Extra

New: Kissinger's Dubious Legacy

Jagjit Singh
Friday December 01, 2023 - 11:51:00 AM

The passing of Henry Kissinger at the age of 100 marks the end of an era, provoking a divided remembrance of a man whose legacy is a collision of adulation and condemnation. To the Washington establishment, Kissinger stands as an influential diplomat shaping U.S. foreign policy. However, beyond American borders, particularly in countries like Chile, East Timor, Bangladesh, and Cambodia, his actions are indelibly tied to allegations of war crimes, instigating coups, and genocide. -more-


New: Shameful Omission in Oakland

Bruce Joffe
Friday December 01, 2023 - 11:09:00 AM

Oakland's City Council passed a cease-fire resolution on November 27, that shamefully omitted critical facts.

Shame, for Shame that the Oakland City Council rebuked Israel's bombing of Gaza, but didn't mention Hamas' murder of 1200 Israelis and kidnapping of 240 hostages. -more-


New: Please show that Berkeley stands for peace in the Middle East

Moni T. Law
Thursday November 30, 2023 - 12:27:00 PM

Dear Mayor and City Council:

Please… take action. Other cities, churches. Jewish organizations, and county organizations have sent proclamations and pleas for a bilateral and permanent Ceasefire between Israeli Defense Forces and Hamas.

I have friends living in Israel, and Palestinian American friends air lifted out of Gaza. I returned to my college town because we are a city with values that include compassion for our neighbors, local and global. -more-


Why is Berkeley Too Poor to Pave the Streets?

Glen Kohler
Tuesday November 28, 2023 - 12:46:00 PM

Recent letters to the Planet expressing disapproval of the City's campaign to remake the streets—timely and pertinent as they are—omit a fact that serves to sharpen the points they make: Berkeley's notably poor financial condition and how it affects the city today. -more-


Not All for Bicycles

It Charles Siegel
Tuesday November 28, 2023 - 12:20:00 PM

A couple of recent reader commentaries assume that all the recent changes in Berkeley’s streets were done for the sake of bicycles, but they are sadly misinformed. -more-


It's Time to Pave Hopkins

Isabelle Gaston, Steve Robey
Tuesday November 28, 2023 - 12:16:00 PM

Dear Mayor and City Council,

Please, let's pave Hopkins and stop playing politics.

The money is there if you want it to be. -more-



Public Comment

Rosalynn Carter

Jack Bragen
Sunday November 26, 2023 - 05:12:00 PM

I have not followed the career of Rosalynn Carter, yet somehow her passing, and seeing photos on the internet of her and Jimmy Carter, made my eyes watery. It brings to mind my shortcomings in life, including physical separation from my spouse of twenty-eight years. -more-


Street Changes Create Problems

Nori Hudson
Sunday November 26, 2023 - 04:54:00 PM

Bicycle safety appears to be the stated purpose for the numerous street changes in many Bay Area cities:

  • · streets with green lanes
  • · cement dividers beyond normal curbsbb
  • · odd-shaped islands at intersections
  • · parking spaces in traffic lanes
  • · restaurant seating in parking spaces (parklets)
  • · outright elimination of parking in general
  • · increased unnecessary street barriers and one-way streets
The consequences of these remodeled streets are numerous, some of which have been seen in nearby cities as well. -more-


What's Up With Berkeley Streets?

Eric Cheng
Sunday November 26, 2023 - 04:47:00 PM

I live in Oakland and drive through Berkeley a lot. I take Martin Luther King on my way back to go to Fat Apple's restaurant. Now MLK is being turned into an obstacle course like other streets in Berkeley and Oakland.

It doesn't make sense. Look at Milvia Street from University Avenue to Haste. I used to get supplies at Ace Hardware when I was in that area but don't any more because Milvia is one way and hard to use. Most of the time there is nowhere to park. So where are all the bikes? There are hardly any.

In Oakland the City acts like the only thing they care about is bicycles but the number of bikes is tiny compared to people driving. You hardly see bikes on big green stripes on 40th Street and Park Blvd. Wide bike lanes on West and Market Street are mostly empty, but how we drive is being controlled by the idea of bicycles. -more-


What Our Votes Should Mean

Romila Khanna
Sunday November 26, 2023 - 04:39:00 PM

Think about it!

