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Letters to the Editor

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The End of Crafted?

I’ve been hearing alarming rumors about Crafted at the Port of Los Angeles. I love Crafted and the Brewery, but from what people are saying their days are numbered. I prefer not to be involved as Pedro is a small town and I don’t want to be shot as the messenger.

Having said that, these are the rumors I’m hearing, and too many people are grumbling for this to be idle speculation.

I believe the group that operates warehouses 9 and 10 have a very long lease, but there seems to have been a significant management shake up recently. Some are blaming Mike at the Port for threatening to jack up the property lease payments by more than 200%. I recall this rent increase was attempted by the port a few years ago and a good number of Crafted supporters contacted wrote to the LA Harbor Board of Commissioners. That seemed to quash it for a time. I don’t know if that eventually led to the recent management shake up or not. I have heard that many of the Crafters are very unhappy. The new management has threatened to increase space costs despite existing leases. I don’t know how they could but that’s what I’ve heard. It’s also been said the people there are being charged for storage space for anything not physically in their booths. In the past they never were, if space was available they were allowed to use it judiciously.

It seems odd to suddenly, after surviving the pandemic, squeeze the artisans to the point they can’t continue in business. While things apparently ran smoothly for years, now the vibe there is chaotic.

Here’s where it gets really strange. People have said they want to replace the craft market with an outlet mall or a Mexican market. I’ve also heard they plan to shut down the brewery. I can’t imagine that. Why would they do that??

Well anyway, I really don’t know that I can personally do anything. I truly hope I’m just catching malicious gossip. But my gut tells me there is something to all this. I figured if anyone could successfully get to the heart of the matter it would be Random Lengths!

Greg Peccary

San Pedro

RLN spoke to Debbie Stinson of the San Pedro Art Association or SPAA at Crafted. SPAA has had a space at Crafted for 11 years, with no rate hike.

Stinson added the SPAA’s lease was up 2021. Stinson does expect to receive the anticipated rental increase that occurs with leasing but she’s fine with that because, she said, “We can’t rent any place in downtown San Pedro for the rent that we’re paying.”

Stinson went on to say that SPAA has no plans to leave Crafted and that booths at Crafted are being rented and have waiting lists.

 

Democracy or Trump

That’s on the ballot in 2024. Listen and hear what Trump is saying.

On Fox News at a town hall meeting, Sean Hannity asked Trump if he would be a dictator.

Trump said on his first day as President he would be a dictator and get rid of all the immigrants.

If you think that Trump is not dangerous, listen and hear what Trump will do as a dictator like his Russian buddy Putin.

Not in any particular order, Trump said:

  1. Terminate the Constitution of the U.S. of America. This has been the law of the land and protected democracy for over 200 years.
  2. Discontinue Social Security and Medicare for the elderly and disabled, which the American people paid into their entire working lives.
  3. Get rid of Obamacare healthcare for 40 million Americans.
  4. Overrule the Insurrection Act and control the military at his discretion.
  5. Pack the White house with men and women loyal to Trump. Loyalty is Trump’s mantra.
  6. Control the media. Trump wants people to see and hear only what he decides is the truth.
  7. Dispose of all his political rivals. Remember Trump said, “I can shoot someone on Fifth Ave. and get away with it.” Emulating Hitler, his hero.

Trump means what he says and says what he means — there is no in between!

Sounds like fiction — Sad to say

It’s True!!!

Maya Angelou said, “When someone shows you who they are, believe them!”

Vote For Democracy!

Pray for Peace!

Sarah Maketansky

New Jersey.

 

 

LASD is Asking for the Public’s Help Locating At-Risk Missing Person, David Dudeck, Lomita

Detectives from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department are seeking assistance in locating at risk missing person, David Dudeck. He is a 72-year-old male White who was last seen at 4:30 p.m., March 8, on the 25600 block of Narbonne Ave, Lomita.

Mr. Dudeck is 6’00” tall, 170 lbs. with white hair and blue eyes. He was last seen wearing blue jeans and a light blue long sleeve shirt.

David is dependent on medication and has a possible destination of Glendale, CA. His family is concerned for his well-being and are asking for the public’s help in locating him.

Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s missing persons unit at 323-890-5500 or anonymously at 800-222-8477, http://lacrimestoppers.org

Harbor Gateway – Light Coming into Full Focus

By Rick Thomas

Last night, on Feb. 22, the Community Police Advisory Board (CPAB) held its monthly Board meeting in the Harbor Gateway South. For too many years ALL the meetings were held in San Pedro. I have my personal name for CPAB, but that’s for another time, should they choose to continue to prevent the addition of another Board Member from the Harbor Gateway.

For now, I will leave it at that.

Rep. Nanette Barragán was in attendance during the meeting, representing light coming into focus. She’s from the area and is an alumna of Halldale Elementary where the CPAB meeting was held. She is also a USC Trojan alum. “FIGHT ON!!!”

Tim McOsker, our new city councilman, was present. For the record EVERY city councilmember for CD 15 has been from San Pedro since 1951. There is a new City Council office at The Enclave, in our neighborhood. Nothing like that has ever happened in the Harbor Gateway since 1925. Two representatives from Assemblyman Mike Gipson’s office were in attendance as well.

They represent the new light coming into clear focus as well. But this is just the start, as there are a lot more pounds to bake up, in the words of the philosopher Biggie Smalls.

I moved into the Harbor Gateway five years ago to get out of the Hollywood rat race and live in a community with, well… normal people. So, I’m here. I moved into the most diverse community I’ve lived in for the past 20 years in Los Angeles. There’s no question that every race, creed, and color lives in the area where I reside.

