Wednesday, November 5, 2025
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War is Not the Answer

But then what is the question?

The student uprisings and encampment at colleges and universities across the country over the Israeli destruction of Gaza and the deaths of more than 34,000 Palestinians over the past six months, resonates with the student activism exhibited during the Vietnam War era. It’s surprising that some university leaders and politicians are willing to make the mistake of tamping down on student expression of solidarity with the besieged Palestinian people with calls for the police and national guard to bring “order.” Yes, there has been some vandalism, but nothing like the bombing in Palestine that has destroyed hospitals, universities, libraries, not to mention the untold tens of thousands of civilian lives lost. The protestors aren’t demanding that Israel not defend itself, but to cease fire now, negotiate the return of the hostages and allow relief supplies to be delivered.

The images of the national guard shooting students at Kent State, in Ohio (May 4, 1970), immediately comes to mind as one of those media images one can never forget.

I was at the 1967 police riot at the Century Plaza Hotel. President Lyndon Johnson came to speak in Los Angeles and 10,000 peace demonstrators held a peaceful demonstration before the LAPD attacked them. It wasn’t the protestors that started the melee that ensued, but the police who instigated it.

President Joe Biden, like Johnson and the Vietnam War, didn’t start the war in Gaza. He inherited it and failed to stop it from expanding, with no help from Israel’s right wing prime minister, Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu, leader of the far-right Likud party, and his coalition of Zionist political allies. He falsely claims, “What’s happening in America’s college campuses is horrific. Antisemitic mobs have taken over leading universities. They call for the annihilation of Israel. They attack Jewish students. They attack Jewish faculty.”

This is what some in the media repeat or would like the American public to believe, but not unlike the Black Lives Matter protests of a few years ago, most of these protests are non-violent until authorities or agents provocateurs provoke them.

You will note, that I am in no way defending the political and military organization governing Palestinians, Hamas, for attacking Israel and drawing first blood in this round of conflict. As in most wars, there is no righteous side. After all, 75 years after the founding of the modern state of Israel, a lasting peace treaty with a two-state solution has never been accomplished. Just how long can a people be oppressed before they are allowed to be free? That’s a sentiment every person of the Jewish faith should be able to have empathy for. Instead, with the aid of intellectual disingenuous logic US student uprisings are being labeled “anti-Semitic” in the same way the anti-Vietnam War demonstrators were labeled Commie sympathizers and communists in the 1960s.

What these student uprisings are exposing is not only the hypocrisy of the Zionist faction in Israel, but also the false premise of academic and student free speech on campuses across America. Remember when Richard Bertrand Spencer the American neo-Nazi, anti-Semitic conspiracy theorist, and white supremacist was invited to college campuses. Spencer claimed to have coined the term “alt-right” and was the most prominent advocate of the alt-right movement from its earliest days and was defended on free speech grounds.

The far-right had a field day throwing “free speech” in the face of liberal academics and student progressives. It caused, even me — a proponent of the First Amendment — to step back and question, “What exactly is free speech.” The answer that I came to was that hate speech is like walking into a bar in South Central LA and calling the Black bartender “boy” and thinking you will get out of there without getting thumped. Free speech is not absolute. You can’t yell fire in a crowded theater. But in this case of the student uprisings, it needs to be protected. After all, it is political speech. It should be up to the authorities on just how to keep the peace between the pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian protestors from becoming a Proud Boys confrontation in Huntington Beach. This is where true police reform may yet work here in Los Angeles — they need to be the politically neutral entity and not like the NYPD did when arresting 230 protestors at Columbia University.

What has failed in this context is the reporting by the corporate media which has mostly taken the side of those supporting Israel and the U.S. arms deal that will only increase Palestinian civilian deaths, misery and war in Gaza. For those who only listen to the right-wing media, or are barely cognizant of this war I would direct you to the regular broadcasts of DemocracyNow.com. Five days a week it covers this and other stories from the inside out — from the Palestinians’ point of view, from the vantage point of Jewish scholars who oppose the war or students on-site at Columbia University. If your news diet doesn’t include some alternative voices (there’s a list of them on our website) and you only read what comes up on your news feed, you really don’t know what’s truly going on.

