April 22 – 28, 2026

Highlights this week:

Greensite… Back soon… Steinbruner… Ibogaine… changing charter… Hayes… Rerun this week… Patton… Are You Losing Your Will To Work?… Matlock… losers…doctors…warm fuzzies… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… No Fluff Academy… Quotes on… “Statistics”

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MISSION AND KING STREETS. June 7, 1957. I can’t make out any price per gallon for their gas back then. The only gas there now is laughing gas administered by the Five Gables Family Dentistry dentists.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email photo@brattononline.com


If you want to pitch in to
keep this work of passion going,
we are ever so grateful!

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Dateline: April 26, 2026

CULTURE, SHMULTURE… I was at a Fika event today at Viking Hall, i.e. the Scandinavian Cultural Center on Plymouth Street in Santa Cruz. I was standing in for Susan Ortmeyer of FIKA Bakeshop fame. It was so nice! Cardamom buns, coffee, and a presentation on the history and concept of Fika – I mean, what’s not to love?!

By the way, if you’ve always wanted to try Susan’s delicious pastries, but don’t want to come to Ben Lomond, she delivers to Viking Hall for pickup on the 2nd Saturday of every month! Next pickup date is May 9 (my birthday!!), and the ordering deadline is Wednesday, May 6.

Just go to the order page on her website! You can thank me later… 😉

I had a great time today, and I think I’m going to work on getting more involved with this organization. Maybe do a knitting thing there… it’s not like we Swedes don’t knit! I’ll keep you posted.

Until next time,


~Webmistress

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STRANGER THINGS – TALES FROM ’85. Netflix. Series. (5 IMDb) ***

Stranger Things exits stage left…then pops back out for one more bow.

Set between seasons 2 and 3, this animated take brings back the core crew without sanding things down for kids. It’s not anime or cheap knockoff – dipping their pens in the Spiderverse/Arcane inkwell, with a creative, stylized look. It’s also more focused than the later live-action seasons, trimming most of the adults and zeroing in on the kids. Best of all, Will Byers actually gets to be a character instead of a punching bag, helped by the addition of Niki, an Amazonian punk rocker who connects with him over their shared outsider status. The recast voices are a little jarring at first, but you should settle in. Rough reviews aside, it’s worth a watch.

~Sarge

STRANGER THINGS (final season). Netflix. Series. (9.3 IMDb) ****

Final season, and once again Will Byers gets absolutely brain-fracked. For the uninitiated: Stranger Things is steeped in the early ’80s, following a quartet of young teens (I was all of 20 when it’s set) doing the usual – playing D&D, blasting a killer soundtrack, biking everywhere unsupervised… and occasionally getting snatched by nightmare creatures from the Upside Down, a vine-choked mirror of their hometown.

They cross paths with Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown), a runaway lab experiment with psychic powers and a deep love of Eggos. From there: more Upside Down lore, bigger and nastier villains, government conspiracies, a mall food court leveled, peak ’80s fashion, coming out, and a truly unfair amount of trauma for poor Will. Season 5 breaks up the cast in teams who each have their own stories – this season Linda “Sarah Conner” Hamilton pops up to give Vecna a run for his money as a “big bad”. Mike’s little sister gets dragged into things, and his mom finally gets to shine as a badass. It neatly cleans up all the loose threads. It’s both satisfying and a little sad to see it end – but no worries, the Duffer Brothers already have more Strangerverse on the way. Worth a watch.

~Sarge

PROJECT HAIL MARY. In theatres. Movie. (8.4 IMDb) ***-

This is hard-science sci-fi that blends in laughs without undercutting the tension. Ryan Gosling – somehow I’d never really noticed him before, sort of Arthur Davrill – plays Ryland Grace, a middle-school science teacher turned astronaut, who wakes up alone on a spaceship light-years from home with zero memory of why he’s there. Slowly, he pieces together that Earth’s survival literally hangs on him – and then he meets an alien whose planet is in just as much trouble. Cue the odd-couple science team: two species, zero common language, and enough physics to make your head spin. Gosling is charmingly competent, the alien is nicely alien (not just a guy in a weird forehead prosthetic), and while the story feels a lot like The Martian, it’s a solid high-stakes ride. I enjoyed it, even with the odd shortcomings. Running 2:36, it didn’t really lag. Definitely worth a watch.

~Sarge

THE PITT. Hulu, Max. Series. (8.97 IMDb) ***-
Noah Wyle is back in the ER… can George Clooney be far behind?

Set in a brutally busy Pittsburgh ER, a grizzled Wyle leads a rotating pack of residents, interns, and students through near–real-time shifts (one episode = one hour, one season = one day). The writing is sharp, the characters click, and the show pulls no punches on nudity or bodily damage—approach with caution, but it’s worth it. Season two is still rolling out weekly. Now with more ICE!
~Sarge

SCARPETTA. Prime. Series. (5.9 IMDb) **-

This series is about a noted Medical Examiner (Kidman) investigating a murder tied to a string of killings from 25 years ago.

Wait—no. It’s about sibling rivalry that apparently has no expiration date (Kidman/Curtis).

Then again, it’s about the adult niece of a Medical Examiner who can’t let go of her deceased wife and builds an AI replacement.

Any one of these might’ve made for an interesting series—just not all at once. Good cast, so-so mystery, and way too much going on. Pick a lane.

~Sarge

A MURDER BETWEEN FRIENDS. Prime. Movie. (3.5 IMDb) ***-

Half a point for being in focus. Joan Collins fronting for a series – at least according to the end card. Six… “people,” I guess… reunite at an Airbnb “castle” owned by a legendary mystery writer, played by Joan Collins. One of them ends up floating in the hot tub. That’s about it.

Everyone treats Joan Collins as a full-blown Mary Sue: “You’re a great mystery writer – we should all listen to you.” What does she actually do? Watch security cameras that most of the cast already know about, while they continue misbehaving anyway.

It’s embarrassing to watch, especially since I’m reasonably sure she bankrolled it. Not worth a watch. Stand well back. Mind the gap. Go watch “Agatha Christie’s 7 Dials” on Netflix.

~Sarge

THE LAST KIDS ON EARTH. Netflix. Series (1hr pilot). (7.2 IMDb) ***
This largely bloodless animated series began with a pilot-style special and ran for two seasons. It’s based on the children’s book series by Max Brallier, with character designs inspired by the illustrations of Douglas Holgate.

The story follows orphan Jack Sullivan as he adjusts to life after an invasion of extra-dimensional monsters and a zombie apocalypse. He soon bands together with a scrappy group of kids who missed the evacuation – along with a loyal monster-dog – forming their own ragtag survival team.

Aimed primarily at the 8–12 crowd, the show still has enough sharp humor and creature-feature flair to entertain adults. The voice cast includes Nick Wolfhard (brother of Finn), Mark Hamill, Keith David, Catherine O’Hara, and Rosario Dawson. Worth a watch – with or without your kids.
~Sarge

AGATHA CHRISTIE’S SEVEN DIALS. Netflix. Series. (6.2 IMDb) **-

There have been a fair few non-Poirot/Marple adaptations recently, and this is certainly one of them.

The cast is solid – Martin Freeman is great, and Mia McKenna-Bruce really shines in the lead role (though Helena Bonham Carter kind of phones in a stock twitchy character). The film doesn’t quite hook you into the mystery, though. It’s not slow, just… not all that engaging. The highlight for me was definitely Mia jumping out of a window to dodge a wedding proposal. On the plus side, it’s only 3 episodes. Many clocks.

It’s probably worth a watch if you’re looking for something to pass the time before the next episode of your favorite show drops.

~Sarge

Sarge, aka Jeffery Sargent, cut his teeth on the Golden Age of Hollywoood on TV and with regular trips to the Sash Mill. Film classes then, at Cabrillo with Morton Marcus, broadened his scope – he found he preferred Keaton over Chaplin, and Akira Kurosawa was his Yoda. Sarge spent 15 years working in Special Effects, on everything from Starship Troopers to Battlestar Galactica. He is a staunch geek who has a weak spot for Cozy Mysteries and loathes “Reality” shows. While he doesn’t care for the unrelenting banal horror of “True Crime”, he licks his lips over a twist like the end of Chinatown.

Email Sarge at JeffLSargent@gmail.com

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Gillian will be back soon!

Greensite4Mayor.org
Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org  Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild.

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THIS COULD MAKE A HUGE POSITIVE DIFFERENCE

Ibogaine has shown excellent success in helping people who are drug-addicted just not want the drugs anymore.  Imagine that!  An executive Order came out April 18, and I think this is a wonderful improvement .
Accelerating medical treatments for serious mental illness. [The White House]

Consider this study result:

Results
Most participants (72%) had used opioids for at least 4 years and 69% reported daily use. Most (80%) indicated that ibogaine eliminated or drastically reduced withdrawal symptoms. Fifty percent reported that ibogaine reduced opioid craving, some (25%) reporting a reduction in craving lasting at least 3 months. Thirty percent of participants reported never using opioids again following ibogaine treatment. And over one half (54%) of these abstainers had been abstinent for at least 1 year, with 31% abstinent for at least 2 years. At the time of survey, 41% of all participants reported sustained abstinence (>6 months). Although 70% of the total sample reported a relapse following treatment, 48% reported decreased use from pretreatment levels and an additional 11% eventually achieved abstinence. Treatment responders had the lowest rates of depressive and anxious symptoms, the highest levels of subjective well-being and rated their ibogaine treatment as more spiritually meaningful compared with treatment non-responders.

