March 19 – 25, 2025

Highlights this week:

Greensite… on the Meder St. development… Steinbruner… Batteries, fire map, and private well owners… Hayes… We Are One… Patton… Direct Action On The “Climate Crisis”… Matlock… …tireless…nothing in return…cuz u trash… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… Salut Salon … Quotes on… “Timelines”

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OFFICIAL OPENING OF OUR MUNICIPAL WHARF. This was in 1918; little did these folks know how we would beautify our wharf with our fabulous commercial enterprises. Do note the northern angle the wharf takes…that’s what saved it from the monstrous waves and storms over all these decades (over a century), until the recent debacle. Hmmm, I wonder what changed…

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email webmistress@brattononline.com

Dateline: March 19, 2025

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WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE THING HERE IN PARADISE? I often tell people, “Well, I do live in Paradise!” when they complain about, for example, their winter weather and mention how good I have it. I’ve been here since 1996, and I do love it. I googled “Santa Cruz” for some writing inspo, and the things that came up were mixed, to say the least! There were lots of articles about it being “the most expensive rental market in the US”, and lots of “5 things to do in Santa Cruz!”, which covered stuff like miles-long beaches and trails, the Boardwalk, and other “touristy” things.

My best friend from high school back home in Sweden, whom I hadn’t seen in 29 years(!!!) was recently here for a visit with my other friend from Sweden who lives in Portland. We had 3 glorious days of 3 BFFs hanging out being tourists, and I brought them to Roaring Camp, the Mystery Spot, a walk on West Cliff, a soak at Well Within, and a Sin Sisters Burlesque show at Kuumbwa Jazz Center. It felt like the right blend of relaxing, yet packed few days, and as often when you show someone new around your town, I got a better appreciation of it myself. I’m wondering what places you would bring someone to? What absolute must-sees did I miss? If you are so inclined, feel free to email me about it at webmistress@BrattonOnline.com 🙂

This has been part of my attempted self-care regimen that involves staying positive despite currently inhabiting the darkest possible timeline… do also feel free to share your tips and tricks! I now return you to your regularly scheduled programming…

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THE ELECTRIC STATE. Netflix Movie (6 IMDb) ***- This has the energy of ’80s adventure films, like Batteries Not Included and War Games, with a touch of Fallout retro-futurism. Here’s the deal: In the ’50s, Walt Disney sparked a robot boom, leading to a robot rebellion in the ’90s. After the war, robots were confined to a walled-off Midwest wasteland. Michelle (Millie Bobby Brown) discovers her genius brother, supposedly dead, stuck in a robot shell and searching for a mysterious doctor. Keats (Chris Pratt) and his robot sidekick help her break into the wasteland. They’re pursued by a robot exterminator (Giancarlo Esposito) working for a tech billionaire, Skate (Stanley Tucci), who wants Michelle’s brother. Fun, nostalgic, and spot-on art direction. Worth a watch. ~Sarge

ADOLESCENCE. Netflix Series (8.4 IMDb) *** I was going to start off saying this was uninspired in its execution, till I saw a shot fly up from one character, fly several blocks away, drop down to where another character is getting out of a car, and hold a steady close up – all in one shot. A British crime drama about the impact of incel politics on pre-sexual children. Very saddening. Worth a watch. ~Sarge

[Mea culpa! I overwrote the review below with a different one last week, so sorry! Thanks to a reader for the email letting me know! Here’s the correct one: ~Webmistress]

A COMPLETE UNKNOWN. AppleTV, PrimeTV. Movie (7.4 IMDb) ***- I don’t know how accurate this is as a depiction of young Bob Dylan (Timothee Chalamet), but it does make me yearn for those days as an adult (I wouldn’t be released till ’63). The film basically encapsulates Dylan from ’61 to ’65, following his relationships, and rise in the folk community, and his troubled transition to something more. Ed Norton as the supportive and eventally outgrown Pete Seeger, Elle Fanning as Dylan’s constantly trying-to-stay-in-his-focus lover Sylvie Russo/Suze Rotolo, and Monica Barbaro as the legendary sometime lover/sometime music partner Joan Baez. Worth a watch.~Sarge

THE BRUTALIST. PrimeTV. Movie (7.5 IMDb) *** I thought the title was JUST a reference to the Brutalist Movement in art and architecture. Oh how wrong I was. A brutal story about love, separation, and power. Adrien Brody is gut-wrenching in his performance as a holocaust survivor, drug addict, and brutalist architect. It’s like dragging yourself along the edge of a straight razor – the further forward you go, the deeper it cuts. Painful, but worth a watch. Interesting note – while Brody’s character is fictional, the name Lazlo Toth (and variants) is out there, most notable to me, it was the name of the guy who vandalized La Pieta, and it was the pen-name of Don Novello (Reverend Guido Sarducci on old SNL) when writing his “Lazlo Letters”. ~Sarge

DAREDEVIL. Disney+. Series (8.6 IMDb) *** The one that started the Netflix/Marvel cavalcade. Charlie Cox and Vincent D’Onofrio bring depth and humor/tragedy to the David and Goliath of New York. Matt Murdoch/Daredevil (Cox), an attorney who was struck blind as a youth, develops the ability to “see” through the use of organic sonar, and uses that ability (along with rigorous martial arts training) to take on the criminal denizens of the shadowy streets. Wilson Fisk/Kingpin (D’Onofrio), a man of outsized power (figuratively and literally) with rage issues, but also a nuanced romantic side, finds his criminal enterprises falling into the “sights” of the blind kid from Hell’s Kitchen. Subsequent stories dealt with other comic characters, Elektra and The Punisher. Amazing fight choreography (not just martial arts, but the fluidity of the staging) if you’re into that – not for the faint of heart. Now on Disney. ~Sarge

DAREDEVIL – BORN AGAIN. Disney+. Series (9 IMDb) *** For anyone thinking that Daredevil would lose its edge being on Disney, think again. The original cast of Netflix’s Daredevil are back for this sequel from Disney. After a journey through various other shows (the Defenders, Hawkeye, Echo, and She Hulk) Cox and D’Onofrio are back. In the first two episodes we see Matt, in the wake of a tragedy, hang up the horns, and Fisk coming out of rehabilitation after getting shot in the face by Echo (see: “Hawkeye” and “Echo”). Matt returns to lawyering, and Fisk … has a vision for a better New York, as Mayor. Just a wee tad chilling, given the current climate. First two episodes on Disney right now – new episodes every Tuesday. ~Sarge

COMPANION. Apple TV, Fandango, PrimeTV. Movie (7.1 IMDb) *** Iris (Sophie Thatcher) and Josh (Jack Quaid) traveling to a friend’s country home for a party where the fact that one of the guests is an android “companion” is the LEAST surprising thing that will be discovered. Some distressingly recognizable relationship dynamics are revealed and explored. Also some violence, and a sexual assault, for those who might be triggered. Well made for a light budget, with some nuanced performances. For those troubled by AI – you might want to start saying “please and thank you” to Alexa and Siri. ~Sarge

MOANA 2. Apple TV, Fandango, PrimeTV, YouTube, Disney+. Series (6.8 IMDb) ** Moana, after reconnecting her people with their seafaring heritage, discovers the ocean is empty. She’s called back by the Gods to face a greedy deity who sunk a cornerstone island, once the link between all Oceania’s seafaring people. Unfortunately, it’s a step down from the original. “Get Lost,” sung by the mid-film villain Matangi, lacks the charm of “Shiny,” and Maui feels like a shadow of his former self. Moana’s crew is a completely superfluous random mix—grumpy farmer, Maui fanboy, manic tech girl, and another comic relief animal (who’s outshone by HeiHei, the chicken). Only the mute rabid coconut warrior, Kotu, adds any value. Much like the first film, the Big Bad is just an angry, personality-less force, this time throwing lightning instead of fireballs. While it’ll entertain kids, there’s little for the parents this time around. Comes to Disney+ March 12th. ~Sarge

HEART EYES. In theaters. Movie (6.6 IMDb) **- A meet-cute rom-com – with a slasher! Odd mix, but it seems to be director Josh Ruben’s forte. Ad designer Ally (Olivia Holt) accidently presents a “historic tracic lovers” motif JUST as notorious serial killer, Heart Eyes, who murders romantic couples on Valentine’s Day, resurfaces. She teams up with “ad fixer” freelancer Jay (Mason Gooding) in a “Desk Set” will-they won’t-they team-up, until an unexpected kiss puts them in the sights of Heart Eyes. The slashing is moderately creative, the chemistry fairly good, but it just lacks a real personality for Heart Eyes (which you need for a franchise killer). Not for the timid, but not epic gorefest either. On par with Christopher Landon’s 2020 body-swap horror/comedy “Freaky” (ala Freaky Friday – only instead of mother/daughter, it’s slasher/cheerleader). ~Sarge

THE BREAKTHROUGH. Netflix. Series (7.1 IMDb) **- Thanks to Netflix’s voracious appetite for new material, we’ve had a lot of opportunity to watch movies and tv from all over the place. I’ve been noticing an alarming number of bleak crime dramas from Sweden – one of them was “The Breakthrough”, a police procedural based on a real-life 16 year murder investigation. Though the first 3 episodes were a trifle slow, the final episode finally brings it all together. Peter Eggers stars as a police detective who does a LOT of speedwalking while beating his heart out against an impossible case. ~Sarge

NOSFERATU (2024). Prime. Movie (7.4 IMDb) ***- A darkly delightful remake of F.W. Murnau’s 1922 original “Nosferatu” (itself, an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula”). The story points match, down to the use of shadows as characters. The performances by Depp, Hoult, and Skarsgård breathe new life into the story, as do the visual textures of the cinematography and costume design (even the choice of using Dacian – a long dead language from central Europe – for Orlok’s dialogue). Slowly menacing in its pacing, this film builds its mood in a way that most modern horror films fail to. ~Sarge

ERASERHEAD. Max. Movie (7.3 IMDb) **** In honor of the passing of one of the most individual visions in the film industry, David Lynch, I went back and revisited “Eraserhead” for the first time in 40 years. It would become a cult hit during the late 70’s-80’s. There was nothing like it at the time, with a Buñuel level of slow-paced uncomfortable surrealism, and a story that can’t easily be described. As such, it tends to be shoehorned into the genre of horror, which, on a certain level, is fair, but it is so much more. It will be a slog for the short attention-span set, but worth every unsettling moment. Starring Jack Nance, one of Lynch’s personal ensemble favorites. ~Sarge

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March 17, 2025

Turning a Silk Purse

This sweet piece of open space land is at 422 and 430 Meder St., opposite the Jewish Cemetery. It is the site of a proposed development project for ninety-seven townhouses. The builder is KB Home, a company that “builds homes primarily for first-time home buyers” according to Wikipedia. A meeting was held by the city on March 10, for the public to give opinions and ask questions on the design and pre-application review of the project. I, along with over ninety others, attended the virtual community meeting. The overwhelming sentiment from those who spoke or wrote comments was one of dismay; not for the fact that the land was finally being built on, but for the density of the development; ninety-seven three-story townhouses on a six and a half-acre site.

