November 5 – 11, 2025
Greensite… back soon … Steinbruner… BESS, BESS, BESS…
Hayes… Appreciations… Patton… I’m Personally Asking… Matlock… cruelty as strategy…Thanksgiving cancelled…punchlines… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… Dad Advice from Bo… Quotes on… “November”
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Dateline: Novmber 5, 2025
NOVEMBER. IT’S NOVEMBER! We are back on standard time, and no, I am not loving it. It gets dark so. darn. early! And it will keep creeping back to earlier and earlier for another month and a half! I could cry. That won’t help though, this keeps happening every year, so why can’t I get used to it? Honestly? I have no idea. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not like I’m miserable over this all day, every day. It’s mostly in the late afternoon/evening when I can’t figure out what time it is by just looking out the window, you know?
SPEAKING OF NOT GETTING USED TO IT. The shutdown is still going on. Heather Cox Richardson has a really good explanation for why Chuck Schumer’s offer to negotiate reopening was the opposite of a sellout. Watch it here, if you’re interested. I put the video over on the right. The fate of the SNAP benefits is winding its way through the courts. Democrats had a very good off-year election, but we can’t take the foot off the gas anytime soon! Complacency before the midterms would spell disaster!
~Webmistress
FRANKENSTEIN. Netflix. Movie. (7.7 IMDb) ![]()
Yet another Frankenstein (“that’s Fahnken-steen”) or Oscar Isaac in what feels like his 25th role of the year.
Visually sumptuous and soaked in both blood and atmosphere, Guillermo del Toro delivers a lavish reimagining of the oft-told tale. The film nails the gothic philosophy and metaphysics of its era, pairing beauty with brutality in true del Toro fashion. You can almost imagine the Shelleys and Byron nodding in approval at the moments where it strays, and smiling where it catches the heart of the story perfectly.
It’s not for the faint of heart – one shot that got me, of the Creature twisting a sailor’s arm a few rotations too far, proves that – but the grotesquerie serves the point. After all, this is a story about Build-A-Man from spare parts and asking what makes him human.
Dark, intelligent as always, and unsettlingly gorgeous – this Frankenstein is well worth a watch.

I LIKE ME. Prime Video. Movie. (8.2 IMDb)
John Candy was one of the brightest stars born from the supernova that was SCTV (Second City Television) – Canada’s answer to Saturday Night Live in the ’70s and ’80s (if you haven’t seen it, it’s worth digging up). The cast was a who’s who of comedy royalty: Catherine O’Hara, Eugene Levy, Harold Ramis, Rick Moranis, Dave Thomas, Joe Flaherty, Martin Short, Andrea Martin, and more. And right in the middle of it all was Candy — the gentle giant with impeccable timing and a heart to match.
By all accounts, Candy was as kind and humble offscreen as he was hilarious on it. No one seems to have a bad story about him – which, in a crowd of comedians, is practically sainthood.
From “Uncle Buck” and “Planes, Trains and Automobiles” to “Spaceballs”, “JFK”, and even his lesser outings, Candy was always a joy to watch. His performances carried warmth, humanity, and that unmistakable glint of mischief.
Gone far too soon, “I Like Me” remains a sad “must-watch” — a reminder that true comedy often comes from a place of heart.
~Sarge
[Halloween Pick: WEREWOLF] AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON. Philo. Movie. (7.5 IMDb)
“Stay on the road. Keep clear of the moors.”
The story is simple: two American backpackers ignore the locals’ warnings, wander onto the moors, and one ends up cursed with full-moon-itis while the other returns as a wisecracking, rapidly decomposing ghost. What follows is a sharp blend of horror, dark humor, and some amazing makeup work.
The transformation scene – while dated by today’s standards – was groundbreaking for its time, delivering a visceral, painful metamorphosis and a final werewolf form that’s genuinely menacing. David Naughton makes for a sympathetic lycanthrope, Griffin Dunne shines as David’s decaying corpse conscience, and Jenny Agutter does her best as the nurse/love interest with questionable professional boundaries.
“An American Werewolf in London” remains the most watchable, witty, and downright entertaining werewolf film since the Golden Age.
~Sarge
OZZY: NO ESCAPE FROM NOW. Paramount+. Movie. (8.4 IMDb)
A farewell performance you can’t roll your eyes at. Plenty of rock legends have milked “one last time” for decades – but not Ozzy. His “Back to the Beginning” concert on July 5th, 2025, really was the end. He was gone by the 22nd.
“No Escape From Now” is an unvarnished chronicle of both his career and more importantly, his final, lucid march toward the inevitable. It’s less a myth-making documentary than a brutally honest goodbye, showing the man behind the metal: frail, funny, and utterly self-aware. Through it all, Sharon Osbourne is the quiet backbone – tending, cajoling, and loving the battered but unbowed Prince of Darkness as he takes his final bow.
~Sarge
GOOD BOY. In theaters. Movie (6.8 IMDb)
Full disclosure: I was ready to hate this film. Any movie that makes people cry about a dog is a very bad thing, because ALL dogs are the Best People, so that’s an automatic red flag.
But Good Boy surprised me. It’s a horror film told from the dog’s perspective – not another “evil dog” flick or a cheap scare where the pet gets offed to raise the stakes. Here, Indy the Dog follows his troubled Person into a forest full of strange smells, eerie silences, and one especially bad not-Person who clearly means trouble. Bad not-Person!
Some have called it slow, but I found it quietly tense, the way good horror should build. And yes, it includes one truly wrenching moment that no good dog should face. Still, it’s worth a watch – just make sure to hug your own dog after.
~Sarge
[Halloween Pick: VAMPIRE] THE HUNGER. Tubi. Movie. (6.6 IMDb)
Incredibly stylish Vampire film from 1983 by Tony Scott. Starring Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, and Susan Sarandon.
A young, lanky Sarandon stars as a doctor caught between two vampires — Bowie, seeking a cure for his decay, and the impossibly elegant Deneuve, the ageless predator in search of a new consort. With a soundtrack that swings from Bauhaus to Delibes and lush, stylized cinematography, The Hunger remains an elegant, sensual cornerstone of modern vampire cinema.
~Sarge
WEAPONS. In theatres, Apple TV. Movie. (7.4 IMDb)
Weapons: “Pulp Fiction” meets “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street”.
A perfect suburban horror: 17 children get up in the middle of the night, and run off into oblivion. The problem is, they’re all from the same class. The problem is, it’s the entire class…but one. The problem is, it must be the teacher.
Or is it.
The film structures its mystery through overlapping points of view, evoking Pulp Fiction’s fractured narrative. At the same time, it channels Rod Serling’s “The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street”, where paranoia and fear become more destructive than the supposed threat itself. Just when the audience feels grounded, the story pivots in an unexpected direction.
The cast is anchored by the elfin Julia Garner (Ozark), Josh Brolin (“Thanos” Avengers), and Benedict Wong (Doctor Strange). Rather than relying on gore or jump scares, the film builds an atmosphere of unease that lingers after.
It’s unsettling, thought-provoking, and worth a watch.
~Sarge
WEDNESDAY (Season 2). Netflix. Series (8 IMDb)
Learning from Season 1, they eschew romance for Wednesday and instead keep her caught between her rocky relationship with her mother (Morticia, played by Catherine Zeta-Jones) and her attempts to thwart a tragic prophecy (how very unlike Wednesday).
This season brings a slew of new guest stars, including Lady Gaga, Christopher Lloyd (he was Fester in the ’90s Addams Family movies), Steve Buscemi, and Billie Piper (pop singer and Rose from Doctor Who), along with brief surprise returns from Christina Ricci (she played Wednesday in the ’90s films) and Gwendoline Christie. Breakout new character Agnes DeMille (played by Evie Templeton – a young actress to watch for) steals many of the scenes she’s in.