Subjective effectiveness of ibogaine treatment for problematic opioid consumption: Short- and long-term outcomes and current psychological functioning. [PubMed]

Here is a study conducted by Stanford University reporting improvement for post-traumatic brain injury in Veterans: Psychoactive drug ibogaine effectively treats traumatic brain injury in special ops military vets. [Stanford]

Will the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors approve a pilot project for Ibogaine treatment, using some of the millions the County has received from the national opioid settlement case?  Maybe…if you write them and insist money be spent actually helping people get off the drugs, instead of paying millions of dollars to the non-profits to do “outreach”.

Write the Supervisors: Board of Supervisors < boardofsupervisors@santacruzcountyca.gov > and the Supervisor for your District:

1st District: Manu Koenig
2nd District: Kimberly De Serpa
3rd District: Justin Cummings
4th District: Felipe Hernandez
5th District: Monica Martinez

CITY OF SANTA CRUZ CHANGING THE CHARTER

The City of Santa Cruz is changing its Charter…what does that mean?
Take a look:

Page 13: The City Council may establish rules for the conduct of its proceedings and may impose appropriate penalties on any member or other person for disorderly conduct at any meeting.

Page 16: The City Clerk is no longer appointed by the Council, and cannot be subject to removal, such as is the case for the City Manager and City Attorney.

Also, Page 16: Will the City Manager now have to be a resident of the City at time of appointment?  The section stating that residency is not required is being removed, but not clarified.

Page 17: Removes the provision that no blood relative of the City Manager can be employed by the City.

Page 19: the City Finance Director no longer would be required to provide the Council with financial reports on a monthly basis…just an annual report.

Page 28: The annual City Professional Audit would now be available on the City;s web page and available for public inspection at City Clerk’s office.

It is worth the time to review this Charter that governs how the City of Santa Cruz operates. Read the language on pages 28-30 in SECTION 1431, VOTER APPROVAL FOR DESALINATION PROJECTS, and know that it is there as a result of the hard work of many residents, led by Mr. Rick Longinotti and Desal Alternatives.

Also, ask some questions about where the funds of this money pot go: SECTION 1432. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ CHILDREN’S FUND. (page 30)

effective July 1, 2022, the Santa Cruz Children’s Fund shall receive funds from the City’s General Fund equivalent to twenty percent (20%) of the City of Santa Cruz’s audited total actual annual unrestricted revenues derived from the City’s Cannabis Business tax. The annual amount of revenue for the next fiscal year shall be estimated by the City Manager no later than January 15 of each year, beginning January 15, 2022.

Monies in the Santa Cruz Children’s Fund shall be appropriated by the City Council to support enhancement and expansion of evidenced-based programs to prioritize access to early childhood development, youth prevention, and vulnerable youth programs. The City Council shall designate a community oversight panel to make recommendations on the use of future revenues in a manner consistent with this Section which may include, but shall not be limited to, representatives of the following:

A. The City’s Parks and Recreation Commission;
B. The Santa Cruz City School District;
C. First Five Santa Cruz;
D. Youth Organizations;
E. The City Council

The City Manager site has information about the Children’s Fund Oversight Committee, stating applications for funding were available earlier this year for $529,000 in funding.  However, there are NO minutes or agendas of the Committee available, and no way to determine who is making the decision about how the money is spent.  Children’s Fund Oversight Committee

Other Commissions have active links to agendas…however the Historic Preservation Commission shows NO meetings for the year???   Hmmm… Does that mean our historic resources preservation is being ignored or just bad website management on the part of the city?

Please contact City Clerk Bonnie Bush at bbush@santacruzca.gov if you have any questions.

THANK YOU COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSIONERS FOR PROTECTING HISTORIC RESOURCES

Last  Wednesday, the Santa Cruz County Planning Commission took wise action to recommend the Board of Supervisors NOT include an amendment to the County Policy to allow owners of historic structures to gain ministerial approval by the Planning Director to remove historic designations if the structure were lost or damaged in calamity.  Currently, such action would require review by the County Historic Resources Commission, likely requiring documentation of the structure and analysis regarding whether restoration is possible.

“Is arson included in the definition of “calamity”?”  Chair Trina Barton asked.  “Yes”, replied Staff.
“Does the Historic Resources Commission know about this amendment?  It would take away their ability to review such situations.” stated Commission Renee Sheperd.  Staff replied “Yes, they are aware.”

However, I have attended nearly all County Historic Resources Commission meetings and saw nothing in writing about this on their agendas.

I was glad I could attend the Planning Commission meeting and testify about the danger of approving the proposed amended language because the Commission did not seem aware of my written correspondence of April 19 opposing the amendment:

I oppose this amendment because it incentivizes owners of historic structures who would like to quickly remove any historic designation of properties to easily accomplish that, without the expense of providing any structural analysis or rehabilitation feasibility studies.

It also makes the de-listing ministerial, thereby removing all significant involvement by the County Historic Resources Commission

E) Delisting of an Historic Resource that Longer Exists. In the event of a natural disaster or calamity that destroys an historic resource, the structure shall be delisted from the County Historic Inventory. The Director of Community Development and Infrastructure or their designee shall inform the Historic Resources Commission of the delisting at a regularly scheduled Historic Resources Commission meeting). The County Zoning Map shall
subsequently be amended to remove the Landmark “L” Combining District pursuant to SCCC 18.40.055)

page 205 of the packet

I really want to thank Commissioners Barton, Sheperd and Jimenez for recommending this section NOT be approved by the Board of Supervisors, scheduled for June 9, 2026.  Oddly, Commissioners Pavonetti and  Nickell opposed the recommendation.  Jesse Nickell, former VP of Barry Swenson Builders of the Aptos Village Project, represents District 2…where the historic Bayview Hotel is located.  Hmmm….

Staff informed the Commissioners that parcels scheduled for re-zoning  were removed from the agenda due to problems with noticing, and will be considered at the Commission’s May 13, 2026 meeting.  This likely was due to my correspondence and documentation regarding the historic Redman-Hirahara House in Watsonville.

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING AND SPEAK UP FOR WHAT MATTERS TO YOU.
MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY DOING JUST ONE THING.

 
Cheers, 
Becky

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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[I’M RERUNNING THIS, BECAUSE IT’S IMPORTANT! ~Webmistress]

The Upcoming Fire

How do you know if a catastrophic fire is coming? If you live around the Monterey Bay, the answer is not ‘if’ but ‘when?’ Here’s another piece of not-news: you can’t rely on the historic fire return interval to inform the ‘when’ part of the question. Best bet: plan on it coming this summer…are you ready?

Mechanisms

Several things add up to catastrophic wildfire: heat, drought, ignition and wind chief among them. I collected temperature data at 900′ elevation near Davenport from 2008-2020, when the CZU Lightning Complex Fire ate up my data loggers. That first decade had an average of 3 hours above 94F per year and an equal number of hours below 34F.  In 2019 and 2020, there were days and days above 94F with a stretch of many hours above 100F. Since then, we have regularly had heat waves for many days in the mid-90s. It seems to be getting hotter. March 2026 was the warmest March on record across the USA and the driest in most Californians’ lifetimes. Drought fuels wildfires by killing vegetation. In the shrublands and forests, drought kills back portions of plants, making the worst kind of wildfire fuel: dead woody vegetation. Add lots of dead stuff to the heat waves and you have half of the equation for wildfire. Next, we need some source of flame and then wind to feed the flames some oxygen and push the fire along. Wildfire ignition used to be caused by automobiles and backyard barbecue accidents. More recently, it is caused by remnants of summertime hurricanes. With human-caused greenhouse gas emissions filling the skies, the warmer planet holds more moisture aloft and the atmosphere becomes more energy-charged: hurricanes become more frequent and stronger. Recently, pieces of these hurricanes are sweeping from south to north up California during our dry-dry, hot-hot summers. Lightning starts the fires and the hurricane-originated winds get them going.

Directions

Directionality is meaningful for a few wildfire reasons: fire spread and escape routes. Firefighters still rely on historic fire data to predict how fires spread. In Santa Cruz County, it is been from north to south. Because vegetation is moister closer to the ocean, wildfire tends to calm a bit when getting close to the sea, “until it doesn’t” (firefighter joke).

More importantly, plotting an exit strategy is important…even in town. Recent bumper sticker sighting: “nothing ends well when it involves a getaway car.” If you live in town, you’ll need to think about how to flee wildfire on foot or bicycle because chances are there will be too much traffic to get out otherwise. Rural roads are much the same. Take home message: get out quickly when there’s an evacuation order. But how? To where? Do you know where you would go and how you would get there? Plan now!

Go Bag!

Too often, people are delayed in escaping wildfire because of their ‘stuff.’ Do you like ‘stuff?’ Most people do, but which stuff do you really need if, say, all the rest of your stuff is going to burn up in a wildfire? If you have 15 minutes to leave your house, how much of your stuff can you organize enough to fit in your car? Maybe don’t wait for that moment to come. Here’s a link to CALFIRE’s ‘Go Bag’ website replete with a well-informed list of what to take.

