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

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department missing persons unit is asking for the public’s help locating at-risk missing person, Leonardo Zaragoza, who is a resident of Los Angeles County. He is a 30-years-old male Hispanic who was last seen in Rosarito, Mexico at 6:41 p.m. on March 22.

Leonardo is 6’00”, 220lbs with short black hair, brown eyes, goatee with a tattoo on his forearm of a skull and dagger. Leonardo was last seen wearing a purple t-shirt, blue jeans, tan boots, a necklace and bracelet.

Mr. Zaragoza’s family is concerned for his well-being.

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

How Should We Rethink Our Relationship to US Violence Around the World?

 

Democracy-destroying forces thrive off militarism. We have to resist both.

By George Yancy, Truthout, March 18

https://truthout.org/articles/how-should-we-rethink-our-relationship-to-us-violence-around-the-world/

The outrages are raining down one after another: Trump’s suggestion that Ukraine is responsible for the war with Russia, which thus blames Ukraine for the deaths of its own people and implicitly supports Putin’s use of unrestrained military force. Trump’s proposal to forcefully relocate Palestinians from Gaza, which functions as an extension of ethnic cleansing. Trump’s exaggerated use of “invasion” to describe undocumented immigrants, which is a military term used to describe those “enemies” infiltrating a territory with the aim to conquer.

As news like this comes down, I often wonder just how far I am willing to go speaking against those power structures that are responsible for so much catastrophe, profound grief and actual and potential violent death.

Those power structures include what Martin Luther King Jr. called “the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism and militarism.” It can be argued that those triplets constitute the raison d’être of the U.S. — the purpose for its existence.

Speaking out against the Vietnam War on April 4, 1967, King quickly became an unpopular figure. In fact, notes Brian Jones at Jacobin, “Opinion polls conducted just prior to King’s death one year later indicated that 72 percent of white people and 55 percent of black people disapproved of his opposition to Vietnam.” But King was convinced that it was time to speak out: “A time comes when silence is betrayal.

One fortifying source in our collective effort to speak out and resist the jingoistic nature of the U.S. is the courageous work of Norman Solomon, who is the national director of RootsAction and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy. His new book, War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine, demonstrates that the U.S. is driven by warmongering. Indeed, he writes, “The militarism that propels nonstop U.S. warfare is systemic.”

In this exclusive interview for Truthout, Solomon discusses the mainstream media silence around U.S. militarism. He articulates ways of resisting such silence, of rejecting denial. He provides deep insights regarding U.S. participation in Israel’s genocide in Gaza, reminding us that the U.S. is run by those who qualify as war criminals, and how the political economy and anti-democratic forces are linked to the U.S. being a war criminal system. Furthermore, Solomon links forms of racist othering and U.S. warfare. The interview that follows has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

George Yancy: In your book, War Made Invisible, I get the sense that many Americans would rather not know about the horrible atrocities that the U.S. has committed around the world via military violence. In what way are corporate media outlets in the U.S. (what you call “mainline American media”) responsible for maintaining many Americans’ willful ignorance regarding the ugly and dehumanizing realities of what happens in war?

Norman Solomon: Patterns of media silence and evasion are crucial. When empathy is very selective about victims of war, it’s easy to fall into the tacit assumption that some grief is profound and some is trivial — lives that really matter and lives that don’t. That’s usually implicit in what’s communicated from mainline U.S. media and even more routinely from U.S. government officials. They emphasize the humanity of some and ignore or downplay the humanity of others, and I do mean “others.” For Americans and for the society as a whole, the dynamic is deeply corrosive in realms that we might call moral, ethical, spiritual, political — and the results are foreign policy that serves the U.S.’s warfare state while relying on hypernationalism and what George Orwell called “doublethink.” Windows on the world are tinted red, white and blue.

The essence of propaganda is repetition, and it keeps reinforcing a kind of mass media wall. There are cracks in the wall — some exceptional journalism can happen in even the largest news outlets — but overall, the structural constraints are unyielding. So, in this century, fairly rigid taboos have prevented much candid reporting or commentary in major U.S. media about the horrors that the U.S. military has directly inflicted on a huge scale, in Afghanistan and Iraq, and elsewhere, as well as indirectly in many other places, including Yemen, Lebanon and Gaza.