Sadly, the show still features the “Outcasts” as a marginalized group, as it did in Season 1. I’ve always felt the Addams Family worked best when their innocent bewilderment at their effect on “normies” drove the humor. Still, the season offers plenty of laughs and a terrific cast to carry you through. Worth a watch.
Snap! Snap!
~Sarge
Gillian is working hard and will be back soon!
| 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. |
Click on Item #25: Take a moment to watch the video recording of how the Solano County Planning Dept. has proceeded with their work to develop a battery energy storage system (BESS) Ordinance, relying on a Technical Advisory Working Group that included participants from all sides, and the public.
Note that Solano County will NOT allow utility-scale BESS in agricultural lands. Conversely, Santa Cruz County is considering allowing the Seahawk BESS project at 90 Minto Road in Watsonville to be in an established apple orchard and next to dense neighborhoods.
Please share this video with your County Supervisor and others.
NO PROBLEM WITH SEA WATER INTRUSION IN MIDCOUNTY GROUNDWATER BASIN
Public Records Act request materials state there is no problem with sea water intrusion in the MidCounty groundwater basin. Analysis of 2022 data using airborne electromagnetic methods, since 2017: “The shallow fresh water seems to
extend a little further off-shore for the 2022 data.” and “A very high degree of repeatability: Near the Summer Beach the fresh water might extend a little further into the sea compared to 2017 Off-shore comparison.”
Here is correspondence regarding the analysis. Rob Swartz directs the MidCounty Groundwater Agency, a consortium of Soquel Creek Water District, City of Santa Cruz Water Dept., Central Water District, and the County of Santa Cruz (representing private well owners). Soquel Creek Water District is the bully in the room, pumping the most groundwater and thereby paying the largest share of the costs of the MidCounty Groundwater Agency’s commitments.
Take a look at this:
From: Rob Swartz <rswartz@cfscc.org>
Sent: Monday, 13 May 2024 17.59
To: Max Halkjaer <max@geophysicalimaging.com>; Georgina King <gking@elmontgomery.com>; Ahmad-Ali
Behroozmand <ahmad@geophysicalimaging.com>
Subject: RE: Santa Cruz Mid-County Basin GeophysicsHello Max,
I’m still trying to define a scope of work for a request for qualifications. Could you confirm the depth of
investigation with this geophysical technique? I ask because of the areas around Seascape and New Brighton
where we don’t currently have an intrusion problem. Those wells are completed at depths of 900 and 765 feet,
respectively. If the deep zones do not already show high chlorides, I don’t know that the geophysics would tell us
anything new at those locations (I seem to recall roughly 200 meters for depth of investigation?).
Also, is Geophysical Imaging Partners registered in the US? We wanted to know, since any potential future work
would be DWR grant funded.
Thanks.
Rob
Rob Swartz, PG, CHG
Senior Planner – Groundwater Sustainability
REGIONAL WATER MANAGEMENT FOUNDATION
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION SANTA CRUZ COUNTY
WELL, CHECK OFF THAT BOX…BESS TOWN HALL MEETING WAS A SHAM
The October 27, 2025 Santa Cruz County BESS Ordinance Town Hall Meeting, organized by Supervisor Hernandez and held in the Watsonville City Community Room, was carefully orchestrated to limit the public, but allow unlimited time for the battery energy storage system (BESS) developer and benefactor, Central Coast Community Energy (3CE).
Although the public was instructed that the meeting discussion was focused only on the impending County Draft BESS Ordinance, a significant amount of time was allotted to representatives of Central Coast Community Energy (3CE) and New Leaf Energy developer Max Christian. This caused the meeting to become confusing in that the 90 Minto Road BESS Project became focal when the purpose of the meeting was to gather input on the County’s impending BESS Ordinance.
It also caused the meeting to run long, and many members of the public were not allowed to speak near the conclusion of the meeting. It should be noted that Supervisor Hernandez allowed 3CE representative Mr. Das Williams to speak during the precious-little time available for public comment, even though he had spoken extensively during the Q & A Expert Panel discussion. A second 3CE representative named Sophia, who spoke for the agency’s public relations department, was also given a full two minutes to read a prepared statement during the abbreviated public comment period.
This Town Hall Meeting was the first held since the Board approved “in concept” the County’s BESS Overlay Ordinance. There was no copy of the Draft Ordinance provided for public examination, however Planning Dept. Director Ms. Hansen’s presentation as a panelist did reveal new information that was not known:
- One of the three sites identified by County Staff on October 29, 2024 has been removed from consideration: the area adjacent to the Houts Substation near Dominican Hospital; and
- Setback distances have been increased to 1000′.
It was not made clear during the presentation exactly who is writing our County’s Draft BESS Ordinance, but from Public Records Act request responsive materials, I know that the New Leaf Energy consultants, Dudek, have been instrumental and have seemingly acted upon behalf of New Leaf Energy’s 90 Minto Road Project,
Many members of the public requested that the Board of Supervisors heed the good action taken by Solano County Planning Department and Supervisors to convene a Technical Advisory Group to assist with drafting our County’s BESS Ordinance. Battery Energy Storage Systems | Solano County, California
Many members of the public requested that the Board review the Solano County Draft BESS Ordinance as a model for public safety protection by incentivizing non-lithium BESS and best practices. I personally provided Ms. Hansen with a copy of this document, and offered it to Supervisor Hernandez.
I also provided the Recommendations that informed members of the public compiled and provided to the County’s Commission on the Environment at the first BESS Workshop in June, 2025, but that were not included in that Commission’s Summary or mentioned during Mr. Damhorst’s extensive presentation at the October 27 Town Hall Meeting, as one of the panelists.
In closing, I question how the County noticed this important Town Hall Meeting, and how will the County notice any future meetings related?
There were no press releases, and it appeared that only FaceBook and Instagram announcements were used by Supervisor Hernandez’s office. There was mention of the meeting buried in Supervisor Hernandez’s monthly newsletter, published in The Pajaronian in early October, but it did not ever appear in any internet searches.
Members of the public, once alerted to the important meeting, spent great effort to publicize the event with local radio and television stations, as well as print media.
On October 27, there were no signs at the entrance of the room where the Town Hall Meeting was held to alert and direct the public to the Watsonville Community Room, which was a different venue than had been noticed. In fact, many residents not familiar with the Watsonville City office building at 275 Main Street attempted to enter from the library and found that both the elevator and stairwell were locked.
There were no signs to provide direction about the meeting location or access. Many people left and were not able to participate.
Please contact the Board of Supervisors and demand that all future meetings and hearings will be fully noticed to the public as the County proceeds with the new rules to allow flammable, explosive BESS projects in neighborhoods.
Telephone 831-454-2200
Write the Supervisors individually to ensure they receive your message in a timely manner:
Chair Felipe Hernandez <felipe.hernandez@santacruzcountyca.gov>
Supervisor Justin Cummings <justin.cummings@santacruzcountyca.gov>
Supervisor Kim DeSerpa <kimberly.deserpa@santacruzcountyca.gov>
Supervisor Manu Koenig <manu.koenig@santacruzcountyca.gov>
Supervisor Monica Martinez <monica.martinez@santacruzcountyca.gov>
PUBLIC MEETING NOVEMBER 10 TO LEARN ABOUT BATTERY FIRES PLANNED IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
Please attend the November 10 Public Meeting at Simpkins Center (6:30pm-8pm) to learn more about the large, flammable battery energy storage system (BESS) projects planned for your neighborhood. The event is free, with a good Q & A opportunity.
Simpkins Center is located at 979 17th Avenue, Santa Cruz. Please share the information with others.
