Blog Archives

October 15 – 21, 2025

Highlights this week:

Greensite… back soon… Steinbruner… PG&E rate hike, human trafficking, crime in Aptos… Hayes… Beavers… Patton… A Definition Of Democracy… Matlock… Nobel participant… unnomination… desperation and laughter… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… Lego Beach… Quotes on… “Protesting”

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BEFORE THE COUNTY BUILDING AND AFTER THE 1955 FLOOD. That’s Soquel Street and the Soquel Bridge at the bottom and way atop the photo is the new Highway One Bridge. At the very bottom on the right you can see Riverside Electric. In between is the cleared area where the County Building would be built.

Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email photo@brattononline.com

Dateline: October 15, 2025

OVERLOAD, OVERWHELM, OVER IT? Having an honest-to-goodness diagnosis of ADHD makes me have a little more grace with myself at times. That doesn’t mean I’m OK with the little “quirks” that come with the acronym. It is so much more than just “ooh, look, a squirrel!!” It’s hard to explain to people that sometimes you tell yourself that you have a thing you need to do, every day, for days on end – and you still don’t get the thing done! Once you actually start it, you are usually surprised by how not-awful it is. That should translate to a “just do it!” kind of attitude next time, but that’s rarely the case.

All of this, if that wasn’t clear, is a convoluted apology for not getting this column up on time. So sorry, mea culpa. I will try to do better 🙂 In the meantime, enjoy these submissions from our intrepid contributors! I’ll be back with the next one in a couple of days.

~Webmistress

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[Halloween Pick: WEREWOLF] AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON. Philo. Movie. (7.5 IMDb) ****

“Stay on the road. Keep clear of the moors.”

The story is simple: two American backpackers ignore the locals’ warnings, wander onto the moors, and one ends up cursed with full-moon-itis while the other returns as a wisecracking, rapidly decomposing ghost. What follows is a sharp blend of horror, dark humor, and some amazing makeup work.

The transformation scene – while dated by today’s standards – was groundbreaking for its time, delivering a visceral, painful metamorphosis and a final werewolf form that’s genuinely menacing. David Naughton makes for a sympathetic lycanthrope, Griffin Dunne shines as David’s decaying corpse conscience, and Jenny Agutter does her best as the nurse/love interest with questionable professional boundaries.

“An American Werewolf in London” remains the most watchable, witty, and downright entertaining werewolf film since the Golden Age.
~Sarge

OZZY: NO ESCAPE FROM NOW. Paramount+. Movie. (8.4 IMDb) ****

A farewell performance you can’t roll your eyes at. Plenty of rock legends have milked “one last time” for decades – but not Ozzy. His “Back to the Beginning” concert on July 5th, 2025, really was the end. He was gone by the 22nd.

“No Escape From Now” is an unvarnished chronicle of both his career and more importantly, his final, lucid march toward the inevitable. It’s less a myth-making documentary than a brutally honest goodbye, showing the man behind the metal: frail, funny, and utterly self-aware. Through it all, Sharon Osbourne is the quiet backbone – tending, cajoling, and loving the battered but unbowed Prince of Darkness as he takes his final bow.

~Sarge

GOOD BOY. In theaters. Movie (6.8 IMDb) ****

Full disclosure: I was ready to hate this film. Any movie that makes people cry about a dog is a very bad thing, because ALL dogs are the Best People, so that’s an automatic red flag.

But Good Boy surprised me. It’s a horror film told from the dog’s perspective – not another “evil dog” flick or a cheap scare where the pet gets offed to raise the stakes. Here, Indy the Dog follows his troubled Person into a forest full of strange smells, eerie silences, and one especially bad not-Person who clearly means trouble. Bad not-Person!

Some have called it slow, but I found it quietly tense, the way good horror should build. And yes, it includes one truly wrenching moment that no good dog should face. Still, it’s worth a watch – just make sure to hug your own dog after.

~Sarge

[Halloween Pick: VAMPIRE] THE HUNGER. Tubi. Movie. (6.6 IMDb) ****

Incredibly stylish Vampire film from 1983 by Tony Scott. Starring Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, and Susan Sarandon.

A young, lanky Sarandon stars as a doctor caught between two vampires — Bowie, seeking a cure for his decay, and the impossibly elegant Deneuve, the ageless predator in search of a new consort. With a soundtrack that swings from Bauhaus to Delibes and lush, stylized cinematography, The Hunger remains an elegant, sensual cornerstone of modern vampire cinema.

~Sarge

WEAPONS. In theatres, Apple TV. Movie. (7.4 IMDb) ***-

Weapons: “Pulp Fiction” meets “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street”.

