Monday, October 6, 2025
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The Genocidal Partnership of Israel and the United States

 

For decades, countless U.S. officials have proclaimed that the bonds between the United States and Israel are unbreakable. Now, the ties that bind are laced with genocide. The two countries function as accomplices while methodical killing continues in Gaza, with both societies directly – and differently – making it all possible.

The policies of Israel’s government are aligned with the attitudes of most Jewish Israelis. In a recent survey, three-quarters of them (and 64 percent of all Israelis) said they largely agreed with the statement that “there are no innocent people in Gaza” – nearly half of whom are children.

“There is no more ‘permitted’ and ‘forbidden’ with regard to Israel’s evilness toward the Palestinians,” dissident columnist Gideon Levy wrote three months ago in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz. “It is permitted to kill dozens of captive detainees and to starve to death an entire people.” The biggest Israeli media outlets echo and amplify sociopathic voices. “Genocide talk has spread into all TV studios as legitimate talk. Former colonels, past members of the defense establishment, sit on panels and call for genocide without batting an eye.”

Last week, Levy provided an update: “The weapon of deliberate starvation is working. The Gaza ‘Humanitarian’ Foundation, in turn, has become a tragic success. Not only have hundreds of Gazans been shot to death while waiting in line for packages distributed by the GHF, but there are others who don’t manage to reach the distribution points, dying of hunger. Most of these are children and babies…. They lie on hospital floors, on bare beds, or carried on donkey carts. These are pictures from hell. In Israel, many people reject these photos, doubting their veracity. Others express their joy and pride on seeing starving babies.”

Unimpeded, a daily process continues to exterminate more and more of the 2.1 million Palestinian people who remain in Gaza – bombing and shooting civilians while blocking all but a pittance of the food and medicine needed to sustain life. After destroying Gaza’s hospitals, Israel is still targeting healthcare workers (killing at least 70 in May and June), as well as first responders and journalists.

The barbarism is in sync with the belief that “no innocent people” are in Gaza. A relevant observation came from Aldous Huxley in 1936, the same year that the swastika went onto Germany’s flag: “The propagandist’s purpose is to make one set of people forget that certain other sets of people are human.” Kristallnacht happened two years later.

Renowned genocide scholar Omer Bartov explained during an interview on Democracy Now! in mid-July that genocide is “the attempt to destroy not simply people in large numbers, but to destroy them as members of a group. The intent is to destroy the group itself. And it doesn’t mean that you have to kill everyone. It means that the group will be destroyed and that it will not be able to reconstitute itself as a group. And to my mind, this is precisely what Israel is trying to do.”

Bartov, who is Jewish and spent the first half of his life in Israel, said:

“What I see in the Israeli public is an extraordinary indifference by large parts of the public to what Israel is doing and what it’s done in the name of Israeli citizens in Gaza. In part, it has to do with the fact that the Israeli media has decided not to report on the horrors that the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] is perpetrating in Gaza. You simply will not see it on Israeli television. If some pictures happen to come in, they are presented only as material that might be used by foreign propaganda against Israel. Now, Israeli citizens can, of course, use other media resources. We can all do that. But most of them prefer not to. And I would say that while about 30 percent of the population in Israel is completely in favor of what is happening, and, in fact, is egging the government and the army on, I think the vast majority of the population simply does not want to know about it.”

In Israel, “compassion for Palestinians is taboo except among a fringe of radical activists,” Adam Shatz wrote last month in the London Review of Books. At the same time, “the catastrophe of the last two years far exceeds that of the Nakba.” The consequences “are already being felt well beyond Gaza: in the West Bank, where Israeli soldiers and settlers have presided over an accelerated campaign of displacement and killing (more than a thousand West Bank Palestinians have been killed since 7 October); inside Israel, where Palestinian citizens are subject to increasing levels of ostracism and intimidation; in the wider region, where Israel has established itself as a new Sparta; and in the rest of the world, where the inability of Western powers to condemn Israel’s conduct – much less bring it to an end – has made a mockery of the rules-based order that they claim to uphold.”

The loudest preaching for a “rules-based order” has come from the U.S. government, which makes and breaks international rules at will. During this century, in the Middle East, the U.S.-Israel duo has vastly outdone all other entities combined in the categories of killing, maiming, and terrorizing. In addition to the joint project of genocide in Gaza, and the USA’s long war on Iraq, the United States and Israel have often exercised an assumed prerogative to attack Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and Iran, along with encore U.S. missile strikes on Iraq as recently as last year.

Israel’s grisly performance as “a new Sparta” in the region is coproduced by the Pentagon, with the military and intelligence operations of the two nations intricately entangled. The Israeli military has been able to turn Gaza into a genocide zone with at least 70 percent of its arsenal coming from the United States.

While writing an afterword about the war on Gaza for the paperback edition of War Made Invisible, I mulled over the relevance of my book’s subtitle: “How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine.” As the carnage in Gaza worsened, the reality became clearer that the Orwellian-named Israel Defense Forces and U.S. Defense Department are essentially part of the same military machine. Their command structures are different, but they are part of the same geopolitical Goliath.

