Wild Blue Yonder

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music & nightlife |

By Gabe Meline

There’s gotta be a medical term for the quick-flash split second that occurs between the sudden awakening from a jarring nightmare and the realization that the dream is over. That moment of confused, haunted disbelief that doesn’t cause you to ask “Where am I?” so much as “What am I?” The moment passes, you remember the fact of your own existence, and everything’s fine–but what’s that split second called?

While it may not have a name, it does have a soundtrack.

A Heap of Broken Images is the stunning debut album from the Santa Rosa duo known as Blue Sky Black Death, and between the music contained therein to the cover image of a man desperately covering his eyes, it is as bleak and creepy as a jostling nightmare. It’s also the most promising underground hip-hop production effort that has come across my turntable all year.

The timing is perfect. DJ Shadow is about to release his “hyphy” album, The Outsider, to a mass of soon-to-be disappointed fans, and a couple of unknown kids bake up the perfect successor to his groundbreaking 1996 debut disc Endtroducing. It’s the album that a decade’s worth of DJ Shadow fans have continually wished he would one day record–and that DJ Shadow himself probably wouldn’t ever want to make in a million years.

In the wake of Endtroducing, a whole new league of atmospheric beatmakers stepped up to the plate, trying to swing at the glory gained by that album’s grand slam. Naturally, as droves of substanceless replications are touted as the new thing, most of them have struck out and headed back to the bench. A few of the strong contenders–including Blockhead’s Music by Cavelight, Rjd2’s Deadringer and Dante Carfagna’s Express Rising–have made the all-star team, and A Heap of Broken Images is its most recent recruit from the minor leagues.

One half of BSBD is 21-year-old Ian Taggart, who explains his early love of hip-hop by citing one of the first albums he ever bought: Nas’ It Was Written. “I wish I could have a cooler answer,” he admits, “like Paid in Full or The Great Adventures of Slick Rick, but, alas, I’m not that old. Can’t front.”

But Taggart, along with musical partner Kingston Maguire, has made an album that explores sounds well outside the boundaries of hip-hop, one that doesn’t rock the bells so much as rattle and caress them into bulbous, resonant rumblings. Heard throughout A Heap of Broken Images are snatches of classical sonatas, movie scores, psychedelia, ’70s prog rock and world music. “Pretty much everything,” Taggart jokes. “In addition, we use live instruments: guitar, cello, violin, trumpet, bass and keys.” It’s one of the reasons he eventually focused more on production than MC-ing.

“No one’s going to know that I love Neurosis, Godspeed You Black Emperor and then also DJ Premier, RZA, Mobb Deep and tons of other artists from hearing me rap,” he explains, “but you might be able to hear all of that in our instrumentals. Plus, I’m not outgoing enough to rap. I think you’ve gotta have a certain personality for it.”

In addition to the brooding instrumentals, A Heap of Broken Images contains a second disc of collaborations with over a dozen noted MCs, including Gang Starr’s Guru, Jedi Mind Tricks’ Jus Allah and Freestyle Fellowship’s Mikah-9. A strong album on its own, this extra disc also solves the common problem of producers needing to prove their roots by marring an instrumental album with the out-of-place presence of an MC. “We felt that the cohesion was being compromised when we had Heiro rapping right after one of our instrumentals,” Taggart says. “They just didn’t mesh too well.”

The immediate future holds more high-profile collaborations for the up-and-coming production team. Released this Tuesday is Blue Sky Black Death Presents the Holocaust, a pairing with Wu-Tang Clan affiliate the Holocaust. In the meantime, Taggart’s keeping his mind open to new, malleable sounds for future projects–two of his favorite albums lately have been CocoRosie’s eccentric, deadpan Noah’s Ark and My Morning Jacket’s dreamy, Neil Young-esque At Dawn.

“Any time I’m listening to something really good,” he says, “I’m like ‘Damn, I wish I did that.'”

As long as Blue Sky Black Death keeps creating eerie monologues made up of incongruous sonds, those interrupted nightmares will continue to have a suitable backdrop. You can take your chances, but I’m setting my alarm.




FIND A MUSIC REVIEW

Get Ready to Rumble

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September 6-12, 2006

Rockabilly planted its rebel roots in the fertile soil of mainstream country music, sprouting such rock-ready radio acts as Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison and Jerry Lee Lewis. Yet in its unadulterated form, this amped up hillbilly hybrid lingered in the musical underground, emerging only periodically over the years on covers by the Beatles, Rolling Stones and Aerosmith or under the guise of such rockabilly revivalist acts as Robert Gordon and the Stray Cats.

Rockin’ Bones: 1950s Punk & Rockabilly–a new four-CD, 101-track set on the Rhino label, and packaged like ahardcover pulp novel–revels in the trash and twang that shook complacent Eisenhower-era America and helped blaze the trail for the teen revolution of the ’60s.

All the big names are here: Elvis, Jerry Lee, Orbison, Johnny Cash, pre-pop Buddy Holly, Link Wray, Ricky Nelson, Gene Vincent, Eddie Cochran, Wanda Jackson, Carl Perkins, and Dale Hawkins, among others. So are the lesser known cult heroes: Joe Clay, Johnny Burnette, Charlie Feathers, Ronnie Hawkins, Hasil Atkins and Gene Summers, to name a few.

There are surreptitious appearances by such country artists as George Jones (aka Thumper Jones) and Buck Owens (aka Corky Jones).

Missing in action: Bill Haley and the Comets, whose breakthrough 1955 hit “Rock Around the Clock” marked the first time a rockabilly record topped the charts–Elvis had yet to chart at that point in time.

A 64-page booklet traces the history of this high-octane sound with its lyrical message of sex and rebellion. It was music by, for and about teenagers. But as producer James Austin points out in his lively liner notes, this ain’t no history lesson–it’s about attitude.

And he captures that in his pulp-fueled prose. “This stuff’s for the back alley,” he writes, “where juvenile delinquents wore Levi’s and peggers (pegged pants in a variety of colors) and flicked switchblades bought in Tijuana.”

He makes a case for rockabilly being the first music that left parents feeling threatened about the sanctity of their moral values–rockabilly was the devil’s music, the perfect soundtrack for sending those 2.5 child households into the grasp of sin.

Rockabilly revivalist Deke Dickerson delivers a five-page essay on the history of rockabilly guitar, and writer Colin Escott provides a track-by-track commentary.

This remains vibrant music that gave rise to the UK-based skiffle craze that enthralled the Beatles and other British Invasion bands (who would re-export it back to the land of its origin) and has informed the likes of the Clash and the Ramones and the Donnas. Until now, you may never have heard of Peanuts Wilson or Tom Tall or Johnny Powers, but anyone worth their rock ‘n’ roll shoes owes them all a debt of gratitude.


Fit to Print

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Extreme danger: According to an article published in ‘Mother Jones,’ the world’s oceans are poised for catastrophe from which there is no return.

By Peter Phillips, Trish Boreta & Project Censored

For 30 years, Sonoma State University’s Project Censored has released an annual list of the most important news stories not covered by the corporate media in the United States. Here again are the top 10 news stories that didn’t make much news.

