in our country.” And Larry Kudrow, Director of the National Economic Council, said on CNBC, ”We have contained this. I won't say airtight, but pretty close to airtight.” Given Trump’s history of telling falsehoods, I believe the experts, not Trump. 

On February 26, Trump named Vice President Mike Pence as his point person on the Coronavirus epidemic. Remember Pence, as governor of Indiana, was criticized for his handling of a major public health crisis during his time as governor. The worst HIV outbreak in the state’s history happened while he was governor in 2015, which critics blamed on Pence’s belated response and his opposition to authorizing a needle-exchange program on the grounds it would encourage more drug use.. This failure aggravated an AIDS outbreak among intravenous drug users in a rural Indiana county. 

A Coronavirus pandemic is just around the corner. I fear that the Trump administration is ill-prepared to meet the challenge it poses. He seems to be worried more about how a pandemic would effect his reelection chances — his usual “me, me” approach. 

 


SMITHEREENS: Reflection on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Friday February 28, 2020 - 03:41:00 PM

Going Viral

With the coronavirus taking over the airways—both broadcast and bronchial—there was a line in a February 27 Chronicle report that raised some concerns. In story on "negative pressure rooms," the Chron stated: "These rooms have HVAC systems that suck in contaminated air, filter it, and release it outside so that it doesn't contaminate the air in the rest of the hospital."

What gives? The HVAC systems don't completely decontaminate the air?

So the HVAC systems intentionally release contaminated air outside the hospitals?

Sounds like another reason to stay far away from hospitals if you want to stay healthy. 

Getting Zapped with Paul Krassner 

Yippie co-founder, Realist magazine editor, and "investigative satirist" Paul Krassner died in December, leaving behind a legend and a legacy that's about to get even greater. Despite his encounter with death (aka "the Cosmic Banana Peel"), Paul made one last deadline, finishing a book that's just now hitting the bookshelves. Zapped by the God of Absurdity has just been published by Fantagraphics Books

According to Paul's friend and collaborator, Pat Thomas, the book is a "personally curated 'best of' collection" chronicling Krassner's "whole career" with excerpts from The Realist, High Times, National Lampoon, Whole Earth and other insider outlets. 

In an email to friends, Thomas recalls having "incredible conversations with Paul about Norman Mailer and the American Nazi Party, Krassner dropping acid with Squeaky Fromme during the height of the infamous Manson Family trial, Valeri Solana's shooting of Andy Warhol and, of course, tons of info about Jerry Rubin, Abbie Hoffman, the Yippies and The Realist magazine." 

Fantagraphics is also the publisher of Krassner's 2016 collection, The Realist Cartoons

Last Gasp 

Speaking of books and cartoons, be it known that legendary comic-art publisher Last Gasp will be celebrating "50 years of independent publishing" with a gala Warehouse Sale on March 14 (11-4) and an anniversary art show on April 3 at the 111 Minna Gallery in San Francisco. 

Last Gasp went live on the first Earth Day in April 1976 with its publication, Slow Death #1. The SF-based publisher will mark it's mid-century mark with a special, follow-up edition titled Slow Death Zero: The Comix Anthology of Ecological Horror." 

Last Gasp editor Jon B. Cooke sends out a salute to some of the comic art "giants who have passed on"—Greg Irons, Dave Sheridan, Jaxon, Spain—and notes that many of the Slow Death originals are still with us (and have contributed to the new publication)—William Stout, Tim Boxell, Bryan Talbot, and Richard Corben. These vets, and a score of new talent, have joined Last Gasp guru "Baba" Ron Turner to produce a hunky 128-page commemorative paperback. 

With 2019 titles that included The Book of Weirdo, Neverlasting Miracles, Shut Up You Animals, Babylon Burning, and The Grateful Dead Family Album, it's no wonder Last Gasp was once again voted "Best Bay Area Publisher." 

Checking in on Modern Fundraising 

There are so many nonprofits struggling for support these days. How to compete? Well, one common ploy is the (redundant) "free gift." Typically these range from personally addressed name stickers to tote bags. The Sierra Club ups the ante with signature duffel bags and backpacks. Some nonprofits include actual coins. CARE recently sent out solicitations with a nickel attached. The Tuskegee Airmen mailed a funding request with a large commemorative coin. But Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) outdid them all by including a $3 check made out to each of its potential donors. (Here's a tip: If your charitable nature tends to surrender in the presence of the profit-motive, don't respond to MADD's first check. Hold onto it and wait four months, at which point, MADD will mail a follow-up check for $3.) And here's the altruistic coda: MADD has found that this "we trust you" approach actually works to stimulate larger donations! 

What's Not to Like? 