First some history. I’m acquainted with the long-time owner of this property. Sometime in the late 1980’s or early 1990’s I recall his frustration with the city over his trying to develop the property for first-time, single-family home buyers. The proposed houses, probably twenty-five in all – the allowed zoning in this R1-10 zoned district – were to be modest in scale and affordable to first-time homebuyers. The city pushed back hard, they wanted density, he didn’t. Finally, he gave up, withdrew the application and the land has remained a horse paddock ever since, until recently.

This newly proposed KB Home project comes in at fifteen units per acre, compared with approximately four units per acre according to R1-10 zoning. It includes the state’s density bonus, which raises the allowed number of units from ten to fifteen per acre. I have searched the city’s Municipal Code and General Plan but can find no entry for such a significant change to the stated zoning for R1-10, even with the addition of state-mandated density bonus and allowed ADU’s. This project is listed as a Medium-density project which I thought is disallowed in an R1 zone. I have emailed the project planner and hope to get more clarity by next issue and will correct or question, depending on the city’s response.

Leaving aside the zoning question for now, what else did we learn about this project? The representative from KB Home explained the townhouses are intended for families. Each is four bedrooms with three and a half baths. This aroused my skepticism. If KB Home is known for building for first-time home buyers, why would each townhouse have the same number of bedrooms? And why four bedrooms? Not suitable for most first-time homebuyers looking for affordable housing, but ideal for students.

After their first year on campus, students look for off-campus rental housing, usually a house where they share bedrooms and living space. Four bedrooms and almost as many bathrooms is an ideal layout for students. Given the proximity to UCSC with its lack of sufficient housing for its growing student body, a savvy investor would snap up these ninety-seven townhouses to rent to students. My hunch grew stronger with a look at the project plans, which show the ninety-seven townhouses arranged in barrack-like rows. If you were designing townhouses for young families, you would consider arranging them in clusters around a safe play space for children. There is no play space anywhere in the project plans. Granted this was an initial design and could change but it was presumably prepared to appeal to the public. Nothing in the project or the design appealed to the vast majority who expressed opinions.

When asked what the price range was to be for a townhouse, the representative said, “we don’t have a price range yet.” That is hard to believe. I can’t imagine securing funding without some specifics on rate of return. There were many concerns expressed; increased traffic at nearby, already dangerous intersections, impact on the wide range of wildlife that live on or traverse the property, impact on the water table, protection for the creek and a consensus that the scale was out of all proportion to the area. One commenter with a mastery of the English language called it an “aesthetic crime!”

With respect to the question of affordability, the 15% of units earmarked as “affordable” are for those earning the moderate rate or 120% of the Area Median Income (AMI). The KB Home representative mentioned teachers and public employees as examples. However, those two categories of workers are in the current Low-Income category given the escalating rate of AMI in the city due to the influx of high-income professional workers and the exodus of low-income service workers. It’s past time to have a public dialogue on the use and misuse of these income categories and assess who they are helping and who they are not helping.

To be continued.

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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WHAT WILL PRIVATE WELL OWNERS PAY?
The MidCounty Groundwater Agency called a meeting for private well owners on St. Patrick’s Day to present a plan for a new tax on parcels and wells in order to fund the Agency’s $650,000 anticipated cost for compliance with the State mandates. I was very happy to see the large meeting room at Simpkins Swim Center full and overflowing and that it was a presentation with question and answer format, rather than a noisy open house social hour.

In general , people are against having to pay anything to the Agency because they are already paying to maintain their wells, pay the high cost of electricity to pump their water, and argued that septic recharge should be considered as a benefit to the groundwater recharge efforts of the region.

The matter will NOT be put to a vote of the property owners, who would be asked to pay a parcel tax plus a fee based on how much water they pump. The consultant estimated there are 1,900 parcels that could be assessed $20-$45 each, in addition to the water use tax. One fellow did the math and objected that the amount for the parcel tax alone would be well over the 10% the consultant’s pie chart showed in the presentation that would be needed from the private well owners to “pay their share”.

The MidCounty Groundwater Agency Board meets Thursday, March 19 at 6pm in the Capitola Library. People need to show up and speak up. Recent News | Santa Cruz Mid-County Groundwater Agency

ANOTHER IMPORTANT COUNTY CITIZEN’S ADVISORY COMMISSION TO BITE THE DUST?
I attended the County Housing Advisory Commission meeting on Wednesday, March 18. It was the first time the Planning Dept. staff had not cancelled the meeting in a year. How can that be when housing issues are so critical? The main topic on the Commission agenda was to provide comment on what the Board should regarding whether their advisory body stays intact or gets the ax, as several others have experienced.

Seasoned and knowledgeable Commissioners presented excellent comment to support their continued regular gathering to review housing policy and make recommendations to the Board that has appointed them. Appointing “stakeholders” without regard to countywide representation will not necessarily provide a balanced analysis of any policy the Planning Dept. or Board wants to have the Commission weigh in on for the record.

The thrust of all this has come from a study the County and City of Santa Cruz did to analyze composition of commissions based on ethnicity and socio-economic status. They also want more youth to serve on commissions, so now offer a $75/meeting stipend, despite claiming the reason the number of commission meetings would have to be dropped due to the staffing costs.

Hmmm….

The staff from the County Administrative Office, who is clearly pushing this agenda, said he appreciated the comments of the Housing Advisory Commissioners, but had his mind made up in what he plans to recommend to the Board of Supervisors in the near future. I’ll bet you can guess what that means….

PUBLIC MEETING ABOUT THE LARGE AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROPOSED FOR 41ST & SOQUEL DRIVE
This location was at one time going to be another car sales lot, but the residents in Soquel launched a legal challenge because the Sustainable Santa Cruz County Plan had designated it for housing. That group won. Now, the lot where King’s Paint & Paper is proposed for a large affordable housing project. Come learn more about that on Thursday, March 27, 6pm-7:30pm in the Simpkins Swim Center’s Live Oak Community Room (979 17th Avenue). Light refreshments will be available, as well as Spanish translation. Children welcome.

DID YOU GET NOTIFICATION OF CPUC LANDLINE HEARINGS?
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) will again be hearing pleadings from telephone service companies to eliminate them as Carrier of Last Resort (COLR), in yet another attempt to drop landline telephone service that is vital for rural areas when the electricity goes out, and there is no cell phone service.

The CPUC directed these telephone carriers to notify all their customers of the public hearings scheduled for April on the matter. Did you receive that notice? I have not, and neither have many people who depend on reliable landline phone service.

Here is what the CPUC ordered AT&T and others to do.

The carriers listed above are directed to:

  • Include notice of the PPHs as a written insert with a mailed bill to customers that currently receive bills via the United States Postal Service. The notice shall state the dates and times of the PPHs, and other information contained in Attachment A. The carriers listed above shall provide a draft notice to the Public Advisor’s Office within 10 days of the issuance of this ruling, and the Public Advisor’s Office may modify the draft notice;
  • Send an e-mail message to all customers that elect to receive their bills via e-mail. The subject line of the e-mail must clearly notify the recipient that the PPHs will be held in this proceeding and include other information contained in Attachment A. The carriers listed above shall provide a draft notice to the Public Advisor’s Office within 10 days of the issuance of this ruling, and the Public Advisor’s Office may modify the draft notice;
  • Send a text message to all customers that elect to receive their bills via text. The carriers listed above shall provide a draft notice to the Public Advisor’s Office within 10 days of the issuance of this ruling, and the Public Advisor’s Office may modify the draft notice;
  • Publicize the PPHs on all social media platforms used by the companies listed above; and
  • Post notice of the PPHs on the companies’ website in a prominent location so that customers can easily access the notice. By no later than March 27, 2025, each carrier or provider listed above shall file a letter with the Public Advisor’s Office verifying that it has complied with all directives set forth above and attaching a copy of the notice for each communication method. For each communication method described above, the letter shall state the dates the carrier sent the notice to customers, and the approximate number of customers notification.

I looked on AT&T’s website and found nothing, other than the notice of the hearings on this matter held last year!

CPUC APPROVES BATTERY ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEM ORDER
In case you have not yet heard, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) approved an update to Order 167 on March 13, relating to safety of battery energy storage system (BESS) safety policy and procedures. It became effective immediately.

The new regulation requires battery energy storage system (BESS) owners and operators to:

  1. implement the Senate Bill (SB) 1383 (Hueso, 2022) mandate to establish standards for the maintenance and operation of Energy Storage Systems;
  2. apply SB 38 (Laird, 2023) requirements for Emergency Response and Emergency Action Plans to Energy Storage System Owners;
  3. require Generating Asset Owners to coordinate with local authorities in developing their emergency plans;
  4. establish Logbook Standards for Energy Storage Systems and Renewable Generating Assets and revise Logbook Standards for each Generating Asset;
  5. modify Maintenance and Operation Standards for Generating Assets;
  6. add provisions to enhance safety and effectiveness of Generating Assets and Energy Storage Systems operation and maintenance;
  7. update procedures, references, and definitions;
  8. remove obsolete references and add relevant language; and
  9. update applicable industry codes, standards, and organizations.

SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS:

  • Will improve the safety and reliability of California electric generation facilities and energy storage facilities.