1. Net Neutrality

Throughout 2005 and this year, a largely underground debate has raged regarding the future of the Internet. More recently referred to as Net neutrality, the issue has become a tug of war with cable companies on the one hand and consumers and Internet service providers (ISPs) on the other. Yet despite important legislative proposals and Supreme Court decisions throughout 2005, the issue was almost completely ignored in the headlines until 2006. And except for occasional coverage on CNBC’s Kudlow & Kramer, mainstream television remains hands off to this day.

Most coverage of the issue framed it as an argument over regulation, but the term “regulation” in this case is somewhat misleading. Groups advocating for Net neutrality are not promoting regulation of Internet content. What they want is a legal mandate forcing cable companies to allow ISPs free access to their cable lines (called a “common carriage” agreement). This was the model used for dial-up Internet, and it is the way content providers want to keep it. They also want to make sure that cable companies can not screen or interrupt Internet content without a court order.

Those in favor of Net neutrality say that lack of government regulation simply means that cable lines will be regulated by the cable companies themselves. Internet service providers will have to pay a hefty service fee for the right to use cable lines (making Internet services more expensive). Those who could pay more would get better access; those who could not pay would be left behind. Cable companies could also decide to filter Internet content at will.

Source: “Web of Deceit: How Internet Freedom Got the Federal Ax, And Why Corporate News Censored the Story,” by Elliot D. Cohen. Buzzflash.com, July 18, 2005.

2. Halliburton and Iran

According to journalist Jason Leopold, sources at Dick Cheney’s former company, Halliburton, allege that as recently as January 2005, Halliburton sold key components for a nuclear reactor to an Iranian oil development company. Leopold says his Halliburton sources have intimate knowledge of the business dealings of both Halliburton and Oriental Oil Kish, one of Iran’s largest private oil companies.

Halliburton has a long history of doing business in Iran, starting as early as 1995, when Vice President Cheney was chief executive of the company. In an attempt to curtail Halliburton and other U.S. companies from engaging in business dealings with rogue nations such as Libya, Iran and Syria, an amendment was approved in the Senate on July 26, 2005. The amendment, sponsored by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, would penalize companies that continue to skirt U.S. law by setting up offshore subsidiaries as a way to legally conduct business and avoid U.S. sanctions under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

A letter, drafted by trade groups representing corporate executives, vehemently objected to the amendment, saying it would lead to further hatred and perhaps incite terrorist attacks on the United States and “greatly strain relations with the United States primary trading partners.” The letter warned that “foreign governments view U.S. efforts to dictate their foreign and commercial policy as violations of sovereignty often leading them to adopt retaliatory measures more at odds with U.S goals.”

According to Leopold, during a trip to the Middle East in March 1996, Dick Cheney told a group of mostly U.S. businessmen that Congress should ease sanctions in Iran and Libya to foster better relationships, a statement that, in hindsight, is completely hypocritical considering the Bush administration’s foreign policy.

“Let me make a generalized statement about a trend I see in the U.S. Congress that I find disturbing, that applies not only with respect to the Iranian situation but a number of others as well,” Cheney said. “I think we Americans sometimes make mistakes. . . . There seems to be an assumption that somehow we know what’s best for everybody else and that we are going to use our economic clout to get everybody else to live the way we would like.”

Cheney was the chief executive of Halliburton Corporation at the time he uttered those words. It was Cheney who directed Halliburton toward aggressive business dealings with Iran–in violation of U.S. law–in the mid 1990s, which continued through 2005 and is the reason Iran has the capability to enrich weapons-grade uranium.

It was Halliburton’s secret sale of centrifuges to Iran that helped get the uranium enrichment program off the ground, according to a three-year investigation that includes interviews conducted with more than a dozen current and former Halliburton employees.

If the U.S. ends up engaged in a war with Iran in the future, Cheney and Halliburton will bear the brunt of the blame.

Source: “Halliburton Secretly Doing Business with Key Member of Iran’s Nuclear Team,” by Jason Leopold. GlobalResearch.ca, Aug. 5, 2005.

3. World Oceans in Extreme Danger

Oceanic problems once found on a local scale are now pandemic. Data from oceanography, marine biology, meteorology, fishery science and glaciology reveal that the seas are changing in ominous ways. A vortex of cause and effect wrought by global environmental dilemmas is changing the ocean from a watery horizon with assorted regional troubles to a global system in alarming distress.

The oceans are one, say oceanographers, with currents linking the seas and regulating climate. Sea temperature and chemistry changes, along with contamination and reckless fishing practices, intertwine to imperil the world’s largest communal life source.

In 2005, researchers from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory found clear evidence that the ocean is quickly warming. They discovered that the top half-mile of the ocean has warmed dramatically in the past 40 years as a result of human-induced greenhouse gases.

One manifestation of this warming is the melting of the Arctic. A shrinking ratio of ice to water has set off a feedback loop, accelerating the increase in water surfaces that promote further warming and melting. With polar waters growing fresher and tropical seas saltier, the cycle of evaporation and precipitation has quickened, further invigorating the greenhouse effect. The ocean’s currents are reacting to this freshening, causing a critical conveyor that carries warm upper waters into Europe’s northern latitudes to slow by one-third since 1957, bolstering fears of a shut down and cataclysmic climate change. This accelerating cycle of cause and effect will be difficult, if not impossible, to reverse.

Atmospheric litter is also altering sea chemistry, as thousands of toxic compounds poison marine creatures and devastate propagation. The ocean has absorbed 118 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide since the onset of the Industrial Revolution, with 20 to 25 tons being added to the atmosphere daily. Increasing acidity from rising levels of CO2 is changing the ocean’s PH balance. Studies indicate that the shells and skeletons possessed by everything from reef-building corals to mollusks and plankton begin to dissolve within 48 hours of exposure to the acidity expected in the ocean by 2050. Coral reefs will almost certainly disappear and, even more worrisome, so will plankton. Phytoplankton absorb greenhouse gases, manufacture oxygen and are the primary producers of the marine food web.

Mercury pollution enters the food web via coal and chemical industry waste, oxidizes in the atmosphere and settles to the sea bottom. There it is consumed, delivering mercury to each subsequent link in the food chain, until predators such as tuna or whales carry levels of mercury as much as 1 million times that of the waters around them. The Gulf of Mexico has the highest mercury levels ever recorded, with an average of 10 tons of mercury coming down the Mississippi River every year, and another ton added by offshore drilling.

Along with mercury, the Mississippi delivers nitrogen, often from fertilizers. Nitrogen stimulates plant and bacterial growth in the water that consume oxygen, creating a condition known as hypoxia, or dead zones. Dead zones occur wherever oceanic oxygen is depleted below the level necessary to sustain marine life. A sizable portion of the Gulf of Mexico has become a dead zone–the largest such area in the United States and the second largest on the planet, measuring nearly 8,000 square miles in 2001.

It is no coincidence that almost all of the nearly 150 (and counting) dead zones on earth lay at the mouths of rivers. Nearly 50 fester off U.S. coasts. While most are caused by river-borne nitrogen, fossil-fuel-burning plants help create this condition, as does phosphorous from human sewage and nitrogen emissions from auto exhaust.