There is an annoying part of public speech that may or may not have its own name. It's not unknown, it's not a verb, and it's certainly not a gerund. Since I am not a linguist, and do not no one, I've chosen to call these conversational tidbits linguistic litter." 

I'm referring to those small scraps of meaningless lingo–essentially rhetorical sound effects–that saturate common chatter when the speaker doesn't really have anything to say but can't bear to stay silent. You know the words: Um … Uh-huh… yeah… you know… really… duh…. Back in the 60s, we also had the all-purpose filler "dig." Today the current front runner is like." 

Tonight Show host Jimmy Kimmel recently culled an episode of The Bachelor to see how much the millennial contestants relied on this particular piece of mindless place-filler. After reviewing the evidence, Kimmel concluded: "It's, like, insane." 

Here is the video: 

 

Fight to Unite? 

As the Democrat Debates continue to roil, we seem to acquire even more evidence that America is, at heart, a clinically belligerent nation. A majority of the presidential contenders continue to strike the same familiar poses—fist in the air, index finger pointing menacingly at opponents, foreheads furrowed and eyebrows clenched, eruptions of loud, rude, and raucous shouts. 

The majority also strike a "familiar prose"—counter-attaching with ballistic vocabularies and vowing to "fight" and "battle" to "defeat" the opposition in order to "take back" the country. But what's really strange is the way they (Bernie, Elizabeth, Mike, Tom, and Joe among them) follow their militaristic jingoism with prescriptions that call for "uniting the country" while accusing they're competitors of "dividing the country." 

Isn't it inconsistent to argue that the only way to "unite a divided nation" is to win by fighting and destroying your political opponents? 

Laughing at War 

In an unlikely collision of art, humor and war, award-winning actor, director and screenwriter Jonny Lewis has created a new genre for the film-festival crowd—an exposition of "Antiwar Comedy Shorts." 

Maybe it's time we tried to turn the myths of "patriotism, duty, heroic combat, and the glory of sacrifice" into a laughingstock. Here are some samples of what Lewis has managed to imagine. 

 

 

 

 

 

Trinidad Chatter 

As usual, we spent the holidays in Trinidad, enjoying the tropical weather, speculating on the topical "whethers" of local politics, and catching up with the lives our family members. Among the memories of tasty food and jubilant music, there were several bits of conversation that still linger in the mind. Here are a few: 

A teen nephew, upon hearing that I had written another book: 

"You've written two books? So why don't you have a mansion?" 

A five-year-old named Ethan, pausing to put things in perspective: 

"That was a long time ago — back when I was four!" 

Overheard among the ladies gathered in the kitchen: 

"One time, she put vodka in her batter and the cake never baked." 

And a sports note from December 26, the day that Trinidad's National Lotteries Control Board hosted the "Saint James Stakes," an "eagerly anticipated" annual horserace also known as the Gold Cup. 

Top honors went to a steed named "Master of War." 

Runners up included "Nuclear Power," "Air Force," "Nuclear Fire," and "Wise Guy." ("Appocalypso" was not in the running.) 

Trump Does TIME 

And finally, Smithereens offers another of our continuing tributes to the legacy of Donald J. Trump. 

 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, March 1-8

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Alliance
Saturday February 29, 2020 - 07:22:00 PM

h There is a lot of information in the weekly summary of meetings, the introduction is given as a guide to meetings with items of high interest or potential high impact. Those meetings have a double **. The best opportunity for input is at the City Council policy committees and key Boards and Commissions



Worth Noting and Showing Up:

  • Super Tuesday March 3 California Primary Day: - Polls open 7 am and close at 8 pm,
Absentee Ballot Voters - Don’t delay, get your ballots in. Voting in person or walking in your absentee ballot you must arrive before 8 pm.

  • Wednesday: Planning Commission is conducting a public hearing on eliminating off-street parking minimum requirements for multi-unit buildings.
  • Thursday: morning – Council Land Use Committee TOPA (Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act,) afternoon – Council FITS Policy Committee phase out of sale of (new) gas/diesel/natural gas powered passenger vehicles, evening – Housing Advisory Commission
  • Sunday – March 8 – Daylight Savings begins


The agenda for the March 10 City Council meeting is available for comment to Council and follows the list of meetings.



Sunday, March 1, 2020 

Ben Bartlett Councilmember District 3 & Mayor Jesse Arreguin Office Hours, 2 - 4 pm, at 3250 Adeline, Vault Cafe 

Monday, March 2, 2020 

Peace and Justice Commission, 7 pm at 2180 Milvia, 1st Floor Cypress Room, Agenda: 7. Revised resolution opposing new US base construction in Henoko-Oura Bay of Okinawa, 8. Resolution opposing war in Iran, 11. Social Justice Framework on Human Needs in Berkeley 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/ContentDisplay.aspx?id=13054 

Personnel Board, 7 – 9 pm, 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Conference Room, Agenda: V. Recommendation to Establish Classification and Salary Range of Communications Specialist. 