CPUC AUTHORIZES LARGE POWER COMPANIES TO PAY THE SIERRA CLUB FOR THEIR HELP
Also on the March 13 CPUC docket was approval to have ratepayers reimburse the Sierra Club for their help in some decision-making. Called “Intervenor Compensation”, the Sierra Club got paid $20,232.50 for their help. They had requested more. It was a consent agenda item…considered non-controversial. Should the ratepayers have to fund private groups who act as “Intervenors”? What do you think? Aren’t our power bills high enough?

R.20-05-003
Order Instituting Rulemaking to Continue Electric Integrated Resource Planning and Related Procurement Processes.

PROPOSED OUTCOME:

  • Awards Sierra Club $20,232.50 for substantial contribution to Decision (D.) 24-08- 064. D.24-08-064 makes an initial need determination under the provisions of Assembly Bill 1373, where the California Public Utilities Commission may request that the Department of Water Resources procure electricity from diverse long lead- time resources on behalf of customers of all load-serving entities under the Commission’s integrated resource planning purview. Sierra Club originally requested $21,322.50.

SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS:

  • Substantial contribution by intervenors, as found here, enhances the Commission’s ability to resolve safety and other issues under Public Utilities Code Section 451 for each public utility, by taking all actions “necessary to promote the safety, health, comfort, and convenience of its patrons, employees, and the public.”

ESTIMATED COST:

  • $20,232.50, plus interest, to be paid by the ratepayers of Pacific Gas and Electric Company, San Diego Gas & Electric Company, and Southern California Edison Company. (Comr Alice Reynolds – Judge Fitch) http://docs.cpuc.ca.gov/SearchRes.aspx?docformat=ALL&docid=557444163 Pub. Util. Code §1701.1 — This proceeding is categorized as Ratesetting

NEW FIRE HAZARD MAPS WILL CAUSE BIG CHANGES IN OUR COUNTY
I attended the Scotts Valley Fire informational workshop recently and had an opportunity to speak with Fire District staff as well as representatives from the Building Dept. and Water Dept.

The State Fire Marshal released the maps last month, and identified many areas in local fire district jurisdiction as having high fire hazard classification. Take a look at the map

The change this generates is, according to the Building Dept staff, all structures built in 2010 and after will have to comply with one-hour fire rating materials and have zero combustible surfaces within the first five feet of any and all structures, including decks. No more composition roofing will be allowed. And, if one wants to upgrade a structure, the work will have to meet the new fire safety requirements.

On and after July 1, 2021 when you sell property that is located in a high or very high fire hazard severity zone, you’ll need documentation of a compliant Defensible Space Inspection. More information about requesting a Real Estate Defensible Space Inspection here.

I was glad to see the Water District’s presentation about the Graham Hill Blvd. work starting very soon to create an intertie connection with the City of Santa Cruz for regional water supply improvement. Traffic there will be a mess this summer, but the infrastructure and improved water supply for a large wildland fire will be worth the headaches….I think.

WRITE ONE LETTER. MAKE ONE CALL. ATTEND A PUBLIC HEARING ABOUT SOMETHING THAT REALLY MATTERS TO YOU AND ASK QUESTIONS.

MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING 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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We Are One

Do humans all want the same things? Do we all know good from bad? When we look for explanations, for meaning, do we all find the same answers, and feel the same sense of wonder? It is my experience that we have much in common.

In Search of Unity

A critique of Our Time Now is that too many are finding too much fault and see too many divisions. Where is unity?

It is easy for me to find My Tribe and to describe The Others. My tribe consists of the ones who believe that all species deserve a chance and we learn to operate from that principle. Often, we feel apart, too few. We despair to see the Monterey Bay’s most special places disappear to poorly planned development, approved by bureaucrats who feel that their jobs are to strike a balance. We believe humans are capable of better, but that money and politics bend to special interests, eroding the quality of life for future generations. We know what is lost in the real world of biology, deep in the fertile healthy soil and along the ancient paths of wildlife, cannot be regained.

Then there are The Many Others, who have other principles. Many are just ‘getting by.’ A great many just want to have fun. Then there are the ones who worship money above all else, and the ones who believe that technology will somehow keep us alive and well after the loss of most of Earth’s natural biosystems. I have met these people, we have spoken about such things. These people are not strangers, they are not abstract. Can anything bring us together?

Falling Apart, Together

One unifying theme I see is a widespread belief that things are falling apart. My Tribe is unified in understanding that humans’ relationship with Earth is increasingly critically imperiled due to poor collaboration, greed, and despotism. Many others believe that humans are doomed to extinction, perhaps sooner than later. We see that a great many people believe that things have already reached a critical state, requiring absolute destruction. There is ample evidence to support all of those positions.

Somehow, through this varied cacophony of hopelessness, a stolid force has held up a belief that everything will be alright.

Coming Together, Naturally

Another unifying theme I experience is widespread trust that everything will turn out fine. We get in our cars and drive sometimes very high speeds among thousands of strangers expecting to arrive safely at our destinations. We go to the store and find almost everything we expect to buy. Our bank accounts are secure. The weather doesn’t go to wonky extremes very often. Most of us can get food and find a safe place to sleep, largely thanks to a society that works due to trust and routine. When things don’t turn out how we expect, most people believe that humans are working to make things better, that we will have solutions to the world’s great problems. There is ample evidence to support those beliefs.

Many people simultaneously hold positive beliefs alongside much more despairing ones. How do we reconcile such disparate world views?

Discrepancies

I have noticed many people struggling with holding opposite world views, unresolved. Most notably, I’ve seen people simultaneously decrying the inhumanity of the US ‘justice’ system and yet lauding it when it turns out favorably to their beliefs…all the while with an inability to detail even rudimentary synopses of legal arguments used in judgements. I’ve also witnessed people believing governments will find a workable solution to climate change despite local, national, and international decisions to the contrary. And, individuals celebrate trickle down economics when evidence strongly contradicts such approaches. In each case, it seems to me that there has not been enough smart talk, enough curiosity, to resolve these discrepancies. We need more smart talk.

Howdy!

After the hellos and beyond the weather, we must find things to talk about to bring us together. This will take getting personal, kindly. We might practice quickly arriving at the question of ‘what do you want to be remembered for?’ Or perhaps, ‘who has done the most good for you, personally (and why)?’ Asking people about how they are feeling is a good idea, too, but perhaps go more deeply than ‘how’s it going?’ Prolonging topics and conversations is a skill I’m seeing as important.

Carry It Forward

The most liked people remember things. Politicians remember names and faces and a few facts about many people. Every social network has someone or some few who recall many more personal things. Your circle is held together by shared memories, by long conversations lasting years. We build community by carrying conversations based on memory, respect, and kind curiosity.

What if we all make it a point to have more caring conversations, taking them as far as seems right each time we see each other? What if we take those conversations to people on our periphery, to build larger communities, to make a more peaceful society, to sustain Life on Earth? We must turn those conversations over and over in our minds, curiously seeking understanding, coming up with the next questions, and bringing those cherished questions back when we reconnect. This is what will bring healing.

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, March 18, 2025

I do not, personally, like to talk about “Global Warming” under the rubric of “Climate,” or “Climate Change.” Human-caused “Global Warming,” or “Global Heating,” is what is actually going on, and what is causing all the climate-related issues we have come to consider as “normal.” Nonetheless, and despite my personal linguistic preferences, the illustration above does come from a website that references “Climate.” I am using it because I think that the image conveys an important message, which can be grasped even by those who do not, actually, read what I am writing about today. My title, therefore, reflects the source of the image which heads up this blog posting. It also references the statement I have included, below, which also uses “Climate” to describe the challenges now facing us.

Today’s blog posting is, essentially, to pass on the statement that I have included below. The statement is one that I received by way of an email from an instructor at Cabrillo Community College, addressed to those who are part of a “Sunrise Santa Cruz” listserve, which focuses on the Global Warming challenge to human civilization. The photo, taken in our Nation’s Capital, includes two members of Sunrise Santa Cruz, proudly present to argue for dramatic changes in national policy.

What do you think about the idea put forward by that Cabrillo College Instructor (see below)? Do you think that we would be willing to occupy our nation’s capital until our elected representatives actually start taking action on our Global Warming Crisis?

I would like to think that we could muster the kind of action described below. See what you think. Next step would be to do some planning for such a direct action – what would be an ongoing “occupation” of the nation’s capital until our elected officials start taking actions that they have avoided taking so far. Maybe the occupation could begin on the first day of Summer (June 20, 2025), as things start really heating up – as forests burn and heat deaths grow. How about that?

THE PROPOSAL:
A strong presence in DC is key to getting momentum in a good direction. For 14 years of teaching Climate Science now, I’ve had as my primary recommended action, to launch an occupation of DC ‘Occupy DC for Climate” with a rotating army of ~1/2 million people who will serve a ~1 week “tour of duty” with their backpack and total self-containment, before rotating home and another take their place. A large enough group they cannot be jailed, cannot be “disappeared”, cannot be hauled off without a half million iPhones capturing the actions of the police or National Guard against its own citizens. Citizens scrupulously obeying non-violence of course. Not a weekend march, but an occupation, with clear specific legislative demands to be enacted before the Occupation disbands. In contraast, One-on-one with your congressperson is NOT effective. Not when Party Unity is the insistence, and so no individual Republican or Democrat will dare break ranks, poke head above fox-hole, with their party, for fear of being “primaried” out next time, or worse. But if ALL are in the Capitol, looking out over a mob of insistent citizens – it has a very different effect, and the threat to their domination over the People is felt as real. They may begin to take more seriously that nagging guilt inside them, of being a coward towards defending the best of Democracy and honorable welfare (emphasis added).

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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NO EXIT RAMP, ADULTS IN THE ROOM, FREEDOM FRECKLES

Stephen Colbert who recently mocked Democrats and their hand-held protest signs displayed at Trump’s State-of-the-Trump speech at the joint session of Congress, has gained a bit traction with his own paddle-sign that read “Try Doing Something.” Protests against the administration’s policies are becoming more common, larger in number and in participants, with representatives holding town halls in their districts being forced to flee because of voter anger — advisers are saying, “just skip this tradition!” One person who has been persistent in punching at Trump with Tweets for years, but magnifying her activity since last October, is Natasha Rothwell, who starred as Belinda in the TV series, ‘The White Lotus.’ Every single day she posts a message reminding the president in some form saying, “Donald Trump, you are trash!” Natasha may include retweets, quotes, likes, and different views, one variant reading, “You have no value or use and you spend your days lying around doing nothing…cuz u trash.” Not content to pick on just Donny, her header on X has ‘TRASH‘ above headshots of the six conservative Supreme Court Justices, with arrows pointing appropriately to insure that they feel the burn.