Meanwhile, since its peak in 2000, the global wild fish harvest has begun a sharp decline despite progress in seagoing technologies and intensified fishing. So-called efficiencies in fishing have stimulated unprecedented decimation of sea life. Long-lining, in which a single boat sets line across 60 or more miles of ocean, each baited with up to 10,000 hooks, captures at least 25 percent unwanted catch. With an estimated 2 billion hooks set each year, as much as 88 billion pounds of life a year is thrown back to the ocean either dead or dying.

Additionally, trawlers drag nets across every square inch of the continental shelves every two years. Fishing the sea floor like a bulldozer, they level an area 150 times larger than all forest clear-cuts each year and destroy seafloor ecosystems.

Aquaculture is no better, since three pounds of wild fish are caught to feed every pound of farmed salmon. A 2003 study out of University of Nova Scotia concluded, based on data dating from the 1950s, that in the wake of decades of such onslaught, only 10 percent of all large fish (tuna, swordfish) and ground fish (cod, hake, flounder) are left anywhere in the ocean.

Other sea nurseries are also threatened. Fifteen percent of sea grass beds have disappeared in the last 10 years, depriving juvenile fish, manatees and sea turtles of critical habitats. Kelp beds are also dying at alarming rates. While at no other time in history has science taught more about how the earth’s life-support systems work, the maelstrom of human assault on the seas still continues. If human failure in governance of the world’s largest public domain is not reversed quickly, the ocean will soon and surely reach a point of no return.

Source: “The Fate of the Ocean,” by Julia Whitty. Mother Jones magazine, March/April, 2006.

4. Poverty Increasing in the United States

The number of hungry and homeless people in U.S. cities continued to grow in 2005 despite claims of an improved economy. Increased demand for vital services rose as needs of the most destitute went unmet, according to the annual U.S. Conference of Mayors Report, which has documented increasing need since its 1982 inception.

The study measures instances of emergency food and housing assistance in 24 U.S. cities and utilizes supplemental information from the U.S. Census and Department of Labor. More than three-quarters of cities surveyed reported increases in demand for food and housing, especially among families. Food-aid requests expanded by 12 percent in 2005, while aid center and food bank resources grew by only 7 percent. Service providers estimated 18 percent of requests went untended. Housing followed a similar trend, as a majority of cities reported an increase in demand for emergency shelter, often going unmet due to lack of resources.

President Bush’s proposed budget for fiscal 2007, which begins October 2006, includes a Commerce Department plan to eliminate the Census Bureau’s Survey of Income and Program Participation. The proposal marks at least the third White House attempt in as many years to do away with federal data collection on politically prickly economic issues.

Founded in 1984, the Census Bureau survey follows American families for a number of years and monitors their use of Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, Social Security, Medicaid, unemployment insurance, childcare and other health, social-service and education programs.

Some 415 economists and social scientists signed a letter and sent it to Congress shortly after the February release of Bush’s federal budget proposal, urging that the survey be fully funded as it ”is the only large-scale survey explicitly designed to analyze the impact of a wide variety of government programs on the well-being of American families.”

Supporters of the survey elimination say the program costs too much at $40 million per year. They would kill it in September and eventually replace it with a scaled-down version that would run to $9.2 million in development costs during the coming fiscal year. Actual data collection would begin in 2009.

Sources: “New Report Shows Increase in Urban Hunger, Homelessness,” by Brendan Coyne. TheNewStandard.com, December 2005. “U.S. Plan to Eliminate Survey of Needy Families Draws Fire,” by Abid Aslam. OneWorld.net, March, 2006.

5. High-Tech Genocide in Congo

The world’s most neglected emergency, according to Jan Egeland, the U.N. Emergency Relief Coordinator, is the ongoing tragedy in the Congo, where 6 million to 7 million have died since 1996 as a consequence of invasions and wars sponsored by Western powers trying to gain control of the region’s mineral wealth. At stake is control of natural resources that are sought by U.S. corporations: diamonds; tin; copper; gold; cobalt, an element essential to nuclear, chemical, aerospace and defense industries; and, more significantly, coltan and niobum, two minerals necessary for production of cell phones and other high-tech electronics. Eighty percent of the world’s coltan reserves are found in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Niobium is another high-tech mineral with a similar story.

The high-tech boom of the 1990s caused the price of coltan to skyrocket to nearly $300 per pound. In 1996, U.S. sponsored Rwandan and Ugandan forces entered eastern DRC. By 1998, they had seized control and moved into strategic mining areas. The Rwandan army was soon making $20 million or more a month from coltan mining. Though the price of coltan has since fallen, Rwanda maintains its monopoly on coltan and the coltan trade in DRC. Reports of rampant human-rights abuses pour out of this mining region.

Coltan makes its way out of the mines to trading posts where foreign traders buy the mineral and ship it abroad, mostly through Rwanda. Firms with the capability turn coltan into the coveted tantalum powder, and then sell the magic powder to Nokia, Motorola, Compaq, Sony and other manufacturers for use in cell phones and other products.

Yet as mining in the Congo by Western companies proceeds at an unprecedented rate–some $6 million in raw cobalt alone exiting DRC daily–multinational mining companies rarely get mentioned in human-rights reports.

Sources: “The World’s Most Neglected Emergency: Phil Taylor Talks to Keith Harmon Snow,” The Taylor Report, March 28, 2005. “High-Tech Genocide,” by Sprocket. Earth First! Journal, August 2005. “Behind the Numbers: Untold Suffering in the Congo,” by Keith Harmon Snow and David Barouski. Z Magazine, March 1, 2006.

6. Whistleblower Protection in Jeopardy

Special Counsel Scott Bloch, appointed by President Bush in 2004, is overseeing the virtual elimination of federal whistleblower rights in the U.S. government.

The U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC), the agency that is supposed to protect federal employees who blow the whistle on waste, fraud and abuse is dismissing hundreds of cases while advancing almost none. According to the Annual Report for 2004 (which was not released until the end of first quarter of the 2006 fiscal year), less than 1.5 percent of whistleblower claims were referred for investigation while more than a thousand reports were closed before they were even opened. Only eight claims were found to be substantiated, and one of those included the theft of a desk, while another included attendance violations. Favorable outcomes have declined 24 percent overall, and this is all in the first year that Bloch has been in office.

Bloch, who has received numerous complaints since he took office, defends his first 13 months in office by pointing to a decline in backlogged cases. Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility executive director Jeff Ruch says, “Backlogs and delays are bad, but they are not as bad as simply dumping the cases altogether.” According to figures released by Bloch in February 2005, more than 470 claims of retaliation were dismissed, and not once had he affirmatively represented a whistleblower.

In fact, in order to speed dismissals, Bloch instituted a rule forbidding his staff from contacting whistleblowers if their disclosure was deemed incomplete or ambiguous. Instead, the OSC would dismiss the matter. As a result, hundreds of whistleblowers never had a chance to justify their cases. Ruch notes that these numbers are limited to only the backlogged cases and do not include new ones.

On March 3, 2005, OSC staff members, joined by a coalition of whistleblower protection and civil rights organizations, filed a complaint against Bloch. The complaint specifies instances of illegal gag orders, cronyism, invidious discrimination and retaliation by forcing the resignation of one-fifth of the OSC headquarters legal and investigative staff. The complaint was filed with the President’s Council on Integrity and Efficiency, which took no action on the case for seven months.

