This week’s edition of Looking Back at the Week features articles, commentaries, columns, toons, and other work by San Diego Free Press regulars, irregulars, columnists, at-large contributors, cartoonists, and sourced writers on: the Women’s March(es), protests, Trump’s executive orders, Frye and McCormack calling out Kasparian, public education under assault, our border under siege by Trump, ACLU taking action, and lots of other grassroots news & progressive views from San Diego’s friendly, neighborhood, all volunteer, slightly funky, community news site. [Read more…]
Call To Order, January 20, 2017
By Fran Finley
Call To Order January 20, 2017
Play dead
The farce begins
Orange is the new black now
Friday unfolds the new order
Night comes [Read more…]
An Alternative Pledge
By Barry Johnson
since we are getting Alternative Truths, why not alternatives to other sacred cows
I pledge allegiance
to defy Donald Trump
and all the hurtful policies that he stands for [Read more…]
Icing on the Cake
San Diegans Responding to Trump Muslim Ban With Airport Protests
As of Noon Sunday, two thousand people have responded to a call on Facebook for a protest scheduled for Terminal 2 (International Arrivals) at Lindbergh Field starting at 5pm.
According to social media posts, the theme for the demonstration is #NoBan #NoWall. [Read more…]
Gov. Brown: ‘California is Not Turning Back. Not Now, Not Ever.’
State of the State Address / Office of the Governor
This is California, the sixth most powerful economy in the world. One out of every eight Americans lives right here and 27 percent – almost eleven million – were born in a foreign land.
When California does well, America does well. And when California hurts, America hurts.
As the English poet, John Donne, said almost 400 years ago: “No man is an island entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main…And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.”
A few moments ago, I swore into office our new attorney general. Like so many others, he is the son of immigrants who saw California as a place where, through grit and determination, they could realize their dreams. And they are not alone, millions of Californians have come here from Mexico and a hundred other countries, making our state what it is today: vibrant, even turbulent, and a beacon of hope to the rest of the world.
We don’t have a Statue of Liberty with its inscription: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free…” But we do have the Golden Gate and a spirit of adventure and openness that has welcomed – since the Gold Rush of 1848 – one wave of immigration after another. [Read more…]
Geo-Poetic Spaces: Teardrops in a Bucket
What appears
to be an ordinary bucket
is a sacred vessel
blessed by hands
burned on desert death marches
carried during the Armenian Genocide.
[Read more…]
Trump News Brings on the Blues
Nobody said this was gonna be easy
Hey did you hear the news? Donald Trump has been president for one week.
While there is some truth to the sense that each day of this week has felt like ten, the sound and the fury masks some very real problems in the new administration.
Let’s stand things on their head for a moment and look for some silver linings. [Read more…]
The San Diego-Tijuana Border Under Siege? Donald Trump’s Executive Order
I’m back with your weekly North of the Fence: a summary of news covering the South Bay, San Diego (which includes San Ysidro, Otay Mesa, Imperial Beach, Chula Vista and National City). In sum: What isn’t happening at the border this week?
- President Donald Trump signed “orders Wednesday to start construction of a border wall, expand authority to deport thousands, increase the number of detention cells and punish cities and states that refuse to cooperate,” the Los Angeles Times reported.
- One element of the executive order — that he would withhold federal grant money from sanctuary cities — could effect San Diego. Is San Diego a sanctuary city? It’s not quite clear. Sara Libby at Voice of San Diego tackles the question. The answer, it’s complicated. But here’s a snipped of the article: “Plenty of websites have compiled lists of sanctuary cities, and San Diego lands on many of them. But the mayor’s office has said San Diego is not one.” [Read more…]
Donna Frye and Irene McCormack Show Solidarity with Kasparian’s Accusers
“Doing nothing is not an option for people of good conscience.”
On a cold Wednesday evening in Kearny Mesa prominent San Diegans Donna Frye and Irene McCormack joined community members to show their solidarity with Sandy Naranjo, Isabel Vasquez and Anabel Arauz and call for the resignation of the President of UFCW Local 135 and San Diego and Imperial Labor Council, Mickey Kasparian.
Naranjo, Vasquez, and Arauz filed separate lawsuits against Kasparian accusing him of gender discrimination, sexual harassment, retaliation, and other misdeeds. Also named in all three complaints are the union itself and in Arauz’s filing, Richard Barerra, executive assistant of the local.
McCormack was the chief communications aide to disgraced, former mayor Bob Filner and the first of many women to accuse him of sexual harassment. Former City Councilwoman Donna Frye, alongside lawyers Cory Briggs and Marco Gonzalez, was the first person to come out publicly to condemn Filner and call for his resignation. [Read more…]
ChangeFest Speakers Rally for Driscoll’s Boycott, Against Domestic Violence & for Fracking Ban
By Dan Bacher / DailyKos
A diverse array of Sacramento community groups participated in the “ChangeFest: A Climate Mobilization” rally on the north steps of the Capitol on Jan. 21, as part of a week of anti-Trump street protests in Sacramento centered around the Presidential Inauguration.
“It’s empowering to see the community take action against neoliberalism, inequality and taking a stand for justice,” said Garcia. “Borders around the world are being militarized and states are turning immigration into scapegoats all for global capitalism. The workers here in the US and workers in Mexico are not to blame for the lost of jobs; it’s greed by the corporations that value profit over people.”
“Immigrant labor is extremely important for transnational corporations economy such as Driscoll’s, the largest distributor of berries in the world,” said Garcia. “Driscoll’s justifies the pay of $6 a day for ten-plus working hours in San Quintin, Baja California, 5 hours from the Mexican border in San Diego California.” [Read more…]
Voter Fraud Claims: Amping Up the Crazy With an Eye Towards 2018
There is no greater threat to democracy in the United States than voter fraud. I am not, however, referring to the ballot box stuffing variety envisioned by the purveyors of online paranoia.
It’s the logic behind the claims on this subject being made by the President and his minions that counts. They all lead to the same conclusion: some people’s votes are more valuable than others.
Donald Trump admitted as much during an astonishing interview with ABC News by asserting that none of the claimed fraudulent voters cast ballots on his behalf. Nevermind that arrests in the 2016 elections involving actual presidential ballots involved people trying to cast votes for the GOP candidate. [Read more…]
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