Feeling the burn from last week’s vote on the continuing resolution to fund the government until September, is Senator Chuck Schumer who succumbed to the demands of blackmail as John Stoehr of Editorial Board posted on the blog. Schumer took to the floor and said that he would vote with MAGA to pass the resolution, with Stoehr asking, “What is Schumer getting in return?” He isn’t implying that corruption is an issue, only that this is politics and the Senator must be trading for something, right? The resolution allows Trump and Musk to continue dismantling the government, with Everett B Kelly of the American Federation of Government Employees saying, “A widespread government shutdown has been underway since January 20 and will continue to spread whether Senators vote ‘yes’ or ‘no’ on HR 1968.” Kelly, leader of the country’s largest public employee union, says HR 1968 sets in stone the administration’s crime spree, decimating agencies without due process, cutting off funding that has already been appropriated and signed into law, and with it the administration “will dramatically expand its termination of federal workers and double down on its campaign to make federal agencies fail, because there will be nothing left” to stop them. He believes it robs the constitutional authority of Congress, with the White House having said that even if the bill passes, it will ‘impound‘ that money — which is to say, ‘steal it’ — if it pays for things that Trump does not like. What it boils down to for Democrats who voted for it, is that Trump will become a criminal president, or if they voted against it, Trump will become a criminal president. Heads…I win, tails…you lose. Not a choice, blackmail, as Stoehr said.

Senator Schumer explained to Chris Hayes in an interview, that he made his choice to vote for the resolution, because the alternative was much worse by allowing a government shutdown. Trump would have favored a shutdown, allowing him to redefine what counts as ‘essential services,’ then cutting the government even closer to the bone. Stoehr saw Schumer’s premise, yet he didn’t explain why the House MAGAs voted to keep the money flowing if co-presidents Musk and Trump preferred a shutdown — and why did Schumer deceive us earlier into thinking he might lead a resistance demanding a one-month extension? Stoehr asks agains, “What are Democrats getting in return?” He answers his own question — “nothing.” Chris Hayes posted that “the institutional Democratic Party is guided by an almost pathological level of conflict-avoidance in almost every direction. ‘What can we do to make the least number of people mad?’ is just a bankrupt way to operate.” Stoehr concludes the Dems pathology is deeper than ‘conflict-avoidance’ — only the fear of being held accountable by someone somewhere “who requires the Democrats to take responsibility for the bad choices made by Republicans. Its’ a deep-seated sense of obligation that the Democrats are the only adults in the room, and if they don’t act like adults, things will get much worse than they are. Schumer believes in his bones that the Democrats must save the Republicans from themselves, and thus save the country from the Republicans, as reflected in his comments about a possible shutdown.”

Schumer is quoted as saying, “There’s no exit ramp. Anyone who wants the shutdown, I have asked: ‘Well, how do we get out of it?’ Guess who it’s up to — Trump, Musk, DOGE, all bad choices. I respect people who don’t want to vote for the CR. It’s awful. But with the alternative being a government shutdown, that’s even worse.” To this, Stoehr replies, “Well, yes! It is up to Trump! And if he does to the government after a shutdown what he’s already doing to it before a shutdown, then whatever happens is on him and him alone. Lots of good people are going to suffer, because the administration is evil. But the Senate Democrats cannot save them, nor should they try, because they cannot hold accountable the man responsible for their suffering if they themselves are complicit in it.” Stoehr feels that institutional Democrat Schumer is taking cues from the mainstream media, not “plucky indie newsletters,” and also the party’s donors who are concentrated in the northeast. “They want the Dems to bargain with the Republicans, not necessarily fight them, as serious combat would probably jeopardize their interests,” he discerns. “In times of crisis the mainstream media understands subconsciously that the Republicans are hopeless but that Democrats are not. They assume that Democrats will be the adults in the room, and because institutional Democrats interpret this assumption as something mainstream voters want, they deliver. Even if it means getting nothing in return.”

Representative Nancy Pelosi, in a statement regarding handling of the funding vote, took a shot at an unnamed Schumer, saying, “Democratic senators should listen to the women. Appropriations leaders Rosa DeLauro and Patty Murray have eloquently presented the case that we must have a better choice: a four-week funding extension to keep government open and negotiate a bipartisan agreement. America has experienced a Trump shutdown before — but this damaging legislation only makes matters worse. Democrats must not buy into this false choice. We must fight back for a better way. Listen to the women, For the People.” She goes on to praise House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries for his leadership in rejecting a false choice, and her colleagues in the House Democratic Caucus for their “overwhelming vote against this bill.” Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said, “There is a deep sense of outrage and betrayal. And not just about progressive Democrats — this is across the board — the entire party. I cannot underscore enough how incorrect that is. There are members of Congress who have won Trump-held districts in some of the most difficult territory in the United States, who walked the plank and took immeasurable risks in order to defend the American people, in order to defend Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare.” Representative Greg Casar, head of the Congressional Progressive Caucus chimed in, saying, “The GOP bill is specifically designed to allow Trump and Musk to continue plundering the taxpayers to enrich themselves.”

In the end, Senators and Representatives voted to “sell our country out to Donald Trump and Elon Musk for mass firings, cuts to vital services, and tax breaks for the rich,” according to the Common Cause website. Elected leaders are sticking to the same passive, by-the-book strategies that empowered people like Trump and Musk in the first place, while abandoning our public services and our values at the altar of political convenience. Stirring up a hornet’s nest of dissatisfied constituents, Senator Schumer was met with a barrage of demands for his resignation, calls which have only escalated. Food & Water Watch executive director Wenonah Hauter said, “Schumer has lost the confidence of a critical mass of well-meaning people around the country. He must step down from his leadership role in the Senate now, so a sufficiently determined resistance to the disastrous Trump-Musk agenda can be allowed to rise up and act before it’s too late.” Human rights lawyer Qasim Rashid said in a blog post, that Schumer must resign, and adding with perspicuity, “Let’s be clear: MAGAs control the House, the Senate, and the White House. The Democratic Party is not in its strongest position, and every single day Trump and Musk are working to gut democracy, attack working families, and consolidate power. And yet, when given the opportunity to use the one piece of leverage Democrats have — forcing Republicans to own the government shutdown — Schumer is folding like a cardboard box in a rainstorm. This isn’t just betrayal. It’s utter incompetence. We don’t need more politicians holding tiny signs and coordinating outfits while Trump consolidates power and enables fascism. We need leadership with the courage to fight injustice and hold the line when it matters.”

Aru Shiney-Ajay, executive director of Sunrise Movement, a youth-led, climate-focused organization, declared that, “Today was a spectacular display of cowardice from Senator Schumer. This morning, Schumer had arrested, 11 young protestors in his office rather than look them in the eye. This afternoon, he gave Elon Musk the keys to the government. Trump’s and Musk are hurtling our country toward disaster. They are gutting the educational system, enabling oil billionaires to burn the planet, and destroying vital government programs that millions rely on. Meanwhile, Chuck Schumer sits on the sidelines. The budget is one of the only pieces of leverage Democrats have, and Schumer just gave it away. That’s incredibly reckless. Chuck Schumer needs to step aside. Our democracy and our climate and our families can’t afford even another month of this b.s.” Democratic strategist, Waleed Shahid, commented, “This wasn’t about whether Democrats were willing to impose a cost on their opponents for governing through blackmail. Instead, Schumer made the kind of move that tells Republicans they can keep pushing.” Justice Democrats, a progressive group that helped Ocasio-Cortez upset a top House Democrat in a 2018 primary, said, “Corporate Democratic leadership is all talk and no fight. Gutless, spineless, and utterly unqualified to lead.” Schumer stepping down from his leadership isn’t enough for many, with many critics encouraging Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez or Dan Goldman to challenge the Senator in the 2028 primary.

Domestic beer brewers should take a page from Canada’s oldest brewery, which has announced a ‘Presidential Pack’ of Moosehead beer — 1,461 cans of its Canadian lager, intended to last the course of President Trump’s entire second term, one beer for every day of that term. The pack retails for $3,490 CAD and is sold in Nova ScotiaNew Brunswick, and Ontario provinces. Leaning into the ongoing trade war with the USAKaren Grigg, director of marketing said in a press release, “If the start of 2025 has taught us anything, it’s that it will take determination to weather four years of political uncertainty — and what better way to make it through each day than with a truly Canadian beer.” Trevor Grant, VP of Sales and Marketing said the idea was talked about for a few weeks as the challenges with tariffs and the Trump administration dragged on, and, “Obviously, it’s a bit of a difficult situation, so we’re trying to maybe have a little bit of fun with it, as Canadian shoppers look for locally made products now more than ever.” Many of the big US companies that sell in Canada, like Anheuser-Busch, manufacture American brands within Canada, such as Bud Light, and thus aren’t affected by tariffs — or good taste.

Trump’s Health Secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, has remained relatively low-key as the measles outbreak worsens, with cases popping up in even more states across the country. Several weeks ago, Kennedy couldn’t get excited about the first death in Texas, saying, “It is not unusual, we have measles outbreaks every year,” ignoring the fact that outbreaks are considered rare, with measles considered eliminated in the US in 2020. Kennedy has been slammed for writing previously that measles are not deadly and that outbreaks had been “fabricated” to push people toward “unnecessary and risky” vaccines. His prominence in the anti-vax community has been credited with leading to an increase in the number of parents who won’t follow the science, now refusing to vaccinate their children. What our children have now learned from Kennedy and President Trump is that, ‘science is stupid.’ Fran Lebowitz, in her short essay entitled ‘Science,’ writes, “Legend has it that the atom was split when a bunch of scientists working late decided to order in a pizza. Indeed a terrifying story and one made all the more chilling when one learns that a number of their colleagues smarting from the snub of being excluded from this impromptu meal spitefully repaired to an all-night diner and invented polyester.” Be aware that Trump and Kennedy may designate measles as ‘Freedom Freckles.’

