Government |
Violence in Oakland forces residents to seek private security |
2013-08-18 |
[CBSNEWS] There has been 61 murders so far in Oakland, Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party,. And with crime on the rise, some neighbors are taking extraordinary steps. When gummint ceases doing its job the citizenry must of necessity pick up the job. Just ask Charles Cora. Gunfire has become so common on the streets of Oakland, Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, -- that even in neighborhoods that once seemed immune to the city's violence, residents are no longer shocked. But they'll continue voting Democrat, because there's no such thing as cause and effect. "It's like, 'Oh, another shooting,'" said Jan Hetherington, who has lived for 14 years in the Oakland neighborhood of Maxwell Park. It's a place with glorious views across the Socialist paradise of San Francisco ...where God struck dead Anton LaVey, home of the Sydney Ducks, ruled by Vigilance Committee from 1859 through 1867, reliably and volubly Democrat since 1964... Bay, neat houses and friendly neighbors. Referred to in the local papers as "a bastion of white privilege." "This is the most wonderful neighborhood I've ever lived in," she said. "...except for the occasional dead guy." Yet she acknowledged she has to bring in private security to feel safe. "Until I hired Thugmont, life wasn't quite perfect." With budget cuts forcing Oakland to trim its police force by a third, Anybody remember when Bill Clinton was puffing and preening about how he'd pushed through legislation to "hire 100,000 new policemen?" They're not new anymore. residents decided to pay themselves for private security patrols, which is understandable when you hear this from Hetherington. Watch for the guys in the hoodies. You end up in court, you racist bustard. "A car came down the street, three guys got out with a gun. There was a shootout three blocks over. And I did hear actually a bullet went through somebody's house." You should send a strongly worded letter to Mayor Jean Quan. Or perhaps Mayor Ron Dellums can come out of retirement and fix the problem. Or his predecessor, now Gov. Jerry Brown. That routine gunfire turned tragic last month. Oh, hold me, Ethel! "Our neighbor Judy, who lived in the next block to me, was shot and killed," said Hetherington. "Oh, Former Mayor Brown! What shall I do?" Judy Salamon, a 66-year-old dog walker, was murdered as she drove home. Who did it and why is unknown. Neighbors gathering at the spot where she died fear that if it could happen to Salamon, it could happen to anyone. They're a brilliant lot, aren't they? See how they picked right up on that? Pastor Gregg Brown moved here nine years ago. Even he has been threatened at gunpoint, right outside his Lutheran church "I was scared and I'm still scared," he said. "I'm allergic to lead!" The man with the gun complained about the noisy power washer used to clean the church sidewalk. Brown was told to stop or he'll be shot. "That's how close the crime is," he said. That's how much his life is worth. Eighty-one-year-old Joyce Nichelini has lived Maxwell Park for 42 years. "I lock a gate now and I lock my door and I have alarms. I even put bars on my house," she said. Yet she acknowledged she doesn't feel safe. Perhaps because she's surrounded by the descendants (spiritual and otherwise) of the Sydney Ducks? Other residents hope that when the private security patrols begin in a couple of weeks, it will bring a sense of security to a neighborhood most love too much to leave. |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
Newt Gingrich: All (opposition) politics is local |
2009-11-22 |
![]() The law's arm is long, its grip strong. Take health care, for example. The intended consequence of the campaign for Democratic health reform has been to expand government into the most intimate, most consequential parts of our lives. 17 percent of the economy's a pretty hefty boodle. But the unintended consequence has been to drive more Americans away from the idea of government-run health care and toward more personal responsibility. The latest polling data from Gallup show a stunning, 22-point shift among Americans away from believing that government is responsible for health care toward believing that individuals are responsible for their own health care. It's that "T" word: trillions. I can't recall ever having heard it used when discussing government projects. It's kind of a paradox that while a trillion is too big a number for people to get their minds around they also seem to constitute something that's finite: how many trillions do we have? What's more, this shift against government health care has actually been fueled by the campaign to federalize it. In 2006, 69 percent of Americans believed government was responsible for health care. Today, that number is 47 percent. Lots of us are in favor of all sorts of nice-sounding things until we look at the details. The devil's always in the details, isn't it? The unintended but nonetheless building backlash against big, centralized government isn't just confined to health care, and it isn't just confined to Washington. In Baton Rouge, La., last week voters by a wide margin rejected a tax increase to pay for more city spending. The entire Democratic establishment, the