Dirty Water

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It’s become part of summer along the Russian River: the weather warms up, and people flock to the water—only to be warned to stay away because of elevated levels of contamination.

Monte Rio Beach—the popular summer swim-and-sun spot on the Russian River, better known to locals as Big Rocky—was closed last week due to high levels of bacterial pollution, with E. coli levels briefly registering at four times the state standard. Coliform levels were also 10 percent higher than state and county protocols permit.

Both bacterial counts indicate the presence of “fecal waste” in the water.

On Thursday, July 6—following some of the largest crowds ever recorded over the extended Independence Day weekend—the Environmental Health & Safety division of Sonoma County’s Department of Health Services issued a press release saying that it had ordered staff to post “warning-closure signs” at Monte Rio advising the public against “swimming, wading or water contact.”

“At significant levels, this bacteria could indicate that other disease-causing agents are present,” the press release stated. “Additionally, these pathogens at certain levels can sicken swimmers and others who use the river.”

None of the county’s nine other public beaches on the river where weekly sampling occurs—from Cloverdale Park to Johnson Point—were closed. County officials had anticipated that the levels would diminish by the weekend, but follow-up tests indicated no such dissipation. As of Monday afternoon, Sonoma County health officer Karen Milman said that Big Rocky was still closed to swimmers.

“Additional test results are still elevated,” Milman said, “so the current recommendations to stay out of the water are the same.

“We don’t have a source identified,” Milman added in a phone interview. “It’s complicated, because there is elevated coliform, but the E. coli is going back down. We will update our website when test results come back later in the week.”

Don McEnhill, executive director of Russian Riverkeeper, says the source of those high levels could come from a number of places.

“Livestock, such as cows, pigs, goats, that are frequently fenced so they have direct access to waterways, could be part of it,” McEnhill speculates. “Dog waste from careless owners, leaking sewer-collection pipes, leaky or malfunctioning septic tanks, illegal dumping, unsanitary homeless camps—though we have more sanitary ones—birds, marine mammals and other wildlife and kids in diapers playing in water” can all contribute.

“Grab tests,” such as those conducted by the county, McEnhill adds, “really don’t give a very accurate reading on the state of the river. It’s like shining a flashlight in a dark room for a few seconds where everything is moving. It doesn’t provide sufficient detail for a full scientific assessment.” A grab test comes from a single water sample.

On hearing that the numbers were still elevated, McEnhill noted that it would be hard “to pin the cause on high use” over the holiday. “It seems more consistent than that, so likely a discrete source like a leaking pipe or maybe all those folks jamming into Bohemian Grove and their beach camp area for [their] annual confab.”

The Sonoma County Tourism website calls Big Rocky a “vacation wonderland,” but the popular beach has been a less than idyllic spot in recent weeks—for reasons other than fecal pollution. During the last weekend in June, Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputies broke up a gang-related brawl that left five people injured. Two arrests were made at the scene and others are pending.

In the summer of 2015 there was a large bloom of blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) at various places on the river that also presented environmental concerns. A dog was believed to have died because of the outbreak.

McEnhill, who has been actively engaged in the watershed since his childhood in the 1960s, is generally optimistic about the river’s water quality. “For the amount of development and human activity,” he says, “the Russian River is in fairly good shape, is safe for swimming 99 percent or more of the time and is much cleaner than 40 years ago, before the Clean Water Act regulations.”

He adds that the county is doing a better job of protecting the river than in years past—especially with human waste.

“Helping our river stay clean is like keeping a kitchen clean—if you make a mess, clean it up. Half of dog owners go to the river without bags. Parents need to use waterproof diapers. And we still have a ways to go with agricultural and livestock contaminants.

“We can always do better.”

Letters to the Editor: July 12, 2017

Heal the Wound

Thank you, Stett, for your Open Mic (“What Would Trump Do?” July 5). You’ve expressed my own dilemma so beautifully: how to stay informed politically, while also taking care not to ruin my sense of well-being in the process! I love your advising to help myself feel better by caring for others in (greater) need—the opposite of Trumpism.

Thank you for caring, for educating yourself, being a responsible citizen, for expressing your insecurities, incredulity, dismay, frustration, anger—and your humanity. Outreach to others is a balm that our town, state and country need.

May I add that mustering compassion and good will for those we so easily disdain (I point to myself)—for Trump, his cabinet, dedicated followers—is not only a worthy spiritual practice, but a wellspring of help and healing for our own selves, and for the community of souls we are all connected to.

Last, just as an “ugly” oozing sore can be regarded as part of an organism’s intelligence for healing, or the flushing out of toxic elements, might our political woes be symptomatic of a national “healing crisis” of our body politic? Maybe all this horrible, disgusting, creepy, flabbergasting garbage excuse for a governing regime is also a sign that Things Are Changing for the Better, according to greater laws.

Trust, keep finding ways to be a healthy “cell” and be part of the healing.

Santa Rosa

Health
(Don’t) Care

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced that the vote on the awful GOP health care bill would be postponed until after Independence Day. That is because the GOP doesn’t have enough “yes” vote commitments from members of the party to bring this horrible bill to the Senate floor.