It is fantastic. I love it here.

But we have significant issues that still need to be addressed by the city of Los Angeles and our political leaders, which is unacceptable.

And I get it.

Most people living in my area are low income, don’t speak English very well, not gonna show up in PDI as voting in the last election and some are clearly undocumented. So, in a way I get it. I understand the political world well after my faded run for Los Angeles City Council a couple of years back.

But I don’t understand how a city ‘intentionally,’ from my perspective, ignores providing basic services to stakeholders in my area of the city.

This is not something that happens just here in Los Angeles. I’ve seen it everywhere I’ve lived, so this is not something just here in the Harbor Gateway portion of the city. I’ve seen similar phenomena in Boston’s Dorchester, and Roxbury neighborhoods. When I lived in New York, parts of Harlem were ignored by the city. In West Philly, where I grew up, and North Philly, where I went to college, it was considered “We don’t wanna do anything for that area.”

That was the attitude of politicians and city officials.

But that was a hell of a long time ago. It is now time for communities like mine to get recognition. Just because a large part of the constituency near 206th Street and Western are undocumented, can’t vote and English is not their first language does not mean they do not deserve the same services as stakeholders in other parts of the city.

That is discriminatory and quite frankly actionable in a court of law.

So, to be blunt… our politicians, the city, the county and the state have failed ― with a capital ‘F’ ― underserved communities when it comes to basic services.

Why?

Because politicians ‘designate’ certain areas of Los Angeles to NOT receive those services. Until someone like me says two words back to said politicians that I can’t fully post here, but the first word begins with an ‘F’ and the second word begins with a ‘Y.’ And we don’t need to know ‘The Queen’s English’ to determine the meaning here. As an aside, I just found out that there is a ‘Queen’s English’ and there is a ‘Queens English’ as in what verbiage is used by the LGBTQIA community.

I didn’t know that! See. You learn something every day.

I learned over the past five years how politicians and cities refrain from providing services until somebody steps up and calls them out on it.

As I said earlier in this piece, I will be blunt. I will not back down on the crap that I have seen when it comes to EVERY city, county and state service to this area. And you can bet the house and the dog… OK maybe not my dog, but you can bet YOUR house and dog that this is happening in other areas of the City of Los Angeles.

That’s got to end.

-Gatewayat the end of the tunnel.

We look hopefully to a new future in this fast-growing area. I will continue to use this platform as an opportunity to expose and highlight these significant discriminatory practices by politicians and service providers in Los Angeles. And I will also use it to point out the positive aspects of what is happening in the city, in the Harbor Gateway.

But there will be no holds barred.

Buckle up.

Master Teacher, Artist Annette Ciketic Dies

 

June 13, 1948-March 1, 2024

Annette Ciketic, native San Pedran died on March 1, 2024. The beloved teacher, artist and businesswoman was trained as an artist and teacher under the guidance of internationally famed Corita Kent (Sister Mary Corita), her style explored the extraordinary surprises of everyday living through various media forms. Annette was one of several prominent LA Harbor Area alumni of Immaculate Heart College who continued Corita’s legacy in San Pedro.

Annette was the executive director of fINdings Art Center in downtown San Pedro which serves as the support gallery for the temporarily closed Warner Grand Theater. Thanks to her, today, fiNdings Art Center works in three capacities. The community gallery annually hosts several shows for a variety of artists. The fINdings women’s project helps immigrant women of diverse heritage build entrepreneurial skills and discover their creative capabilities through designing art pieces and textiles that enrich their lives and benefit society. In honor of Sister Mary Corita Kent, the center has a variety of her artwork on hand at all times.

Before starting fiNdings, Ciketic was director of the Family Literacy Center. It’s a national program sponsored by Toyota: National Centers for Families, wherein family literacy programs help parents improve their parenting and literacy skills while providing children with early childhood education. When Annette retired from the center, fiNdings formed a group of immigrant women which evolved into the fiNdings Women’s Project.

Annette began her art explorations by designing classroom bulletin boards. Most of her early art was made for gift-giving. Annette worked in photography, graphic design, batik, serigraphy, paper maché, enamel, and jewelry. Later, she began oil painting and explicitly dedicated her work to exploring trees. She said many messages to be learned from trees and trees speak of life, hope, beauty, and shelter.

In October 2010 she joined the artists at Angel’s Gate with her working studio in support of fINdings and endeavors such as the Women’s fINdings Project. She also served as a member of the Artists in Classrooms Program at Angels Gate Cultural Center and as a service learning adviser and adjunct professor at the former Marymount California University.

Ciketic’s adult life mirrored her faith ― a life committed to helping the youth, women, the indigent and the immigrant.

In the 1980s, Ciketic served as youth director at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in San Pedro. While in this capacity in 1987, Ciketic helped organize Catholic youths from around the South Bay and Harbor Area to demonstrate their commitment to peace.

Catholic youths from around the world celebrated the founding of World Youth Day, declared by John Paul II. The pope asked young people to pray for peace and build a civilization of love. In San Pedro, a rally focused on creating peace within neighborhoods and families

She was also the coordinator of citizenship and English learning programs at the San Pedro/Narbonne Community Adult School. She said of the English learning program at the time, “It’s really good for the community as a whole because breaking down walls benefits us all.”

~ A celebration of Annette’s life will happen at 11 a.m. Wednesday, March 20, at The Neighborhood Church, 415 Paseo Del Mar, Palos Verdes Estates.