This is the third probe into Bloch’s operation in less than two years in office. The Government Accountability Office and a U.S. Senate subcommittee both have ongoing investigations into mass dismissals of whistleblower cases, crony hires and Bloch’s targeting of gay employees for removal while refusing to investigate cases involving discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. The case has since been supplemented with allegations of Bloch supplying Congress with misleading information and misusing his office to support a person espousing creationist views even though his office had no jurisdiction to do so.

The Department of Labor has also gotten on board in a behind-the-scenes maneuver to cancel whistleblower protections. If it succeeds, the Labor Department will dismiss claims by federal workers who report violations under the Clean Air Act and the Safe Drinking Water Act. Government Accountability Project general counsel Joanne Royce sums up major concerns: “We do not want public servants wondering whether they will lose their jobs for acting against pollution violations of politically well-connected interests.”

Source: All stories by Jeff Ruch, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility website. “Whistleblowers Get Help from Bush Administration,” Dec. 5, 2005; “Long-Delayed Investigation of Special Counsel Finally Begins,” Oct. 18, 2005; “Back Door Rollback of Federal Whistleblower Protections,” Sept. 22, 2005.

7. U.S. Operatives Do Torture

The American Civil Liberties Union released documents of 44 autopsies held in Afghanistan and Iraq on Oct. 25, 2005. Twenty-one of those deaths were listed as homicides. The documents show that detainees died during and after interrogations by the Navy Seals, military intelligence and other government agencies.

“These documents present irrefutable evidence that U.S. operatives tortured detainees to death during interrogation,” said Amrit Singh, an attorney with the ACLU. “The public has a right to know who authorized the use of torture techniques and why these deaths have been covered up.”

The Department of Defense released the autopsy reports in response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by the ACLU, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans for Peace.

One of 44 U.S. military autopsy reports reads as follows: “[A] 27-year-old Iraqi male died while being interrogated by Navy Seals on April 5, 2004, in Mosul, Iraq. During his confinement, he was hooded, flex-cuffed, sleep-deprived and subjected to hot and cold environmental conditions, including the use of cold water on his body and hood. The exact cause of death was ‘undetermined,’ although the autopsy stated that hypothermia may have contributed to his death.”

An overwhelming majority of the so-called natural deaths covered in the autopsies were attributed to “arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease” (heart attack).

The Associated Press carried the story of the ACLU charges on their wire service. However, a thorough check of Nexus-Lexus and Proquest electronic data bases, using the keywords ACLU and autopsy, showed that at least 95 percent of the daily papers in the United States didn’t pick up the story.

Sources: “U.S. Operatives Killed Detainees During Interrogations in Afghanistan and Iraq,” American Civil Liberties website, Oct. 24, 2005. “Tracing the Trail of Torture: Embedding Torture as Policy from Guant·namo to Iraq,” by Dahr Jamail. TomDispatch.com, March 5, 2006.

8. Pentagon Exempt from FOIA

The Department of Defense has been granted exemption from the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). In December 2005, Congress passed the 2006 Defense Authorization Act, which renders Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) “operational files” fully immune to FOIA requests, the main mechanism by which watchdog groups, journalists and individuals can access federal documents. Of particular concern to critics of the Defense Authorization Act is the DIA’s new right to thwart access to files that may reveal human-rights violations tied to ongoing “counterterrorism” efforts.

The rule could, for instance, frustrate the work of the ACLU and other organizations that have relied on FOIA to uncover more than 30,000 documents on the U.S. military’s involvement in the torture and mistreatment of foreign detainees in Afghanistan, Guantánamo Bay and Iraq–including the Abu Ghraib scandal.

Several key documents that have surfaced in the advocacy organization’s expansive research originate from DIA files, including a 2004 memorandum containing evidence that U.S. military interrogators brutalized detainees in Baghdad, as well as a report describing the abuse of Iraqi detainees as violations of international human rights law.

According to Jameel Jaffer, an ACLU attorney involved in the ongoing torture investigations, “If the Defense Intelligence Agency can rely on exception or exemption from the FOIA, then documents such as those that we obtained this last time around will not become public at all.” The end result of such an exemption, he told TheNewStandard.com, is that “abuse is much more likely to take place, because there’s not public oversight of Defense Intelligence Agency activity.”

Jaffer added that because the DIA conducts investigations relating to other national-security-related agencies, documents covered by the exemption could contain critical evidence of how other parts of the military operate as well.

The Newspaper Association of America informs that due to lobbying efforts of the Sunshine in Government Initiative and other open-government advocates, congressional negotiators imposed an unprecedented two-year “sunset” date on the Pentagon’s FOIA exemption, ending December 2007.

Source: “Pentagon Seeks Greater Immunity from Freedom of Information,” by Michelle Chen. TheNewStandard.com, May 6, 2005.

9. World Bank Funds Israel-Palestine Wall

Despite the 2004 International Court of Justice (ICJ) decision that called for tearing down the Wall and compensating affected communities, construction of the Wall has accelerated. The route of the barrier runs deep into Palestinian territory, aiding the annexation of Israeli settlements and the breaking of Palestinian territorial continuity. The World Bank’s vision of “economic development,” however, evades any discussion of the Wall’s illegality.

The World Bank has meanwhile outlined the framework for a Palestinian Middle East Free Trade Area (MEFTA) policy in its most recent report on Palestine published in December 2004: “Stagnation or Revival: Israeli Disengagement and Palestinian Economic Prospects.”

Central to World Bank proposals is the construction of massive industrial zones to be financed by the World Bank and other donors and controlled by the Israeli occupation. Built on Palestinian land around the Wall, these industrial zones are envisaged as forming the basis of export-orientated economic development. Palestinians imprisoned by the Wall and dispossessed of land can be put to work for low wages.

The post-Wall MEFTA vision includes complete control over Palestinian movement. The report proposes high-tech military gates and checkpoints along the Wall, through which Palestinians and exports can be conveniently transported and controlled. A supplemental “transfer system” of walled roads and tunnels will allow Palestinian workers to be funneled to their jobs, while being simultaneously denied access to their land. Sweatshops will be one of very few possibilities of earning a living for Palestinians confined to disparate ghettos throughout the West Bank.

In breach of the ICJ ruling, the United States has already contributed $50 million to construct gates along the Wall to “help serve the needs of Palestinians.”

Sources: “Cementing Israeli Apartheid: The Role of World Bank,” by Jamal Juma. Left Turn issue #18. “US Free Trade Agreements Split Arab Opinion,” by Linda Heard. Al-Jazeera, March 9, 2005.

10. Expanded Air War in Iraq

There is widespread speculation that President Bush, confronted by diminishing approval ratings and dissent within his own party, as well as within the military itself, will begin pulling American troops out of Iraq this year. A key element of the drawdown plans not mentioned in the president’s public statements, or in mainstream media for that matter, is that the departing American troops will be replaced by American airpower.

