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As COVID-19 Cases Mount in Berkeley, Residents Patiently Await a Safe and Effective Vaccine

Isabelle Gaston, Ph.D.
Saturday August 08, 2020 - 04:21:00 PM

In early January 2020, a novel coronavirus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV2), was isolated in several patients in Wuhan, China (1). Because of a global outbreak in 2002 of a different but genetically similar coronavirus (SARS), and subsequent outbreak of another coronavirus called MERS-CoV in 2012, scientists around the world immediately pivoted to working on vaccines and treatments for this new disease. This included molecular virologists, immunologists, biochemists, and structural biologists at UCSF, UC Berkeley, and the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI).

As of August 6, 2020, the City of Berkeley has reported 422 SARS-CoV-2 cases and four deaths. With rapidly increasing community spread, and a burning desire to get back to some semblance of normality, the need for an effective vaccine and therapy grows stronger every day. If all goes well – and there are no major setbacks in the clinical trials – a vaccine to prevent infection with SARS-CoV-2, and new and more effective antiviral therapies to treat the disease known as COVID19 (Coronavirus Disease 2019), might be available within six months to a year.  

Read the whole story here.  

 


Questions, Concerns Persist About Point Molate Development

Sam Richards, Bay City News Foundation
Friday August 07, 2020 - 12:35:00 PM

Key concerns about a proposed major Point Molate development project - about emergency egress, conflicts with Richmond's general plan, open space preservation and traffic mitigation, among other things - linger for Richmond planning commissioners, less than two weeks before a scheduled vote on approving the project's final environmental report.  

The Planning Commission sat for a presentation Thursday night on the Final Subsequent Environmental Impact Report for the proposed Point Molate Mixed Use Development Project. This, its most updated and adjusted iteration, as proposed by Irvine-based developer SunCal, would includes 1,452 new residential units (mostly condominiums), approximately 375,000 square feet of rehabilitated existing structures and 250,000 square feet of new construction for mixed-use development that could include restaurant, retail, commercial and residential uses, all on about 270 acres. Point Molate is about a mile and a half north of the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge.  

At least 70 percent of the site, about 193 acres, would remain as open space, including recreational areas, parks, trails (including an approximately 1.5-mile portion of the San Francisco Bay Trail along the shoreline), vista overlooks and other similar amenities. A terminal on the existing pier that may be accessible to water transit options, such as ferries, water shuttles, and/or water taxis. There would be an historic district, a waterfront park and hillside open spaces on the east side. 

But many public commenters Thursday night implored the commission to reject the SunCal proposal and instead recommend to the City Council adoption of the alternate Community Plan. That plan, supported by the Point Molate Alliance, calls for some development in the Winehaven Historical District on Point Molate's north end, but no homes.  

"If this project is approved, Point Molate will become yet another enclave for the privileged few," Richmond resident Sally Tobin told the planning commissioners. "This is the essence of gentrification."  

Former Richmond Planning Commissioner Jeff Kilbreth said the SunCal project "isn't in the spirit" of Richmond's general plan. If the homes don't sell, he said, "you simply can't guarantee that the project won't bankrupt the city."  

Planning Commissioner Andrew Butt said he too has concerns about whether the city will be left holding the bag if those condos don't sell, and the city still has to pay for the infrastructure to support them. Commissioner Jen Loy said she wants to know whether Native American tribes that still have ties to Point Molate have been sufficiently updated on this process. 

Commissioner Nancy Baer said she was "confused and disturbed" about traffic issues that, according to the environmental impact report, present "significant and unavoidable" problems.  

"To me, that means the project that was presented to us might not be possible," Baer said.  

From 1942 until 1995, Point Molate hosted a U.S. Navy fuel storage and transfer facility. After its September 1995 closure as part of the Department of Defense's Base Closure Act, a Point Molate Reuse Plan was approved by the Richmond Local Reuse Authority in 1997.  

A lawsuit was filed in 2011 by Upstream Point Molate, LLC and the Guidiville Rancheria, a Pomo tribe based in Mendocino County, after Richmond voters rejected a proposed casino at Point Molate. A federal judge also said no to the casino, but required that any profits from eventual development there be split between the city and the casino developers. The suit was settled in April 2018.  

Richmond city staff will return Aug. 17 with responses to the commissioners' questions Thursday. The commission could certify the environmental report that night; if they do, the Richmond City Council could take further action as early as Sept. 1.


A Love Letter to Beirut

Gar Smith
Sunday August 09, 2020 - 05:55:00 PM

ast summer, we spent two weeks visiting Lebanon and Jordan. We found Beirut to be a rollicking series of intensely human encounters with scores of engaging, helpful, delightful strangers that we met in the streets and in the souks. Jordan's capital city, Amman, was a blistering hot ramble of crowded streets, storied ruins and high-rise office towers—towers that some locals resent. As our Jordanian friend, Ayman, put it: "This is not our culture. You can't know everyone in your building if it is more than four stories tall." 

Our base in Beirut was the West House, a multi-storied hotel on a hill in the Hamra District. The West House was located about two miles west of the massive August 4 explosion that destroyed the city's major port and blocks of surrounding buildings. The hotel was within the blast zone of an explosion that has been estimated to have released 10 percent of the destructive power of the atomic bomb that destroyed the Japanese city of Hiroshima. 

Staring at the horrific images of the blast's aftermath—the remains of shattered buildings and bloodied residents working to save neighbors buried in the rubble—triggers a strange form of angst. 

Looking at these images of familiar streets and buildings shredded by the force of the detonation was like seeing a photograph of a dear friend who had been beaten and left to die at the side of the road. 

But it also brought back memories of a beautiful city and the many marvelous people we had the pleasure to meet. 

At Home in Hamra 

It was a short walk downhill from the West House to a sprawling commercial district filled with clothing shops, electronic stores, and restaurants. Snappily dressed mannequins dressed in elegant dinner jackets and ties stood watch on the sidewalks outside clothing stores. But only the mannequins were wearing these over-the-top duds: no one in the hot streets showed any interest in wearing burgundy-colored evening jackets, let alone bow-ties. Every now and then, we came across mannequins that were designed to resemble comically overweight men. The sight was good for a laugh. 

In one storefront, we found some young men earnestly making sugary drinks on-the-spot. Cars and small trucks would pull up and unload long clumps of sugar cane. The stalks would be hoisted and thrust into a massive metal press at the front of the shop. The crushed cane released a steady supply of cane syrup and the sweet elixir was then poured into cups filled with ice and handed out to appreciative customers. 

Multilingualism: A Tool for a More Peaceful World 

The folks we met on the streets of Lebanon were wonderfully engaging people—from students and clerks to cabbies and cooks and lots of adorable children. 

For us, a good part of the magic of Beirut was the discovery that nearly everyone we met was fluent in English and French in addition to Arabic. In Lebanon, we were told, school children learn to speak at least three languages—Arabic, English, and French (a colonial legacy). And they have the option of choosing a fourth language (most often Spanish or Italian). 

As a result, Beirut is a cosmopolitan, multilingual, international city whose residents are exceptionally engaging and helpful. The people we encountered in the parks and on the street all stopped to chat and offer help when needed. Unlike the US, Beirut's residents weren't stumbling around in a daze, gazing at their "smart" devices. Instead, hey were looking about with smiles and eager eyes, paying attention to one another and the world around them. 

Even the young folk at the checkout counters spoke "ear-perfect English." They sounded just like US kids—but really smart kids who understood international money exchanges, knew where San Francisco was located, and were ready to talk about local and world politics. 

Everyone went out of their way to chat and help us navigate our way through their city. Business-owners, passersby, and even armed soldiers, all found the time to stop and chat with us, to share opinions, and swap jokes. 

When we had asked a question of that one local shopkeeper could not answer, he called across the street to a neighboring storeowner who came to our assistance. When he learned we were from the US, his face brightened and he told us how, as a young man, he had served as a sailor on a commercial ship that visited US ports from Virginia to the Gulf. He still had a special love for New Orleans where he learned how to "dance like an American." And then, right there in the store, he began to high-step and move his hips to a long-remembered tune. 

The experience left me thinking that, as lovely as the Bay Area may be, it would be even greater if we were all as congenial and multilingual as Beirut. 

Beirut's Drivers 

In Beirut, no one seems to be rushing off to some "important" meeting or scurrying off in a mad rush to catch a bus. For one thing, there aren't any buses—only taxis, lots of cars and almost as many motorbikes. 

As we prepare for a road trip, Wisam, our local driver, shows us a photo of the youngest of his two daughters and explains how he and his wife share the child-raising duties. His wife has her own business, selling clothing online. 

He jokes about "Beirut drivers" and it's true: the traffic is chaotic, with cars continually competing for space and missing collisions and scraps by mere inches—while people on motorbikes zip in and out, adding to the chaos and unpredictability. 

At large intersections, 15 or more cars will arrive at the same time from all directions, pushing ahead, jostling for position, jumping in front of one another. There are few stoplights. The beeping of horns is constant but there's no road-rage. The competition seems jocular, business-like, and almost collegial. 

At one point, as we're racing down Highway 51, a main boulevard out of town (that runs past the doomed City Port), in a crowded flood of three-lane traffic, I notice that we are actually barreling down what was supposed to be a two-lane highway. The original lane lines were still vaguely visible but everyone ignored them, as they competed for space. 

The Proud Residents of Hamra 

A shopkeeper on Souraty Street, who was making a cup of Lebanese espresso when we walked by, invites us in to chat. He says his family has been in Hamra for generations. His grandfather opened the shop and his father ran it before passing it on. The family owns several other stores in the neighborhood. He's proud to be a resident of Hamra, which he refers to proudly, as if it is a separate country. 

He brings up the recent past. The Civil Wars of 1958 and 1975; The Israeli attacks in 1982 and 2006. With personal experience that we can only image, he proclaims war to be a terrible thing. "People don't make war," he says, "it's countries that make war. People can get along. We don't need war. Why can't we live together as people? People are more important than war." 

"Countries declare war and people are ordered to fight and die," he continued, "but why do countries declare war? Because of a small number of powerful people are competing to control resources and expand their power. The rest of the people only suffer. War does not make the common man rich or bring new liberties and freedom." 

He lifts his hands and pretends he's holding a large book. "Who is good?" he asked rhetorically. "A King? No!" He turns an invisible page. "Trump? No!" He turns another invisible page. "The people? YES!" He looks up triumphantly and slams his invisible book shut. Case closed. 

 

Rooted in Beirut 

On one morning stroll, a family of shopkeepers invited us in for a half-hour of chatter about travel and trinkets. And they didn't ask us to purchase a single item. Conversation seemed more important than commercialism. 

Further on, we spotted a silver-haired gentleman sitting in a chair next to a small but thriving garden in front of a seafront restaurant called Le Posiedon on the Minet al Hosn. When we asked about the garden, he asked us to join him and offered a 15-minute tour, inviting us in to touch, smell and sample his tomatoes, oleander, and peppers, even offering a sniff of some pinched leaves and a taste or two. It turned out that he was the owner of the establishment, one of the most popular seafood restaurants in Beirut. 

Walking along Beirut's version of the Embarcadero, we leaned over the cement sea wall facing the Mediterranean Sea and shouted down to a fisherman, asking how many fish he'd caught. He held up a single finger. When we returned two hours later, we noticed he was still there. When we again asked how many fish he had caught. He grinned and held up ten fingers.  

As we walked by the Saint George Yacht Club, a large bus pulled up and 50-plus men emerged. My travel companion (a sociologist) looked them over and announced that they were most likely from Nepal. We caught the eye of the driver, who turned out to be from Tyre and, when asked about his passengers, he replied that they were part of a United Nations delegation—from Nepal. 

Score another win for the sociologist. 

Falafels and the Warriors 

After walking back to the Hamra District, it was time to search for a falafel joint. Several people recommended a place called Barbars but everyone's directions seemed to lead in different directions. More often than not, when a local resident advised walking two blocks and turning left, they made the gesture for a right turn. At the end of our third dead-end, we discovered a restaurant screening the Women's Soccer World Cup games. But, alas, no falafels.  

A block further on, our luck changed. We found a sidewalk restaurant that offered a half-dozen cookie-sized falafels to-go. We sat down at a table waiting for our order and found ourselves in front of a large TV screen live-casting the final four minutes of a Raptors/Warriors game with the score nearly tied and the Raptors holding a 1-point lead.  

(Note: One distinct feature of the Beirut dinning experience involved watching the servers not only bringing food and drinks to the tables but also offering hookahs for the customers to enjoy between bites. The first night we experienced this sight, there were more women than men sucking on their favorite flavored vapors.) 

A Day in Prehistoric Grotto 

One morning, we set off on a road trip that began with a long drive to the Nahr al-Kalb Valley in the western flanks of the Lebanon mountains to visit one of the New Seven Wonders of Nature. 

After taking a gondola-ride from a staging area, we found ourselves descending down a long tunnel to explore the Jeito Grotto. The Grotto exists thanks to a "disappearing stream" found on the top the mountain. Over millions of years, the rain that filled the stream continued to vanish into the mountain, working its way deep through the volcanic and sedimentary rock to create a spectacle resembling an underground cathedral of stone. 

After exploring the Upper Cave for an hour, we moved on to the Lower Cave where we found ourselves floating on a raft, paddling through a vast, hidden underground lake inside calcite chambers filled with gigantic limestone stalactites illuminated by beams of light. 

Photographs were not permitted but I did find this video: 

 

A Baker in Byblos 

After emerging from the grotto, we moved on to visit one of the world's oldest human settlements—the coastal city of Byblos, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that is believed to have been continuously occupied since 8800 BC. 

While in Byblos, we found ourselves walking down a stone pathway surrounded by a variety of shops when a woman at a storefront bakery called out: "Do you want to see my oven?" The invitation was irresistible. 

The baker's name was Rim El Barj and, as she explained, she lived atop a nearby mountaintop with a household of cats. We wound up talking with Rim for an hour, sharing stories about friends, family, and adventures. She felt like family. Although she'd never visited the US, Rim knew all about California and confessed she had once considered buying property in Grass Valley. 

Mutual Problem-solving, Beirut Style 

On our third day in Beirut, my laptop died and I found I couldn't recharge it. 

That evening, we dropped by Bits & Bytes, a local Internet Café-cum-videogaming room. While the other habitués were busy firing imaginary weapons at exploding avatars, we caught up with our email. But, without the means to recharge my laptop, it looked like I'd be offline for the next two weeks. When I asked the owner if he knew of any nearby stores that might offer a repair, he invited me to bring my computer in and he promised to personally check it out. 

I was back in 20 minutes and, after some initial fiddling, the screen lit up. He announced that the problem wasn't with the battery or the charger but with the adaptor. "Made in China," he explained. "These things basically work twice and that's it." 

The odds of getting a new converter seemed dim, but walking down Sidoni Street the next day, I spotted a shop with some electronic goods on display. The owner wasn't able to help but he recommended a fellow shopkeeper further up the street. Along the way, trying not to get lost, a student walking in the same direction offered to escort us to the shop. 

It didn't look too promising (the shelves were filled with boxes of videogames) but the owner looked at my adaptor, asked about the voltage, and set about digging into two drawers of electronic goods. After trying and failing several times to find a working combination, he came back with, not one but two adaptors coupled together. We plugged the laptop charger in, popped the combo into a wall socket and, voila, the laptop started charging. 

The "Purse Bread" Incident 

Later in the day, we found ourselves chatting with a taxi driver as we bounced across town to a neighborhood museum. (Formerly the family home of a prosperous Lebanese businessman, the mansion—along with its trove of unique paintings—had been bequeathed to the city as a public art space.) Along the way, we asked the driver about a special kind of bread we had discovered the previous day during a stop at a bakery chain called Abu Arab's. Because the large pretzel-like loaf featured what looked like a large handle, we called it "purse bread." 

The driver was perplexed by our attempts to describe this "purse bread." So what did he do? Something I would never expect to see in any other city on Earth. Spotting a couple of young pedestrians on the sidewalk, he pulled over to the side of the narrow street and called out to them: "Do you speak English?" They did. So I sketched a quick drawing of the bread on a scrap of paper and handed it over. They smiled and told us the bread was called Kahky

 

The Anguish of Loss 

Watching the footage of Beirut's burning port, the up-ended cars, and the rubble-strewn streets is painful to confront. The spiraling death count and reports of thousands of casualties falls especially hard on the heart. 

When a blast leaves hundreds dead and missing—and more than 5,000 wounded and 300,000 homeless—such high numbers mean there's a good chance that we personally met and briefly got to know some of the people who are now among the blast's victims, both living and dead. 

So far, the only residents of Beirut that we have been able to contact report they are safe but in shock. Wisam tells us that the situation is desperate, with people sleeping on the sidewalks. 

Here are a few places that are accepting donations to provide aide for the people of Beirut. 

The Lebanese Red Cross is an independent organization focused on disaster prevention and relief. It is the main provider of ambulances in Lebanon, and relies on volunteers. Its services are provided for free to those who need them. 

Lebanese Food Bank. The blast destroyed grain silos that contained around 85% of the country’s grain supply. Up to 80% of the country’s food is imported, most of it via the port destroyed by the explosion. 

Beit el Baraka runs a free supermarket, as well as providing medical costs and housing for people in need. Following the explosion, it is also working to repair damaged homes. 

CARE International began working in Lebanon in 2006, to help meet the needs of refugees affected by the conflict in Syria. 