A perfect suburban horror: 17 children get up in the middle of the night, and run off into oblivion. The problem is, they’re all from the same class. The problem is, it’s the entire class…but one. The problem is, it must be the teacher.

Or is it.

The film structures its mystery through overlapping points of view, evoking Pulp Fiction’s fractured narrative. At the same time, it channels Rod Serling’s “The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street”, where paranoia and fear become more destructive than the supposed threat itself. Just when the audience feels grounded, the story pivots in an unexpected direction.

The cast is anchored by the elfin Julia Garner (Ozark), Josh Brolin (“Thanos” Avengers), and Benedict Wong (Doctor Strange). Rather than relying on gore or jump scares, the film builds an atmosphere of unease that lingers after.

It’s unsettling, thought-provoking, and worth a watch.
~Sarge

WEDNESDAY (Season 2). Netflix. Series (8 IMDb) ****

Learning from Season 1, they eschew romance for Wednesday and instead keep her caught between her rocky relationship with her mother (Morticia, played by Catherine Zeta-Jones) and her attempts to thwart a tragic prophecy (how very unlike Wednesday).

This season brings a slew of new guest stars, including Lady Gaga, Christopher Lloyd (he was Fester in the ’90s Addams Family movies), Steve Buscemi, and Billie Piper (pop singer and Rose from Doctor Who), along with brief surprise returns from Christina Ricci (she played Wednesday in the ’90s films) and Gwendoline Christie. Breakout new character Agnes DeMille (played by Evie Templeton – a young actress to watch for) steals many of the scenes she’s in.

Sadly, the show still features the “Outcasts” as a marginalized group, as it did in Season 1. I’ve always felt the Addams Family worked best when their innocent bewilderment at their effect on “normies” drove the humor. Still, the season offers plenty of laughs and a terrific cast to carry you through. Worth a watch.

Snap! Snap!

~Sarge

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Gillian will be back soon!

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

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ATTEND THIS TO HELP STOP HUMAN TRAFFICKING IN SANTA CRUZ COUNTY
Human trafficking is happening in Santa Cruz County, according to the 2024-2025 County Civil Grand Jury Report.
 
Here is one thing you can do to help strop it and prevent our youth from falling prey to social media traffickers: Attend the October 28 fundraiser  film screening “Volunteers Needed” about criminal orphanage enterprises around the world that take children from families to place them in institutions to profit from voluntourism, deceiving well-meaning individuals and church groups and raking in massive profits.
 
RisingWorldwide.org/
 
Make a difference by becoming informed.

Listen to the “Community Matters” interviews of October 10 with Film maker Barak Laub and Rising Worldwide human trafficking survivor Jess T.

Also listen to the September 19 interview with staff from Arukah Project, also working to end human trafficking and to support those who escape.
Community Matters on SantaCruzVoice
 
WATSONVILLE CITY MAYOR’S POLICY PROHIBITS PUBLIC COMMENT

At the October 14, 2025 Watsonville City Council meeting, the Mayor Maria Orozco and City Manager Tamara  Vides scheduled a presentation on the controversial Seahawk Energy project (90 Minto Road, Watsonville)  to be included on the agenda as the tenth and final “Presentation” on the agenda, and that immediately followed the “Open Public Comment” portion of the agenda. 
 
Many members of the public came to the meeting to hear the presentation and to speak to the Council regarding concerns.  Many, including myself, were unfamiliar with Watsonville City Council meetings, and believed that the proper time to speak on the controversial topic would be after the presentation.  Therefore we did not speak during “Open Public Comment”.
 
Halfway through the presentations, one Councilwoman Ari Parker asked the Mayor Orozco if she would reconsider her standing policy to not allow public comment on any item included in the “Presentation” portion of the agenda, because many people in the audience may not have been aware that their time to speak on the controversial topic would have been during “Open Public Comment”. The Mayor had made no announcement of such opportunity to inform the public at the beginning of “Public Comment”. 
 
The Mayor Maria Orozco refused, even though many people voiced that they were not aware of her unwritten policy.

City Manager, Ms. Tamara Vides, then stated that she had decided that it would be better to arrange another public meeting with the Seahawk project developer, Mr. Max Christian, for a later date.
 
After Mr. Christian’s presentation, during which the Mayor quieted some people in the audience interjecting oppositional information, one elderly woman approached the podium and asked to speak about the topic.  Mayor Orozco refused, turned off the podium microphone and called for a five-minute Council recess.
 
Does Mayor Orozco’s unwritten policy to prohibit public comment and lack of written explanation of such on the agenda violate the Brown Act?  It is my understanding that the public is allowed to comment on any item included on the agenda.
 