In defense of his bosom buddy and co-president, ElonDonald Trump came to the Tesla mogul’s aid after an announced boycott against the firm’s vehicles, in addition to protester’s vandalizing dealership showrooms or individually owned cars and trucks, not to mention plunging stock prices. The orange co-president posted, “To Republicans, Conservatives, and all great Americans, Elon Musk is ‘putting it on the line’ in order to help our Nation, and he is doing a FANTASTIC JOB! But the Radical Left Lunatics, as they often do, are to illegally and collusively boycott Tesla, one of the world’s great automakers, and Elon’s ‘baby,’ in order to attack and do harm to Elon, and everything he stands for. I’m going to buy a brand new Tesla tomorrow morning as a show of confidence and support for Elon Musk, a truly great American. Why should he be punished for putting his tremendous skills to work in order to help MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN???” Musk responded with, “Thank you, President @realDonaldTrump!” So be careful out there — those of us who decide against buying a Tesla because we dislike Musk are doing so illegally, and perhaps Donny should know, being a convicted felon himself as many pointed out. Let’s not forget that Trump once called for a boycott of Goodyear tires because of their dress code prohibiting political attire, i.e., MAGA baseball caps. Trump’s promotion of a specific brand and whining about ‘illegal‘ is silly and inappropriate for a president’s concern. Of course, while this is going on, the two co-perpetrators are ruining American’s lives, by tanking the economy, threatening long-time allies around the world, and compelling them to boycott all American products. No worries, though — Trump, a once fierce critic of electric vehicles (drill, drill, drill!) is buying a Tesla from the world’s wealthiest man. Oh! And, so is Sean Hannity! Lunatics all — to include those who voted for this.

Tesla sales boycotts are only part of the picture, as some Tesla owners are selling, or considering selling, their vehicles as the backlash against Musk and DOGE grows, even though they may take a serious financial hit as prices plummet according to dealership website CarGurus. Singer Cheryl Crow announced she is selling her Tesla, then donating the proceeds to NPR as a protest against Elon. Investor Joanne Wilson told Business Insider she was ditching her Model S, floating the idea of letting members of the public smash it with hammers. Real estate developer, Scott Oran decided to sell his Tesla out of “embarrassment,” and a concern over vandalism, and to beat the rush of other sellers to the marketplace with the brand which is most common for EVs. Oran feels that Musk has irrevocably damaged the Tesla brand, with the maker’s stock drop on a recent Monday of 15% — a $29 billion reduction to Musk’s worth in just one day. Not to fret over Musk’s loss — after Trump’s announced Tesla acquisition, reports emerged that Elon was considering a $100 million donation to a super PAC associated with, and controlled by, the president.

That donation probably went a long way into converting the White House south lawn into a Tesla showroom for Trump’s big auto purchase, with five vehicles displayed for his perusal before his decision to spring for a deep red Tesla Model S, valued at almost $80,000, for use by his staff since he doesn’t drive any more. It’s unclear whether or not Pennsylvania Avenue was lined with plastic tube men, or air dancers, to attract the locals to the big sale. Trump praised Tesla’s quality and Musk’s dedication during the White House auto sale, and a photographer got a shot of the script and Tesla price list given the president by Musk to make a sales pitch to the masses. It must have been a convincing sales pitch, because Trump also committed to gifting a Tesla Cybertruck to his granddaughter, Kai — what’s another $80 grand? According to the price list, “Teslas can be purchased as low as $299/month or $35K.” And who knows? Trump may qualify for tax incentives under the Inflation Reduction Act for purchasers of electric vehicles. That’s dependent upon whether or not the Internal Revenue Service is still operating by next year’s tax filing — no comment from Musk, as he told Fox Business’s Larry Kudlow that he’s been running his businesses “with great difficulty” since spending his time with DOGE. Time for that chainsaw to be shelved, Elon? If Trump is drawing his $400K standard presidential salary, he won’t qualify for the tax incentive, but if he’s only drawing his one-dollar annual salary as in his first assault on the presidency — he’s not saying…what do you think? — he might qualify for the EV credit.

So far, Trump has not commented on his 2023 post that electric car supporters should “ROT IN HELL.” The Atlantic’s Charlie Warzel wrote that the car promo was, “a stilted, corrupt attempt to juice a friend’s stock, and certainly below the office of the presidency,” and we might add, so is most of the other junky crapola Trump and his grifting Crime Family push constantly. If any other government official in the executive branch had done a similar promotion, they would have been in clear violation of the regulation prohibiting such endorsements; but Trump and his hillbilly VP are exempt, where norms are usually respected as the primary lever for holding the line. The Don has repeatedly demonstrated his appetite for overturning norms and pushing ethical bounds, so his Tesla push is not out of the ordinary for him, and in reality, it delights him that he has such impunity, says Lora Kelly in her The Atlantic Daily commentary.

On his show, Jimmy Kimmel expressed dismay at the changing reputation of Tesla recently, recounting how owners are attempting “to disguise their vehicles to avoid confrontations and vandalism.” He showed clips of Teslas minus the logos, which now sport MazdaAudi, or Subaru identification. “People are even trying to disguise their Cybertrucks. That’s like trying to pass off Chewbacca for a chihuahua. It doesn’t seem right,” he said. “Maybe this is all a ruse. Elon somehow tricked MAGA into driving electric cars. Maybe he really is a genius,” he speculated. The Late Show’s Stephen Colbert shared that recently someone stole the wheels off of every single Tesla in a Texas parking lot. “Whoever did it, I do not condone this. But I do appreciate your tireless efforts,” he said as he accepted a fake Nobel Prize for Puns“Thank you so much!” He continued, “I want to be clear. I do not condone violence or vandalism of any kind. That is a deeply held belief of mine that comes from the bottom of my CBS legal department.” He pointed to a trend where Cybertrucks are being covered in garbage, theorizing, “To be fair, that might not be vandalism. That might just be a simple mistake because they do look a lot like a dumpster.”

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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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner-view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

Timelines

“The country should be more inclusive, not less inclusive, and over an infinite timeline, it becomes more inclusive. It doesn’t always happen at once.”
~W. Kamau Bell

“In the Chinese subconscious, the universe exists on a timeline that extends into the future without end, and also without change.”
~Liu Cixin

“My research process doesn’t vary much. I do a little reading to establish a timeline and decide how I’m going to approach the story.”
~Laurie Graham

“It’s funny because I think, as a general rule, that people seem to think that if you do lots of different things over the course of, like, a timeline, it means that you kind of disregard what you did before. But that’s not true of me. I still genuinely like everything I did as much as I liked it when I released it.”
~Dev Hynes

“The five stages – denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance – are a part of the framework that makes up our learning to live with the one we lost. They are tools to help us frame and identify what we may be feeling. But they are not stops on some linear timeline in grief.”
~Elisabeth Kubler-Ross

“Guys, I’ve been thinking about that night over and over, and one thing has become clear: this is the darkest, most terrible timeline.”
~Abed, Community

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I have a feeling I have posted this video before, a long time ago. It is worth a re-watch, however… or two, or more! These ladies are hilarious, not to mention supremely talented. They are German, or at least based in Germany, started in the year 2000 and are still touring! I went down a rabbit hole doing research, but I’ll let you do your own. Here’s a link to (the English version of) their website. Enjoy!


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

March 12 – 18, 2025

Highlights this week:

Greensite… on Rail Trail Segment 7 Phase 2… Steinbruner… Battery fires… Hayes… Out this week… Patton… To Whom Should We Send Invitations?… Matlock… easy pickings…whale’s head…parallel universe…Swasticar… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… Life in the Middle Ages… Quotes on… “Time Travel”

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Lovely Downtown Santa Cruz 1894. Those mass transit trolley tracks were in stalled in 1891. Note the two direction buggy lanes. That tall white pole in front of where Jamba Juice is now was a “Victory Pole”. Way down the street you can just barely see the ODD Fellows tower, which is of course our Town Clock now.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email photo@brattononline.com

Dateline: March 12, 2025

A WHOLE ‘NOTHER WEEK! How does this keep happening? I sometimes feel like I blink, and another week has passed. And then a month, and then a year… the passage of time is something I stew on now and again. At times, it makes me ponder time travel, and what that would mean if it was actually possible.

Someone asked me once, “If you had a time machine, would you want to go backwards in time, or forwards?” I was absolutely flabbergasted. It had never even occurred to me that anyone would want to go forward in time when there are so many historical periods to get into. Egyptians, Romans, Vikings, the Middle Ages… I wouldn’t know where to start!

It’s probably a good thing it’s just fantasy…

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A COMPLETE UNKNOWN. AppleTV, PrimeTV. Movie (7.4 IMDb) ***- The one that started the Netflix/Marvel cavalcade. Charlie Cox and Vincent D’Onofrio bring depth and humor/tragedy to the David and Goliath of New York. Matt Murdoch/Daredevil (Cox), an attorney who was struck blind as a youth, develops the ability to “see” through the use of organic sonar, and uses that ability (along with rigorous martial arts training) to take on the criminal denizens of the shadowy streets. Wilson Fisk/Kingpin (D’Onofrio), a man of outsized power (figuratively and literally) with rage issues, but also a nuanced romantic side, finds his criminal enterprises falling into the “sights” of the blind kid from Hell’s Kitchen. Subsequent stories dealt with other comic characters, Elektra and The Punisher. Amazing fight choreography (not just martial arts, but the fluidity of the staging) if you’re into that – not for the faint of heart. Now on Disney. ~Sarge

THE BRUTALIST. PrimeTV. Movie (7.5 IMDb) *** I thought the title was JUST a reference to the Brutalist Movement in art and architecture. Oh how wrong I was. A brutal story about love, separation, and power. Adrien Brody is gut-wrenching in his performance as a holocaust survivor, drug addict, and brutalist architect. It’s like dragging yourself along the edge of a straight razor – the further forward you go, the deeper it cuts. Painful, but worth a watch. Interesting note – while Brody’s character is fictional, the name Lazlo Toth (and variants) is out there, most notable to me, it was the name of the guy who vandalized La Pieta, and it was the pen-name of Don Novello (Reverend Guido Sarducci on old SNL) when writing his “Lazlo Letters”. ~Sarge