Islamic Relief Lebanon 

International Rescue Committee 

American National Red Cross 


What UCB Is Really Up To This Time, No Kidding

Dan Mogulof
Tuesday August 04, 2020 - 04:10:00 PM

To Whom It May Concern,

The following event listing is rife with misleading and/or erroneous information, and we hope it will be corrected as quickly as possible. We also expect any future reporting about 1921 Walnut to be factual and accurate

http://berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2020-08-01/contact

Please allow me to reiterate a few, key facts about 1921 Walnut that we have consistently conveyed to media…to residents of the building…and to the City of Berkeley: 

  • There is no imminent action planned for the property. Residents will be allowed to remain in their units for some time as the University is contemplating the development of the entire block but has not yet decided to demolish the building.
  • While the University is preparing a relocation plan, relocation will not actually commence unless and until the campus moves forward with a plan to demolish the building, which does not exist at present.
  • For eligible residents, relocation offers could include payment for moving expenses and financial assistance for rental or purchase costs of a replacement dwelling. Relocation assistance packages would, among other things, factor in household income, costs of comparable housing, and moving expenses. The amount of assistance would take into account the circumstances of each household.
IN addition the ridiculous claims about secrecy and the identify of the donating foundation are demonstrably false. Here’s is a copy of what we have sent to inquiring reporters since last May: 

"UC Berkeley is pleased to confirm that the Helen Diller Foundation is the heretofore anonymous donor working with the campus on a new student housing project. The campus has no additional information to share about the project beyond that which is included in this publicly available memo that was provided to the UC Regents’ Finance and Capital Strategies Committee in January 2020. 

The foundation has asked that we share the following statement with interested journalists and members of the public who inquire about the project: 

The Helen Diller Foundation is pleased to be working with UC Berkeley to address the student housing crisis. This collaborative effort represents the continuation of a long-standing relationship between the Diller family and the campus, dating back to when Sanford and Helen Diller were undergraduates at the university. The foundation sees this planned investment as an embodiment of its deep belief in, and support for, public higher education in general, and UC Berkeley in particular. The foundation will be pleased to share additional information and answer questions about the project when plans are finalized, prior to the start of construction.” 

Sincerely, 

 

Dan Mogulof 

Asst. Vice Chancellor 

Office of Communications and Public Affairs 

UC Berkeley 

 

(m) 510-919-6954 


Open Letter to the Berkeley City Council

Carol Denney
Tuesday August 04, 2020 - 02:09:00 PM

Anyone in a leadership position in the City of Berkeley should recognize that the burning of a Black church, The Way on University Avenue, is more than simple arson. Our Chief of Police apparently suggested that "no one was hurt." This comment speaks volumes. 

Please join your voices in a united effort to make sure the Berkeley Police Department has better leadership for the sake of the future we hope to have, where all communities are respected and racist acts of terror are recognized for what they are - efforts to frighten, silence, and intimidate which have serious effects on our whole community, but especially on vulnerable, targeted communities of color.


UPDATE: Berkeley Police Officer Fires Weapon After Interrupting Robbery Thursday Night

Kathleen Kirkwood (BCN)
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 03:23:00 PM

An officer fired her gun Thursday night after coming upon three suspects robbing a Berkeley drug store but police aren't sure if anyone was hit by gunfire. 

The officer was in the area of the CVS Pharmacy at 1451 Shattuck Ave. about 9:15 p.m. when she spotted a robbery taking place. 

The officer tried to detain the suspects and fired her weapon. It was not known if gunfire hit any of the suspects, who fled the scene in a dark-colored sedan. Police have checked at local hospitals and said no related injuries have been reported, Berkeley police spokesman Byron White said Friday. 

The Berkeley officer's foot was injured in the incident and she was treated and released at a hospital, White said. Neighbors who were present told the Planet the car ran over her foot. 

Police did not release any information about whether the suspects were armed. 

The shooting is being investigated by police and the officer will be placed on administrative leave, according to police. 

Anyone with information about the incident is asked to call Berkeley police at (510) 981-5741.


Press Release: Person Struck by Gunfire in North Berkeley

Ofc. Byron White, Berkeley Police
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 03:01:00 PM

On August 1st at 3:53 am, officers responded to the area of Solano Avenue and Fresno Avenue on a report of gunfire in the area. When officers arrived, they discovered a man in his 20’s on the ground with a single gunshot wound on the 900 block of Fresno Avenue. The Berkeley Fire Department transported the man to a local hospital with serious injuries. 

Officers will remain in the area while we continue the investigation. If anyone has information about this incident, please contact BPD’s Homicide Unit at (510) 981-5741. 

Case 2020-00035962


Diana E. H. Russell
1939-2020

Tuesday August 04, 2020 - 02:05:00 PM

Diana E. H. Russell, world-renowned feminist activist, scholar, and author died July 28th in Oakland, California. She was 81 years old. The cause of her death was cardiac arrest. 

Diana Russell devoted her life to the remediation of crimes against women. She authored numerous books and articles on marital rape, femicide, incest, misogynist murders of women, and pornography. In addition to her scholarship, Diana was a grass roots organizer. In the mid-1970s, she started lobbying feminists around the world. Her organizing efforts resulted in the first International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in Brussels, Belgium. Two thousand women from 40 countries heard first-hand accounts of the gender-related violence and oppression tribunal speakers had experienced. Simone de Beauvoir in her introductory speech to the Tribunal said: "I salute the International Tribunal as the beginning of the radical decolonization of women." Later, Belgian feminist Nicole Van de Ven documented the event in a book, Crimes Against Women: The Proceedings of the International Tribunal

Diana Russell was born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, the fourth of the six children of a South African father and a British mother. After completing her Bachelor's degree from the University of Cape Town, at the age of 19, Russell left for the United Kingdom. 

In Britain, she enrolled in the London School of Economics in Political Science. In 1961, she completed a Master’s degree and received the prize for the best student in the program. In 1963 she was accepted into an interdisciplinary PhD program at Harvard University and she moved to Boston. Her research focused on sociology and the study of revolution. 

Diana’s research focus stemmed from her own involvement in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. In 1963, Russell had joined the Liberal Party of South Africa that had been founded by Alan Paton, the author of Cry the Beloved Country. While participating in a peaceful protest in Cape Town, Russell was arrested with other party members. She came to the conclusion that non-violent strategies were futile against the brutal violence and repression of the white Afrikaner police state. Thereafter, she joined the African Resistance Movement (ARM), an underground revolutionary movement fighting apartheid in South Africa. The principal strategy of the ARM was to bomb and sabotage government property, and though Russell was only a peripheral member of the ARM, she still risked a 10-year incarceration if caught. During this period, Diana’s father was a member of the emphatically apartheid parliament of South Africa. 

After completing her doctorate, Diana was hired as a sociology professor at Mills College in Oakland, California. During her first year, she co-taught the first course on women ever offered at Mills. Eventually this course led to the development of the Women’s Studies curriculum at Mills –one of the first in the U.S. 

In 1977, Diana conducted an extensive series of in-depth interviews with women. Data she gathered from these nine hundred interviews appeared in a series of books: Rape in Marriage (1982), Sexual Exploitation: Rape, Child Sexual Abuse, Workplace Harassment (1984), and The Secret Trauma: Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women (1986). The Secret Trauma, the first scientific study of incestuous abuse ever conducted, was the co-recipient of the prestigious C. Wright Mills Award in 1986. 

In 1987, Diana traveled to South Africa to conduct interviews with revolutionary women activists in the anti-apartheid liberation struggle. Upon her return, she published Lives of Courage: Women for a New South Africa (1989). In 1993, Diana edited an anthology on pornography, Making Violence Sexy: Feminist Views on Pornography. Her 1994 book, Against Pornography: The Evidence of Harm, which included 100 pornographic photos, made the connection between pornography and increased incidents of rape. 

Perhaps Diana’s most significant theoretical contribution to the field of women’s studies was a single word. In 1976 Russell redefined ‘femicide’ as "the killing of females by males because they are female." Russell's intention was to politicize the term. She wanted to bring attention to the misogyny driving lethal crimes against women, which she said gender-neutral terms like murder failed to do. In order to deal with these extreme crimes against women, Diana insisted, it was necessary to recognize that, like race-based hate crimes, "Femicides are [also] lethal hate crimes." 

Feminist movements in many countries in Latin America, as in Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Chile, and El Salvador among others, have adopted the use of Russell's politicized 'femicide' and have successfully used it socially, politically and legally to address lethal violence against women in their respective countries. In 1992, she co-edited an anthology, Femicide: The Politics of Woman Killing. 

In addition to her publications, Diana always found time for boots-on-the ground activism. She was often on the front lines of feminist protests in the USA, South Africa, Europe, and the U.K. In concert with other feminists, she demonstrated outside courthouses and theaters; she staged sit-ins in various government offices; she spray-painted feminist slogans on misogynist businesses; and destroyed magazines in porn stores. For many months, she was the solo picketer outside a Berkeley restaurant owned by a trafficker in underage girls. Her acts of civil disobedience often satirized her targets. In 1991, for example, a waitress refused to serve a male customer because he was reading Playboy. She was fired for her act of rebellion. Hefner responded by flying in a large quantity of issues of his magazine that were distributed free to all the diner customers to read. Diana and six friends dressed as waitresses and served ketchup-covered penises and testicles (adroitly sculpted hotdogs) on plates to the crowd that had gathered outside. 

For her various acts of civil disobedience, Diana paid a price. She was sued, arrested a half dozen times, and, on occasion, physically attacked. She remained undaunted. 

She continued to start feminist organizations. In 1977, Diana co-founded Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media (WAVPM), the first feminist anti-pornography organization in the United States and internationally. She also founded FANG (Feminists’ Anti-Nuclear Group) in response to the failure of the peace movement to recognize the role of patriarchy in the development of nuclear arms. This culminated in the publication of Exposing Nuclear Phallacies (1989), designated an Outstanding Book on human rights in the United States by the Gustavus Myers Center in 1990. In 1993, Russell initiated an organization called Women United Against Incest, which supports incest survivors with legal assistance against their perpetrators. Similarly, she created the first TV program in South Africa where incest survivors talk in person about their experiences. 

After spending a half century conducting research, writing and publishing books and articles, public speaking, and political activism to combat male sexual violence against females, Diana shifted her attention to her memoirs. She died before she could complete them. For a more complete summary of Diana’s life and accomplishments, please visit her website: dianarussell.com. 

Consonant with her egalitarian values, Diana lived in a collective household with several other women and a succession of cherished rescue dogs. On the occasions when she allowed herself time-outs from her work, she shared a meal with one of her friends. Those of us fortunate enough to be included in her circle were awed by her single-minded dedication and her remarkable achievements. In addition to our reverence for her, we loved her. 

She is survived by her sister Jill Russell, scores of friends and co-activists, and the thousands of women who owe their survival to her work. 

In her honor, donations can be made to any feminist organization or to 

Diana E. H. Russell, world-renowned feminist activist, scholar, and author died July 28th in Oakland, California. She was 81 years old. The cause of her death was cardiac arrest. 

Diana Russell devoted her life to the remediation of crimes against women. She authored numerous books and articles on marital rape, femicide, incest, misogynist murders of women, and pornography. In addition to her scholarship, Diana was a grass roots organizer. In the mid-1970s, she started lobbying feminists around the world. Her organizing efforts resulted in the first International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in Brussels, Belgium. Two thousand women from 40 countries heard first-hand accounts of the gender-related violence and oppression tribunal speakers had experienced. Simone de Beauvoir in her introductory speech to the Tribunal said: "I salute the International Tribunal as the beginning of the radical decolonization of women." Later, Belgian feminist Nicole Van de Ven documented the event in a book, Crimes Against Women: The Proceedings of the International Tribunal

Diana Russell was born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, the fourth of the six children of a South African father and a British mother. After completing her Bachelor's degree from the University of Cape Town, at the age of 19, Russell left for the United Kingdom. 

In Britain, she enrolled in the London School of Economics in Political Science. In 1961, she completed a Master’s degree and received the prize for the best student in the program. In 1963 she was accepted into an interdisciplinary PhD program at Harvard University and she moved to Boston. Her research focused on sociology and the study of revolution. 

Diana’s research focus stemmed from her own involvement in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. In 1963, Russell had joined the Liberal Party of South Africa that had been founded by Alan Paton, the author of Cry the Beloved Country. While participating in a peaceful protest in Cape Town, Russell was arrested with other party members. She came to the conclusion that non-violent strategies were futile against the brutal violence and repression of the white Afrikaner police state. Thereafter, she joined the African Resistance Movement (ARM), an underground revolutionary movement fighting apartheid in South Africa. The principal strategy of the ARM was to bomb and sabotage government property, and though Russell was only a peripheral member of the ARM, she still risked a 10-year incarceration if caught. During this period, Diana’s father was a member of the emphatically apartheid parliament of South Africa. 

After completing her doctorate, Diana was hired as a sociology professor at Mills College in Oakland, California. During her first year, she co-taught the first course on women ever offered at Mills. Eventually this course led to the development of the Women’s Studies curriculum at Mills –one of the first in the U.S. 

In 1977, Diana conducted an extensive series of in-depth interviews with women. Data she gathered from these nine hundred interviews appeared in a series of books: Rape in Marriage (1982), Sexual Exploitation: Rape, Child Sexual Abuse, Workplace Harassment (1984), and The Secret Trauma: Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women (1986). The Secret Trauma, the first scientific study of incestuous abuse ever conducted, was the co-recipient of the prestigious C. Wright Mills Award in 1986. 

In 1987, Diana traveled to South Africa to conduct interviews with revolutionary women activists in the anti-apartheid liberation struggle. Upon her return, she published Lives of Courage: Women for a New South Africa (1989). In 1993, Diana edited an anthology on pornography, Making Violence Sexy: Feminist Views on Pornography. Her 1994 book, Against Pornography: The Evidence of Harm, which included 100 pornographic photos, made the connection between pornography and increased incidents of rape. 

Perhaps Diana’s most significant theoretical contribution to the field of women’s studies was a single word. In 1976 Russell redefined ‘femicide’ as "the killing of females by males because they are female." Russell's intention was to politicize the term. She wanted to bring attention to the misogyny driving lethal crimes against women, which she said gender-neutral terms like murder failed to do. In order to deal with these extreme crimes against women, Diana insisted, it was necessary to recognize that, like race-based hate crimes, "Femicides are [also] lethal hate crimes." 

Feminist movements in many countries in Latin America, as in Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Chile, and El Salvador among others, have adopted the use of Russell's politicized 'femicide' and have successfully used it socially, politically and legally to address lethal violence against women in their respective countries. In 1992, she co-edited an anthology, Femicide: The Politics of Woman Killing. 

In addition to her publications, Diana always found time for boots-on-the ground activism. She was often on the front lines of feminist protests in the USA, South Africa, Europe, and the U.K. In concert with other feminists, she demonstrated outside courthouses and theaters; she staged sit-ins in various government offices; she spray-painted feminist slogans on misogynist businesses; and destroyed magazines in porn stores. For many months, she was the solo picketer outside a Berkeley restaurant owned by a trafficker in underage girls. Her acts of civil disobedience often satirized her targets. In 1991, for example, a waitress refused to serve a male customer because he was reading Playboy. She was fired for her act of rebellion. Hefner responded by flying in a large quantity of issues of his magazine that were distributed free to all the diner customers to read. Diana and six friends dressed as waitresses and served ketchup-covered penises and testicles (adroitly sculpted hotdogs) on plates to the crowd that had gathered outside. 

For her various acts of civil disobedience, Diana paid a price. She was sued, arrested a half dozen times, and, on occasion, physically attacked. She remained undaunted. 

She continued to start feminist organizations. In 1977, Diana co-founded Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media (WAVPM), the first feminist anti-pornography organization in the United States and internationally. She also founded FANG (Feminists’ Anti-Nuclear Group) in response to the failure of the peace movement to recognize the role of patriarchy in the development of nuclear arms. This culminated in the publication of Exposing Nuclear Phallacies (1989), designated an Outstanding Book on human rights in the United States by the Gustavus Myers Center in 1990. In 1993, Russell initiated an organization called Women United Against Incest, which supports incest survivors with legal assistance against their perpetrators. Similarly, she created the first TV program in South Africa where incest survivors talk in person about their experiences. 

After spending a half century conducting research, writing and publishing books and articles, public speaking, and political activism to combat male sexual violence against females, Diana shifted her attention to her memoirs. She died before she could complete them. For a more complete summary of Diana’s life and accomplishments, please visit her website: dianarussell.com. 

Consonant with her egalitarian values, Diana lived in a collective household with several other women and a succession of cherished rescue dogs. On the occasions when she allowed herself time-outs from her work, she shared a meal with one of her friends. Those of us fortunate enough to be included in her circle were awed by her single-minded dedication and her remarkable achievements. In addition to our reverence for her, we loved her. 

She is survived by her sister Jill Russell, scores of friends and co-activists, and the thousands of women who owe their survival to her work. 

In her honor, donations can be made to any feminist organization or to 

Diana E. H. Russell, world-renowned feminist activist, scholar, and author died July 28th in Oakland, California. She was 81 years old. The cause of her death was cardiac arrest. 

Diana Russell devoted her life to the remediation of crimes against women. She authored numerous books and articles on marital rape, femicide, incest, misogynist murders of women, and pornography. In addition to her scholarship, Diana was a grass roots organizer. In the mid-1970s, she started lobbying feminists around the world. Her organizing efforts resulted in the first International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in Brussels, Belgium. Two thousand women from 40 countries heard first-hand accounts of the gender-related violence and oppression tribunal speakers had experienced. Simone de Beauvoir in her introductory speech to the Tribunal said: "I salute the International Tribunal as the beginning of the radical decolonization of women." Later, Belgian feminist Nicole Van de Ven documented the event in a book, Crimes Against Women: The Proceedings of the International Tribunal

Diana Russell was born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, the fourth of the six children of a South African father and a British mother. After completing her Bachelor's degree from the University of Cape Town, at the age of 19, Russell left for the United Kingdom. 

