Features

Spanish Artist Known as "233" Donates Art to People's Park

Carol Denney
Tuesday September 06, 2022 - 06:13:00 PM

A visiting art scholar known as "233" contributed an art installation to People's Park estimated to be worth over $100,000 on September 3rd by gift-wrapping the large backhoe the University of California left in the park when it halted its construction and transforming it into a giant public swingset. The installation includes a plaque and is wrapped in UC school colors.

In the artist's own words, "Saturday, September 3rd, 2022, exactly a month after the terrible events occured at People's Park, the community of People's Park is going to wrap up a special gift back to the UC Berkeley administration. We don't want it! Spaniard artist 233 is leading an art project fruit of collective thought, sharing and work, promoted by People's Park Council and supported by the whole community of People's Park. The idea is to contribute through contemporary art with People's Park's struggle against the powerful unfair capitalist establishment in which every human being coexist."

The public is welcome to attend the artist's on-campus art opening, "Bulldozer Alarm", will be this Thursday, September 8th, 2022, at 4:00 pm at Kroeber Hall. Professor Ramon Blanco-Becerra will be there to introduce the artist, the art, and take questions regarding 233's large installations and vision. Community members expressed a hope that the giant transformation of the backhoe swingset will become a model of People's Park's nonviolent, creative response to UC's destruction of a landmark which, on May 24, 2022, was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. -more-


Public Comment

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Dealing with Nonpsychiatric Medical Problems

Jack Bragen
Tuesday September 06, 2022 - 05:43:00 PM

Most mental illnesses are believed to be rooted in how the brain works or doesn't work. For this reason, mental illness could correctly be classified as a medical problem, because the human brain is a bodily organ. Yet, because of our usage of English in the U.S., when most people communicate, mental illness is referred to as a mental problem and not a medical or physical one. It is imprecise but that's how people communicate. And in the future, that may change. -more-


A Berkeley Activist's Diary, 2 weeks ending Sept. 4

Kelly Hammargren
Tuesday September 06, 2022 - 04:49:00 PM

As September begins and the last days of summer slip away, I am wishing I had taken off to some place interesting in August. I took sort of a staycation with good intentions of continuing weekly Diaries, but good intentions slid into combining the last two weeks of August meetings into this one Diary for September 4. -more-


SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces: SmitherRumbles&Bumbles

Gar Smith
Tuesday September 06, 2022 - 05:33:00 PM

Hellter Swelter

Our public servants in the state and media have been busy preparing the multitudes for a string of triple-digit temperatures but sometimes the advice falls short. A front-page Chronicle article advised: "People should protect themselves from the heat by keeping indoors as much as possible in the morning and afternoon." (Apparently there's no need to worry about dashing about in the mid-day sun.)

The Chron's climate experts also had a number of survival tips to keep cool. One was to visit shopping malls and other large spaces with air-conditioning. Another tip: drive around in a car with the air-conditioning turned on.

These survival tips amount to a stunning example of "causative blindness."

Consider: Rising temperatures are the result of climate change, which is the result of carbon pollution, which is caused (in large measure) by driving around in gas-powered carbon polluters.

Is this how Earth's last surviving humans will meet their end—huddled inside parked cars with the AC turned up high until their gas tanks run dry? -more-


An Open Letter to Governor Newsom About Energy Policy

C.M.Woodcock
Tuesday September 06, 2022 - 05:20:00 PM

Dear Governor Newsom, Financing your political ambitions by favors to the oil, nuclear, and agribusiness industries is undermining your support among California voters. -more-


ECLECTIC RANT: On Labor Day 2022

Ralph E. Stone
Wednesday September 07, 2022 - 09:14:00 AM

Why do we need unions anyway? Because they are essential for America. Unions are the only large-scale movement left in America that serve as a countervailing balance against corporate power, acting in the economic interest of the middle class. Remember corporations did not all of a sudden give workers two days off each week, which we now call weekends, or paid vacations and sick leave, or rights at the workplace, or pensions, or overtime pay. Virtually all the benefits we have at work, whether in the public or private sector, are because unions fought hard and long against big business who did everything they could to prevent giving us these rights. -more-


Does Islam Hate Girls & Women?

Jagjit Singh
Tuesday September 06, 2022 - 06:00:00 PM

In Kabul, Afghanistan, young girls are under severe restrictions denied a secondary education and are constantly monitored by heavily armed, ruthless religious police and are harshly punished for the slightest infractions. -more-


September Pepper Spray Times

By Grace Underpressure
Tuesday September 06, 2022 - 09:56:00 PM

Editor's Note: The latest issue of the Pepper Spray Times is now available.

You can view it absolutely free of charge by clicking here . You can print it out to give to your friends.

Grace Underpressure has been producing it for many years now, even before the Berkeley Daily Planet started distributing it, most of the time without being paid, and now we'd like you to show your appreciation by using the button below to send her money.