Writing in The New Yorker magazine, Seymour Hersh quotes Patrick Clawson, the deputy director of the Washington Institute, whose views often mirror those of Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, as saying, “We’re not planning to diminish the war. We just want to change the mix of the forces doing the fighting–Iraqi infantry with American support and greater use of airpower.”

While battle fatigue increases among U.S. troops, the prospect of using airpower as a substitute for American troops on the ground has caused great unease within the military. Air Force commanders in particular have deep-seated objections to the possibility that Iraqis will eventually be responsible for target selection. Hersh quotes a senior military planner now on assignment in the Pentagon as saying, “Will the Iraqis call in air strikes in order to snuff rivals or other warlords, or to snuff members of their own sect and blame someone else? Will some Iraqis be targeting on behalf of al Qaida or the insurgency or the Iranians?”

Visions of a frightful future in Iraq should not overshadow the devastation already caused by present levels of American airpower loosed, in particular on heavily populated urban areas of that country. The tactic of using massively powerful 500- and 1,000-pound bombs in urban areas to target small pockets of resistance fighters has, in fact, long been employed in Iraq. No intensification of the air war is necessary to make it a commonplace.

Sources: “Up in the Air,” by Seymour M. Hersh. The New Yorker, Dec. 5, 2005. “An Increasingly Aerial Occupation,” by Dahr Jamail. TomDispatch.com, December 2005.


Fright Spread Fred

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September 6-12, 2006

‘Believe it or not, I was studying this Russian philosopher, Georgi Ivanovitch Gurdjieff, who writes a lot about levels of consciousness as I made it,” Wes Craven told me in 2000 about A Nightmare on Elm Street. “The farther up you went toward consciousness, the more painful it was, until the few and far between broke through into the clear conscious, where they were no longer involved egotistically and it was just beauty everywhere. That he called ‘complete awakeness.’ So the whole idea of Nightmare was built on that assumption that we all have this sense that we’re half asleep as to what’s really going on.”

At the heart of this quote is what makes Craven, to my mind, the most effective horror filmmaker of the modern era. His best scary movies spin off from fascinating ideas, and yet you don’t have to read the 1,200 pages of Gurdjieff’s Beelzebub’s Tales to His Grandson to “get” A Nightmare on Elm Street. You don’t have to have seen Bergman’s The Virgin Spring to be sucked into the visceral undertow of The Last House on the Left. And you don’t have to understand Bertolt Brecht’s Verfremdungseffekt to enjoy Scream.

Craven’s art entertains at the same time that it uses the horror genre to bring intellectual curiosity to mainstream moviemaking. It’s unfortunate that he’s been in some ways the victim of his own success; Last House is remembered as more exploitative than it actually was, while horror fans often mistakenly write off Scream as kid’s stuff, forgetting that beneath that glossy pop shell it was one of the edgiest and grittiest horror films of the ’90s.

Nightmare gets the worst of these misremembrances, which is why it’s worth it to catch its two-day rerelease Sept. 20-21. It’ll be shown in 124 theaters around the country; go to www.bigscreenboxoffice.com to find the location closest to you.

The thing about the first Nightmare is that it’s remembered as a “Freddy” movie, which in most people’s minds means cheeky one-liners and silly dream set pieces. But that vibe actually developed in the sequels, which moved Freddy further and further into self-parody.

If you haven’t seen it in a while, you may not remember how dark, dark, dark the original Elm Street is. It’s moody and sinister, and is appropriately one of the only horror films I would call truly nightmarish in tone. The character of Fred Krueger as articulated here is a psychosexual ghoul, a true “male monster from the Id,” as the Chills once put it.

Upon repeat viewings, the complexity of his character comes out. He’s not only a sadist, but a masochist, mutilating his own body on two occasions in front of his intended victim. He’s a vile child killer, yet the movie seems to find some degree of injustice in his murder, being killed as he was by a vigilante mob and for some reason granted the opportunity to avenge his own death by haunting the dreams of his killers’ children.

That’s not the only fairly radical message in this movie. Every one of Craven’s horror films is political in some way; here he not only gives philosophy claws, he suggests that what parents don’t tell their children can kill them. Remember, this was the age of “Just Say No,” when kids were expected to unquestioningly accept abstinence without crucial information about AIDS or other STDs, and believe that drugs were bad simply because the nice policeman who came to our classes said so. In that way, Craven’s film bridges the gap between ’70s paranoia epics and ’80s teen-oriented fare. It is perhaps the quintessential suburban paranoia film (Arlington Road is another worthy contender for that honor).

Critics have always had trouble with Nightmare‘s structure because it’s basically impossible to tell by the end if the whole movie is just a dream–the fact that the “phone scene” happens when Nancy is awake would suggest that it is. Supposedly, that’s a cheat. But what’s the problem? Doesn’t that explanation fit all the better into Craven’s intended message? A Nightmare on Elm Street is our collective dream, because we are all asleep. And in the Reagan years at least, weren’t we?


New and upcoming film releases.

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The Byrne Report

September 6-12, 2006

Something remarkable is going on in Graton, a tiny town located a few miles west of Santa Rosa. Downtown Graton is just a few shops and restaurants, the epicenter of a well-to-do suburban milieu. But on a public sidewalk in front of a locked private club, dozens of Latino men gather early each morning to organize themselves. They are day laborers, and they call their organization Centro Laboral de Graton.

As the social benefits of the sidewalk-based labor center become apparent, Sonoma County businesses and individuals flock to support the group with donations of money, bicycles, a site for an office trailer and tons of volunteer time. Six years after it was jump-started by several Gratonites, including local teacher Christy Lubin, the self-protection society has obtained nonprofit status.

For sure, most of the workers are “nonprofit” refugees, fleeing the depredations that NAFTA unleashed upon Mexican and Central American economies. They come here not because they like Disneyland or McDonalds, but because they must.

The Centro Laboral board is composed of workers and local activists. The workers take the leading roles on board committees, especially regarding issues of housing, healthcare and politics. In partnership with Santa Rosa Junior College, volunteers teach two kinds of English to the men (and a few women). Ensconced in a local eatery, they teach “street” language for use in restaurants, vineyards and construction sites, and the literary English required in high school equivalency courses.

Carlos Lopez and Davin Cardenas are the paid organizers. Leaning into car windows, they quickly negotiate wages ($12 an hour and up, depending upon skill level) and conditions of employment. Employers are asked to fill out “feedback” forms, which provide protection to the workers and help the group to assess how it is doing.

Across the street from Centro Laboral is a cluster of day laborers, who, for various reasons, remain apart from the organized workers. Lopez says that alcohol and fighting are problems in those groups. Antisocial behavior is not allowed at Centro Laboral, which is structured to avoid the primary source of intraworker friction: job competition.

Each day, the workers sign a list and receive one-half of a torn, numbered ticket. The tickets are randomly drawn in lots of five to determine which men get priority when a housewife or contractor drives up looking for a worker. Those who have not worked for two days jump to the head of the line.

Consequently, Lopez estimates that the laborers are employed about 40 percent of the time. They gross around $750 a month, of which half goes to paying cheap rent in group homes and eating cheap food. The balance is sent home to family.

