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San Diego Free Press

Grassroots News & Progressive Views

You are here: Home / 2012 / Archives for June 2012

Archives for June 2012

Sex in San Diego: Women in Movies

June 7, 2012 by Annie Lane

Double Standard: Women on screen are always required to look their sultry, sexy best. Not so for their male counterparts.

Over the weekend I caught the movie X-men on TV and I have to say that women are really starting to get on my nerves. For those who are unfamiliar with the story (is that possible?), X-men is an action adventure about love, revenge, super human capabilities, violence and acceptance. And lots and lots of sex.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Culture, Sex in San Diego

Sign Petition: Support a Resolution to Reverse Citizens United

June 7, 2012 by Annie Lane

We are asking for San Diegans – and ONLY SAN DIEGANS – to help out by signing our new Change.org petition.

The petition asks that the San Diego City Council support a resolution to amend the constitution and reverse Citizens United. After all, corporations are not people and money is not free speech!   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Activism, Government, Politics

Close Encounter with Lorie Zapf

June 6, 2012 by Andy Cohen

The San Diego City Council District 6 representative demonstrates a disturbing lack of knowledge on important issues.

Last night at Golden Hall, San Diego’s election central, I had the opportunity to participate in a live-blog along with the writers from CityBeat and contributors from SD Rostra, the OB Rag/SDFP, along with several other politically active contributors from around the San Diego. It was a great time, with perspectives from all over the political spectrum (but most of us were pretty squarely on the liberal side).   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Government, Politics

Birther Extraordinaire Gary Kreep Poised to Become Judge

June 6, 2012 by Andy Cohen

Birther King–and lawyer for Birther Queen Orly Taitz–Gary Kreep is about to become a San Diego Superior Court judge.  The latest tally put out there by the San Diego County Registrar of Voters has Kreep leading Garland Peed by  a mere 56 votes in the race for the seat in Office 34. If you’re not […]

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Filed Under: Government, Politics

The Starting Line – The Big Money Wins The Big Races, Filner is the Exception

June 6, 2012 by Doug Porter

June 6, 2012—It was a long night for poll watchers in San Diego. Or at least it seemed long, as the County Registrar of Voters’ computer system {wags were saying its was a pair Commodore 64’s using Compuserv} crashed right after the first batch of results were posted and didn’t come back on line until 11 pm.

In the end, there were few surprises in local races. It’s DeMaio v.Filner come November and both local Propositions passed by large margins. The one local upset was SDUSD School Board President John Evans coming in second to Mark Powell by a mere 46 votes.

Turnout throughout California was abysmal, with a mere one in four registered voters bothering to cast their ballots. It’s a new record low for the State. In minority neighborhoods turnout was even lower, often in the teens.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Government, Politics, The Starting Line

City Heights Up Close & Personal

June 6, 2012 by Anna Daniels

Author’s note: This is the first post of my new weekly SDFP column City Heights Up Close & Personal. It is the distillation of my experiences and observations of the confounding, sometimes dazzling and always changing urban landscape that I call home.

“We are children of our landscape; it dictates behaviour and even thought in the measure to which we are responsive to it.” Lawrence Durrell, Justine

“We’re not in Kansas anymore Toto.” Dorothy, The Wizard of Oz

For the past twenty five years My Beloved and I have lived in a postage stamp size home that we own in City Heights. Our street is in constant motion with pedestrians and cars moving between the wide thoroughfares of University Avenue and El Cajon Boulevard. Two of the most common sounds are the trash trucks in the alley and moms calling out apúrate (hurry up!) to their kids lingering on the sidewalk. There is very little that is unified or uniform about the physical landscape or the people who live here. That is what I love about City Heights. That is what I also hate about City Heights.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: City Heights: Up Close & Personal, Culture Tagged With: City Heights

Election Night Live Blog

June 5, 2012 by Staff

Join us tonight – Primary Night – here at 8:00 pm when the San Diego Free Press and OB Rag join other local online media doing a live blog of the Primary’s mysterious being unfolded over the course of the evening. We will be joining San Diego CityBeat and San Diego Rostra in this joint online media project. Andy Cohen will be downtown blogging at Election Central, and both Doug Porter and Frank Gormlie will be live blogging from home, and Annie Lane will be somewhere in between.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Government, Politics

California’s Primary Election Grand Experiment

June 5, 2012 by Andy Cohen

After 2010 redistricting measure voted into law, California finally gets to take its new process for a test drive.

It’s Tuesday, June 5th, 2012 today. It’s the day of the 2012 primary elections. Welcome to the dawn of a new era in California electoral politics! If you’re any kind of political junkie, and you’re a Californian, then this is a pretty exciting day. It’s a historic day. It’s the day when we finally get to peel the lid off the Petri dish and see if our experiment worked, and if so, how well.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Government, Politics

A Personal Election Recommendation: Robert O. Amador for Judge

June 5, 2012 by Jack Hamlin

We are all tired of the campaigns; I was a year ago and tomorrow is just the primary. I truly believe most of us who vote, have made up our minds for whom or what we will cast our sacred votes long ago. The editorial board asked me to write sumthin’ about the elections. But I just really could not fire myself up about it…anymore. Politicians have their world, and I have mine. I have not been excitedly for or against someone or something for quite some time (not counting the prayers and candles I lit between 2000 and 2008 to make the Cheney administration go away). I believe Tom Hayden was the last politician I really cared about…and he turned out to be a disappointment as well.

The election of a judge has always been an interesting subject to me. I found over the years, most judges have been appointed to the bench based upon a quid pro quo with the current governor, or as a result of quasi-nobility ascendency (I believe the public might gasp at the number of sitting judges whose fathers and grandfathers were sitting judges…notice I did not say mothers and grandmothers).   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Government, Politics, Voter Guide 2012

Scenes from small-town Wisconsin on eve of recall

June 5, 2012 by Dixon Guizot

Editor’s note: Our contributor Dixon Guizot happens to be visiting Wisconsin as the push to recall Governor Scott Walker reaches its conclusion.

In this article, Dixon shares photos snapped on the eve of the election in Stevens Point, a small town smack-dab in the middle of the state.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Culture, Politics

Why Wisconsin matters to San Diego

June 5, 2012 by Andy Cohen

The Wisconsin recall election could have implications in local San Diego races

Anyone who has followed national politics over the last year will be eagerly awaiting the results of the efforts in Wisconsin to recall Republican Governor Scott Walker. It is considered to be the most important pre-November general election result in the country because it represents two distinct philosophies and the direction this country could go when all the votes are tallied on November 6th.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Activism, Government, Politics

The Starting Line: Look at the Big Picture, Follow the Money for California and Wisconsin Election Predictions

June 5, 2012 by Doug Porter

June 5, 2012- Today’s primaries in California and Wisconsin will be watched by pundits around the country. While predicting the actual results may seem like a crapshoot, my bet is that you’ll get the most correct predictions by keeping your eye on the big picture and following the money.

The long view of today’s voting is that this is yet another battle in an epic struggle between increasingly polarized views on government. A study released yesterday by the Pew Research Center and fronted by the Washington Post this morning, confirms that the most significant divisions in the United States are no longer based on race, class or sex but on political identity.   [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Government, Politics, The Starting Line

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San Diego Free Press Has Suspended Publication as of Dec. 14, 2018

Let it be known that Frank Gormlie, Patty Jones, Doug Porter, Annie Lane, Brent Beltrán, Anna Daniels, and Rich Kacmar did something necessary and beautiful together for 6 1/2 years. Together, we advanced the cause of journalism by advancing the cause of justice. It has been a helluva ride. "Sometimes a great notion..." (Click here for more details)

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