Here is how the Agenda reads:

PRESENTATIONS & ORAL COMMUNICATIONS

This time is set aside for members of the general public to address the Council on any item not on the Council Agenda, which is within the subject matter jurisdiction of the City Council. No action or discussion shall be taken on any item presented except that any Council Member may respond to statements made or questions asked, or may ask questions for clarification. All matters of an administrative nature will be referred to staff. All matters relating to Council will be noted in the minutes and may be scheduled for discussion at a future meeting or referred to staff for clarification and report. 

ALL SPEAKERS ARE ASKED TO FILL OUT A SPEAKER CARD & LEAVE IT AT THE PODIUM. SPEAKERS ARE ASKED TO ANNOUNCE THEIR NAME AND DISTRICT IN WHICH THEY LIVE IN ORDER TO OBTAIN AN ACCURATE RECORD FOR THE MINUTES.

How would the public know that Mayor Orozco had made the policy to not allow public comment on presentations at the time they occur on the agenda?
 
Would she have reconsidered if the topic were not controversial?  Does she have a conflict of interest in that she is the analyst for 4th District County Supervisor Felipe Hernandez, who supports putting the 300+ cargo containers filled with flammable, explosive lithium batteries on 90 Minto Road, next to the Schapiro Knolls affordable housing complex, and adjacent to the dense blue-collar subdivisions of Diamond Estates, Amador and many other smaller neighborhoods?  
 
Does City Manager Tamara Vides also have a conflict of interest, serving on the Executive Board of Central Coast Community Energy (3CE)  and is awaiting the opportunity to support a Power Purchase Agreement with Mr. Christian for the Seahawk project?  Did that relationship influence in her actions to arrange the Council agenda such that Mr. Christian’s presentation would prevent public comment, under Mayor Orozco’s unwritten policy?  Leaders of local grassroots groups had contacted Ms. Vides in advance to confirm the date of Mr. Christian’s presentation but she refused any confirmation, and she refused to allow the groups’ requests for presentation time as well.
 
Write to the City Council with your thoughts. Watsonville City Council 
 
 
Shouldn’t Mayor Orozco include written explanation on all agendas of her policy to prohibit public comment on presentations other than during the Open Comment time preceding them?   
 
Do you think she has a conflict of interest in this 90 Minto Road battery energy storage project that her employer supports and is pushing the County to allow via a new Ordinancei?  
 
Do you think City Manager Tamara Vides has a conflict of interest regarding the 90 Minto Road project in that she serves on the 3CE Executive Board? 
 
 
CRIME IN APTOS?
A recent series of burglaries in Aptos brought about a public meeting with Sheriff staff to discuss the problem. Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office details rare spate of Aptos burglaries. [Santa Cruz Sentinel]
 
I was not able to attend it, but others expressed their concerns.
 
Many thanks to my friend, Al, for sending the link to this County Sheriff Dept. dashboard for incidents in the County: Agency – EIS CSP Mapping Portal

FUNDING AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ? LISTEN FRIDAY FOR INFORMATION ON SANTA CRUZ CITY MEASURES B & C 

City of Santa Cruz voters’ ballots include Measure B and Measure C and both pertain to funding affordable housing in the City.  Listen in on “Community Matters”  Friday, 2pm-4pm, to learn more about these two ballot measures.  Guest  Renee Mello will be interviewed at 2:10pm Pacific Standard Time, and Guest Elaine Johnson will be interviewed at 3:10pm.
 
Listen from your computer or smart device.
 
At discretion of the Guests, we may or may not be taking calls from the audience.  
 
Learn more about Measures B and C here.

SPEAK UP THIS WEEK ABOUT PG&E PROPOSED RATE HIKE

There are no limits on how often utilities can raise rates—or by how much. The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) can stop this—but only if we hold them accountable.

RAISE YOUR VOICE!

Join other California ratepayers and call into the virtual CPUC meeting on 10/23 at 6:00 PM

View 10/23 Event Details

PG&E wants to pass massive costs to you:

  • $1.237 billion increase in 2027

  • 6% annual increases through 2030

  • By 2030, bills could be 14% higher than today

  • PG&E customers could pay $11.3 billion more over 2027–2030

PG&E calls it the “lowest increase in a decade” — but for Californians, it means higher bills while the cost of living soars.

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING OR FILM SCREENING ON HUMAN TRAFFICKING.
MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING ONE THING.

Cheers,
Becky

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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Beavers

Photo credit: D. Gordon E. Robertson – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0,

Beavers are again being recognized by humans as creatures crucial to holding together the natural world across much of North America and Europe. Where they are able, beavers create wetlands. Those beaver wetlands do so much for so many other beings, including us. Let’s explore California’s beaver resurgence for a few minutes.

