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News Networks Must Provide Equal Time to Rebut Trump’s Daily Campaign Events

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The long U.S. tradition of providing equal time to the opposition party after a president’s yearly State of the Union (SOTU) address must now apply to Trump’s daily COVID-19 “briefings.”

These chaotic, embarrassing, deeply disturbing displays of presidential dishonesty and incompetence define Trump’s “state of the pandemic” addresses.

They demand a regular immediate rebuttal.

Some networks have considered suspending their coverage entirely. Others have simply switched away in the midst of Trump’s broadcasts.

But that’s a major dereliction of duty. The American people and the world must witness the Trump catastrophe in its fullest reality.

What’s really missing is equal time being provided for rebuttal, perhaps by opposition Democrats or progressive political leaders and actual experts who are not aligned with the Democratic Party.

There’s deep precedent for this. The 1966 State of the Union address by President Lyndon Johnson was immediately followed with a programmed rebuttal from Republican leaders Sen. Everett Dirksen and Rep. Gerald Ford.

Various forms of response followed each SOTU address until 1987. The protocol then settled into a nationally televised talk from one or two members of the opposition party, which was aired immediately after the president’s speech.

The concept of such “equal time” dates back to the Fairness Doctrine officially adopted by Congress in 1949. With the spread of radio came worries that wealthy owners would use their licensed stations to impose their political point of view. So, they were required to provide equal time to someone with a balancing opinion.

The Doctrine was extended to television in 1959. But it was trashed in the Reagan ‘80s. The 1996 Clinton-Gore Telecommunications Act ended ownership restrictions, feeding the formation of Fox and other mega-networks that blare out their unanswered bias non-stop.

Trump’s briefings are clearly not official State of the Union addresses. And a lawsuit demanding equal time based on federal license requirements would likely fail.

But Trump has in essence turned these briefings into campaign events. He continually pronounces his catastrophic failure to cope with the pandemic as “perfect,” portraying himself as blameless in relation to the mass death and financial devastation that are underway. He has a number of times touted “cures” for COVID-19 that are unproven or harmful. He continually attempts to shift blame for his shortcomings to people in China, immigrants, Democrats, governors and previous staffers he has fired.

Experts and journalists have repeatedly documented how Trump’s self-aggrandizing rants are filled with inaccuracies. But there is no regular, programmed response on which the public can rely.

Refusing to air Trump’s updates in the midst of a global crisis is not a responsible option. But especially without a regular, effective response, many Americans are simply left to accept Trump’s version of things without an effective fact-check or rebuttal. The virtual silence of Joe Biden, the Democrats’ presumptive nominee, has left a painful vacuum where a balancing opinion has been desperately needed.

The public must now demand that any news organization carrying a Trump briefing must follow it with independent counter-balancing comment. The “equal time” slot should be filled with experts and commentators, doctors, epidemiologists, climatologists and others with the professional ability to evaluate how the administration has performed, and what Trump has just said about it.

Though they may now be dropping, public ratings for Trump’s performance through this pandemic have been surprisingly stable. Part of the reason for this is surely the lack of regular critiques coming from the opposition party or its apparent presidential candidate; without contextualization or pushback against Trump’s daily briefings, many members of the public apparently see little reason to doubt Trump’s word.

No commander-in-chief should be spared from scrutiny in the midst of such a crisis. Trump needs to be seen regularly by the American people, up front and personal, so we can all remain fully aware of who and what we’re dealing with. But the public should rest assured that he’ll be followed by reliable experts who know what they’re talking about and can provide a realistic counter-balance to what has just been said.

In keeping with our nation’s long-standing tradition of providing a balanced response to a partisan point of view, the networks that provide this free airtime to Trump’s campaign events (currently posing as crisis briefings) have a vital obligation to give equal time to those who can correct and counter-balance what he says — immediately after he says it.

Harvey Wasserman

Harvey Wasserman’s The People’s Spiral of U.S. History is at Solartopia. His radio shows are at the Progressive Radio Network and KPFK-Pacifica, 90.7 FM Los Angeles.

Carson Reports Lowest Crime Rate In Its History

In a report to Mayor Albert Robles and the Carson City Council, Los Angeles Sheriff Department  Station Captain Jason Skeen noted that crime is down in Carson —  the lowest documented crime rate in the city’s history.

Skeen reported Carson is down in every major Part I Crime category, which includes homicide, rape, assault, robbery, burglary, grand theft auto, larceny thefts and arson.  The two previous lowest-crime rates were in 2018 and 2019. Skeen went on to note it is rare to be down in every major category and 2018 and 2019, representing the cities two lowest crime years prior to the crime trajectory Carson is on.