I find that our democracy risks falling apart due to the greediness of our so called representatives, who just want to grab power to create a disturbance in our social and political structure.

It is very important for us to make our democracy strong. It can only happen when citizens understand the meaning of democracy.They need to vote in our represented democracy in every local state and primary election. Let no representative take away their power to vote or voice their opinions regarding the policies which impact them.

In my view, everyone should follow the rule of law. Constitution clauses must be applied equally to all citizens. Money power should not be able to buy governing power. We, the voters, must have more power in our hands than members of congress or senate.

The three branches of government (Congress, Judiciary and Executive) must work together to create a better society. -more-


Editorial

Why Not Gerontocracy? Older is Often Better

Becky O'Malley
Friday October 06, 2023 - 01:24:00 PM

The cover of a recent New Yorker was a cleverish Barry Blitt caricature of four old folks running a race while pushing the kind of aluminum walkers used by mobility challenged people of all ages. Since I’m currently one of them (having been in bed with a broken ankle for a month) I sympathize. Apparently we’re supposed to snicker at these runners because they’re still involved in electoral races even though they’re kinda sorta (OMG) old.

Otherwise, they’re not that much alike.

From left to right:, visually, not politically:

Donald Trump. No need to say more about him—we know too much already.

Mitch McConnell: A canny political operator, wrong on most issues by my standards, but clever.

Nancy Pelosi: Another super clever politician, but good on most important questions.

Joe Biden: In his current incarnation, quite adept at identifying and promoting effective policies. He hasn’t always been so great, but he’s learned a lot on his journey.

A diverse set, but the common denominator is that they’re all now, well, old.

Luckily, Dianne Feinstein was not part of the group, which could have proved embarrassing.

New Yorker Editor David Remnick’s Talk of the Town comments in the same issue are headed “This Old Man” in print, “The Washington Gerontocracy” online. Pretty clearly, Remnick (b.1958) views with alarm some data he’s selected from assorted polls. He worries that “more than seventy per cent of respondents suggested that Biden is too old to be effective in a second term”.

The New Yorker, even before Remnick, has traditionally hoped that it caters to the youngster market, but I doubt that’s true. I only have anecdotes to support my opinion, but these are sometimes better than the data-lite often featured in glossy magazines like The New Yorker.

Harold Ross, its original editor, is often quoted in an urban legend as saying that his brainchild was “not for the little old lady in Dubuque.”

Well, maybe, but I learned to read it from my mother, born 1914 in St.Louis, which is probably more sophisticated than Dubuque ever was, but is not Manhattan, She missed out on college because of the Depression, but made up for it by being a voracious reader of the kind of snappy prose that the New Yorker has always favored. She claimed that the main advantage to not being employed outside home most of her married life was having first crack at the latest issue when it came in the mail, before my father got home from his office. She read every one of them until she died, finally a little old lady at almost 99,

I (b.1940) was rumored to have taught myself to read when I was about 5 with New Yorker cartoons, in those days funnier than the dreary self-centered ones in the current issues. I’d moved on to the heavier stuff by 1958, which was the year I started college and Remnick was born.

New York City has always been populated by the impecunious young and the rich old, and the magazine has reflected that, especially its ads. I would not be in the least surprised to learn that a stunningly high percentage of the New Yorker’s readers,young and old, poor and rich, have voted for Biden and will do so again.

John Lanchester in the latest London Review of Books in a great piece about how numbers are weaponized in politics says this:: -more-


Arts & Events

The Pianistic Wizardry of Daniil Trifonov

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Tuesday November 28, 2023 - 12:35:00 PM

Russian-born pianist Daniil Trifonov exhibits what can only be called wizardry, for no matter what music he plays, Trifonov turns it to gold. I have heard Trifonov play Chopin, Rachmaninoff, Bach, Rameau, Mozart, Mendelssohn, and Beethoven, to name only a few composers he has performed here. And Daniil Trifonov’s wizardry has turned everything to gold. The sole exception was the banal, uninspired Piano Concerto by Mason Bates, which was written for Trifonov, who did his best in an attempt, ultimately a failed attempt, to persuade us of this work’s merits at its premiere with San Francisco Symphony in 2022. -more-


A Felliniesque ELIXER OF LOVE

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Tuesday November 28, 2023 - 12:27:00 PM