History

There once were two beaver species, then only one living alongside indigenous people, then even those were nearly wiped out. In modern time, beavers have been variously killed, ignored, restored, or coexisted with. The Big Beaver of the Pleistocene, like so many other species, winked out when humans arrived on the continent. Probably they were too tasty. Its smaller cousin, though, survived. There are names for beaver in many native people’s languages across California. But the Old World Peoples persecuted both the native peoples and the beaver. Beavers were trapped to extirpation so early in those terrible times that as records started being written, there was already doubt that beavers had ever been in most places across the State. The state’s wildlife department finally protected the few remaining of the species and then began restoring them. Beavers, farmers, water managers, and road departments had problems working it out, so the State started allowing, and still allows, beavers to be killed where they cause too big of problem.

Over the past 20 years, brilliant folks from Back East figured out a way to solve some of those problems, so beaver coexistence technology is now a thing in California. At the same time, in just the last 5 years, our wildlife officials have started translocating problem beavers to restore the species in more places. These recent pro-beaver developments come just in time for so many reasons.

Beaver Biota

Where beaver go, many follow. Three weeks ago, I saw a river otter stick its head out of the water in a pond behind a beaver dam. River otters follow beavers as do ducks, egrets, herons, kingfishers and so much more. Rare amphibians and reptiles likely were once more abundant due to beavers, including California red-legged frogs, San Francisco garter snakes, California tiger salamanders, Western pond turtles, and Santa Cruz long-toed salamanders. Mostly, those rare species rely on manmade cattle or farm ponds nowadays, but what about before those?

I have studied the landscape for 50 miles in every direction around Santa Cruz and have found very few natural ponds. Coastal ponds are either in earthquake faults, vernal pools in ancient dune declivities (e.g., Ft. Ord), or impoundments at the back of more modern dunes. These situations are all quite rare. Looking further abroad, there are more vernal pools in the Central Valley and one can imagine oxbow lakes along many of California’s rivers before modern humans messed so much by channelizing rivers. If we could restore beaver to the landscape, I’m betting we could recover frogs, snakes, turtles and salamanders…and even fish! Most agree that California’s many species of super endangered salmon once thrived in the food-rich backwaters of beaver ponds.

I could go on and on about the many other wetland species that follow beaver pond architecture, but I’m thinking you get the idea.

Fire Stop

Recently, “Smokey the Beaver” has become a meaningful meme. In the past decade Californians have witnessed catastrophic infernos raging across the landscape like no one had previously imagined was possible. Across the West and north through Canada the same pattern has been emerging: big, big fires fueled by climate-change-induced drought, heat, and winds. The solution to fire: water. When beavers dam rivers and streams, they create fire breaks. In the huge footprints of “The Big Black,” post-fire, thank the beaver for the green strips that offer refuge to whatever wildlife may have survived the blaze. I have stood my ground on the edge of two approaching wildfires and have witnessed masses of fleeing deer, rabbits, wood rats and more running from the flames. I imagine those creatures finding beaver wetlands and hunkering down, eyes wide, hearts racing as the world around them crackles, roars, and burns. Beaver firebreaks can help save human lives and infrastructure, as well.

The Wetting

Beavers make it possible to rehydrate the West. Their dams are speed bumps for floods, slowing the surge, spreading floodwaters across floodplains, and hydrating large swaths of valley bottoms. By storing rainwater behind their dams, beavers keep streams and rivers flowing farther into the season of California’s long, dry summer. As water slows down behind beaver ponds, it can more readily recharge groundwater, too. Some have suggested that restoring beavers across the mountain meadows of the Sierra Nevada could store as much water as 2 large new reservoirs. That would be cheaper…and more sustainable!

Monterey Bay’s Beavers

Beavers are in the Salinas River all the way down to the Highway One bridge. Those riverine beavers are bank burrowers…they don’t make dams in such big rivers, but they sure like to eat the willows. You’d have to go south to San Luis Obispo before you found another beaver family. And, travelling north you would have to get onto private land along Butano Creek in San Mateo County to encounter our beaver buddies. Sometimes that population makes a more public showing downstream in the Pescadero marsh, where one mysteriously died this past year. What about prime beaver habitat in the Carmel, Pajaro, and San Lorenzo rivers? When will beavers arrive in those locations? Corralitos, Soquel, and Scott creeks also offer promising beaver habitat. Perhaps one day we can find a way to offer beavers a place alongside humans in some of those rivers or streams. Help spread the word!