Preparing Your Home

Where I live out in the country, my neighbors report having to commit 4 hours a week, year-round, to protecting their homes from wildfire. We do pretty well in the preparation, judging from 2 wildfires and what structures survived. That’s 100′ radius all around every structure that needs vegetation management. That’s more than three quarters of an acre and an acre of vegetation production per year, dried bone dry, is at least 2 tons: lots to manage! Wait a year and do even more! No dead vegetation shall exist in that zone or else it will burn and threaten your home. The Zone 0 recommendation is for the 0 to 5 feet from the exterior wall of your house: not only no dead vegetation but also nothing else that could possibly burn – no cardboard boxes, wood chips, piles of leaves, etc. Speaking of leaves, time to clean off the roof and clean out the gutters! Something oft overlooked: wooden fences or gates that join the house wall – that’s continuous fuel…a wick…a fuse! Replace at least the final section up against the house with inflammable something.

Air Filters

One last thing that would behoove you to prepare for the upcoming wildfire season: air filter reminder! We can be miles and miles from the nearest wildfire but still suffer from the smoke. Inevitably, there’s a run on air filters right then. Don’t be one of those people. The time to save your lungs is now when air filters are available. Studies have indicated that wildfire smoke inhalation has major deleterious health effects…that are avoidable if you seal your house well, stay inside, and run an air filter when (not if) the wildfire smoke comes. Check for smoke ratings and have some backup filters handy for the occasion.

Remember: Only YOU can prepare YOU for wildfires (and vote for those most dedicated to real climate change solutions!)

Grey Hayes is a fervent speaker for all things wild, and his occupations have included land stewardship with UC Natural Reserves, large-scale monitoring and strategic planning with The Nature Conservancy, professional education with the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, and teaching undergraduates at UC Santa Cruz. Visit his website at: www.greyhayes.net

Email Grey at coastalprairie@aol.com

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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

We are all turning into “grasshoppers” now – at least according to Barton Swaim, writing in the April 18-19, 2026, edition of The Wall Street Journal. Swaim’s column was titled, “America Loses Its Will To Work.” Click the link if you’d like to read Swaim’s argument. I am told that no paywall will prevent you! Click right here if you need to refresh your memory about that that Aesop’s Fable about the ant and the grasshopper.

Swaim asserts that “evidence abounds that many Americans no longer consider gainful work a natural and necessary part of life.” He points to the “explosion of online sports betting” as the main proof that this is, in fact, an accurate statement.

I am absolutely in agreement that “betting,” in all of its various forms, is a plague upon society – and with online sports betting mainly intended, the way I see it, to filch scarce money from the pockets of those who succumb to its allure. Back in the middle of April, as Swaim was writing his column, the Chief of Police in New Haven, Connecticut was arrested in connection with his online gambling habit. It’s quite a story, let me tell you, and he was fully employed! Click that link to read it!

While I don’t really buy into the idea that Americans (and particularly young Americans) have turned into a plague of grasshoppers, enamored of personal enjoyment, and unconcerned about the fact that the winter is coming, I do think that we should be paying attention to “employment” and “work” issues.

Most of the news stories that I read are basically telling everyone in our society (and particularly young people, perhaps) that there aren’t going to be any jobs in the future. A.I., we are told, will replace pretty much all of the jobs now available, and it’s not welfare-dependent poor people who are carrying this message. To the contrary, it is the extremely wealthy (the A.I. giants who constantly boast of their billionaire status, and of the billionaire backers of the new A.I.-based economy yet to come). Those billionaires are the folks who are sending the message, to all the non-billionaires, that “work” isn’t going to support them in the future.

I think that this message from the billionaires, and not any moral failure on the part of a young “grasshopper generation,” is likely to be much more the cause of what Swaim is writing about than any moral collapse, caused by a whole generation deciding that they should get something for nothing.

The economic productivity that is a fact of our modern life should be mobilized for the benefit of everyone – meaning that food, shelter, education, health care, and meaningful employment opportunities should be something that everyone in our society should be able to count on. Taxes, you know, they’d be involved in making that happen. Then… What about collabortative efforts to provide a job to everyone – a job they’d find worthwhile, a job they’d want to do not because they were trying to “make a million,” but because they saw its importance and understood the benefits that the job would provide to them, as well as to others in society.

I’m thinking of jobs like: (1) Childcare; (2) Assistance for the elderly, who are trying to navigate a complicated society with diminished mental capacity; (3) Wildland stewards helping to replant forests, and to prevent forest fires; (4) Building rail and similar transportation projects to replace our dysfunctional automobile-based freeway system; (5) Environmental restoration projects; (6) Solar Energy installations; (7) Teachers! (8) Public Art; (9) Neighborhood Cleanups; (10) Etc.

The United States is the wealthiest society in the history of the world, and we got that way through hard work. Telling everyone (especially young people) that there aren’t going to be any jobs in the future, which is what they are being told, today, by the billionaire class, is totally counterproductive. There are LOTS of jobs that need doing, and we, with all our wealth, could make them available. The “Etc.” category is huge!

Could we do that?

Well, yes! Duh!!

But it would require us – “we, the people” – to decide that this is exactly what we need to do. In other words, instead of articles trying to “describe” what exists, let’s start writing articles about what we want to happen (so we can then get out, and get to work, and make it happen). This blog posting is one such article.

Gary Patton is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney for individuals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. You can read and subscribe to his daily blog at www.gapatton.net

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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KETCHUP, DEAD IN THE WATER, REPENTANCE

The illegal war against Iran is humming along with President Trump and Pete Hegseth continuing with their threats to destroy the country completely, though the president insists, “Whether we make a deal or not makes no difference to me, because we’ve won,” though Iran appears to be in control of the situation. International shipping is at a virtual standstill through the Strait of Hormuz, “the geopolitical equivalent of stabbing the global economy’s femoral artery,” in the words of Matt Ford in The New Republic. On-again-off-again cease fires, and passage through the strait, continue to plague any resolution, a result of the election of a loser to lead the world’s only superpower, says Ford — “loser” being the president’s favorite insult, followed closely by “failing” and “low IQ.” Ford sees that a loser is not someone who is left behind, nor someone who simply failed at something, since failure is a part of life and a possible step toward subsequent success.

His definition of a loser is one who thinks in terms of winners and losers at all, and believes that they have not received the status and rewards to which they feel entitled, always slighted by the world at large which has cheated and denied them things that they think belong to them by virtue of their supposed innate superiority. It’s curious that JD Vance wrote in ‘Hillbilly Elegy‘ that the message of the right-wingers is increasingly: “It’s not your fault that you’re a loser; it’s the government’s fault,” his implication being “it’s your fault if you’re a loser.” The Vice President probably regrets inclusion of that sentiment in his book. Ford writes, “Losers do not actually care about the reality of winning and losing — instead, they care about the perception of success and failure, a basis for Donald Trump’s insistence that he was the biggest and best in the New York real estate scene.” Trump is quoted as saying, “Show me someone without an ego, and I’ll show you a loser,” which might explain his tacky gold ornamentation in the White House. Also, when your blood type is ketchup…

Ford writes that “losers internalize their own self-perception and seek to reinforce it in the world. They are drawn to hierarchy, and are therefore hostile to America’s fundamentally egalitarian ethos. A stratified society gives them a clearer sense of their inferiors, which is usually bound together with their perceptions of race, sex, genetics, or some other apparently inborn trait. Racism is the most familiar redoubt for the loser, since it provides what they think as highly visible proof of their own supposed superiority.” Trump describes himself as “highly intelligent” based on genetic grounds — his uncle was an MIT professor, therefore becoming a credential for his own cognitive ability. Fascism and loserdom go hand in hand because fascism is predicated on the notion that the fascist has been unjustly cheated and robbed, and that only force can lead to restoration and revitalization. Fascists idolize losers because no fascist society has ever flourished and because they see themselves reflected in other people’s failure. Hence, the praise lavished upon the likes of General Robert E. Lee, the loser of ‘The War of Northern Aggression.’

Ford concludes his piece with, “The goal of Trumpism, is to create losers of us all. The political and economic project’s goal is not to materially improve its adherent’s lives. Instead, it is to create a sense of social order for some people that offers an aesthetic sense of improvement, even as one’s standard of living declines in real terms. These illusory gains can only go so far. Or as one frustrated Trump voter once told reporters, ‘He’s not hurting the people he needs to be hurting.'”

Nobel laureate Paul Krugman wrote on Substack: “President Trump has lost the war with Iran but is refusing to accept it.” Krugman says the president is “flat out unable” to deal with the fallout of the war, and is unable to accept that his intervention has failed — “it’s been clear for awhile that the United States has basically lost this war.” Goals to achieve regime change and take Iran’s uranium will not happen, with the regime being even more hardline. Iran is demonstrably strengthened with its ability to control the Hormuz Strait, and though temporarily permitting some access, Trump’s announced blockade hastened Iran’s decision to shut down all shipping, stating, “Control of the Strait of Hormuz has reverted to its previous state, and this strategic waterway is under strict management and control of the armed forces.” So, until Trump stops his meddling, allowing Iranian ships to navigate freely, the president is dead in the water.