DAREDEVIL. Disney+. Series (8.6 IMDb) *** The one that started the Netflix/Marvel cavalcade. Charlie Cox and Vincent D’Onofrio bring depth and humor/tragedy to the David and Goliath of New York. Matt Murdoch/Daredevil (Cox), an attorney who was struck blind as a youth, develops the ability to “see” through the use of organic sonar, and uses that ability (along with rigorous martial arts training) to take on the criminal denizens of the shadowy streets. Wilson Fisk/Kingpin (D’Onofrio), a man of outsized power (figuratively and literally) with rage issues, but also a nuanced romantic side, finds his criminal enterprises falling into the “sights” of the blind kid from Hell’s Kitchen. Subsequent stories dealt with other comic characters, Elektra and The Punisher. Amazing fight choreography (not just martial arts, but the fluidity of the staging) if you’re into that – not for the faint of heart. Now on Disney. ~Sarge

DAREDEVIL – BORN AGAIN. Disney+. Series (9 IMDb) *** For anyone thinking that Daredevil would lose its edge being on Disney, think again. The original cast of Netflix’s Daredevil are back for this sequel from Disney. After a journey through various other shows (the Defenders, Hawkeye, Echo, and She Hulk) Cox and D’Onofrio are back. In the first two episodes we see Matt, in the wake of a tragedy, hang up the horns, and Fisk coming out of rehabilitation after getting shot in the face by Echo (see: “Hawkeye” and “Echo”). Matt returns to lawyering, and Fisk … has a vision for a better New York, as Mayor. Just a wee tad chilling, given the current climate. First two episodes on Disney right now – new episodes every Tuesday. ~Sarge

COMPANION. Apple TV, Fandango, PrimeTV. Movie (7.1 IMDb) *** Iris (Sophie Thatcher) and Josh (Jack Quaid) traveling to a friend’s country home for a party where the fact that one of the guests is an android “companion” is the LEAST surprising thing that will be discovered. Some distressingly recognizable relationship dynamics are revealed and explored. Also some violence, and a sexual assault, for those who might be triggered. Well made for a light budget, with some nuanced performances. For those troubled by AI – you might want to start saying “please and thank you” to Alexa and Siri. ~Sarge

MOANA 2. Apple TV, Fandango, PrimeTV, YouTube, Disney+. Series (6.8 IMDb) ** Moana, after reconnecting her people with their seafaring heritage, discovers the ocean is empty. She’s called back by the Gods to face a greedy deity who sunk a cornerstone island, once the link between all Oceania’s seafaring people. Unfortunately, it’s a step down from the original. “Get Lost,” sung by the mid-film villain Matangi, lacks the charm of “Shiny,” and Maui feels like a shadow of his former self. Moana’s crew is a completely superfluous random mix—grumpy farmer, Maui fanboy, manic tech girl, and another comic relief animal (who’s outshone by HeiHei, the chicken). Only the mute rabid coconut warrior, Kotu, adds any value. Much like the first film, the Big Bad is just an angry, personality-less force, this time throwing lightning instead of fireballs. While it’ll entertain kids, there’s little for the parents this time around. Comes to Disney+ March 12th. ~Sarge

HEART EYES. In theaters. Movie (6.6 IMDb) **- A meet-cute rom-com – with a slasher! Odd mix, but it seems to be director Josh Ruben’s forte. Ad designer Ally (Olivia Holt) accidently presents a “historic tracic lovers” motif JUST as notorious serial killer, Heart Eyes, who murders romantic couples on Valentine’s Day, resurfaces. She teams up with “ad fixer” freelancer Jay (Mason Gooding) in a “Desk Set” will-they won’t-they team-up, until an unexpected kiss puts them in the sights of Heart Eyes. The slashing is moderately creative, the chemistry fairly good, but it just lacks a real personality for Heart Eyes (which you need for a franchise killer). Not for the timid, but not epic gorefest either. On par with Christopher Landon’s 2020 body-swap horror/comedy “Freaky” (ala Freaky Friday – only instead of mother/daughter, it’s slasher/cheerleader). ~Sarge

THE ÅRE MURDERS. Netflix. Series (6.7 IMDb) ***- A darkly delightful remake of F.W. Murnau’s 1922 original “Nosferatu” (itself, an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula”). The story points match, down to the use of shadows as characters. The performances by Depp, Hoult, and Skarsgård breathe new life into the story, as do the visual textures of the cinematography and costume design (even the choice of using Dacian – a long dead language from central Europe – for Orlok’s dialogue). Slowly menacing in its pacing, this film builds its mood in a way that most modern horror films fail to. ~Sarge

THE BREAKTHROUGH. Netflix. Series (7.1 IMDb) **- Thanks to Netflix’s voracious appetite for new material, we’ve had a lot of opportunity to watch movies and tv from all over the place. I’ve been noticing an alarming number of bleak crime dramas from Sweden – one of them was “The Breakthrough”, a police procedural based on a real-life 16 year murder investigation. Though the first 3 episodes were a trifle slow, the final episode finally brings it all together. Peter Eggers stars as a police detective who does a LOT of speedwalking while beating his heart out against an impossible case. ~Sarge

NOSFERATU (2024). Prime. Movie (7.4 IMDb) ***- A darkly delightful remake of F.W. Murnau’s 1922 original “Nosferatu” (itself, an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula”). The story points match, down to the use of shadows as characters. The performances by Depp, Hoult, and Skarsgård breathe new life into the story, as do the visual textures of the cinematography and costume design (even the choice of using Dacian – a long dead language from central Europe – for Orlok’s dialogue). Slowly menacing in its pacing, this film builds its mood in a way that most modern horror films fail to. ~Sarge

ERASERHEAD. Max. Movie (7.3 IMDb) **** In honor of the passing of one of the most individual visions in the film industry, David Lynch, I went back and revisited “Eraserhead” for the first time in 40 years. It would become a cult hit during the late 70’s-80’s. There was nothing like it at the time, with a Buñuel level of slow-paced uncomfortable surrealism, and a story that can’t easily be described. As such, it tends to be shoehorned into the genre of horror, which, on a certain level, is fair, but it is so much more. It will be a slog for the short attention-span set, but worth every unsettling moment. Starring Jack Nance, one of Lynch’s personal ensemble favorites. ~Sarge

FLOW. Apple TV, PrimeTV. Movie (7.9 IMDb) *** “Flow” is a an amazing journey – animated with a small crew on open-source software, it is a personal exploration by animals in the wake of a global flood. A cat is joined by a capybara, a bird, a lemur, and a dog, as they explore the flooded world together on a boat. No dialogue, but actual animal voices in the soundtrack. A refreshing new animaed film, without the glossy signature stylings of Pixar or Dreamworks. We need more of this. Latvian, but it translates well. ~Sarge

STAR WARS: SKELETON CREW. Disney+ series (7.2 IMDb) *** It’s refreshing when a big franchise realizes they’ve created a universe big enough to tell other stories (look at Star Trek Lower Decks – a successful animated comedy entrenched deeply in the Star Trek Universe), and that’s what Skeleton Crew does for Star Wars. A quartet of children, chafing at the bureaucratic cloister of their homeworld, stumble on a crashed spaceship and find themselves launched into the rough and tumble Star Wars Universe. Using a rough “Treasure Island” plotline, there’s space piracy aplenty: Jude Law’s character is referred to as Cap’n Silvo (nod to Long John Silver from Treasure Island) and the ship’s yarr-voiced droid is SM-33 (Smee was Captain Hook’s first mate in Peter Pan). Good for adults and children (though not TOO young – plenty of life-taking and intense scenes). ~Sarge

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March 10, 2025

A $ Sink

The photo shows progress as of January 2025 on the rail trail, Segment 7, Phase 2 which runs from Bay and California Streets, past Neary Lagoon and the Wastewater Treatment Plant to join up with Beach Street at the roundabout. It is eight tenths of a mile long.

In 2018, when the city circulated an environmental review of this site for one segment of the rail trail project, the Sierra Club expressed its concerns at the incompleteness of the city’s environmental work. Given the ecosystem sensitivity of the site, the Club requested an EIR be done. Initially there was no mention by the city of the Monarch butterfly overwintering site at the eucalyptus grove near the trestle bridge, despite the fact the city had earlier erected a display case describing the site as such. There was concern about the project’s required removal of forty-seven trees, with twenty-one listed as heritage. There was issue with the city’s downplaying a riparian wetland on the project site. Efforts to secure a full EIR were unsuccessful, however the city agreed to monitor the health of the eucalyptus grove for five years after project completion. The concrete slurry material recently deposited and hardened over the trees’ root zones is not a good sign.

Council approved the project in early 2021, with a price tag of $11 million. In late 2023, an additional $3 million was asked for and approved by council. A request for a further $900,000 is on this week’s City Council agenda.

Why less than a mile of trail should cost $15 million, even with a three thousand foot long retaining wall, is hard to fathom. My hunch is that the wetland created more of a problem than the city and consultants planned for. Staff’s explanation for needing an extra $900,000 is that “the site is situated adjacent to Neary Lagoon and is inundated with groundwater during and after heavy rain events.” Well, yes, it includes a wetland, as was documented by the Sierra Club in 2018. This should not come as a surprise. Citing it as an “unforeseen condition” the staff report explains that “a major unanticipated cost was the construction of a concrete cut-off wall… to limit groundwater so the soil could be adequately compacted to sustain the asphalt path”. Surely such conditions were carefully evaluated before deciding the site was suitable for rail trail construction. According to the staff report, the budget adjustment funds will come from “Measure D, a local source for transportation project funding.”

Measure D, a half-cent sales tax increase was approved by county voters in 2016. Its task is to “improve, operate and maintain Santa Cruz County’s transportation network”, according to the Measure D Fact Sheet published by the Santa Cruz County Regional Transportation Commission (SCCRTC). The funding is split amongst various Transportation Projects. The Rail Corridor is one such project and is allocated 8% of the total funding over a 30-year period. According to the SCCRTC, this allocation would be for “Analysis (including environmental and economic analysis) of both rail transit and non-rail options for the rail corridor; rail line maintenance and repairs.” Studying the feasibility of rail transit prior to construction of a rail trail seemed wise to me and I voted for Measure D on that basis.