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, October 14, 2025
#287 / A Definition Of Democracy

Pictured above is Osita Nwanevu, as he is being interviewed by Ross Douthat, a “conservative” columnist for The New York Times. Nwanevu is the author of The Right of the People: Democracy and the Case for a New American Founding. He is a contributing editor at The New Republic and is the Democratic Institutions fellow at the Roosevelt Institute.

The exchange between Nwanevu and Douthat is lengthy – and I think it is very much worthwhile. If you would like to read what Nwanevu has to say, the next link should get you there, and it should get you there “paywall free,” besides. The Douthat column is titled, “Abolish the Senate. End the Electoral College. Pack the Court. Why the left can’t win without a new Constitution.” I was most taken by Nwanevu’s definition of “Democracy.”

As those who read my blog postings with any regularity will probably remember, I don’t much like to advertise “Democracy” as the kind of government we need. I strongly prefer the term, “Self-Government.” The term “Democracy,” as I understand it, focuses mainly on voting, with the majority vote deciding what happens. While it’s my view that voting is critically important, I don’t think that voting is nearly as important as our personal participation in politics. Examine the quoted material below, and you will see why I am recommending that you read the entirety of Nwanevu’s conversation with Douthat.

Incidentally, you can “listen” to the discussion, if you’d prefer to do that, instead of reading what Douthat and Nwanevu have to say. There is a link to an audio discussion, right near the beginning. It is titled, “Is Trump a Test or Triumph for Democracy?” Reading or listening, I like what Nwanevu has to say about “Democracy” [Emphasis added]:

Douthat:

In your description, I think you can see two potential takeaways that people trying to reformulate ideas for the Democratic Party could draw from the election. The idea that voters were asked to choose between abstractions and kitchen table issues, you get the argument that, basically, what the Democratic Party needs to do is just focus on those kitchen table issues, have policy debates, argue about specific issues — health care, education, the environment, and so on — and not get caught up in larger theories of how democracy works.

But you do have a larger theory of how democracy doesn’t work in America right now, and how it should work. So, give me your definition of democracy. What is a democracy? 

Nwanevu:

A democracy is a system in which the governed govern. You can read a lot of political theory, you can read the classics — I don’t think you get a definition that is more succinct than that. Another formulation is Lincoln’s government “of, by, and for the people.”

And so, in a democracy, the people themselves are the people who govern. It’s not entrusted as a responsibility to some alien authority, some external power, some other hierarchy. People take on the responsibility and burden and promise of governing themselves. That’s the core idea.

In the kind of “Democracy” that Nwanevu is talking about, we do not have a government in which we elect the people, who hire the people, who run our lives for us.

If we are discouraged and despairing about the future of our government (and I’m thinking that most of us are), it’s because we have set up a system in which others are doing the governing. That doesn’t work. That’s not the kind of “Democracy” we expect. The kind of “Democracy” that works is a system in which the “governed” govern.

Have you been “governing,” today?

If not, it’s no wonder that you are discouraged and despairing. But there’s only one solution if you are.

We can’t have “self-government,” we can’t have the kind of “Democracy” that Nwanevu is talking about, unless we are, lots of us, personally engaged in politics and government.

If we’re not (and we’re not) a significant time reallocation is required!

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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MIDDLE EAST RIVIERA, TUBMAN, VENEZUELA TWO-STEP

Poor President Trump will have to wait another year in his attempt to convince the Peace Research Institute in OsloNorway that he deserves the Nobel Peace Prize, as they probably considered his obsession a running joke in their deliberations. Humorist Andy Borowitz, tongue firmly planted in cheek, wrote, “Though the committee did not bestow its prize on Trump, it did recognize him with a laser printed ‘certificate of participation,’ saying ‘his entry gave us many hours of welcome laughter.‘” His quest to be awarded the prize has been front and center since his return to office but that fixation is seen by foreign diplomats as fodder for wisecracks, since TACO Trump hasn’t even been able to focus on the Ukraine situation, despite his claim to have solved eight wars — or is it nine now that his push for peace in Gaza seems fruitful? It’s ironic that the Norwegian committee held its final meeting two days before Trump announced the first phase of the possible mid-east truce on Truth Social, with many critics hailing it as a major achievement. And, besides, the Russia-Ukraine dilemma is just too difficult to mess with, considering his relationship with Comrade Putin.