In Britain, she enrolled in the London School of Economics in Political Science. In 1961, she completed a Master’s degree and received the prize for the best student in the program. In 1963 she was accepted into an interdisciplinary PhD program at Harvard University and she moved to Boston. Her research focused on sociology and the study of revolution. 

Diana’s research focus stemmed from her own involvement in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. In 1963, Russell had joined the Liberal Party of South Africa that had been founded by Alan Paton, the author of Cry the Beloved Country. While participating in a peaceful protest in Cape Town, Russell was arrested with other party members. She came to the conclusion that non-violent strategies were futile against the brutal violence and repression of the white Afrikaner police state. Thereafter, she joined the African Resistance Movement (ARM), an underground revolutionary movement fighting apartheid in South Africa. The principal strategy of the ARM was to bomb and sabotage government property, and though Russell was only a peripheral member of the ARM, she still risked a 10-year incarceration if caught. During this period, Diana’s father was a member of the emphatically apartheid parliament of South Africa. 

After completing her doctorate, Diana was hired as a sociology professor at Mills College in Oakland, California. During her first year, she co-taught the first course on women ever offered at Mills. Eventually this course led to the development of the Women’s Studies curriculum at Mills –one of the first in the U.S. 

In 1977, Diana conducted an extensive series of in-depth interviews with women. Data she gathered from these nine hundred interviews appeared in a series of books: Rape in Marriage (1982), Sexual Exploitation: Rape, Child Sexual Abuse, Workplace Harassment (1984), and The Secret Trauma: Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women (1986). The Secret Trauma, the first scientific study of incestuous abuse ever conducted, was the co-recipient of the prestigious C. Wright Mills Award in 1986. 

In 1987, Diana traveled to South Africa to conduct interviews with revolutionary women activists in the anti-apartheid liberation struggle. Upon her return, she published Lives of Courage: Women for a New South Africa (1989). In 1993, Diana edited an anthology on pornography, Making Violence Sexy: Feminist Views on Pornography. Her 1994 book, Against Pornography: The Evidence of Harm, which included 100 pornographic photos, made the connection between pornography and increased incidents of rape. 

Perhaps Diana’s most significant theoretical contribution to the field of women’s studies was a single word. In 1976 Russell redefined ‘femicide’ as "the killing of females by males because they are female." Russell's intention was to politicize the term. She wanted to bring attention to the misogyny driving lethal crimes against women, which she said gender-neutral terms like murder failed to do. In order to deal with these extreme crimes against women, Diana insisted, it was necessary to recognize that, like race-based hate crimes, "Femicides are [also] lethal hate crimes." 

Feminist movements in many countries in Latin America, as in Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Chile, and El Salvador among others, have adopted the use of Russell's politicized 'femicide' and have successfully used it socially, politically and legally to address lethal violence against women in their respective countries. In 1992, she co-edited an anthology, Femicide: The Politics of Woman Killing. 

In addition to her publications, Diana always found time for boots-on-the ground activism. She was often on the front lines of feminist protests in the USA, South Africa, Europe, and the U.K. In concert with other feminists, she demonstrated outside courthouses and theaters; she staged sit-ins in various government offices; she spray-painted feminist slogans on misogynist businesses; and destroyed magazines in porn stores. For many months, she was the solo picketer outside a Berkeley restaurant owned by a trafficker in underage girls. Her acts of civil disobedience often satirized her targets. In 1991, for example, a waitress refused to serve a male customer because he was reading Playboy. She was fired for her act of rebellion. Hefner responded by flying in a large quantity of issues of his magazine that were distributed free to all the diner customers to read. Diana and six friends dressed as waitresses and served ketchup-covered penises and testicles (adroitly sculpted hotdogs) on plates to the crowd that had gathered outside. 

For her various acts of civil disobedience, Diana paid a price. She was sued, arrested a half dozen times, and, on occasion, physically attacked. She remained undaunted. 

She continued to start feminist organizations. In 1977, Diana co-founded Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media (WAVPM), the first feminist anti-pornography organization in the United States and internationally. She also founded FANG (Feminists’ Anti-Nuclear Group) in response to the failure of the peace movement to recognize the role of patriarchy in the development of nuclear arms. This culminated in the publication of Exposing Nuclear Phallacies (1989), designated an Outstanding Book on human rights in the United States by the Gustavus Myers Center in 1990. In 1993, Russell initiated an organization called Women United Against Incest, which supports incest survivors with legal assistance against their perpetrators. Similarly, she created the first TV program in South Africa where incest survivors talk in person about their experiences. 

After spending a half century conducting research, writing and publishing books and articles, public speaking, and political activism to combat male sexual violence against females, Diana shifted her attention to her memoirs. She died before she could complete them. For a more complete summary of Diana’s life and accomplishments, please visit her website: dianarussell.com. 

Consonant with her egalitarian values, Diana lived in a collective household with several other women and a succession of cherished rescue dogs. On the occasions when she allowed herself time-outs from her work, she shared a meal with one of her friends. Those of us fortunate enough to be included in her circle were awed by her single-minded dedication and her remarkable achievements. In addition to our reverence for her, we loved her. 

She is survived by her sister Jill Russell, scores of friends and co-activists, and the thousands of women who owe their survival to her work. 

In her honor, donations can be made to any feminist organization or to your local ASPCA. 

Diana E. H. Russell, world-renowned feminist activist, scholar, and author died July 28th in Oakland, California. She was 81 years old. The cause of her death was cardiac arrest. 

Diana Russell devoted her life to the remediation of crimes against women. She authored numerous books and articles on marital rape, femicide, incest, misogynist murders of women, and pornography. In addition to her scholarship, Diana was a grass roots organizer. In the mid-1970s, she started lobbying feminists around the world. Her organizing efforts resulted in the first International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in Brussels, Belgium. Two thousand women from 40 countries heard first-hand accounts of the gender-related violence and oppression tribunal speakers had experienced. Simone de Beauvoir in her introductory speech to the Tribunal said: "I salute the International Tribunal as the beginning of the radical decolonization of women." Later, Belgian feminist Nicole Van de Ven documented the event in a book, Crimes Against Women: The Proceedings of the International Tribunal

Diana Russell was born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, the fourth of the six children of a South African father and a British mother. After completing her Bachelor's degree from the University of Cape Town, at the age of 19, Russell left for the United Kingdom. 

In Britain, she enrolled in the London School of Economics in Political Science. In 1961, she completed a Master’s degree and received the prize for the best student in the program. In 1963 she was accepted into an interdisciplinary PhD program at Harvard University and she moved to Boston. Her research focused on sociology and the study of revolution. 

Diana’s research focus stemmed from her own involvement in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. In 1963, Russell had joined the Liberal Party of South Africa that had been founded by Alan Paton, the author of Cry the Beloved Country. While participating in a peaceful protest in Cape Town, Russell was arrested with other party members. She came to the conclusion that non-violent strategies were futile against the brutal violence and repression of the white Afrikaner police state. Thereafter, she joined the African Resistance Movement (ARM), an underground revolutionary movement fighting apartheid in South Africa. The principal strategy of the ARM was to bomb and sabotage government property, and though Russell was only a peripheral member of the ARM, she still risked a 10-year incarceration if caught. During this period, Diana’s father was a member of the emphatically apartheid parliament of South Africa. 

After completing her doctorate, Diana was hired as a sociology professor at Mills College in Oakland, California. During her first year, she co-taught the first course on women ever offered at Mills. Eventually this course led to the development of the Women’s Studies curriculum at Mills –one of the first in the U.S. 

In 1977, Diana conducted an extensive series of in-depth interviews with women. Data she gathered from these nine hundred interviews appeared in a series of books: Rape in Marriage (1982), Sexual Exploitation: Rape, Child Sexual Abuse, Workplace Harassment (1984), and The Secret Trauma: Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women (1986). The Secret Trauma, the first scientific study of incestuous abuse ever conducted, was the co-recipient of the prestigious C. Wright Mills Award in 1986. 

In 1987, Diana traveled to South Africa to conduct interviews with revolutionary women activists in the anti-apartheid liberation struggle. Upon her return, she published Lives of Courage: Women for a New South Africa (1989). In 1993, Diana edited an anthology on pornography, Making Violence Sexy: Feminist Views on Pornography. Her 1994 book, Against Pornography: The Evidence of Harm, which included 100 pornographic photos, made the connection between pornography and increased incidents of rape. 

Perhaps Diana’s most significant theoretical contribution to the field of women’s studies was a single word. In 1976 Russell redefined ‘femicide’ as "the killing of females by males because they are female." Russell's intention was to politicize the term. She wanted to bring attention to the misogyny driving lethal crimes against women, which she said gender-neutral terms like murder failed to do. In order to deal with these extreme crimes against women, Diana insisted, it was necessary to recognize that, like race-based hate crimes, "Femicides are [also] lethal hate crimes." 

Feminist movements in many countries in Latin America, as in Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Chile, and El Salvador among others, have adopted the use of Russell's politicized 'femicide' and have successfully used it socially, politically and legally to address lethal violence against women in their respective countries. In 1992, she co-edited an anthology, Femicide: The Politics of Woman Killing. 

In addition to her publications, Diana always found time for boots-on-the ground activism. She was often on the front lines of feminist protests in the USA, South Africa, Europe, and the U.K. In concert with other feminists, she demonstrated outside courthouses and theaters; she staged sit-ins in various government offices; she spray-painted feminist slogans on misogynist businesses; and destroyed magazines in porn stores. For many months, she was the solo picketer outside a Berkeley restaurant owned by a trafficker in underage girls. Her acts of civil disobedience often satirized her targets. In 1991, for example, a waitress refused to serve a male customer because he was reading Playboy. She was fired for her act of rebellion. Hefner responded by flying in a large quantity of issues of his magazine that were distributed free to all the diner customers to read. Diana and six friends dressed as waitresses and served ketchup-covered penises and testicles (adroitly sculpted hotdogs) on plates to the crowd that had gathered outside. 

For her various acts of civil disobedience, Diana paid a price. She was sued, arrested a half dozen times, and, on occasion, physically attacked. She remained undaunted. 

She continued to start feminist organizations. In 1977, Diana co-founded Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media (WAVPM), the first feminist anti-pornography organization in the United States and internationally. She also founded FANG (Feminists’ Anti-Nuclear Group) in response to the failure of the peace movement to recognize the role of patriarchy in the development of nuclear arms. This culminated in the publication of Exposing Nuclear Phallacies (1989), designated an Outstanding Book on human rights in the United States by the Gustavus Myers Center in 1990. In 1993, Russell initiated an organization called Women United Against Incest, which supports incest survivors with legal assistance against their perpetrators. Similarly, she created the first TV program in South Africa where incest survivors talk in person about their experiences. 

After spending a half century conducting research, writing and publishing books and articles, public speaking, and political activism to combat male sexual violence against females, Diana shifted her attention to her memoirs. She died before she could complete them. For a more complete summary of Diana’s life and accomplishments, please visit her website: dianarussell.com. 

Consonant with her egalitarian values, Diana lived in a collective household with several other women and a succession of cherished rescue dogs. On the occasions when she allowed herself time-outs from her work, she shared a meal with one of her friends. Those of us fortunate enough to be included in her circle were awed by her single-minded dedication and her remarkable achievements. In addition to our reverence for her, we loved her. 

She is survived by her sister Jill Russell, scores of friends and co-activists, and the thousands of women who owe their survival to her work. 

In her honor, donations can be made to any feminist organization or to your local ASPCA. 

 

Diana E. H. Russell, world-renowned feminist activist, scholar, and author died July 28th in Oakland, California. She was 81 years old. The cause of her death was cardiac arrest. 

Diana Russell devoted her life to the remediation of crimes against women. She authored numerous books and articles on marital rape, femicide, incest, misogynist murders of women, and pornography. In addition to her scholarship, Diana was a grass roots organizer. In the mid-1970s, she started lobbying feminists around the world. Her organizing efforts resulted in the first International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in Brussels, Belgium. Two thousand women from 40 countries heard first-hand accounts of the gender-related violence and oppression tribunal speakers had experienced. Simone de Beauvoir in her introductory speech to the Tribunal said: "I salute the International Tribunal as the beginning of the radical decolonization of women." Later, Belgian feminist Nicole Van de Ven documented the event in a book, Crimes Against Women: The Proceedings of the International Tribunal

Diana Russell was born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, the fourth of the six children of a South African father and a British mother. After completing her Bachelor's degree from the University of Cape Town, at the age of 19, Russell left for the United Kingdom. 

In Britain, she enrolled in the London School of Economics in Political Science. In 1961, she completed a Master’s degree and received the prize for the best student in the program. In 1963 she was accepted into an interdisciplinary PhD program at Harvard University and she moved to Boston. Her research focused on sociology and the study of revolution. 

Diana’s research focus stemmed from her own involvement in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. In 1963, Russell had joined the Liberal Party of South Africa that had been founded by Alan Paton, the author of Cry the Beloved Country. While participating in a peaceful protest in Cape Town, Russell was arrested with other party members. She came to the conclusion that non-violent strategies were futile against the brutal violence and repression of the white Afrikaner police state. Thereafter, she joined the African Resistance Movement (ARM), an underground revolutionary movement fighting apartheid in South Africa. The principal strategy of the ARM was to bomb and sabotage government property, and though Russell was only a peripheral member of the ARM, she still risked a 10-year incarceration if caught. During this period, Diana’s father was a member of the emphatically apartheid parliament of South Africa. 

After completing her doctorate, Diana was hired as a sociology professor at Mills College in Oakland, California. During her first year, she co-taught the first course on women ever offered at Mills. Eventually this course led to the development of the Women’s Studies curriculum at Mills –one of the first in the U.S. 

In 1977, Diana conducted an extensive series of in-depth interviews with women. Data she gathered from these nine hundred interviews appeared in a series of books: Rape in Marriage (1982), Sexual Exploitation: Rape, Child Sexual Abuse, Workplace Harassment (1984), and The Secret Trauma: Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women (1986). The Secret Trauma, the first scientific study of incestuous abuse ever conducted, was the co-recipient of the prestigious C. Wright Mills Award in 1986. 

In 1987, Diana traveled to South Africa to conduct interviews with revolutionary women activists in the anti-apartheid liberation struggle. Upon her return, she published Lives of Courage: Women for a New South Africa (1989). In 1993, Diana edited an anthology on pornography, Making Violence Sexy: Feminist Views on Pornography. Her 1994 book, Against Pornography: The Evidence of Harm, which included 100 pornographic photos, made the connection between pornography and increased incidents of rape. 

Perhaps Diana’s most significant theoretical contribution to the field of women’s studies was a single word. In 1976 Russell redefined ‘femicide’ as "the killing of females by males because they are female." Russell's intention was to politicize the term. She wanted to bring attention to the misogyny driving lethal crimes against women, which she said gender-neutral terms like murder failed to do. In order to deal with these extreme crimes against women, Diana insisted, it was necessary to recognize that, like race-based hate crimes, "Femicides are [also] lethal hate crimes." 

Feminist movements in many countries in Latin America, as in Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Chile, and El Salvador among others, have adopted the use of Russell's politicized 'femicide' and have successfully used it socially, politically and legally to address lethal violence against women in their respective countries. In 1992, she co-edited an anthology, Femicide: The Politics of Woman Killing. 

In addition to her publications, Diana always found time for boots-on-the ground activism. She was often on the front lines of feminist protests in the USA, South Africa, Europe, and the U.K. In concert with other feminists, she demonstrated outside courthouses and theaters; she staged sit-ins in various government offices; she spray-painted feminist slogans on misogynist businesses; and destroyed magazines in porn stores. For many months, she was the solo picketer outside a Berkeley restaurant owned by a trafficker in underage girls. Her acts of civil disobedience often satirized her targets. In 1991, for example, a waitress refused to serve a male customer because he was reading Playboy. She was fired for her act of rebellion. Hefner responded by flying in a large quantity of issues of his magazine that were distributed free to all the diner customers to read. Diana and six friends dressed as waitresses and served ketchup-covered penises and testicles (adroitly sculpted hotdogs) on plates to the crowd that had gathered outside. 

For her various acts of civil disobedience, Diana paid a price. She was sued, arrested a half dozen times, and, on occasion, physically attacked. She remained undaunted. 

She continued to start feminist organizations. In 1977, Diana co-founded Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media (WAVPM), the first feminist anti-pornography organization in the United States and internationally. She also founded FANG (Feminists’ Anti-Nuclear Group) in response to the failure of the peace movement to recognize the role of patriarchy in the development of nuclear arms. This culminated in the publication of Exposing Nuclear Phallacies (1989), designated an Outstanding Book on human rights in the United States by the Gustavus Myers Center in 1990. In 1993, Russell initiated an organization called Women United Against Incest, which supports incest survivors with legal assistance against their perpetrators. Similarly, she created the first TV program in South Africa where incest survivors talk in person about their experiences. 

After spending a half century conducting research, writing and publishing books and articles, public speaking, and political activism to combat male sexual violence against females, Diana shifted her attention to her memoirs. She died before she could complete them. For a more complete summary of Diana’s life and accomplishments, please visit her website: dianarussell.com. 

Consonant with her egalitarian values, Diana lived in a collective household with several other women and a succession of cherished rescue dogs. On the occasions when she allowed herself time-outs from her work, she shared a meal with one of her friends. Those of us fortunate enough to be included in her circle were awed by her single-minded dedication and her remarkable achievements. In addition to our reverence for her, we loved her. 

She is survived by her sister Jill Russell, scores of friends and co-activists, and the thousands of women who owe their survival to her work. 

In her honor, donations can be made to any feminist organization or to Berkeley Humane or Berkeley Animal Care Service. 