He attributed the encouraging statistics to the success of enforcement strategies, the dedication of the deputies, professional staff and investigators. He also credited the success to the engagement of the community and the support of the elected officials and city administration along with the Safer-at-Home order associated with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Are Tiny Homes the Future of Shelter in America?

In 2010, my wife and I escaped from our hometown of San Pedro, located on the coast in the beast of Los Angeles. Only after living 70 years and raising three kids there, did we realize we had to downsize our lifestyle and move elsewhere. It was a draining and wrenching decision too. With the effects of the Great Recession of 2008 teaching me yet another valuable lesson about real estate greed and capitalist-economics in California, we had to decide ―stay or go.

Financial zombies of distressed people, homes, and businesses were all over the place. The homeless number was growing too. As an architect, broker, and developer, I’ve seen and experienced this financial trauma several times in past recessions and two bankruptcies of my own. But the 2008 recession was a real doozy and very different for several reasons This time a new minimalist mindset is going to be required, not only for me and my wife, but for millions of others as well.

To be clear, we didn’t have to move; it became our logical choice. Also about this time, I started researching the so-called tiny home movement. We discovered we weren’t alone, but a huge mental shift would be required if we were to survive and thrive in the future. We began by giving away or selling everything we couldn’t fit into an RV. I mean everything. And we didn’t have an RV yet (RVs are considered tiny homes in certain circles).

Indeed, our giving-trips to the Salvation Army were so many we lost count and it took us over three months to downsize. All financial documents and family photos were scanned and put on a thumb drive, our clothes became just the very basics and we began embracing the true-minimalist mindset: If we don’t need it ― we don’t want it. Pretty simple.

Fast forward nine years, the huge mental enema we took back then now feels great. What a relief it was! Thinking tiny was the catharsis we needed and it showed us a smart way forward.

Additionally since 2008, we’ve had the first black president (a good thing) but a criminal has been voted into the White House. That White House criminal has bought off a wide swath of voters with $1.5 trillion stolen from the Treasury’s taxes. This tells me that another and possibly even worse recession is on the way. Thinking tiny is becoming increasingly important.

Thinking Tiny is Critical for Millions

We’re now living on the beautiful central coast of Oregon, and to satisfy my architectural curiosity about tiny home living, I‘ve learned about all kinds of advocacy groups, including city planners, architects, developers, writers, artists, seniors, investors, vets, homeless organizations, and even entrepreneurs living in and launching businesses from their tiny homes.

Some amazing things are happening. Some nifty prefab tiny homes that can be put up in a few days, come in a box and can cost less than $12,000. Incredibly smart, environmentally safe, inexpensive off-grid designs are also available on Amazon. Some DIY plans start at just $27.

However, there is a lot more to this tiny home movement than most people realize and big problems loom for some tiny home enthusiasts. Critical differences exist between tiny homes on wheels (THOW) and small fixed-foundation homes and local building and fire codes. Some builders, city planners and architects are struggling with outdated building codes for dwellings less than 600 sq. ft., and this conflict often prevents new and unique, space-saving designs for mobile-tiny-home owners. For example; many of the popular 280 to 400 square feet loft-bedroom designs of THOW (with low ceilings and ladders) are at odds with most standard building and fire codes.

Another major consideration is where you park your THOW; even if it’s just a cute little trailer you built yourself, parking it for an extended period may violate some building or DMV code or may be prohibited by a local RV ordinance. This is where the homeless stigma often overhangs the actual need and advancement of the tiny home movement.

Thankfully, some cities “get it.” In Portland and Los Angeles, simply changing local codes from R-1 to R-2, was sufficient to legalize backyard units. Some investors are also buying tiny homes to give away free to existing home owners to put in others back yards, without a permit, and renting them out on AirBnB. Meanwhile, the term “Granny Unit” is also becoming synonymous with tiny home. In different words, with or without wheels, big bucks are coming to tiny homes.

Is a smaller or tiny house for you? It was for us.

By Richard Pawlowski, Contributor – rp@venturexpo.com

LB City Council Approves Emergency Rental Assistance Program

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LONG BEACH — Long Beach City Council brought forward a plan that will allocate over $5 million in federal funds to provide direct rental assistance payments. The city council has previously approved a moratorium on evictions of tenants who cannot make their full rent payments due to COVID-19 impacts, however the tenants still must come up with the full back rent owed within a year.

The Long Beach CARES Rental Assistance Program approved June 9, will provide up to $1,000 in rental assistance for up to three months for households that meet income requirements, easing these families’ overall rent burden. These payments will be made directly to the landlord, which also ensures that housing providers receive rental income that they rely upon.