Trump’s desperation for the prize, coupled with his belief that he would be passed over by the committee, led him to bitterly declare, “They will never give me a Nobel Peace Prize. It’s too bad. I deserve it, but they will never give it to me.” Wow, he was correct on one point, but wrong on the other, and as Clarence Lusane writes on Nation of Change there are ten reasons for not deserving the honor — ten being just a nice round number. Lusane describes himself as a political scientist, focusing on human rights, global racial justice, and social movements, and having given thought and study on the Nobel Peace Prize, having taught a course on the prize at American University, and spending time at the Nobel Peace Center museum and the Norwegian Nobel Institute. In these capacities he has been able to review various documents, such as nomination letters.

From his activities, Lusane is categorized as one who can officially make a nomination for a desired recipient, a category which includes members of ‘parliamentary assemblies,’ previous Nobel Peace Prize Laureates, directors of peace research institutes and foreign policy institutes, members of international courts, members of the Norwegian Nobel Peace Prize Committee, and university professors. Lusane explains that whole the Committee has “never explicitly stated that such a thing is possible, I’m going to assume that I can also make an ‘unnomination.‘” For instance, there were many letters of support for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s nomination in 1963 and into 1964, there were also letters asking the Prize Committee to deny him the prize, most coming from individuals ineligible to make, or unmake, such a request.

This leads Lusane to say, “I can think of no one more deserving of being unnominated for a Nobel Peace Prize than President Donald Trump. His record of authoritarian and antidemocratic rule grows more dangerous and harmful by the day, not just for the United States but for the entire global community. And yet he has been nominated by Republican sycophants in Congress who seek his favor, and global strongmen, including Gabon’s President Brice Oligui Nguema, who came to power thanks to a military coup, and Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev, who has been that country’s president for 22 years. They all understand that such recommendations appeal to his need for adulation and blunt any criticisms he may have of their own behavior.” The Nobel Committee keeps all nominations secret for fifty years, so the only way Trump and the world would know that a person nominated him is if they themselves made it public.

The Committee considers a nominee’s work in the previous year, making Trump’s ‘peace’ efforts during his first term in office, and the time out of office, not a factor. Lusane then examines the president’s first eight months in office in 2025, asking his question: “What has Trump done so far this year to NOT deserve the award?” Number one on his list: Pardoning and commuting prison sentences of 1,500 J-6 rioters; second, his immoral and radicalized campaign against undocumented immigrants who are “poisoning the blood of the country,” kidnappings of American streets, and renditions to foreign gulags; third, he shut down the United States Agency for International Development, precipitating loss of education for 23 million children, with another 95 million losing access to basic healthcare which could result in 3 million more preventable annual deaths; fourth, deploying ICENational Guard troops in US cities, which sparked resistance and violence, all while claiming that troops were quelling widespread criminality; fifth, imperialistic threats to CanadaGreenland, and the Panama Canal.

Reason #6, demanded Brazil stop “persecution” of his buddy, Jair Bolsonaro, who attempted to stop transition of power following a legitimate election — “a witch hunt” according to Trump; seventh, issued an unconstitutional order threatening two US professors for their work with the International Criminal Court, resulting in two federal judges concluding he was violating the First Amendment’s right to free speech; eighth, bombing of three nuclear sites in Iran under distinctly dubious legal authority, and despite Trump’s boast that the facilities were “completely and fully obliterated,” the truth came out that it was a setback of only a few months which led to War Secretary Hegseth firing Lieutenant General Jeffrey Kruse who reported the botched air action; ninth, Trump withdrew the country from critical international bodies that work with 46 European governments and organizations to address issues of discrimination; tenth, despite his claim of ending seven wars, he is/was complicit in the genocide and famine in GazaLusane continues, “His unholy alliance with Israel Prime Minister Netanyahu has meant a lot of performative concern about starvation and tens of thousands of deaths in Gaza along an unending supply of weapons for Israel. His insensitivity to the suffering has only been compounded by this disturbing desire to cleanse the area of Palestinians and develop what he’s called a ‘Riviera of the Middle East.'”

And mind you, I won’t even count President Trump’s ‘pathetic’ groveling campaign for the Peace Prize as one of the reasons he shouldn’t get it. That seems almost self-evident. It reminds me of comedian Steven Wright’s joke: ‘I’d kill for a Nobel Peace Prize.’ It’s impossible to imagine Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter, or Martin Luther King Jr., calling officials in Norway and begging for the prize as Trump recently did; or, for that matter, using his platform at the United Nations to falsely claim that ‘everyone says I should get the Nobel Peace Prize,’ just a few weeks after starting his killing campaign with military strikes in international waters in the Caribbean without due process or legal recourse, not to speak of changing the name of the Department of Defense to the Department of War,” charges Lusane. A Washington Post-Ipsos poll found that 76 percent of Americans don’t believe that he deserves the award, including 49 percent of Republicans, who believe that the award must be EARNED.