 

vv 

 


Opinion

Editorials

Twitterati Mob Berkeley's Historic Preservation Commission

Becky O'Malley
Tuesday August 11, 2020 - 04:52:00 PM

If you’re not a Twitter addict, it’s possible that all you know about the medium is news reports about the emanations from the person Willie Brown now calls “DT”. I like Willie’s choice of names—DT evokes the late night tremors that issue daily from whatever vulgar luxury resort the Trump is currently inhabiting. But if you want another example closer to home of what mischief can be done with Twitter, you might have learned something from the Twitter storm which preceded last Thursday’s meeting of Berkeley’s Landmark Preservation Commission. 

First, full disclosure: I’ve twice been a member of this body, and I confess to bias in favor of its mission. The first time, I was appointed by progressive icon Maudelle Shirek, for whom Berkeley’s Old City Hall is named. Maudelle wanted to make sure that a church-owned brown shingle apartment building which once hosted meetings which eventually became the disability rights movement was not demolished. After I joined the commission, the building eventually became a City of Berkeley landmark, which didn’t guarantee its preservation, but did require the church elders to stop and think before tearing it down, and they ended up saving it. 

I was on the LPC close to 8 years that time, ultimately resigning early in this millenium to try to revive the Daily Planet. About three years ago I was re-appointed by Mayor Jesse Arreguin. 

He fired me unceremoniously after three years via email. This may have been in part because of my open defense of another City of Berkeley landmark, People’s Park, which the mayor had openly offered to sacrifice to UC Berkeley’s expansionist enthusiasms. Or maybe not, but anyway I was tired of the job, so it was fine. 

But last week a couple of outraged citizens forwarded links to a Twitter thread which, as near as my limited Twitter skills could decipher, had been started by an ambitious Harvard history grad student. He posted a copy of a letter from the LPC’s online file that lefty politico and UCB professor Robert Reich and his wife had written to support the designation as a historic structure of an 1889 brown shingled house on the North Berkeley block where they own their home. This nomination, supported by a good number of letters from both neighbors and others, was the subject of a hearing before the LPC last Thursday. 

Professor Reich’s house is in a transitional neighborhood near Berkeley’s Live Oak park zoned R2A, multi-units allowed. It's a comfortable mix of old houses and 20th century apartment buildings , ethnically diverse if you judge by the people you see on the street. The house in question is indeed old, and it currently shows its age. It was originally built for the family of William Payson, a founder of the First Unitarian Church of Berkeley. 

Sometime in the 20th century it was legally divided into three or four units, depending on how you count, but most recently it was owned and occupied by a multi-generational family of working class origin. They were not wealthy people, so maintenance was delayed. It’s on a big lot, thick with (legally protected) coastal live oaks and other mature trees. To some it might look a bit neglected, or even seedy, like many Berkeley houses within walking distance of campus. 

The would-be developer who showed up to argue against designating this house called it squalid. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, isn’t it? 

The developer said he has a nascent proposal to tear it down, replacing it with ten units, nine at the Bay Area’s still-high market rate and one at some as yet unspecified level of affordability. 

The most interesting part of Thursday’s spectacle was how the Twitter + Zoom equation has redefined public process in Berkeley. 

I read through the Twitter thread before joining the Zoomed meeting. I’d love to show it to you, but it seems to have been deleted. Let me know if you can find it. 

The author of the ur-Twitter, I figured out, is the son of an academic and a museum executive. His family of origin lives in Arlington, a Virginia suburb of DC where few homes would be called squalid, and he himself now lives in Cambridge. 

He’s a white male. He’s ultra-Ivy: both a Yale graduate and a Harvard history Ph.D. student. He and his wife (she went to Brown) met when they were interns on Teddy Kennedy’s staff, the kind of opportunity open to the privileged young. 

How do I know all this personal stuff? I deduced it from a write-up of his wedding in the society— now“LOVE”— section of the New York Times, which mysteriously surfaced, not just once but in multiple copies, in this Twitter thread. No idea why or how it got there. That’s Twitter for you, I guess. 

And why does it matter? Because the Twitter thread my correspondents sent me featured personal attacks on Robert Reich as a hypocrite, a faux-prog, for speaking up about what’s happening on his own block. If you launch personal attacks, expect personal replies. 

Tweeters implied that Robert Reich was personally responsible for the exclusionary practices that marred California before our fair housing law was passed in the 1950s. Not only that, they suggested, he was supporting the designation of the Payson home because he didn’t want poor neighbors. 

That makes him a NIMBY, right?. 

Not in My Backyard (NIMBY) is the slogan coined by the mothers who exposed the chemical pollution of Love Canal. As you surely know by now, the semi-literate greedy and privileged young have branded themselves with the non-acronymic YIMBY, which means, despite the deceptive M, Yes in Your Back Yard. So when the self-righteous grad student issued a call to arms, his fellow YIMBYs jumped on the Twitter bandwagon with their own attacks. 

This time, they used the front name Berkeley Neighbors for Housing and Climate Action, with a web page that had no one’s actual name associated with it. Same old same old YIMBYs as usual. And one of them posted the link to the Zoomed LPC meeting. 

For pandemic era Zoomed public meetings in Berkeley, the rule is that anyone anywhere can log in, and by clicking a raised-hand icon be added to the queue to eventually speak, usually for just one minute. Speakers are not required to be Berkeley residents, or even ever to have visited Berkeley. This has resulted in infinitely long comment periods with nothing of any complexity articulated because of the time limits. 

Yimby-ism has acquired an almost messianic following, characterized by a quasi-religious belief that if enough housing is built they might eventually score homes like the ones their privileged parents provided for them. The claim is that the only way to provide badly needed housing for very low income people is as a required ad-on to market-rate projects. In this case, there’s talk of nine expensive units and one “affordable” one, but since the developer’s permit application is not complete we can’t be sure what’s planned for this site or whether it will ever materialize. 

Alerted by Twitter, last Thursday maybe a hundred hopeful young men plus a few women called in from all over the country to say that they’ve always wanted to live in Berkeley, if we’d only tear down those squalid old brown shingle houses and build them some nice new condos. Many also parroted some version of the old refrain "I don't know anything about art, but I know what I like." 

Since commenters’ faces were not visible because of technical limitations and real names were not required, there’s no way to know if any of the speakers were under-represented very low-income people of color, but I doubt it. Just one speaker identified himself as Black, and he already lives in the neighborhood. 

Nobody fact-checked this steady stream of opinion and invective. Several speakers, needless to say, went after Professor Reich personally. 

I spotted many errors of fact offered as argument. Here’s just one sample: the house was charged by several speakers with being part of the Northbrae neighborhood, which was indeed developed by an admitted racist. 

It’s not—it was built well before Northbrae in a different place. 

I watched the whole sorry exercise, and my conclusion is that it was an object lesson in the power of predatory capitalism. On his YouTube channel, Professor Reich, an experienced politician and no dummy, dissected the phony argument that demolishing old houses like this guarantees low-cost housing on his blog. Watch this: 

I hope he’ll reprise this analysis when the next old house is threatened. 

I did manage to copy one quote from the Payson House Twitter thread before it was deleted. This one is from an Older White Guy, another Berkeley academic, kind of a lefty, someone I know and generally admire. I’ll charitably conceal his name here hoping he’ll come to his senses and be embarrassed by this: 

“Is there any reason why I should not denounce this as a grotesque abuse of landmarking? As something that will make it much harder down the road to preserve real landmarks, after the dam breaks and the NIMBYs go down?” 

Hey Prof! Here’s your reason: 

Historic preservation should not be only about landmarks. There’s no such thing as a “real” landmark. 

In most towns ordinances like the one which governs Berkeley’s LPC are called historic preservation ordinances—perhaps we should change the name of ours. It’s now considered important by egalitarian people to preserve places and buildings where ordinary people lived and worked, not just grandiose “landmark” monuments to lifestyles of the rich and famous. Architectural historians call this vernacular architecture, and in most countries thoughtful citizens now take pains to preserve it in situ. 

History used to be all about famous men, but now it’s also about regular women and men and how they lived their ordinary lives. If you read up on Berkeley history, you’ll discover that this city and its physical and cultural fabric were woven of lots of kinds of lives: the Ohlone whose shell mound is located near what’s now the Fourth Street mini-mall, the Irish workman buried in a collapse while Old City Hall was being built, the Japanese-American family who ran a laundry in an inconspicuous building on Shattuck, and sincere high-minded Unitarian intellectuals like the Paysons who built Berkeley’s brown shingle houses like this one with respect for nature and fought for social justice. We need to remember all of them. 

In this case a majority of LPC commissioners didn't agree, however, since they did not decide to designate the Payson House, either as a landmark or as a structure of merit. I don't know if the flood of comments from the Twitterati influenced them. The decision, or lack of one, can be appealed to the Berkeley City Council. 


P.S. I’ve left out the Twitter accuser’s name because what he obviously wants is publicity, and I’d rather not gratify him. But to get his measure, here are some of his posts on a different thread where the topic is the Point Reyes National Seashore and environs: 

“A bunch of property owners got together and decided that their definition of environmental protection was wilderness and dairy farms five miles from a major city and everyone for the most part bought it. 

“Marin residents would love you to believe they made a noble environmental decision on behalf of the entire region, but instead they simply redirected the sprawl to Antioch and Vallejo. 

“This is where I would suggest an intersectional approach that considers open space, exclusion, and inequality as interrelated, especially insofar as ‘nature’ is not a pure public good but a thing that can be used to enrich some and immiserate others.” 

I especially love the last graf, don’t you? Lots of pricey Latinate words. Translation: We oughta build more market-rate high-rise condos in Inverness, okay? 

And if you’d like to know who he’s in bed with, take a look at this supportive blog post: 

https://vdare.com/posts/leftist-robert-reich-is-slightly-to-the-right-of-j-r-r-tolkien-when-it-comes-to-his-own-berkeley-neighborhoodi


Public Comment

Re-elect Berkeley Councilmember Cheryl Davila, the Conscience of the Counci

Carol Denney
Friday August 07, 2020 - 12:40:00 PM

Two different Berkeley neighborhoods reported incidents of Black Lives Matter signs being torn down in the last month, the same month The Way Christian Center on University Avenue was set on fire hours after placing a Black Lives Matter sign across its entrance. The Berkeley police investigated it as arson since "nobody was hurt." 

The chilling recognition that racism in Berkeley can take the same form it has taken against Black churches for hundreds of years and go unrecognized by Berkeley police clarifies several things. We need more informed leadership in the Berkeley Police Department and the City Manager's office. We need to stand taller with Black churches and activists who speak out for justice. And we need to re-elect Cheryl Davila to the Berkeley City Council. 

Often referred to as "the conscience of the council," District Two Representative Cheryl Davila represents community voices routinely excluded from the comfortable back rooms where many Berkeley decisions are made. Sometimes other councilmembers will join her efforts to address inequities and disparities ignored for years in our wealthy town. But all too often the Berkeley City Council majority will let solid policy efforts die for lack of a second so that there will be no embarrassing discussion to haunt electoral chances.  

Councilmember Davila had no particular ambition to be on the Berkeley City Council. She's a respected career woman with a strong, close family deeply threaded into the community. But former District Two Representative Darryl Moore, who had appointed her to the Human Welfare and Community Action Commission, suddenly removed her in an effort to squelch a vote on Palestinian rights, replacing her with the spouse of his legislative aide. 

The scandal rocked the community. It was a free speech issue. It was a human rights issue. It was poorly disguised as a procedural issue that rattled through circles not ordinarily aware of the commission or its work. Cheryl Davila maintained a steady, dignified voice for human rights through it all, deciding afterward to run for Moore's seat. Despite Moore having the backing of the city's insiders and the heft of incumbency, Davila won. 

Cheryl Davila's passion for building a unified community is informed; she is leading two regional task forces crafting forward-thinking legislation to address our city's disparities in education, health, housing, policing, and employment disproportionately burdening communities of color. Her focus and intensity on the council never clouds her compassion, her sense of humor, and the comfortable way she welcomes others. She's a celebrated presence at local festivals and events, and one of the few who sat for hours with street activist/artist William Barclay Caldeira, who called himself 300, listening with an open, patient heart to his despair and pain before his death last year. There are no spotlights on these moments, but they bear witness to a broader vision of the healing qualities of human family and connection often left in the dust of impoverished policy. 

Her circle of support speaks volumes: Ben Bartlett, Councilmember, City of Berkeley City District 3; Gus Newport, Former Mayor, City of Berkeley; Carol Kennerly, Former Vice Mayor, City of Berkeley; Ying Ling, Former Councilmember, City of Berkeley; Eduardo Martinez, Councilmember, City of Richmond; Melvin Willis, Councilmember, City of Richmond; Jovanka Beckles, Former Councilmember, City of Richmond / Former State Assembly Candidate; Mansour Id-Deen, President of Berkeley NAACP*; Fania Davis, JD, PhD, Former Founding Director Restorative Justice for Oakland Youth (RJOY)*; Danny Glover, Actor, Film Director & Political Activist; Keith Carson, Supervisor, County of Alameda; Jane Kim, Former Supervisor, City of San Francisco; Maxwell G. Anderson Jr., Former Councilmember, City of Berkeley District 3; Geoff Ellsworth, Mayor, City of St. Helena; Mariko Yamada, Former State Assembly Member; Rochelle Pardue Okimoto, Councilmember, City of El Cerrito; Pennie Opal Plant, Co-founder Idle No More and Gathering Tribes; Ruscal Cayangyang, Former School Board Member, Vallejo Unified School District, and many more (including this writer).

The considerable circles of talent endorsing Councilmember Davila are often outvoted by councils and boards unable to see this moment as crucial. And this moment is crucial. The ordinary opposition to more effective social justice efforts is circling her seat on the Berkeley City Council hoping to preserve the traditional success of simply posing as supportive of transformative re-prioritization while accommodating disparities so shocking that in 2014 Berkeley was ranked in the top ten for income disparity, and little has changed. 

It isn't just the pandemic that risks exacerbating Berkeley's affection for weak, ineffective policy. It's the council majority's willingness to let Berkeley's Chief of Police state on the record that without the indiscriminate use of potentially lethal toxic chemicals the Berkeley police would have no choice but to "shoot people" and then be satisfied with a limp apology after the ensuing outrage. We can't afford any more decades of racism in our police force, our housing policy, our schools, or our priorities. 

Councilmember Davila's extraordinary circle of talent and family is a community that knows how to lead with love. And her successes, which include adopting the third Climate Emergency Declaration in the country, stopping Berkeley’s participation in Urban Shield, initiating our “Welcome to the City of Berkeley, Ohlone Territory” signs, arranging for the West Campus pool to be open all year, expanding the homeless shower program, expanding the criteria for opening Berkeley's Emergency Storm Shelter, banning the sale of flavored tobacco, helping start "Voices Against Violence," a program designed to support youth at risk of involvement in violence in Berkeley, is all the more impressive if you've paid attention to the initiatives that died for lack of a second at the council. 

No matter what extraordinary tragedy her family has had to endure, or what belittling treatment sometimes comes her way at the Berkeley City Council, Cheryl Davila has met it with grace. It unites her with the hardships she hears from her constituents and never seems to shake her determination not just to see the broad picture, but to speak its name and provide its most enduring stewardship. 


Justice for Breonna Taylor

Jagjit Singh
Friday August 07, 2020 - 12:30:00 PM

More and more US police seem to behave like mafia style gangsters, gunning down African-Americans with impunity. Take the case of Breonna Taylor. 

Breonna and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, were asleep in their apartment when just before 1 a.m. on March 13 three plainclothes officers with the Louisville Metro Police Department mistakenly arrived at the wrong house to execute a search warrant in a drug case. 

The officers failed to identify themselves and broke down the front door firing 20 shots indiscriminately killing Breonna. Suspecting the plain clothes police were robbers, Walker frantically dialed 911, drew his gun and fired at the intruders. Walker had a license to carry a firearm. Breonna was unarmed. 

Incredibly, Walker was arrested and charged with assault. A subsequent law suit filed by Breonna’s family accuses the police officers of murdering Breonna, a former EMT worker. 

Taylor and Walker had no criminal history or drug convictions, and no drugs were found. Tragically, the couple had the misfortune of being born in a racist society where black people are considered to be guilty until proven innocent and police offers are protected by their powerful police unions and a highly skewed justice system reeking of racism. I urge readers to DEMAND THE IMMEDIATE ARREST OF THE THREE VIGILANTE police offers FOR THE MURDER OF BREONNA. 

We must set an example that society will no longer tolerate racist police using black bodies for target practice. For more go to, http://callforsocialjustice.blogspot.com/


Getting Tested for Covid-19

A Berkeley Resident
Friday August 07, 2020 - 12:22:00 PM

I got tested for COVID-19 earlier this summer and I’m writing this to tell you about the prelude and experience, for if and when you get tested. 

My takeaways: 

  1. the test itself is not difficult;
  2. there are some simple things you should keep in mind to make the testing process easier;
  3. despite all the publicity about efforts to do mass testing, it can be a challenge to get a test scheduled;
  4. you’ll have to travel to a testing site. Not a problem if you don’t have symptoms, but if you’re pretty sick you may require help;
  5. test results probably won’t come for several days after the test.
My household has Kaiser insurance coverage, so all of this is most relevant to Kaiser patients, but also has applicability to everyone. 

In early July we were worried that we might have been exposed to COVID-19 after developing similar cold-like symptoms (mild sore throat, headaches, some coughing and pleghm) on the same day. 

I had previously put off seeking testing since the arrival of COVID-19 in the Bay Area because of all the dire warnings about limited testing, and how tests should be reserved for those with major symptoms, health care workers and—later—other “essential” workers. 

But I thought in this case it would be time, nearly months since the City’s shelter-in-place order started and because we both got symptoms the same day. 