When an official enemy of Washington is responsible for massive war atrocities, as with Russia in Ukraine, the U.S. media try hard to convey the horrors in human terms. But when Pentagon firepower is responsible, the empathetic coverage of its victims is ratcheted way down, if not nonexistent. And in medialand, if the perpetrators are at the top of the U.S. government, the narrative has victims without victimizers, just well-meaning American policy makers who sometimes make mistakes and miscalculate. In tandem with the nonstop flow of official pronouncements, a premise of mass media is that U.S. policies might be flawed at times but the impetus is basically to do good in the world.

In your book, you argue courageously about the necessity for changing mainline reporting in the United States. You point out how mainline reporting avoids telling the truth about the horrors of wars and how the U.S. explicitly engages in wanton violence. Furthermore, the U.S. military-industrial complex seems invested in perpetuating a narrative or a form of framing that “exculpates” it from charges of warmongering. Talk about the ways in which mainline reporting needs to be challenged.

The needed transformations are concentric: growing individual awareness, strengthening truly independent journalism, challenging corporate media outlets (as the media watchdog group FAIR does so well), freeing artistic expression from constraints of the profit motive, organizing for basic political change inside and outside electoral arenas, and developing mass movements against the corporate power that fuels the country’s runaway militarism along with countless destructive effects of neoliberal capitalism at home and abroad. In the process, I think it’s much healthier to shift away from emphasis on “speaking truth to power” and toward speaking truth about power. Realism about 24/7 class warfare is necessary for building vital capacities.

A straightforward look at U.S. military interventions in the last 80 years brings into focus clear pictures of methodical policies on several continents. And that means overcoming chronic avoidance. Few grow up comprehending that their government has been, and is being, run by people who qualify as war criminals. But that has been the case for many decades, not simply as a matter of individuals in power, but most importantly because of the political economy and the anti-democratic forces that are dominant. We could call it a war criminal system. Such understanding is at odds with acceptable discourse in mainstream media. One result can be cognitive dissonance. If people reject denial, they’re left facing inconvenient and often horrific truths — and, in the usual U.S. frameworks of media and politics, likely marginalization or excommunication for the sin of ethical realism. We need to expose these dynamics, bring them out into the open and confront them.

When finishing War Made Invisible, of course, I thought a lot about how to end the last chapter. I could do no better than quoting these words from James Baldwin: “Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced.”

Speaking of warmongering, in my discussion with scholar Nurit Peled-Elhanan, she clearly points out how Israeli children are taught to perceive Palestinians/Arabs as “racially other,” as “primitive” and “disposable.” In War Made Invisible, you discuss how race (or racism) frames other human beings as “racialized enemies” within the context of war. As a philosopher who writes about race/racism, I am painfully aware of how this framing is used to “justify” the killing of human beings. Speak to how you understand anti-Palestinian or anti-Arab racism as a powerful and nefarious factor impacting the current and ongoing slaughter of innocent Palestinians by the State of Israel. I would be remiss not to mention that Martin Luther King Jr. spoke of the interrelationship between “the sickness of racism, excessive materialism and militarism.

It’s been chilling to see videos of Israeli children singing and waving Israeli flags at right-wing rallies for relentless war on Gaza while Palestinian children there are being bombed and starved along with their relatives. So many descriptive words come to mind: Racism. Ethnocentrism. Religious fanaticism. Spiritual rot. Fascistic cruelty. And parallel with the deadly hate is the nationalism of Israel that strives for Jewish supremacy and a warped sense of superiority over Arabs in general and Palestinians in particular. Meanwhile, in the United States, strong currents of such attitudes can be discerned in the claims of America’s Jewish Zionists, and the more numerous Christian Zionists for that matter. Twisted religious passions get tangled up in racist pathologies and belief in serving God by extinguishing the lives of those perceived to be obstructing the purity of holy agendas.

Racial and religious toxins are constantly swirling around U.S. politics, as personal biases combine with functionality within the U.S. warfare state, which is tightly synced up with Israel’s military. Last year — even though polls showed that a majority of Americans opposed shipping weapons to Israel as long as its war in Gaza continued — Congress kept approving huge arms shipments to Israel while it went on with ethnic cleansing and genocide. The conformity that took hold was stark from the outset in October 2023, and there was a racial aspect. Here’s a telling fact: Two weeks after Israel’s siege of Gaza began, just four percent of the House of Representatives had signed on to a resolution calling for “an immediate de-escalation and ceasefire in Israel and occupied Palestine”; the sponsor and all 18 co-sponsors were legislators of color. The speed and intensity of their response stood out. As the war on Gaza continued, not a single white House member’s name went onto the resolution.