Lusane romps on with his anti-Trump diatribe: “His authoritarian push to reshape the US and demean all its governing, social, financial, and cultural institutions is itself a threat to peace. He continues to attack a free press, bully universities, ignore judicial orders, abuse the very principle of a separation of powers, and openly seeks to rig elections in his favor. Forget for the moment the fascism, authoritarianism, patrimonialism, retribution, bigotry, corruption, greed, mendacity, and incompetence — his one character trait that should be considered most disqualifying is his cruelty. His lust for revenge and power has brought unspeakable malice and pain to undocumented immigrants, LGBTQ families, federal workers, foreign students, and any number of individuals whom he feels have challenged him.” Who can forget at the assassinated Charlie Kirk’s memorial service, his widow forgave the shooter, stating that, “the answer to hate is not hate,” and Trump’s retort, “I hate my opponents, and I don’t want the best for them.”

The Nobel Prize criteria for nominees, and for awarding the final award, is to “the person who has done the most or best to advance fellowship among nations, the abolition or reduction of standing armies, and the establishment and promotion of peace congresses.” Trump has a long uphill slog to even come close in the next year. Lusane concludes, “Let Trump continue to whine and play the victim as he manifests his doctrine of intimidation, bribes, and palling around with authoritarians. In the not-too-distant future, history will extensively document and abhor the outrages and inhumanity of the Trump era, recording it with the same disdain and dismay that now is used for the eras of slavery and segregation, or the McCarthy years. Let’s hope that the Nobel Peace Prize never becomes another institution that Trump disgraces and diminishes.”

Satirical writer, Andy Borowitz couldn’t let the Trump/Nobel Show pass without his own contribution: “OSLO, NORWAY (The Borowitz Report) — After promising on Truth Social that the gathering would be ‘wild,’ on Friday Donald J. Trump summoned angry supporters to rally outside the headquarters of the Norwegian Nobel Committee. Urging his irate loyalists to ‘stop the steal,’ Trump declared, ‘If you want to win the Nobel Peace Prize, you’ve got to fight like hell.’ In a brief public statement, the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said, ‘What a effing baby.‘”

Trump may have to console himself with news that the US Treasury has released the first drafts of imagery for a new $1 coin to commemorate America’s 250th birthday and the President, who ostensibly will be in the Oval Office at that celebratory time. US Treasurer Brandon Beach says more information will be forthcoming after the “obstructionist shutdown” of the government is over. The first images depict Trump’s side profile on the front side, with the word ‘LIBERTY‘ at the top, and ‘In God We Trust‘ below the profile. The reverse side contains the overused image of Trump raising his fist as seen in photos following the ButlerPA assassination attempt, with a billowing US flag in the background, and words ‘FIGHT, FIGHT, FIGHT‘ at the top. At this time it isn’t clear the controversial coin will ever be minted, being against the law to display the image of a sitting president or living former president. A two-year lapse is required following a president’s death to have his or her features on a coin, according to the US code governing coin design. Congress has passed the Circulating Collectible Coin Redesign Act, allowing the Treasury to mint special $1 coins to celebrate the upcoming anniversary for a one-year period beginning on January 1, “with designs emblematic of the United States semiquincentennial.”

The law also states, “No head and shoulders portrait or bust of any person, living or dead, and no portrait of a living person may be included on the reverse of specified coins.” So, does the side view portrait of Trump featured on the front side of the proposed coin, not the reverse, observe the law? The reverse side still features Trump, but the Butler image falls outside of the direct language “head and shoulders portrait or bust.” Treasurer Beach confirms that the drafts with Trump hogging both sides are legitimate, but a Treasury spokesperson emphasizes that a final design has not been chosen — though “the first draft reflects well the enduring spirit of our country and democracy, even in the face of immense obstacles,” and they look forward to sharing more soon. Thanks, we can hardly wait! The only living president to be featured on a coin was Calvin Coolidge in 1926, according to The American Numismatic Association.

To commemorate the 150th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, and to finance the Sesquicentennial Exposition in Philadelphia, a million half-dollar coins were authorized, portraying the heads of George Washington and ‘silent Cal‘ facing right on the front, and a cracked Liberty Bell on the reverse, with the inscription ‘Sesquicentennial of American Independence.’ The Exposition Commission overestimated the public’s interest in the coin, and though the Exhibition was well-attended, 859,408 half-dollars were returned to the Philadelphia Mint, melting into history. NBC’s Saturday Night Live News Update has an idea that might spur interest in any Trump coin: Instead of Trump’s raised fist image from the ButlerPA photo, why not show Trump holding Harriet Tubman in a headlock on the reverse side?