I began with the City of Berkeley’s website since the City has promoted its new program that offers testing for all for Berkeley residents, regardless of symptoms. But in the fine online print of that program, it says that if you have health insurance, go to your health provider, first. 

So I tried to contact my doctor through the Kaiser website. No luck. When I logged in the website said it couldn’t currently display certain messages sent to me. When I tried to email my doctor, it said sorry, that function isn’t working right now.  

I next called the general Kaiser information number and push-buttoned my way through a somewhat bewildering recorded menu, finally ending up with an all purpose operator. He was pretty helpful and forwarded me to an advice nurse. I was on hold for a fairly long time in the waiting queue (note to Kaiser; when you have sick people on hold, particularly those with headaches, please don’t make them listen to very loud, bouncy, music over the phone while waiting! Something soft and soothing would be more tolerable.) 

The advice nurse finally came on the line, asked a bunch of questions about symptoms and history, and then said she would schedule a phone call with a doctor. 

But I would just tell the doctor exactly the same things I just told you, I said. Sorry, she said, only doctors can refer people for Kaiser COVID-19 tests.  

So I scheduled a phone consult with my doctor. My spouse tried the same. Their appointment happened to come first. After describing symptoms and household setting, that doctor said she would schedule an appointment—and throw an appointment for me in, for good measure. 

Unfortunately the testing appointments were in Richmond—a drive of thirty or forty minutes—but at least we had them booked. 

Then my consult took place, which also went OK until my doctor called up the Kaiser scheduling website and found that my appointment, scheduled by my spouse’s doctor less than a hour earlier, had indeed been booked—and then somehow cancelled within an hour! 

She verbally threw up her hands and promised she’d ask her scheduling staff to try to figure things out, if they hadn’t gone home for the day. Fortunately the scheduler, the most effective and helpful person in the process so far, called me back soon, got us back into the reservation system and, for good measure, moved both our appointments to the closer Kaiser Oakland testing facility for the same time. Relief. 

We were promised an email giving details on the appointment but, of course, since the Kaiser website wasn’t allowing me to see all messages, I couldn’t access that. Fortunately the scheduler had given me the basics: show up at this address at this time; have your driver’s license and medical card on the dashboard; keep your windows closed; follow the instructions of the security guard. Oh, and no videos allowed, she added. 

On the appointed day we arrived early, circled the block and found the garage entrance which had a cryptic sign (it didn’t say anything like “testing location”) and a guard sitting on a chair by the driveway looking at her cell phone. The guard perfunctorily waved us in. Another staffer pointed us into one of two rows of stopped cars. 

It didn’t look busy when we entered, but within a minute there were new cars filling in behind us and we realized it was actually quite a crowd of testees. 


The inside staff, face-masked and shielded, communicated through the windows with gestures and big printed signs they held up. “Turn Off Your Engine.” “Move Forward”, and so forth. 

They had all the energy and authority of pit stop mechanics maneuvering racing cars into stalls for quick repairs. Since the cars inched forward one at a time, under the direction of the staff we dutifully started our engine, moved a few feet, and turned off the engine probably six or seven times before reaching the actual testing station. 

It was pretty hot in the garage with the engine off and the windows closed tight, and the bit by bit movement forward reminded me of waiting in line to exit a stadium or concert hall parking lot after the performance—or perhaps getting on a car ferry. 

As we got to the front of the line another staffer came, peered at our ID through the windshield, checked us off a list, and put papers under the windshield wipers. 

Finally we literally turned the corner and were waved into one of three testing slots. Gowned, masked, and face shielded staff approached both sides of the car, and had us open the windows for the test. 

A friend who had the test before told us it didn’t hurt. That is true. Sort of. Almost. It doesn’t “hurt” in a conventional sense like getting cut, or being stuck by a big needle or having a tooth drilled without anesthetic, but it’s not a comfortable experience either. 

They ask you to open your mouth, then stick a swab in on one side, way to the back, and hold it there for a few seconds, rubbing against the inside of your throat. Then your nostrils, one at a time. The swab does go pretty far back into both throat and nostril and you have to tilt your head back and hold still. 

It was over soon, but there were two things we didn’t expect but should have. First, when the swab is in your throat, you may start to involuntarily retch—not throw up, but still experience the beginning of the process as your throat tries to push the intruder away. Second, our eyes watered! The testers said both of those were not universal, but still common, reactions. 

A third result which we did expect was some throat discomfort for a while after the throat swab. 

When the test is done you’re done your are expected to drive out of the garage promptly to make way for the next testee. If you’re the driver, there’s no time to recover from the test. Since street traffic is right ahead, you might want to pause at curbside to make sure you’re in condition to drive. I had to do that since my eyes were still watering. 

The information you’re given at the test site will posit a range of time—one to five days—before you’re notified of the test results. When she made my appointment my doctor said that some of the Kaiser testing equipment was broken, so it would probably be closer to five days. The staff at the testing station said something similar. One of them also said some of the testing equipment was temporarily broken so it could easily be that long. 

Everyone also said that if you test positive, you’ll get a phone call. If you’re negative, you’ll just get an email through Kaiser’s message center. 

A friend who has been sick tested by Kaiser twice said that both times he got an email the next day saying he was negative. 

In our case, we didn’t hear anything from Kaiser for some days. The website was having some of the same problems accessing functions—I still can’t email or directly see messages from my doctor—but I was finally able to see a message under “test results”.  

Both of us checked our results and, fortunately, the test was negative for both of us. We did not have COVID-19. Or, as the test said, “CORONAVIR PAN 2019-NCOV, NAA, QL, Not Detected”.  

So why did we start feeling sick at the same time, with a couple of the common COVID-19-like symptoms? We’re not sure. But in retrospect we realized the week we went to get tested was one where some wildfire smoke was blowing in and out of the Bay Area, and that might have been a contributor to sudden throat soreness and headache. 

IF YOU’RE SCHEDULED FOR A COVID-19 TEST, HERE’S SOME ADVICE FROM OUR EXPERIENCE: 

Both doctor phone interviews emphasized them going methodically through a checklist of symptoms. I presume they have to make a determination about testing based on your responses. So my advice is that if you have, or have had, a symptom on the list, do not be shy about describing it. 

If you drive to your test, regardless of the temperature outside, run your car air conditioner a bit before you arrive since you must keep the windows up, even with the engine turned off. Our car became quite hot and stuffy when inching through the testing line in the garage. 

Since you can’t open your windows (and you’re presumably wearing a mask, too) if you have something you want the staff to know in advance of the test, print or write out your own signs in advance. You can hold them up from inside the car. Hand gestures or trying to talk through the windows won’t suffice. 

Bring a bottle of water, a cough drop, or something similar to immediately sooth your throat after the test. Better yet, have someone from your household drive you. 

Resources: 

Here’s the City of Berkeley’s webpage on testing. There are two free sites in Berkeley, one run by the City, the other by the State. 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/covid19-testing/ 

Alameda County also has a free testing program. See here: 

http://www.acphd.org/2019-ncov/testing.aspx 


Fatal Drug Overdoses Hit a Record High in 2019

Nickolaus Hayes
Friday August 07, 2020 - 12:17:00 PM

Preliminary data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicated the number of fatal drug overdoses hit a record high last year, reversing the progress made in 2018. In 2016, for example, more than 100 people were dying every day because of an opioid-related overdose, and over 11 million people misused prescription opioids, per Drug Rehab Services. The data released by the CDC show that within 50 states and the District of Columbia, overdose deaths are occurring in everyone at different degrees of severity. The number of Americans who died from a drug-related overdose surged to over 70,000 in 2017. However, by 2018 the number declined by 4.6%, which was the first decrease in almost 30 years. 

The progress made in 2018 was erased in 2019, and the number of overdose deaths increased by the same number, 4.6%, from 2018 to 2019. Approximately 37 states and the District of Columbia reported an increase in drug-related overdose deaths in 2019. The state of South Dakota reported the biggest increase at 54%. In 2018, more than half of the overdose deaths involved synthetic opioids such as fentanyl. The CDC also indicated that the number of overdose deaths involving cocaine and methamphetamine increased from 34.7% in 2017 to 45.4% in 2019. Fentanyl was responsible for most of these overdose deaths, which included fentanyl mixed with cocaine. 

Overall, the data suggest that 2020 could be worse because of the pandemic, government restrictions, self-isolation, stay at home orders, job loss, and financial struggle. Even data that was released by the White House was suggesting that America already saw an increase in the number of drug-related overdose deaths in 2020. If the trend continues and it seems that it is, 2020 will be the sharpest increase in annual overdose deaths since 2016. 

There are countless reasons why people choose to abuse drugs or alcohol. Unfortunately, many Americans are feeling more despair, anxiety, stress, and other issues caused by the pandemic and the on-going civil unrest. It has been a collision of two significant issues involving the stress of uncertainty with the pandemic and the uncertainty of your future, whether with work, school, or future goals. Social isolation has been devastating, and it made it more difficult for people with substance use disorders to manage their conditions, and it increased the likelihood of overdose. 

It was a domino effect because, at the beginning of the pandemic, many of the outpatient and inpatient treatment facilities had to suspend their in-person services, which limited access to care. Countless residential programs shut their doors and left addicts with nowhere to go. The year has been unbelievable, and it seems almost impossible to predict what will happen next. Behind everything, opioids continue to destroy families and rip communities apart. For example, the Shelby County Health Department in Tennessee reported 391 suspected overdoses from April 7, 2020, to May 7, 2020—58 of which were fatal. 

The Franklin County Coroner in Ohio reported the first four months of 2020 showed 50% more deaths than in the same period of 2019. Milwaukee County’s Emergency Medical Services Division in Wisconsin reported March and April 2020 displayed a 54% increase in drug overdose calls when compared to 2019. The numbers for 2020 are showing these problems are going to persist, and it will result in more funding to help treatment centers survive. However, there have been past trends with funding and support being reduced and allocated elsewhere. 

Between 2009 and 2013, some states during those fiscal years cut at least $4.35 billion from their budgets for mental and behavioral health services. As of 2020, some states are already reducing their funding for mental and behavioral health services due to economic losses because of the pandemic. The state of Oregon, for example, is preparing to cut $69 million in 2021, and other states like Colorado, Florida, New Jersey, and Utah made similar cuts. The most vulnerable in the country has been made even more vulnerable. By the end of 2020, there will be more people addicted to drugs and more people who have suffered from a fatal or non-fatal drug overdose. The need for substance abuse treatment will increase, and countless programs are funded at the state and federal level, which could make it difficult to help those in need if there is no funding. 


Nickolaus Hayes is a healthcare professional in the field of substance abuse and addiction recovery. He utilizes his experience in his writing to provide an expert viewpoint. His primary focus is spreading awareness by educating individuals on the topics surrounding substance abuse  


Sources- 

https://www.addicted.org/opiates-detox-treatment-programs-in-the-united-states.html 

https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/drug-overdose-data.htm 

https://files.constantcontact.com/a923b952701/dbf0b5a5-f730-4a6f-a786-47097f1eea78.pdf 


On Councilor Droste’s Proposal on Re-Districting

Phil Allen, District One resident
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 01:09:00 PM

During a discussion over a November ballot measure about promoting our elected deciders to full-time status conducted at the 4pm meeting of the City Council of Tuesday July 21, D-8 councilmember Lori Droste mused about reducing the number of city commissions, then went further by suggesting fewer council districts as well. (These moves would cut costs, the savings then presumably applied to the councilors’ ‘raises’.) While both notions are bound to generate loud opinions, the second struck me as both timely and prescient. Whether or not she was expecting a constructive reaction from her out-of-the-whirlwind inspiration, she has one. My idea may put Berkeley on the map—a new map. 

Our eight districts’ boundaries are about to be adjusted, as happens decennially upon the taking of the census, to assure equal populations. The City Clerk will open the process by September 1, with nominations to the 13-member Citizens Redistricting Commission commencing by February 1. Their findings will be placed before the voters in November 2022. 

District-based representation took hold in 1986 to redress what was seen as inequitable at-large councilships. Given the town’s particular geography, the familiar block-like shapes that characterize so much of America’s political land division are taken by some of the eight districts. The others, sitting on rising land and the hills, are more organically outlined. As such, each has acquired characteristics particular to its social and economic characteristics, from wealthy to as poor as one can be and still live here, from essentially residential to mixed uses and zonings. 

As long as numbers are equalized, why not consider a conceptual redesign? I propose the creation of new districts—of whatever even number—in sympathy with our unique geography, by which I mean our creekbeds. Six creeks run to the Bay by meandering routes, fed by numerous springs. By standing on several north/south streets in west Berkeley, one can see the undulations they created before being culverted and paved or built over. How many cities can claim to lay upon such natural a wonder, beyond the Bay Area that is? They provide the re-design basis, and are not necessarily meant to be taken as strict boundaries.  

Creekbeds and their flanks—riparian environments—are about the smallest fry of watersheds, those grand unique domains of biota and climate formed by mountainous heights and the river systems descending from them. While some speculative geographers and the bioregional movement fancy them as primary subdivisions (which New Zealand did some 30 years ago), the native waviness of our flatlands is too slight to generate such noticeable differences. However, many municipalities—particularly in waterlogged areas like the Pacific Northwest or the floating sponge that is upper Minnesota—sit amidst and manage watershed ‘districts’ which are often protected natural reservations. 

As I see it, parts of the entire city would be contained in each of these new ribbon districts, running from our eastern esplanade to the bay shore, and would include the range of incomes, elevations, biota, land-use zones and types, businesses and recreation. 

What are some disadvantages? A return to an at-large council run by well-funded individuals or factions. (I know, where’s the difference?) There might not be focused areas of representation, such as the campus area or the historically beset southwest. The waterfront might be Balkanized. 

And then there is the problem our Founders should have taken care of but didn’t: Landlocked Districts Five and Six issues well north of the rest of town. The City of Albany stands in its way to the sea. Should Albany be conquered, its land annexed to a greater Berkeley, and perhaps more districts? After all, it too has creekbeds. 

Remember, that Commission has about eight months to be picked and seated. Let’s help make their tenure memorable! 


BLM Offers Lessons to Indian Police

Jagjit Singh
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 03:30:00 PM

The Black Live Matter movement is gaining resonance in many of the minority communities around the world.

In Israel BLM has reenergized Palestinians, “Palestinian Lives Matter” are ubiquitous banners seen in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The horrific murder of George Floyd has renewed demands for ISRAEL GET YOUR LEG OFF PALESTINIAN NECKS!

In India police violence against Muslim minorities following the highly unpopular “Citzenship Law” created deep hostiles and mistrust. Disturbing accounts had emerged of gross mistreatment by police and state officials in the town of Nagina. Police chased young teenagers ranging in age from 13 to 17 and brutally tortured them. According to two of the boys, the officers laughed during beatings, saying, “You will die in this prison.” Witnesses said that police officers opened fire on demonstrators with live ammunition, broke into houses, stole money, and threatened to rape women. 

The BBC aired footage showing police officers knocking down security cameras in a Muslim neighborhood and shattering the windows of parked cars. Although these incidents occurred a year ago the situation has become worse with the pandemic as hundreds of poor low caste Hindus and Muslims flee to their villages often beaten mercilessly by police. 

Harsh Mander, a human rights activist visited homes resembling “wastelands,” where the police have become a lunch mob. Much like the US, none of the police officers were charged and continue to act with complete immunity buffeted by the right wing Modi government which seems to be in lockstep with President Trump.  

The overt discrimination towards Muslims threatens the very foundation of India as a secular and tolerant nation. This is extremely distressing for a nation which often boasts of its spiritual heritage. Donning religious garbs and chanting from scriptures is a waste of time if we do not imbibe the spiritual jewels into our everyday behavior to make as us kinder, gentler, honest and more compassionate people. Sadly, I have never come across an Indian family which has been not been fractured by financial entanglements rooted in dishonesty. 

Lashing out against minorities and committing egregious acts of violence only demeans us. 

The police have emphasized the need to preserve order and protect innocent people against “radical groups” with “deep-rooted conspiracies” to commit violent acts. Sounds familiar? President Trump would be so proud! 

If we really wish to bring honor and respect to Hinduism we should dismantle the unjust and cruel caste system. God did not give life to his most vulnerable people to be reviled and abused. Finally, let us remember the incredible life of African-American Rep. John Lewis who demonstrated enormous courage in advancing the cause of justice. 

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


Major League Baseball Opened Too Soon

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 03:00:00 PM

It is time to pull the plug on Major League Baseball. From the beginning, I suspected from the beginning that the reopening of the pandemic-shortened Major League Baseball season would be short-lived. Given the raging pandemic, MLB was unwise to reopen in the first place.  

I cannot think of anything more non-essential and out-of-place as professional sports. Its become an article of faith that having baseball back would be a morale booster to society suffering from the virus. This assertion is self-serving and overstated. MLB just didnt want to miss its $10+ billion in annual revenue. 

Although, players are in sort of a bubble, a bubble that disappears once the players leave the stadium. It is clear that the MLB cannot keep its players safe. Fifty-eight Major League Baseball players tested positive for the coronavirus upon reporting to their team, while an additional 13 tested positive after workouts began, according to data released by MLB on July 24. And at least 14 members of the Miami Marlins and their staff have tested positive for the virus in recent days. And each passing day, we learn about new players testing positive. 

Now the National Football League is planning games as does the Pacific-12 Conference. The PAC-12 plans September 26 openers with a 10-game, conference-only football schedule even though four conference schools are in California and two in Arizona, states with raging infections. Are the players going to wear masks when they face each other across the line of scrimmage? And forget about social distancing. 

Lets get the pandemic under control before reopening sports.


August Pepper Spray Times

By Grace Underpressure
Monday August 03, 2020 - 03:02:00 PM

Editor's Note: The latest issue of the Pepper Spray Times is now available.