Super Tuesday Sets Frame For November

As Haley drops out, Biden welcomes her supporters. In LA, Defenders of Justice in fight for run-off, echoing national trends

After both President Biden and former President Trump won almost every Super Tuesday race, Trump’s last challenger, Nikki Haley, suspended her campaign, and Biden immediately reached out to her voters.

“Donald Trump made it clear he doesn’t want Nikki Haley’s supporters,” Biden said in a written statement. “I want to be clear: There is a place for them in my campaign. I know there is a lot we won’t agree on. But on the fundamental issues of preserving American democracy, on standing up for the rule of law, on treating each other with decency and dignity and respect, on preserving NATO and standing up to America’s adversaries, I hope and believe we can find common ground.”

In North Carolina, Republicans nominated a Trump-backed Holocaust-denier for Governor, putting the state even more in play for Biden, who lost the state by just 1.34% in 2020—his narrowest loss that year. Trump has called Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, who is black, “Martin Luther King on steroids.” Robinson, in turn, has called King an “ersatz pastor” and a “communist.” In addition to Holocaust denial, he’s entertained a wide range of conspiracy theories, even saying he “wouldn’t be surprised” if the 1969 moon landing was fake and the 9/11 terrorist attacks were an “inside job.” He’s also made bigoted comments about women, Muslims and the LGBTQ community, condemning it as “filth.”

Like other Trump-backed extremists in the past, Robinson could easily cost Republicans 3 to 5 points or more in November, handing North Carolina to Biden, thus off-setting the potential loss of Michigan due to Biden’s support for Israel’s war in Gaza.

Here in LA, initial results—with roughly half the votes counted—show two public defenders running for county judge in close races to make the two-person November run-off, while a third seems assured. Reform DA George Gascon is leading in a field of 12 but will face a certain run-off, while Supervisor Janice Hahn holds a commanding 20+ point lead (54.7% – 30.5%) over scandal-plagued former Sheriff Alex Villanueva as a supposed “law and order” candidate, but she could still face a run-off if her total falls below 50%. Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor John Cruikshank was a distant third with 14.7%.

In judicial races, Ericka J. Wiley received 42.64% of the votes for office #48, trailing Renee Rose with 47.02%. George Turner is currently third in a tight three-way race for office #39, trailing the leading candidate, Steve Napolitano, by 1.57% and the second-place candidate, Jacob Lee by 0.43%. La Shae Henderson trails Sam Abourched by 2.82% for second place in the race for Office 97, far behind Sharon Ransom’s 48.91%. But she still could win in November, if she manages to make the run-off. Even a losing campaign would be a crucial opportunity to educate the public about the alternatives to harsh punishment already written into law, but not being used to their potential.

Education vs. misinformation is bound to be center stage in the DA’s race, as Reform DA George Gascon leads all challengers with 21.4% compared to 17.7% for Nathan Hochman, with only one other candidate in double-digits in a field of a dozen. “Crime is down, but fear is up,” as an LA Times headline put it last October. And Gascon’s opponents all were running on fear. With only one opponent going forward, there’s a chance for a more coherent picture to prevail.

“My message to the community is, if I am granted another term, we’re going to continue to work hard, we’re going to continue to evolve, and we’re going to hopefully get to creating a criminal justice system that is not only fair and equitable but is much more efficient, more effective than we’ve had in the past,” Gascón said late Tuesday afternoon, according to KABC.

County Measure HLA—which would fully implement the already approved Mobility Plan—held a commanding 25-point lead (62.73-37.27%), while Long Beach Measure RW—raising the wages of Long Beach hotel workers to $23/hour immediately, and $29.50/hour by 2028—led by a razor-thin margin, 50.29-49.71%.

While the national media has been flooded with rightwing scare stories about rising crime, specifically tied to migrants—who traditionally have much lower crime rates than natural-born citizens—the overall results, both local and national, suggest that this has had less electoral impact than expected. Perhaps most notably, in a race that drew national attention, Austin Texas progressive DA Jose Garza cruised to a 2-1 victory (66.86-33.14%) over an Elon Musk-backed challenger. Musk even sent his Austin-based employees an email urging them to vote Garza out in the closing hours of the campaign, but Garza easily withstood Musk’s infamous trolling.

The challenge between now and November is to ensure that facts continue to win out over fear.

Anne Olsen Daub’s Extraordinary MULTI-FACETED at PVAC

Discover elegance in form and craftsmanship

Anne Olsen Daub has a rich imagination. The proof is in her detailed works and her own specialized craftsmanship for making jewelry and sculpture. One year in the making, her exhibition, Multi-Faceted on view at the Palos Verdes Art Center to April 13, is named perfectly. Anne’s creative reuse of antique and contemporary objects provokes imagination, while each object engages you to survey its unique charm, assemblage and even historical context.

After her well received show, Out of The Box at Michael Stearns Studio at The Lofts (Now Los Angeles Harbor Arts or LAHA) in 2021, Anne said she loved creating those big cardboard pieces. Indeed, the show was an indulgence where viewers could feel a child’s wonder via Frank Baum’s The Land of Oz.

This time, “I wanted to create unique oversized sculptures based on jewels, with a little bit of story behind them,” said Anne. “I enjoy making pieces that everybody can like.”

Moreover, these sculptures are substantial and are sourced from solid equipment. They are well thought out. Anne posited her background in fashion allows her to make all these pieces compliment each other.