“The new era in which Israel, backed by the U.S., dominates the Middle East is likely to see even more violence and instability than in the past,” longtime war correspondent Patrick Cockburn wrote this month. The lethal violence from Israeli-American teamwork is of such magnitude that it epitomizes international state terrorism. The genocide in Gaza shows the lengths to which the alliance is willing and able to go.

While public opinion is very different in Israel and the United States, the genocidal results of the governments’ policies are indistinguishable.

American public opinion about arming Israel is measurable. As early as June 2024, a CBS News poll found that 61 percent of the public said that the U.S. should not “send weapons and supplies to Israel.” Since then, support for Israel has continued to erode.

In sharp contrast, on Capitol Hill, the support for arming Israel is measurably high. When Bernie Sanders’s bills to cut off some military aid to Israel came to a vote last November, just 19 out of 100 senators voted yes. Very few of his colleagues voice anywhere near the extent of Sanders’s moral outrage as he keeps speaking out on the Senate floor.

In the House, only 26 out of 435 members have chosen to become cosponsors of H.R.3565, a bill introduced more than two months ago by Rep. Delia Ramirez that would prevent the U.S. government from sending certain bombs to Israel.

“Israel is the largest cumulative recipient of U.S. foreign assistance since World War II,” the Congressional Research Service reports. During just the first 12 months after the war on Gaza began in October 2023, Brown University’s Costs of War project found, the “U.S. spending on Israel’s military operations and related U.S. operations in the region” added up to $23 billion.

The resulting profit bonanza for U.S. military contractors is notable. So is the fact that the U.S.-Israel partnership exerts great American leverage in the Middle East – where two-thirds of the world’s oil reserves are located.

The politics of genocide in the United States involves papering over the big gap between the opinions of the electorate and the actions of the U.S. government. While the partnership between the governments of Israel and the United States has never been stronger, the partnership between the people of Israel and the United States has never been weaker. But in the USA, consent of the governed has not been necessary to continue the axis of genocide.

Long Beach Concession Workers Will Earn an Olympic Wage

Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy or LAANE reported July 23 that the Long Beach City Council voted to raise the wage for concession workers at the airport and convention center to $29.50/hour by the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2028. The policy extends protections to future workers at the Long Beach Bowl, a highly anticipated waterfront venue adjacent to the Queen Mary that will be the second-largest outdoor amphitheater in L.A. County.

Thanks to this victory, concession workers are now brought up to the same wage standard that was won by hotel workers when Long Beach voters approved Measure RW, which went into effect just over a year ago.

The Tourism Workers Rising campaign in Long Beach was anchored by UNITE HERE Local 11, LAANE, and CLUE. This victory was only made possible through a broad coalition of 75 local community organizations, 206 small businesses, and thousands of voters who overwhelmingly passed higher wages for Long Beach tourism workers through Measure RW.

Long Beach will be hosting several Olympic sporting events, and both the airport and convention center are set to receive millions of dollars in preparation for the 2026 World Cup and the Olympic and Paralympic Games. While workers at theLongBeach airport and convention centerareessential to the success ofLongBeach’s tourism industry, many of their workers struggle to afford rent, groceries, and basic necessities.

In May, Mayor Bass signed a similar Olympic wage law that raises the wage for City of Los Angeles tourism workers to $30/hour by 2028. But in LA, corporations like Delta, United Airlines, and the American Hotel and Lodging Association have funded a campaign to attempt to overturn the law.

Executive Director of LAANE, Víctor Sánchez, said, “The corporate pushback we face in L.A. is proof that we’re on the right path, and we willkeep pushing forward to improve the lives of working families in our communities. Our victories in L.A. and inLongBeachare proof that when we’re united, we’re unbeatable.”

Letters to the Editor: Censorship, Complicity, and the Collapse of Public Trust

The “CHEER OF AGONY”

A cult Republican group and the Heritage Foundation’s agent (Trump) should hold their heads in shame.

  1. When they “cheered” for 17 million men, women, and children to be thrown off Medicare!
  1. When they “cheered” that over 300 hospitals will be closed for the needy and elderly without means to have the proper treatment!
  1. When they “cheered” for millions of children to be thrown off the food programs and go Hungry!
  1. When they “cheered” for a “4 trillion” dollars of debt to be placed on the backs of the American people!
  1. When they “cheered” to fund groups like ICE (Immigration Customs Enforcement) that have used and are using “Gestapo” tactics to tear families apart, not the apprehension of criminals!

And lastly, an attempt to damage our economy!

It truly takes a “sadistic mind” to “Cheer” for the Suffering and Pain of hapless and disadvantaged people. But hopefully in the mid-term elections the American people will be “Cheering” by sending the “Cult-Republicans” and supporters back to their dark place!!

Robert Lesley

Carson, CA

 

Thinned Skin? Silence Public Broadcasting

House Republicans voted to defund public broadcasting, and Southern California families will feel the impact. They’re taking back $4.3 million from PBS SoCal, which provides trusted educational programming, like Sesame Street, and free learning materials from over 1 million children under the age of 5 in our region.

It also eliminates funding for stations like KCRW in Santa Monica and KUSC in Los Angeles, jeopardizing access to local news, cultural programming, and emergency alerts that keep our communities safe and informed.

I voted AGAINST this power grab that takes away money Congress has already allocated. This isn’t about saving money — it’s about silencing voices and access to programming that thin-skinned Donald Trump and his rubber-stamp Republicans don’t like. That’s about as un-American as you can get.