The application process for the program is expected to be launched in July, with rental assistance payments beginning in August.Details www.Long-Beach-city-council-staff-report

Carson Councilman Leads Peaceful Demonstration

By Alex Witrago, Editorial Intern

In the midst of COVID-19, Carson marched in support of the Black Lives Matter movement and justice for George Floyd on June 6.

“It is not just our community; it’s not just California but people around the world seeing everyone in the world stand next to us to fight for rights we deserve,” said Ryan Warn, a 39-year-old man, who identified himself as a black-Filipino. “It’s beautiful.”

Dr. Adaina Brown, the community of schools administrator, expressed her support for the movement.

“I want to say I struggle for the past two weeks in finding the right words to express the right words on how I feel as a mother of four black sons and a wife and an educator,” Brown said. “I felt a marriott of emotions from anger, to fear, to hatred, to sadness, to rage, to helplessness, and then I was proud.”

Councilman Juwane Hilton led the demonstration.

“I want to get people together in a healthy environment to show their support towards the movement,” Hilton said.

Hilton stood shoulder to shoulder with local law enforcement, elected city leaders and faith leaders to demand change for a safer African American community.

“There are two silent plagues in our nation,” said councilman and former Mayor Jim Dear. “Coronavirus is invisible, but hatred and racism is more deadly because it destroys our spirit as a nation and you are here today because you care about America, you care about our children’s future and you are here because you believe you are doing God’s work.”

Dear explained that the city council is working together with the leadership of Hilton to continue the change that is needed now.

“We cannot wait for another brother or sister to die at the hands of people who wear a badge or a uniform and think they’re God,” Dear said. “It affects every one of us individually. The damage to George Floyd was a damage to us and the damage to him was a damage to America.”

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Capt. Jason Skeen stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the community to show his support on behalf of the Carson law enforcement. Hilton expressed that police aren’t bad people and that the community has to change the narrative.

“The deputies of this station support your right to do what you are doing and we are here to protect you,” Skeen said. “We get it. We understand that this is about a lot of other insignificant changes not just about police. On a local level we recognize that we can do our job better and we strive for that. This community has come a long way in the last three decades and I’ve been proud to watch where it’s at now.”

Hilton invited City Clerk Donesia Gause-Aldana. She walked up with her son Mason to express her concern for her son’s future and her plan to change the community.

“Growing up as a little girl all I ever wanted was a son, but now I have my son and I am teaching him lessons on how to behave when he is in public now, because I’m nervous for his life,” Gause-Aldana said. “We can’t keep moving like this people, but do you know what we got to do? We have to hold our legislators accountable. How do we do that? Election day.”

Gause-Aldana’s plan is to improve the access to voting in Carson. She wants everyone who is registered to vote to vote on Nov. 3, so that they can elect legislators that can help implement the change the community needs.

Part of the change that the city council wants to make is the city schools. Hilton explained that the schools in Carson are not educating the youth correctly and the city council calls to reform the schools.

Brown supported Hilton and wanted to let people who were gathered in front of the city hall to know that change is coming, and nothing would be able to stop it. Brown expresses the importance of educating the youth.

“These conversations have to happen not to evoke hatred, but to create power,” Brown said. “Knowledge is power to know, to stay woke.”

Buy a Book, Save a Store

Looking for books to read during the COVID-19 safer-at-home orders? Bookstores have been especially hard-hit during the economic crisis and some are keeping their doors open (mostly for curbside service), while others emphasize online shopping. Here are some ways to shop locally for reading material, whether you’re looking for a specific title or just browsing.

Page Against the Machine

Store owner Chris Giaco says he has never completely closed for the pandemic, half-joking that he considers a bookstore an essential business for the dissemination of information. He’s stocked up on science and medicine books, especially on the flu pandemic of 1918.

“I didn’t have an online store before this started,” Giaco said.

So the shutdown has given him time to sit down and create a working website. Having a website has enabled him to take special orders, although he doesn’t have a search service for rare books.

Giaco says he’s had a steady trickle of orders during the COVID-19 lock down. He noticed, for example, an immediate bump in demand for racial-related books after a Minneapolis police officer killed George Floyd on May 26.

Another of Giaco’s specializations is local authors.

“It’s part of the socially conscious mission of the store,” he explained. “Any kind of poetry and writing is, almost by nature, subversive.”

Details: 562-588-7075; www.patmbooks.com

Venue: 2714 E. 4th St., Long Beach

Book Off

Book Off is a chain but the Gardena location has an advantage over other local branches during the COVID-19 shutdown, because it’s in a storefront instead of an enclosed shopping mall.

Different from many competitors, Book Off specializes in Japanese products, new and used. Here’s a place for Japanese manga, anime and literature, whether in Japanese or English translation. You’ll also find a vast variety of entertainment media, new and used — DVDs, CDs, gaming and collectibles.