For almost a quarter of a century, the racial subtext embedded in the “war on terror” has been hidden in plain sight. Beginning with the invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001, virtually all the victims of Pentagon firepower have been people of color. Countries aren’t bombed because people of color are living there — but the fact that people of color are living there makes it easier to start and continue wars on them. While the liberal establishment is apt to concede that systemic racism is at work in a wide range of domestic institutions and policies, scarcely a word gets said about the systemic racism at work in foreign policy. Meanwhile, the powerful military of the Israeli apartheid state is a close partner with the Pentagon. When I was working on the afterword about the Gaza war for the paperback edition of War Made Invisible, I realized that the book’s subtitle directly applies: “How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine.” The Israeli military is a major adjunct to the U.S. military machine. The command structures are different and the national leaders might differ about tactics at times, but their missions and operations remain firmly aligned.

Clearly, it is in the interests of the U.S. to keep the human toll of war invisible. The invisibility helps to construct the U.S. (and I would also include the State of Israel here) as a “victim,” and as “innocent.” This narrative of “victimhood” and “innocence” also enables U.S. citizens to see themselves as far removed from being complicit with U.S. violence. Because I grapple with this question constantly, I want to pose it to you: How should U.S. citizens rethink their relationship to U.S. violence around the world? There is a remark that you make in your book where you’re discussing “the hellish realities in Gaza” and you state how this is “largely courtesy of U.S. taxpayers.” I am ethically consumed by this issue of complicity, my own complicity. How do you think about this?

Silence is complicity. Inaction is complicity. In the Middle East and elsewhere, people’s homes have been on fire, sometimes literally, courtesy of U.S. taxpayers and civic acquiescence. Much of the U.S.’s entire culture revolves around buying things and looking out for real or imagined self-interest. For sure, many Americans are preoccupied with their personal struggles, whether financial, health, family troubles, all kinds of distress. Yet to the extent we can be more aware of the very real forms of violence and deprivation that the U.S. government is causing to be inflicted in many parts of the world, we have opportunities to escalate nonviolent opposition to the actual roles of “our” government on this beautiful and tormented planet.

While it is hard to admit, Donald Trump is now at the helm of the U.S. and head of its military might — yet again. I disdain Trump’s ethical ineptitude, his fascistic tendencies and his indifference to truth-telling. I recall he once said that he would not take the nuclear option off the table regarding Europe and the Middle East. When I think about the fact that we are now 90 seconds to midnight on the Doomsday Clock, a Trump presidency ought to scare all of us. Or perhaps motivate us to resist the possible consequences of his administration. Any thoughts on Trump and war?

Instead of “crackpot realism,” we now have crackpot egotism in control of the executive and legislative branches. As bad as many of Joe Biden’s cabinet members were, comparing them to Trump’s cabinet ought to make clear the absurdity of claims we’ve heard over the years that there is no significant difference between the Democratic and Republican parties. Noam Chomsky was correct when he described the Republican Party as the most dangerous organization in human history. This doesn’t let “Genocide Joe” and the neoliberal Democrats off the hook for their horrendous crimes and terrible policies.

We need to acknowledge simultaneous truths. While militarists are running both parties, one of them is emphatically racist, misogynist, resolutely anti-democratic and determined to crush virtually every major facet of social progress since the New Deal. The Trumpist Republican Party is hellbent on dismantling the remaining elements of democracy in this country. Militarism thrives on the destruction of democracy, and vice versa. To what extent Trump will be a war president remains to be seen, but his political agenda is clearly fascistic. Our responsibilities include fighting against militarism, racism, sexism and predatory corporatism — along with all the intermeshed evils — while also fighting for a truly progressive future to nurture life instead of destroying life.

California Launches SprayDays: New Pesticide Application Notification System

 

CALIFORNIA — On March 24, the California Department of Pesticide Regulation or DPR launched SprayDays California, a novel statewide system designed to provide transparent, accessible and timely notifications and information about the use of specific pesticides, called “restricted material pesticides.” Restricted material pesticides are a category of pesticides subject to California’s strictest regulations, including requirements on where they can be used, who can use them and how they can be used.

What You Need to Know:

SprayDays California notifies the public before specific pesticides (called “restricted material pesticides”) are used on farms across California.