Anne Olsen Daub, Hinged, mixed media. Photo courtesy of the artist
Anne Olsen Daub, Cruel Fashion, Photo courtesy of the artist.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Entering Multi-Faceted feels like you’ve found yourself in an Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland dream. Climb the staircase to the first, Welsh Gallery, and you’re greeted by Some Look, a hand-beaded vintage pink velvet on wood antique convex mirror, which declares,Many Look Very Few See.” The parts may be vintage but this piece — even its message — parallels the contemporary human dilemma of social polarization; society’s alternate realities, like a mirrored world confusing us. What are we really seeing? Has technology obscured reality, in some ways taking us back in time, confounding human connection to our surroundings?

Continuing into reflections, discover several of Anne’s sparkling collage pieces displayed on the backs of mirrors. Through a semi-veiled, French countryside, Marie & Friends evokes a serene decadence, via the antiqued, worn mirror back juxtaposed with modern imagery from Sofia Coppola’s film, Marie Antionette.

Anne’s Stories We Tell evinces Alice’s adventure. A midnight blue backdrop features a varied cast of miniature 19th-century figures: harlequins, witches, pirates, and cancans, amidst leather-bound books, gemstones, an upside-down garden and column, checkerboard floor, and a delicate floral trim.

 

As you enter the capacious Norris Gallery’s 1 and 2 an oversized array of items including gems, flowers, handbags, jewelry pieces and even a crown each simultaneously call your attention, engaging you. Multi-Faceted elicits wonder, play and pleasure. Anne has a discerning eye for gathering objects, both found and some she’s kept occupied in her collection over time. She has an innate skill to design pieces anew into both wearable and oversized adornments and new creations, each with individual personalities that fascinate. Indeed, Anne said Multi-Faceted is just a version of her jewelry she makes and “this [show] was pushing it.”

Anne Olsen Daub, Remembrance, Photo courtesy of the artist

Her piece, Remembrance, is an homage to sculptor Tom Van Sant the “Grandfather of modern kite making.” Before Van Sant, kites were made with paper and wood. The designation was the result of Van Sant being the first to use Fiberglass tubing and nylon fabric, in the early ’70s.

The piece is displayed on Van Sant’s self-portrait of the artist as a boy. (Collection of Anne and Eugene Daub). Remembrance made of nylon cord, wood beads and found objects is about, “everything we’ve drug with us,” said Anne. “The weight we carry.” Indeed, a cord of wooden beads follows down the back of Van Sant’s form and runs across the length of the gallery floor. “The red is powerful,” Anne said, referring to cords draped elegantly on the anterior of the form. Beside the forms foot sits a small black, metal house, signifying “dark house memories” of the form.

Opposite from this antique form you’re thrust into the late 20th century, circa 1980s with an oversized ring Veritas (metal band, corrugated paper, mirror, crystals mixed media) and handbag Canal Street, (corrugated paper, mixed media). The latter’s name describes, “where all the high-end rip-offs happen, such as with Louis Vuitton, Chanel etc. bags.

Anne Olsen Daub,, Temptation, Photo courtesy of the artist.

On a platform right next to this ostentation rests Temptation, appropriately, an apple. A beautiful one at that (corrugated paper, crystals mixed media). But it’s not red like the forbidden fruit — though its crystals are as ruby red as pomegranate seeds, as if sliced from this earthy apple with red flesh. A sight to behold. This fruit is a heavily shellacked golden brown and, look closely, you will find an outline of a hand holding the bottom of the fruit, as if in offering.

In Norris Gallery 2, jewels abound, featuring gigantic earrings, Disco Queen (Vintage brass springs, disco balls vintage tiara), Diamond In the Rough (corrugated paper, glitter, crystal, mixed media) and a fabulous, giant ring hanging in the corner. Anne’s rings are made in part from wine barrel rings. She just happened to have them and decided “they are going to be rings,” (the jewelry kind). This one, just beaming from the corner is titled Madly Deeply (metal band, corrugated paper, found objects). The 28×28” ring has a setting of three silver orbs, each encased in a silver prong. The center one sits upon a gold starburst from which gold leaves extend laterally. All her rings have phrases on the bands; this one reads “In Perpetuum Amorem” or “together forever.”

Anne Olsen Daub, Kryptonite Photo courtesy of the artist
Anne Olsen Daub, Disco Queen, Photo courtesy of the artist

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The jewelry in Muti-Faceted will have you craving to wear it. Anne can create oversized art pieces and certainly jewelry to size, which many love to wear, some of which is on display — and for sale — in the gallery. Anne has also occasionally held pop ups with her jewelry in the past and will do so again.

It is my wish that viewers and wearers alike will embark on their own personal journey of re-imagination. My goal is to provoke contemplation of the past while taking individuals to realms where the familiar becomes elevated and extraordinary.”— Anne Olsen Daub.

Give in to temptation for the divine and visit Anne’s exquisite creations in Multi-Faceted.

Details: www.pvartcenter.org and @anne_olsen_daub

The Scapes Pulled ‘Round the World’

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I once took a train from Beijing to Siberia. We left the station early, gliding behind factories where thousands of people did synchronized tai chi before work. Soon we picked up speed, heading north toward Mongolia and beyond. I decided to find the dining car and have some breakfast.

There was no menu. They handed you food. My plate contained stir-fried pork and some kind of vegetable in a brown sauce. With rice, of course. As we escaped the outskirts of Beijing, more and more of the landscape became farmland. I figured there was garlic out there, as China produces more than any other country. And I knew from my plate that the scapes were up in northern China.

Garlic is my favorite crop to grow. If you plant enough you can eat it every day. And out in the field, there is never a dull moment. The plants are in the ground from fall until summer, leaving a short window between harvest and planting. And now, with the solstice upon us, the garlic harvest begins, in the form of bunches of green, glorious, curly scapes.