As far as I can tell, this Senate plan is not a healthcare bill; it’s a massive transfer of wealth from working people to Wall Street. Twenty-two million Americans would lose their insurance under the Senate bill. The Senate bill taxes working people’s health benefits while cutting taxes for millionaires, billionaires, tycoons and insurance companies, and that’s just wrong! The Senate bill also effectively destroys Medicaid, stripping healthcare from children, disabled people, senior citizens and low-income Americans.

Health insurance is more than a policy; it’s peace of mind. It’s knowing your family will be cared for and not having to worry about going broke when you get sick. That’s why I strongly oppose the Senate healthcare bill. The more I learn about it, the less I like. Robbing healthcare from millions of Americans to give yet another tax cut to the rich and powerful is just plain cruel. Our healthcare system needs to be improved—we all agree on that. But this bill would do exactly the opposite, for no other reason than greed. I urge Sens. Kamala Harris and Dianne Feinstein to vote no on the Senate healthcare bill.

Sacramento

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Tape Heads

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If someone asked you to define the North Bay sound, how would you do it?

That’s the question that songwriter and Gremlintone Studio co-founder John Courage, nonprofit North Bay Hootenanny founder Josh Windmiller and the city of Santa Rosa’s Out There campaign begin to address on the recently released compilation, The Out There Tapes, featuring new songs by 13 Sonoma County bands.

“The big goal with this compilation is to help put Sonoma County on the map as a music center,” Courage says. “A lot of people around here know about the rich music scene, but I think it’s been hard for bands to break through, and I’m hoping to help showcase these bands” to larger audiences.

That mission statement aligns with Courage’s hopes for his Gremlintone Studio as well. “To me, this studio can be a really important tool in defining the ‘Sonoma County’ sound,” he says.

Courage formed Gremlintone Studio in 2014 with musician Francesco Catania as an all-analog home studio specializing in cassette recording. Its first major project was a series of cassettes for the Crux, Windmiller’s longtime experimental folk band.

Together, Courage and Windmiller conceived of the new compilation in 2015, and with the Hootenanny’s connection to the local Americana scene through events like the annual Railroad Square Music Festival, the album adopted that genre as its theme. “It seemed like a natural way to progress,” Courage says.

The two pitched the idea to Out There Santa Rosa, the city’s outreach program that promotes community gatherings and supports arts-minded projects. The program gave Gremlintone a grant to finance the compilation, which Courage largely put into upgrading his recording gear from four-track to eight-track recorders.

The Out There Tapes includes tracks from the Easy Leaves, the Brothers Comatose, David Luning, Sean Hayes, Ashley Allred, Misner & Smith, and the Timothy O’Neil Band among others, including the Crux and Courage himself.

The bands recorded their contributions live to Gremlintone’s eight-track machines, giving each song a vibrant, in-the-moment touch. “All the bands sound different, every track sounds different,” Courage says. “I tried not to get in the way too much. I just wanted to capture a cool picture of what they were doing.”

From start to finish, The Out There Tapes is an excellent amalgam of Sonoma County music that Courage sees as only the beginning. “We’ve conceptualized a follow-up,” he says. “But, I’m going to let this one get released and simmer and get the feedback from the city on if they’re willing to do a volume two that would pull in some more ‘outside’ music. I’m always scheming on how to represent the other facets of the Sonoma County music scene.”

‘The Out There Tapes’ is available
at local record stores and online at outtheresr.com.

Real Champs

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‘Let them drink Champagne.” Is that what some North Bay wineries are saying by importing French bubbly? Is there no more locally made sparkling wine on hand?

Before we storm the battlements and lob magnums of Sonoma Coast Blanc de Noirs at this elitist coterie, let’s back up and explain what we talk about when we talk about Champagne. While better quality California sparkling wine is made in the traditional Champagne method, “Champagne” is legally defined as coming from a specific region of France. Guess the name of that region—you got it, frère. Confusingly, a new trend finds local wineries importing and selling actual Champagne. We asked a few for samples—and their excuses.

AR Lenoble Jordan Cuvée Brut Champagne ($49) This Bordeaux-inspired California chateau is also the birthplace of local sparkling wine house J Vineyards. But when Judy Jordan decided to sell J, the folks at Jordan huddled to discuss their options. While on vacation in France, winemaker Rob Davis dropped in on an old friend who had worked a harvest at Jordan back in 1980, and now runs a Paris wine bar. Davis asked if he knew any small, quality-driven Champagne houses that would make a good fit with Jordan. “There’s only one person you need to see,” the friend replied, and he called up AR Lenoble.

This bubbly, tinted just the slightest cream-rose hue, was the overall favorite of Bohemian tasters for its classic brut aroma and texture. It’s hard to pin down to specific aromas and flavors, but it’s a slice of nectarine, toasty apple and white raspberry or two this side of austere. Not zippy on the finish, it’s elegantly balanced. ★★★★★

Buena Vista La Victoire Champagne ($50) What gives, after Jean-Charles Boisset expensively retrofitted the historic 1864 Champagne cellar at Buena Vista? Boisset calls this wine an “ambassador of the Franco-American relationship” in honor of Arpad Haraszthy’s efforts to make California’s first traditional method sparkling after interning in Épernay.