Congresswoman Nanette Barragán (CA-44)

 

TWO PEAS IN A PEDOPHILE POD

“A pal is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday – and may every day be another wonderful secret.” — disgusting Donald Trump, in a verified 2003 personal letter Trump sent to his prolific pedophile billionaire best friend Jeffrey Epstein for his 50th birthday. (“Wonderful secret” means rape.)

I assume you’re already familiar with the phrase “politics makes strange bedfellows”, which is one way of describing former partners in sex crimes against children, diddler Donald Trump & jagoff Jeffrey Epstein, America’s two most notorious adjudicated rapists of the 21st Century.

Another way of describing demonic Donald and his pedophile pimp Epstein is they’re the Republican Party’s modern-day role models, two peas in a pedophile pod, falsely pretending to believe in God. Moses himself needs to make a return appearance to smash some stone tablets over demented Donald Trump’s big, empty, orange head.

As a result of their personal perversions, these two sick and stupid, child molesting sociopathic scumbags have terminally tarnished the reputations of two major world religions with their own unforgivable, evil, predatory criminal behavior: #1) Protestant Christianity and #2) Orthodox Judaism. Israel ran Jeffrey Epstein’s child rape ring to blackmail prominent American politicians and businessmen.

Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein was undeniably an asset of Israel’s version of the CIA, the child molesting Mossad. And when most Americans finally confront that awful truth, it will be the end of our counterproductive, fake, so-called alliance with the rogue nation/colony called Israel. Good riddance!

Jewish supremacist Jeffrey Epstein, who supposedly committed suicide in 2019 (which is, of course, untrue) can’t be punished for his crimes now, but diabolical Donald Trump can be punished and should be punished, if not by the law in the tangerine tyrant’s nascent dictatorship, then by we the people ourselves by any means necessary!

Speaking of strange political bedfellows, I never thought I’d be in agreement with that notorious neo-Nazi podcaster Nick Fuentes about anything, but when you’re right, you’re right (or in fascist Fuentes’ case, right-wing):

“And now he says if you are not on board with the Epstein coverup, I don’t want your support. You’re a weakling. Fk you. Fk you. You suck. You are fat. You are a joke. You are stupid. You are not funny. You are not as smart as you think you are. And honestly, and if you watch my show, you know I’ve been very critical. I’ve never been this far. This just goes to show this entire thing has been a scam. When we look back on the history of populism in America, we are going to look back on the MAGA movement as the biggest scam in American history. The Liberals were right. The MAGAs were had. They were. When we look back in history, we will see Trump as a scam artist.”

Jake Pickering

Arcata, CA

Worse Than COVID

ICE Immigration Raids Upend Local Community Life

By Emma Rault, Community Reporter

“Fear is killing our businesses, emptying our storefronts, and choking our economy,” said Anthony Luna, board chair of the San Pedro Chamber of Commerce, at the July 11 press conference held on the Port of LA’s Terminal Island, which federal immigration enforcement agents have been using as their base of operations for the large-scale immigration raids that have been carried out across Southern California over the past month.

The conference painted a bleak picture of the devastating impact on public life.

“Let’s be clear: the immediate harms … to people is what’s primary. But we have all these secondary harms that come to our education system, our hospital system, our business communities,” said 15th District City Councilman Tim McOsker.

When Anthony Luna recently walked into The Original Las Brisas, a family-owned restaurant that has been feeding San Pedro for more than 40 years, he found the normally bustling restaurant almost empty. “Lunch is gone,” manager Hilary Mejia told him.

Last month, the Wilmington Farmers’ Market announced it would be shutting down indefinitely. “Due to increased ICE activity in Wilmington, many of our farmers are scared and have chosen not to attend,” the organizers wrote in a Facebook post.

Summer school attendance is also down significantly, as parents and students are afraid of having their lives forever upended on their school run.

The climate of extreme anxiety is caused by the current administration’s unprecedented dragnet approach to immigration enforcement. Since early June, masked men in tactical gear claiming to be agents of the federal government have swarmed parking lots, bus stops, day laborer corners, farms, car washes and other places to conduct violent arrests.

At an ICE raid targeting a farm in Camarillo, several workers were critically injured and one man—the sole breadwinner for his family—died after falling from a roof.

The raids have repeatedly ensnared U.S. citizens, like Army veteran George Retes, a security guard at an Oxnard marijuana farm who was sprayed with tear gas, pepper sprayed and dragged from his vehicle on his way to work and detained for three days without being allowed to contact an attorney.

Meanwhile, in Florida, a 15-year-old boy with no criminal convictions ended up at the new immigration prison in the Everglades. At another Florida ICE facility, according to a harrowing new report by Human Rights Watch, shackled detainees were made to kneel and eat food from Styrofoam plates with their hands behind their backs.

In addition to ensnaring documented immigrants, the raids have also targeted people without papers who are proactively trying to come into compliance with the law. In Santa Ana, for example, one resident was arrested at his ISAP check-in — a mandatory check-in with the immigration authorities that is part of ICE’s Alternatives to Detention program. Countless incidents like these have left immigrant families reeling and unsure whether their civil liberties will be respected.