Centro Laboral is much more than a job distribution site–it is a model for the future. Not just for workers who are excluded from citizenship, but for entire communities that wish to create foundations for a just society. The benefits of inclusion are self-evident. For example, Centro Laboral enrolls the workers in programs at county health centers where medical practitioners focus on healing infections and job injuries, while teaching preventative medicine.

There are a few day-labor centers in Northern California, located in Graton, Healdsburg, San Francisco, Oakland and Mountain View. Many of the Centro Laboral-based workers live in Santa Rosa, but that city offers no support to immigrant labor. Every day, Santa Rosans ride bikes or buses to Graton, searching not only for work, but for collective dignity. The day-labor organizing movement recently got a shot in the arm when the AFL-CIO recognized the rights of “illegals” to employment protections. And Centro Laboral is a member of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network that advocates “legalization for everyone.”

It is a fact that day laborers do much of the productive labor that supports society. By the millions, they work, buy consumer goods, rent apartments and pay taxes. Their will to do an honest day’s labor stands out from the dominant paradigm of laziness that afflicts the corporativized workforce.

As baby boomers retire from making babies, the replacement rate of white people is in decline. But the Hispanic population is soaring. Waves of new immigrants are revitalizing our economy. And they hold the key to unlocking the political system and replacing plutocracy with a true democracy. Hence the whimpers of protest from the likes of Lou Dobbs. The CNN anchor claims, with clenched jaw, that immigrant hordes are draining our economy.

In fact, “illegals” produce more economic value in a day than the average corporate bureaucrat or media celebrity creates in a lifetime. And “illegals” pay lots of taxes, unlike the government contractors and wealthy individuals who, according to a March 2006 report by the IRS, cheated the government of $345 billion in 2001.

¡Basta ya!

or


Morsels

0

September 6-12, 2006

If you don’t have a ticket for the sold-out Heirloom Tomato Festival slated for Saturday, Sept. 9, at Kendall-Jackson Vineyards, despair not. You can still eat as though you’re there, though perhaps tasting a few less than the 170 varieties to be sliced up that day.

It’s kind of a crazy phenomenon, this festival, and has even sparked a small friendly competition among the good folks at Whole Foods. The prepared-foods departments of those stores in Sebastopol, Santa Rosa and Petaluma recently jousted with each other to create an original heirloom tomato recipe worthy of serving to the thousands of worthies set to crowd K-J’s gardens this Saturday. Matt Talavera, prepared-foods team leader for the Santa Rosa store, emerged the victor. (Happy disclosure reveals that Matt is the partner of the Bohemian’s own Andrea Hollingshead and the father of our favorite six-year-old, Sylvan Talavera.)

Talavera says that he created the recipe from scratch after considering “where it was going to be served and what it would be served with,” recommending pairing his refreshing salad with either a Viognier or Syrah. “This salad is a pretty equal balance of both sweet and earthy flavors,” he says.

Those without tickets or the desire to cook can still have their heirlooms and eat them, too, as the Santa Rosa Whole Foods (1181 Yulupa Ave.) will feature Talavera’s dish in their cold case. How will you know you’ve found the right place? Just look for the life-sized cardboard replica of the chef that his managers have erected. Nice to know they’re proud. Stop by and pet him sometime soon!

Matt Talavera’s Heirloom Tomato Prawn Salad
6 medium-to-large heirloom tomatoes
1 c. prawns, peeled and de-veined
8 ounces Beelers pepper-garlic bacon (6 to 8 strips)
1 c. raspberries
1/2 c. white wine
2 lemons
1 c. baby arugula
1/3 c. raspberry vinegar
1 c. olive oil
salt and pepper

Cut bacon in 1/4-inch dice, and place in small sautÈ pan with 1 cup water; cook over medium-high heat. Once water has evaporated, turn down to low heat and stir bacon until evenly browned. Place on paper towel to cool.

Next, zest lemons and chop zest very fine; set aside. Juice lemons into two-quart pot. Add 2 cups water, white wine and 1 tablespoon salt; bring mixture to a boil. Have a strainer and medium-sized bowl of ice water ready nearby. Place prawns into poaching mixture for 2 minutes, remove and quickly immerse in ice water. When cool, cut into small pieces and set aside.

Wash tomatoes, raspberries and arugula. Remove core from tomatoes and cut into 1/2-inch dice. Whisk together vinegar and olive oil, and season to taste with salt and pepper. Place all components except vinaigrette into large bowl and combine gently. Dress lightly with vinaigrette; save remainder for another use as it will keep for a long time in refrigerator. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Serve cold in a bowl or on a platter; can be served as appetizer or main dish.By removing prawns and bacon, this salad is suitable for vegetarians and vegans as well. Serves four.

Quick dining snapshots by Bohemian staffers.

Winery news and reviews.

Food-related comings and goings, openings and closings, and other essays for those who love the kitchen and what it produces.

Recipes for food that you can actually make.

Living Together

0

September 6-12, 2006

My Year with a Caveman

It wasn’t the fact that my roommate was a sociopath, ate my food, stole my stuff and professed to be an ardent anarchist. That I can deal with. I can put up with chronic weed smoking, cheating, repetitious Rent-soundtrack playing, loud chewing, macho posturing, naked sleeping, bar-soap usurping, snoring, farting, stoned poetry reciting, hygiene forsaking, tone-deaf singing, laundry neglecting, early retiring, mess inducing, violence threatening and a colorful variety of other undesirable traits.

The proverbial straw that broke this only child’s back came during an exchange we had during our first week together in our palatial freshman digs. Somehow, after a thorough exercise of all other topics familiar to young gentlemen everywhere, the conversation turned to the opposite sex. This prompted me to delicately initiate the often awkward but very important “tie on the door handle” issue.

“Don’t flatter yourself,” my roomie responded flatly and returned to noisily chewing his pizza.

All right, fuck this guy.

How to deal with the effect of this Cro-Magnon skewing my rosy doctrine of universal intelligence and goodwill? A similar battle has been waged since Darwin, who, after presumably surviving his undergraduacy at Cambridge, published The Origin of Species in 1859. Taking a few pages out of the Church’s battle against evolution, I ignored my roommate.

In fact, from late October to the day he flew back to wherever the hell he was from, we did not again exchange a single word. Our lack of verbal correspondence did not, however, stop us from endlessly antagonizing each other. The cruel animosity that grew between us reached epic proportions by Christmas. If either of us came in while the other was sleeping, the lights–all of them–went on. Early wake-up time? Hello, Led Zeppelin. Is someone changing his undies? It must be time to leave and forget to close the door.

Did I mention I go to Stanford? In 2005, over 17,000 applicants were turned down by a Stanford acceptance rate hovering around 10 percent. Several of those applicants were eloquent and deserving friends of mine. How did Fred Flintstone beat out all those enlightened valedictorians?

He was the recipient of the only two-word noun to strike love into the hearts of admission officers nationwide: football scholarship.

The funny thing is, I like football. I made it to all of our home games last season, and I count a few members of the team as friends. But how much is a university like Stanford willing to sacrifice in order to win on the football field? Quite a bit, apparently. The kicker is, after all that salutary neglect of admission standards at Stanford, the football team still really sucks.

–Loren Newman

KISS Off

“Keep it simple, sweetie”–otherwise known as KISS. That phrase proved to be the most effective formula for surviving as an over-the-hill graduate student surrounded by twenty-something classmates.