Let the roiling, gold-green tinted bubbles settle before tilting the glass noseward to find classic brut aromas of dry straw and slightly musty lees. My favorite for its contrasting lemony zip on the finish, this wine can be bought retail; a $75 version is offered at the tasting room. ★★★★

Claypool Cellars Pachyderm Champagne ($55) Leading the trend for the boutiques, this Sebastopol outfit has access to lots of great Pinot Noir, but the demand for those grapes prices them above reason for sparkling wine, I’m told. This 200-case lot is made for Claypool by a small family operation. The Pachyderm has an appealing nose of fresh scone and brightens the palate with pink grapefruit citrus, sweetening the finish with ripe pear fruit. A softer style, this would go great with cake. ★★★½

Eternity 2.0

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At 11am on a Sunday morning, I slip into a row of seats in front of a podium with flower bouquets on each side. I’m here to listen to an aging white man talk about the afterlife. A woman in a fancy hat arranges a potluck lunch on a back table. Other attendees, mostly gray-haired, pass around a wicker basket and toss in $20 bills and personal checks.

We aren’t in church. This is godless Silicon Valley.

The Humanist Society has welcomed Ralph Merkle, a Livermore native, to explain cryonics—the process of freezing a recently dead body in “liquid goo,” like Austin Powers—to the weekly Sunday Forum. We all want to know about being re-awoken, or reborn, in the future.

Merkle, who has a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Stanford and invented what’s called “public key cryptology” in the ’70s, makes his pitch to the audience: hand over $80,000, plus yearly dues, to Alcor, and the Scottsdale, Arizona–based company will freeze your brain, encased in its skull, so that you and your memories can wait out the years until medical nanotechnology is advanced enough to both bring you back from a frozen state as well as fix the ills that brought on your death in the first place.

“You get to make a decision if you want to join the experimental group or the control group,” Merkle says. “The outcome for the control group is known.”

Alcor gained infamy in 2002, when the body of baseball legend Ted Williams was flown to the company’s Arizona headquarters, where his head was then severed, frozen and, according to some reports, mistreated.

The Humanist Society is an ideal audience for Merkle’s presentation, as its congregants aren’t held back by the tricky business of believing in a soul. Debbie Allen, the perfectly coiffed executive director and secretary of the national board of the American Humanist Association, considers cryonics a practical tool. “Religion has directed the conversation for thousands of years,” she says. Allen prefers to focus on ethics, and whether cryonics “advances the well-being of the individual or the community.”

“Science-fiction,” someone whispers behind me, as Merkle talks about nanorobots of the future. He also notes how respirocytes and microbivores can be “programmed to run around inside a cell and do medically useful things like make you healthy.”

As one might expect in a room full of humanists, skepticism runs high during the Q&A portion of the meeting. People are wondering exactly what kind of animals the scientists have used to test the cryonics process (answer: nematodes); when Alcor freezes bodies (after one’s heart stops, if a DNR, or do not resuscitate, order is requested); whether a frozen brain is any good if the rest of the body deteriorates (“Toss it,” Merkle says. “Replacement of everything will be feasible.”); and what happens if Alcor goes bankrupt.

“We take that very seriously,” the doctor says.

Lunch is served.

“Why would he want to preserve somebody like Adolf Trump?” asks Bob Wallace, 93, who ate salad and cubed cheese with his partner, Marge Ottenberg, 91, whom he met at a Humanist Society event.

“Obviously, the worst possible people are most likely to want to live forever,” says Arthur Jackson, 86, a retired junior high school teacher.

Ottenberg seems more open to the idea of coming back from the dead than her golden-year counterparts. “Whatever works,” she says.

Silicon Valley is the sort of place where people dream about nanorobots fixing our medical disorders. It’s the sort of place where hundreds of millions of dollars are spent chasing that dream.

The last five years have seen an investment boom in what’s called “life extension” research. Some of it is straight-up science, such as the Stanford lab researching blood transfusions in mice to cure Alzheimer’s. Scientists are in a race against time to help as many people as possible, as fast as possible. They’re battling a disease that saw an 89 percent increase in diagnoses between 2000 and 2014; and Alzheimer’s or other dementia is currently the sixth leading cause of death. There are also nontraditional sources of cash flowing into biotech, which was once considered a risky investment.

But death itself is the biggest social ill Silicon Valley is trying to solve.

We can build apps to keep track of diabetics’ blood glucose levels, to measure how soundly we’re sleeping and to access medical records in an instant, but none of this stops the body from wearing out. Alongside the scientists laying the medical foundation to get us to the nanorobots envisioned by Merkle, techie utopians are looking at other ways to cheat death. A cluster of tech companies are attracting far more funding from Silicon Valley than academia, shifting the research landscape with infusions of cash.