WILDFIRE SURVIVOR TO SURVIVOR
The United Policy Holders is sponsoring a Survivor to Survivor Wildfire webinar on Tuesday, November 18, 7pm Pacific Time.
What Consumer Reports has to say about the Insurance Crisis: Homeowners Are Facing an Insurance Crisis. CR Thinks These 9 Basic Rights Could Help. – United Policyholders
THANK A VETERAN FOR THEIR SERVICE…OPERATION GREENLIGHT
Next Tuesday, November 11, is Veteran’s Day. Please thank a Veteran for their service. It is interesting that the Solano County Board of Supervisors spent a great amount of time honoring the Veterans at their November 4 Board meeting. Conversely, Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors made no mention of the Veterans at their November 4 meeting, not even recognizing that the County Government Building will be illuminated with green lights next week, as part of Operation Greenlight
MAKE ONE CALL. WRITE ONE LETTER. THANK A VETERAN FOR THEIR SERVICE.
ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING AND ASK QUESTIONS THAT MATTER TO YOU.
DO ONE THING THIS WEEK AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.
Cheers,
Becky
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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 |
I feel gratitude for many of the actions people are doing to help nature around the Monterey Bay. In this column, I will extend praise for those actions to specific people but inevitably will overlook others to whom I apologize in advance…chalk it up to not knowing everything everyone is up to or just plain forgetfulness. I also realize that no one is perfect, so I focus on the specific actions that I appreciate, not the whole of what anybody or group of people does, which might include things that are, on the other hand, very bad for nature.
First Peoples
I lead with my appreciation for the First Peoples for their care for the Monterey Bay region. It is not hyperbole to say we owe everything we experience, the whole of nature, to the First People. The people who are and were indigenous to this place for thousands and thousands of generations took care of this land – every part of it. From squirrel to deer, from river to ridge, from the tallest oak to the tiniest wildflower – these things are here because of those people. The descendants of some of these people are still here, and we have much to learn from them and alongside them if we care to do so. They are still weaving together the fabric of this wonderful part of Earth.
Organic Farmers
I also appreciate organic farmers for caring for nature. By shunning the use of synthetic chemicals for pesticides and fertilizers, organic farmers are avoiding poisoning nature. These farmers forgo these things, pay fees for certification and inspection, and work harder to produce food that often times, to me, tastes better. Farming is not an easy career. I am so glad that I can afford organically grown food and that there is such an abundance produced in our region. There are lots of organic farmers that have inspired me, but I especially think of Phil Foster (Pinnacle), Ronald Donkevoort (Windmill Farms), and Jane Friedmon and Ali Edwards (the original Dirty Girl Farm), and Jerry Thomas (Thomas Family Farm) as inspirations.
Weed Warriors
I want to give thanks to the folks who have long battled invasive plants in our area. Some of the hardest work protecting nature is done by the Monterey Bay’s weed warriors. These folks often volunteer their time to battle the worst invasive species affecting natural areas. They’ve battled French broom, jubata grass, ice plant, sticky Eupatorium, and on and on. Ken Moore was the godfather of weed warriors through his founding of the Wildland Restoration Team (interview pt. 1 and pt. 2), but there have been many others. Linda Broadman worked with Ken and carries the torch through her leadership with the Habitat Restoration Team of the Santa Cruz Chapter of the California Native Plant Society. The Monterey District of State Parks deserves mention for steadfastly and regularly organizing volunteers to control invasive plants. Then, of course, there are the many volunteers who actually do much of the work…
Conservation Activists
This is where my appreciation will surely fall short as there are so many people who deserve recognition. Conservation activists often take civic engagement quite seriously. I am in awe of the many nature conservation activists who have fought and won so many important battles around the Monterey Bay. I have enjoyed learning from and sometimes working alongside Celia and Peter Scott, Bruce Bratton, Jodi Frediani, Michael Lewis and Jean Brocklebank, Corky Matthews, Gillian Greensite, Debbie and Richard Bulger, and Don Stevens. Behind and working with these good people were expert and dedicated legal support from Debbie Sivas, Jonathan Wittwer, Gary Patton, and Bill Parkin. Folks who have been affiliated with the Rural Bonny Doon Association and Friends of the North Coast also deserve recognition. Without people who are willing to donate their time, expertise, good judgement, intelligence, and skills we would not have much of the open space that species need to survive.
Tending the Fire
I have been so pleasantly surprised to see so much work with prescribed fire in our community. For me, this started years ago with Cal Fire including more recently as Angela Bernheisel led the first good fire at Soquel Demonstration State Forest. I have been thankful also to the work of the Central Coast Prescribed Burn Association, including their leaders Jared Childress and Spencer Klinefelter. State Parks’ Portia Halbert is a dynamo for putting good flames on the ground and an inspiration to so many others in moving that powerful tool forward. This prescribed fire work is tricky and takes brave people who know so much about so many sciences to get that kind of work done. Plus, they have to work well with others because it takes so many others to do that kind of work. They are restoring nature while making our communities safer. Thank you.
Politicians
For the last 35 years, there have been few politicians in our area that have openly declared nature to be central to their platforms, and I deeply appreciate those who have. Currently, there are very few indeed. State Senator John Laird seems to me to be an outstanding example of how a politician might succeed when keeping environmental conservation a publicly stated priority. Mayor of Marina, Bruce Delgado, is another example. I wish there were more than just those two, but that says something about both the need for more folks to run for office and the public’s will to prioritize such things when they vote.
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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 |
Tuesday, November 4, 2025

That’s Kathy Hochul, pictured. She is the Governor of the State of New York. Not long ago, I got a nice email from Governor Hochul, which I reproduce below. The “subject” line on the email read this way: “I’m personally asking.”
Gary, I wanted to share a bit of my personal story with you:
I grew up in Buffalo as one of six kids.
Just before I was born, my parents started married life living in a trailer park in Lackawanna, not far from the steel plant where my dad worked.
My dad worked long shifts at that steel mill. I watched my mother — who raised six kids — stretch every dollar by buying used clothes and serving fried spam sandwiches for dinner.
My parents instilled the values of hard work and grit as they worked tirelessly to provide for us.
My parents’ sense of service is what inspired me to run for office.
Gary, for far too long, I’ve watched families just like mine struggle to make ends meet while Donald Trump and his Republican loyalists prosper off the backs of families getting squeezed — and I’ve had enough. Unlike these D.C. Republicans, I’m fighting to make the lives of all New Yorkers easier — teachers, students, farmers, small business owners, and more. But I can’t continue this work without your support. So, Gary: Can I count on you to chip in $15 in the next 11 hours before midnight?
D.C. Republicans only care about their special interest donors — not us.
Meanwhile, as Governor:
? I took Trump to court over his illegal tariffs — and won twice.
? I delivered inflation refund checks to put money straight back into New Yorkers’ pockets.
? I tripled the Child Tax Credit to help families juggling childcare costs.
But now, D.C. Republicans want to buy their way into power here in our state and unravel all the work we’ve done – and I won’t stand for it.
So I’m personally asking: Will you pitch in $15 before midnight to help me compete with the millions D.C. Republicans will spend on this race, fight off their extremism, and bring home a massive victory for New Yorkers?
I read The New York Times every morning, and I follow national politics pretty closely. I tend to have a rather positive impression of Hochul, and was pleased when she endorsed Zohran Mamdani in his race to become the Mayor of New York City. I tend to have a positive impression of Mamdani, too. Let’s see what happens in today’s election!
I must say, however, that New York State and New York City politics seem a long ways away. I live in California. It’s unlikely that either Hochul or Mamdani will ever represent me. I don’t think they’re likely to move here, and while I did live in New York City for almost a year, and really wouldn’t mind living there again, I don’t think there is actually much chance of that happening.