Users can view an interactive map online or sign up for email or text message notifications before scheduled pesticide applications.

Developed over four years, SprayDays increases transparency on when and how California restricted material pesticides are used and how they are strictly regulated in California to protect people and the environment.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/Spray-days-notification-system

City of Carson 2025 Pays Tribute to César E. Chávez

 

The City of Carson presents its annual tribute to the late labor leader César E. Chávez, March 28

This year’s keynote speaker is Marc Grossman who served as César E. Chávez’ press secretary, speechwriter, and personal aide for 24 years. He still serves as a spokesperson for the Cesar Chavez Foundation and the United Farm Workers. Entertainment will be provided by Alma de Oro and Trio Renaciemento.

Time: 6 p.m.March 28

Details: 310-847-3570.

Venue: Carson Park Gym, 21411 Orrick Ave., Carson

RPV Land Movement Community Updates, FEMA Rejection Appeal and Council Recap (March 19)

 

Land Movement

RANCHO PALOS VERDES — The City of Rancho Palos Verdes will receive $2 million from the Los Angeles County Flood Control District to help offset the costs of emergency measures that were put in place to prepare the Portuguese Bend landslide area for the rainy season. On March 18, the Board of Supervisors approved a recommendation (PDF) from L.A. County Public Works Director Mark Pestrella to provide the $2 million in reimbursement for the City’s $4 million winterization efforts, which began last fall to prevent rainwater from infiltrating into the landslide area. This work included filling fissures, lining canyons, installing drainage improvements and repaving vulnerable streets in the Seaview neighborhood. These measures have held up well during recent storms.

The $2 million from the Flood Control District is in addition to $5 million in landslide relief provided by Supervisor Janice Hahn’s office in October 2024. That included $2.2 million for the city to support emergency remediation measures, and $2.8 million for grants of up to $10,000 to deliver immediate aid to residents impacted by land movement and utility shutoffs.

The City thanked Chair Kathryn Barger, Supervisor Hahn, the Board of Supervisors, and director Pestrella for all their support and collaboration helping the city navigate the landslide emergency.

City Appeals FEMA’s Disaster Recovery Rejections

Last week, the city formally appealed the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s or FEMA decision to deny $37.9 million in disaster recovery funding requested by the city for costs incurred responding to the landslide emergency due to the winter storms in late January and early February 2024. The city’s seven appeals (PDF) will be considered by FEMA District 9 Administrator Robert Fenton, and his decision is then appealable to FEMA’s headquarters in Washington, D.C.

FEMA notified the city of its denials in January 2025, as the federal government considers accelerated movement in the city’s landslides a pre-existing issue. In its appeals, the city argued that the unprecedented land movement experienced as a result of the 2024 winter storms was not just a simple expansion of the shallower Portuguese Bend landslide complex, but the activation of the Altamira Landslide, a much larger and deeper landslide that had been dormant prior to the record storms.

The city will provide updates on the appeal process in future newsletters.

March 18, 2025 City Council Meeting Discussion Recap

At last night’s meeting, city geologist Mike Phipps gave an update on land movement, noting that while the deeper slide plane has reached a steady state, shallower points in the Portuguese Bend Landslide that were not the focus of winterization efforts are responding to recent rainfall with an increase in movement. Mr. Phipps is hopeful that 8-10 deep dewatering wells planned by the Abalone Cove Landslide Abatement District or ACLAD will help decelerate the Abalone Cove landslide. So far, two of ACLAD’s wells are operational and three are in progress.

City staff gave an update on a proposed feasibility study exploring whether the city could implement a toll road along Palos Verdes Drive South to generate revenue for landslide roadway management. The council has not discussed or approved a toll road, but previously authorized city staff to explore alternative funding sources for landslide remediation. The idea of a toll road has been suggested to the city by residents over the course of the landslide emergency. City staff has reached out to firms that work on tolling projects for quotes to conduct a feasibility study, and a contract for the study is expected to go before the council in the coming weeks. The study would explore revenue and operational costs, the impacts of diverted traffic, and legal requirements.

To avoid temporarily disconnecting portions of the sewer system in the Portuguese Bend community association and red-tagging additional homes, the council allocated $710,000 needed for repairs through the end of June 2025.

Finally, the council renewed for 60 days the local emergencies in the landslide area and the temporary prohibition of motorcycles and bicycles along a two-mile stretch of Palos Verdes Drive South.