The Nobel Committee’s selection of Venezuela’s María Corina Machado, an opposition leader driven into hiding since the country’s disputed 2024 election, for her keeping “the flame of democracy burning amid a growing darkness, and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy.” Machado has described her life’s work as promoting “ballots over bullets,” with the Nobel Committee lauding her as “one of the most extraordinary examples of civilian courage in Latin America in recent times.” In her statement of acceptance, Machado said the prize belongs to the people of Venezuela: “It is a recognition of what we have achieved together and a reminder of what still remains,” adding that it should act as an impetus for Venezuelans to complete the task of achieving freedom. Although the White House was disgruntled at the Nobel Committee’s choice, earlier this year President Trump had nothing but praise for Machado for “peacefully expressing the voices and the WILL of the Venezuelan people.” Trump claimed that he spoke to her after the award was announced globally, and that she was “very nice” during their call. “The person who actually got the Nobel Prize called today, called me and said, ‘I’m accepting this in honor of you, because you really deserved it,'” the president declared. WAIT a damn minute! Wasn’t she quoted as saying the prize belongs to the people of Venezuela? Sounds kinda fishy…definitely lacking in truthiness…the only list Trump belongs on is Epstein’s list!

But then, Machado told El País newspaper that Venezuelans are “deeply grateful” to the US president, and earlier she publicly thanked him on social media “for his decisive support of our cause. We are on the threshold of victory, and today more than ever we count on President Trump, the people of the United States, the people of Latin America, and the democratic nations of the world as our main allies in achieving freedom and democracy. Venezuela will be free!” Her efforts have become more difficult with the deterioration of her country’s democratic institutions due to despotic crackdowns by President Maduro’s government. “Everyone in Venezuela is afraid of losing our freedom or even our lives,” she explained to CNN’s Christiane Amanpour. “But above all we are committed to make the truth prevail…and get a transition to democracy peacefully.”

It’s curious that the prize award comes at this time of rising antagonism between the US and Venezuela, with the US military conducting lethal strikes on boats off the coast of Venezuela, which the Trump White House has deemed to be “narco-trafficking vessels.” Evidence of any kind to support this action is totally lacking, so they could be fishing boats, pleasure boats or conveyances for carrying paying passengers to other ports — the last boat destroyed was said to have several Columbian citizens aboard. Also, the US has deployed at least seven warships to the southern Caribbean, while announcing a $50 million reward for information leading to President Maduro’s arrest stemming from formal drug trafficking charges in 2020 by the Justice Department.

Also curious is an email from CodePink.org, which decries the selection of Machado as a Nobel recipient. CodePink is a feminist grassroots organization working to end US warfare and imperialism, support peace and human rights initiatives, and redirect resources into healthcare, education, green jobs and other life-affirming programs, according to their website. The writer of this particular message claims to be Venezuelan-American who knows exactly what Machado represents, whose politics have brought much suffering to that country while functioning as a polished spokesperson for sanctions, privatization, and foreign intervention disguised as democracy. Machado is accused of working hand-in-hand with Washington to justify regime change, demanding foreign military intervention to “liberate” Venezuela through force, and cheering on Trump’s threats of invasion and his naval show of force in the Caribbean. Further, she is accused of wanting to hand over the country’s oil, water, and infrastructure to private corporations, “…the same recipe that made Latin America the laboratory of neoliberal misery in the 1990s.”

CodePink says that Machado praises Trump’s “decisive action” against a “criminal enterprise,” aligning herself with the man who cages migrant children and tears families apart under ICE’s watch while Venezuelan mothers search for their children disappeared by US migration policies. The email says Machado isn’t a symbol of peace or progress, the ideology being a belief that lives are disposable, that sovereignty is negotiable, and that violence can be sold as order. CodePink sums it up with: “If Henry Kissinger could win a Nobel Peace Prize, why not María Corina Machado? Maybe next year they’ll give it to the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation for ‘compassion under occupation,’ or the Palestinian journalists in Gaza who, with no safety or rest, document the bombings, name the victims, and keep the truth alive when the world looks away.” Too late for debate, or the ‘unnomination,’ this year.

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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“Protesting”

“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse, and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.”
~Desmond Tutu

“Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence.”
~Leonardo da Vinci

“I love America more than any other country in the world and, exactly for this reason, I insist on the right to criticize her perpetually.”
~James Baldwin

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.”
~John F. Kennedy

“He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it.”
~Martin Luther King, Jr.

This video is 4 years old, but I very much doubt that things are much better… It’s worth a watch though.


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Deep Cover

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