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

Tax the Rich Rally, with music by Occupella, 4 – 5 pm at the Top of Solano in front of the Closed Oaks Theater, Rain Cancels. 

Tuesday, March 3, 2020 

Super Tuesday – Primaries in California, Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia. 

Sanctuary City Task Force, 4 - 5:30 pm at 2180 Milvia, reconvening of task force, contact TTrachtenberg@cityofberkeley.info 

Wednesday, March 4, 2020 

Board of Library Trustees, 6:30 pm at 1901 Russell St, Tarea Hall Pittman South Branch Library, Agenda: II.B. Add $30,000 and extend contract 2 yrs to Dec 31, 2022, total $80,000 with Roberto Salcido dba Hercules Electric for on-call electrical services, II.C. 5th Contract renewal with Noll & Tam Architects for Central Library Area Improvements project add $20,000 total $585,416 thru June 30, 2021, II.D. Accept $60,000 from CA State Library Fund for10 GB Internet connection. III. Discuss Moss Adams analysis and recommendations. 

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

Commission on Disability, 6:30 – 9 pm at 1947 Center, 4th Floor, Agenda: 2. Elevator Ordinance, 3. Paratransit Update, 4. Presentation Berkeley Preparedness Network, 5. BART Advisory Appointment, 

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

**Planning Commission, 7 – 10 pm at 2939 Ellis, South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: 9. Public Hearing Parking Reform – eliminate minimum off-street parking requirements except in High Fire zones, establish off-street parking maximums and establish TDM (Transit Demand Management) Program, unbundle parking except when prohibited by Federal Funding. 

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

Thursday, March 5, 2020 

**City Council Land Use, Housing & Economic Development Committee, 10:30 am, at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Room, Agenda: 2. Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act - new ordinance giving tenants the opportunity to collectively purchase the property they live in 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/Policy_Committee__Land_Use,_Housing___Economic_Development.aspx 

**City Council Facilities, Infrastructure, Transportation, Environment & Sustainability Committee, 2 pm, at 2180 Milvia, 6th Floor Redwood Room, Agenda: 2. Ordinance terminating the sale of gas, diesel and natural gas powered passenger vehicles and City fleets by 2025 (phase out program), 3. Bright Streets Initiative (improve street safety for pedestrians, bicyclists and near schools), 4. Potential Bonding and funding opportunities for improving PCI (Paving Condition Index) and creating paving master plan. FUTURE meetings: Traffic Circles, Plastic Bags. 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/Home/Policy_Committee__Facilities,_Infrastructure,_Transportation,_Environment,___Sustainability.aspx 

Cannabis Commission, 2 – 4 pm, at 1947 Center, Multi-purpose Room, Basement, Agenda: VII. A. Berkeley Ordinance, B. Active State Legislation 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/MedicalCannabis/ 

**Housing Advisory Commission, 7 – 9 pm at 2939 Ellis St, South Berkeley Senior Center, Agenda: 6. Possible Recommendation Reducing Interest Rate from 3% to 1% for 1601 Oxford Housing Trust Fund Loan, 7. Presentation Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA), 8. Discussion/Action TOPA, 10. Recommend Reserving Funding for Bay Area Community Land Trust to purchase 1685 Solano 11. Climate Emergency Subcommittee 12. Joint Subcommittee for Implementation of State Housing Laws and establishing objective standards. 

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

Landmarks Preservation Commission, 7 – 11:30 pm at 1947 Center St, Multipurpose Room, Basement, 

2133 University - sign alteration 

2200 block Piedmont – structural alteration permit 

2043 Lincoln – Landmark or Structure of merit 

2517 Virginia – add to list of potential initiations 

2328 Channing Way – landmark initiation 

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

Public Works Commission, 7 – 10 pm at 1326 Allston Way, Willow Room, City of Berkeley Corporation Yard, NO AGENDA posted – per last meeting minutes, proposed items for March presentation PRW Forestry, Adopt-a-Spot, 

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

Friday, March 6, 2020 

No City meetings found 

Saturday, March 7, 2020 

Community Repair Event – Fixit Clinic, 12 – 3 pm, at Tarea Hall Pittman / Tool Lending Library, 1901 Russell, Participants are assisted in learning how to fix/repair the broken item brought in 

https://www.cultureofrepair.org/community-repair-events 

Sunday, March 8, 2020 

SPRING FORWARD – Daylight Savings begins 

 