Bryan Johnson, an entrepreneur who sold his online payment company to PayPal for $800 million, was the first investor in Craig Venter’s Human Longevity Inc., which aims to create a database of a million human genome sequences, including people who are over 100 years old, by 2020. Oracle founder Larry Ellison, who once said “Death makes me very angry” and is one of the oldest of the life-extension investors at 72, has also invested in Human Longevity. Johnson infused even more cash into the biotech field, investing another $100 million of his own money into the OS Fund in 2014, to “support inventors and scientists who aim to benefit humanity by rewriting the operating systems of life.”

Such projects are examples of Silicon Valley’s extreme confidence in its own ability to improve the world. In an email, Johnson describes his work in grandly optimistic terms.

“Humanity’s greatest masterpieces have happened when anchored in hope and aspiration, not drowning in fear,” he says.

It takes some serious chutzpah to say you’ll extend the human lifespan, and for Johnson, he and his colleagues are venturing where no one has gone before.

“Building good technology is an act of exploration, and that it is very difficult for us to imagine the good that might come from any new technology,” Johnson says. “We proceed, as explorers, nonetheless.”

Johnson’s lofty goals are similar in scale to other giant anti-aging investments in Silicon Valley. In 2013, Google created an anti-aging lab called Calico (for “California Life Company”), hiring top scientist Cynthia Kenyon, known for altering DNA in worms to make them live twice as long as they usually do. Calico is not your local university research lab; it has $1.5 billion in the bank and has remained close-lipped about its progress, like a Manhattan Project for life extension.

For Google co-founder Sergey Brin, 43, Calico may be another way to attack a more personal health concern: Brin carries a gene
that increases his likelihood of contracting Parkinson’s disease and has already invested $50 million
in genetic Parkinson’s research, conducted by his ex-wife’s company, 23andMe. Brin said in 2009 that he hoped medicine could “catch up” to cure Parkinson’s before he’s old enough to develop it.

That hope is a common thread among health-obsessed tech investors like PayPal founder Peter Thiel, 49. A libertarian and Trump adviser, Thiel is trying to avoid both death and taxes. His foundation hired a medical director, Jason Camm, whose professional goals include increasing his clients’ “prospects for Optimal Health and significant Lifespan Extension.” Like Brin, who swims and drinks green tea to prevent Parkinson’s, Thiel has changed his daily habits to live longer. He’s aiming for 120, so he avoids refined sugar, follows the Paleo diet, drinks red wine and takes human growth hormone, which he believes will keep bones strong and prevent arthritis.

Thiel has also expressed personal interest in a company called Ambrosia in Monterey, where
Dr. Jesse Karmazin is conducting medical trials for a procedure called parabiosis, which gives older people blood plasma transfusions from people between 16 and 25. Karmazin has enrolled more than 70 participants so far, each of whom pays $8,000 for the treatment. Much has been made of Thiel harvesting and receiving injections of young people’s blood, though Karmazin recently denied that Thiel was a client of his.

Karmazin doesn’t call himself a utopian, but he does note that his work requires some faith. “There’s always uncertainty about whether it’s going to stand the test of time, whether it’ll work at all,” he says. “That’s especially true in technology, and you have to believe in it.”

At the same time, the dystopians of Silicon Valley are preparing for the apocalypse. Reid Hoffman, CEO of LinkedIn, told the New Yorker that he guesses up to 50 percent of tech executives have property in New Zealand, the hot new hub for the end of the world. Steve Huffman, CEO of Reddit, bought multiple motorcycles so he can weave through highway traffic if there’s a natural disaster and he needs to escape. He also got laser eye surgery so he wouldn’t have to rely on glasses or contacts in a survival scenario.

Among the dystopians is Elon Musk, whose brand-new Neuralink company is investigating what Musk calls “neural lace,” a digital layer on top of the brain’s cortex that connects us to computers. Such inventions could eventually lead us to what Google director of engineering Ray Kurzweil calls “technological singularity,” or the time when ever more powerful artificial intelligence will surpass human intelligence, around 2045.

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Musk is nervous about that day, and part of the reason he wants to colonize Mars through his SpaceX plan is because humans need an escape route in case computers take over—or, perhaps, in case of environmental apocalypse. Musk recently quit two of Donald Trump’s business advisory councils over the president’s decision to leave the Paris climate accords, tweeting, “Climate change is real.”

Tech companies as a bloc urged Trump not to leave the Paris agreements; Tim Cook of Apple called him after the announcement to try to get him to change his mind, and Mark Zuckerberg wrote on his Facebook page that leaving Paris would “put our children’s future at risk.”

Zuckerberg has been trying for years to knock down four houses to build a residential compound in Palo Alto, that includes a basement structure that sounds like a bunker perfect for hiding the whole family if the world ends.

Whether climate change destroys California or regular old death arrives before investors have funded a cure, Musk, Zuckerberg and their elite peers have the resources to plan an escape. The question is whether they’re interested in planning anyone else’s.

Tony Wyss-Coray, director of the Stanford Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, which is on the forefront of anti-aging research, has seen that conflict up close.

“I have been approached by billionaires from L.A. and Texas, and they already have their clinics in the Bahamas or wherever, where they inject themselves with stem cells,” he says.