Supervisor Hahn Honors Local Cambodian Leaders & Commemorates 50th Anniversary of Cambodian Genocide

LOS ANGELES—On March 25, Supervisor Janice Hahn will honor 22 local Cambodian community organizations in celebration of Cambodian Heritage Month and in recognition of the 50th anniversary of the beginning of the Cambodian genocide committed by the Khmer Rouge in 1975. Last week, the Board of Supervisors approved a motion by Supervisor Hahn declaring April Cambodian Heritage Month for the first time in county history.
Supervisor Hahn will present county scrolls to representatives from the organizations during a ceremony at Tuesday’s Board of Supervisors meeting.

Time: 9:30 a.m. meeting, 10 a.m. presentation, March 25
Cost: Free
Venue: Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration, 500 W Temple St, Los Angeles

The following local Cambodian organizations will be recognized:
LA County Cambodian Employees Association
Cambodia Town Film Festival
Cambodian American Cultural Center
Cambodia Town
Angkor Arts Collective
Untied Cambodian Community
Asian World Film Festival Cambodia Day
Cambodian Association of America
Cambodian Health Professionals Association of America (CHPAA)
Khmer Parent Association
Long Beach – Phnom Penh Sister Cities Association
Chanchaya Khmer Cultural Heritage
Pacific Asian Counseling Services
Killing Field Memorial
Families in Good Health
United Khmer ChaiYam
Cambodian Veterans Inc
Khmer Culture & Fine Arts of California, USA
Global Refugee Awareness Healing Group
Modern Apsara Dance Company
Khmer Girls in Action
Khmer Krom Association of Southern California

Wage Theft Amidst Ongoing Strike, Long Beach Convention Center Faces Backlash

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By Daniel Rivera, Labor Reporter

On March 18, workers from the Long Beach Convention Center rallied at Long Beach City Hall in solidarity amidst to ongoing strike at the convention center and with workers from 1Fifty1 after a report by the Los Angeles Times alleging that the company stole wages and unjustly marked up its services.

“We are here today because of the city-owned Convention Center, after a report of wage theft from labor supplied by ASM Global,” Soledad Garcia, Organizing Director said during the rally in front of city hall.

Reportedly, 1Fifty1 paid its employees in envelopes potentially skirting various income tax laws and not providing paystubs to its employees with a clear statement on what was withheld.

“We want them to ensure that ASM Global hires the affected agency workers, guarantee that all affected workers are made whole for any labor violations they have experienced,” Maria Hernandez, Communications person for UniteHereLocal 11 told Random Lengths News.

ASM moved to terminate the contract with the iFiftyi immediately and members of the union now call for ASM to hire those workers. Those workers are allegedly entitled to preferential hiring under a Long Beach.

They reportedly charged ASM Global more than other contracts for its services, allegedly paying its workers $17-$19 an hour while charging ASM Global about $26 – $30 an hour, a 60% markup paid by the city.

“For seven months, Local 11 members have been negotiating with ASM Global for all a fair contract that ensures that all employees, including subcontracted workers, earn a living wage and are created firmly at the convention center,” Garcia said during the rally amidst the ongoing labor dispute between the union and ASM Global.

The Union that represents these workers, UnitehereLocal 11 has been in contract negotiations with ASM Global since September of last year amid tension on the inclusion of subcontracted workers who have been left out of the deal during a city council decision earlier that year.

“We oppose the city’s efforts to remove protection for sub-contracted workers from the existing living wage ordinance. We know about the work they carry out… the allegations we’ve heard about 151 reportedly paying their workers in cash envelopes without paystubs is damning, we are calling on the city to investigate,” Andrea Romero, a cook for 11 years at the Long Beach convention center said during the rally.

The living wage ordinance is called Measure RW, which was passed last year and was meant to raise the wages of various hospitality workers across Long Beach for hotels with over 100 rooms.

The measure later on expanded to include airport and convention workers however the city council decided to exclude them from that expansion. Measure RW raised the wages to about $17 an hour which was potentially violated by 1Fifty1, and the ordinance also mandated an escalator for wages to about $29 an hour by 2028, the year Los Angeles will host the Olympics.

The city council heard an impact report during that meeting that stated the potential loss of investment and booking that would lead to the center’s inability to meet those rising operating costs.