media and the business establishment tried to sell the higher taxes as hope and change for Baton Rouge, but the voters weren't buying. Thanks in large part to an opposition campaign mounted by the Baton Rouge Tea Party, 64 percent of voters rejected the new taxes. That's a phenomenon that I don't think the Publican party actually comprehends yet. People are still tired of them because they took power in 1994 using the Contract with America. They implemented most of it, but then they decided to act like Dems and "govern from the center." Nobody acts like Dems better than the Dems themselves do, so they took back power, which they're now proceeding to abuse -- they're not bothering to "govern from the center" or even from center left. But the only virtue the Publicans have is being not Dems. Rather than discussing the details of legislation they'd be a lot better off dicussing things like liberty and competetiveness, job creation, and national independence. This comes on the heels of the historic rejection of higher taxes and bigger government that California voters delivered earlier this year. In a state that gave Barack Obama a 24-point margin of victory in 2008, California voters in May rejected a series of taxing and spending measures by 63 percent-plus majorities. Another initiative, which would limit elected officials' salaries in times of deficits, passed with 74 percent of the vote. Right. We'll see them in court on that one. Add this all together and it points to a strong message being sent by the American people: At a time when politicians are telling us that only government can solve our problems -- a time when government itself seems to be the most important constituency of many politicians -- Americans are simply saying, "No." No more. They are a rejecting big, expensive, distant government. They're rejecting a grab at 17 percent of the national economy. If the entire U.S. GDP is $13.84 trillion and we're looking at a health care bill that's talking about anywhere from $1 trillion to $22 trillion depending on who's doing the presentation, even the dullards among us can comprehend it, and even the dullards can comprehend that even just one of those 13.84 trillions is a significant chunk that won't be available for other things, such as beer. The idea of a government program that costs more than our entire GDP is simply ludicrous. I wouldn't take too much comfort from Caliphornia's rejection of their legislatures attempts to spend them into the ground. They've been rejecting ever since Proposition 13, but they've keep reelecting the same gang the San Francisco vigilantes were in the habit of stringing up or running out of town 150 years ago. Nancy Pelosi and Barbara Boxer are from Caliphornia. So's Maxine Waters and so was Ron Dellums. Jerry "Governor Moonbeam" Brown is running for governor again and it's my guess he's got a real good chance of reoccupying the seat currently warmed by Arnold Schwartzegger. The alternative to big government isn't no government, as critics of small-government conservatives would have you believe. It's something increasing numbers of Americans are calling "localism." Localism is federalism, but with the benefit of hard experience. America's Founders established federalism -- creating a federal government with clearly defined, and thus constitutionally limited, powers and reserving the remainder of governmental power to the states or the people -- to maximize individual freedom and prevent a central government from creating for itself ever expanding powers over the people. Much of that was dismantled in the wake of the Civil War, whether implicitly or explicitly. We're not going to repeal the 14th amendment, nor are we going to rewrite it even though it needs it. But the political establishment in Washington and politicians from Sacramento to Albany to Baton Rouge don't like federalism. They have tried to sell the American people on the idea that today's challenges are too complex and too pressing to be left to the states or to the people. These challenges, we are assured, require bigger and more expensive federal or state governments. We always expect these big programs to be run with an efficiency that's to date been lacking. Parkinson's Law applies just as remorsely as the Law of Unintended Side Effects. The British Colonial Office in 1949 had more employees to administer fewer colonies than had pertained in 1898. The U.S. Postal Service charges more and more to deliver an ever decreasing volume of mail. Excluding junk mail and bills they may deliver none at all. Yet still we expect the gummint to administer health care with more efficiency and compassion than the insurance companies' utilization managers, most of whom are RNs. Localism is a direct reaction to this. The past couple months have seen the most decisive shift in generations back to the original American view of the role of the federal government. It is a return to the constitutional understanding that powers not belonging to the federal government should reside in the most local possible center of responsibility. Sometimes that's individual Americans and their families. Other times it's local or state government. It's an idea that's inimical to the proposition that the common folk exist to create wealth for their betters. In all cases, it's a decisive