So, why would Hochul, with whom I have had no personal contact whatsoever, send me this nice email, asking me, as a California resident and voter, to give her money to address issues of key importance to residents of New York?
Well, many readers of this blog posting know exactly why. They probably got an email from Hochul, too, and everyone reading this posting has almost certainly gotten some similar communication from other politicians, from distant parts of the country, asking for their financial support. I got the nice email because Hochul is a Democrat, and I am, too. Hochul’s “party,” in other words, is what is supposed to motivate a person like me to contribute to her, even though I will never be able to call upon her to vote or take action on anything that directly affects my life.
Our governmental system is based on the idea that “we, the people” are “running the place.” I always like to put it that way, to remind people that we are supposed to be in charge of the government, not the other way around. To the degree that we do “run the place,” though, we do so through our “representative” democracy – in other words, by way of our “elected representatives.” We vote for people who will be legally entitled to vote on measures that will directly affect our lives and future, in the states and in the cities where we live. If our elected representatives don’t do what we want them to do, we can then vote for someone else in the next election, whom we think will do a better job in voting the way we want them to. In California, we can also “recall” our elected representatives, if they’re not voting the way they promised to, or the way we want them to.
That’s a quick description of how our political system is, or was, designed to work, ably summarized by Tip O’Neill, who put it this way: “All politics is local.”
Is this still true? Maybe not! Kathy Hochul certainly doesn’t think so. In fact, as The Atlantic has recently opined, it seems that the days of Tip O’Neill have come and gone. Check out The Atlantic’s article making the claim that “No Politics Is Local.” Without a doubt, our politics, today, has absolutely become more “national” than “local,” and is more and more based on party, not on the “representative” relationship between the voter-resident and the elected official-officeholder.
While Hochul is trying to raise money from Democrats all over the country, whom she will never actually represent, our political parties, of course, are also seeking to raise money. And the parties are raising money not only from those who can be motivated to give $15, but also from those who can give $1,500 dollars, or $15,000 dollars, or even $15 million dollars. The “party” ends up “representing” those with the most dollars, while our idea of representative and democratic government is intended to produce elected officials who are beholden not to “money” but to the majority of the voters whom they “represent,” voters who can vote to elect them – or not.
If we want actually to “run the place,” we can’t let ourselves be deceived into thinking that we can be represented effectively by national political parties. We need to elect representatives who respond not to some party hierarchy, mostly funded by the “billionaire class,” as Bernie Sanders calls them. We need, each one of us, to make sure that we are truly being “represented” by persons elected by a majority of the people who live in their “district” (their congressional district, or their state Assembly or Senatorial district, or by city or county officials who live in the same city or county as those whom they represent). We need to make sure that our “representatives” truly understand that their ability to continue in office, or to advance to some “higher” office, is dependent on doing not what the party leadership wants, but what the majority who actually voted to elect that representative want.
The system just described is sometimes called “democracy,” but is better described as “self-government,” because we, ourselves, are in charge of our government when ordinary people elect “representatives” who are loyal to and dependent upon the people who can vote for them, in the geographic area in which they live.
Of course, for this system of representative democracy to work, “we, the people” need to be personally involved in the process. Shipping out our $15 contribution to some far-off politician who has the same party label that we do isn’t going to do it!
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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 |
The Lincoln Square website declares that with Trump losing the shutdown fight, he wants kids to starve anyway, so, “Donald Trump cancelled Thanksgiving.” The writer challenges Democrats to take that message and run with it, knowing it will result in a 500-page briefing book on SNAP — however, talk is better. Divulging that, ‘kids are starving‘ is much more effective than ‘the fiscal and health-impacts of the discontinuation of 7 CFR 272 programmatic efforts to ameliorate food insecurity,’ so forget the study! The GOP can taste the defeat of losing the shutdown — they lost it as soon as The Don turned the federal government into a hostage for his own vanity, and as protection from the release of the Epstein files.
“They lost it again when reality showed up with receipts: polls, long lines at food banks, missed paychecks, grounded flights, and, coming soon to an aisle near you, the SNAP freeze that wallops retailers,” asserts Lincoln Square, “this isn’t 5D chess. It’s 1D cruelty dressed up as strategy, and it’s detonating in their faces. Even little Mike Johnson, Trump’s latest meatbot who obviously finds self-abnegation and public embarrassment arousing, can’t hold it together too much longer.” New national polling shows Americans continue to blame Trump and Congress, with worsening numbers: Washington Post/ABC/Ipsos indicates voters are pointing fingers at the Trump-GOP side by a solid margin, with independents breaking against them by an almost 2-1 margin.
Michael Cohen writes on MeidasTouch, “Let’s be brutally honest: we’re not moving the needle because Democrats have suddenly figured out how to talk to voters or craft a compelling message. We’re moving it because the Republican Party has completely lost its mind. The GOP isn’t just bad at governing anymore; they’re morally bankrupt, publicly cruel, and proudly arrogant. And for once, the American people seem to be noticing.” Cohen interprets figures from the Quinniac poll that he says should both encourage and alarm Democrats, and not because the left is inspiring hope or offering visionary leadership. The fifty percent of voters who say they would rather see Democrats control the House is because they are disgusted by what the right is doing — in being “so detached from basic humanity that they think hunger, poverty, and suffering are punchlines.”
For example, Cohen refers to Louisiana’s Representative Clay Higgins, who told the 42 million citizens who are losing access to food assistance to “stop smoking crack.” Go tell your neighbor, your aging parent or grandparent that Higgins mockingly suggests their monthly stipend is some sort of unnecessary luxury with which MAGA sees no need to be concerned with. Eighteen percent of his own constituents are among his state’s one million SNAP recipients, but instead of his empathy, they get his contempt, no understanding, classed as stereotypical. The GOP has become a mockery by mocking the poor as it worships the powerful, the greedy. At Mar-a-Lago, Trump was the host of a ‘Roaring 20s’ Halloween gala, serving champagne and wagyu beef to a crowd that doesn’t care about the bottom line on their grocery bill, feasting while the country starves. Cohen writes, “The optics couldn’t be clearer — the Republican message to working Americans is simple: you’re on your own, peasants.”
Though poll numbers are shifting, Republicans being blamed for the shutdown and the economy, the cruelty and the chaos, with voters sick of it, Democrats can’t assume it’s because of their own success. With a year left until the mid-terms, complacency could doom the polls downward trajectory faster than MAGA’s corruption. Cohen believes the GOP is imploding under the weight of its own lunacy, but they’re still ruthless, still organized, and still willing to burn democracy to the ground if it means clinging to their money and power; however, Democrats aren’t winning because they’ve inspired confidence — they’re winning because Republicans are terrifying. Trump is underwater on every issue, except Israel where a fragile ceasefire is supposedly holding, but this self-proclaimed “business genius” would view customers shedding tears at the checkout counter, if only he were able to see beyond his potbelly.
Cohen concludes: “The Republican Party’s cruelty isn’t strategic anymore. It’s reflexive. It’s who they are. They can’t help themselves. When millions of Americans lose access to food, healthcare, or housing, they don’t feel shame; they feel pride. They call it ‘tough love.’ They sneer about ‘personal responsibility.’ They talk about crack pipes instead of policy, mock the hungry instead feeding them, and think empathy is weakness. If the Democrats don’t retake the House — and possibly the Senate — we’re in for another cycle of dysfunction, shutdowns, and moral decay, watching as Trump and his enablers turn hunger into a weapon and governance into performance art. Democrats need to stop assuming voters will automatically side with sanity. They won’t — not unless we remind them, daily, what’s at stake. The needle is moving only because the other side has revealed who they really are. The clock is ticking — one year to prove that America still has a conscience. The fight doesn’t end because the polls look good; it starts because they finally do.”