But those billionaires weren’t interested in funding his lab or curing disease for anyone else.

“They’re interested in living,” Wyss-Coray says. “They realize quickly they can’t buy this directly from Stanford University.”

The line between science and someone’s obsession with mortality is blurry, especially with this much cash flowing.

“It’s hard to completely disassociate the influence of wealthy, rich people from what we do,” Wyss-Coray says. Until the recent influx of funding and attention, the anti-aging scientists he knew “were just a bunch of academic geeks” studying worms. He’s interested not in extending life as much as figuring out why certain people can live past 100 years old.

“The average person at 60 or 65 starts to suffer from a multitude of age-related diseases—arthritis, heart disease, cognitive decline—that for some reason the centenarians seem to be able to escape from, and that’s what drives many of us in the field.”

But when Thiel is reading one’s research, things get more complicated. Wyss-Coray’s studies on the benefits of parabiosis in mice, for example, form the basis of the Monterey trial that so fascinates Thiel. Wyss-Coray is quick to distance himself from Karmazin. “He cites all our work on his website,” Wyss-Coray says.

The first two studies in the “Science” section of the Ambrosia website are from Stanford’s labs, and the first study Karmazin lists about plasma transfusions in mice is Wyss-Coray’s.

Many scientists consider clinical trials like Karmazin’s unethical and scientifically unsound, since they require participant payment for unproven treatments, and you can’t charge someone $8,000 for a placebo, so there’s no simultaneous control group. The Ambrosia trial passed an ethical review, but Karmazin acknowledges the criticism.

“Some people are opposed to it for ethical reasons,” he says. “That’s understandable, but I still think it’s worth doing, so I’m trying to treat people.”

Wyss-Coray is ambivalent about his research being exploited for profit. “You contribute a small piece to knowledge that frequently can be abused by somebody,” he says. “I feel somewhat guilty, but I hope at the same time, we can contribute to maybe having an impact on some diseases, and that will be offset.”

Back under the fluorescent lights at the Humanist Society, Merkle explains that in addition to freezing themselves, people can use Alcor as a bank, putting money aside so that they don’t wake up poor in a hundred years. Future poverty is a common enough concern that Merkle includes it in his presentation. Why would anyone want to live forever if it meant working three jobs to survive?

Indeed, people who are struggling to pay rent right now won’t be able to afford to freeze themselves, so anyone waking up from cryogenic sleep will be wealthy, and most of them will be white, just like the bros pioneering biotech startups and building underground bunkers. Indeed, about 75 percent of Alcor’s frozen customers are male, and Max More, its CEO, is a libertarian like Thiel. The men who have everything want to keep it all, indefinitely.

Income inequality makes life extension the ultimate oligarchical fantasy. A month before Gawker shut down last year, bankrupted by Thiel’s campaign against it, reporter J.K. Trotter mused, “It’s not hard to imagine a Thielist future in which members of the overclass literally purchase the blood of the young poor in order to lead longer, healthier lives than their lesser counterparts can afford.”

In Thiel’s libertarian universe, the luckiest people could live forever, feeding on the blood of teh Bay Area’s youthful underclass—

Hey there, renters!—and living on extra-governmental barges like the seasteads Thiel dreams about, without paying taxes to help anyone else. Floating cities might be helpful if flooding and erosion destroy the California coastline, as CALmatters’ Julie Cart reported could happen 70 years from now.

Taking the scenario a little further, birth would be unnecessary, since no death would mean no one would need to be replaced. That might make people with wombs a little less than necessary, as well, especially if those barges are populated with the new crop of alt-right dudes who sleep with men because they worship masculinity.

Thiel, who is gay, would probably find it preferable to get by without women; he considers date rape as “belated regret” and once blamed women’s voting rights for the eventual demise of democracy. His worldview is the warped conservative version of feminist theorist Donna Haraway’s Cyborg Manifesto, in which she imagined the freedom in a “world without genesis, but maybe also a world without end.” Back in 1984, Hathaway predicted a future where we merged with machines, but warned against letting “racist, male-dominant capitalism” control technology, since hippie progressives are not cheerleading the convergence of humans and machines.

It might all sound far-fetched, but Thiel shares an anarcho-capitalist worldview with White House senior adviser Steve Bannon, among the most powerful people in America right now. And the House passed a healthcare law that saves money on insurance by letting poor people die faster, moralizing that poor people don’t want to be healthy.

Californians may not agree with that law outright, but Silicon Valley’s bootstrappy cult of health is based on the nerds’ association between fitness and brainpower. They’re taking up kiteboarding, tracking steps on Fitbits and eating ketogenic diets during stressful times at startups. It’s not a big jump to life extension for the rich, who deserve to live longer after all that effort.

Are the ethics of life-extension technology any different from historical questions of who gets access to medicine? Maybe not.

Karmazin hadn’t yet considered the topic before our phone call. “I haven’t had this kind of conversation with anyone yet,” he says. But Karmazin compares his trial to the introduction of antibiotics. “Someone who didn’t have access to antibiotics when they were invented—man, they’d probably be really upset. That’s reasonable.” He foresees similar problems with blood plasma as a cure for aging: “I think it’s going to be unevenly distributed.”