rejection of the notion being peddled in Washington that self-government in the 21st century is too complicated to be left to the people. The irony is that this great awakening of personal and local responsibility is in response to a concerted campaign to convince us that the opposite is true: That the hope and change we've been waiting for must come from enlightened politicians and governments, not from ourselves. It's the result of realizing that the Dems are corrupt to their hairlines and that they haven't the least concern for the "little people" they claim to represent. The Publicans are inept and generally lacking in principles, though only about a tenth as corrupt. That leaves We the People with nobody to represent us. Third parties are a lost cause, a haven for cranks and vanity campaigners. Big government is being sold in Washington today as something new. The unintended consequence is that Americans are returning to something old: government of, by, and for the people. It won't happen. The best we're going to get is a transient improvement, something like we saw following the Contract with America. The Tea Party movement's not going to being going with the same fervor ten years from now, even five years from now. Once the improvement's been made many of the agents will be coopted by the Dem machines, some will pronounce themselves "mavericks" and get their pictures in the papers, others will turn into time servers enjoying their perks. 1994 was only 15 years ago and we can see how much of the Contract with America's still in force. |
Link |
Home Front: Politix |
Dellums could owe $239,000 in taxes |
2009-11-04 |
Ron Dellums, who earns about $184,000 as Oakland mayor on top of a congressional pension, appears to owe the Internal Revenue Service at least $66,554. A lien has been placed against his property for failing to pay taxes for 2006. According to the East Bay Express, which broke the story, Mayor Dellums and his wife, who file jointly, may owe more than $239,000 in taxes, mostly for the years he worked as a lobbyist in Washington, DC. Though there has been some speculation that Mayor Dellums would run for reelection, this confirms long-standing rumors that he has financial problems that are exacerbated by his job as mayor. The failure to pay taxes on what is undoubtedly a comfortable income is also an embarrassment to the mayor. It is unclear how the tax dispute arose or will be resolved; normally, taxes are a private matter, but the filing of the lien created a public record discovered by the Express. |
Link |
Home Front: Culture Wars |
Oakland police chief to resign |
2009-01-29 |
![]() Tucker, 65, said at a news conference at Oakland City Hall that he will step down Feb. 28 after serving more than four years as chief. He stressed that he has not been fired - nor has he been asked to resign - but that he is leaving because that is what is best for the city and that "quite frankly, I've lost faith in this council." "I think when the council and the chief of police, regardless of who's making the decision, are finding themselves with irreconcilable differences, that it's time for one of them to go, and I've chosen myself to be the one to go," Tucker said. He made the announcement hours before four City Council members prepared to discuss their plans to hold a vote of no confidence in Tucker, citing spiraling violent crime, a below-average rate of crimes solved and a stream of negative publicity. Tucker described the council's criticism of him as "for the most part inaccurate." The leaders of the proposal, Council President Jane Brunner and members Larry Reid, Desley Brooks and Pat Kernighan, called off their news conference after Tucker's announcement. The chief, whose salary is $205,000, serves at the pleasure of Mayor Ron Dellums. The mayor said he accepted Tucker's resignation with regret and that an interim police chief will run the department after Tucker leaves. Dellums did not say who that will be or how the chief will be selected. Dellums praised Tucker's work in overseeing changes in the department in the wake of the "Riders" scandal. In that case, several officers were acquitted of criminal charges that they had planted evidence and beat suspects in West Oakland in 2000, but the city paid a $10.5 million civil settlement and agreed to implement reforms under the supervision of a federal judge. "If history is recorded correctly, Chief Tucker has been an instrument of change moving forward, has been committed to reforms in the Oakland Police Department, has been respectful of the role of the courts in moving that mandate forward. Many of the changes that now have taken place have moved Oakland well forward in a very dramatic way," Dellums said. |
Link |
Home Front: Politix | |
Ron Dellums, Oakland mayor-elect | |
2006-06-21 | |
An ebullient Oakland Mayor-elect Ron Dellums promised Monday to seek a broad consensus to fulfill his vision for making the city a model, saying he will soon set up citizen groups to help him deal with the public schools, crime and economic development when he takes office Jan. 1. "It is a responsibility I accept with honor, humility and optimism," the progressive former congressman, 70, said in his first public remarks since the June 6 election. "We can solve the problems of Oakland. We can be a great city."