For the student journalists and protestors, this is your generation’s moment to be politicized — and be made aware that the world is not as it has been presented … watch the unmasking of war’s hypocrisy and the powers profiting from it. To quote my Grandpa Charlie, “If they took the profit out of war, there would be none.” Profit, greed, and hate have always created human suffering and conflict. So, if war is not the answer — what then is the question?

The students engaged in these protests are searching for the answer to that question as did the generation before and the generation before that. It is a debate worthy of every college campus in the world until we as one human race of people figure out the question.

Annual Grant Applications Now Open for Arts Council for Long Beach

 

The applications for Arts Council For Long Beach annual grants are now open. Long Beach artists and organizations are invited to apply and bring the arts to their community. The three grant categories are: the organization grant, the community project grant, and the professional artist fellowship grant. Each of these grants is designed to help the arts in special and meaningful ways, promoting progress, originality, and collaboration within our community.

Join the online technical assistance workshops this May for guidance on the community project grants and professional artist fellowship grants. Gain insights into the grant application process, refine your proposals, and receive personalized support from our grants team. One-on-one meetings are also available for organization grant applicants. Make the most of this opportunity and let us help you succeed.

The deadline for all grant applications is June 14. Whether you’re an individual artist thinking of your next project, a community group with a vision for engagement, or an organization looking to make a broader impact, these grants are here to turn your aspirations into reality.

This is your chance to be part of Long Beach’s flourishing arts scene, made possible by the generous funding from the City of Long Beach, which allows Arts Council For Long Beach to champion the arts and artists in its community.

Apply here:

Community Project Grants https://tinyurl.com/Community-project-grants

Organization Grants (Operating I & II) https://tinyurl.com/Organization-grants

Professional Artist Fellowship https://tinyurl.com/Professional-artist-fellowship

Sign up for Grant Application Assistance Here:

Grant Assistance | Arts Council for Long Beach (artslb.org)

https://tinyurl.com/Grant-Assistance

Additionally, Arts Council For Long Beach announced the allocation of over $310,000 funded through its annual grant programs for Fiscal Year 2024. These opportunities are supported through the City of Long Beach’s allocation for the arts, the Percent for Arts Program, and the National Endowment for the Arts. These artists and organizations represent the diversity and vibrancy of Long Beach. The grant categories included community project grants, professional artist fellowships, and operating grants.

“As a leading arts agency and funder in Long Beach, our grants nurture and enliven the arts throughout the city,” said Arts Council for Long Beach Executive Director Griselda Suárez. “We know that funding for the arts has an incredible return on investment. I am proud of our ongoing partnership with the city to build resilient arts and culture grant programming throughout Long Beach.”

Among these programs, the Arts Council for Long Beach supports 32 grantees funded through its Annual Grant programs for fiscal year 2024. Supported through the City of Long Beach’s allocation for the arts, the Percent for Arts Program, and the National Endowment for the Arts, these artists and organizations represent the diversity and vibrancy of the city. The grant categories include community project grants, professional artist fellowships, and operating grants.

Arts Council for Long Beach board president Greg Johnson said, “We are excited to support these grantees while uplifting diverse voices in our amazing community. We must continue to create favorable conditions for artists to live and work here to retain our standing as a leading creative city.”

Details: https://artslb.org

Mayor Bass Taps New General Manager for L.A. Department of Neighborhood Empowerment

 

LOS ANGELES – Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass April 26 announced that she has selected Carmen Chang as the new general manager of the Los Angeles Department of Neighborhood Empowerment following a comprehensive search. Chang will drive an equity-driven vision for the department where Angelenos across the city can be civically engaged through the neighborhood council system to advocate for their communities on the issues that matter to them most.