American psychologist and psychotherapist, Dr. John Gartner, believes that Donald Trump is more like an animal at this point in his presidency, and will lash out at anything and everyone. As he told The Daily Beast, “A cornered, wounded animal is the most vicious and dangerous kind of animal there is, and that’s where he is right now.” Gartner worries that if the midterm elections bring about a complete turnover in both houses of Congress, Trump will still be a commander-in-chief who is getting off on the omnipotent destructiveness and power of blowing things up. Any thought Trump might have now is what he believes, even if it is completely false. Gartner says it’s a primitive type of thinking, where if you imagine it, it must be true — magical thinking! “Anything that occurs to him — any stray, crazy thought — is true,” warns Gartner. “His grandiosity is so extreme that not only does he want to be the Pope, and Jesus, and the president of Venezuela, and the Mullah of Iran — he wants to be all of these things at once. He wants the world to worship him, and he wants to erect massive monuments to praise himself.”

The now-infamous A.I.-generated image of Trump’s Truth Social post depicting himself as Jesus healing a patient, or raising someone from the dead, with an entourage of heavenly hosts and a plethora of American iconography, outraged religious and political leaders across the board. The president’s explanation that he saw himself as a Red Cross doctor healing the sick fell on deaf ears, so he was convinced to use his lighted celestial fingers for deleting the post. We can expect a surge in Halloween costumes this year of celebrants wearing white robes and carrying stethoscopes. Trump, of course, couldn’t let sleeping dogs lie, so he quickly followed up his chastisement with a Truth Social A.I. post depicting him being comforted by a Jesus-like figure.

Trump’s second A.I. post prompted a number of snarky comments on social media: “Wait a second. That’s not Jesus, that’s clearly a DOCTOR! Why does he look so forlorn? Is something wrong? Are the test results back? Is he breaking bad news to the president about his failing health? Is Trump trying to tell us something?“; and “Donald Trump is testing out a new portrayal of himself as the chosen one after deleting a post that sparked backlash for depicting himself as Jesus Christ.” As might be expected, Trump then posted, “The Radical Left Lunatics might not like this, but I think it is quite nice!!!! ” Right, warm fuzzies all around!

Since his return to the Oval OfficeTrump has enacted changes that have encouraged a resurgence of religion within the federal bureaucracy, which some federal workers view as an alarming breakdown of the boundary between church and state which can be seen in the proselytizing emails, invitations to worship services, and religious undertones in high-profile policy pronouncements. Most government employees see their jobs as working on behalf of all Americans, but what they are observing is very explicitly Christian — in a very narrow representation of the faith, at that! Administration officials scoff at these charges on the pretext that such expressions are not new and shouldn’t be controversial. Last year, Trump established the White House Faith Office, headed by Televangelist Paula White-Cain, who has compared the president to Jesus, inviting a bit of mockery after she claimed that Trump, as a child, attended Saturday and Sunday school up to three times a week. “Church was a big part of his life,” she insists. Perhaps this is only a test of the emergency fascism system — do not adjust your conscience.

The Office of Personnel Management, in July of last year, released a memo permitting federal workers to “encourage” peers “to participate in religious expressions of faith, such as prayer,” and on Easter SundayDepartment of Agriculture Secretary Brook Rollins sent an agency-wide email with the subject line “He has risen!” The email message described the life of Jesus as “the greatest story ever told, the foundations of our faith, and the abiding hope of all mankind.” One department employee called the email “grotesque,” adding that such conduct would be unacceptable even for military chaplains; but, a department spokesperson felt that the secretary was within her rights to send such a message. A government employee says “people are uncomfortable,” with another saying “there’s a lot of carrying on” and while no one’s forcing you to pray, it’s happening in the middle of a government workplace — meaning that we, the taxpayers, are supporting the breakdown of the wall? It seems that Christo-fascism can be defined as a belief that being productive at work equals having the right to tell co-workers they are going to hell.

The Daily Dose of Democracy website reports on “Secretary of War Crimes Pete Hegseth authorizing the deployment of weapons-grade cringe” last week at a Pentagon prayer service, as he quoted a Biblical-sounding verse that film buffs immediately recognized as the Samuel L. Jackson monologue from Quentin Tarantino’s black comedy ‘Pulp Fiction.’ The movie verse was delivered just before Jackson’s hitman character murders an unarmed man in cold blood, with Hegseth being too myopic to recognize that the speech is satirizing men who hide behind religion in order to justify unholy acts of violence — which is exactly what the Secretary himself is doing in Iran. “Nothing sums up the Trump regimes relationship with religion better than using fake Bible quotes to justify an illegal war of imperial aggression,” the writer charges. The verse is similar to Ezekiel 25:17 in the Old Testament, which uses only part of the scripture, the remainder being scripted by Tarantino. The comments section on DDoD prompted this post by Cy Clops: “And the Lord sayeth: ‘Spread out, numbskulls. Why I oughtta…’ Customized from The Book of Stooges: Nyuk 1, Nyuks 2 and 3.”

But wait! There’s more! Not satisfied with angering Christians all week, President Trump will be reading from the Bible as a publicity stunt in an effort to spread the lie that we live in a Christian Nation. MAGAs in the administration will be participating in a week-long Bible recitation as part of an initiative called ‘America Reads the Bible‘ at the Museum of the Bible to commemorate ‘250 Years of the Bible in America.’ As Hemant Mehta writes on The Friendly Atheist blog, Trump being fresh off posting the image of himself as Jesus while healing a Jeffrey Epstein-lookalike, and offending Pope Leo and Catholics world-wide, will be attempting to do damage control. To start, a recording of Trump reading a verse from the Old Testament — hopefully not Ezekiel 25:17 which should be given to Hegseth — to be released next week, to be followed by his reading of 2 Chronicles 7:14, a section about repentance. That’s sensible to Mehta, who says, “If the man lies during every speech and press conference, he might as well read a Bible verse he doesn’t believe in either. It’s not like they were going to ask him to read the Sermon on the Mount. Or anything from the Gospels.”

Mehta goes on to say that Trump was never going to be asked to follow the message of Jesus because he’s never been interested in that, so this is the next best thing for the right-wing Christians who have latched onto a man now being dubbed the Antichrist by many on the right. It’s good that they are recording it, which will be the only proof we ever get of Trump actually opening up The Book. In a more prudent world, those who cause as much harm in the world as that group would never be asked to hold a Bible, much less read from it, but conservatives have gone all in on hypocrisy. While no one is perfect, most of us put in a bit of effort, unlike Trump, who goes out of his way to be cruel and chaotic. That the people organizing the event won’t denounce his actions tells you a lot more about their values than a reading of the Bible that no one will ever listen to in full.

Mehta concludes that the event isn’t really about honoring the Bible, “It’s about projecting power over non-Christians. The fact that so many so many self-described Christian leaders are participating in the performance — when they would be appalled by a Democrat even citing one verse from the Qur’an in a speech — tells you everything you need to know about their intentions. If they cared about Christianity, they wouldn’t be reading a section of a book they’ve never bothered to read in full for an audience that’s never going to listen to them. They would talk from the heart about things like humility, repentance, compassion, and the vulnerable. But the same dishonest, cruel authoritarians who only care about Christianity to the extent that it keeps them in power don’t actually care about following any of the lessons from the faith. They don’t care if they have a leader shaped by the Bible; they just want one who knows how to use the Bible to control everyone else. That’s what Christian Nationalism is all about.”

The introduction of an exhilarated religious fervor by Trump and Hegseth into the Iran war is a gift to the mullahs of that country according to two former diplomats, who say that they are only going to make things worse. ‘Morning Joe‘ contributor Sam Stein approached former National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan with his question, “When you frame war in matters of theology, when you have the president mocking Islam in his tweets or Truth Social posts, how does that play with the leadership of Iran? How will they view this war when you have the defense secretary talking like that?” Sullivan answered, “Well, it does two things. First, in a way, it plays into their hands because these guys are theocrats themselves. And so the idea of having a holy war against the Great Satan, the United States, and the Little Satan, Israel, is core to their identity and core to their argument, to their own people who they were just mowing down. ‘You’ve got to back us in this holy war.’ So it really plays on the turf of the Iranian mullahs and clerics.”

MS NOW host Joe Scarborough added, “The continued deification, to follow up on what Jake said, and having people coming in — scam preachers, phony preachers saying Donald Trump is Jesus Christ is grotesque…every single day. Jake’s exactly right — they are turning this into a crusade. They are literally playing right into Iran’s hands, right into the Revolutionary Guards’ hands.” Former president of the Council on Foreign Relations Richard Haas replied, “Absolutely. And again, it works against the idea of compromise. For the Iranians this has become an existential conflict. For us, this is a limited conflict. It’s very hard to prevail in a limited conflict when you’re up against someone who basically feels if they lose, they’re gone.” As Lawrence Wright wrote in his novel, ‘The End of October,’ “Reverence for Life affords me my fundamental principle of morality, namely, that good consists in maintaining, assisting, and enhancing life, and that to destroy, to harm or to hinder life is evil. When good people do good, and evil people do evil, it is not surprising. But when good people do evil, it takes religion to do that.”

Instead of shrinking from the idea that there is a religious aspect to the Iran “excursion,” US administration leaders are leaning into it, invoking God and promising fire and brimstone, once again, for Iran’s civil society if its leaders do not buckle to US demands. A reporter asked Trump if he thinks God supports the US in the war. “I do, because God is good, and God wants to see people taken care of,” Trump said, adding that neither he nor God “like what’s happening.” In Trump’s mind, he may think God is on his side, but international law is not if he carries out the threat to bomb bridges and power plants, which is a war crime by targeting a civilian population. Trump apologist and Representative Russell Fry of South Carolina explained to Fox Business why the GOP-controlled Congress refuses to do its job and rein in the Iran war. “Congress, right now, certainly has an obligation in some ways to assist in matters of international importance, but to micromanage the president with 535 CEOs of the country doesn’t make sense to me — doesn’t make sense to the American people.” What a low IQ, failing, loser of an answer, eh?!!