Educators are seeing a devastating impact. “As a teacher, I don’t know what the future holds,” said David, a teacher with UTLA based in Torrance. “I don’t know how many students I will have in my classroom in August or how many phone calls I will have to make to find them as a result of ICE terrorizing our immigrant communities.”

LAUSD saw itself forced to roll out the option of virtual summer-school attendance, and Cal State LA likewise announced that it will allow professors to move classes online.

Many schools in the harbor area are doing the same. In March, the CSU Dominguez Hills Academic Senate passed a resolution urging faculty to do everything in their power to support students “who may be experiencing disruption in their education because of the federal executive orders relating to documentation and residency status.”

CSU Long Beach gives its faculty similar flexibility, while El Camino College has had hybrid options in place since the pandemic and continues to offer them, according to spokesperson Kerri Webb. (Harbor College could not be reached in time for comment.)

While those accommodations can be a lifeline, students continue to face uncertainty and unsafety, exacerbated by incidents like the one on the CSUDH campus earlier this month, when ICE used one of the university’s public parking lots as a staging area. (In a public statement on its Instagram page, the university stated that “ICE agents are not permitted access to non-public areas of the campus without a valid judicial warrant.”)

“Our communities are standing firm, but our kids are suffering trauma that will affect the rest of their lives,” David from UTLA told Random Lengths.

David also pointed out that many children are reliving the trauma of the pandemic — the sense of being trapped at home because nowhere else is safe.

Just weeks ago, a convoy of federal agents armed with machine guns marched into LA’s MacArthur Park while children were at a summer camp in a nearby recreation center. Torched writer Alissa Walker pointed out that scenes like these are likely to cut families off from both much-needed downtime and vital services.

“The same city rec centers also provide lunches for all kids on weekdays. Fear of ICE is going to keep families away from free summer meals,” she wrote on Bluesky.

As the Chamber’s Anthony Luna also pointed out, all this will likely have a ripple effect felt far beyond the present moment. For LA, it raises questions about the World Cup, the Olympics, and the city’s role on the international stage. For the Harbor Area, the political situation raises questions about the tourism industry (already down dramatically), the port economy, and the high hopes invested in projects like West Harbor. As Torched’s Alissa Walker put it: What if the world doesn’t come?

“This is what we’re fighting to save,” Luna summarized: “The family restaurant on the corner, the harvest ready to be picked, the dignity of safe work, the trust that keeps our economy running.”

A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to temporarily stop the LA raids, ruling in favor of a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and cities including LA, which alleged unconstitutional racial profiling. The federal government immdediately appealed the ruling.

In spite of the ongoing uncertainty, the community is coming together by establishing mutual-aid funds and showing up in droves to support events that have been affected.

“San Pedro has an amazing activist community that’s very in tune with social issues,” said Rick Canter, owner of VenaVer, the company that organizes the San Pedro Farmers Market.

“The community-building that’s happened [in response to the raids] is actually making the market stronger. We’re in it together. That’s how we win.”

 

 

The Orange Cloud Over Democracy

 

Will Americans Stop the Rise of Dictatorship?

By John Gray, a “Banning Homes/Channel Heights Projects” Kid

There appears to be an orange cloud passing through the skies, threatening to tear apart the American way of life as we once knew it. It isn’t a nuclear cloud, but rather one that brings unwanted political policy to Americans by the current administration in power.

This cloud introduces autocracy and dictatorship, modeling itself after despotic nations like Russia and North Korea, with other authoritarian pretenders like Turkey and Syria not far behind. Will this be a global moment? Or rather, a one-off phenomenon that will die after the Trump presidency and MAGA expire? Amid this orange cloud, it has become clear that there is no adherence to humanistic principles, values, or biblical code. After all, the French and American Revolutions were fought in the name of humanistic values, and we have to make sure our nation lives up to those principles.

In the face of Trump’s blooming dictatorship, what are the guardrails against his authoritarianism? Americans see his immigration policies that resemble manifest destiny and dictatorial tactics daily. He has infiltrated America’s justice department and the Supreme Court, the military has been tarnished, and there is a slipknot around the neck of the American Republican Congress. Are there any guardrails against all of this?

Political Scientist Dr. Francis Fukuyama believes there are a few left, such as proper checks and balances as guaranteed by the Constitution. But in the wake of Trump’s first presidency and the first few months of his second administration, we see that these guardrails are increasingly falling apart.

Over the past few months, we have seen an almost limitless barrage of executive orders that challenge the constitutional limits of his office. The only check against most of these orders has come from the judicial branch, either at the federal or state level.

Nevertheless, Trump seems content to simply ignore these checks according to his own whims. He has bombed Iran without any Congressional approval, bringing the nation dangerously close to war, rammed through the so-called “Big Beautiful Bill,” which cuts Medicare by nearly $1 trillion and nearly $300 billion from food benefits to low-income families through intimidation and uncouth tactics.

One opines that there must be those in the world who have thoughts and beliefs adverse to dictatorship. Will the world and America allow Trump to move towards complete dictatorship, or will we the people rise against this emerging authoritarianism? Trump’s authoritative actions have essentially deemed the Constitution irrelevant; he cares nothing for it and has proven he will do what he wishes, no matter what. So what can be done? Who will defend us against this rising dictatorship? All of us must defend this nation and the world. We will be the ones to end Trump’s authoritarian whims before we all find ourselves under the boot of his fascism.