Chang brings a background in organizing and helping empower communities to be actively engaged in public and political processes while working to make systems more inclusive. She currently serves as the director of programs and organizing at Golden State Opportunity, a statewide anti-poverty organization, where she leads a team and executes a multi-million dollar budget to work with 40 organizations throughout the state to provide education and outreach to low-income Californians to ensure access to economic opportunities, public benefits and to advocate for systems change at the state and federal levels.

By centering the voices of impacted Angelenos, Carmen earned advocacy wins on economic justice, health and public benefits, and detention and deportation, including full inclusion of the California Earned Income Tax Credit for tax filers using Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers or ITIN and health for all regardless of immigration status. Carmen is an active advocate for Asian American and Pacific Islander communities in Los Angeles. Read more about her professional history and achievements here.

“I am honored to be appointed to serve as General Manager of the Los Angeles Department of Neighborhood Empowerment. I look forward to carrying out Mayor Bass’ vision for a neighborhood council system that is inclusive and representative of the many cultures and the diversity of Los Angeles,” said Mayor Bass’ Appointee Carmen Chang. “My first priority will be to listen to the Neighborhood Councils, to build relationships with each of them and to engage and learn from the Department staff to develop a plan to increase community engagement in every corner of the city. Solving our greatest challenges and improving our communities must always begin with hearing the voices of community members. That is what we will do, together.”

The appointment will be referred to the Los Angeles City Council for consideration.

The Use And Misuse Of A “Can”

 

Photographs by David Bacon

Shipping containers have deep meaning for the working people of the San Francisco Bay Area. First and foremost, they’re the material basis of the work of the longshore. From miles away, you can see the container cranes on the Oakland waterfront. The unions for the waterside workers, Locals 10 and 34 of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, just won a long battle to keep one of San Francisco’s legendary, or notorious, families, John Fisher (think, The Gap) from turning the Oakland waterfront into a huge condo development with a ballpark on the side. The union and its allies argues that without the room for the containers and cranes, the waterfront would die, and with it, the economic life of the city.

The containers have historic meaning as well, which makes the workers’ defense of them a kind of bitter irony. In the days before the containers and cranes, cargo was loaded and unloaded using many, many workers for each ship. Even today the union’s symbol is the cargo hook, used then to catch the cargo net and swing it into place. In the 1960s, however, the union agreed that the containerization of the waterfront couldn’t be stopped, and that it had no choice but to bargain for the terms under which it would take place. Workers got a pay guarantee, and they still are so important to the movement of cargo that if they stop, the whole shipping system shudders to a halt. But the price was jobs, and the container meant that only a tenth of the workers who worked the docks then now work them today.

With so many containers, or cans, as the workers call them, floating through the Bay Area, it didn’t take long to see them put to other purposes as well. A lawyer friend has his office in a pile of containers not far from the port, welded together to make a building. Around the corner from my house is the home of an architect couple, who put two containers in their back yard for their home office. When I visited longshore workers in Basra not long after the U.S. occupation started, I saw containers used by workers for housing in the wake of the enormous destruction. Containers for housing is an idea floated in this country too, as a way to give shelter to people living on the sidewalk.

This year Berkeley administrators of the University of California gave the shipping container an entirely new meaning – the wall. Two years ago the community in and around People’s Park had repulsed the University’s previous attempt to expel the public and grab back the city block on which the Park stands. But activists pushed down a chain link fence, and then disabled the huge construction vehicles brought in to reduce trees and structures to dirt and rubble. This year the University would not be defeated so easily. On Jan. 4, in the dead of night, police reoccupied People’s Park. After the people living in the park were removed, trucks brought in dozens of cans, and a wall of containers, stacked double high, was erected around the park.

Perhaps the University can name the wall the James Rector Memorial. Or since they say they intend to build student housing on the site, it can be called the James Rector Dormitory. Either way, the University can acknowledge, for the first time, that the price of taking the land for the community in 1972 was Rector’s death. As cops from the state and surrounding cities fought students and community activists who wanted the land for a park, and tear gas filled Telegraph Avenue in the heart of the student ghetto, one of them trained his sights on Rector, as he stood on a building roof watching the battle going on below. He fired, and Rector died.