Subcontracted workers have hourly limits set at 960 annually, about 18 hours a week. ASM Global and the convention center have cited operating costs as the leading reason for these cuts.

The convention center reported income over pre-pandemic levels in December 2024, generating $2 billion in revenue and about $200 million more than in 2018 before the COVID pandemic. However, workers have reported understaffing that has yet to recover to pre-pandemic levels.

Long Beach Convention Center has not immediately responded to requests.

LA #1 In Air Pollution Again

Global Report Finds Africa and South Asia Far Worse, But In U.S., LA Stands Alone

Los Angeles is the most polluted major city in the U.S., according to a new report from IQAir, which measures PM2.5 — fine particulate matter — from over 40,000 monitoring stations across 8,954 locations in 138 countries, territories and regions worldwide. And our regional air basin accounts for almost half the 100 most polluted cities in the U.S. The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach are the largest stationary sources of pollution in the region, and the transportation routes emanating from them are the primary mobile sources, reaching well into the Inland Empire.

The World Health Organization PM2.5 guideline of 5 micrograms per cubic meter (μg/m3) as an annual average was only met by 17% of global cities, while 126 (91.3%) out of 138 countries and regions exceeded it. It’s a stark reminder that the climate crisis isn’t the only threat to human life from the fossil fuel industry, which falls primarily on the global South.
Yet, this is actually a significant improvement from 9% of cities meeting the guideline in IQAir’s report last year. Regionally, 56.9% of cities in Oceania (Australia, New Zealand, and French Polynesia) met the guideline — setting an example of what is possible. In North America, second best, it was 29.3%. It was 8.0% in Europe, and 7.8% in Latin America and the Caribbean, but was 0-1% in the rest of the world’s regions — all of Africa and Asia.
“IQAir has provided a real contribution by publishing this integrated worldwide perspective on particle burdens – which is a critical marker for environmental and public health,” said Ed Avol, professor emeritus at USC School of Medicine. “One of the most significant accomplishments of the report is to draw attention to continuing and widening exposure disparities in various regions of the world,” he added. “The data reflect not only the disparities that exist between nations and continents but also the potential for real improvement (as seen among those countries that have enforced emissions reduction efforts).”

Although it’s only one component of air pollution, PM2.5 had a dominant health impact. As the report notes, “In 2021 alone, 8.1 million total deaths were attributable to air pollution, with 58% of those deaths caused by ambient PM2.5 air pollution.”

LA averaged 10.1 (more than twice the guideline) compared to 8.8 to 7.7 for the next nine major cities, four of which were in Texas. In addition, all five of the most polluted cities in North America were in the South Coast air basin, topped by Ontario at 14.3, although an expert cautioned Random Lengths the data could be skewed due to monitoring locations. Of the 100 most polluted municipalities in the U.S., 60 were in California, and 45 were in the regional air basin: 33 in LA County, 5 in San Bernardino, 4 in Orange and 3 in Riverside. This contrasts sharply with the fact that 43% of the 863 locales in California met the standard, including cities like San Francisco, Oakland, Alameda and San Jose.

This is consistent with previous findings from the South Coast Air Quality Management District. “Local air regulators tell us that, on average, more than 1,000 people in the Los Angeles region will die prematurely each year between 2025 and 2037 because of exposure to PM2.5 that exceeds federal standards,” former AQMD Boardmember Joe Lyou told Random Lengths. He directed attention to a 2022 chart projecting 1,168 annual deaths from PM2.5 along with 341 due to ozone.

There was no breakdown for LA city neighborhoods, but Compton (11.9), West Rancho Dominguez (11.9), Gardena (11.8), Carson (11.2) and Signal Hill (10.6) were all in the top 100. Long Beach (9.8) was slightly lower, while Manhattan Beach, Rolling Hills and Palos Verdes Peninsula all registered 7.7.

As the report explains, the data from individual monitoring locations is “organized into ‘settlements,’ indicating cities, towns, villages, counties, or municipalities, reflecting local population distributions and administrative divisions,” but the report itself refers to all settlements as cities. IQAir sells low-cost air quality monitors to non-governmental organizations, or NGOs, and has an initiative, Schools4Earth, that seeks to provide over 1 million schools with air quality monitors. Children are especially vulnerable to pollution’s health impacts due to their higher respiratory and metabolic rate, and monitors located in schools generally capture the conditions for entire populations. This could lead to long term health complications like asthma or cancer. But presently, IQAir estimates only 21% of the global population has such monitoring. Consequently, country and regional totals are calculated as population-weighted averages based on city-level data. And here the global picture is striking.