These whimsical flowering stalks can act as spice, vegetable, edible skewer, or a decorative centerpiece. Cooked whole, they resemble spears of coiled asparagus, a shape that is tricky to dunk one into some sauce and wrangle into your mouth with any dignity. So rather than making scapes the star of a meal, I usually chop them into bite-sized pieces if I want the vegetable, or mince it if I want the spice. As with all garlic, cooking will soften the flavor of a scape.

I still have a handful of bulbs left from last year’s harvest. They are soft, with green shoots in the middle. I may not get to them now that I have new scapes to work with.

Growers pick the scapes so the plant will divert all of its energy into the growing bulb. Like castrating a steer, but with more chlorophyll. Unharvested, the scape will curl around twice, like a cartoon pig’s tail. And then, over a period of weeks, it will uncurl, stand up tall, and bloom into a purple flower shaped like an exploding firework. If you have some garlic in the ground, it’s worth letting a few plants flower just for the beautiful spectacle.

But just a few. Harvest the rest, because big bulbs are where it’s at. You can snap or snip them, but I prefer to harvest scapes the way you’d pull a blade of grass to chew. Tug with sustained, gentle pressure until you hear the stalk snap off somewhere in the plant. The deeper inside the plant that it breaks, the more tender and juicy the end will be. Deeper breaks will emerge with a slurp, which is appropriate, as the deepest parts are as tender as sushi.

The farmers markets will be full of scapes in the coming weeks. When shopping, the most important thing to look at is the broken end of the scape. If harvested young, and via pulling, the end will be appropriately tender. But if the scape was allowed to curl around once or twice, the cut end may very well be woody and will have to be trimmed before it can be used, as with asparagus.

With scapes in hand, the possibilities are endless, as with garlic bulbs. It’s spicy when raw, but not as feisty as a clove, which allows you to munch on a scape along with something hearty like hard cheese and or sausage, or smoked Copper River sockeye belly if you have friends like I do. Cooked, scapes are sweet and mellow, without the bitterness a clove can deliver. Many a great meal has started with chopped scapes in a pan with oil, butter or bacon. It could be fried rice, fried eggs, frittata. Use a blender to make scape pesto, with olive oil, cheese and nuts. It’s garlic, so use it every day, in every savory meal.

Stir-fried scapes with pork

This dish can be served vegetarian-style by simply skipping the pork.

Serves 4

½ pound pork, cut into slices no more than ½-inch thick. Don’t trim the fat. You can use bacon.

1 bunch of scapes, with the tips trimmed off and, if necessary, woody ends cut off the bases, chopped into sections of an inch or less.

Sauce ingredients
1 tablespoon each soy sauce, oyster sauce, rice vinegar
1 teaspoon each fish sauce, hoisin sauce, hot sauce, toasted sesame oil, brown sugar
¼ teaspoon black pepper
¼ onion, sliced and teased apart
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 cubic inch ginger, peeled and sliced

In a medium-sized bowl, combine the sauce ingredients.

Heat a pan on medium/high heat and brown the pork, stirring often. When it’s well-cooked and delicious looking, add the scapes. Stir-fry for 2-5 minutes, then add the sauce. Stir it in and bring to a simmer. Serve with rice.

Putin’s Puppets And America’s Circus Courts

On Monday, Feb. 26, the GOP’s star witness in their Joe Biden impeachment fantasy, Alexander Smirnov, was ordered to be held without bail pending trial for lying to the FBI. A woman outside the downtown LA courthouse, dressed in a Tyrannosaurus rex costume, held a sign echoing Judge Otis Wright’s decision: “I’ll take my Smirnov on ice.”

According to a second court document, the FBI now has evidence that “officials associated with Russian intelligence were involved in passing a story about” Hunter Biden. What’s more, “the misinformation he is spreading is not confined to 2020. He is actively peddling new lies that could impact U.S. elections after meeting with Russian intelligence officials in November. In light of that fact there is a serious risk he will flee in order to avoid accountability for his actions.”

In short, the GOP’s Biden impeachment fantasy has been fueled by Russian disinformation. They’re acting as Vladimir Putin’s puppets.

But — T-Rex costumes aside — the real judicial circus happened two days later, when the Republican supermajority Supreme Court agreed to hear Donald Trump’s preposterous claim of presidential immunity from prosecution, almost ensuring that Trump’s trial for trying to overturn the 2020 election — originally scheduled to start on March 4 — will not be completed before election day.

Delay, delay, delay has been Trump’s strategy all along, given the overwhelming evidence against him, and judges he appointed are helping him along. The 42-count stolen document case has been repeatedly delayed by Judge Aileen Cannon in Florida. And now SCOTUS is doing the same with the election subversion case.

Special Counsel Jack Smith first asked the Court to take the case on Dec. 11, after Trump appealed Judge Tanya Chutkan’s Dec. 1 immunity ruling to the DC Court of Appeals. After Trump’s lawyers filed a brief arguing against him, Smith called their argument “misguided,” saying “The public interest in a prompt resolution of this case favors an immediate, definitive decision by this Court,” in his Dec. 21 response. But SCOTUS speedily rejected Smith’s request the next day.

Only now, more than two months later, after a unanimous, iron-clad appeals court ruling basically settled things, SCOTUS has changed its mind. In a one-page order, it said it will hear the case seven weeks in the future, during the week of April 22. With 88 days needed for pre-trial preparations and proceedings and 90 days for the trial itself, the earliest it can conclude would be mid-October — if SCOTUS ruled immediately, the day after the hearing, with no further delay — which no one expects will happen. Thus, it’s all increasingly likely the trial won’t conclude before election day. It might not even begin before then.