Wyss-Coray has serious concerns about that distribution.

“We have enough problems in the world already, and I definitely do not want a select group of people to live longer just because they can afford it,” he says.

In this country, the richest 1 percent live 15 years longer than the poorest 1 percent, meaning Wyss-Coray’s fear is already our reality. The question is how much worse things can get, and whether a medically assisted longer life will be inaccessible to almost all of us.

That’s assuming, of course, that we even want a longer life, or to wake up after a cryogenic sleep. We may value our time on Earth, but not everyone thinks it’s worth it to stick around indefinitely.

If your Silicon Valley brain sees the world as a place of obstacles that can always be overcome—where every system can be disrupted for the better and your brain is the one that will unlock a better future—you might be more inclined to stay. That might also be true if you think the universe is a place to conquer, whether via spaceship to Mars à la Musk or through politics like Thiel.

But what might the future look like, for those who want (and can afford) to stay?

Google’s Kurzweil envisions three medical stages before singularity, starting with our current push to slow aging. Stage two: building on genomic research, including personalized fixes for diseases like cancer. Kurzweil believes we’ll get to the medical nanotechnology that Merkle envisions by the 2030s, which would lead us to the last phase—nanorobots connecting us to “the cloud” in 2045. At that point, avatars of our brains could be loaded into another body. Then we’d live forever.

Bodily ailments would be curable and we’d access consciousness from the cloud, but we’d still lose our memories when our physical brains stopped working. A better (and still terrifying) option might be freezing our brains via cryonics and then bringing them back with nanorobots.

Kurzweil has signed himself up to be frozen, in case the 90 supplements he takes daily don’t keep him alive.

Wyss-Coray has chosen not to go into the meat locker. “I can’t think of any way to connect that to what we’re doing,” he says. “I haven’t signed up for that myself.”

Neither have most other people. Cryonics remains unproven, cost-prohibitive and unusually creepy to the general population, an option for the rich and famous who would need several lifetimes to see their savings run dry. At this rate, they’ll likely outlive us, so we might as well enjoy some refined sugar, pay our taxes and stop fearing the reaper.

Heirloom Herbs

Approximately 12,000 years ago, the Holocene warming began, ushering in the period in which humans began to explore plants dormant and inaccessible due to glaciers.

So began what ultimately lead to the foundations of modern agricultural practices. It was also during this time that cannabis reemerged in Central Asia, according to ethnobotanists Robert C. Clarke and Mark D. Merlin, authors of one of the definitive accounts of the plant, Cannabis: Evolution and Ethnobotany.

While cannabis likely flourished prehistorically, it is hypothesized that this era is when the human experience with the plant began. And, as with today, cannabis held an allure resulting in its transmission through human migration and plant domestication.

Curiosity, a tenant of the human experience, may have led our hunter-gatherer ancestors to discover cannabis, possibly due to its fragrant flowers and the highly nutritious seeds they possess. Discovering a source of nutrition, it is highly plausible that the resins of female flowers, likely covering the hands and the seeds themselves, resulted in psychoactive and mind-expanding experiences. Humans began to domesticate it for food, fiber and psychoactive use, ushering in the origins of landrace cannabis.

Landrace cannabis is defined by cultivars (strains) that have resided in a geographical location for extended periods of time. The results are plants that possess incredible resiliency and survival traits specific to their particular ecosystems.

Resistance to pathogens and insects, diverse chemical and phytonutrient expressions, and favorable growth patterns (such as flowering periods) are all unique traits exhibited by landraces. Clarke and Merlin note that “cannabis has a tendency to revert to atavistic (ancient ancestral) genetic combinations quite rapidly . . . especially when populations are genetically isolated.” This means that landrace cannabis strains possess ancestral traits alongside newly developed ones arising from their adaptation to particular geographical locations over time.

Why are landrace cannabis cultivars important? They are the protectors of genetic diversity and the backbone of modern cannabis cultivars. They provide each unique strain an array of qualities, resiliencies and phenotypical expressions, such as potency and aroma.

For the medical-cannabis patient, landrace strains possess unique cannabinoid and terpenoid expressions, the likes of which are not always found in modern hybrids. These individual and combined phytonutrient profiles hold immense therapeutic potential, much of which is yet to be discovered. Protecting these cultivars is critical.

Patrick Anderson is a lead educator at Project CBD.

The Risk Takers

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The hard truth about running a theater
is that, for the most part, companies tend
to be just one or two low-performing shows away from shutting the doors. Popular plays tend to put butts in seats, so it takes real guts to program a new or little-known show—and something akin to insanity to schedule a world premiere.

Despite this, several local theaters remain committed to new works, and many have announced that premieres will continue to be a part of their upcoming seasons of shows. One small theater—the Guerneville-based Pegasus Theater—has devoted its entire current season to original works.

This is cause for celebration, and audience support. Without new works, especially from young, up-and-coming playwrights, the future of American theater is dim. The best way to assure that theater does not die is for more theaters to take those risks, and to find new and creative ways to sell those new plays to the next generation of theater-goers.