And this just in from satirist Andy Borowitz, dateline Tehran: “In a major setback for Donald J. Trump, Iran announced that the Strait of Hormuz will be closed the next two years for renovations. The Strait of Hormuz board also approved a plan to put Mojtaba Khamenei’s name on the renovated waterway. ‘The Khamenei Strait of Hormuz will be the biggest and most beautiful trade chokepoint EVER!,’ the ayatollah announced in a social media post. In the same post, he indicated that the renovated strait would have a ‘world-class tollbooth’ fitted with marble armrests ‘unlike anything ever done or seen before.‘”

Dale Matlock, a Santa Cruz County resident since 1968, is the former owner of The Print Gallery, a screenprinting establishment. He is an adherent of The George Vermosky school of journalism, and a follower of too many news shows, newspapers, and political publications, and a some-time resident of Moloka’i, Hawaii, U.S.A., serving on the Board of Directors of Kepuhi Beach Resort. Email: cornerspot14@yahoo.com
 

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Each week, I will feature a selection of interesting and historically significant places in Santa Cruz County from the 1986 edition of Donald Thomas Clark‘s wonderful book, “Santa Cruz County Place Names: A Geographical Dictionary“, published by the Santa Cruz Historical Trust.

   “Nuggets” If I find something topically relevant, but not necessarily directly related to the week’s selection, you’ll see it under the Nuggets heading. Note: for reasons of brevity, sources are usually dropped when I reproduce an entry. You can always email me if you’re curious, or, even better, buy a copy of the book!

Dateline: April 23, 2026

Sometimes I open the book with an agenda, other times, I just randomly flip through until something catches my eye. Who could resist “Squabble Hollow“, the former name of Glen Canyon, and a much more prosaic label? As the entry below demonstrates, there was substantial reason for the name to stick. There was even a company named the “Squabble Hollow Mining Company”. Curiously, although the clipping mentioned in the last sentence references an 1885 decision by the County Board of Supervisors to rename it Glen Canyon, an article from 1950 cited earlier in the entry, states that it was known as Squabble Hollow “until recent years”. Clark offers no explanation for the discrepancy. Perhaps another example of informal nomenclature being preserved by hyper-local culture over official names? I wonder how many current Glen Canyon residents are aware of the colorful history of their area. If the term has somehow survived into the modern day, or any locals can attest to their elders referring to it as such, I’d of course love to hear about that!


The source referenced in the last sentence, “Rowland Scrapbook”, caught my eye. Clark of course documents all of his sources, even from whom he heard about them (in this case, the indomitable local historian Sandy Lydon), so it turns out these are the legacy of Leon Rowland (1884-1952), who, according to the Santa Cruz County History wiki, was “a local-history columnist and reporter, mainly for the Santa Cruz Sentinel.” Leon is most famous, in contemporary times, for the post-humous collection, “Santa Cruz: The Early Years, the Collected Historical Writings of Leon Rowland” published in 1980 by Paper Vision Press (a name locals will of course recognize) with an introduction by Sandy Lydon (sometimes it is just referred to as “Santa Cruz: The Early Years”. I managed to find a review, published in [Volume 60, Issue 2 (July 1981)] written by one David A. Williams, professor Emeritus, History, CSLUB, who colorfully describes Rowland as “a veteran of the newspaper game, a man who had written millions of words and in the process had become a past master at the art of digging out the relevant facts, assembling them into a coherent package, and presenting them in clear, readable prose.” Whew!

The house he and his wife shared (she apparently outlived him by at least 25 years) has a [historical marker] on it. The marker lists both of them as “Santa Cruz Historians” and the residence dates as 1929 (when Rowland moved to Santa Cruz) to 1977 (presumably when she died). I can only find one reference validating her role as a historian: an [oral history] taken in 1977 by Faye Ellis, where she recounts the tumultuous story of one Harry Love’s life, 1818-1868.

Folger

A former name for Glen Canyon.

[John Henry] Brown was, according to legend of the times, “a little too addicted to alcohol for his own good,” and as such frequently in trouble with his neighbors which fact gave to his environs the title of Squabble Hollow, by which Glen Canyon was known until recent years.’–Riptide, October 19, 1950.

According to other writers the troubles centered around boundary disputes.

“It was the reported scene of a feud over property boundaries between the Webber and J. H. Brown families.”–Scotts Valley Banner, March 4, 1981. The date that the canyon acquired the name of Squabble Hollow is uncertain, but it must have been well established by 1856 when the Squabble Hollow Mining Company filed a claim with the county recorder on May 15, 1856 described as: “Commencing at an alder tree on the creek known as Squabble Hollow creek, on the left side and being more or less 150 yards above the bridge known as Blackburn bridge, thence up said creek northerly 100 yards to a marked redwood tree, thence easterly 500 yards through George Kittleman’s oat field, thence 100 yards to a stake near Blackburn’s creek and thence to place of beginning.”

In 1875, in Paulson’s Handbook, Squabble Hollow was given as a business address for a farmer, a teamster, and two woodsmen. Ten years later, the name was changed.

“The name and reputation of Squabble Hollow found no favor with its residents and in 1885 they appeared with a petition before the county supervisors who officially changed its designation to Glen Canyon.”–(from an unidentified clipping in Rowland Scrapbook, p.268).

Thomas Leavitt is the husbandy thing to our illustrious webmistress. A resident of Santa Cruz (now part time) since 1993, his interests include history, technology, and community organizing. He started the world’s first self-service web hosting company, WebCom, located at 903 Pacific in May of 1994. He’s been part of too many community organizations to mention, and ran for City Council in the early aughts.

Email Thomas at ThomLeavitt@gmail.com

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“Statistics”

“Like dreams, statistics are a form of wish fulfillment.”
~Jean Baudrillard

“The Government are very keen on amassing statistics – they collect them, add them, raise them to the nth power, take the cube root and prepare wonderful diagrams.”
~Josiah Stamp

“There are two kinds of statistics, the kind you look up and the kind you make up.”
~Rex Stout

“You cannot feed the hungry on statistics.”
~Heinrich Heine

“Statistics show that of those who contract the habit of eating, very few survive.”
~George Bernard Shaw

MORE LIES, DAMN LIES, AND STATISTICS… No Fluff Academy has these little pieces on things like algebra, calculus, macroeconomics, and more. This one is on statistics, and I kinda love it. I appreciate when people get that “explain it like I’m 5” is not the same as “explain it like I’m stupid”…


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice as soon as the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential.

Direct questions and comments to webmistress@BrattonOnline.com
(Gunilla Leavitt)

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Deep Cover

April 15 – 21, 2026

Highlights this week:

Greensite… campaigning, back soon… Steinbruner… out this week… Hayes… The Upcoming Fire… Patton… Apology Time… Matlock… image laundering…going rogue…rearview coverup… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… proof?… Quotes on… “Lies”

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NEW LEAF MARKET-BANK OF ITALY-BANK OF AMERICA BUILDING. Chase’s Sidewalk Guide says this “1929 zig-zag Moderne building” was desdigned by Henry A. Minton. In 1977 it won a preservation battle and Thacher and Thompson adapted it for New Leaf Market. Before it was built there was a two story building there that contained the Santa Cruz Surf’s pressroom and a Buddhist Church presided by Swami Mazzanandi.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email photo@brattononline.com


If you want to pitch in to
keep this work of passion going,
we are ever so grateful!

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Dateline: April 16, 2026

COMPARED TO LAST WEEK, I don’t have much to report on. It’s hard to beat a huge fireworks show, after all… We have a short crew this time around, but will be back in full force soon!

Do enjoy, and have the best time!


~Webmistress

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STRANGER THINGS (final season). Netflix. Series. (9.3 IMDb) ****

Final season, and once again Will Byers gets absolutely brain-fracked. For the uninitiated: Stranger Things is steeped in the early ’80s, following a quartet of young teens (I was all of 20 when it’s set) doing the usual – playing D&D, blasting a killer soundtrack, biking everywhere unsupervised… and occasionally getting snatched by nightmare creatures from the Upside Down, a vine-choked mirror of their hometown.

They cross paths with Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown), a runaway lab experiment with psychic powers and a deep love of Eggos. From there: more Upside Down lore, bigger and nastier villains, government conspiracies, a mall food court leveled, peak ’80s fashion, coming out, and a truly unfair amount of trauma for poor Will. Season 5 breaks up the cast in teams who each have their own stories – this season Linda “Sarah Conner” Hamilton pops up to give Vecna a run for his money as a “big bad”. Mike’s little sister gets dragged into things, and his mom finally gets to shine as a badass. It neatly cleans up all the loose threads. It’s both satisfying and a little sad to see it end – but no worries, the Duffer Brothers already have more Strangerverse on the way. Worth a watch.