There is no James Rector Hall. But today there are many buildings on the UC campus named after rich people and those who serve them well. Giannini Hall memorializes AP Giannini, California’s premier financier and founder of the Bank of America, while the Hearst Memorial Mining Building honors the ultra-wealthy newspaper owner. According to author Tony Platt, former UC President Benjamin Ide Wheeler argued for suppressing the birthrate of “inferior” peoples, and his name now graces Wheeler Hall. The Lawrence laboratory, where research helped produce the first atom bomb, is named for the scientist who headed that catastrophic project. Gordon Sproul, as UC President, oversaw the McCarthy loyalty oath purge that led to firing 40 professors and got his name attached to Sproul Hall, where 800 students (myself among them) were arrested in 1964’s Free Speech Movement.

Since the university’s reoccupation of People’s Park, a group of active opponents marches from a local union high school to the container wall every week. Seeing their banners beneath the towering cans, the marchers can seem small by comparison. But out in the port, where the containers have their true value and usage, people moving them also seem small. Yet there is a power in work and protest that comes from human endeavor, and can bend a container to its will. The marchers may yet overcome the scandalous use UC President Carol Christhas put to these objects, whose tradition and dignity she has ignored.

The People’s Park Council (https://www.peoplespark.org/wp/) “calls on the University to honor the recognition of People’s Park as a nationally significant site, included on the National Register of Historic Places [and] to acknowledge the cultural and environmental importance of the park, returning it to the community that maintains it … People’s Park stands as a beacon of community empowerment, environmental stewardship, and social justice. To fight climate chaos, we need all the green space we can find.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

UPDATE: Proposal Approved on McOsker’s Policy Update

 

On May 9 Councilmember McOsker spoke at the City Planning Commission with a coalition of community leaders to advocate for an ordinance to prohibit new trucking-related uses in the Wilmington-Harbor City planning area.

The proposal was approved by the commission. The emergency ordinance in place will expire in July 2024. To protect the community, Councilmember McOsker called for a new, permanent ordinance to be adopted and implemented by July, ensuring lasting regulations on trucking activities. When adopted, the replacement ordinance will cover Wilmington-Harbor City to shield residential areas from new or expanded uses and the disproportionate impacts of truck traffic and pollutants. It will address truck storage, parking, terminals, yards and other related matters.

Original Brief:

WILMINGTON-HARBOR CITY — The currently effective emergency ordinance which prevents new trucking-related uses in the Wilmington-Harbor City community plan area is set to expire in July 2024. To protect these communities, councilmember Tim McOskers office “demanded” an ordinance to be prepared and made effective by July, to ensure permanent measures to regulate trucking-related uses. This ordinance will apply to the Wilmington-Harbor City community and protect residential areas in these two communities that have been disproportionately burdened by exposure to truck traffic and pollutants. This proposed ordinance will regulate truck storage, truck parking, trucking terminals and trucking yards and more.

The proposed ordinance will be heard at the City Planning Commission or CPC at 8:30 a.m., May 9 at City Hall. Councilmember McOsker encourages you to participate and provide public comments at this hearing.

California Thrives: State Funding Spurs New Investments, Job Growth and Population is Rising

New Round of State Funding to Generate $15.5 Billion in New Investments, 2,100 New Jobs

SACRAMENTO — As part of the California Jobs First initiative, Gov. Gavin Newsom April 30 announced that the state has awarded $120 million in tax credits to eight innovative companies. It will generate more than 2,100 full-time jobs with an average annual salary of over $100,000 and bring in an estimated $15.5 billion in private investment over the next five years.

The funding, from the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development’s or GO-Biz California Competes program, is going to companies expanding their operations in California and supporting the type of cutting-edge industries that are the hallmark of the Golden State.