Details: 310-532-5010; www.bookoffusa.com/bookoff-gardena-store

Venue: 1610 Redondo Beach Blvd., Suite E-8, Gardena

Skylight Books

General manager Mary Williams says the store isn’t open to browse “for the foreseeable future” but there are online sales and curbside service since May 20.

She describes the store as “general interest” but specializations include literary fiction, children’s books and graphic novels. Whether you’re shopping for e-books, audio books, or old-fashioned books, you can browse the store’s website.

Let’s say you’re looking for two critiques of mass media, one classic, one current. The store’s website lists several editions of Upton Sinclair’s The Brass Check, but none in stock. If you’re interested in the 2002 edition, for example, you’re directed to phone the store.

Ordering a recent best-seller such as Ronan Farrow’s Catch and Killis much simpler and more successful. Your biggest hurdle here may be choosing your shipping option. Store members ($25 per year) get free shipping.

Details: 323-660-1175; www.skylightbooks.com; Twitter: @skylightbooks

Venue: 1818 N. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles

Hennessey & Ingalls

Hennessey & Ingalls specializes in art/architecture/design and was a Santa Monica landmark for many years, but they moved to downtown Los Angeles about four years ago. If you click on their “all subjects” link online, you’ll find they have a lot more than art, architecture and design, including poetry and graphic novels.

As of May 30, they’re offering in-store shopping. Their services include buyback of used books in their subject specialization, special orders and of course online shopping.

Details: 213-437-2130; www.hennesseyingalls.com; Twitter: @HennesseyIngals

Venue: 300 S. Santa Fe Ave., Suite M, Los Angeles

Update on trip to Washington, D.C.— Light Still Shines For SPHS Golden Pirate Regiment

Amid the strife we are collectively experiencing we can still find places where light shines. In what seems like a distant time now, in January, Random Lengths News covered a fundraiser for the San Pedro High School Golden Pirate Regiment to travel to Washington D.C. Nominated by Rep. Nanette Diaz Barragán (D-San Pedro), the regiment was to perform at the 2020 National Memorial Day Parade.

With the coronavirus pandemic putting the stop on travel and the safety of the students in mind, curious, we checked in with regiment band director, Darnella Davidson, to discover what was going to be the outcome for the regiment and this special trip.

Unfortunately, the regiment did not go to Washington, D.C. this past Memorial Day weekend. COVID-19 put a stop to that.

“We have been invited and rescheduled to attend the National Memorial Day Parade in 2021!” Davidson said.

The San Pedro High School Golden Pirate Regiment had worked hard for this honor. And Davidson was about to see a dream come true.

In the original story she recalled, “I have always dreamed of taking a group out of state.”

The dream came together when Rep. Barragán nominated the regiment to represent California in the District of Columbia parade. But the seed was first planted when drum major, Andrew Soto, senior and intern for Barragán, said that he knew his band was driven enough to participate at the National Memorial Day Parade.

Davidson reported that funds donated to the regiment will be transferred over for their 2021 trip and they will continue their fundraising efforts as soon as they deem possible.

Booster Club president Kiok McCarthy reported they don’t know the total cost of the trip now. They may know in the fall when the regiment has a count of how many students will go. For now, there are no definite numbers but they are trying to keep the cost as close as possible to the original $1,350 per student.

“We have invited all of our regiment students to join us for the 2021 parade, including the current seniors,” Davidson said. “Plus, the opportunity to join the trip will be extended to incoming freshmen.”

Details: https://www.facebook.com/thesanpedrohsgoldenpirateregiment[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

This Is Not a Pep Rally

By Evelyn McDonnell

On Saturday, June 6, San Pedro had its first large gathering in response to the protests that have swept the world since the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer. There had been smaller protests, in front of the San Pedro police station and city hall, but that morning’s event was the first to draw several hundred people in a march from the police station to city hall, followed by speeches.

It looked like a demonstration; there were “I Can’t Breathe” posters and chants of “No Justice! No Peace!” Some social media commentators called it a Black Lives Matter protest. But that activist organization was not involved in the event. Instead, it was organized by three unlikely bedfellows: The San Pedro chapter of the NAACP, the Los Angeles Police Department Harbor Division, and the office of Los Angeles 15th District City Council Member Joe Buscaino.

Organizers hailed this as a breakthrough alliance. But skeptics — and I am one — feared that this was not a breakthrough coalition, but a cooptation. First, the march was channeled onto empty roads where there was no chance to engage onlookers or passersby or generally make an impact, which is pretty much the point of a march.