Conservative and former federal judge J. Michael Luttig wrote in The Atlantic, suggesting in his article that Trump has already taken steps in this second term to ensure he never relinquishes power. “With every word and deed, Trump has given Americans reason to believe that he will seek a third term, in defiance of the Constitution,” Luttig says. “It seems abundantly clear that he will hold on to the office at any cost, including America’s ruin.” The president has admitted to reporters that he would “love” to violate the Constitution by running for a third term, and Trump loyalist Steve Bannon has never let the possibility wane that there are “different alternatives” that could allow his golden idol run again. Luttig cites Trump’s use of the US military to carry out personal vendettas against Democratic-led cities, his efforts to eliminate birthright citizenship, and the conservative-majority Supreme Court giving the president its “imprimatur to continue his power grab.”
Luttig writes, “Trump has always told us exactly who he is. We have just not wanted to believe him. But we must believe him now. If America is to long endure, we must summon courage, or fearlessness, our hope, our spirited sense of invulnerability to political enthrall, and, most important, or abiding faith in the divine providence of this nation. We have been given the high charge of our forbears to ‘keep’ the republic they founded a quarter of a millennium ago. If we do not keep it now, we will surely lose it.” On MSNBC’S Morning Joe, Judge Luttig said, “Donald Trump has seized near absolute unchecked power in the United States — unchecked by either Congress, the Supreme Court, the several states, or the media itself. There’s no question at all that, as of today, Donald Trump has all the power he would ever need to run for a third term and be seated as the next president, whether or not he actually won that election.” As The Onion ‘quotes’ Trump — “I will not rule out a Third Reich.”
Concerns about the president’s health has been a big topic of late, and his claim of passing with ease his recent MRI, raises even more questions about his acuity to remain in office, with many looking for an early expiration date. Andy Borowitz has jumped into the conversation with usual satiric jab: “Donald J. Trump ordered members of his Cabinet on Wednesday to start wearing three pairs of tube socks to make his ankles appear normal. At the White House, press secretary Karoline Leavitt attempted to downplay Trump’s demand, as well as his order that Cabinet members use a hammer to create bruises on the back of their hands. ‘The press has been trafficking in stories about the President’s health which are entirely malicious and false,’ said Leavitt, black sweat socks protruding from her Ann Taylor slingbacks. According to sources, Trump has also mandated that Cabinet members periodically babble incoherently and fall down, a directive immediately embraced by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.”
Robert Reich, on his blog, writes: “Trump is incapable of allowing tensions and stresses to ease without creating new ones.” One recent example comes after his meeting with China’s Ji, and the announcement that our countries will de-escalate the trade war — all well and good, but we are now in the same place before Trump created that tension in the first place. Then, what does he do? He announces the USA will restart nuclear testing after a 30-year lull by the three major military powers. His only explanation? “Other nations” are doing so — another Trump lie to fester the chaos. His refusal to fund food stamps, to extend Obamacare subsidies, to ease up on tariffs which are killing US farmers, to end criminal prosecutions of his ‘political foes,’ to end the violence of ICE raids, or to end the bullying of our neighboring countries to the south all ramp up the stress in our lives.
Reich says we cannot ignore the news, because it plays into Trump’s hands by allowing him to cause even more mayhem if we aren’t watching — all of it matters and denial only weakens our resolve. If we fall into despair or hopelessness, Trump wins it all, becoming a self-fulfilling prophesy; we cope by becoming stronger, by coming out in record numbers as on ‘No Kings‘ day, or calling our Congress members and showing up at their town halls, by protecting the vulnerable among us, and importantly — organize for the mid-term elections. His conclusion is: “We keep the faith in America’s ideals. We stay as close as we can to our loved ones and dearest friends. And we celebrate small and noble acts of decency, wherever they occur.”
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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. |
“November”
“I know that I have died before—once in November.”
~Anne Sexton
“In November, the smell of food is different. It is an orange smell. A squash and pumpkin smell. It tastes like cinnamon and can fill up a house in the morning, can pull everyone from bed in a fog. Food is better in November than any other time of the year.”
~Cynthia Rylant
“It was one of those early November mornings that are as beautiful as any in spring. There was gold everywhere, drifts of it on the elm tree, flakes of gold under our feet, gold dust on the hedges, liquid gold in the refracted falling light.”
~Elizabeth Goudge
“Her smile adds an air of enigma to her. Like a melting cup of warm dark chocolate on a November evening.”
~Ipsita Upasana
“There comes a time when people get tired of being pushed out of the glittering sunlight of life’s July and left standing amid the piercing chill of an alpine November.”
~Martin Luther King, Jr.
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YouTube is so interesting. This channel is called “Dad Advice from Bo”. He has some 200 videos! You should go watch some. |
Direct questions and comments to webmistress@BrattonOnline.com
(Gunilla Leavitt)

October 22 – November 4, 2025
Greensite… back soon… Steinbruner… also back soon… Hayes… Seasonal Awareness… Patton… Can we keep it… Matlock… elective despotism… shutdown coup… power forgets purpose… rule of Don… amphibious strength… antifa… brunch… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… Daniel Johnston… Quotes on… “Halloween”
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Dateline: October 29, 2025
THE BUSY TIME OF THE YEAR. We are going into “the holidays”, in case you’d missed that. There’s already Christmas stuff out in the stores, and Halloween’s not even over yet! It blows me away! I am, personally, not a fan. Don’t get me wrong, I love Christmas and Yule decorations: Santas, Gingerbread Men, Lucia, Gnomes, candles, mistle toe, and snow, but for Pete’s sake – NOT IN OCTOBER!!
And then, there’s this weird paradox where things are put out so, so early, but then people tear them down before even a week has passed! What is that all about?? In Sweden, traditionally, you take down your Christmas stuff on January 6, known as “trettondedag jul” or 13th day of Christmas. This tracks, because we celebrate Christmas Eve, not Christmas Day. Anyway, on that day, you “dance out Christmas”, take down your tree, eat the gingerbread and candy you’ve had on the tree, and Christmas is now over.
Speaking of things I’m not a fan of, we go back to standard time this weekend 🙁 I don’t love the change. It always throws me off for days! More importantly though, I hate the fact that it is going to get dark an hour earlier 🙁 I wish we could stay on PDT permanently, if anything. Come to think of it, wasn’t there a proposal about that?
Oh, and speaking of proposal: DON’T FORGET TO VOTE ON PROP 50!
~Webmistress
I LIKE ME. Prime Video. Movie. (8.2 IMDb)
John Candy was one of the brightest stars born from the supernova that was SCTV (Second City Television) – Canada’s answer to Saturday Night Live in the ’70s and ’80s (if you haven’t seen it, it’s worth digging up). The cast was a who’s who of comedy royalty: Catherine O’Hara, Eugene Levy, Harold Ramis, Rick Moranis, Dave Thomas, Joe Flaherty, Martin Short, Andrea Martin, and more. And right in the middle of it all was Candy — the gentle giant with impeccable timing and a heart to match.
By all accounts, Candy was as kind and humble offscreen as he was hilarious on it. No one seems to have a bad story about him – which, in a crowd of comedians, is practically sainthood.
From “Uncle Buck” and “Planes, Trains and Automobiles” to “Spaceballs”, “JFK”, and even his lesser outings, Candy was always a joy to watch. His performances carried warmth, humanity, and that unmistakable glint of mischief.
Gone far too soon, “I Like Me” remains a sad “must-watch” — a reminder that true comedy often comes from a place of heart.
~Sarge

[Halloween Pick: WEREWOLF] AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON. Philo. Movie. (7.5 IMDb)
“Stay on the road. Keep clear of the moors.”