_____________________ 

 

To comment: email Council@CityofBerkeley.info 

March 10 City Council Agenda: CONSENT: 1. Contract 3-15-2020 to 3-14-2023 with option two 1 yr renewals for $2.7 million over 5 years with Blaisdell’s Business Products for Office supplies, small equipment and office furniture, 2. Contract $100,000 thru 6-30-2022 with Resource Development for results based accountability to evaluate mental health programs, 3. Loan $7.1 million to BRIDGE Housing for acquisition and predevelopment of proposed affordable housing project at 1740 San Pablo, 4. Establish standing list of City’s Labor Negotiators, 5. Contract add $20,000 total $65,000 with Cadalys, Inc for software for BESO (Building Energy Saving Ordinance), 6. Contract add $65,081 total $365,773 (term 5-15-2013 to 6-30-2021) with SSP Data Products, Inc. for Barracuda Backup Solution with Hosted Cloud Storage, 7. Accept donation $9,500 from Friends of Ohlone Park for Ohlone Park Mural Garden, 8. Grant application for $150,000 to National Fitness Campaign for Fitness Courts, 9. Contract add $125,000 total $1,386,771 with 2M Associates for Tuolumne Camp Project, 10. Contract add $40,000 total $280,000 with APB General Engineering for Hillview Road and Woodside Road drainage improvement project, 11. $457,000 to purchase 2019 John Deere Co. 644L 20 Ton Hybrid Wheel Loader with Pape Machinery, Inc, 12. Vision Zero Action Plan, 13. Use Portion Cannabis Tax Proceeds to fund subsidies 1000 Person Plan (homeless) 14. Oppose S.2059 – Justice for Victims of Sanctuary Cities Act of 2019 with letters to Feinstein, Harris, Lee and Trump, 15. Support AB 1839 – CA Green New Deal, 16. Support AB 2037 – Hospital Closure Notification, 17. Refer to Planning Commission Update definition “Research and Development,” 18. Referral to City Manager to study feasibility of 1890 Alcatraz (city owned) as site for African American Holistic Resource Center and affordable housing, 19. Allocation U1 General Fund Revenues, 20. Letter Supporting Reviving Berkeley Bus Rapid Transit, 21. Affirm support for People of Tibet, ACTION: 22. Electric Bike Share Program Franchise Amendment with Bay Area Motivate, subsidiary of Lyft for shared electric bikes, 23. Direct City Manager to Lease CalTrans Property at University and West Frontage Road for temporary outdoor shelter and immediately provide handwashing, toilet and garbage pick-up, 24. Ronald V. Dellums Fair Chance Housing Access, 25. Ballot Initiative to increase City Council Salary, 26. Disposition (sale) 1631 Fifth Street, 27. Surveillance Technology and Acquisition Reports and Body Worn Cameras Policy, INFORMATION REPORTS: 28. Economic Dashboards and Demographic Profile Update, 29. 2019 FY 4th Quarter Investment report, 30. 2020 FY 1st qtr report, 31. Audit Status Report from Public Works towards 2020 Zero Waste Goal, 32. Audit Status report from Public Works on Zero Waste Activities, 33. Proposed Navigable Cities Framework for access for People with Disabilities from Commission, 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2020/03_Mar/City_Council__03-10-2020_-_Regular_Meeting_Agenda.aspx 

 

_____________________ 

 

Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

0 Euclid – Berryman Reservoir TBD 

Remanded to ZAB or LPC With 90-Day Deadline 

1155-73 Hearst (develop 2 parcels) – referred back to City Council – to be scheduled 

Notice of Decision (NOD) With End of Appeal Period 

1533 Beverly 3-12-2020 

2565 Buena Vista 3-11-2020 

1237.5 Carrison 3-10-2020 

2965-2967 College 3-4-2020 

1660 Lincoln 3-12-2020 

74 Oak Ridge 3-19-2020 

1231 Ordway 3-17-2020 

1919 Oregon 3-16-2020 

1315 Peralta 3-17-2020 

1416 Russell 3-4-2020 

2418 Sacramento 3-18-2020 

2421 Seventh 3-12-2020 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/planning_and_development/land_use_division/current_zoning_applications_in_appeal_period.aspxhttps://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 

 

___________________ 

 

WORKSHOPS 

March 17 – CIP Update (PRW and Public Works), Measure T1 Update 

May 5 – Budget Update, Crime Report 

June 23 – Climate Action Plan/Resiliency Update, Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update 

July 21, Sept 29 – no workshops scheduled “yet” 

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

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Vision 2050 

Systems Realignment 

_____________________ 

 

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/ 

 

_____________________ 

 

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,