One of the participants was controversial LAPD Chief Michel Moore, who led his officers into violent confrontations with protesters in Los Angeles earlier in the week and at one point blamed those protesters for Floyd’s death. [He later had to walk that comment back.]

Buscaino, a former cop, is against the cuts to the police department already agreed to by Mayor Eric Garcetti, let alone the foremost demand of Black Lives Matter: Defund police.

Indeed, no concrete changes were demanded or offered at the rally, except for a call to vote for change in November (agreed). Instead of singing Lean On Me, Alright, We Shall Overcome, or even, I don’t know, This Land is Your Land, a woman wailed (beautifully) The Star-Spangled Banner — as if we were at a political convention, or a football game.

The “Unity Rally” suffered from a serious existential crisis. Many of the participants were visibly and vocally disappointed by the speeches and the presence of Chief Moore and other cops; indeed, speeches by anyone with a badge were largely drowned out by protesters.

“This is not a photo op,” they chanted at Buscaino. “This is a protest!” they shouted at the politicians. “This is not a pep rally!” they shouted — incredulously — when the NAACP’s Cheyenne Bryant ended the event by thanking folks for coming to, yes, “a pep rally.”

Most people around me turned away in disgust at that point. One young man jumped up and started speaking to the crowd about his dismay with the speakers’ failure to address the real issues of systemic racism. Many stopped to listen to a voice that finally spoke to the real message of this movement.

None of this dissent made the coverage of the “Unity Rally” in the Daily Breeze and the Los Angeles Times. Reading their accounts, I had to wonder if I was at a different event. As a journalist and a scholar of journalism, I can’t say I was shocked: Mainstream news outlets typically report the perspective of the powerful, not those speaking out against power structures. Sometimes the erasure is structural; reporters hang out by the stage, instead of in the crowd, and miss the true story. But at this event, you had to be pretty deaf and blind to miss the shouts of the protest against the rally.

All this said, there was an incredibly moving moment that did bind everyone there — a moment that lasted eight minutes and 46 seconds, the amount of time Derek Chauvin kneeled on Floyd’s neck.

Bryant asked everyone to take a knee, the gesture made famous by football player Colin Kaepernick (one of the pioneers of the protest against police violence for years now, whose work is finally being vindicated; the National Football League finally had to admit it was wrong to censure him and others).

Cops, protesters, politicians, parents, kids, black people, white people, Native Americans, Pacific Islanders, Latinx — everyone that I could see kneeled. And for almost nine minutes we were quiet — mostly. After several minutes that seemed like an eternity, in an act of spontaneous, improvisational street theater, voices rang out:

“I can’t breathe!”

“Get off my neck!”

“Mama!”

The final words of George Floyd exploded from the crowd. Staring at the ground, I began to sob. I could hear others crying around me. It was a powerful gesture that has been deployed at protests around the world. Eight minutes and 46 seconds is a long time. Long enough to take a man’s life, just because you can.

As the crowd rose, they started another chant, again, one not led from the podium: “A silent cop is a bad cop.”

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I am not against dialogue. I understand that you sometimes have to sit down with your enemies if not to negotiate change, to make them change. For 8 minutes and 46 seconds everyone in that plaza — including many police officers — had to contemplate one man’s dying moments at the hands of another.

Gestures can be powerful. But they can also be easily imitated. What America needs is not gestures, or even words, but action. Action like that the Minneapolis City Council said they would take on the night of June 7: To not merely cut the police budget, or defund the force, but to disband them.

This is, of course, exactly what the LAPD fears, and why at this point, they need to listen to the people, more than the people need to listen to them.

Evelyn McDonnell is an associate professor in the English Department and Director of the Journalism Program at Loyola Marymount University. She has been the editorial director of http://www.MOLI.com, pop culture writer at The Miami Herald, senior editor at The Village Voice and associate editor at SF Weekly. Her writing on music, poetry, theater and culture has appeared in numerous publications and anthologies, including the Los Angeles Times, Ms., Rolling Stone, The New York Times, Spin, Travel & Leisure, Us, Billboard, Vibe, Interview, Black Book and Option. She lives in San Pedro. An earlier version of this article appeared on her blog, www.populismblog.wordpress.com.

Remaking Justice

By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor

The murder of George Floyd was a feature, not a bug, in the eyes of a growing number of critics, activists and ordinary Americans who’ve now watched police respond to peaceful protests with hundreds of instances of violent attacks, carried out with reckless abandon for all the world to see. The long-held belief that police are synonymous with public safety simply doesn’t jibe with what the whole world is watching daily on TV and social media.

In a Monmouth poll, 78% of respondents said protesters were either fully (57%) or partially (21%) justified in their anger — an unheard of level of support for any protests in U.S. history.