Securing The EV Battery Supply Chain

Lithium Valley is on track to become one of the world’s largest sources of lithium, the essential material for EV batteries – positioning California to be a global hub for battery production and a leader in securing a clean energy future.

Controlled Thermal Resources received a $30 million tax credit to help construct a facility near the Salton Sea to sustainably extract lithium and other critical minerals from geothermal brine in Imperial County.

In exchange for this tax credit, the company is expected to make capital investments of more than $14.7 billion and create nearly 450 new, full-time jobs in Calipatria and Imperial.

Constructing The State’s First Steel Mill in Over 5o Years

Pacific Steel, which is poised to construct the first steel mill in California in more than 50 years, received a $30 million tax credit to hire employees and invest in manufacturing equipment as part of its expansion in Kern County.

In exchange for this tax credit, the company is expected to make capital investments of more than $540 million and create nearly 450 new jobs.

Developing Next-Generation Energy Storage Systems

Two California businesses will be advancing their efforts to design and manufacture battery energy storage systems – a technology that is critical to ensuring the state meets its climate goals.

Moxion Power, which develops mobile energy storage products and technologies that accelerate last-mile electrification, received a $25 million tax credit to expand its manufacturing capabilities in both Richmond and Los Angeles.

Paired Power, a commercial solar and battery energy storage system manufacturer, received a $3.5 million tax credit to expand its operations in Campbell as well as the Central Valley.

Collectively, these two companies will make nearly $130 million in capital investments and create more than 540 new, full-time jobs across California.

Designing The Electric Motors of The Future

Tau Motors received a $7 million tax credit to further its R&D capabilities in Redwood City as it continues to partner with leading automakers, suppliers, and industry to design and deploy advanced technologies across a wide range of platforms and powertrains. In exchange, they will create more than 150 new jobs and invest nearly $60 million.

Biotech and More

  • MicroVention, based in Aliso Viejo, will use their award to further develop, manufacture and market medical technology products focused on the treatment of neurovascular diseases and cerebral aneurysms.
  • Elve, headquartered in Davis, will use their award to expand manufacturing capacity for wireless communication networks.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/CA-Competes

 

California’s Population is Increasing

SACRAMENTO — California’s population increased by 67,000 people last year to 39,128,162, according to new data released April 30 by the California Department of Finance or DOF. The state’s population growth can be attributed to an increase in legal foreign immigration and a natural population increase. This is the first year since 2020 that the state has seen a net increase.

With the improvement of federal legal immigration processing backlogs, rebounding legal immigration levels – not including people seeking asylum at the border – and mortality rates returning to long-term trends, a stable foundation for continued growth has returned. Net domestic migration has receded to its lower rates of the 2010s, and DOF estimates California is likely to experience continued positive population growth.

The report contains preliminary year-over-year January 2024 and revised January 2021 through January 2023 population data for California cities, counties, and the state. These estimates are based on information through January 1, 2024.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/CA-population-increase

LA County Probation Puts Four More Officers on Leave at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall

 

LOS ANGELES — LA County Probation Department Chief Guillermo Viera Rosa April 26 ordered four more sworn peace officers to be placed on leave after an internal review identified additional incidents of youth-on-youth violence at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall.

Viera Rosa said his actions are part of a comprehensive push to root out departmental staff responsible for perpetrating a culture of violence, drugs, or abuse in County juvenile institutions.

“While these incidents involve a small number of our staff, they violate our core values and undermine our ability to do our duty to provide a safe and nurturing environment for the rehabilitation of the youth placed in our care,” said Viera Rosa .

“My commitment to dig deeper into potential wrongdoing, to take immediate action, and to publicly disclose my actions should make it clear that we will not tolerate anything that creates or contributes to a culture of violence in our juvenile facilities,” he said.

Since January, the Chief has put 12 officers from Los Padrinos on leave pending investigations of the incidents of youth-on-youth violence, all of which are now being investigated by the California Attorney General. He announced on Jan. 10 that he put eight other officers on leave after viewing a video of an incident that took place December 2023 in a unit of Los Padrinos.