“It is an unmistakable sign from the MAGA majority of the Trump-created Court that they are with him, that they are going to use their power to make sure that he does not face trial in an election year for attempting to end American democracy,” said MSNBC host Chris Hayes. “Everyone has always understood, the substance of his legal claim here was meritless,” Hayes said. “The point was never to win on the merits. The point was to make a time-consuming Hail Mary pass to attempt to escape accountability.”

Ellie Mystal, justice correspondent for The Nation magazine, echoed that assessment. “They are corrupted political actors who act in bad faith,” he said on MSNBC an hour later. “There are six Republicans — not conservatives, Republicans — on the Supreme Court who view it as their job to help the Republican Party,” he said. “Until we do something about that, until we take away that power, until we draw the line on them there, they will continue to do this. They will help Trump. They will take away abortion rights. They will end affirmative action. They will liberalize gun rights. They will do all of it until we stop them. And somebody needs to start listening in the higher echelons of the Democratic Party, because we will keep losing every day if we allow these six Republicans in robes to rule over all of us.”

Democracy In Peril

To put things in a broader context, “Today is an excellent day to remind all of you Americans that the Brazilian electoral court banned Bolsonaro from running in the next election within six months from his attempted insurrection,” John Hopkins political science professor Filipe Campante wrote on Bluesky.

Here, in contrast, Trump has upped his attacks on the entire judicial system, which has seen a sharp rise in threats to the federal judicial system from his supporters. Serious threats to both judges and prosecutors have more than doubled over the past three years, Reuters reported on Feb. 13. The baseline threat level was primarily due to people upset about decisions in their own cases, while the increase comes from “people enraged because of politics.” At the same time, “election officials saw a barrage of threats from Trump’s supporters, as previously documented,” Reuters reported. What’s more, “Judges and prosecutors involved in the criminal and civil prosecutions of Trump have reported hundreds of threatening messages linked to those cases, according to court records and public statements by the targeted officials.”

The rise in violence is clearly driven in part by Trump, who has encouraged violence at his political rallies since he first began running in 2015. But there’s a much longer backstory. Rightwing hate radio has long engaged in eliminationist rhetoric, justified in terms of imagined conspiratorial threats, and directed at perceived social outgroups from a white Christian supremacist perspective. Trump’s rhetoric and campaigns have emboldened once-marginalized extremists most receptive to such messages, as reflected, for example, in the open presence of self-identified Nazis at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in late February.

Meanwhile, the mass base of Republican voters has become increasingly conspiracy-minded in their political outlook. Polls last year showed 60-70% of Republicans don’t think Biden legitimately won the 2020 election, despite a complete lack of evidence to support their views. Unsupported claims of Biden’s corruption reinforce the belief his presidency isn’t legitimate, and thus impeachment is warranted — bringing Biden down to the same level as Trump.

The Russian Connection

Which is where Smirnov comes in. Fox host Sean Hannity did 85 segments based on Smirnov’s allegations, and then-Speaker Kevin McCarthy invoked them when he initiated the House’s impeachment inquiry last September, saying, “Even a trusted FBI informant has alleged a bribe to the Biden family.” Altogether, Fox has mentioned Biden in the context of bribery almost 2,900 times over the past year, according to the Internet Archive Television News Archive, peaking 98 times in one day on June 9, 2023. Smirnov wasn’t responsible for all that coverage, but — although anonymous at the time — he was far and away the most crucial source of so-called evidence.

And now it turns out he was feeding Russian disinformation to the FBI, GOP lawmakers, Fox hosts and viewers. To its credit, the FBI at least tried to stem the flow. But all the rest have been hyped up Russian dupes — or worse, willing co-conspirators to deceive the American people.

According to the indictment from Hunter Biden Special Prosecutor David Weiss, in June 2020, three years after first mentioning Biden while reporting on contacts with Burisma, Smirnov “reported, for the first time, two meetings in 2015 and/or 2016, during the Obama-Biden Administration, in which he claimed executives associated with Burisma” admitted to hiring Hunter Biden to “‘protect us, through his dad, from all kinds of problems,’ and later that they had specifically paid $5 million each” to Hunter Biden and his father.” But the indictment reveals that multiple lines of evidence show that Smirnov had no contact with Burisma before 2017, before Biden left office as Obama’s VP. So all his bribery claims were lies. They were floated in 2020 with the clear intention to interfere in the 2020 election.

The indictment contains text messages between Smirnov and his FBI handler, starting on May 19, 2020, laying the groundwork for his accusations, with names redacted, but clearly identifiable. The second message, 20 minutes after the first, said “Biden going to jail”. A minute later he wrote, “Dems tried to impeach Trump for same. Even less. All those politicians same shit. Jail for all of them. Plus bribe of Biden should be soon in the news.” His handler was skeptical, to say the least. “I’ll try to prove it for you bro,” Smirnov responded. And that’s just what he tried to do.

Explanation of Russian intelligence agencies’ involvement was included in the second filing, Feb. 20, in support of Smirnov’s detention without bail. His contacts in those agencies “are extensive and extremely recent,” as well as high-level, and working with them, “Smirnov’s efforts to spread misinformation about a candidate of one of the two major parties in the United States continues.”

One of his Russian contacts “Smirnov has described as a high-ranking member of a specific Russian foreign intelligence service.” Another “has been described by Smirnov in a number of ways, including as the son of a former high-ranking Russian government official, someone who purportedly controls two groups of individuals tasked with carrying out assassination efforts in a third-party country, a Russian representative to another country, and as someone with ties to a particular Russian intelligence service.”