I turned 40 in the middle of an intensive one-year master’s program in journalism, which meant I went from a steady, reasonably comfortable job income to living on my savings and student loans. I streamlined my lifestyle on many levels.

First, I stored, gave away or donated most of my furniture. There wasn’t a lot of room in graduate student housing and, frankly, I was too busy with the nearly overwhelming requirements of the program to maintain much more than the bare necessities. A comfy bed in a reasonably quiet room. A desk with my computer and all my study supplies within reach. A place to cook minimal meals (with both a stovetop and a microwave) and a place to consume them. Two plates with silverware. A fry pan, a sauce pan and a set of storage containers. A drinking glass in the kitchen and one for water in the bathroom. Simplifying my focus.

I didn’t try to compete with my youthful classmates, on any level. They could pull all-nighters, finishing up a term paper or cramming for an exam. I needed my rest, not for my beauty but for my sanity. Thus the emphasis on a quiet bedroom of my own. It didn’t need to be pretty or cushy; it just needed to be sleepable.

My fellow students also invited me to a number of late-night parties, invitations that I tended to decline. I missed the barfing-off-the-16th-floor-balcony contest. That’s much too complex of an activity for my KISS approach to graduate school.

For one year, I simplified, I streamlined, I persevered. I graduated.

–Patricia Lynn Henley

Livin’ on the Edge

Blinded by my optimism and naÔvetÈ, I set sail for the college dorms one year ago thinking I was totally invincible. My disillusionment took about a month. Many college students love to complain about how small their dorm rooms are, but mine really was. Being in my room was like going to the bathroom on an airplane: there was only enough room for the essential activities.

There was little opportunity for wall decorations. My roommate, about the height of Michael Jordan, cut the space down by 30 percent. Not to mention he understood the word “neat” only in reference to alcoholic drinks. But here’s the silver lining: the room was so small, they’re converting it into a single next year. And who gets to keep his old room for another year, minus one bed, one desk and one 6-foot-5-inch roommate? Yours truly.

I go to college in Illinois, and the frigid winters there have a curious effect on the quaint Midwestern folk. Perhaps in an attempt to impress visitors, they turn up their thermostats ridiculously high. Our dorm sweltered in the winter. Sure it’s cold outside, but why overcompensate? It’s like buying a Hummer for the extra legroom.

It’s wasteful and it pollutes.

Our solution was to open the windows. The 90 degree temperature inside and the 15 degree temperature outside made a somewhat happy medium. But the eco-friendly Californian inside me died a little bit each time I reapplied my antiperspirant.

The bright side? Experiencing the frivolity of the Midwestern furnace made me twice as environmentally conscious as I was before college. Thanks to their pollution, I’m a little bit greener.

The worst thing–and the best thing–about living in the dorms is the extreme lack of privacy. I can’t begin to count how many phone conversations I unwillingly overheard in the rooms near mine. Shouting fights with parents, sobbing fights with long-distance girlfriends, emotional reconciliations with said girlfriends (some bordering on phone sex), all broadcast to one’s very uncomfortable suitemates.

Of course, the inadvertent invasion of privacy goes both ways. Any given phone call to my friends required a little self-censorship and a low speaking voice. I found myself relocating at least three times per conversation to escape the Big Brother atmosphere.

Although it was bothersome, that kind of exposed environment helped us make friends very quickly. After a few weeks, we knew each other’s personal lives inside and out.

There were definite cons to the communal lifestyle, but I have no regrets. There’s a certain satisfaction in having to deal with the hardships of dorm life. College is about new experiences, even when they’re difficult. The dorm is something every student should suffer through.

–Andrew Bowen

Medieval Madness

It was my freshman year at Duke University, and the first time in three decades that the Epworth dorm was going to be “normal.” Since the 1970s, Epworth had been the black sheep of dorm life, housing the small alternative SHARE community, which offered film and silk-screening classes along with a gay-friendly environment. But SHARE (Student Housing for Academic and Residential Experimentation) got moved to an eyesore of a site right before I arrived in 1998.

Compared to the other dorms on campus–massive, brick colonials built to house up to 300 students each–Epworth was a small and cozy oddball. An old beauty of a building, Epworth opened in 1894, and even after fire destroyed two-thirds of it, it retained two capacious porches and a large balcony. From the outside, Epworth looked like a Faulknerian mansion, yet it housed only 50 of us, half of whom had opted to immerse ourselves in an intensive Medieval studies program.

Being the clever collegians we thought we were, we convinced our Medieval bodies of literature professor to let us out of writing a final paper for her class. Instead, we’d stage a pageant play we were reading in class for the final. What better place to perform The Last Judgment than the oldest dorm on campus? Plus, Epworth’s double-tiered balcony would make the perfect set: the top level would be Heaven; the bottom, Hell.

To break up the boredom of reading an entire script in Middle English, we relied somewhat unsuccessfully on an avant-garde staging technique. We set the play within the context of a basketball game pitting Duke and its rival, University of North Carolina, against each other. Some of us played the damned–UNC basketball players–while the Duke Blue Devils would actually be the saved.

Three of us were angels incarnated as Duke cheerleaders. We wore white tennis skirts, performed synchronized moves we’d rehearsed at length in the parking lot and chanted odes that snappily began: “Loft be thou, Lord of Mights most . . . ” My friend Anna was God on the upper balcony, projecting her voice from behind a mirror reflecting trees.

The play was long. Even as an actor, I got bored waiting for all the damning and saving to wrap up. The audience was small, since most of the people who took any interest in Medieval performance were in the play.

Although Epworth was finally flying solo from the alternative living group that preceded us, the dorm had somehow absorbed the SHARE program’s commitment to experimentation, making us all a bit odd. But we didn’t mind being on the fringe. For us players, quirkiness was closer to Godliness.

–Brett Ascarelli


Letters to the Editor

September 6-12, 2006

Human tragedy

I was completely blown away by Eugene Dey’s story and plight ( Aug. 30). I don’t use the word “tragedy” often, but in this case I do. Please pass along to Mr. Dey–if it’s possible–that at least one person, and I imagine that I’m not the only one, heard him and would like to help in any way that she can.

Linda Ludwig, via e-mail

Wattled and witless

I am a hard-core conservationist in regards to saving several species of heritage livestock and poultry, and I found the light in which you spun your story ( July 19) to be in extreme bad taste. Species conservation shouldn’t be portrayed in such a light-hearted manner. Your article made mention of the fact that there may be fewer than 300 viable breedstock head of red wattles left in the world. I hope to have that many here at my farm by spring of ’08. I take my job seriously enough to lose money I have invested just to make sure my animals are OK and increasing their herd size, not becoming something my children will only be able to read about someday.

I can do that without selling animals that mean something to our family, our heritage and our very income to someone who thinks little or nothing about where their food came from or who raised it. I would rather lose income than to sell my soul to some yuppie, plastic-world, clueless crowd such as yours.

Allan Sterbinsky, God’s Way Farms, Midland City, Ala.