The Promise and the Curse

 

We Hold these Truths to be Self-Evident, Except

When We Don’t

The promise in the Declaration of Independence that all people are endowed with certain inalienable rights and the adherence to these ideals is a continual struggle in the “perfecting of the Union.” It has been so since the very beginning of our republic. In other words, it was never perfect in the original and was meant to be amended over time to make a more perfect republic. The founding fathers knew that the risks would always be there of the abuse of power and tried to prevent any form of tyrant from becoming a “king.” As such, the three equal but separate branches of government– legislative, judicial and executive were thought to be the guards against tyrants.

Not very long into our history, we fought a great Civil War to clarify just who was free and who wasn’t. The 11th, 12th, 13th, and 14th amendments were meant to codify the certainty of those inalienable rights and that all people living in this nation have those rights and protections. And it does not matter if you are a citizen, a tourist or an undocumented worker. At least that’s the promise.

Of course, it wasn’t until much later that women got the right to vote, and not until the 1950s and 1960s did civil rights become enforceable, yet we continued to fight with ourselves and the promise.

The curse is some people’s prejudices and penchant for ignoring or intentionally breaking these laws out of their own avarice, greed, or corruption, which is obviously what the Orange Felon has brought to the White House and despoiled the very institutions that have stood for 250 years.

What did America expect from a man who was thrice indicted, who is so corrupt he bankrupted an Atlantic City casino, cheated on his taxes, then inspired an insurrection when he wasn’t reelected and who at the end of this term needs to be indicted all over again if not impeached for a third time once the Democrats take back congress.

Yes, it appears that since all other restraints on this infant tyrannical psychopath have failed so far, some extreme measures will need to be placed if the republic actually survives. At this point, the future seems uncertain, except that we can expect more chaos for the next 18 months. And not only is the Orange Felon to blame, but all of his associates who have gone along with his corruption in the DOJ, the FBI, DHS, and all of the Republicans in Congress who voted for the Big Ugly Bill, signed, hypocritically, on the Fourth of July!

When this reign of fascist tyranny ends, and it will end, there needs to be a Nuremberg-style prosecution of all the protagonists who knowingly towed the Orange Line out of loyalty to the tyrant and not to the U.S. Constitution.

As we watch the news daily, there needs to be a scorecard adding up the number and evidence of these crimes against the people of America. We can no longer afford to pardon this Richard Nixon. No longer can we afford to let all the criminals under Ronald Reagan go free after being convicted in the Iran-Contra scandal, nor forget George W. Bush’s lies about the Iraq War and going unpunished. No more forgive and forget — what we want is justice for all the crimes. Trump just needs to be impeached, indicted and convicted for the good of our nation!

You see all of these past regimes were not held accountable for their crimes and so when it comes down to this president, Congress didn’t even have the guts to impeach him twice and then the judiciary couldn’t move fast enough to prosecute him on multiple charges — all of which would have banned him for life from ever holding office again.

Oh, but you say Bill Clinton! Who happened to get a blow job from a woman who wasn’t underage, or Hillary’s emails. Unlike what will be exposed in the Epstein files (if they are ever released) of the Orange guy having sex with underage girls, the Clintons’ foibles’ will seem slight.

And the other part of the curse is the corporate-owned media being bullied, sued, blackmailed, and then backing down to a man who they know is corrupt and immoral.

People, it’s not like you haven’t been warned. If you have read this column over the last 10 years, you know that I have been ringing the alarm bell on this grifter since before he was elected the first time. I think I should compile all of my columns into one volume and with a title of the Orange Curse. It might actually land me in jail at this point along with all the other dissidents who stand for the promise and not with this curse.

Just remember that the fascists always start with the weakest but then make victims of everyone else who doesn’t raise their arm to salute, Sieg Heil!

Bridging San Pedro

A Call to Connect West Harbor and the Historic Arts District

Connecting residents and expected visitors of the waterfront destination, West Harbor, to San Pedro’s historic downtown arts district (both less than a mile apart) has been a subject of discussion by people invested in the arts and local businesses since before the 2018 demolition of Ports O’Call Village. It has been argued for at least 25 years, with assistances from the developers and boosters alike, that the waterfront will naturally draw visitors into the downtown area.

This town’s arts community is the primary reason for San Pedro’s historic downtown becoming a destination when it was at its lowest in quality retail establishments and foot traffic. The impact was so great that this town’s boosters and developers attempted to ride the wave by building a slew of “artist lofts” and the first waterfront condos on Harbor Boulevard. The intent behind it all was to save San Pedro’s retail economy and become a viable live-work hub for those engaged in education, the arts, and the Blue economy.

Instead, roughly five months before the opening of West Harbor’s first phase, many residents and the visitors the developers aim to attract have no idea that there’s a thriving, historic arts district in our midst.

Art―and our great local restaurants―attract people; yet, there has been no visible effort to connect these locations. To attract visitors and give San Pedro a great lift, instead of only marketing “attractions,” this region needs a big initiative: “Respect The Locals.”

