The Bad Lip Reading crew is at it again! For those disappointed in Zuckerberg’s testimony before Congress, here’s the version that we would have seen in a perfect world’s alternate universe. [Read more…]
Looking Back at the Week: April 22-28
This week’s edition of Looking Back at the Week contains articles, commentaries, columns, and other work by San Diego Free Press regulars, irregulars, columnists, cartoonists, at-large contributors, and locally and nationally sourced writers on National Poetry Month, voting, Issa rallies ending, CD6, failure at San Diego County jail, Priscilla Yañez, the last days in Ocean Beach, and lots of other grassroots news & progressive views from San Diego’s feisty, all volunteer, slightly funky, community news site. [Read more…]
Parov Stelar – The Sun (feat. Graham Candy) | Video Worth Watching
For some reason the weather for the last few days has me thinking of summer. Maybe that’s why this tune from a lens ad has gotten stuck in my head … [Read more…]
Priscilla Yanez — Civil Service Worker or Spy?
About month ago I sat down to interview Tina Real. Tina has memories of San Diego that span her eight decades here. What began as an interview of Tina herself quickly expanded to encompass her heritage of strong independent women–her grandmother Mercedes Morales and her mother Priscilla Yanez, who would become a spy for the United States during World War II. [Read more…]
Romain Thiery – Requiem for Pianos | Video Worth Watching
Photographer and pianist Romain Thiery accompanies his own remarkable images of abandoned pianos in his Requiem for Pianos series. More behind the story at BoingBoing. [Read more…]
Have You Decided How to Vote Yet? Want Help? | Progressive Activist Calendar April 27-May 7, 2108
Things are starting to get intense in election races. Mail-in ballots will go out May 7th, and June 5th is election day.
The day you go to vote used to be a big deal. I remember back in my younger days (when I lived in Washington DC) friends would gather for cocktails before going to walk the gauntlet outside our designated polling place. We called it VWI. (Just joking) Mailing your ballot was called absentee voting, seemingly reserved for overseas military and those wealthy enough to plan jaunts to exotic places.
By the time the local media decides to go to polling places on election “day,” as many as 75% of voters will have already cast their ballots. Smart campaigns know this, and that’s why you’ll see an uptick in advertising, direct mail, and those ever-so-pesky phone calls in coming weeks. (Pro Tip: Casting your ballot stops the phone calls and most of the mail.)
So who are all these people on the ballot? Why should you care? And how do you know you’re not voting for the wrong person? [Read more…]
Reflective Wave | Geo-Poetic Spaces
Overnight
airbursts
A city
on another continent explodes
By morning
the reflective wave
blasts through a local coffee house
[Read more…]
Jena Friedman: It’s Been a Rough Time for Men Lately | Video Worth Watching
This segment originally aired on CONAN back in February, but somehow it seems as if it’s timely again. “You guys have had a rough couple of weeks …” [Read more…]
Another Fail for San Diego County Jail
Suicides and attempts at self-harm in the San Diego County jail system remain an unsolved problem. And, despite reforms in sentencing, the cost of incarceration in California continues to grow.
Two studies released this week point to local and statewide issues concerning incarceration. I’ll start with the local one, especially since it is relevant to the June 5th elections.
Disability Rights California, which has federal authority to investigate conditions in adult and juvenile detention facilities throughout the state, has issued a detailed report on suicides in San Diego County’s Jail System. Reforms instituted by Sheriff Bill Gore, who has oversight of County facilities are too little and too late. [Read more…]
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Ben Carson Leaves People Nowhere to Go
“It is absolutely unthinkable that the Trump Administration’s response to the crisis is to make things worse with draconian rent increases and work requirements.”
By Tara Raghuveer / People’s Action Blog
75 low-and moderate-income tenants and manufactured homeowners repeatedly disrupted Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Ben Carson at a speech in Las Vegas on Wednesday, asking, “where will we go?”
Carson’s response? Instead of offering solutions, he insulted poor tenants, saying “This is a perfect example of what happens when the swamp gets ahold of people.”
[Read more…]
The Savagery of One True Religion | Dear Ohio, Part 5
Dear Ohio,
I was listening to the soaring soundtrack of The Mission today, and it made me think of you. The film tells the story of a church-state conflict that arises in the 1750s and ultimately crushes a tiny Jesuit mission and the people who built it, members of the Guarani, indigenous peoples who inhabited tribal lands deep in the rain forests of central South America.
In the film, a tiny slice of the larger political fight for power over the Guarani takes place among Spain, Portugal, and the Vatican. The losers are the Guarani believers who took refuge in the mission – one of many that had been established by the Jesuits – in the hope not just of eternal salvation, but of earthly deliverance from the hands of the slave-trading countries that had invaded their lands. The natives’ hope is destroyed as Catholic European soldiers murder the natives as they attend Mass.
At this point, Dear Ohio, you’re probably wondering why the music from this film makes me think of you. As you well know from my previous correspondence, I write to you because you are the bellwether election state. And it seems of late that religion and politics have become welded together in a way that is galvanizing the electorate in Ohio and all other states in the Union. (How ironic to have this happen in a country where it is common to hear people say, “Never talk about politics or religion,” and where we celebrate a history of government and church being separate in order to promote freedom among all believers and non-believers.) [Read more…]
Beth | National Poetry Month
She said goodbye and I was left with memories.
Running across a field at her placid back.
. A yell. She turns.
Running across a field at her fleeing back.
A phone call and a small voice says,
come, with half a question mark on the end.
The meeting-place is an old one — a dream
midway between two realities.
. I’m on my way. [Read more…]
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