You can view it absolutely free of charge by clicking here . You can print it out to give to your friends.

Grace Underpressure has been producing it for many years now, even before the Berkeley Daily Planet started distributing it, most of the time without being paid, and now we'd like you to show your appreciation by using the button below to send her money.

This is a Very Good Deal. Go for it! 


Columns

ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Arriving at Square One

Jack Bragen
Friday August 07, 2020 - 12:26:00 PM

When we make new beginnings or start a new project, we often must begin at square one. A certain point in recovery from an acute episode of mental illness is often like this. 

What I'm calling "Square One," for someone with a psychotic disorder, is an important juncture. It is where you've emerged from a delusional/paranoid belief system and have entered a realistic belief system. Coupled with that is the tendency to become a lot calmer. It is a starting point, a new one, in which a psychiatric consumer can begin again at life. Less often, following an episode of severe psychiatric illness, a consumer could pick up from where they left off. 

It is only after you reach square one that you can hope to attain some kind of genuine success. When you are psychotic, the door is shut to any kind of progress or getting anything good. When you emerge from a psychotic state, it is like being an inhabitant of your body following being highly disconnected from your body. This perception exists because psychosis causes the mind to stop communicating with the five senses. When you are once again connected to your surroundings, you can interact with people and with the world, and some of the time at least, you can get things you want. 

(An agitated and psychotic person can usually see and hear. Yet, these senses are obscured with bizarre interpretations. Additionally, we are often unable to make sense of a person's speech. The body sense is almost completely gone, replaced with an adrenalized version almost resembling being a stick figure, rather than a good portrait.) 

Stopping psychosis doesn't happen by deciding not to be psychotic. When psychosis is severe, psychiatric intervention is needed, generally including medication--given by force if need be. If no one intervenes, the problem will get worse, and even when it doesn't result in the death of the patient, (which it can) it may eventually cause severe brain damage. This can be observed in brain imaging, showing that many people with schizophrenia have what neurologists call "enlarged ventricles." The ventricles are the empty spaces between parts of the brain. Larger empty spaces or ventricles mean less brain. 

The brain is damaged by extended periods of acute psychosis because brain cell activity is out of control. It is as though you had a Honda Civic and drove it continuously with the accelerator floored, exceeding a hundred miles an hour on the freeway. Try doing that to any car daily for long hours. The brain was not intended to be overloaded continuously without rest, for months. 

Stopping psychosis with medication and by getting other help is a journey. You are not completely in control of the journey, but you do your part. At some point, you calm down, and the realization comes about that your mind has been off the deep end. This can be both saddening and comforting. This is because the previous unchecked psychosis is quite a wild ride, and it is harrowing. On the other hand, you must let go of delusional beliefs to which you may have been deeply attached. Coming out of a state of psychotic denial can involve some level of emotional pain, but it can also bring about greater acceptance. 

I'd like to make a distinction between "being in denial" versus being psychotic. Denial is purely psychological and it is a trait of most people's intact egos. Most people, in some areas of their lives, are in denial. Non-afflicted or "normal people's" denial is a self-protection mechanism, one that allows us to function without being excessively bothered or troubled by something. 

On the other hand, the denial that comes with psychosis is out of the ballpark. It is where the brain is not capable of distinguishing basic realities from unrealities. While there are some similarities between mere denial and psychotic illusions to which we are attached, these are not the same things. The brain just isn't working properly, in the case of a psychotic person, and the primitive pleasure, pain and fear mechanisms of the brain are malfunctioning and play a part in reinforcing the problem. 

When we reach square one, we have a chance to make things better. Good things might or might not come our way. Yet without arriving at square one, and remaining disconnected from the world, nothing significantly good is likely to happen. 

Some spirituality suggests that either we are within our bodies, or not. If we are disconnected from the senses, it is equivalent to not being in the body. The five physical senses are the gateway to connecting with ourselves. This also opens the door for normal emotions. And we need our emotions. 

Getting to square one isn't a remedial thing, it is a sign of great progress. And it gives us the opportunity to do and experience great things in our lives. 

*** 

Jack Bragen is author of "Schizophrenia: My 35-Year Battle," and "Instructions for Dealing with Schizophrenia: A Self-Help Manual."


THE PUBLIC EYE:Trump’s Trifecta: Update

Bob Burnett
Friday August 07, 2020 - 11:31:00 AM

Three months ago, I wrote: "We're in the middle of a slow-motion catastrophe. The consequence of disease, depression, and Donald." Sadly, U.S. conditions have gotten worse. The latest GALLUP POLL indicates, "[only] 13% of U.S. adults are satisfied with the state of the nation." 

The Pandemic: Late in April, the U.S. had 1 million coronavirus cases (and 56,000 deaths). Now we have 5 million cases (and 163,000 deaths).
The best summation of our current situation was written on April 18 by New York Times science and health reporter Donald G. McNeil Jr, "The Coronavirus in America: The Year Ahead." (https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/18/health/coronavirus-america-future.html

"In truth, it is not clear to anyone where this crisis is leading us... Exactly how the pandemic will end depends in part on medical advances still to come. It will also depend on how individual Americans behave in the interim. If we scrupulously protect ourselves and our loved ones, more of us will live. If we underestimate the virus it will find us... Resolve to Save Lives, a public health advocacy group run by Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, the former director of the C.D.C., has published detailed and strict criteria for when the economy can reopen... Reopening requires declining cases for 14 days, the tracing of 90 percent of contacts, an end to health care worker infections, recuperation places for mild cases and many other hard-to-reach goals." [Emphasis added] 

Donald Trump has not been willing to apply these criteria. Instead he has asserted that the pandemic is not serious and pushed for an immediate reopening. 

Trump has not provided the leadership required to deal with this tragedy. He has shown no remorse for our 163,000 deaths: "it is what it is." Writing in Mother Jones, David Corn observed: "Since the start of this epidemic, Trump has gushed out a series of idiotic and false remarks: The virus is no big deal. It will go away. This is a hoax. We will have a national testing program within days. We will have a vaccine within months. Try hydroxychloroquine. Maybe injecting bleach will help. Case numbers are high because of testing. I take no responsibility. I’ve been right all along. We’ve done an amazing job." 

Given Trump's inadequate response, it comes as no surprise that most voters give him low marks on the health crisis. According to the 538 website (https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/coronavirus-polls/ ) only 37.7 percent of Americans approve of how Trump has handled the pandemic. 

The Economy: In June, the U.S. officially entered a recession (https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/09/the-us-is-officially-in-a-recession-will-it-become-a-depression.html). In the first quarter the real GDP decreased by 5 percent and in the second quarter it decreased by a whopping 32.9 percent -- the worst plunge ever recorded. "The second-quarter cliff in economic activity was driven by a drop-off in consumer spending, which appeared as a 34.6% drop in the personal consumption metric in Thursday’s report... Consumer spending comprises about two-thirds of the US economy, and prior to the pandemic had been the main engine of economic growth." (https://finance.yahoo.com/news/q2-gdp-us-economy-coronavirus-pandemic-consumer-171558880.html ) Consumer sentiment has also fallen off a cliff. (https://www.visualcapitalist.com/economic-impact-of-covid-h1-2020/

The current unemployment rate is 12.1 percent -- down from 19.7 percent in April. The unemployment rate is the largest since it sunk to 25.6 percent at the depths of the Great Depression. To get back to where we were before the pandemic, the U.S. economy has to add 30 million jobs. ( https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/29/nearly-half-the-us-population-is-without-a-job-showing-how-far-the-labor-recovery-has-to-go.html

Which workers are laid off depends upon where you live. Here in Sonoma County, in northern California, there are more than 40,000 furloughed workers: primarily hospitality jobs, agricultural work, and retail occupations. Most workers won't regain full employment until the economy can safely reopen. It's unclear when this can happen. 

Donald Trump doesn't have a plan to deal with this recession. The latest Quinnipiac poll indicates that only 44% of people approve of the way Trump is handling the U.S. economy. (By the way, Trump plans to spend this weekend playing golf.) 

At this writing, Congressional Democrats and Republicans cannot agree on the form of a new stimulus bill. 

Meanwhile, there's a historic disconnect between consumer perception of the economy and the Wall Street Indices -- such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average. (https://www.visualcapitalist.com/understanding-the-disconnect-between-consumers-and-the-stock-market/) Two factors have contributed to this: first, the DJIA is skewed (weighted) towards information technology technology companies such as Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Facebook -- companies that have done well in the pandemic. Second, stock prices are being supported by the Federal Reserve. In any event, the relatively robust state of the stock indices presents a distorted view of the economy. 

Donald Trump: Trump is incapable of the leadership this catastrophe requires. 

On August 3rd, Trump was interviewed by Jonathan Swan -- an Australian journalist who works for Axios. (https://www.rev.com/blog/transcripts/donald-trump-interview-transcript-with-axios-on-hbo ) It's difficult to watch this interview and not be deeply disturbed by Trump's performance. For example, 

"Trump [The pandemic is] under control.
Jonathan Swan: How? 1,000 Americans are dying a day.
Trump: They are dying. That’s true. And it is what it is." 

The interview indicates that Trump has no understanding of how serious the pandemic is and no idea of what to do about the situation. 

"Trump: And there are those that say you can test too much. You do know that.
Jonathan Swan: Who says that?
Trump: Oh, just read the manuals, read the books." 

More frightening than Trump's ignorance is his lack of remorse for those who have died or been seriously harmed by COVID-19. 

According to the 538 website, only 41.3 percent of voters approve of the job that Donald Trump is doing. 

So we're in a difficult situation: the pandemic continues without an end in sight; the economy has fallen into a deep recession; and Donald Trump is falling apart -- if anything, he's making matters worse. 

Hold on tight. We're heading for rough waters. 

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


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Friday August 07, 2020 - 11:59:00 AM

Chalk Talk

Some young jokester has scrawled a message on the sidewalk on Rose Street. It reads: How do oceans say hello?"  

Keep walking and you'll find the answer (also written in chalk): "They wave at each other." 

Another option: "They say 'Happy Tidings'!"  

Wasted Water 

On another stretch of Rose Street, there's another watery puzzle. The lawn sprinklers at MLK Jr. School are sending hundreds of gallons of precious H20 across the sidewalks and into the street. The problem: The sprinklers are designed to automatically spread a circle of water in a five-foot radius but many of the sprinklers—especially the ones close to the sidewalk—are covered with overgrown grass and weeds. This blocks the spray and traps the water beneath the vegetation. The trapped water simply drains away, watering the walkways instead of the grass. Simple solution: cut the grass around the sprinklers. 

Trumperstickers in Berkeley? 

I recently found myself following a large van down a thoroughfare in Berkeley when I noticed a small sticker on the back. At a traffic stop, I pulled up close to insure that I hadn't hallucinated the message. Sure enough, it read: "Trump 2020." And sure enough, I the driver was wearing a cowboy hat. As the truck accelerated away, I noticed another political sticker on the vehicle's back gate. It announced: "My dog is a Republican." 

I'm guessing a German Shepherd/Pit Bull mix. 

Can Plastic Trash Save the Arctic? 

Plastic pollution threatens the health of the world's oceans and the lives of all the creatures that dwell above, upon, and beneath the waves. This long-standing problem has now been compounded by a new tributary to the waste stream—tons of new plastic stemming from all the disposable pandemic-protective paraphernalia being consumed in hospitals and homes. 

So here's an idea: What if we pulled all the plastic trash our of the oceans and used the recaptured material to build small islands of "plastic ice" for the planet's endangered polar bears to cling to? With the warming of the poles and the disappearance of land and water ice sheets, polar bears—unable to find secure perches while diving for food in warming Arctic waters—are dying from starvation and will eventually be forced to abandon the oceans. 

Forget the Blue Angels: Here Comes the Red Angel 

If you've had it with the Blue Angels doing flyovers in formation, take a few minutes to check out a what a single Russian pilot can do in a Mikoyan MiG-29 with an OVT Vectored Thrust engine. Viewing suggestion: Queue up a recording of Strauss' Blue Danube Waltz to accompany the video. 

 

Some Coveted Covid Tips 

Johns Hopkins Hospital recently shared some coronavirus safety tidbits that I'd missed. (Stay safe: Spread widely.) 

* Since the virus is not a living organism, it can't be killed. 

* Antibiotics and antibacterial treatments can't kill something that's not alive. 

* The virus is a protein molecule covered by a protective layer of lipid (fat). 

* Soap or detergent is the best weapon because the foam dissolves the fat. 

* Heat also melts fat; so try always to use water heated above 77 degrees. 

* Any mixture containing more than 65% alcohol can dissolve viral fat. 

* Spirits won't work. Vodka is only 40% alcohol. But Listerine would work: it's 65% alcohol. 

* Moisturize your hands. Dry hands can develop microcracks where viruses can hide. 

* Keep your nails short so the virus can't hide there. 

An August Announcement 

On August 6, 75 years after the US detonated an atomic bomb over Hiroshima, three nations—Ireland, Nigeria, and Niue—ratified the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Only seven more ratifications are needed to reach the 50 needed to make the treaty law. To date, 83 nations have signed while 43 have fully ratified the treaty. 

The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) writes: "Today’s ratifications are also an important acknowledgement of the courageous advocacy of the survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, who have long warned humanity of the threat of nuclear war. We can think of no better way to commemorate the 75th anniversary of these horrific attacks than with meaningful action to rid the world of the scourge of nuclear weapons. Please help share this news and urge other nations to ratify: 

https://twitter.com/nuclearban/status/1291370740613341191?s=20 

Your Vote Matters (Is That Why the Website's Been Disabled?) 

On August 6, a voice message alert encouraged me to check my voting status on www.IWillVote.com. But there was a problem: the www.IWillVote.com website was defunct, dead, and down. 

Trump agents at work? A GOP cyber-attack? Who knows? At least you can enjoy the video. 

 

And here's a backup. California residents can quickly check their voter registration status by going to My Voter Status - California Secretary of State. 

Comic Karma 

It's good to see some comic strips are starting to take the coronavirus seriously. Among the strips featuring strips of cloth masking cartoon characters—Candorville, Lio, Pearls Before Swine, and Baby Blues. So get with it, Blondie, Dennis the Menace, Doonesbury, and Garfield

Bonus points: In a recent Baby Blues panel, the McPhereson's were seen returning from a protest demonstration with their kids—and carrying half-obscured BLM and solidarity signs. 

(The last time I saw a "hidden flag" like that was back in 2004, when a Beetle Bailey strip included a half-visible presidential campaign poster for John Kerry.) 

A Comic Strip . . . Strips 

If you missed it, Greg Evans' award-winning comicstrip, Luann, made a splash this week by marking the first time a cartoon character has paused to take a bathroom break. 

Luann generally features warm, character-rich storylines that occasionally involve narcissistic toddlers, insecure teens, sociopathic adults, potentially deadly diseases, and occasional brushes with calamity. But the August 4 strip was history-making in a new way. 

Here's the set-up: Luann's friend, Bernice, has just moved into the guest bedroom in Luann's home. It's late at night and everyone is asleep—except for Bernice who wakes up and announces: "Gotta take a pee!" (I'm pretty sure that sentence has never appeared in a comic strip before.) 

She tries in vain not to make any noise but she has to walk down a creaky hallway, deal with a squeaky bathroom door, and unZIIIIIIP! her jeans. The August 5 panel finds her sitting on a toilet with her pants rolled down and thinking to herself: "Should I not flush: Maybe I can muffle the sound by covering the toilet with towels . . . ." 

Owing to Planetary deadlines, I can't tell you how this all pans out but you can find the full episode online by clicking here

A Life Well-Chronicled 

The Bay Area lost a celebrity this week when longtime Bay Area sportscaster and storied media star Ralph Barbieri succumbed after a long tussle with Parkinson's Disease. Hundreds of testimonials inundated local newscasts and flooded print and online press postings. But that was just the start. The memorials peaked on August 5 when the Chronicle published a full-page tribute to Barbieri (dubbed "Razor Voice" by Chron gossip columnist Herb Caen). The page includes a nice photo of a young and vibrant Barbieri but most of the page is taken up with a 4,000-plus-word biography in near-microscopic 4-point type. It's worth the read. And my guess is: Ralph Barbieri wrote every word himself. 

Like A Kidney Stone 

The Founders Sing have managed to merge top-quality satire with orb-smacking deep-fake imagery to create a stream of memorable musical take-downs targeting All Things Trump. 

Here's another inspired expropriation featuring Bob Dylan backing a bevy of eight female reporters who have been badgered and besmirched during Trump's preening press briefings. Give the clique a click and listen as they get their revenge. 

 


DISPATCHES FROM THE EDGE: India & China: Behind the Conflict

Conn Hallinan
Friday August 07, 2020 - 12:10:00 PM

Chinese and Indian forces have pulled back from their confrontation in the Himalayas, but the tensions that set off the deadly encounter this past June—the first on the China/India border since 1975—are not going away. Indeed, a combination of local disputes, regional antagonisms and colonial history have brewed up a poisonous elixir that could pose a serious danger to peace in South Asia. 

In part, the problem is Britain’s colonial legacy. The “border” in dispute is an arbitrary line drawn across terrain that doesn’t lend itself to clear boundaries. The architect, Henry McMahon, drew it to maximize British control of a region that was in play during the 19th Century “Great Game” between England and Russia for control of Central Asia. Local concerns were irrelevant. 

The treaty was signed between Tibet and Britain in 1914. While India accepts the 550-mile McMahon Line as the border between Indian and China, the Chinese have never recognized the boundary. 

Sir Mortimer Durand, Britain’s lead colonial officer in India, drew a similar “border” in 1893 between Pakistan (then India’s “Northern Territories”) and Afghanistan that Kabul has never accepted, and which is still the source of friction between the two countries. Colonialism may be gone, but its effects still linger. 