This is all rather embarrassing to Republicans and Fox TV hosts, who love to pretend Russian campaign interference is a liberal conspiracy theory. But no one involved here is a liberal. We have a Republican FBI director, a Republican special prosecutor, and a Republican federal judge (appointed by George W. Bush) all agreeing that Smirnov is a Russian agent, not to be believed. It’s now the third straight presidential election that Russia has tried to interfere in to help elect Donald Trump.

What’s more, it’s the same sort of disinformation that Trump tried to extort from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in 2019, which lead to his first impeachment, when he said, “I would like you to do us a favor, though,” when Zelenskyy was asking about military aid. Trump tried to get Zelenskyy to open an investigation into the same bogus claim of Biden protecting Barisma. (He also asked about a Rudy Giuliani-promoted conspiracy theory that it was actually Ukraine that hacked the Democrats in 2016, and then tried to frame Trump and Russia for it.)

The Hunter Biden Letdown
Three days after Smirnov’s detention hearing, Hunter Biden gave a seven-hour closed-door deposition to Congress, the transcript of which was released later that day. It again underscored the utter lack of evidence of any wrongdoing by Biden’s father, who had nothing to do with his businesses, as he stated repeatedly.

But a line of question by California Democrat Eric Swalwell highlighted the far more serious corruption of the Trump family that’s somehow been totally normalized. He asked Biden if his father had done anything like Trump, including operating a hotel where foreign nationals spent millions while he was in office, employing family members in the Oval Office, having a family member receive 41 trademarks from China, being fined $355 million by a state, and trying to install as a daughter-in-law or other family member as party chair. Biden answered in the negative every time. “I don’t think that anyone in my family would be crazy enough to want to be the chairperson of the DNC,” he added in response to the last question.

Finally, Swalwell asked, “Anyone in your family ever strike a multibillion dollar deal with the Saudi Government while your father was in office?”

“No,” Biden replied.

Republicans remain undeterred, and will continue their bogus impeachment investigation, asking Hunter Biden to publicly testify in the coming weeks. The point isn’t to find evidence of wrongdoing, but simply to keep talking about it, creating the illusion of a false equivalence (even as Trump is literally running for president to keep himself out of prison). And a media that covers conflict far more than substance will surely help them in doing that.

In the end, Chris Hayes said, after the Supreme Court delay announcement, “Today is the starkest proof yet that in the zero-sum battle between MAGA and democracy, there was and is only one thing that could ever truly could stop Donald Trump. And that is we the people. Americans voting against him. A majority. Voting against what he stands for and what he wants to do.”

Or, as North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper said on MSNBC’s The Last Word, “The choice is going to be ‘Do you want a president who wakes up every morning thinking about the American people? Or do you want a president who wakes up every morning thinking about himself?”

DocSunday at LAHIFF: From Fish Harbor to World War II

The story behind The Smell of Money Documentary

The film’s producers call The Smell of Money a tribute to the historic fishing and canning industries at the Port of Los Angeles and preserve that history for posterity in the Los Angeles Maritime Museum’s permanent exhibit, “Caught, Canned, and Eaten: The History of San Pedro’s Tuna Canning Industry” that opened in 2007.

Jack Baric’s producer credits include A Place Among the Dead (2020), City Divided (2013), Bloody Thursday (2009), Searching for a Storm (2009), and Port Town (2006).

The San Pedro-born producer spoke with Random Lengths about the documentary film, which will be featured on DocSunday at the Los Angeles Harbor International Film Festival.

“If you get around people who were of that era, the middle part of the 20th century and they talk about the fishing and canning industry, you will often hear them chuckle and say, you know, it might have been stinky in San Pedro, but that was the smell of money,” Baric explained. “It’s kind of like a catchphrase that a lot of people in that industry used to describe the fact that although it caused an unpleasant aroma sometimes, it also meant that people were making money and people were putting food on the table.”

Indeed, in the period between the construction of Fish Harbor in 1915 and World War II, stories abound of fishermen bringing in hauls that could change the fortunes of an entire family during those times.

“We didn’t put this in the film, but there are folks that I’ve also talked to about how a lot of the fishermen would donate one of their tons of fish. And that was what was used to build Mary Star [of the Sea Catholic Church],” Baric explained. “The industry played a very, very significant role in the foundation of our community.”

Baric discussed two major pieces of the story about fishing at the Port of Los Angeles.

“Two significant things can be noted about the Japanese fishermen,” Baric began. “First, in the early part of the 20th century, the Japanese fishermen introduced the bamboo poles used for longline fishing. Before they were catching fish with nets, they were doing it with poles. That was a technology, if you will, an old-fashioned technology … but a technology that was brought to our area by the Japanese.”

Fishermen mending nets at Fishing Village on Terminal Island in San Pedro.

The second part was the incarceration of Japanese fishermen during World War II inside internment camps after they were dispossessed of their savings and property.

“World War II was both the best and worst thing that happened to our local fishing industry,” Baric said. “The worst thing is that we very unjustly robbed the Japanese fishermen of their livelihood. The best thing that happened is that the United States government used canned tuna to feed the troops and that’s how many of them developed a taste for it. And that led to the boom in the 1950s.”

The documentary is 30 minutes long. Baric explained that the project was initially only supposed to be 15 minutes long.

“It wasn’t commissioned to be something that was super, super long,” Baric said. “It already grew to 30 and that was as big as it was going to get. That’s the filmmaker’s decision.”

Baric noted that this wasn’t a project he could dedicate an entire year to make a full-fledged 90-minute documentary.