There was, however, a hidden agenda in Measure D. A further 17% of the total funding was listed under the heading of Active Transportation. The only entry under Active Transportation is the Monterey Bay Sanctuary Scenic Trail and the allocation is for” bike and pedestrian trail construction; maintenance, management and drainage of rail and trail corridor.” With careful use of language, there is no mention of rail trail construction but that is exactly what the funds are being used for. The rail trail therefore gets a combined 25% of the total funding.

Note to self and others, read ballot measures very carefully, including the fine print. Measure S for the library system was deceptive, as is the Initiative being circulated for signatures for the misleadingly titled “Workforce Housing Solutions Act.” Caveat lector!

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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Fire, Fire at Moss Landing!

Why the batteries burned and what that means

Listen THIS SUNDAY (March 16) to KSQD and learn what happened…and why we need to continue to demand more information and local control.

Ric O’Connell – Ivan Aiello – Megan Thiele Strong

on Sustainability Now!  Sunday, March 16th, 5-6PM

On January 16th, 2025, a fire broke out at the Vistra plant in Moss Landing, California burning for two days and scattering heavy metals and other toxic materials across the plant’s surroundings, including Elkhorn Slough.  What happened there and why did the batteries burn?  What are the impacts of the fire and on the future of renewable energy?

Join host Ronnie Lipschutz for three conversations about the batteries and the fire, with Ric O’Connell, executive director of GridLab, who will explain what the batteries are doing there, Dr. Ivano Aiello, Professor of Geological Oceanography at San Jose State’s Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, who will discuss the results of his research into contamination of Elkhorn Slough, and Dr. Megan Thiele Strong, Professor of Environmental Sociology at San Jose State, who will talk about the health and social effects of the fire on people living around the site.

That’s on Sustainability Now! Sunday, March 16th, 2025, from 5-6 PM right here on community radio for the Monterey Bay Region, KSQD 90.7 FM, KSQT 87.9 FM, K207FE (FX) 89.5 and KSQD.org, streaming on the internet.

LISTEN IN NEXT FRIDAY TO HEAR ASSEMBLYMEMBER DAWN ADDIS ADVOCATE LOCAL CONTROL OF BATTERY ENERGY STORAGE
Please listen in Friday, March 21 at 3pm on Santa Cruz Voice “Community Matters” program to hear Assemblymember Dawn Addis discuss her proposed AB 303 legislation that would claw back local control of battery energy storage system (BESS) facilities.

She needs our support because she is up against big money.  Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors are dragging their feet on sending a letter of support…even given what has happened in Moss Landing Vistra Fires.

Listen from your computer or smart device from anywhere in the world at 3pm Pacific Time on Santa Cruz Voice.com and join the conversation.

Here is the proposed AB 303 legislation.

Contact the elected representatives below and urge their support of AB 303.

Assemblymember Dawn Addis
Robert Rivas, Speaker of the Assembly
Assemblymember Gail Pellerin
Senator John Laird

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL. LISTEN IN TO LOCAL FORUMS ON TOPICS THAT INTEREST YOU AND ASK QUESTIONS.
MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING 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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Grey is out this week.

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, March 11, 2025

You probably know the sonnet by Emma Lazarus, “The New Colossus.” If you don’t know that poem in its entirety, you may, at least, recall the following and famous lines, which are inscribed on a bronze plaque, which was placed at the base of the Statue of Liberty in 1903:

Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!

It has been our experience, for more than one hundred years (and actually quite a bit more, I think), that the United States, as “a nation of immigrants,” has benefitted immensely from immigration. This is, really, what The Statue of Liberty, that enduring emblem of our nation, symbolizes.

Of course, this is not the view of our current president. Donald J. Trump appears to despise immigrants, as he made clear as he began his first campign for the presidency:

“When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. […] They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.” This quote from Donald Trump has become emblematic of the President’s attitude towards immigrants. Since the 2016 campaign trail, Trump has spread harmful narratives about Latinx immigrants, and his words have tangible impacts on local communities…. President Trump characterizes Latinx immigrants as a dangerous out-group to gain political power.

The president’s words – “They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists…” – have not, at least not yet, been inscribed anywhere, but the president’s denunciation of immigration is restated frequently, and it’s hard to escape the memory of the message about immigrants with which he began his 2016 campaign, and which are featured in the quotation that I have included above.

In the Emma Lazarus sonnet (meant to reflect the realities that the nation has actually experienced), America has invited immigrants to come. The nation has opened its “golden door” to them, welcoming them here, with the result being that our nation has become greater – and richer – because of those formerly homeless, and “tempest-tost,” and impoverished immigrants. Those “wretched” immigrants, welcomed here, have ended up contributing greatly to American wealth and success.

On February 28th, the president outlined a new approach to immigration. He has proposed a “Gold Card” visa, an invitation to those immigrants who are able and willing to pay $5,000,000 for the privilege of gaining entry to the United States.

Whom should we invite? To whom should we send an invitation to come to America? Should we continue to follow the advice of Emma Lazarus? Or, is Donald Trump, perhaps, the wiser head? Should only the already wealthy be welcomed here?

This question is now placed before us. Should we repudiate those who come here with nothing, hoping not only to enrich themselves, but to enrich this nation, too?

We have been asked to repudiate our historic welcome. Our current president says, “We Welcome The Rich! And only them!”

Are you with him? Or not?

I am not.

I am with Emma!

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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PLAYING POSSUM, FULL OF IT, RUBY, COOKOUT POTATO SALAD

James Carville seems to have adopted the Napoleon Bonaparte quote: “Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.” The influential Democratic Party strategist who came to prominence in the Bill Clinton years recently predicted that the Trump White House will “collapse” in less than a month as his approval ratings continue to decline with his multitude of unpopular executive orders, and slashing of governmental agencies by firing thousands — risking an economic nosedive. His advice to his party is to simply sit back and watch it all come down: “Democrats need to play possum. This whole thing is collapsing,” he predicted in an interview with Dan Abrams of Mediaite“We’re in the midst of a collapse. This is the lowest approval — not even close — that any president has ever had at a comparable time. It’s going to be easy pickings here in six weeks. Just lay back.” Later, he told Sean Hannity on Fox News that he sees Democrats up by 13 points in the congressional generic, with Trump at the lowest approval of any president, so early in the game, in American history. He challenged Hannity by his query, “So, your viewers are getting one view. And I’m reading another view. One of us is right and one of us is wrong. It’s that simple. Have they got fact checkers at Fox?” Trump came to his defense on Truth Social with the claim that he has “the best polling numbers” in his history. “The Democrats, run by broken down losers like James Carville, who’s weak of mind and body, are going crazy, and just don’t know what to do. They have lost their confidence and spirit — they have lost their minds!” he fired back. Carville maintains that the House Democrats know exactly what they are doing because they see what is going to happen, in spite of the concern in the party that its defenses are lacking. Trump’s first moves in office instigated from constituents, 1,600 phone calls a minute to the Senate, complaining that more needed to be done. Representative Jim McGovern of Massachusetts told Axios that the record number of calls were from “people disgusted with what’s going on, and they want us to fight back.”

Carville suggested to Democratic politicians that they should not get in the way of protesters around the country who are speaking out against co-presidents Trump and Musk, or as rural America says, “‘Don’t just stand there. Do nothing.’ Let this germinate. In the immortal words of Dalton in ‘Road House,’ ‘be nice until it’s time not to be nice.’ And that time is coming shortly.” Carville disagrees with moderates who say people are overreacting to Trump, warning, “No one is overreacting. We’re living in real time in a catastrophe.” One prominent date he sees is the November 5 election in Virginia, where Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin, a leading Trump supporter, will be dealing with a large and angry electorate made up of thousands of fired federal employees. Carvile asks, “Do you think they’re gonna vote? I think they’re gonna vote. I think I know which way they’re gonna vote, and they’re gonna vote heavily.”

Robert Reich says people are asking him, “Where’s the Democratic Party?” He says that at a time when America needs a strong, bold, courageous opposition, the party’s silence is deafening, but goes on to say, “But with due respect to my old friend James Carville who is telling Democrats to ‘roll over and play dead,’ he’s full of it. Trump is killing our country, reducing the US government to rubble, and destroying our relationships with our allies. Putin may love it, but it’s a catastrophe four us and much of the rest of the world. Democrats have been rolling over and playing dead too long. That’s one reason the nation is in the trouble we’re in. My simple advice to congressional Democrats: Wake the hell up!” He goes on to say that if the party had only “had the guts years ago to condemn big money in politics, fight corporate welfare, and unrig a market that’s been rigged in favor of big corporations and the rich, Trump’s absurd bogeymen (the deep state, immigrants, socialists, trans people, diversity-equity-inclusion) wouldn’t have stood a chance.” His comments preceded the joint congressional session State-of-Trump speech, where he correctly predicted the “Republican lawmakers who have turned over their brains and intestines” would applaud his stream of lies. His wish that the Democrats would boycott the whole event en masse did not come to pass and his suggestion that they would perhaps just sit on their hands and applaud a few insipid Trump utterances was close to what we saw. There were many empty seats, with some making an exit at various times during the ninety-nine minute ordeal. Representative Al Green had to be escorted from the gathering when he heckled Trump as he pointed his cane toward the president for spewing lies, and many of those remaining had brought signs which they held up in response to his insults and rambling lies.

The small, hand-held signs only brought derision and chuckles from the Republican faction, and a political cartoon printed in some newspapers emphasized the futility of the protest in showing a chainsaw wielding Elon Musk laying waste to government buildings as the Democratic donkey mascot sat nearby in a chair holding up a sign that read, “Tsk, tsk.” Andy Borowitz satirized the event with his own account: “Donald J Trump watched Elon Musk’s historic address to Congress Tuesday night from the last row of the House chamber. Striking a menacing tone, Musk threatened to mount lavishly funded primary campaigns against congressional Republicans unless they gave him a standing ovation after every line of his speech. Trump’s view of the speech was partially obstructed by Robert F Kennedy, Jr, who sat in the second-to-last row and brought a dismembered whale’s head as his plus-one guest.” With a bit more accuracy, Borowitz said, “In what is being called a historic performance, on Tuesday night Donald J Trump set a new world record for delivering the longest speech that did not include a single fact. Congressional Republicans were awestruck by their leader’s ability, at the age of 78, to give such a sustained fact-free oration. House Speaker Mike Johnson said, ‘He’s still got it.’ Republicans contrasted Trump’s address favorably with the Democratic response of Senator Elissa Slotkin, who spoke only briefly but whose remarks were riddled with facts.” It must be noted that Elon was actually present, all spruced up in a fitted suit and tie, after ditching the blazer/t-shirt/baseball cap/dark sunglasses attire which is his Oval Office outfit — much the same as Zelensky’sStephen Colbert offered his thoughts on the Oval Office’s strict dress code of decorum, saying, “You must either look like a businessman or a guy trying to hand you a flyer outside of a strip club.”