| |
Link |
Home Front | |
Barbara Lee and her "moral compass" | |
2001-09-15 | |
Lee, who was elected in 1998 to succeed Democratic Rep. Ron Dellums, the district's longtime anti-war congressman, has opposed U.S. military action before. (Edward Epstein, SF Chronicle Washington Bureau)
| |
Link |
Axis of Evil |
Sammy turning into the voice of moderation? |
2002-03-25 |
Didn't Sammy tear up the formal document he had with Iran on teevee and then invade them? The new stance in Beirut, taken as Baghdad faces a threatened US attack, is in marked contrast to last year's Amman summit. President Saddam Hussein's regime then played the party-pooper, blocking any attempt to work out a resolution on Iraqi-Kuwait relations. It's only temporary. If Sammy can get through the next year with his skin intact Kuwait'll go back on the Iraqi map as the 19th province. Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri said Iraq did not want to get involved, considering that this year's summit in the Lebanese capital should concentrate on supporting the Palestinian cause. The Palestinians become very important to Sammy when he's feeling threatened. After he occupied Kuwait, he fought the Gulf War for the Palestinians, not to try and keep the swag. He said that only when it learned that the Kuwaitis had asked for their continued grievances to be put on the summit agenda that Iraq had countered with a document of its own. An Arab League official said Kuwait had taken a relatively hard line, listing its complaints since the Iraqi invasion in August 1990 and subsequent seven-month occupation and the question of Kuwaitis still missing from the war. Guess they haven't forgotten everything, at least not yet. Not that I believe in Arab gratitude. That and the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy are all pretty much out of my system. The Iraqi document was conciliatory, expressing "respect for the security and independence of Kuwait and stressing that the priority for Arab states was to "concentrate on the essential questions", namely the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and "threats against Arab countries." If the Kuwaitis are dumb enough to believe Iraq's good intentions, next time they're flattened I'll be out there hollering "No blood for oil" with the Ron Dellums crowd. Fool me once, it's your fault, fool me twice it's my fault. Arab ministers also told AFP they had been pleased to see Sabri and Kuwait's minister of state for foreign affairs, Sheikh Mohammad al-Sabah, having a "constructive dialogue" in an informal meeting of the Arab world's top diplomats on Sunday. "There were no harsh exchanges between the two countries as is sometimes the case in this sort of meeting," one official said. He added that it was expected that some sort of satisfactory compromise would be reached in the summit's final declaration to be approved at Thursday's end to the two-day summit. They don't have to holler at them. The cold shoulder's okay. I guess. Saddam's regime has been stepping up efforts to improve ties with other Arab states, especially since US President George Bush's administration lumped it into an "axis of evil" with Iran and North Korea in January. The guiding thought behind the Iraqi initiative is the theory that there's one born every minute. |
Link |