Pegasus, which just completed a run of Merlyn Q. Sell’s Tempestuous, a breezy, Russian River homage to Shakespeare’s Tempest, will be presenting a staged-reading of Richard Manley’s new play A Fish Story (July 16 at the Rio Nido Roadhouse). Pegasus then continues its 16-year-run of Tapas (a series of original one-acts),
Aug. 11–27 at the Mount Jackson Masonic Lodge, and concludes its season in November with the world premiere of It’s All Relative, a collaborative work by Scott Lummer, Maureen Studer, Jacquelyn Wells and Russell Kaltschmidt.

Left Edge Theater in Santa Rosa has announced the world premiere of Sideways, a new stage adaptation of the hilariously dark, Oscar-nominated movie, with a new script written by Rex Pickett (pictured), on whose novel the movie was based. It runs Sept. 8–Oct. 1, kicking off a series of shows that, if not entirely new, will be receiving their Sonoma County premieres.

6th Street Playhouse, which last year presented two world premieres, plans to include a Bay Area premiere this September, though the title and author have not yet been announced. And in Sebastopol, Main Stage West continues its own string of doing at least one premiere a year with the one-woman show Mary Shelley’s Body (Oct. 13–30) (disclosure: I wrote the novella), featuring Sheri Lee Miller as the ghost of Mary Shelley, who authored the groundbreaking Frankenstein.

Finally, in December, the Raven Players in Healdsburg, will present the world premiere of Tony Sciullo’s A Vintage Christmas, described as a cross between A Christmas Carol and It’s a Wonderful Life, set in contemporary wine country.

Free the Press

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The respected journalist Seymour Hersh broke the Mai Lai massacre story during the Vietnam War, and the U.S. military’s torture of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib in 2004. He investigated alleged gas attacks by Syrian president Bashar al-Assad. Using excellent sources, including ones in the U.S. security establishment, Hersh determined that Assad never gassed his own people.

Although Hersh was a fixture at The New Yorker for years, the magazine refused to publish his Syrian revelations. He had to go all the way to England, where the London Review of Books published his first Syria story. It was instrumental in preventing President Obama from attacking Syria. But the mainstream media portrayed the truth of Assad’s culpability as a “slam dunk.”

The London Review of Books paid for Hersh’s second investigation on the April 4, 2017, Khan Sheikhoun “sarin gas attack,” but then declined to print it. This time, Hersh had to go all the way to Germany, where the Welt am Sonntag newspaper ran it. President Trump subsequently launched 59 cruise missiles at the Shayrat Air Base. While many Americans doubted the credibility of the West’s assumptions, mainstream media stories attributed facts to government officials in the United States, Britain, France, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Israel.

As the availability and ubiquity of social media has opened up multifarious sources of information, some doubtful, but most not government propaganda, the war waged by the mainstream media intensifies. One cannot imagine President Nixon being toppled if Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein had been blacklisted by all major media outlets in America, as happened with Hersh’s groundbreaking challenge to misinformation, disinformation and omission.

This example is only one of many in this age of “fake news” and “alternative facts.” Governments and think tanks are waging an Orwellian war of words, meant to create a language of orthodox ideology and to discredit any exposure of corruption or war crimes and, in the words of media critic Noam Chomsky, to “strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion.” Thus consent is manufactured and the media become the fourth branch of government.

Barry Barnett is a writer, health professional and musician living in
Santa Rosa.

Open Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Bold Beauty

0

In Bay Area foodie circles, chef Chris Cosentino doesn’t need an introduction.

The man behind San Francisco’s carnivore temples Incanto and Cockscomb and winner of Bravo TV’s

Top Chef Masters, Cosentino is a charismatic star on the local skyline, known for his love of nose-to-tail cooking, cured meats and Italian cuisine.

This summer, Cosentino ventures into wine country. His new Napa County project, with partner Oliver Wharton, is the spacious Acacia House, part
of the Las Alcobas resort in
St. Helena. While the rest of the resort is earthy browns and grays, Acacia House fronts the property with a white facade, situated in a picturesque building with an appealing front porch.

On a recent warm night, Acacia House is filled with diners taking pictures of each other and the restaurant’s exterior. Inside, the vibe is decidedly relaxed, as guests are led to the main dining area through a bar surrounded by plush sitting areas.

The restaurant’s decor and menu strive for a light touch. The dining room is finished in wood and cream colors, and the waiters wear beige and green uniforms that are part golf fashion, part gardening club.

The menu is tidy: two snacks, seven appetizers, eight entrées and no specials on my visit. Acacia House caters to both hotel guests and locals, and there is a conscious effort to appeal to a broad common denominator, with a nice balance of vegetarian options and classic, well-loved entrées like lamb and pork.

The seemingly endless supply of excellent housemade breads and whipped butter are easy to love. The bread, multigrain and olive, is so addictive you’ll have to stop yourself before the appetizers arrive.

All of this doesn’t mean, however, that Cosentino came to Napa to kick back and tone it down. On the contrary, it seems as if the Napa Valley’s casual, farm-to-table aesthetic has brought out a softer, playful side of him, without taking the flavor away.