Additionally, San Pedro, California, in geographic terms, is part of the Palos Verdes Peninsula, specifically at its southern end, overlooking the San Pedro Bay. In its entirety, the five cities of the peninsula encompass a network of wildlife habitats, sea life, and natural corridors. It’s feasible that this ecosystem is the strongest factor linking these rugged coastal regions together.

To connect these two destinations and areas, and to honor San Pedro’s artistic history and geography, I advocate for commissioning a mural at 6th and Harbor of John Van Hamersveld’s art posters for the Respect The Locals initiative, written about here. Such an illustrious statement would draw the attention and curiosity of cultural consumers, environmentalists, art lovers, youth, and the locals, and it would raise awareness about our precarious and precious coastline, sea life, and the important organizations that care for them.

Random Happening: Fluid Dynamics Exhibition Opens at Angels Gate Cultural Center

Artists from Los Angeles and New Orleans examine the mutability and movement of identity, ideology, information and spirituality.

Los Angeles and New Orleans are two metropolitan areas deeply influenced by their relationships with water, albeit in very different ways: Los Angeles navigates its scarcity while New Orleans grapples with its abundance. Both also have long and complicated histories with oil — its extraction, the environmental and public health effects of that process, and impact on the economy and transportation systems in each region. Their inhabitants experience fluidity in more personal ways. We are constantly using liquid metaphors to express the mutability and movement of identity, ideology, information, and spirituality.

Curation by Katherine Shanks

Works by:

Hannah Chalew, Ben Cuevas, Leslie Foster, Felli Maynard, Renee Royale, Nancy Voegeli-Curran, Demi Hanad Ward, Sterling Wells

Time:1 to 4 p.m., opening reception, July 26. The show runs from July 26 to Sept. 13

Cost: Free

Details:tinyurl.com/fluid-Dynamics-AGCC

Venue: Angels Gate Cultural Center, Building A, 3601 S. Gaffey St., San Pedro

SteffenMarkkus Coffee Roasters Bring High-End Brews to Everyday People

 

SteffenMarkkus Specialty Coffee Roasters was founded with a mission: to increase the enjoyment of coffee and to raise the bar for coffee for everyone and make it relatable to everyday people. That mission drives Steven Rosemergy and Marcus Menard, who are at the forefront of coffee’s so-called “fourth wave” — a movement focused on precision, quality and customer education.

The idea for the business took root during the COVID-19 pandemic, about two and a half years ago. At the time, Steven was frustrated by the lack of fresh, high-quality coffee. With nearly three decades of passion and experience — including owning several top-of-the-line espresso machines — he decided to take coffee roasting seriously again.

“I couldn’t find anything fresh, so I figured, why not roast it myself?” Steven said.

Encouraged by Mendard, he invested in a commercial-grade roaster. As a software engineer by trade, Steven wrote custom software to control the roaster and fine-tune the consistency.

“The result was some amazing coffees and roasts,” Steven said. “That’s when we decided to start selling.”

From the beginning, SteffenMarkkus has exclusively sourced specialty-grade coffee — the top 10% of beans globally. Steven roasts beans from Timor, various African regions, South America, and Hawaii. “I get to experience the flavor of them all while sharing that with our customers,” he said.

As the business evolved, Steven and Mendard began helping customers refine their home brewing. That led to workshops focused on water quality, grinder types, dosing techniques and flavor tuning.

“It started with basics — like which water to use — and grew into a full exploration of how to get your coffee right every time,” Steven said.

He believes the broader coffee culture has shifted. Once, a diner like Denny’s defined the average coffee experience. Starbucks elevated the standard, learning from Peet’s Coffee in San Francisco, a pioneer of the third-wave coffee movement.

“Alfred Peet was brought in as a consultant. The founders of Starbucks actually worked for him (at one point),” Steven explained. “But they had a bigger business vision. Peet wanted to be your neighborhood café — not a global chain.”

Today, Starbucks has expanded beyond coffee to become a lifestyle brand. The fourth wave, Steven said, is a reaction to that, refocusing on brew quality and flavor.

“The third wave introduced arabica beans and raised the bar,” he said. “Now, the fourth wave pushes even further with specialty-grade beans and lighter roasts.”

At SteffenMarkkus, the darkest roast they offer is what used to be considered medium. “We’re about clarity and complexity — not burning the flavor out.”

Steven and Mendard now host coffee workshops once or twice a year, with plans to increase frequency.

“We’re looking at every six months, then every three,” Steven said. “If the interest keeps growing, we’ll go monthly and eventually move into a downtown space.”

The next workshop is scheduled for November 2025 at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, chosen for its spacious kitchen. Workshops are capped at 22 participants and include five hands-on stations demonstrating various brewing methods.

Attendees learn immersion methods — such as French press, Aeropress and cold brew — as well as percolation techniques using Moka pots, percolators and pour-over devices. They also explore espresso and even cacao brewing, which Steven described as “a kind of chocolate tea.”

“We roast cacao, too, and share that during the event,” he said. “It’s fun, hands-on, and casual. We want people to learn without feeling overwhelmed.”

The workshop concludes with a tasting session paired with light food to avoid caffeine overload.

“The food is important,” Steven said, laughing. “But really, it’s all about having fun.”

Visit steffenmarkkus.com to learn more about Steffen Markkus Specialty Coffee Roast.