While the target for the McMahon Line was Russia, it has always been a sore spot for China, not only because Beijing’s protests were ignored, but also because the Chinese saw it as a potential security risk for its western provinces. 

If England, which had already humiliated China in the two Opium Wars, as well as by seizing Shanghai and Hong Kong, could lop off Tibet—which China sees as part of its empire—so might another country: Like India. 

Indeed, when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi unilaterally revoked Article 370 of the Indian Constitution and absorbed Kashmir and Jammu in 2019, the Chinese saw the grab as a threat to the security of Tibet and its restive western province of Xinjiang. The area in which the recent fighting took place, the Galwan Valley, is close to a road linking Tibet with Xinjiang. 

The nearby Aksai Chin, which China seized from India in the 1962 border war, not only controls the Tibet-Xinjiang highway, but also the area through which China is building an oil pipeline. The Chinese see the pipeline—which will go from the Pakistani port of Gwadar to Kashgar in Xinjiang—as a way to bypass key choke points in the Indian Ocean controlled by the US Navy. 

The $62 billion project is part of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor, a piece of the huge Belt and Road Initiative to build infrastructure and increase trade between South Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, Europe and China. 

China moves some 80 percent of its oil by sea and is increasingly nervous about a budding naval alliance between the US and Beijing’s regional rivals, India and Japan. In the yearly Malabar exercises the three powers war game closing the Malacca Straits through which virtually all of China’s oil passes. The Pakistan-China pipeline oil will be more expensive than tanker supplied oil—one estimate is five times more—but it will be secure from the US. 

In 2019, however, India’s Home Minister, Amit Shah, pledged to take back Aksai Chin from China, thus exposing the pipeline to potential Indian interdiction. 

From China’s point of view the bleak landscape of rock, ice and very little oxygen is central to its strategy of securing access to energy supplies. 

The region is also part of what is called the world’s “third pole,” the vast snowfields and glaciers that supply the water for 11 countries in the region, including India and China. Both countries make up a third of the world’s population but have access to only 10 percent of the globe’s water supplies. By 2030, half of India’s population—700 million people—will lack adequate drinking water. 

The “pole” is the source of 10 major rivers, most of them fed by the more than 14,000 thousand glaciers that dot the Himalayas and Hindu Kush. By 2100, two-thirds of those glaciers will be gone, the victims of climate change. China largely controls the “pole.” 

It may be stony and cold, but it is lifeblood to 11 countries in the region. 

The recent standoff has a history. In 2017, Indian and Chinese troops faced-off in Doklam—Dongland to China—the area where Tibet, Bhutan and Sikkim come together. There were fist fights and lots of pushing and shoving, but casualties consisted of black eyes and bloody noses. But the 73-day confrontation apparently shocked the Chinese. “For China, the Doklam stand-off raised fundamental questions regarding the nature of India’s threat,” says Yun Sun, a senor fellow at the Stimson Center in Washington. 

Doklam happened just as relations with the Trump administration were headed south, although tensions between Washington and Beijing date back to the 1998-99 Taiwan crisis. Then US President Bill Clinton sent two aircraft carrier battle groups to the area, one of which traversed the Taiwan Straits between the island and the mainland. The incident humiliated China, which re-tooled its military and built up its navy in the aftermath. 

In 2003, US President George W. Bush wooed India to join Japan, South Korea and Australia in a regional alliance aimed at “containing” China. The initiative was only partly successful, but it alarmed China. Beijing saw the Obama administration’s “Asia pivot” and the current tensions with the Trump administration as part of the same strategy. 

If ones adds to this US anti-missile systems in South Korea, the deployment of 1500 Marines to Australia, and the buildup of American bases in Guam and Wake, it is easy to see why the Chinese would conclude that Washington had it out for them. 

China has responded aggressively, seizing and fortifying disputed islands and reefs, and claiming virtually all of the South China Sea as home waters. It has rammed and sunk Vietnamese fishing vessels, bullied Malaysian oilrigs, and routinely violated Taiwan’s air space. 

China has also strengthened relations with neighbors that India formally dominated, including Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, and the Maldives, initiatives which India resents. In short, there are some delicate diplomatic issues in the region, ones whose solutions are ill served by military posturing or arms races. 

Was the dustup in the Galwan Valley an extension of China’s growing assertiveness in Asia? Partly, but the Modi government has also been extremely provocative, particularly in its illegal seizure of Kashmir and Jammu. In the Galwan incident, the Indians were building an airfield and a bridge near the Chinese border that would have allowed Indian armor and modern aircraft to potentially threaten Chinese forces. 

There is a current in the Indian military that would like to erase the drubbing India took in its 1962 border war. The thinking is that the current Indian military is far stronger and better armed than it was 58 years ago, and it has more experience than China’s Peoples Liberation Army. The last time the Chinese army went to war was its ill-fated invasion of Vietnam in 1979. 

But that is dangerous thinking. India’s “experience” consists mainly of terrorizing Kashmiri civilians and an occasional fire fight with lightly armed insurgents. In 1962, India’s and China’s economies were similar in size. Today, China’s economy is five times larger and its military budget four times greater. 

China is clearly concerned that it might face a two-front war: India to its south, the US and its allies to the west. That is not a comfortable position, and one that presents dangers to the entire region. Pushing a nuclear-armed country into a corner is never a good idea. 

The Chinese need to accept some of the blame for the current tensions. Beijing has bullied smaller countries in the region and refused to accept the World Court’s ruling on its illegal occupation of a Philippine reef. Its heavy-handed approach to Hong Kong and Taiwan, and its oppressive treatment of its Uighur Muslim minority in Xinjiang, is winning it no friends, regionally and internationally. 

There is no evidence that the US, India and China want a war, one whose effect on the international economy would make Covid-19 look like a mild head cold. But since all three powers are nuclear armed, there is always the possibility—even if remote—of things getting out of hand. 

In reality, all three countries desperately need one another if the world is to confront the existential danger of climate change, nuclear war, and events like pandemics. It is a time for diplomacy and cooperation, not confrontation. 


Conn Hallinan can be read at dispatchesfromtheedgeblog.wordpress.com and middleempoireseries.wordpress.com 


ECLECTIC RANT: Trump Rails Against Mail-in-Voting

Ralph E. Stone
Saturday August 08, 2020 - 11:38:00 AM

Trump has railed against "mail-in voting" while defending "absentee voting.” Yet his own lawyers acknowledged in court documents the two are the same thing. Trump and many administration officials have utilized vote-by-mail options in the past. This includes Vice President Mike Pence, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, as well as members of Trump's family.  

Fraud in mail-in-voting? There have been 143 cases of fraud using mailed ballots over the course of 20 years or about seven to eight cases per year, nationally. Across the 50 states, there has been an average of three cases per state over the 20-year span. That is just one case per state every six or seven years or about 0.00006% of total votes cast. Seems like a secure, safe voting option to me, especially during a pandemic. 

Trump believes mail-in-voting favors Democrats. Is this true? A Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research study found that: "(1) vote-by-mail does not appear to affect either partys share of turnout; (2) vote-by-mail does not appear to increase either partys vote share; and (3) vote-by-mail modestly increases overall average turnout rates, in line with previous estimates.” The Stanford researchers, however, took pains to say that their findings applied to a normally administered in-person election.” Voting in a pandemic might produce different results in part because the threat of illness might deter one group of voters from casting ballots more than it would another.  

So lets just call it absentee voting” from now on to keep the very stable genius happy.


ON MENTAL ILLNESS: Most People With Mental Illness Struggle With Self-Esteem

Jack Bragen
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 03:17:00 PM

Most adults who live in the U.S. seem to link their self-worth with their careers. Many also identify with their body image, irrespective of gender. Some pin their self-esteem on high intelligence. People seek advanced college degrees in the expectation that it will allow them to earn more money, and for the purpose of self-worth. Thus, we have Americans who exercise and watch their diet, and who educate themselves and increase their earnings. Many Americans value the accomplishments of their offspring, as extensions of themselves.

Mentally ill people, if we went into a bar and someone approached us to ask, "What do you do?" We might not have a good answer. It would be an awkward moment. And, because psych medications adversely affect metabolism and make it a lot harder to exercise, we may not have a fit physique. Regarding the accomplishments of family, we may have parents or siblings who've done well for themselves, but very few mentally ill people are raising their kids, if they have produced them. Thus, again, when we are approached in a bar or at almost any gathering, when asked about ourselves, we might not have much to say, and this is awkward.

Under these circumstances, it is difficult to have much self-esteem. If we are subject to outpatient institutionalization, and if we don't have a professional job, we may be subject to implied messages telling us that we're subnormal. 

A diagnosis that effectively says there is a major defect in one's brain, by itself, constitutes a substantial blow to self-esteem. The cause of this is cultural. We've learned via osmosis that if we have a supposed defect, we do not deserve to like ourselves. This is why so many Americans are trying so hard to have the perfect bodies, the perfect careers, the finest cars, and so on. In modern times, everyone is measured by material possessions, by wealth, and by tangible achievements. People are in fierce competition with each other on who is the biggest, and the best, in the aforesaid realm. 

People should realize that if they could get to know themselves better on the inside, they could create limitless self-esteem by means of a few simple mental exercises. And this doesn't necessitate being insane; actually, learning about one's insides will make a person saner than they were. 

People with mental illness can value ourselves. It requires that we wholly reject society's shallow material standards of a person's worth. We can replace this with self-talk and self-coaching that builds up our self-acceptance, so that when people try to put us down, the detracting messages don't make it through the invisible shield we've created that protects our self-approval. This is an advantage that we can give to ourselves, and a thing that supposedly successful people do not know how to achieve. 

I'll offer a few examples: "I did not create my brain, so if it has a defect, it is not my fault." "It is not how perfect or powerful my brain is that counts, but what I do with it and how well I use it." "I do not have the perfect six pack of abdominal muscles or the biggest biceps, but I can accept myself as I am." 

The above are positive self-building statements that we can feed ourselves. And, I have news for you, mentally ill people aren't the only ones with self-esteem problems. 


Jack Bragen is author of "Instructions for Dealing with Schizophrenia: A Self-Help Manual," and lives in Martinez.


Smithereens: Reflections on Bits & Pieces

Gar Smith
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 03:03:00 PM

We're living in a revolutionary era (with Donald Trump standing in for King George). Racist statues are being toppled from DC to SF. Even Abe Lincoln and FDR are being called out for their racist failings (Abe ordered the 1862 mass execution of 39 Dakota men while FDR ignored Eleanor's pleas to sign a federal anti-lynching law). But if we're going to topple statues and call for renaming US military bases and high schools, we might also want to consider renaming our weapons of war.

Take tanks, for starters. The Sherman Tank, one of our best-known combat vehicles, honors the memory of Union Army General William Tecumseh Sherman. But, as the History Engine notes, Sherman "forbade the entry of African- Americans into the army. Sherman did not hide the fact that he was a white supremacist." (Sherman's legacy is probably safe for the moment. It's too much trouble to topple a tank.) 

And I'm not suggesting we rename our aircraft carriers (named after American presidents and including the USS Abe Lincoln, the USS Theodore Roosevelt and the over-budget/under-performing USS Gerald Ford). These massive naval vessels mainly exist to enforce compliance with Washington's program of Global Empire so it wouldn't make sense to rename them after anyone who wasn't a warmonger. Perhaps our aircraft carriers and battleships could be put to better use if they were simply decommissioned and home-ported to provide onboard shelters for America's 40,000 homeless veterans

But here's something we can do: Isn't it past time the Pentagon reconsidered Army Regulation 70-28 and stopped naming its helicopters after native nations vanquished by the Army and the US Calvary? Apache. Black Hawk. Chinook. Comanche. Kiowa. Lakota. Sioux. This is probably not the best way to commemorate America's "Indian Wars"—which raged for 148 years. 

John Lewis and the Free Speech Movement 

For decades, in and out of politics, John Lewis was an advocate for "Good Trouble." So it's no surprise that he reached out to the students who were arrested and beaten for occupying Sproul Hall during what became known as Berkeley's Free Speech Movement. 

Earlier today, while thumbing through a thumbdrive filled with copies of old documents, I came across a letter of solidarity that Carl Lewis, then chair of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), had written to the young protesters in Berkeley. The letter, written from SNCC's New York office on December 3, 1964, reads: 

"We wish to express our support for our brothers and sisters at the University of California in their fight for full free speech on the university campus. 

"University administration attempts to curtail the activity of the Friends of SNCC are an attack on the civil rights movement in the deep South. 

"We are shocked at the brutality used by police against the students who sat in at the University's administration building. Police brutality in the South is nothing new to us—but what is happening in the so-called liberal community of Berkeley? 

"Students have the right to participate in political activity on and off the campus. We know well the attempts by administrators on the campuses of Southern Negro colleges to break the civil rights movement by not allowing students to meet and advocate ideas on the campus. Now university administrators in the North are borrowing these same tactics. Such denial of students' rights—North or South—is an affront to the ideals of American democracy." 

A Surprising Legacy of Slavery 

During the Alabama celebrations of the life of Congressmember John Lewis ("The Conscience of the Congress," "The Boy from Troy") one of pastors presiding over the funeral service offered an appeal to the Almighty that began: "Dear Merciful Master…." 

Given that one of the underlying power chords of Lewis' anthemic life was the righteous rebellion against White Masters who imposed enslavement on generations of kidnapped Africans, a plea directed to a "Merciful Master" struck me as a bit discordant. 

Speaking as a former Boy Scout Troop Chaplain, this served to remind me that there are uncomfortable similarities between many religions and the slave-master relationship. In the case of Christianity, suffering believers pray for relief from an "Almighty lord" while remaining as docile as "flocks of sheep" in hopes that a "jealous god" (Exodus 34:14) will someday admit them to the "Kingdom" of Heaven. 

The Mendacity of Mitch McConnell 

And then there was Mitch McConnell's performance at the Capital Hill ceremony held to honor John Lewis' life. Mimicking a display of mourning, McConnell praised John Lewis' life while standing in the way of Lewis realizing his dream—a bill to restore a voting rights act that Trump has ridiculed and McConnell has vowed to block. 

In honor of Lewis' long struggle for equality, Democrats have renamed the bill the "John R. Lewis Voting Rights Act." In Lewis' last month on Earth, Mitch McConnell told John Lewis what he thought of the bill. He disparaged concerns over the GOP's long record of placing roadblocks between voters-of-color and the ballot box as nothing but "voter-suppression nonsense." 

The reality is, voter suppression has exploded across Republican-controlled "red states" since the fateful day in 2013 when Supreme Court conservatives stripped protections from the 1968 Voting Rights Act. 

Following the Capital Hill ceremony Democratic Congressman James Clyburn told CNN: "Trump and the Senate leadership, Mitch McConnell...if they so celebrate the heroism of this man, then let's go to work and pass that bill. Words may be powerful, but deeds are lasting." 

 

US Veterans Place Ad Calling Trump a Traitor 

The American people need relief, support, and protection. Instead, the Trump Administration is failing to lead. It appears that the only thing that Trump has succeeded in achieving is … failure. 

 

CREDO Exposes AT&T's Upgrade Charade 

Last week, AT&T customers received an alarming email headlined: "UPDATE NEEDED." The note warned customers that their phones were no longer "compatible with the new network and you need to replace it to continue receiving service." But, as CREDO (the phone company with a conscience) recently revealed, it was all a scam. 

The truth is, AT&T's planned network update won't happen until February 2022. 

"As a mobile provider that was founded on doing good," CREDO stated, "we pride ourselves on treating our customers with respect." 

AT&T, on the other hand, is known for its "long history of corporate greed and supporting Republican politicians and right-wing interests. They've donated millions to Donald Trump and anti-LGBTQ candidates and have worked hand-in-hand to help the NSA spy on Americans’ Internet traffic." 

CREDO, however, invests its profits to fill social needs, not private pockets. In any given year, CREDO pumps nearly $2 million into progressive campaigns that promote civil rights, reproductive freedom, climate justice, and more. And CREDO lets its customers vote to decide which do-good groups reap the monthly benefits. AT&T would prefer that you ignore CREDO's informative link: Here Are 8 Reasons to Drop AT&T. 

Fund the Post Office; Defend Democracy 

Remember the HEROES Act? This emergency bill was passed more than two months ago by the Democrat=controlled House. The legislation would direct billions of dollars to address the country's mounting health, economic, and education troubles. And the act also includes $25 billion for America's most beloved institution—the US Postal Service.  

The USPS is an indispensible service that may prove essential to assuring the survival of another cherished American institution—the right to vote. With many Americans loath to risk their lives standing in long lines waiting to vote during a deadly pandemic, the Senate needs to follow Congress' lead and fully fund the USPS in the next COVID-19 stimulus package. Sign the Petition: Demand the Senate fund the USPS

 

How the GOP's Covid-19 Bill Would Enrich the Pentagon 

Trump's inaction on health, homes, and harmony has brought the nation to a precipice where millions of Americans risk losing federal unemployment assistance and eviction protections, where more than five million people have lost health coverage in the middle of a rampaging pandemic, where armed US Militias have been ordered to invade US cities and attack US citizens (but only in "liberal, Democratic states"). States ravaged by rising Covid-19 infections and deaths need federal funding for testing but the aid isn't coming because the White House values the sales of heat-seeking missiles over the needs of relief-seeking Americans. 

Thirty-two Senators and 93 members of the Congress voted to cut Pentagon funding by 10 percent—a level of Pentagon disaffection that, until recently, would have been unthinkable. 

So what do we find when we dig into the GOP's 177-page "pandemic relief" document? How about a corporate wish-list soliciting $30 billion dollars for more spending on costly and needless Pentagon playthings—fighter jets, helicopters, and missile defense systems. (All this for a Pentagon that has already been granted $740 billion FY 2021.) At the same time, Win Without War notes, the Reap-publicans are "nickel and diming families who desperately need protections and benefits to put food on their tables and keep roofs over their heads." 