In the program notes for San Francisco Opera’s current production of Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore (aka The Elixer of Love), Director Daniel Slater states that “Designer Robert Innes Hopkins and Iwanted to pull the story out of its nineteenth-century rustic roots and find the perfect period in which to replant it.” What they chose was the 1950s Italy of Felliniesque “Dolce Vita,” so they set their production of The Elixer of Love at a beachside hotel terrace on the Italian Riviera. In place of the original village of rustic farmers, Slater and Innes Hopkins populated the onstage chorus with a variety of characters — tourists, hotel staff, locals, and Vespa-riding military men. Adina is proprietress of the aptly-named Hotel Adina, and shy, vulnerable Nemorino is a waiter who is hopelessly in love with his glamorous and seemingly unobtainable boss. -more-


Best Novels of 2023

Bob Burnett
Sunday November 26, 2023 - 04:21:00 PM


Happy holidays! Here are my choices for 2023’s best novels. (In alphabetical order.) Bear in mind that, as a mystery writer, I typically read mysteries and thrillers. -more-


Events

THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR: November 26-December 3

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Sunday November 26, 2023 - 03:17:00 PM

Worth Noting:

There are only three (November 28, December 5, 12) more scheduled City Council meetings before Winter Recess - December 13, 2023 – January 15, 2024. At the bottom of the posting is the draft agenda for December 12 and the full agendas for November 28 and December 5. The Budget meeting on the AAO#1 (Annual Appropriations Ordinance aka mid-year budget adjustment) is tentatively scheduled for December 5 and is not posted.

  • Monday:
    • At 11 am the Civic Arts Commission Grants Subcommittee meets online.
    • At 2:30 the Agenda Committee meets in the Hybrid format on the Dec 12 city council draft agenda which includes 27-North Berkeley BART Objective Standards, 30-Horse Racing, 32-Eminent domain for 2902, 3908 Adeline and 1946 Russell and the Chess Club.
  • Tuesday:
    • At 6 pm the City Council meets in the hybrid format item 17 is the 5-year paving plan.
    • At 6 pm the Zero Waste Commission meets in person.
    • From 6 – 7 pm community meeting on grant application for outdoor program grant
  • Wednesday: At 6 pm the Environment and Climate Commission meets in person.
  • Thursday:
    • At 7 pm the Zoning Adjustment Board meets in the hybrid format – the zoom link shows as being expired check for an update,
    • The Landmarks Preservation Commission is posted as meeting, but no agenda is posted. Check after Monday.
  • Saturday: From 10 am – 1 pm is the Tots Carnival for ages 0-5 at Live Oak Park.
The December 5 city council agenda is available for comment and includes $900,000 on street calming budget referral and report on reimaging public safety.

Check the City website for late announcements and meetings posted on short notice at: https://berkeleyca.gov/

Directions with links to ZOOM support for activating Closed Captioning and Save Transcript are at the bottom of this calendar.



+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++



BERKELEY PUBLIC MEETINGS AND CIVIC EVENTS -more-


Back Stories

Opinion

Public Comment

Rosalynn Carter Jack Bragen 11-26-2023

Street Changes Create Problems Nori Hudson 11-26-2023

What's Up With Berkeley Streets? Eric Cheng 11-26-2023

What Our Votes Should Mean Romila Khanna 11-26-2023

News

New: Kissinger's Dubious Legacy Jagjit Singh 12-01-2023

New: Shameful Omission in Oakland Bruce Joffe 12-01-2023

New: Please show that Berkeley stands for peace in the Middle East Moni T. Law 11-30-2023

Why is Berkeley Too Poor to Pave the Streets? Glen Kohler 11-28-2023

Not All for Bicycles It Charles Siegel 11-28-2023

It's Time to Pave Hopkins Isabelle Gaston, Steve Robey 11-28-2023

Arts & Events

The Pianistic Wizardry of Daniil Trifonov Reviewed by James Roy MacBean 11-28-2023

A Felliniesque ELIXER OF LOVE Reviewed by James Roy MacBean 11-28-2023

Best Novels of 2023 Bob Burnett 11-26-2023

THE BERKELEY ACTIVIST'S CALENDAR: November 26-December 3 Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition 11-26-2023