Respect The Locals

A Campaign Linking San Pedro’s Arts and Environmental Communities

In April, at Cabrillo Marine Aquarium’s Earth Day 2025 celebration, artist and Peninsula resident John Van Hamersveld signed special edition, hand-drawn posters he designed for Palos Verdes Peninsula Land Conservancy, Marine Mammal Care Center and Cabrillo Marine Aquarium as part of the Respect The Locals campaign.

These art posters serve as a symbol of the connection between these nonprofits. The poster for the land conservancy features a rich depiction of the Palos Verdes blue butterfly, which recovered from the brink of extinction. On the aquarium poster, a majestic giant sea bass looms large amid green sea grass, and the care center poster presents a dewy-eyed harbor seal. (These last two species are threatened and critically endangered, respectively).

 

Respect Locals Triptych
Respect The Locals Triptych of posters created by John Van Hamersveld. Graphic by Suzanne Matsumiya.

 

The campaign coincides with the upcoming 60th anniversary of the surf-documentary film, Endless Summer ― a film for which Van Hamersveld created the iconic Endless Summer film poster.

Back then, Van Hamersveld was a surfer and student at Art Center College of Design, serving as art director for Surfing Illustrated and Surfer magazines before director Bruce Brown commissioned him to create the Endless Summer film poster.

To pull it off, Van Hamersveld staged a photo shoot at Salt Creek Beach with the film’s producer and stars, then combined photo techniques with hand-lettered text. He was paid $150 for the work. The poster is featured in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History.

The film follows surfers Mike Hynson and Robert August as they chase waves across the globe. Along the way, they introduced surfing to locals in places like Senegal, Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa, sharing boards and sparking cross-cultural connections.

By the 1960s and ’70s, the term “Respect the Locals” became a widely adopted mantra. It originated as a phrase used within surf culture to remind visiting surfers to honor the customs, space and priorities of local surfers at any given beach, especially as surf tourism expanded and newcomers began crowding lineups in places like Hawaii, California, Indonesia, Australia and South Africa.

These organizations and Van Hamersveld carry that ethos further by asking humans to respect the locals who were here first ― the wildlife. Respect embodies showing interest in culture, history and traditions, so it’s no different when directing these ideals towards nature and wildlife.

Random Lengths spoke with leaders of each of these organizations, John Van Hamersveld and his wife, Alida Post, about the Respect The Locals campaign.

Laws of Advertising
Word… image… metaphor… This is how Van Hamersveld said he designs.

“I learned that at 19 years old at an art center design class,” said Van Hamersveld. “That was the whole four years, really, those three words. People know what words and images are, but they have to figure out ‘metaphor.’ You have to tie them together.”

Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala
John Van Hamersveld by his posters at the aquarium gift shop. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala

“Advertising always puts a product in an environment and then they put a line [of text] underneath it [explaining] the word, the image, the metaphor,” he said.

He compared it to visiting a museum and looking at a painting; if there’s no text alongside the art, you may not know what you’re looking at. No one’s told you anything. But if the docent comes in and describes what’s in the painting, the next time you visit the museum, you have an entrance to that piece of work.

The land conservancy executive director, Adrienne Mohan, said the nonprofit jumped right in after hearing about this program during a meeting with Van Hamersveld and Alida.

“[That] they wanted to raise awareness for local species, and what makes the peninsula so unique and important really resonated with what we value at the land conservancy,” Mohan said. “It was evident that the Palos Verdes blue butterfly would be a great poster child for this program, for our organization and its mission.”

Mohan noted that the blue butterfly tells quite an amazing story about the community coming together, about valuing the protection of land, space and the species that rely on it. It is the iconic embodiment of the peninsula and relies on this really important, rare and special place.

She discussed the urgency of this campaign in how it relates to the conservancy’s work. Much of the open space around the peninsula has been protected and conserved, she explained. The important work of the conservancy now is to restore the land in those spaces. That, along with fire safety, is of concern across the peninsula and even into San Pedro.

Mohan said it’s not just the work but ongoing education, connecting people to the land, and why open space matters, and stewarding this land matters.

Alida Post noted that most folks north of Torrance do not realize that the Harbor region has these facilities and organizations that are doing amazing work, and they’re all about six minutes apart. She said this campaign is timely, as West Harbor, the new waterfront destination in San Pedro, is slated to begin a phased opening in late 2025.

Respect The Locals was a phrase that Alida saw written in small text on a goodie bag, designed by high schoolers, for a fundraiser at the Lundquist house (the real estate investor couple is one of the most philanthropic donors in the United States). It was an important message, but she said it needed a graphic to go with it.

Later, she and John Warner from the care center met to discuss a campaign to highlight each of these nonprofits. Respect the Locals would be the name of the initiative; they just needed an image to go with it. That’s when Van Hamersveld designed the harbor seal poster.

Warner echoed Alida’s point.

“These nonprofits are located in an area where no one would assume that you’ve got these world class, thought leading, nonprofit organizations all focused on conservation, especially ocean conservation, Warner said, “you start thinking about this and [realize] Pedro, mostly known for the port, has a lot more going for it in terms of the nonprofits that are powering change.

“San Pedro is the epitome of the urban ocean interface and all of the opportunities but challenges that come with that, and for us to be in the backyard of the most visible urban ocean interface is also something to celebrate. [Respect The Locals] tying us all together, visually, with a message that is resonant [will] help … drive the point home that we should love wildlife — not love them to death — in this more powerful ownership [way].”