The story is simple: two American backpackers ignore the locals’ warnings, wander onto the moors, and one ends up cursed with full-moon-itis while the other returns as a wisecracking, rapidly decomposing ghost. What follows is a sharp blend of horror, dark humor, and some amazing makeup work.
The transformation scene – while dated by today’s standards – was groundbreaking for its time, delivering a visceral, painful metamorphosis and a final werewolf form that’s genuinely menacing. David Naughton makes for a sympathetic lycanthrope, Griffin Dunne shines as David’s decaying corpse conscience, and Jenny Agutter does her best as the nurse/love interest with questionable professional boundaries.
“An American Werewolf in London” remains the most watchable, witty, and downright entertaining werewolf film since the Golden Age.
~Sarge
OZZY: NO ESCAPE FROM NOW. Paramount+. Movie. (8.4 IMDb)
A farewell performance you can’t roll your eyes at. Plenty of rock legends have milked “one last time” for decades – but not Ozzy. His “Back to the Beginning” concert on July 5th, 2025, really was the end. He was gone by the 22nd.
“No Escape From Now” is an unvarnished chronicle of both his career and more importantly, his final, lucid march toward the inevitable. It’s less a myth-making documentary than a brutally honest goodbye, showing the man behind the metal: frail, funny, and utterly self-aware. Through it all, Sharon Osbourne is the quiet backbone – tending, cajoling, and loving the battered but unbowed Prince of Darkness as he takes his final bow.
~Sarge
GOOD BOY. In theaters. Movie (6.8 IMDb)
Full disclosure: I was ready to hate this film. Any movie that makes people cry about a dog is a very bad thing, because ALL dogs are the Best People, so that’s an automatic red flag.
But Good Boy surprised me. It’s a horror film told from the dog’s perspective – not another “evil dog” flick or a cheap scare where the pet gets offed to raise the stakes. Here, Indy the Dog follows his troubled Person into a forest full of strange smells, eerie silences, and one especially bad not-Person who clearly means trouble. Bad not-Person!
Some have called it slow, but I found it quietly tense, the way good horror should build. And yes, it includes one truly wrenching moment that no good dog should face. Still, it’s worth a watch – just make sure to hug your own dog after.
~Sarge
[Halloween Pick: VAMPIRE] THE HUNGER. Tubi. Movie. (6.6 IMDb)
Incredibly stylish Vampire film from 1983 by Tony Scott. Starring Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, and Susan Sarandon.
A young, lanky Sarandon stars as a doctor caught between two vampires — Bowie, seeking a cure for his decay, and the impossibly elegant Deneuve, the ageless predator in search of a new consort. With a soundtrack that swings from Bauhaus to Delibes and lush, stylized cinematography, The Hunger remains an elegant, sensual cornerstone of modern vampire cinema.
~Sarge
WEAPONS. In theatres, Apple TV. Movie. (7.4 IMDb)
Weapons: “Pulp Fiction” meets “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street”.
A perfect suburban horror: 17 children get up in the middle of the night, and run off into oblivion. The problem is, they’re all from the same class. The problem is, it’s the entire class…but one. The problem is, it must be the teacher.
Or is it.
The film structures its mystery through overlapping points of view, evoking Pulp Fiction’s fractured narrative. At the same time, it channels Rod Serling’s “The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street”, where paranoia and fear become more destructive than the supposed threat itself. Just when the audience feels grounded, the story pivots in an unexpected direction.
The cast is anchored by the elfin Julia Garner (Ozark), Josh Brolin (“Thanos” Avengers), and Benedict Wong (Doctor Strange). Rather than relying on gore or jump scares, the film builds an atmosphere of unease that lingers after.
It’s unsettling, thought-provoking, and worth a watch.
~Sarge
WEDNESDAY (Season 2). Netflix. Series (8 IMDb)
Learning from Season 1, they eschew romance for Wednesday and instead keep her caught between her rocky relationship with her mother (Morticia, played by Catherine Zeta-Jones) and her attempts to thwart a tragic prophecy (how very unlike Wednesday).
This season brings a slew of new guest stars, including Lady Gaga, Christopher Lloyd (he was Fester in the ’90s Addams Family movies), Steve Buscemi, and Billie Piper (pop singer and Rose from Doctor Who), along with brief surprise returns from Christina Ricci (she played Wednesday in the ’90s films) and Gwendoline Christie. Breakout new character Agnes DeMille (played by Evie Templeton – a young actress to watch for) steals many of the scenes she’s in.
Sadly, the show still features the “Outcasts” as a marginalized group, as it did in Season 1. I’ve always felt the Addams Family worked best when their innocent bewilderment at their effect on “normies” drove the humor. Still, the season offers plenty of laughs and a terrific cast to carry you through. Worth a watch.
Snap! Snap!
~Sarge
Gillian is working hard and will be back soon!
| 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. |
Becky will be back, and in the meantime:
WRITE ONE LETTER. MAKE ONE CALL. ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING OR FILM SCREENING ON HUMAN TRAFFICKING.
MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING ONE THING.
Cheers,
Becky
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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 |
The beginning of the rainy season is special and every citizen of our region can help with, and enjoy, the changes we face in this transitional time.
Mediterranean Goodness
October 15 is the date when everyone should be prepared for the first rain of the season. Statistically, it has been dry this time of year, with no rain, since April 15. The dry season is also the hottest part of the year: almost every year we have a heat wave in October. On the other hand, winter is both cold and wet. These seasonal swings are what makes Mediterranean climates unique. Only 2% of terrestrial Earth experiences this climate, which includes areas surrounding the Mediterranean Sea as well as portions of Chile, South Africa and southern Australia. Despite the tininess of this portion of the Earth, Mediterranean climate areas host 20% of the planet’s plants as well as outsized portion of wildlife species. I urge everyone to help others in our region understand how special this place is and the oversized responsibility we have when choosing to live here. A part of that burden is caring for water – the streams, rivers, and ocean that receive waves of polluted runoff at the onset of the rainy season.
Bad Changes Afoot
During the six months of no rain, toxins accumulate on our roadways, sidewalks, rooftops, and landscaping. On October 26th, one of the season’s first rains illuminated for me a part of this story.
As I walked along Water Street in Santa Cruz, I glanced down, gazing as the gutters swelled with runoff, replete with an iridescent sheen of petroleum contaminated runoff. Down into a storm drain splashed that nastiness as I wondered how the City of Santa Cruz was dealing with that. Those are City-owned streets, after all. The management of those streets is a reflection of citizen’s collective will. So, when I got home I perused the City’s stormwater management plan and found that the hydrocarbon soup I witnessed goes directly into the nearest stream or into the San Lorenzo river, and ultimately into the ocean, unfiltered. There are better ways, but this particular city hasn’t invested in filtration systems that could help.
As I got more and more soaked, I encountered a metal drain cover and found something the City does try to deal with: a pile of trash – food wrappers and other such things. The City sweeps its streets and picks up 2.6 tons of stuff every week in the dry season and 5 tons a week in the rainy season (more leaves, they say).
“All Ye beings who live in the ocean, streams, and rivers…choke on, and be sick from, our polluted effluent!” – The Will of the People as expressed by their government.
On the Brighter Side
On the other hand, as the first rains rehydrate the world around us, there are beautiful and amazing transitions. The most startling transition occurs in our coastal prairies, which go from tawny to green, getting greener by the day. In the forests, the understory vegetation hydrates more gradually but the lichens and mosses on the trunks and branches immediately perk up. Creeks and springs begin flowing. Birds sip from raindrops held on leaf tips and vines (or from mudpuddles!). A summer of accumulated dust washes from everything, brightening colors. The air…everything…smells richer and nice. We look skyward for a glimpse of a rainbow. The pattering of rain hushes harsh noises, lulls us into deeper slumbers. Beachside lagoons fill. Salmon crowd just offshore under the breaking waves, awaiting their chance to swim to their natal waters. Sea lions dart into the salmonid gatherings, feasting on those feisty, fatty fish.