“What people in the streets have won is a permanent, generational change to the mainstream view of policing,” Minneapolis City Council Member Steve Fletcher tweeted on June 2.

“We are going to dismantle the Minneapolis Police Department and replace it with a transformative new model of public safety,” City Council President Lisa Bender tweeted two days later.

Three days after that, a veto-proof council majority publicly committed to that promise, amounting to a drastic defunding of the department, if not its complete abolition, which remains a long-term goal of abolition activists.

In case it sounds too risky or radical, Fletcher offered a safe, sane, sensible description of what it would look like in practice, in an op-ed for Time, under the headline, We Must Disband the Police — Here’s What Could Come Next:

We can reimagine what public safety means, what skills we recruit for, and what tools we do and do not need. We can play a role in combating the systems of white supremacy in public safety that the death of black and brown lives has laid bare. We can invest in cultural competency and mental health training, de-escalation and conflict resolution. We can send a city response that is appropriate to each situation and makes it better. We can resolve confusion over a $20 grocery transaction without drawing a weapon or pulling out handcuffs.

Dramatic transformation is hardly a wild-eyed fantasy. We could achieve it simply by becoming more like some of our closest allies. With just more than 4% of the world population, we have almost 20% of the world’s prisoners — an extreme outlier on the world stage. We imprison people at a rate almost 6 times that of Canada, the nation most culturally similar to us, and the rate at which our police kill civilians is similarly extreme. The comparison to Great Britain is even more stark: from 2010 to 2019 American police killed 140 civilians for every one killed by their British counterparts.

But abolitionists seek more than merely catching up with what other countries take for granted. A June 5 Medium post from the Movement for Black Lives reaffirmed the ultimate goal:

We believe we can build a world free of police, unapologetically. We know that will take all of us. We are not under any illusion that we can build that world overnight. Those who would suggest we believe that are gaslighting you away from important solutions that work to keep our people safe NOW. …

We need bold and visionary action, right now. The call to #DefundPolice gets us that action, right now. It is both a clear solution and an important measure of accountability.

Right now.

In Los Angeles, Mayor Eric Garcetti had introduced a budget that increased spending on police by 7.1% at the same time other spending was being drastically cut — 8.9% cut from Economic and Workforce Development, and 9.4% cut from Housing and Community Investment, for example. This despite the fact that crime was down from the year before, even before COVID-19 hit. Garcetti’s budget devoted 54% of discretionary spending to the police.

A coalition of groups organized by Black Lives Matter LA responded with a call for the People’s Budget, which was created based on a survey of 1,470 Angelenos, and with an online participatory budgeting process (via Zoom and Facebook Live) including 3,300 participants. That budget devoted 5.72% for “Law Enforcement and Policing,” 24.22% for “Reimagined Community Safety,” 44.25% for “Universal Aid and Crisis Management,” and 25.8% for “Built Environment.”

All this happened before George Floyd’s murder, and the subsequent demonstrations, which led a group of city council members to introduce a motion on June 3, requesting up to $150 million in budget cuts for the LAPD.

“The change required won’t happen with one piece of legislation and it won’t happen overnight, but this preliminary budget cut of at least $100m-150m is a step in the right direction,” Councilmember Herb Wesson tweeted.

But activists saw things differently.

“$150 million looks big, until you realize it still leaves the LAPD with 51% of the city’s unrestricted revenues. That’s not at all acceptable,” said Melina Abdullah, a leader of Black Lives Matter Los Angeles. “Our People’s Budget allocates just 5.7% of funds to traditional law enforcement. City Council and Mayor Garcetti need to know that we’re fighting for truly transformative change here and won’t be bought off with just this minimal amount of money.”

That same day, Garcetti pledged to “identify $250 million for further investments in community programs, including cuts to LAPD’s budget,” and tweeted out a list of reforms that had already been introduced.

Alex Vitale, author of The End of Policing views reforms more broadly, as spelled out in a Guardian commentary headlined, The answer to police violence is not ‘reform.’ It’s defunding. Here’s why.

Perhaps most importantly, Vitale’s book explains that the purpose of policing has always entailed violence for political ends, while also making it politically acceptable.

“Crime control is a small part of policing and it always has been,” Vitale explains. “Felony arrests of any kind are a rarity for uniformed officers, with most making no more than one a year,” he notes. Even detectives “spend most of their time taking reports of crimes that they will never solve — and in many cases will never even investigate.”

“The reality is that the police exist primarily as a system for managing and even producing inequality by suppressing social movements and tightly managing the behaviors of poor and nonwhite people: those on the losing end of economic and political arrangements,” writes Vitale, in contrast.

This can be seen most clearly in the origins of modern policing, which were tied to three basic arrangements of inequality in the 18th century: slavery, colonialism and the control of a new industrial working class.