In his speech, Trump again spoke about trying to regain ownership of the Panama Canal, sure to cause diplomatic shockwaves, as he singled out Secretary of State Marco Rubio as the one “to blame if anything goes wrong,” — resulting in a wide-eyed and shocked reaction from Rubio, and a classic forever meme for denizens of social media sites. Poor ‘Little Marco’ was probably still in a state of shock from being present at the Trump-Vance-Zelensky brawl in the Oval Office a few days before. Rubio — who according to Saturday Night Live, will now be known as ‘Marc Ruby’ since Trump signed his English-only language executive order — posted on X that the president’s speech was “inspiring” and “momentous,” with Trump’s “clear mandate from the American people to renew the American Dream.” Ruby won his Senate confirmation 99 to 0, and many hoped that his maturity and government experience would serve him well in holding some sway over Bully Trump, but that is obviously not to be. Ominously, the American asset management company, BlackRock has volunteered to buy two ports at either end of the Panama Canal from their current Hong Kong-based ownership in order to lessen Chinese influence over the crucial international waterway. BlackRock and other investors will spend $22.8 billion to buy the ports of Balboa and Cristobal — a deal which is now only an ‘agreement in principal.’

Response by Senator Bernie Sanders to the joint session speech charges Trump with creating a parallel universe with “a set of ideas that either have no basis in reality, or are nowhere near the most important concerns of the American people” — a pivotal moment in our country’s history. He says Trump’s tactic is the BIG LIE, many of which were heard during the Tuesday night blathering, and these grossly false lies are repeated over and over again, with complicity of right-wing social media sites blasting them out until people accept it as truth. Sanders points to the purpose of these lies, not only to push a right-wing agenda, but to deflect attention away from those important issues facing the country — issues Trump and his billionaire friends don’t wish to address, otherwise there is no financial benefit to them. He emphasized the issues Trump ignored in his record-setting speech: About how will working people support families in these tough times, made tougher by the administration; the reality of the 60% of Americans living paycheck to paycheck; the broken, dysfunctional, expensive health care system, and the non-affordabilty of prescription drugs; the major housing crisis and homelessness;  the massive income and wealth inequality with three 3 Americans owning more wealth than the bottom half of our society; the corrupt campaign finance system that allows billionaires to buy elections; the life expectancy of the poor compared to the wealthy; and the planetary crisis of climate change. Trump urged Congress to pass his “big beautiful budget,” leaving out ugliness of the $880 billion that would come from Medicaid, leaving 36 million Americans in peril. But what the hey — spaceship ownership is such an important factor nowadays, as well! An occasional fireworks display over the Caribbean is a sight to behold!

On his nightly show, Stephen Colbert mocked Trump’s remarks, but he was most critical of the Democrats, saying, “But don’t you worry. The Democrats came ready to fight back with their little paddles. That is how you save democracy. By quietly dissenting…or bidding on an antique tea set, it was hard to tell what was going on. In fact, I made my own sign.” Impassively, he held up a sign reading: “Try doing something.” Before Trump’s address, Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries had demanded that Democrats sit meekly and do nothing during the MAGASpeech, a demand that was not respected by several individuals. Consequently, a dozen or so disruptors were called into a ‘come to Jesus meeting’ on Thursday following the address, to be helped to “understand why their strategy is a bad idea,” which brought forth the comment that “if Jeffries has any good ideas, we’d love to hear them,” accompanied by the snarky, “But he’s been busy on a tour to sell his children’s book, “The ABCs of Democracy.” It seems incredibly misguided to scold Congressional Democrats for taking a stand against an autocrat who the party has characterized as a fascist authoritarian — a puny stand though it may be. Elie Mystal wrote in The Nation“I asked Democrats to boycott Trump’s speech to Congress. They did not. Instead, they brought little placards emblazoned with political messages, as if they were in a silent auction for fascism. We live in hell.” Senator John Fetterman on X, characterized the protests as a “sad cavalcade of self-owns and unhinged petulance. It only makes Trump look more presidential and restrained.”

Elie Mystal, besides being disgusted with Democrats for showing up at the joint session, was further enraged that Representative Al Green was censured by Congress for disrupting Trump’s speech “to a joint session of sycophants and co-conspirators”; and, though many Democrats protested and voted against the procedure punishing Green, Mystal posted a list of the ten Democrats who voted with the MAGAts who he hopes will never be able to raise a dollar from other Democrats, ever again: Ami Bera (D-CA), Ed Case (D-HI), Jim Costa (D-CA), Laura Gillen (D-NY), Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-WA), Jim Himes (D-CT), Chrissy Houlahan (D-PA), Marcy Kaptur (D-OH), Jared Moskowitz (D-FL), and Tom Suozzi (D-NY). He also decried Elissa Slotkin’s “tepid Democratic response to Trump’s multi-hour Netflix series address to Congress, during which she managed to praise notable Democratic hero, Ronald Reagan.” Mystal recounts her follow-up interview with Tim Alberta of The Atlantic“where she outlined her priorities. Her answers were the usual thin gruel that passes for Democratic Party talking points, but one line really stood out to me. She said, ‘It doesn’t win elections to speak to just the base of the party…if it did, Kamala Harris would be president.’ First of all, I’m really gonna need Becky with the 80% White Congressional district to keep Kamala Harris’s name out of her mouth. It’s easy to slag off the Democratic ‘base,’ which has been Black people for Slotkin’s entire life, when nobody is inviting you or your potato salad to the cookout anyway. It’s a little harder when you are running to represent all of America, not just the White folks who think they should own the place.”

Co-president Elon Musk is watching his Tesla vehicle empire skid downward, almost as fast as his pyrotechnics rocket company, though not quite as flashy. Sales are dropping dramatically worldwide, and dealerships are experiencing violent actions from an angry anti-Musk crowd, not to mention individual car and truck owners having their vehicles damaged and getting new paint treatments, or protest stickers applied surreptitiously. A post on Quora shares a definition of the portmanteau word, ‘DePlorean,’ combining ‘deplorable’ and ‘DeLorean,’ which has been applied to Tesla’s Cybertruck. The early 80s DeLorean sports car had a brushed aluminum exterior similar to the C-Truck, and carried similar social connotations of audacity, impracticality, and irritating behavior. While the DeLorean, which originally sold for $12,000 is now a prized collector’s item, the Cybertruck at $100,240 is an overpriced, poorly constructed symbol of excess, greed and stupidity, and much uglier when seen up close than online photos reveal. A UK-based group, ‘Everyone Hates Elon,’ recently unveiled an advertisement for a ‘Swasticar,’ which shows Musk standing in one of his cars while giving the Nazi salute, with printed copy proclaiming the vehicle “goes from zero to 1939 in three seconds.” The bus stop posted image has gone viral, and the group encourages supporters to spread it far and wide, saying, “Not happy with fueling the far-right in the USA, Elon Musk is now doing the same in Europe. We can’t let the richest man in the world poison our politics.” A GoFundMe page has been set up to raise cash to plaster the ‘Swasticar’ ad in more public places, as well as for production of small stickers reading “Don’t buy a Swasticar,” giving emphasis to their motto: “Pissing off Elon Musk, one small action at a time.”

In the UKMusk has supported the far-right, anti-immigrant Reform Party, and attacked the Labour government by spreading “lies and misinformation” about the criminality of immigrants according to Prime Minister Keir Starmer. A few weeks back, Musk expressed support for Germany’s Alternative for Germany party, which gained support in their losing election campaign, even though it has been classified as a suspected extremist group by Germany’s intelligence service. Two left-wing activist groups — UK’s Led by Donkeys, and Germany’s Center for Political Beauty, claimed responsibility after they beamed an image of Elon Musk making the Nazi salute onto Tesla’s factory in Berlin, accompanied by the words “Heil Tesla.” A jeering crowd who erupted at the mention of Musk’s name on the ‘Late Show‘ caused Stephen Colbert to comment, “That is the sound of Tesla sales plummeting.” He also joked, “Millions of young people can’t stand him — and those are just his kids.” Colin Jost on ‘Saturday Night Live’s Weekend Update‘ reported that “experts are saying that Trump’s tariffs will raise the cost of a new car by as much as $12,000, or you can get a free Tesla, since people are throwing them away.” Update co-host, Michael Che reported that European leaders have been coaching Volodymyr Zelensky on dealing with Trump —“kind of like how you need extra training to be a special ed teacher.” Che referred to a Trump claim that “no president has changed government more in 43 days,” to which Che replied, “Yeah, and nobody changed airport security more than bin Laden.” Addressing Trump’s constant back-tracking on his tariffs, amid concerns among consumers and investors, Che joked, “It’s a cunning political tactic experts call ‘bipolar disorder.”

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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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner-view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

Time Travel

“If time travel is possible, where are the tourists from future?”
~Stephen Hawking

“Why do we need time travel, when we already travel through space so far and fast? For history. For mystery. For nostalgia. For hope. To examine our potential and explore our memories. To counter regret for the life we lived, the only life, one dimension, beginning to end.”
~James Gleick

“Songs really are like a form of time travel because they really have moved forward in a bubble. Everyone who’s connected with it, the studio’s gone, the musicians are gone, and the only thing that’s left is this recording which was only about a three-minute period maybe 70 years ago.”
~Tom Waits

“I distracted myself from the fear and terrorism by thinking about things like how the universe began and whether time travel is possible.”
~Malala Yousafzai

“We all have our time machines, don’t we? Those that take us back are memories… And those that carry us forward, are dreams.”
~H.G. Wells

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The Terrifying Reality Of Medieval Life During The Norman Invasion. History Hit has lots of great documentaries, and some of them are available free on YouTube. Enjoy!


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Deep Cover