Close to Home
Around our homes, we make rainy season adjustments. Everyone scurries to bring things under cover that would suffer from soaking. We put away outdoor furniture and tools. Families cherish the last of the harvest from summer gardens – from flowers to tomatoes. It will be many months before they experience them again. Gardeners cover beds with straw and plant winter cover crops. Gutters that should have been cleaned for fire season are re-checked. Raingardens are rejuvenated from their summer rest. Bare ground anywhere is covered lest precious soil washes away: mulch is appreciated. We cover tires, bins, and bottles that could pool rain lest fetid water accumulates, attracting mosquitoes or drowning little innocent animals.
Chipping In
As the newfound season’s water moves things around, we can do our part. For a short while, before the weeds hide it…trash is easy to spot and nab. This time of year, when I return home, I head directly to the trash bin to empty both pockets: beer caps, wrappers, shards of plastic, bits of degraded string. If we all did a little, it would be a more beautiful place. That trash ends up in the bellies of critters, making them sick, but we can help.
Must we wait for the municipality to clear off those drain covers? There’s an opportunity to collect leaves for mulch and trash for the dump before it gets washed to sea and into the mouths of sea turtles.
Vote Right
In preparing this article, I did a quick search of two City Councils to see how we are doing elevating anyone who publicly proclaims giving a wit about clean water. As expected, that issue is such a dud that no one includes it in their public statements. Do we not care about clean water? If we do, political candidates certainly don’t know it.
Take a moment to look at street runoff and imagine where it is going. Do you not want clean rivers and streams? Do we think that polluted runoff goes ‘away’ somewhere that doesn’t mattter? Here is a series of links to reflect on, to consider why cleaning up our water ways isn’t on any politicians list of priorities: Candidate statements from Scotts Valley say nothing about clean water! (Sorry Carbonera Creek!). And, in the Santa Cruz City Council: Shebreh nothing about water quality (Sorry Moore Creek and Antonelli Pond!); Gabriela also nothing (sorry Branciforte Creek!); Sonja nothing (Sorry Arana Gulch, Yacht Harbor, and Seabright Beach); Scott nothing, too, (Sorry Neary Lagoon Creek!); Susie nope, nothing (Sorry San Lorenzo River and Cowell’s Beach!); Renee nothing at all (Sorry Moore Creek and so many Westside surf breaks!).
Anyone recall voting in favor of taxing yourselves to solve water quality issues like these? Measure E brings in a little less than $1 million a year to address Santa Cruz’ water pollution issues. The last report on the City’s website is 5 years old, but still interesting to see where the money went. Measure Q across Santa Cruz County is also supposed to address water quality – can’t wait to see how those funds are spent to address water quality! I’m sure that attention from any member of the public on the spending from those two tax measures could greatly assist in assuring that they are used well. Can you help?
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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 |
Monday, October 27, 2025

That’s Peggy Noonan, pictured. She is currently best known, I think, as a columnist for The Wall Street Journal. Click the link to her name for more information about her background and accomplishments.
The title affixed to Noonan’s recent column, published in the Saturday/Sunday, October 25-26 edition of The Journal, referenced one of the most famous observations of Benjamin Franklin. Here is the title to Noonan’s column:
A Republic, But Can We Keep It?
Franklin, when responding to a question about whether our 1787 Constitutional Convention had provided the nation with a monarchy, or with a republic, told his interrogator, Elizabeth Willing Powel, that the Constitution provided us with “a republic, if you can keep it.” Note the “you.” Franklin was properly letting Powel, and all of us, know that what kind of government we have will depend upon our own, personal, involvement, and our own, personal, actions.
Noonan discussed the destruction of the East Wing of the White House in her column, pretty much bemoaning its loss along the lines of my own observations, as posted in my blog entry published on October 24th. Noonan is a Republican, and was a speechwriter for former president Ronald Reagan. Patti Davis, the daughter of former president Reagan, has also lamented what our current president has done, unilaterally, to destroy a beloved part of one of our nation’s most historic buildings, a building that belongs to us all.
I don’t like to highlight the “partisan” nature of our government, because it is pretty easy to start thinking that a representative’s party affiliation is more important than the representative’s personal qualities, and more important than his personal relationship to those who can vote that representative in or out of office. I do not think that a government based on “party” is kind of government we either want or need, and I also think that it is particularly dangerous when our elected “representatives” begin to believe that their primary allegiance is to the “party” to which they belong, and not to the people who elected them, and who have the right to, and might, cast them out of office. An elected representative’s primary allegiance must always be to those whom they (are supposed to) “represent.”
The only real solution to the abuses of the Trump presidency must come either from the replacement of Republicans in the House of Representatives with person allied with the Democratic Party (which is how things are most commonly portrayed in the press, reflecting what I think is a mistaken idea that “party” is the key to our government), or by the effective use of the power of the people, in the districts in which they live, making current Republican (and other) officeholders pay attention to what their constituents actually want and need (affordable medical care, as one example).
The current House Majority Leader and Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, has been helping to protect the president from actions by the people, by keeping the House of Representatives shut down. But, to be honest, are the people represented by Republican members of the House ready to throw those representatives out if they keep allowing our current president and his accomplices in the Executive Branch to do the opposite of what they want and need (providing affordable medical care, as one example)?
I hope the answer to that last quetion is, “yes,” because if we want to “keep” a government that allows us – “we, the people” – to be in charge, we need to demand, and insist, that our elected “representatives” actually represent what we want and need. Allegience by our elected representatives to the people they represent is what our system depends upon. Let us hope that those people who are currently represented by those supporting the president on the basis of “party” loyalty come to understand that the president is not their boss, and that our elected representatives in Congress are actually the boss of the president (the boss of the president on behalf of the people who elected those representatives to “represent” them).
I do not believe for a moment that a majority of those citizens who elected each and every member of the Republican Party in the Congress really, in every case, want their representatives to cut back their health care benefits, and to allow the current president to bulldoze down the White House for a ballroom, without debate, and without an opportunity of the people to be heard.
Am I wrong about that? Well, as Benjamin Franklin let us know how to answer the question. We have a “republic,” not a “monarchy,” if WE can keep it.
It’s up to us, and if we don’t reallocate how we spend our time, and start taking back our own power over the representatives who are supposed to represent US (“US,” and not the “party” or the “party leader”), then we will end up with what amounts to a modern day “monarchy.”
Take it from Ben! That “No Kings” slogan would make sense to him!
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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 |
[this week]
Thom Hartmann begins his piece on The Hartmann Report by quoting Thomas Jefferson’s commentary in the Federalist Papers #48: “All the powers of government, legislative, executive, and judiciary, result to the legislative body. The concentrating of these in the same hands, is precisely the definition of despotic government. An ELECTIVE DESPOTISM was not the government we fought for; but one…in which the powers of government should be so divided and balanced among several bodies of magistracy, as that no one could transcend their legal limits, without being effectually checked and restrained by others.”
Hartmann says it is presumed that on orders from President Trump, House Speaker Johnson has shut down the House of Representatives in order for Trump to do whatever he wishes “without being effectually checked and restrained by others.” For the moment he is the King of America — it’s the coup that finally worked, writes Hartmann, even though it is Congress‘ duty to prevent seizure of such power. The Founders agreed upon this principle as shown in their writings, before and after inserting it into the Constitution itself. By demolishing the East Wing of the White House, a replica of Vladimir Putin’s Winter Palace Grand Throne Room, The Donald can entertain, and coerce, his rich hangers-on into fundraising for his personal and family projects, all at the expense of the American taxpayer. Donate to the Trumps, receive special favors, and let the hoi-polloi foot the bill, that’s the ticket!