~Sarge

PROJECT HAIL MARY. In theatres. Movie. (8.4 IMDb) ***-

This is hard-science sci-fi that blends in laughs without undercutting the tension. Ryan Gosling – somehow I’d never really noticed him before, sort of Arthur Davrill – plays Ryland Grace, a middle-school science teacher turned astronaut, who wakes up alone on a spaceship light-years from home with zero memory of why he’s there. Slowly, he pieces together that Earth’s survival literally hangs on him – and then he meets an alien whose planet is in just as much trouble. Cue the odd-couple science team: two species, zero common language, and enough physics to make your head spin. Gosling is charmingly competent, the alien is nicely alien (not just a guy in a weird forehead prosthetic), and while the story feels a lot like The Martian, it’s a solid high-stakes ride. I enjoyed it, even with the odd shortcomings. Running 2:36, it didn’t really lag. Definitely worth a watch.

~Sarge

THE PITT. Hulu, Max. Series. (8.97 IMDb) ***-
Noah Wyle is back in the ER… can George Clooney be far behind?

Set in a brutally busy Pittsburgh ER, a grizzled Wyle leads a rotating pack of residents, interns, and students through near–real-time shifts (one episode = one hour, one season = one day). The writing is sharp, the characters click, and the show pulls no punches on nudity or bodily damage—approach with caution, but it’s worth it. Season two is still rolling out weekly. Now with more ICE!
~Sarge

SCARPETTA. Prime. Series. (5.9 IMDb) **-

This series is about a noted Medical Examiner (Kidman) investigating a murder tied to a string of killings from 25 years ago.

Wait—no. It’s about sibling rivalry that apparently has no expiration date (Kidman/Curtis).

Then again, it’s about the adult niece of a Medical Examiner who can’t let go of her deceased wife and builds an AI replacement.

Any one of these might’ve made for an interesting series—just not all at once. Good cast, so-so mystery, and way too much going on. Pick a lane.

~Sarge

A MURDER BETWEEN FRIENDS. Prime. Movie. (3.5 IMDb) ***-

Half a point for being in focus. Joan Collins fronting for a series – at least according to the end card. Six… “people,” I guess… reunite at an Airbnb “castle” owned by a legendary mystery writer, played by Joan Collins. One of them ends up floating in the hot tub. That’s about it.

Everyone treats Joan Collins as a full-blown Mary Sue: “You’re a great mystery writer – we should all listen to you.” What does she actually do? Watch security cameras that most of the cast already know about, while they continue misbehaving anyway.

It’s embarrassing to watch, especially since I’m reasonably sure she bankrolled it. Not worth a watch. Stand well back. Mind the gap. Go watch “Agatha Christie’s 7 Dials” on Netflix.

~Sarge

THE LAST KIDS ON EARTH. Netflix. Series (1hr pilot). (7.2 IMDb) ***
This largely bloodless animated series began with a pilot-style special and ran for two seasons. It’s based on the children’s book series by Max Brallier, with character designs inspired by the illustrations of Douglas Holgate.

The story follows orphan Jack Sullivan as he adjusts to life after an invasion of extra-dimensional monsters and a zombie apocalypse. He soon bands together with a scrappy group of kids who missed the evacuation – along with a loyal monster-dog – forming their own ragtag survival team.

Aimed primarily at the 8–12 crowd, the show still has enough sharp humor and creature-feature flair to entertain adults. The voice cast includes Nick Wolfhard (brother of Finn), Mark Hamill, Keith David, Catherine O’Hara, and Rosario Dawson. Worth a watch – with or without your kids.
~Sarge

AGATHA CHRISTIE’S SEVEN DIALS. Netflix. Series. (6.2 IMDb) **-

There have been a fair few non-Poirot/Marple adaptations recently, and this is certainly one of them.

The cast is solid – Martin Freeman is great, and Mia McKenna-Bruce really shines in the lead role (though Helena Bonham Carter kind of phones in a stock twitchy character). The film doesn’t quite hook you into the mystery, though. It’s not slow, just… not all that engaging. The highlight for me was definitely Mia jumping out of a window to dodge a wedding proposal. On the plus side, it’s only 3 episodes. Many clocks.

It’s probably worth a watch if you’re looking for something to pass the time before the next episode of your favorite show drops.

~Sarge

THE MUPPET SHOW. Disney+. Series. (8.4 IMDb) ****
Or, as I like to think of it, ANTI-MELANIA. They both star a woman who is completely self-obsessed, clinging to a less attractive mate’s position: I mean, of course, the return of … THE MUPPET SHOW!

That’s right, the same old gang at the same old theatre. Minus the legendary Jim Henson and Frank Oz (who is still alive, at time of writing), it actually defies the concern of losing the magic – it’s almost like it never ended. Which is a good thing. Only one episode so far, but it’s off to a good start. Worth a watch!

~Sarge

Sarge, aka Jeffery Sargent, cut his teeth on the Golden Age of Hollywoood on TV and with regular trips to the Sash Mill. Film classes then, at Cabrillo with Morton Marcus, broadened his scope – he found he preferred Keaton over Chaplin, and Akira Kurosawa was his Yoda. Sarge spent 15 years working in Special Effects, on everything from Starship Troopers to Battlestar Galactica. He is a staunch geek who has a weak spot for Cozy Mysteries and loathes “Reality” shows. While he doesn’t care for the unrelenting banal horror of “True Crime”, he licks his lips over a twist like the end of Chinatown.

Email Sarge at JeffLSargent@gmail.com

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Gillian will be back soon!

Greensite4Mayor.org
Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org  Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild.

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Back soon, and in the meantime:
 
MAKE ONE CALL. WRITE ONE LETTER. TAKE A WALK IN A PLACE THAT YOU LOVE AND ENJOY THE DAY.
DO ONE THING THIS WEEK AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

 
Cheers, 
Becky

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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The Upcoming Fire

How do you know if a catastrophic fire is coming? If you live around the Monterey Bay, the answer is not ‘if’ but ‘when?’ Here’s another piece of not-news: you can’t rely on the historic fire return interval to inform the ‘when’ part of the question. Best bet: plan on it coming this summer…are you ready?

Mechanisms

Several things add up to catastrophic wildfire: heat, drought, ignition and wind chief among them. I collected temperature data at 900′ elevation near Davenport from 2008-2020, when the CZU Lightning Complex Fire ate up my data loggers. That first decade had an average of 3 hours above 94F per year and an equal number of hours below 34F.  In 2019 and 2020, there were days and days above 94F with a stretch of many hours above 100F. Since then, we have regularly had heat waves for many days in the mid-90s. It seems to be getting hotter. March 2026 was the warmest March on record across the USA and the driest in most Californians’ lifetimes. Drought fuels wildfires by killing vegetation. In the shrublands and forests, drought kills back portions of plants, making the worst kind of wildfire fuel: dead woody vegetation. Add lots of dead stuff to the heat waves and you have half of the equation for wildfire. Next, we need some source of flame and then wind to feed the flames some oxygen and push the fire along. Wildfire ignition used to be caused by automobiles and backyard barbecue accidents. More recently, it is caused by remnants of summertime hurricanes. With human-caused greenhouse gas emissions filling the skies, the warmer planet holds more moisture aloft and the atmosphere becomes more energy-charged: hurricanes become more frequent and stronger. Recently, pieces of these hurricanes are sweeping from south to north up California during our dry-dry, hot-hot summers. Lightning starts the fires and the hurricane-originated winds get them going.

Directions

Directionality is meaningful for a few wildfire reasons: fire spread and escape routes. Firefighters still rely on historic fire data to predict how fires spread. In Santa Cruz County, it is been from north to south. Because vegetation is moister closer to the ocean, wildfire tends to calm a bit when getting close to the sea, “until it doesn’t” (firefighter joke).

More importantly, plotting an exit strategy is important…even in town. Recent bumper sticker sighting: “nothing ends well when it involves a getaway car.” If you live in town, you’ll need to think about how to flee wildfire on foot or bicycle because chances are there will be too much traffic to get out otherwise. Rural roads are much the same. Take home message: get out quickly when there’s an evacuation order. But how? To where? Do you know where you would go and how you would get there? Plan now!

Go Bag!

Too often, people are delayed in escaping wildfire because of their ‘stuff.’ Do you like ‘stuff?’ Most people do, but which stuff do you really need if, say, all the rest of your stuff is going to burn up in a wildfire? If you have 15 minutes to leave your house, how much of your stuff can you organize enough to fit in your car? Maybe don’t wait for that moment to come. Here’s a link to CALFIRE’s ‘Go Bag’ website replete with a well-informed list of what to take.

Preparing Your Home

Where I live out in the country, my neighbors report having to commit 4 hours a week, year-round, to protecting their homes from wildfire. We do pretty well in the preparation, judging from 2 wildfires and what structures survived. That’s 100′ radius all around every structure that needs vegetation management. That’s more than three quarters of an acre and an acre of vegetation production per year, dried bone dry, is at least 2 tons: lots to manage! Wait a year and do even more! No dead vegetation shall exist in that zone or else it will burn and threaten your home. The Zone 0 recommendation is for the 0 to 5 feet from the exterior wall of your house: not only no dead vegetation but also nothing else that could possibly burn – no cardboard boxes, wood chips, piles of leaves, etc. Speaking of leaves, time to clean off the roof and clean out the gutters! Something oft overlooked: wooden fences or gates that join the house wall – that’s continuous fuel…a wick…a fuse! Replace at least the final section up against the house with inflammable something.

Air Filters

One last thing that would behoove you to prepare for the upcoming wildfire season: air filter reminder! We can be miles and miles from the nearest wildfire but still suffer from the smoke. Inevitably, there’s a run on air filters right then. Don’t be one of those people. The time to save your lungs is now when air filters are available. Studies have indicated that wildfire smoke inhalation has major deleterious health effects…that are avoidable if you seal your house well, stay inside, and run an air filter when (not if) the wildfire smoke comes. Check for smoke ratings and have some backup filters handy for the occasion.