And why are Senate Republicans willing to give the Pentagon another $30 billion? Here's one rationale: to repay the military for the funds Donald Trump siphoned from the Pentagon's fiscal swamp to finance construction of his anarchistic/narcissistic border wall. 

Also included in the GOP's $30 billion menu: a $11 billion gift to repay contractors for money lost because of the Covid-19 virus (no auditable proof of losses required) and a $686 million add-on for the endless costs of the disastrous F-35 fighter jet (aka "the fighter jet that ate the Pentagon"). One of the projects would finance construction of a military vessel at a shipyard in Alabama, home state of Sen. Richard Shelby, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee. (Dare one whisper "corruption"?) 

Consider what that $30 billion could buy if it were spent on PPE and ventilators or shared to keep families protected from eviction and fed during a prolonged economic collapse. 

As Win Without War puts in: "Pandemic relief dollars should NOT go to the Pentagon FULL STOP." 

Speaker Pelosi has the power to block the GOP's corp-friendly bailout. In April, opposition to the "pandemic profiteering" embedded in the GOP's Covid relief bill lead to its defeat. We can do it again. We need to Defund the Pentagon and Defend the People. Tell Speaker Pelosi: Reject the GOP’s Giveaway to the Pentagon in COVID-19 Relief! 

The GOP's Covid-19 Plan: Billions for Weapons; Zilch for Workers 

Public Citizen president Robert Weissman also sat down for a close reading of the GOP's Covid-19 relief bill and reached this conclusion: "My reaction in a phrase: Are you kidding me?"  

Here's Public Citizen's list of some of the targeted provisions you could expect to find in the GOP's America: 

  • Presumptive immunity from lawsuits for corporations that adopt a written policy saying they aim to comply with governmental coronavirus standards. Just a written policy!
  • $1.75 billion for a new FBI building at the site of its current headquarters in Washington, D.C.—demanded by the Trump administration to prevent the site from being used for a hotel that would compete with the Trump International Hotel, which just happens to be right across the street.
  • A scheme to create a commission that would lead to severe cuts in Social Security benefits.
Weissman sums it up perfectly: "The half-baked, watered-down, corporate-handout proposal kludged together by Mitch McConnell and the Trump Gang is a travesty. Get serious and get to work on the bold, comprehensive coronavirus relief legislation the American people and our economy need." 

Here's a Capitol Idea 

The suit-and-tie denizens of Capitol Hill seem to have all the capital while the half-million-plus flatland residents of Washington, DC are living lower-case lives. It's just not fair. With 705,749 residents, the District of Columbia boasts a population larger than Wyoming (578,759) or Vermont (623,980) but, unlike these two privileged states, the District has no representation in Congress. While they pay taxes, the people who live in the Capitol of Democracy have no right to vote. In the heart of Democracy—no ballot boxes! Taxation without representation! But that could change. As Sen. Kamala Harris recently declared: “It’s time to grant DC Statehood.” 

"This broken, undemocratic system unfairly favors Republicans," the Daily Kos notes, "but if DC gets statehood, we would get TWO more Democratic Senators. That’s why Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump have vowed to sabotage DC Statehood." 

The solution? "An army of 10,000 supporters to sign our petition and force the Senate to PASS statehood." The Collective PAC's petition calls for extending the rights of citizenship to the disenfranchised people in our capitol city. 

A Closer Look at Trump's Threat to Void the November Election 

 


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, August 9- 16

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday August 08, 2020 - 11:29:00 AM

Worth Noting:

There are five Board/Commission City meetings and two Ashby and North Berkeley BART “Office Hour” question and comment sessions in the week of August 9 – 16.



Monday – Ashby and North Berkeley BART Office Hours 5 pm

Tuesday – PRC Subcommittee Acquisition and Use of Controlled Equipment 11 am. - (Controlled equipment is about military equipment purchased for and used by Berkeley police)

WednesdayBerkeley Rent Stabilization Board Outreach Committee 2 pm includes the COVID-19 update addressing rent and eviction protections

Parks and Waterfront Commission is at 7 pm

Thursday Ashby and North Berkeley BART Office Hours 12:30 pm

The 6 pm Zoning Adjustment Board Special meeting is the Update to the Baseline Zoning Ordinance and the scheduled one-hour meeting is not really enough time for comment on the 458 page document that covers everything zoning and permitting, i.e. land use, loading zones, demolitions, lapsed permits, public hearings, wireless installations standards, ADUs. And, those reading through the document will be disappointed to see that some of the current problems with zoning are continued into the “update.” This deserves your attention especially if you have any interest in what is allowed and restricted in Berkeley. Once the document goes to Council and is approved by Council it is effective immediately. The regular ZAB meeting follows the special 6 pm meeting.



Sunday, August 9, 2020

No City meetings or events found



Monday, August 10, 2020

Ashby and North Berkeley BART Community Advisory Group (CAG), 5 – 6:30 pm

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94928040853?pwd=UDdiZkVhbjZNWWdIOExpRmk0TG9xUT09#success

Meeting ID: 949 2804 0853 Passcode: 423205

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 949 2804 0853 Passcode: 423205

These are “Office Hours” meant for questions and comments covered in meeting #2, no presentations will be made. You can join the Zoom call at any time during the sessions

Link to video of meeting #2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDhvUxijOR0&t=1328s



Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Police Review Commission Subcommittee Police Acquisition & Use of Controlled Equipment Ordinance, 11 am

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

Videoconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85395953013

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 853 9595 3013

Agenda: 4. Public Comment, 5. Determine how to proceed proposed ordinance regulating police acquisition and use of controlled equipment.



Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board – Outreach Committee, 2 pm

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94498345912?pwd=Q1pPcmpFeWpXQm9mMlJ5cWpwRDIrUT09#success

Teleconference: 408-638-0968 Meeting ID: 944 9834 5912 Passcode: 764417

Agenda: 4. Public Comment, 6. Census Outreach, 7. COVID-19 update and tenants



Parks and Waterfront Commission, 7 – 9

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/95404087596

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 954 0408 7596

Agenda: 5. Public Comment, 8. Berkeley Commons Project, Proposed development @ 600 Addison with proposed improvements to Aquatic Park, bike/ped trail, ADA accessible parking, 9. Update T1 Phase 1, 10. Update T1 Phase 2



Thursday, August 13, 2020

Ashby and North Berkeley BART Community Advisory Group (CAG), 12:30 - 2 pm

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

Videoconference:

https://zoom.us/j/96397530244?pwd=L1lTdEd6QUI3aFp3VlpNTlZQNEprZz09#success

Meeting ID: 963 9753 0244 Password: 0340944

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 963 9753 0244 Password: 0340944

These are “Office Hours” meant for questions and comments covered in meeting #2, no presentations will be made. You can join the Zoom call at any time during the sessions

Link to video of meeting #2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDhvUxijOR0&t=1328s



Zoning Adjustment Board, 6 pm and 7 pm – same login for both meetings

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/zoningadjustmentsboard/

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94599730086

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 945 9973 0086

6 pm Special Meeting

Agenda: 1. Update on Baseline Zoning Ordinance, Phase 1 of the Zoning Ordinance Revision (Zoning Ordinance packet 458 pages)

7 pm Regular Meeting

1328 Oxford – alter 5400 sq ft residential parcel that is over density by constructing 234 sq ft 2nd story, adding 4 dormers to roof resulting 202 sq ft of habitable space in attic to existing 2-story single family dwelling. on consent

2956 Hillegass – enlarge 2-story 1926 sq ft single family dwelling on 2754 sq ft lot by converting 903 sq ft basement and crawl space to habitable space increasing bedrooms from 3 to 5 and establishing an uncovered off-street parking space within rear setback – on consent

1531 Summit – construct new 2393 sq ft 2-story single family dwelling with average height 24’5” and detached 2 car garage within 25% of lot portion closed to Summit on 7269 sq ft vacant hillside parcel. Staff recommend approve

2716 – 2718 – raise dwelling at front of lot to create 3-story dwelling, raise dwelling at rear of lot and construct 2 new dwellings below and not provide required 2 parking spaces. Staff recommend approve front unit addition of 6th or greater bedroom to parcel and residential addition greater than 16’ in average height and 20’ maximum height, deny variance to not provide parking for the new dwellings.

2870 Webster – appeal of Zoning Officer decision to approve Admin Use Permit as part of extensive remodel to expand 2296 sq ft 2-story single family dwelling on 4935 sq ft R-1 parcel, construct 115 sq ft additionof 2nd floor with aveage height of 25’5”, enlarge bathroom window, construct 9’fence. Staff recommend approve and deny appeal.



Friday, August 14, 2020, Saturday, August 15, 2020, Sunday, August 16, 2020

No City meetings or events found



_____________________



Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals

1346 Ordway, TBD

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

1451 Catherine 8/24/20

800 Dwight 8/20/2020

118 El Camino 8/13/2020

2410 Grant 8/24/2020

28 Hillcrest 8/25/2020

1231 Oxford 8/25/2020

2750-52 Prince 8/18/2020

3015 San Pablo 8/12/2020

1201 Second 8/18/2020

2012 Shattuck 8/18/2020

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



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



___________________



WORKSHOPS

Sept 29 – Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update, Zero Waste Priorities, Vision 2050

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



Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations

Cannabis Health Considerations

Presentation from StopWaste on SB 1383

Systems Realignment



Previously Schedules and Unscheduled Items Removed From Lists

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

Ohlone Territory



___________________



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


Protest To Stop UC Berkeley Evictions at 1921 Walnut St.

1921 Walnut St. Association
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 03:09:00 PM

From: 1921 Walnut St. Association in Downtown Berkeley, and ally organizations 

When: 4:00 pm Monday, August 3, 2020 

Where: 1111 Franklin Street Oakland, CA: OUTSIDE in front of the building 

What: – Second Protest 

On July 15, 2020, The University of California officially became the new landlord of the long-term/rent-controlled tenants at 1921 Walnut St., despite objections from Berkeley Mayor Arreguin, Berkeley City Council, Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board, the elected representatives of the UCB student body (ASUC), tenants’ rights organizations and the tenants themselves. In response, the tenants of 1921 Walnut St. and allies will be protesting at the UC Regents’ office in Oakland, demanding that UC stop all plans to evict these tenants and demolish these affordable housing units. 

This purchase of 1921 Walnut St. was UC’s “crossing the Rubicon” moment; signaling UC’s refusal to engage with the local community, be held to public scrutiny or adhere to the ethical values required of any publicly funded university. Now that UC owns the property, the tenants are no longer protected by Berkeley rent laws because of UC’s special privilege as a public university. As part of their special status, UC receives public funding and has a commitment to the public good and thus, UC has a responsibility to the local communities in which it operates. 

Despite those obligations, UC is violating the trust and good faith of the people of California by not working with the tenants of 1921 Walnut St., refusing to compromise with Berkeley elected officials, and ignoring all objections of the student body (ASUC) and other community members. Although UC is subject to state laws, UC even refuses to comply with SB-330 Housing Crisis Act of 2019 and are essentially “picking and choosing” the state laws they want to follow. In light of the recent California Public Records Act (CPRA) document release, it is now evident that UC has enlisted wealthy landlord and heiress Jackie Safier to assist in the redevelopment of 1921 Walnut St. Until this public records request, Safier’s involvement has been kept secret in yet another attempt by UC to hide from public scrutiny. Impunity, unaccountability, anti-affordable housing, disrespect of local communities – are these the values Californians want associated with their public university? Or will Californians hold UC to the standards of public service, ethical behavior and respect for local communities? 

While it is evident that many Californians prefer UC to be ethical and transparent, it is also evident that UC will continue to act with impunity until they are held accountable. Despite the devastating news that UC is now their landlord, the tenants of 1921 Walnut St. continue their “David vs Goliath” struggle to save their homes and to hold UC accountable. 

Event Info: There will be a small, physically distanced action OUTSIDE in front of 1111 Franklin Street in Oakland with the tenants and allies. We welcome media attention and coverage, and will be available before, during, and after the event for media to contact. Prior to the event, questions can be sent to 1921WalnutStAssociation@gmail.com with a copy to John Selawsky of the Berkeley Tenants Union, who can be reached via e-mail at: websky66@gmail.com or phone 510.590.6227 

Background and Contacts: 

To learn more about 1921 Walnut St. and to access the California Public Records Act (CPRA) documents, visit https://www.save1921walnut.org 

or go directly to: 

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/t3pv7cnbtrkcg7h/AACRngXl_bM4Z1qexcoWvYyXa?dl=0 

To see the letter the Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board sent UC on June 8, 2020, visit: 

https://www.cityofberkeley.info/uploadedFiles/Rent_Stabilization_Board/Level_3_-_General/INFO_Ltr%20to%20UC%20Regents%20re%201921%20Walnut%20St.pdf 

To see the Berkeley City Council approved “Resolution in Support of 1921 Walnut Street”:  

https://www.dropbox.com/s/877d6gku0lgk5j4/2020-07-28%20Revised%20Agenda%20Packet%20-%20Council%20-%20WEB.pdf?dl=0 

and contact author Councilmember Kate Harrison KHarrison@cityofberkeley.info 

To see the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association statement of support, visit: 

https://www.save1921walnut.org/about 

To contact the Associated Students of the University of California (ASUC) for comment, contact
Derek Imai eavp@asuc.org 

To learn more about UC’s planned eviction of tenants, demolition of 1921 Walnut St., redevelopment plan and citations, visit https://www.save1921walnut.org/ 

To see UC Regents ethical commitments and Policy 1111: Policy on Statement of Ethical Values and Standards of Ethical Conduct, visit: 

https://regents.universityofcalifornia.edu/governance/policies/1111.html 

 


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, August 2-9

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday August 01, 2020 - 01:22:00 PM

Worth Noting:

July 31, The total number of COVID-19 cases in California is now more than 500,000. California now has more cases of COVID-19 than 191 countries. Only the total US, Brazil, India and Russia have reported more cases of COVID-19 than the State of California.



City Council is on Summer Recess through September 14, 2020. Most of the Boards and Commissions recess during August and the majority have been held from meeting even via zoom since the shelter in place order March 16th.



There are four City meetings in the coming week.

Monday – Ashby and North Berkeley BART Community Advisory Group, 6 pm. The number of decisions that have already been made regarding the BART Projects can be reviewed through the website link below with the meeting agenda. The BART Projects will be a minimum of 7 stories. 

Wednesday - Planning Commission, 7 pm 

Thursday – Rent Stabilization Board Habitable and Sustainable Housing Committee, 5:30 pm and Landmarks Preservation Commission, 7 pm. 

 

Sunday, August 2, 2020  

No City meetings or events found 

 

Monday, August 3, 2020 

Ashby and North Berkeley BART Community Advisory Group, 6 – 9 pm https://www.cityofberkeley.info/bartplanning/ 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/92611093233 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 926 1109 3233 

Agenda: 2. CAG Roles and Process, 3. Planning Process, 4. Zoning AB2923, Development Parameters and Community Goals, 5. Preliminary Site Concepts, 6. Next Steps, 7. Public Comment 

 

Tuesday, August 4, 2020 

No City meetings or events found 

 

Wednesday, August 5, 2020 

Planning Commission, 7 – 10 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/92939134810 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 929 3913 4810 

Agenda: 9. Public Hearing: Southside Zoning Ordinance Amendments Project Update and Draft EIR scoping session, 10. ZORP Phase 1 – Baseline Zoning Ordinance 

 

Thursday, August 6, 2020 

Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board Habitable and Sustainable Housing Committee, 5:30 pm 

http://www.cityofberkeley.info/rent/ 

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94831963731?pwd=UGJ0Ny9FdkNyVVdDQnhlS2dzT1VxUT09#success 

Passcode: 732485  

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 732584 

Agenda: Discussion and possible action 6. Solar cost sharing, 7. Car chargers, 8. dishwashers 

 

Landmarks Preservation Commission, 7 – 11:30 pm 

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

Videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/92990053892 

Teleconference: 669-900-6833 Meeting ID: 929 9005 3892 

1740 San Pablo – Section 106 Referral 

1915 Berryman – Landmark or Structure of Merit designation for Payson House 

2015 Blake – Demolition referral 

2019 Blake – Demolition referral 

1207 Tenth – Demolition referral 

1 Orchard Lane – Landmark Initiation 

2939 Dwight Way - Landmark of Structure of Merit Initiation 

Notice of Preparation of Draft EIR for Southside Ordinance Amendments 

Staff Announcements Impact of SB 300 on Landmarks, 

 

Friday, August 7, 2020, Saturday, August 8, 2020, Sunday, August 9, 2020 

No City meetings or events found 

_____________________ 

 

Public Hearings Scheduled – Land Use Appeals 

1346 Ordway, TBD 

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

2319 California 8/4/2020 

545 Colusa 7/30/2020 

800 Dwight 8/20/2020 

118 El Camino 8/13/2020 

979 Regal 8/4/2020 

3015 San Pablo 8/12/2020 

1120 Second (LPC) 

41 San Diego Rd (LPC) 

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

 

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

 

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WORKSHOPS 

Sept 29 – Digital Strategic Plan/FUND$ Replacement Website Update, Zero Waste Priorities, Vision 2050 

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

 

Unscheduled Workshops/Presentations 

Cannabis Health Considerations 

Presentation from StopWaste on SB 1383 

Systems Realignment 

 

Previously Schedules and Unscheduled Items Removed From Lists 

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

Ohlone Territory 

 

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To Check For Regional Meetings with Berkeley Council Appointees go to 

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

 

To check for Berkeley Unified School District Board Meetings go to 

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

 

_____________________ 

 

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