“The animals are the locals,” said Alida. “It’s not our ocean, it’s their ocean.”

The nonprofits involved with the environment and animals are not in competition with one another, said Carolyn Brady of the aquarium.

“Anything you do to save the harbor seal is also going to help the giant sea bass and vice versa.”

The aquarium has all three posters in its gift shop, and Brady wants that messaging out there. The framed posters cost $50 and the unframed ones cost $25. They are all the same size and can become a collection. There are also plans to create a gray whale poster. Brady said the gift shop has a lot of cool merchandise to buy. But the goal is more than making money; it’s to have an extension of the visitor experience.

Together In One Message

John Van Hamersveld and his wife, Alida Post. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala
John Van Hamersveld and his wife, Alida Post. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala

Alida recalled that after moving back to California in 2001 and getting mail from multiple environmental nonprofits, she wondered, “Why are they all working independently? Why not join forces?”

To her point, Warner said the environment and animals go in the same bucket of philanthropy when they measure people’s philanthropic dollars. And that bucket gets a mere 3% annually.

“It‘s the afterthought of causes,” she said. “That slice of investment for the environment and animals includes everything that we’re doing, and it’s really the smallest slice. It is this type of banding together that helps more people know that it is something that is worthy of their investment. This percentage is not about taking away from each other, it’s about expanding the 3% in the first place.”

Brady discussed the cool factor of these collaborative organizations; every year, the aquarium hosts the Palos Verdes Land Conservancy Film Festival on Earth Day at the John Olguin Theater. And the care center releases its rehabilitated animal patients right on Cabrillo Beach, which is at the aquarium. Also, the connection of the PV Land Conservancy is a direct link with ocean health and coastal health.

“It’s a mutual respect and love society because each one is going for the same sustainable goals,” Brady said. “This is kind of special. Here we have four beautiful murals that we didn’t have to spend thousands of dollars on.”

It took an interloper, being Alida, to point out that they need to let people know about this important work. Additionally, the Van Hamersvelds do not take any money or licensing fees for the posters; all proceeds go to the nonprofits. And upon their passing, the nonprofits will get the copyrights.

Urgency of Fundraising
As the government just passed the so-called Defund NPR Act, which prohibits federal funds from being made available to or used to support National Public Radio (NPR) and public broadcasting stations, Brady spoke about the uncertainty that CMA and other organizations are now struggling with.

Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala
John Van Hamersveld and his octopus mural at the Cabrillo Marine Aquarium in San Pedro. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala

“It’s an uncertain time,” Brady said. “We just lost a federal grant that we thought was almost a certainty. Then another company asked us to do a grant about DEI. That’s basically what we do because we’re bringing children whose parents can’t afford to bring them or children who can’t afford a bus to the aquarium … that’s what we’ve been doing for 90 years now. But this company chickened out and said, “We better not give you this grant.” [That’s] two grants now, totalling almost $200,000, that I can directly say is the impact of the crazy political times we’re living in.

“We’re appealing to the average person who loves coming to the aquarium, who loves us, or who remembers serving with John Olguin, or collecting sea glass, or seeing a marine mammal released right there on our beach. Hey, if you still love the ocean and you love us, we could really use your help right now … we’re a little scared.”

Warner said the urgency is that the fundraising is an ongoing challenge, and the more animals that are stranded, the more the need is there.

“The [other] urgency is for people to understand the direct linkage to the problems that we’re facing and our own individual and collective contributions to it. It’s also a realization that this can be turned around. It’s not a technology thing, [or] how do we do this, it’s not even a money thing, it’s the will to do it. Messages like this that connect you to the human experience … pull at the heart and head strings in a way that is needed to meet the urgency of the problems we’re facing.

“The fact that [the posters] add fundraising revenue is an added benefit, but people are the key to fixing what’s wrong, [which] makes us have to exist in the first place. That means start respecting the environment that you live in and share with everything else.”

Warner noted that nothing else that the nonprofits sell is going to do the same thing as these posters; Van Hamersveld’s name recognition helps. It lends a great credibility stamp because people get excited when they realize who he is and recall his Endless Summer poster or the many album covers, some of which they may have, which he designed. The hope is that AltaSea and International Bird Rescue also join the poster mix.

“JVH has done something to the images that raises them to a level that makes people care about the animals,” Warner noted.

The land conservancy’s director, Mohan, summed everything up nicely.

“This [initiative] is an interesting crossing of passions,” Mohan said. “The love of the peninsula’s open space with the love of art, that will speak to a lot of folks, and we’re excited to get that graphic out there and see if it resonates with the community.

“As far as the beauty of art and the beauty of nature, they can really uplift [people], and there’s a lot going on in the news right now, too. So, the timing of this is good. It offers a real positive infusion of something funky and fun at a time when we need it, of art and appreciation for nature, something that probably unifies all of us.

“We don’t want to seem off topic or inconsequential, but it’s important and it brings good news to people. Environmental factors are connected to everything else that’s happening.”

  • Purchase all three of Van Hamersveld’s art posters at the sites below:

John Van Hamersveld

https://pvplc.org/shop