Remember: Only YOU can prepare YOU for wildfires (and vote for those most dedicated to real climate change solutions!)

Grey Hayes is a fervent speaker for all things wild, and his occupations have included land stewardship with UC Natural Reserves, large-scale monitoring and strategic planning with The Nature Conservancy, professional education with the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, and teaching undergraduates at UC Santa Cruz. Visit his website at: www.greyhayes.net

Email Grey at coastalprairie@aol.com

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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

From An Article In The New York Times

By engaging in a war of choice in a critical region for global trade and utterly ignoring the probable consequences for the economies of its closest allies, the Trump administration has destroyed the legitimacy of American power,” asserted Anatol Lieven of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft.

What do I say to this assertion?

TRUE!

The United States of America (actually, our current president, acting as though he, as president, was entitled to make an individual decision that the United States should go to war) has made a huge and consequential mistake.

When someone (an individual or a nation) makes a mistake, the responsible party needs to apologize. And to be effective, an apology needs to be more than simply “verbal.” The apology needs to be accompanied by some sort of action that fully acknowledges the error made, and that demonstrates an effort to show genuine remorse, and some significant effort to set things right.

We, the people of the United States, are bearing the responsibility for the mistake made by our current president. I don’t think there is a way to set things right without an apology accompanied by doing something to make clear that we, the citizens of the United States, do fully understand and apologize for what has been done.

Our Constitution provides a couple of ways for the nation to make such an apology, in a manner that would have a chance, at least, of being accepted by the nations of the world (and particularly our “friends,” our “allies,” those whom have been so dramatically impacted by what has been done).

Who can take such an action? First, our current president’s Cabinet.

Second, The Congress of The United States of America.

Absent action by the Cabinet, there isn’t a way to make the right kind of apology, other than by Congressional action. If the nation wants to recapture the “legitimacy” of our conduct affecting the world, Congress must take action, and “partisan” votes are not going to do the trick.

Action!

Promptly Undertaken!

That might have a chance.

Gary Patton is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney for individuals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. You can read and subscribe to his daily blog at www.gapatton.net

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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SURPRISE, NEW YORK PARTY, GENOCIDAL MANIAC, HOSTAGE VIDEO

Back in the news this week — the Epstein Report — as a result of a random press conference called by First Lady Melania Trump, a surprise for everyone including the president himself who claimed to know nothing about it. As Joanna Coles writes on Substack, “Melania Trump, last seen smiling alongside the Easter bunny, emerged briefly on Thursday from her gilded witness protection program to issue a statement about Jeffrey Epstein. Why now? Her documentary ‘Melania,’ a long and frictionless Instagram exercise in image laundering, offered the perfect, hermetically sealed environment to address any lingering questions about proximity, rumor, or denial. A captive audience, a sympathetic frame, and not a whisper of Epstein. One might think the omission was the point.”

Melania’s White House statement denying ties to Jeffrey Epstein and knowledge of his crimes, and calling for a congressional hearing for survivors allowing them to testify before lawmakers and have their stories entered into the congressional record, comes at a time when President Trump and his administration had finally succeeded in moving beyond the controversy with the Iran “excursion” dominating headlines. While lawmakers had complained at the limited release last month of files by the Justice Department, the agency said more time was needed for review to ensure no sensitive information about victims was released. The First Lady didn’t waste any of her time defending her husband, and the White House was blindsided with her admitting that she had partied with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell in New York in 1998. Journalist Aaron Rupar wrote on X, “I am not sure why Melania Trump decided to make a statement about Jeffrey Epstein seemingly out of nowhere today, but if the idea was to put the ongoing coverup in the rearview mirror it will backfire spectacularly.”

She denied being a victim of Epstein, to which research paralegal and progressive commentator, RJ Riley, posted on X: “Again, no one asked you if you were Epstein’s victim. That’s a deflection. The actual question is why you and your husband were, at MINIMUM, embedded in the same elite party circuit as a known predator for years, praised him publicly, and only distanced himself after Epstein became radioactive. That’s not chance. So no, a self-written book isn’t evidence, it’s clean up.” Paul Kavanagh, a columnist at the Scottish publication, The National, posted on Bluesky: “Melania Trump is talking about Epstein in order to distract from the Iran war her husband started in order to distract from Epstein.” David Rothkopf on The Daily Beast speculates that Donald Trump has apparently decided that being heavily linked to a notorious sex trafficker, while bad enough to make him want to start a war to distract from it, is not as bad as being seen as a genocidal maniac, behaving like Hitler.

Rothkopf goes on to say that suggesting the president’s wife never had a relationship with Maxwell, seems a stretch, since the internet is flooded with images of the First Lady looking very cozy with Epstein and Maxwell, which raises the questions about her intervention — why? And why now? Is there a pending legal matter in which she is involved? It seems that she would be unable to commandeer the White House stage without approval of and support of the president’s staff, and why would they condone it? Especially in light of Pam Bondi’s firing, she being unable to make the story go away. As delicious as the possibility of Melania’s going rogue may seem, Rothkopf says that is very unlikely since it took place at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue; and he leaves us with the choices of believing the president decided to place Epstein center-stage, or that he was blindsided by his wife because he is the old guy who is no more aware of, or in control of, what goes on in the White House than he is of anything else at the moment.

Jimmy Kimmel, on his show, says that Melania might have highlighted the Epstein scandal out of sheer resentment towards her husband, saying, “He spent the past six weeks trying to bomb this Epstein story out of the headlines. Two days after the ceasefire, she puts it right back on top. She must really hate him. I don’t know how else to explain it. For whatever reason, she didn’t ask. She didn’t give a heads up. She just went right out in front of the cameras and fired away.” To Melania’s demand that lies and rumors about her “cease today,” he ponders if ‘tomorrow’ would be okay, since he needs to catch up on what her concerns are. Melania declared that she is not Epstein’s victim, but Kimmel insisted she meant, “I am my husband’s victim,” and theorizing that the 5+ minute speech was the same one Donald gave to her after the Stormy Daniels brouhaha erupted. Political scientist, Professor Kristoffer Ealy, wrote on Lincon Square, “She spoke for five minutes, reading from a prepared statement, plugged her book, told Congress what investigations to conduct, and walked away without taking a single question. A press conference where you don’t take questions isn’t a press conference — that’s a hostage video with better lighting.

Ealy goes on: “I want to be very clear about something before we go any further. I do not believe this woman. I have not believed this woman for a long time. And it is not because of anything Jeffrey Epstein-related. It is because I have been watching Melania Trump operate for the better part of fifteen years, and what I have observed is a person who lies the way most people breathe — reflexively, efficiently, and without apparent discomfort. The difference between Melania Trump lying and Melania Trump telling the truth is not something you merely hear. It is something you feel. It settles in the room like humidity. And what settled into the White House Grand Foyer on April 9, 2026 was very, very familiar. The media will spend the next several days debating whether her denial was credible. I am not interested in that debate. I am interested in the record. Because the record is long, it is documented, and it has more receipts than a Whole Foods on a Saturday afternoon.”

On The Hartmann ReportThom Hartmann asks “when will the other Melania shoe drop?” He says the great mystery this week, is why Melania Trump would go on TV from the White House and pull a ‘Richard “I am not a crook” Nixon’ for no apparent reason. “That didn’t work out well for Nixon, and it’s unlikely her demands will do anything other than fuel more speculation and a faster circulation of her nudie pictures and photos of her and Jeffrey Epstein. Speculations about what provoked her, run from a woman close to threatening to ‘expose’ her ‘pedophile’ husband, to the possibility of a new book release claiming Melania and Epstein were once involved, to weird theories that Trump asked her to do it to distract from the Iran debacle,” writes Hartmann. “Something very, very weird is going on with this couple (if you could call two people who live and sleep separately a couple). But then, if you were married to Trump, wouldn’t you be a bit on edge, too?

As expected, NBC’s Saturday Night Live’s cold opening ripped into the Melania speech, with two regulars portraying the First Couple in a phone conversation. Melania has called her husband to warn him about her bombshell press conference, saying, “I decided I should do a big random speech completely out of nowhere and say, ‘I am not Epstein’s victim.’ Is that good?” The president replies, “Darling, I gotta admit that sounds a little insane. Who are you…me? Melania, I’d really love to talk to you more, but I have a meeting with, uh, Ronald Reagan.

Oliver Willis, on Daily Kos, provides some details on Melania Trump’s standing in this country, with polling showing the First Lady is netting some of the lowest approval ratings in US history. Despite the White House-backed documentary, ‘Melania,’ which attempted to promote her image around the world, a CNN poll last month showed her favorability rating standing at a -12, a drop from the +3 she had upon her return to the White House in January 2025. This contrasts with second-term First Ladies Michelle Obama and Laura Bush who had a +42 rating, while Nancy Reagan netted a +50; and even Hillary Clinton, who suffered slings and arrows for most of her public life, garnered a +25. CNN data analyst, Harry Enten, notes, “Melania Trump is breaking records in the way that you don’t want to break records — historically awful. The American people don’t really care for her.”