In Britain, Sir Edmund Peel established the first urban police department, London’s Metropolitan Police, in 1829, modelled on his experience developing new methods of colonial control while managing the occupation of Ireland. Bloody massacres only increased resistance, so Peel employed more subtle methods — “identifying and neutralizing troublemakers and ringleaders through threats and arrests,” writes Vitale.

That model was imported to Boston in 1838, and spread from there, most notably, to New York City in 1844, where biracial dockworker strikes, starting in 1802, and wider strike waves, beginning in 1809, “culminated in the formation of the Workingman’s Party in 1829, which demanded a ten-hour day, and led to the founding of the General Trade Union in 1833,” writes Vitale.

A second point of origin was Southern slave patrols, adapted to controlling slaves in Southern cities, where they regularly were tasked with work outside the direct control of their master. These were professionalized long before the London Metropolitan Police.

“The Charleston City Guard and Watch became professionalized as early as 1783,” Vitale notes, and had 100 city and 60 state guards on its payroll by 1831.

There were other colonial origins as well, especially for state police. The Texas Rangers were originally “a loose band of irregulars… hired to protect the interests of newly arriving white colonists.” Its purpose was straightforward: It was established after a private police force, the Coal and Iron Police, proved inadequate in suppressing strikes and union organizing.

What’s more, Vitale notes, America then turned around and created colonial police forces in Central America and the Caribbean. They “were designed to be part of a Progressive Era program of modernization and nation-building, but were quickly turned into forces of brutal repression in the service of U.S.-backed regimes.”

Thus, the widely noted militarization of American police over the last few decades is but the latest example of a process that’s at least 100 years old. Given how badly our past several decades of forever wars have turned out, this close relationship only serves to further undermine the notion that it’s a source of safety, stability and lawful order.

The call to defund the police and invest in communities can be framed in multiple ways, one of which is simply to highlight how much funding has shifted to policing and prisons over the past four decades, with so little good to show for it and so much community need left unaddressed.

Making sense of this shift of spending is a primary concern of Dr. Julilly Kohler-Hausmann, in her book, Getting Tough, as she describes in her introduction:

In 1980, the United States spent three times more money on food stamps and welfare grants than on corrections. By 1996, the balance had reversed, with the nation devoting billions more to corrections than the two principal programs for the poor. Policymakers paired diminishing levels of support with policies constraining beneficiaries’ privacy and freedom.

Notably, black women — typified by the “welfare queen” trope — were both functionally and symbolically excluded from this political process of redefining ‘good citizenship.’ So there’s a historical logic to why they’ve played such a crucial role in the abolitionist movement that’s now so sharply challenging it — from Angela Davis, co-founder of Critical Resistance, to Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow, to Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza and Opal Tometi, co-founders of Black Lives Matter.

The tough policies that emerged from the 1970s reversed the direction of thinking that preceded them, such as “[Richard] Nixon’s guaranteed minimum income proposal that would have added roughly ten million people to the public assistance rolls,” Kohler-Hausmann notes. “Before politicians enacted a frenzy of harsh sentencing laws in the 1970s and 1980s, there was broad agreement, especially among elites, that long prison terms were programmatically ineffective at controlling crime,” and federal mandatory minimums for drug violations were abandoned in a 1970 law.

“[The new tougher] policies did not reflect the inevitable failure of the state or the congenital degeneracy of poor communities of color. Instead, they actually helped entrench these assertions in the political vernacular … ‘Getting tough’ was often the path with less political resistance from powerful interests in society,” she explained. “Proponents exalted punitive strategies of containment and civic degradation by linking them to masculinist visions of ‘tough’ state power and disparaging alternative strategies as effeminate and ‘soft.’”

The “get tough” narrative implies a reliance on hard facts that simply doesn’t exist. If it actually were the case, then America’s sky-high incarceration rates would make it the safest country on Earth — which it clearly is not. In fact, Japan, which has a murder rate less than one-twenty-fifth of ours has less than one-fifteenth of our prison population per capita.

In short, for all the passion that’s driving the demonstrations and the calls for fundamental reforms, there is no rational argument against them. There is only force.

“We must completely transform the world so we can start something new,” Cullors wrote recently in Vogue. “The abolition of the police can be an investment in care for people, leaning into the imaginative efforts of the collective to hold people accountable. Abolition inspires us to redefine safety as a collective action.”

A Towering Task: The Story of the Peace Corps

By Melina Paris, Arts and Culture Writer

The idea for the Peace Corps took hold of then-Sen. John F. Kennedy after reading The Ugly American, [1958, William Lederer, Eugene Burdick], during the Cold War era.