Go fishing

Poison the pike in Lake Davis? Seriously, there has to be a better idea! Clearly, even the experts don’t know, but as we’re waiting for them to develop the perfect solution, let’s try to keep the poisons to a minimum. It also seems to me that the Fish and Game Department is not properly utilizing its most potent fish-killing weapon: anglers. Put a bounty on pike–say, $3 a fish. Distribute literature on pike-fishing methods and hold pike derbies. Give the winners jobs as professional pike hunters. Compare the cost of these strategies and number of pike taken by anglers with the cost of a government-run poisoning campaign, and you’d probably find that we’d be getting more for our tax dollars.

Peter Bauer, Santa Rosa

South and North somewhat

One listens incredulously to the recent ravings of the Strangelovian Donald Rumsfeld. Harshly authoritarian and antidemocratic himself, he decries the “fascism” of Muslims and accuses those who disagree with him and question his bogus but enormously profitable “war on terror” of appeasement and “moral and intellectual confusion about what is right and wrong.” In using such rash rhetoric, he invokes the likes of Joseph McCarthy and Joseph Goebbels, Hitler’s propaganda chief, who wrote that “it is important for the State to repress dissent, for truth is its greatest enemy.”

At this point, why would anyone believe a word he utters? On the eve of his “shock and awe” invasion of Iraq, Rumsfeld, who met personally with Saddam Hussein in Baghdad in 1983 to arrange chemical and other arms sales, informed us that the war “could last six days, six weeks, I doubt six months.” More recently, he announced that “we know where the weapons of mass destruction are: around Baghdad and east, west, south and north somewhat.”

Brian Boldt, Santa Rosa

Clean elections

Californians have a chance to make history on Nov. 7. We can help take our country back from the giant corporations that are running it. How, you ask? By freeing our elected representatives from dependence on special interests for their election campaign money. If we citizens fund politicians’ campaigns, they would then work for U.S. instead of for big-buck funders.

Californians have a chance this November to pass public funding of state election campaigns. It’s called Proposition 89, the Clean Money and Fair Elections Act. It’s a voluntary funding system, paid for by a 0.2 percent increase in state corporate taxes, and applies to proposition campaigns, too.

Folks in Maine and Arizona passed similar acts five years ago, and now three-quarters of their legislators were elected as “clean” candidates; that is, they took no special interest money and are therefore free to serve all citizens. In Arizona, 10 of the top 11 officers, including governor, won as “clean” candidates. Clean elections work!

Tom Wodetzk, Albion


News Briefs

September 6-12, 2006

Changing cable

After months of intense and extremely expensive lobbying, the legislature has overwhelmingly approved a bill (64-5 in the Assembly, 33-4 in the Senate) revamping the cable franchise system to make it easier for telephone companies to enter this lucrative market. The selling point is that more competition will lead to lower consumer prices. Not everyone agrees with this concept. The governor is expected to sign the bill into law, which means cable-access stations and local government officials in the North Bay and statewide are scrambling to understand exactly how this new law will impact local communities. “There’s still a lot of questions and a lot of details we don’t know yet,” says Dan Villalva, interim executive director for Community Media Center of Santa Rosa, which operates channels 69, 70, 71 and 72 in that area. More than 300 amendments were made to AB 2987 as it wound its way through the legislative process, starting in April. Reportedly, AT&T and Verizon spent more than $19.7 million on lobbying efforts in April, May and June, to the tune of $200,000 daily. Originally, the bill voided all local franchise agreements–which usually detail carefully negotiated forms of specific financial support for access stations–in favor of statewide contracts with a standard 1 percent for access programs. However, the final legislation requires cable companies to perform any services already promised in existing contracts. “For Santa Rosa, we seem to be protected for another five years because our contract runs for five years,” Villalva explains. “After that, it’s a whole new ball game.” He adds that 1 percent may be enough in large urban areas to keep cable access stations broadcasting everything from local programming to city council meetings, but it will be inadequate elsewhere. “The biggest losers are the ones that don’t have something in place right now in the rural and small communities. You can almost guarantee that they will never have access.”

Going public

Recovering alcoholics and addicts and their friends are invited to the all-day Recovery Happens celebration on Sunday, Sept. 10. “The goal is to celebrate the fact that recovery works, that treatment works, and to help reduce the stigma experienced by people who suffer from addiction,” says Sarah Moore of the Sonoma County Recovery Happens Coalition. Everything kicks off at 9am with a rally in front of the Sonoma County Administration Building, 575 Administration Drive. There will be a Faces of Recovery march to Franklin Park, 2095 Franklin Drive. The afternoon includes a free picnic, a softball tournament and activities for kids. For more details, call 707.565.6945 or visit www.sonoma-county.org/recoveryhappens.


Freedom of Speech

Wild Blue Yonder

music & nightlife | By Gabe Meline ...

Get Ready to Rumble

September 6-12, 2006Rockabilly planted its rebel roots in the fertile soil of mainstream country music, sprouting such rock-ready radio acts as Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison and Jerry Lee Lewis. Yet in its unadulterated form, this amped up hillbilly hybrid lingered in the musical underground, emerging only periodically over the years on covers by the Beatles, Rolling Stones and Aerosmith...

Fit to Print

Extreme danger: According to an article published in 'Mother...

Fright Spread Fred

September 6-12, 2006'Believe it or not, I was studying this Russian philosopher, Georgi Ivanovitch Gurdjieff, who writes a lot about levels of consciousness as I made it," Wes Craven told me in 2000 about A Nightmare on Elm Street. "The farther up you went toward consciousness, the more painful it was, until the few and far between broke through...

The Byrne Report

September 6-12, 2006Something remarkable is going on in Graton, a tiny town located a few miles west of Santa Rosa. Downtown Graton is just a few shops and restaurants, the epicenter of a well-to-do suburban milieu. But on a public sidewalk in front of a locked private club, dozens of Latino men gather early each morning to organize themselves....

Morsels

September 6-12, 2006 If you don't have a ticket for the sold-out Heirloom Tomato Festival slated for Saturday, Sept. 9, at Kendall-Jackson Vineyards, despair not. You can still eat as though you're there, though perhaps tasting a few less than the 170 varieties to be sliced up that day.It's kind of a crazy phenomenon, this festival, and has even sparked...

Living Together

September 6-12, 2006My Year with a CavemanIt wasn't the fact that my roommate was a sociopath, ate my food, stole my stuff and professed to be an ardent anarchist. That I can deal with. I can put up with chronic weed smoking, cheating, repetitious Rent-soundtrack playing, loud chewing, macho posturing, naked sleeping, bar-soap usurping, snoring, farting, stoned poetry reciting,...

Letters to the Editor

September 6-12, 2006Human tragedyI was completely blown away by Eugene Dey's story and plight ( Aug. 30). I don't use the word "tragedy" often, but in this case I do. Please pass along to Mr. Dey--if it's possible--that at least one person, and I imagine that I'm not the only one, heard him and would like to help...

News Briefs

September 6-12, 2006 Changing cable After months of intense and extremely expensive lobbying, the legislature has overwhelmingly approved a bill (64-5 in the Assembly, 33-4 in the Senate) revamping the cable franchise system to make it easier for telephone companies to enter this lucrative market. The selling point is that more competition will lead to lower consumer prices. Not everyone...
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