This is a Very Good Deal. Go for it! -more-


Editorial

Ain't Nobody Home in Berkeley
But Us Chickens

Becky O'Malley
Friday August 19, 2022 - 03:10:00 PM

Iacta alea est.” That’s what Julius Caesar is supposed to have said when he led his army across the Rubicon river in his bid to take over Rome.

“The die is cast.” We’ve gone over and we can’t go back. The deadline for becoming a candidate for the Berkeley City Council was last Friday, August 12, and now not only have the dice been thrown, the hats are in the ring, Well, District 8 candidates got an extension to August 17 since incumbent Lori Droste isn’t running, but now their time is up too. And it turns out that hats in Berkeley are in short supply this time around.

You can see the spreadsheet listing those who filed the required paperwork here:

Lucky you. Finding it cost me three phone calls to city staff plus seven clicks guided by a pleasant fellow in the City Clerk’s office, the last of which produced a chart obscurely entitled “Roster of Candidate Activity.” Yes, the COB’s new web interface is as bad as they say it is, but when you get there this is an informative document.

What can we learn from it? Well, we already knew that four council seats will be on the November ballot. It seems that no one has the nerve to challenge Kate Harrison, the darling of the progressive planning wonks who care about District 4, the downtown center of the city. That’s the one which has been most adversely impacted by the BUB Boom, aka the Big Ugly Box Boom, even though Councilmember Harrison has valiantly tried to control it.

Next, we have the other heavily BUB impacted district, District 7. That’s the one that was set up by former councilmember Kriss Worthington and now-mayor Jesse Arreguin as a sinecure for ASUC leftovers who want to move slowly into the adult world.

It’s the “student district”. What that means is that it has the lowest registration rate as compared to population, and the smallest turnout among registered voters in any council district. Apportionment is based on population, not numbers of actual voters. It turns out that most students don’t care much about voting in Berkeley.

If you believe that, short of malfeasance in office, incumbency provides a massive advantage in any election, and I do, Rigel Robinson (former or perhaps current Association of Students of the University of California External Affairs Vice President) looks like a shoo-in, though his undergraduate days are behind him. He admits to liking tall buildings, and gets support, financial and otherwise, accordingly.

Nobody is running against him either. Few students want to commit to staying in Berkeley for a four-year term as a councilmember, and there are few non-students in District 7, so Robinson attracted only one potential opponent, recent UCB graduate Aidan Hill. -more-


Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Sept. 4-11

Kelly Hammargren
Tuesday September 06, 2022 - 05:44:00 PM

Worth Noting:

Tuesday City Council is officially on recess, but the Agenda Committee meets at 2:30 pm to plan the September 20th Council meeting (the draft agenda follows posts by day of the week). The full council meets at 4:30 pm in closed session. The PAB Director is on the agenda. The Personnel Board meets at 7 pm to consider new classifications and salaries. For ease of review the annual salaries are included in this summary.

Wednesday afternoon the IKE Kiosk location meeting for the Gillman District is at 2 pm. The evening is packed with the Commission on Disability at 6 pm, the Library Trustees at 6:30 pm will consider modifications of policies for the tool lending library, the Homeless Panel of Experts at 7 pm will consider allocation of Measure P monies and the Planning Commission at 7 pm has one agenda item the DEIR for the Housing Element. Catalyst Town Hall session 3 on housing starts at 5 pm.

Thursday morning is a free webinar on Toxics and Reproductive Health at 10 am, the Loan Administration meets at 12 noon, the Fair Campaign Practices and Open Government Commission meets at 6 pm and ZAB meets at 7 pm. The ZAB posting is not “live” which means there are no working links to the projects being reviewed and no zoom link. Check the ZAB website later for updates. The League of women Voters candidate forums begin on Thursday with District 8 at 5 pm and District 1 at 7:30 pm.

Saturday BNC holds the BUSD School Board forum at 10 am.

Sunday, September 11th is the Solano Stroll.



The September 13th regular Council meeting agenda is available for comment with the full list of agenda items and links at the end of this email.



Don’t forget to check for meetings posted on short notice https://berkeleyca.gov/



Tuesday, September 6, 2022 -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

Public Comment

ON MENTAL WELLNESS: Dealing with Nonpsychiatric Medical Problems Jack Bragen 09-06-2022

A Berkeley Activist's Diary, 2 weeks ending Sept. 4 Kelly Hammargren 09-06-2022

SMITHEREENS: Reflections on Bits & Pieces: SmitherRumbles&Bumbles Gar Smith 09-06-2022

An Open Letter to Governor Newsom About Energy Policy C.M.Woodcock 09-06-2022

ECLECTIC RANT: On Labor Day 2022 Ralph E. Stone 09-07-2022

Does Islam Hate Girls & Women? Jagjit Singh 09-06-2022

September Pepper Spray Times By Grace Underpressure 09-06-2022

News

Spanish Artist Known as "233" Donates Art to People's Park Carol Denney 09-06-2022

Arts & Events

The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, Sept. 4-11 Kelly Hammargren 09-06-2022