The Global Picture
Chad (91.8) is the world’s most polluted country, “influenced by the Bodélé Depression, one of the largest global sources of atmospheric dust,” in contrast to fossil fuel pollution’s dominant role worldwide. The Indian subcontinent — India (50.6), Pakistan (73.7), and Bangladesh (78.0) is the most polluted geographical sub-region, with three of the five most polluted countries, while nearby Tajikistan (46.3) ranks #6 and adjacent Nepal (42.8) ranks #7.
The other top-five country, D.R. Congo (58.3), is part of another highly-polluted regional cluster, along with Uganda (41.0), Rwanda (40.8) and Burundi (40.3), which ranks 8-10.
On the city level, Karaganda, Kazakhstan (104.8) ranks #3 and N’Djamena, Chad (91.8) ranks #8, and Hotan, China (84.5) ranks #17. Aside from them, all of the 40 most-polluted cities are either in India (27), Pakistan (8) or Bangladesh (2). More broadly, India has 74 of the 100 most-polluted cities.

The wider Central and South Asia region “continues to experience some of the worst air pollution in the world” as “Nearly one-third of cities recorded annual PM2.5 concentrations exceeding ten times the WHO guideline, posing a severe health risk to millions.” The region’s urban centers are relatively well-monitored, however, “many areas in India remain under-monitored, particularly in smaller cities and rural regions.”

In contrast, “Africa’s air quality in 2024 remains a major public health crisis,” exacerbated by “rapid urbanization, population growth, and limited air quality monitoring.” Specifically, “With just 400 monitoring stations — only 0.6% of the global total — significant data gaps persist, most notably in Lagos, Africa’s second most populous city, which was absent from the report due to insufficient data.” Monitoring is expanding, but there’s a long way to go. “The number of reporting cities grew from 79 in 2023 to 106 in 2024, yet only 24 of Africa’s 54 countries had cities that met data inclusion requirements.” And more monitoring reveals even more pollution: Kinshasa, Africa’s most populous city, was the second most polluted at 58.2 μg/m³, “a 40% increase from the previous year, partly due to expanded data availability.”

“As with any effort, there are some technical issues of potential concern worth exploring; these include distribution of instrumentation, deployment and specific criteria for instrument installation, maintenance, proportional weighting, and/or corrections for integration of regulatory monitoring data with the larger set of low-cost citizen-operated units,” Avol said.

“However, the summary visualizations and tabular rankings will hopefully motivate interest and discussion, which sets the stage for future improvements in understanding and emissions reduction … and for that, IQ Air has provided a substantial public service.”

Letters to the Editor: Journalism & Activism, Economic Chains, Tariffs, Education, Dystopia, Treason, a Love Letter and Humanity

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“To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile but is morally treasonable to the American public.” President Theodore Roosevelt

 

The Journalist-Activist Who Helped Save Terminal Island’s History

I don’t know what comes first, activist/journalist or journalist /activist, but in either case, RLn community news reporter, Emma Rault, is both. I want to credit and thank her for her role in getting the buildings on Terminal Island designated as historical landmarks for the City of Los Angeles.

She sounded the alarm of the possible razing of those historic buildings that were the last remaining remnants of the once-thriving Japanese-American community on the Island (everyone should know that the Japanese community, mostly American citizens were forced off the Island immediately after Japan bombed Perl Harbor in Hawaii).

With the leadership of Terry Hara, Terminal Islanders Association President, project leader Paul Boyea, and VP Donna Contrell, they were able to team up with Los Angeles City Councilman Tim McOsker and get this important designation. It should be also noted that the LAPort leadership has been open and supportive of this effort of historical preservation and will be a valued critical partner in the steps forward.

I can testify to all of this because I was engaged as an advisor to this effort because of being a descendant of Terminal Islanders, my grandmother was a Japanese language school teacher, my grandfather owned and ran the only gas station in “Fish Harbor” ( what the Japanese community was called in East San Pedro) and my father, born in San Pedro Hospital, grew up there. By the way, both my older brother and I were born in that hospital.

As stated in Emma’s March Rln article, titled, “From Tuna Street to Walker’s Cafe,” we cannot let “Demolition by neglect be an existential threat to our legacy and our histories. Once again, thank you, Emma.