The hamachi crudo appetizer ($18) is a good example. Easily found on dozens of menus across California, crudo, as made at Acacia House, is unexpected and delicious, combining fatty slices of amberjack with cubed strawberries, pink watercress and serrano pepper. Placed on rose reduction sauce and seasoned with flaky sea salt, this is a triumphant starter.

The chilled heirloom cantaloupe soup ($14) is refreshing and light, and complements the spiciness of the hamachi well. It’s sprinkled with “jamon snow,” salty flakes of pork fat that play deliciously against the tart and sweet emulsion. A nice touch, although the plate could use a slightly more generous hand of it.

The mains include pork schnitzel and Kobe beef rib-eye, but it’s tempting to try at least one vegetarian dish. The porcini rigatoni ($26), strongly recommended by our server, is the night’s surprising hit. The sturdy rigatoni incorporates wheat flour and dried porcini powder. The pasta is earthy and flavorful, swimming in an indulgent cream sauce flavored with nettles, pine nuts and hemp oil. With a heap of freshly grated Parmesan cheese on top and more mushrooms in the sauce, the lemony and herbal notes liven up the overall richness, resulting in a dish you just want to keep on eating.

Next to it, the Napa Valley lamb ($38) is a reminder of Cosentino’s affinity for meat. A generous portion of succulent lamb medallions cooked medium rare and splashed with lemon-and-chile-flavored oil are nicely paired with bitter-savory broccoli di ciccio and a base of harissa-flavored smashed carrots.

Desserts can sometimes be an afterthought at resort restaurants, but Acacia House enlisted pastry chef Curtis Cameron to create a series of dishes no one would dream to skip, for $12 each. One dessert, simply named Modern, is almost too pretty to eat: a golden orb of white chocolate mousse surrounded by coconut-flavored toasted buckwheat and lemon marshmallows. The dessert’s golden glaze is made from a mix of exotic fruit purées. It tastes a lot like passion fruit, and the whole ensemble, despite its undeniable beauty, is on the heavier side, reminiscent of the over-the-top mousses and custards of yesteryear.

The second dessert, however, is more in line with the restaurant’s winning simplicity—a caramel tres leches cake, served with burnt-cinnamon ice cream. It’s rich, comforting and airy, thanks to the addition of Greek yogurt.

The check for the meal arrived stashed in a vintage cookbook, Bill Rhode’s 1942 The Business of Carving. Full of gruesome illustrations, it’s a fun reference to Cosentino’s no-nonsense, meat-loving ways.

Help Oddjob Ensemble Record Their Debut LP

0

0009384091_10If you need a musical job done in the North Bay, Kalei Yamanoha is the man to do it. The multi-instrumentalist is a seasoned touring and recording musician who plays hundreds of shows a year, often on the accordion, with acts like the Crux, Sharkmouth and many, many others.
In addition to that musical resume, Yamanoha is also the founder and frontman of avant-garde, Vaudevillian-inspired folk troupe Oddjob Ensemble, who are embarking on a massive mission to record, produce and tour with their forthcoming debut full-length album, “The Silver Sea.” Described as “12 songs that tell a story of a distant land,” the ambitious project is not without its costs, and Oddjob Ensemble is reaching out to the community for support with an Indie GoGo campaign aimed at raising $7500 for the endeavor.
The band is offering several gift packages for backers of the project, ranging from downloads of the album to private concerts and even an option to have them write a song just for you. The group plans to use the funds to record at Prairie Sun Studios in Cotati with several guest musicians and vocalists. After producing the album, the band hopes to take the album on the road for a six-week national tour. Lend a hand if you can, and get in on the shenanigans.

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The hard truth about running a theater is that, for the most part, companies tend to be just one or two low-performing shows away from shutting the doors. Popular plays tend to put butts in seats, so it takes real guts to program a new or little-known show—and something akin to insanity to schedule a world premiere. Despite this, several...

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The respected journalist Seymour Hersh broke the Mai Lai massacre story during the Vietnam War, and the U.S. military's torture of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib in 2004. He investigated alleged gas attacks by Syrian president Bashar al-Assad. Using excellent sources, including ones in the U.S. security establishment, Hersh determined that Assad never gassed his own people. Although Hersh was...

Bold Beauty

In Bay Area foodie circles, chef Chris Cosentino doesn't need an introduction. The man behind San Francisco's carnivore temples Incanto and Cockscomb and winner of Bravo TV's Top Chef Masters, Cosentino is a charismatic star on the local skyline, known for his love of nose-to-tail cooking, cured meats and Italian cuisine. This summer, Cosentino ventures into wine country. His new Napa County...

Help Oddjob Ensemble Record Their Debut LP

If you need a musical job done in the North Bay, Kalei Yamanoha is the man to do it. The multi-instrumentalist is a seasoned touring and recording musician who plays hundreds of shows a year, often on the accordion, with acts like the Crux, Sharkmouth and many, many others. In addition to that musical resume, Yamanoha is also the founder and...
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