As politico James Carville claimed, “I have to get sixteen permits before I can remodel my bathroom!” — but Trump barged ahead with his destruction on the White House, never submitting plans to the National Planning Commission or bothering to get permission from the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Why? Loopholes in the law, and because nobody in government ever imagined a leader would be demented enough to undertake such a self-aggrandizing project, so why ban such a far-fetched idea through legislation? Thomas Jefferson’s idea of “being effectually checked and restrained by others” would have been appropriate and legal, so where were the others? Also, no voices are being raised concerning Trump’s “lawless murders” as Columbia’s president is calling the destruction of boats near his country’s shores. And for that matter, what of the imposition of tariffs violate Article 1 of the Constitution, or the brutality and warrantless arrests by ICE and the secret police!
But, here we are cruising into an indeterminate future as Congress vacations, with no congressional oversight of the president’s newly conferred dictatorial powers. Speaker Johnson is keeping the House in recess during the government shutdown, refusing to hold even pro forma sessions, which is keeping newly elected member Grijalva from being seated. Hartmann says, “This is against the law — the supreme law — of the land. There is no joint resolution with the Senate allowing for a recess longer than three days, nor has the Senate passed such a standalone resolution. As the Constitution reads: ‘Neither House, during the Session of Congress, shall, without the Consent of the other, adjourn for more than three days, nor to any other Place than that in which the two Houses shall be sitting.'” Such lengthy suspensions have never occurred before, even during the Civil War or WWII. “What’s the emergency that’s greater than the War of 1812, WWI, 9/11, or any other national crisis?,” asks Hartmann.
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[last week]
One of the ‘No Kings‘ protesters last Saturday carried a sign that read, ‘If no mentally disturbed person should have an assault weapon, should a mentally ill president have an army?‘ Reasonable question, and by extension it might have read ‘…a navy?‘ or ‘…an air force?‘ As a response to the more than 2700 planned ‘No Kings’ events, President Trump in a show of strength and dominance toward the organizers, and in particular toward the people of California — to include Governor Newsom — he scheduled a live-fire military demonstration at the US Marine Corps’ Camp Pendleton. To ‘celebrate‘ the 250th anniversary of the Corps, the live ammunition exercise was to fire land-based artillery pieces over Interstate 5 into impact areas, claiming it to be “an established and safe practice.” This massive Marine exercise featured fighter jet flyovers, amphibious ships, explosions in a simulated village and Navy SEALS dropping into the Pacific Ocean from helicopters. Vice President Vance contended that the administration was focused on supporting Marines and removing “woke” priorities that “have weakened the US armed forces.” He added, “When officials try to shift focus to mandating diversity quotas, or they try to inject partisan politics into the American armed forces, they impede the Marine Corps’ ability to do its best work.”
Governor Newsom confirmed that the live artillery would be fired over major roadways in Southern California, calling it “reckless,” “disrespectful,” and “beneath the office of the presidency.” The event, entitled “America’s Marines 250: From Sea to Shore — A Review of Amphibious Strength,” forced the California Highway Patrol to close a 17-mile stretch of Interstate 5 from 11 AM to 3 PM during the demonstration, with electronic signage reading “Overhead fire in progress” to inform drivers. San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond, a Republican, posted on social media: “This morning’s sudden freeway shutdown shows exactly what’s wrong with politics. No accountability, no planning — just finger-pointing while everyday people sit in traffic, miss work, and watch their plans fall apart.” The Orange County Republican Party posted on X: “Newsom shut down the 5 today to cause chaos around a Marine Corps celebration. What a jerk.” Nevertheless, safety assurances aside, a California Highway Patrol car reportedly was hit by shrapnel during the ‘Review of Amphibious Strength’. The CHP immediately notified Marine authorities who terminated the exercise after the fired shell detonated prematurely over the freeway.
Ben Meiselas on MeidasTouch calls Trump’s move fascism, and “what we are rallying against today.” Many see the live-ammunition exercise as a continuation of Trump’s June harassment in deploying the National Guard and US Marines into Los Angeles to quell small disturbances that Governor Newsom and local officials claim could have been easily handled by city and state law enforcement. Meiselas writes, “This ‘No Kings’ moment is bigger than Trump’s corruption. It’s about the spirit of a people refusing to surrender democracy to chaos and cruelty. As Governor Newsom said, ‘No Kings’ is a declaration of independence against tyranny…people are waking up to the rule of law increasingly appearing to be the rule of Don.'” Meiselas concludes, “That awakening is visible in every city where Americans are marching today. They are standing shoulder to shoulder, not as partisans but as citizens reclaiming their power. Trump can fire missiles, peddle lies, or try to silence dissent, but he cannot stop the truth. And the truth is this: the people of the United States are done kneeling before a would-be king. This is the day he feared most. This is the day America stood up and said, once again, no kings.”
In the weeks leading up to ‘No Kings,’ Trump and his gangsters had characterized the movement as radically anti-American, and potentially subversive. House Speaker Mike Johnson jumped onboard, calling it the ‘Hate America‘ rally, with “all the Marxists, antifas, Black Lives Matter remnants, pro-Hamas Democrats — all gathering to scream and wail.” White House press secretary KKKaroline Leavitt declared the Democratic Party’s “main constituency is made up of Hamas terrorists, illegal aliens and violent criminals. That is who the Democrat Party is catering to.” This alarmist hyperbole coming from the administration is signaling that a government crackdown is imminent according to The Wall Street Journal and Reuters, as MAGA readies plans to undercut funding of liberal organizations. The WSJ sees the administration “preparing sweeping changes” at the IRS, allowing “the agency to pursue criminal inquiries of left-leaning groups more easily.” And, Reuters made note of investigations into “what the administration labels ‘domestic terror networks’, which includes non-profits and educational institutions.”
Trump has already initiated the ‘domestic terror‘ effort by designating ‘antifa‘ a ‘domestic terror organization‘ with issuance of an executive order, calling all appropriate agencies to “investigate, disrupt, and dismantle any and all illegal operations.” The president has made ‘antifa’, a loosely organized enterprise of anti-fascists, into a structured and formidable force to be reckoned with, and his call for action is likely to be a pretext for repression of legitimate political opposition on a broader scale.
So, while the organizers of ‘No Kings” deem it a huge success, with an estimated 7 million demonstrators nationwide protesting against Trump and his un-Americanism, the Daily Dose of Democracy site says, “In the ultimate pronouncement that ‘subtlety is dead,’ Donald Trump responded to the 7 million Americans who marched against him yesterday by posting an AI video of himself wearing a crown, flying a fighter jet, and literally [crapping] on America. Way to tell us how you feel, Donny! While this is a disgusting and immensely childish response, it proves that the rallies worked — Trump is shook by the outpouring of public fury and knows now just how many people oppose him and his despotic regime.” Poet Amanda Gorman has it right in her poem: “There is always light, if only we’re brave enough to see it. If only we are brave enough to be it.”
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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. |
“Halloween”
“Some people are born for Halloween, and some are just counting the days until Christmas.”
~Stephen Graham Jones
“A grandmother pretends she doesn’t know who you are on Halloween.”
~Erma Bombeck
“Halloween isn’t the only time for ghosts and ghost stories. In Victorian Britain, spooky winter’s tales were part of the Christmas season, often told after dinner, over port or coffee.”
~Michael Dirda
“Acting is like a Halloween mask that you put on.”
~River Phoenix
“No trick or treaters came to my house for Halloween. For some reason, people around here are scared of me.”
~Glenn Danzig
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Watch a movie on YouTube, for free. Here’s a documentary about Daniel Johnston. Enjoy! |
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