The ‘Melania‘ documentary, costing billionaire Jeff Bezos $75 million, has a 10% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and is regarded as “shallow, sycophantic and absent a single unguarded moment, a near-two-hour infomercial disguised as a documentary,’ says reviewer Peter Travers. The First Lady’s recent activities might explain her poor standing, starting with her walking with a robot at the White House, touting use of A.I. in education. “This is exactly what Big Tech wants to create: a sense of a society being led by and taught by robots, displacing all of who we are, starting with education,” says AFT President Randi Weingarten. Melania’s recent chairing of a United Nations session on ‘children in conflict’ was frowned upon, in particular for her husband’s Iran war bombing of a school in which 168 children lost their lives. The administration has been blamed for traumatizing children in its anti-immigrant activities and the attacks on LGBTQ+ rights. Oliver Willis writes that Melania’s poor ratings only echo the low ratings she held upon exiting the White House in January 2021, and that historically, unpopular presidents have been unable to rely on public support for first ladies, even while dealing with political headwinds of their own. Donald Trump has had no such luck — his wife is disliked just as much as he is.

With less than 20% of Americans identifying as MAGA Republicans, they continue to support nearly every decision President Donald Trump makes, yet his “contempt” for his most loyal supporters “is getting worse,” argues writer Amanda Marcotte on Substack. “To Trump and his top brass, like JD Vance, feeling like they owe anything to anybody, especially the red-hat yokels who got them into office, is insulting,” she writes. “Their resentment at their own voters for actually expecting results is getting worse, and that’s starting to be reflected in policy choices.” Trump’s deployment of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in the nation’s airports to supposedly alleviate staffing shortages sparked by the partial government shutdown also impacts MAGA voters — after all, Trump voters fly, too!

Marcotte says that more revealing, and aggravating, was Trump’s response to questions about rising gas prices, which should have been a predictable outcome once war against Iran was initiated. “Trump and even the Vice President can’t help but sneer with annoyance each time they are asked to care about skyrocketing prices at the pump,” says Marcotte. “Trump even tried to spin that as a good thing, claiming that ‘we make a lot of money’ when gas prices go up. Of course, that ‘we’ does not include approximately 99% of Americans, so he’s basically just telling the rest of us we don’t matter. Including his own voters.” Marcotte’s conclusion? “I think Trump and the rest of the White House really do hate Americans. They view the majority who don’t support the MAGA agenda as bratty liberals who need to be squashed into silence. But they also hold most Trump voters in contempt, seeing them as easily duped morons — which is hard to argue with, honestly!

SFGate columnist, Drew Magary, launched a diatribe against Trump and his war last week, following the TACO president’s chickening-out on destroying the Iranian nation. He congratulates the Iranians for calling Trump’s bluff, and is thankful that we are all still here, though it got a bit dicey. A two-week ceasefire was agreed upon, although things have been iffy, and with JD Vance’s 21-hour negotiations with Iran falling through — provoked by the White House — everything is drifting back to square one. Magary says Trump believed Israeli PM Netanyahu’s pitch that a war would be a cakewalk, even after “human footstool” and Secretary of State Marco Rubio called the plan “b.s.” Every war at its core is a self-inflicted wound, Trump’s wound so wide that the Artemis crew could see it from the dark side of the moon — a decisive loss for the US, with Magary hoping it portends many electoral losses for the orchestrators.

Hawkish politicians who kept the Iranian bogeyman alive for half a century were waiting for a useful idiot to occupy the Oval Office to make the war happen — enter Donald Trump — the best and last chance to make war a reality. Netanyahu convinced Trump that Iran would fold in short order, and that he could seize the Strait of Hormuz, with Iranians greeting the US as liberators — shades of Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld! Didn’t happen! Mojtaba Khamenei took control of everything, gas prices soared, global markets went haywire, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps began to charge nations to use the strait, which was free until Trump went off the deep end. Easter Sunday saw Trump screaming curses, throwing a hissy fit, throwing insulting names, and threatening to destroy the entire civilization — no matter that the US was getting low on munitions! Then Russia and China backed Iran, knowing a winner when they see one, as Iran dared Trump to blink. He did so, Iran winning the PR campaign, withTrump complaining the Strait of Hormuz is closed, yet is somehow open. Go figure.

Initially, the administration said Iran could keep its nuclear weapons program, as Trump tried to fish the Obama agreement out of the toilet, but that was transitioned in JD Vance’s negotiations, so expect the sound of flushing once again. As part of the ceasefire agreement, Iran might have received punitive damages from the US for bombing destruction, and with Trump’s negotiating acumen, Iran probably could have gotten Alaska thrown in had they wanted it. Magary accuses Trump of starting this “excursion” for no reason at all, quickly found himself in over his head, then tried to skulk away from it, while the country is stuck with skyrocketing gas bills and a nosediving stock market. Magary says he is outraged and mortified, and is sick to death of living in a country with a ruling party stupid enough to think this war was a good idea, especially when every war in his lifetime has been an unmitigated failure. “I’m sick of the fact that threats of a nuclear holocaust are now routine because our president is a terrorist who has a bowl of oatmeal for a brain. I’m sick of our military professionals having to take orders from politicians who have no idea what they’re doing. And I’m sick of the United States being run by a bunch of absolute losers. Trump lost this war. I hope that, one day soon, he loses everything else,” concludes Magary.

The last word belongs to satirist Andy Borowitz, datelined Tehran: “In its first act of goodwill since the declaration of a ceasefire, on Wednesday Iran permitted a container ship loaded with copies of the Epstein files to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. ‘In recent weeks, the closure of the Strait has cut off the world’s supply of Epstein files,’ and Iranian government statement read. ‘Now, those files will flow freely to the four corners of the globe.’ Although Iran is charging vessels millions for safe passage through the Strait, ‘We are sending the Epstein files through free of charge,’ the statement indicated. The Iranians said they had taken Donald J. Trump’s threat to destroy their civilization ‘very seriously,’ noting, ‘We see what he’s already done to American civilization.‘”

Dale Matlock, a Santa Cruz County resident since 1968, is the former owner of The Print Gallery, a screenprinting establishment. He is an adherent of The George Vermosky school of journalism, and a follower of too many news shows, newspapers, and political publications, and a some-time resident of Moloka’i, Hawaii, U.S.A., serving on the Board of Directors of Kepuhi Beach Resort. Email: cornerspot14@yahoo.com
 

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Each week, I will feature a selection of interesting and historically significant places in Santa Cruz County from the 1986 edition of Donald Thomas Clark‘s wonderful book, “Santa Cruz County Place Names: A Geographical Dictionary“, published by the Santa Cruz Historical Trust.

   “Nuggets” If I find something topically relevant, but not necessarily directly related to the week’s selection, you’ll see it under the Nuggets heading. Note: for reasons of brevity, sources are usually dropped when I reproduce an entry. You can always email me if you’re curious, or, even better, buy a copy of the book!

Dateline: April 10, 2026

Did you know that Santa Cruz has a direct connection to the Folger coffee family? James Athearn Folger II, the owner of J.A. Folger’s Coffee Company, was also a director of the Ocean Shore Railroad, along which the proposed town of “Folger” was to be located. Santa Cruz Trains (an excellent web site for local railroad related history) has an extensive write up on the prospective town of “Folger”, with a map illustrating the intended layout (Clark’s book is cited as a source for the article, by the way).


Former railroad stations live on in place names all over Santa Cruz County, you’ll see references to them scattered all throughout Clark’s book. The Santa Cruz Trains website has a wealth of related historical information (as with this week’s column). It’s amazing to see how many railroads have been operated in this county at one point or another; their history dates back to 1860. If you’re at all interested in Santa Cruz history, you should definitely check it out!

Folger

A former “station” on the Ocean Shore Railroad between Scott Junction and Swanton. Sections 19 & 20, T10S, R3W. The projected town of Folger was laid out by the Shore Line Investment Company in 1908, but never amounted to more than a very small settlement serving as the center for the lumber industry that developed around Little Creek. It was named for J. A. Folger, the so-called “coffee king” of San Francisco, who was the first vice-president of the Ocean Shore Railroad.

At the time he was also the president of J. A. Folger & company, one of the largest and oldest mercantile enterprises on the Pacific Coast…. Outside of his own business Mr. Folger had been personally connected with some of the most important businesses in California and had for years been a leading and public-spirited citizen…. Although Mr. Folger was known as a shrewd and conservative businessman with a long and successful career, it was only natural that he would be one of the enthusiastic investors and officers of anything as dramatic as a new railroad–Wagner (1974, p.17).

Thomas Leavitt is the husbandy thing to our illustrious webmistress. A resident of Santa Cruz (now part time) since 1993, his interests include history, technology, and community organizing. He started the world’s first self-service web hosting company, WebCom, located at 903 Pacific in May of 1994. He’s been part of too many community organizations to mention, and ran for City Council in the early aughts.

Email Thomas at ThomLeavitt@gmail.com

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“Lies”

“The truth has no defense against a fool determined to believe a lie.”
~Mark Twain

“People never lie so much as after a hunt, during a war or before an election.”
~Otto von Bismarck

“A lie told often enough becomes the truth.”
~Vladimir Lenin

“A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.”
~Winston Churchill

“In politics, a lie unanswered becomes truth within 24 hours.”
~Willie Brown

LIES, DAMN LIES, AND STATISTICS… With enough random data points, you can “prove” almost anything…


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential.

Direct questions and comments to webmistress@BrattonOnline.com
(Gunilla Leavitt)

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Deep Cover