Viera Rosa said he decided to refer the incidents to outside law enforcement to ensure a fair, independent, and thorough investigation while the Probation Department restructures and professionalizes its internal affairs unit.

City Celebrates Affordable and Supportive Housing Development

LONG BEACH — The City of Long Beach recently celebrated the ceremonial ribbon cutting for a new affordable and supportive housing development located in the Cambodia Town community, in partnership with its nonprofit affiliate, The Long Beach Community Investment Company (LBCIC), the Housing Authority of the City of Long Beach (HACLB), BRIDGE Housing and TCC Family Health.

The affordable housing development features 87 affordable rental units for low- and extremely low-income households earning 30% to 60% of area median income, 20 units reserved for older adults formerly experiencing homelessness, and one manager’s unit. The housing community consists of a range of one- to three-bedroom apartments, several resident amenities, an expansive roof deck and commercial offices.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/Affordable-housing-unit-LB

UPDATE* Murder Investigation – Lewis Ave. LB

UPDATE* Murder Investigation – Lewis Ave. LB

Homicide detectives are seeking the public’s help to identify the suspect responsible for the murder of 17-year-old victim, Briana Soto.

During a press conference, April 30 the department released video of the suspect responsible for this murder. This video shows the suspect walking in the area prior to the murder. The suspect appears to be a male, unknown age, dressed in all dark attire with a mask over his face. Detectives believe the suspect ran away from the area immediately after the shooting.

Detectives believe someone knows who this suspect is or may recall a person that was acting unusual on the night of Tuesday, March 26. LBPD urges anyone with information to call homicide detectives at 562.570.7244 or submit an anonymous tip via LA Crime Stoppers.

“We are requesting our community’s help to identify the suspect responsible for committing this horrendous crime,” said Chief of Police Wally Hebeish. “To Briana’s family – we will never stop working to find the person who took Briana away from you.”

Anyone with information is asked to contact Homicide Detectives Ethan Shear or Chasen Contreras at 562-570-7244. Anonymously at 800-222-8477, www.lacrimestoppers.org.

Suspect


Originally Published March 30
Homicide detectives are investigating the fatal shooting of a 17-year-old girl that occurred on March 26

On March 26 about 8:26 p.m., officers responded to the area of 11th Street and Lewis Avenue regarding a shooting. Upon arrival, officers found a 17-year-old female victim with a gunshot wound to the upper body. They immediately began rendering medical aid until the arrival of Long Beach Fire Department personnel, who transported the victim to the hospital in critical condition.

On March 30, 2024, the victim succumbed to her injuries. Her identity is being withheld due to her age.

On the evening of the incident, Homicide detectives responded to the scene due to the victim’s life-threatening injuries. The preliminary investigation revealed the victim was walking down the street when she was approached by the suspect(s) and a shooting occurred. The motive for the shooting is under investigation.

Housing Equity Summit and Resource Fair In Partnership with the Dymally Institute at CSUDH

“Housing for All: Empowering Communities through Equitable Access”

Keynote Speaker: Senator Steven Bradford, Chair of the Energy, Utilities, & Communications Senate Committee and Vice-Chair of California Legislative Black Caucus

Three Panel Discussions:
Ensuring Affordable and Inclusive Communities: Strategies for Equity
Navigating Obstacles and Opportunities in Affordable Housing Development
Legislative and Policy Solutions to Foster Affordable Housing

Who Should Attend: Residents; Developers; Elected Officials; Community Leaders

Government officials and housing providers will provide valuable information at the resource fair regarding properties for rent and sites for development. Panelists will discuss the current housing landscape, exploring its multifaceted implications and proposing innovative solutions to address the pressing challenges faced by communities statewide.

Time:10 a.m. to 2 p.m., May 11

Details: 310-412-6120, RSVP here https://tinyurl.com/Housing-equity for parking instructions

Venue: CalState University Dominguez Hills, Innovation and Instruction lecture hall, 1000 E Victoria St, Carson