Set in a fictional southeast Asian country, United States diplomats made no effort to integrate into the communities they served while their Soviet counterparts learned the language and customs, allowing them to easily spread communism throughout the region. The film A Towering Task: The Story of the Peace Corps depicted the bestselling book as a cautionary tale, providing accounts which occurred during the Ronald Reagan era to make the connection. [Just switch the word communism for capitalism — and power.]

A Towering Task awakens viewers to what it means to be a global citizen. Directed by Alana DeJoseph and narrated by Annette Bening, the film was released in virtual theatrical runs across the nation, May 22.

A Towering Task features interviews with current and returned Peace Corps volunteers. Notable members of the media and politicians appear like Sen. Chris Dodd, Rep. Joe Kennedy and current and former Peace Corps staff, scholars, journalists, community members and world leaders including former President Jimmy Carter and former Liberian president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

In 1961, President John F. Kennedy gave young Americans the opportunity to serve their country in a new way by forming the Peace Corps. Now, more than 200,000 volunteers have traveled to more than 140 countries to carry out the organization’s mission of international cooperation.

Talk of proposals for a volunteer corps circulated in Kennedy’s presidential campaign. October 1960, after the third debate between Kennedy and Vice President Richard Nixon, Kennedy flew into Ann Arbor, Michigan. The senator connected well with young voters who, in trying to coax him, placed a mic outside the Michigan Union at the University of Michigan. In response to 10,000 gathered students, Kennedy asked:

“How many of you who are going to be doctors are willing to spend your days in Ghana? Technicians or engineers: how many of you are willing to work in the Foreign Service and spend your lives traveling around the world? On your willingness to do that … to contribute part of your life to this country, I think will depend the answer whether a free society can compete … I think Americans are willing to contribute. But the effort must be far greater than we’ve ever made in the past.”

Inspired to serve, graduate students Judy and Allen Guskin wrote a letter to the editor of the Michigan Daily pledging to work in countries where their help was needed. One month later, Kennedy won the election. To watch the footage ingrained in America’s consciousness as Kennedy delivers the challenge, “Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country,” it’s difficult not to ponder how different America may have been if not for the young leader’s tragic death. Upon his arrival to the White House, Kennedy received 25,000 letters from people volunteering for the Peace Corps.

Kennedy delegated the Peace Corps to his brother-in-law, diplomat, politician and activist Sargent Shriver, who devised and implemented a plan for the organization. Shriver travelled to countries discussing his plans and gauging people’s approval. He assembled a task force across many disciplines which was presented with a memorandum titled, A Towering Task, with the understanding that it had to be a massive effort or it wouldn’t make any impact.

“The Peace Corps was a product of relentless energy,” Shriver’s son and founder of the Special Olympics, Timothy Shriver said. “It took a fight.”

By weaving together personal volunteer experiences with the political machinations of the time, viewers gain a solid understanding of the Peace Corps — both its successes and mistakes. In many ways they jumped into the fire. The implementation of the agency was put on a fast track, causing uncertainty and questions from volunteers that couldn’t always be answered. Through improvising and problem-solving they experienced successes in areas including farming practices and teaching English. Peace Corps volunteers and those they served shared allegiance and affection in kind and people’s desire for the volunteers to stay remained constant.

Archival materials of Vietnam, protest demonstrations and the strife happening around the world through the first decade and a half of the agency’s life provides a backdrop utterly relatable to today. Footage by cinematographer Vanessa Carr from around the globe brings to life an agency that represents to the world the American ideal.

However, rapid growth and a disillusioned public during the Vietnam War soon had the agency fighting to exist. The Peace Corps found an unlikely champion in President Ronald Reagan — only after public thanks from a representative of a country which was helped by Peace Corps volunteers. With an unexpected revival, Reagan appointed Loret Miller Ruppe [U.S. Ambassador to Norway] as agency director — who advocated, undercover, for it to become an independent agency.

Upon the Peace Corps’ 60th anniversary, more than 200,000 volunteers have served in more than 140 countries. At the start of 2020, more than 7,300 Americans of all ages were serving their country and seeking to understand their place in the global community.

In response to COVID-19, and for the first time ever, the Peace Corps has evacuated all volunteers. The future of the agency is in question. Volunteers work at the forefront of some of the most pressing issues facing the global community. Yet, the agency has struggled to remain relevant amid sociopolitical change. Between COVID-19, a rise in nationalism and deep cuts to governmental-agency budgets, the Peace Corps is again confronting a crisis of identity. As the world travails these challenges and reevaluates how to cooperate together, A Towering Task serves as a reminder of Kennedy’s call to action and the evidential need for its recommencement today.

Details: www.vimeo.com/360863160