“It’s unfortunate because it’s a topic that is really interesting,” Baric said. “Ask five people their opinions on the demise of the fishing industry, and you will get various answers. More environmental people would say overfishing depleted the ocean of fish.”

Baric continued, noting that some people are saying no, there was no overfishing, it was just overreach by the government with regulation.

“According to most of the people I spoke with, the decline of the fishing industry was more economic. It was the fact that you could inexpensively catch and can tuna in other parts of the world. And so we, just like in manufacturing, lost our fishing industry, when all those pioneers that started the industry in San Pedro started selling their companies to multinationals ― multinationals that now no longer had any sort of loyalty to the local community. They just went and found the fish wherever they could, at the cheapest price they could, that wasn’t in our waters.”

Longline

Filmmaker Dinko Bozanic lives on the island of Vis in a village called Komiža. Bozanic made a documentary film about Longline fishermen who go out into their local waters and catch different types of fish, based on what was available.

Baric praised the cinematography, exclaiming it was beautifully shot.

“You really see what they do out there. It’s pretty fascinating because the film shows this big wheel spins out a line and goes out into the sea. In the film, it is indicated that the lines are 10 miles long.

“So imagine going out fishing with your fishing pole and having your line being able to extend 10 miles into the sea with hooks every … I don’t know how many feet apart … you kind of learn how fishermen in other parts of the world still to this day catch their fish,” Baric said.

Closing Day of LAHIFF DocSunday

Time: 2:45p.m, March 17

Cost: No charge, reservations requested https://LAHIFFDocSunday.eventbrite.com

Venue: Cabrillo Marine Aquarium – San Pedro – Port of Los Angeles (POLA)

 

Trump is Unfit for Office

Those who can’t see that are either blind or delusional.
Saving Democracy It comes down to who votes now that SCOTUS is involved.

Delay of justice for one is not equal justice at all. It has become clear by now that the US Supreme Court isn’t going to solve the Trump problem any time soon because they allowed his appeal of the lower court ruling on his immunity defense.

The Supreme Court on Feb. 27 agreed to decide whether former President Donald Trump can be tried on criminal charges that he conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 election. In a one-page unsigned order, the justices ordered a federal appeals court to continue to keep on hold its ruling rejecting Trump’s claims of immunity from prosecution, and they fast-tracked the case for oral argument until April 22.

This means that the twice indicted and civilly convicted ex-president is still in the race against President Joseph Biden for the 2024 election. This will be a consequential rematch that could determine or undermine the future of America.

Trump was indicted in August 2023 on four counts arising from Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021, attacks on the U.S. Capitol. Many thought that this was the beginning of the end for the criminal Trumpster but he continues to appeal every legal ruling even after he’s been convicted, like in the New York fraud case, where he owes more than $350 million plus interest (pushing the total to $450 million). “When will somebody just put him in jail where he belongs?” say all but his most loyal and delusional followers. Can the electorate be this confused about the leader who packed his cabinet with billionaires who were so corrupt that five of them were referred by their own staff to the Justice Department for prosecution (which an equally corrupt Bill Barr ignored)?

Here are a few more of Trump’s greatest hits:

  • When, in April 2020, he learned that most of the people dying of COVID-19 were Black people in blue states, he ended America’s lockdown and began pushing to get people back to work. As a result, America had more deaths from the pandemic as a percentage of our population than any other developed country on Earth.
  • He stirred up religious and racial hatred and encouraged Nazis and racist militias. Remember the Proud Boys who were convicted for the Jan. 6 insurrection?
  • He devastated the EPA, pushing out over half their scientists.
  • He cut taxes on his morbidly rich peers, producing an $8 trillion addition to our national debt, more than any president in history.
  • He put three radicals on the Supreme Court and several hundred crackpot, unqualified judges on the federal bench.
  • He sucked up to Putin and trash-talked our democratic allies.
  • He tried to destroy NATO and promised to finish the job if he’s back in office next year.
  • He empowered religious fanatics who are now on a campaign to outlaw abortion and birth control, destroy our entire public school system, and stir up hatred against the queer community. And wants to get rid of vaccine mandates in all schools.

And now the six corrupt Republicans on the Supreme Court are going out of their way to give him the delays he wants so he can stay out of jail and continue his campaign to end our way of life.

As reported in the March 3 Rolling Stone article by Noah Shachtman and Asawin Suebsaeng, the “Defense Department’s inspector general released a report detailing how the White House Medical Unit during the Trump administration distributed controlled substances with scant oversight and even sloppier record keeping. Investigators repeatedly noted that the unit had ordered thousands and thousands of doses of the stimulant modafinil, which has been used by military pilots for decades to stay alert during long missions.”

This article went on to say, “Knowledgeable sources say that samples of the stimulant were passed around for those contributing lines to major Trump speeches, working late hours on foreign policy initiatives, responding to Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s probe, coping with the deluge of media inquiries about that investigation… .”

If during the administration of Trump, you thought the people must be high on something, it turns out that you were right! They were taking uppers and downers washed down with alcohol. This of course only calls into question what the Orange man is taking that keeps him so agitated.

President Biden may be a bit slow at times but nobody has accused him of being stoned. Nor has anyone actually questioned whether Trump (who is less than four years younger) is too old to be president. The deal is you have one man who has years of government experience, and lots of foreign policy knowledge running against an Adderall (amphetamine/dextroamphetamine) addict who is inspired by fascists, dictators, and brutal authoritarians.

This would seem like a no-brainer decision and yet it will come down to a slim majority in just five maybe six states, which isn’t California that is decidedly NO ON TRUMP.