Last note, I don’t know what comes first… Random Lengths News is a newspaper/activist or activist/newspaper… conclusion; BOTH!

Warren Furutani

Gardena

Financial Slaves

It’s truly sad and ironic. Just about two months ago America was recognized as an “Economy” that was the “envy” of the world.” Now, our convicted criminal and traitor to our allies of a president, supported by a devious, disloyal billionaire co-president, Elon Musk, and a coterie of trifling Republicans have placed our country (America) and its citizens on track for a financial disaster, based on these facts below:

  1. 1. Illegally and unlawfully cut thousands of government employees’ jobs. Under Article 1 Section 8, Clause 18 (only Congress can have the power to create and remove federal agencies). Yet, these cuts and other unlawful actions are DESIGNED to devastate our economy.
  2. 2. Dangerous Tariffs, cutting vital benefit programs such as Social Security and Health Care. This further pushes us into a recessionary situation.
  3. And 3. A so-called crypto reserve is a speculation currency without a collateral value. This “Inflationary Scheme” will lead to finally add the financial collapse of our country.

To prevent us from becoming Financial Slaves, “Our Voices and the Courts’ Rules of Law” is our last resort for American Democracy!

Robert Lesley

Carson

 

Who Actually Pays for Tariffs?

There seem to be two belief systems on who pays tariffs. One is accurate and one is inaccurate. Under both belief systems, Americans pay the increased tariffs.

Reality:

Tariffs on goods imported from other countries into the U.S. are taxes paid by the U.S.-based importer directly to the U.S. Treasury. Such taxes are usually passed on to U.S. consumers by increased prices. They are not paid by the exporter country.

There is a paper trail of documents and wire transfers showing that the U.S. importer makes the tariff payments to the U.S. Treasury.

If the exporting country paid our tariffs, there would be documents showing payments from other countries directly to the U.S. Treasury. Those types of documents have never been produced to the public because they don’t exist.

Alternate Reality:

Tariffs on goods imported into the U.S. are paid by the exporting country. If that is true, it follows that the opposite is true too. That means that when the U.S. exports its goods to other countries, the U.S. Treasury pays the tariffs that the exporter country levies on our goods. So, either way you believe, the bottom line is Americans pay increased taxes because of increased tariffs.

John Henrichs

San Pedro, CA

 

Dismissal from Dodson Gifted Magnet

I am Raymond Moser and have been teaching history at Dodson Gifted/High Achieving Magnet for a quarter century. My class has always been a rite of passage for students at Dodson Magnet that prepared them for their future education, not high school, but college. I always considered Dodson a Prep school for urban youth who cannot afford private school. However, the Los Angeles School Board will be voting on my dismissal in the near future. The reason is very simple: John Vladovic was corruptly installed as the principal at Dodson and proceeded to proudly undo everything that had made Dodson great. I spoke out against his actions and so the persecution began. The UTLA-LAUSD Collective Bargaining Agreement is the contractual equivalent of the North Korean justice system. If you are accused, you are guilty. No matter how badly an administrator violates the contract, LAUSD is both defendant and judge, convenient for covering their abuse of teachers. I now have eleven Conference Memos and six suspensions totaling 76 days, with dismissal on the horizon. In order to accomplish this, Dodson administrators have had to: 1) lie; 2) knowingly abet students lying; 3) pull students out of class and encourage them to bad-mouth teachers; 4) violate the contract; and, 5) violate California State law by including illegally obtained recordings of me in my classroom. Not only was this a violation of the law, but they included the recordings in a record of events that happened seven years after the recording. These are the desperate measures that LAUSD will take against a teacher who speaks the truth. LAUSD has lost its way, for they choose administrators based on loyalty, not competence; and teachers based on compliance not talent, focus on testing not teaching, and ego not education. When I posted the district’s intention on Facebook, 50 of my students sent emails to the School Board protesting this action in six days. These included students from as far back as 2001, including a comedy writer in Hollywood, a former fighter pilot and professor at the Air Force Academy, and a novelist and writer for Entertainment Weekly. Teachers are concerned about students’ education, while administrators are only concerned about the appearance of education. Most teachers do not have either the stomach or the financial means to fight this abuse or their dismissal; I have both.

Raymond R Moser

Harbor City

 

What a sad, dystopian address

If anyone was hanging on by a thread of hope, it’s clear that Donald Trump does not accept the pain and struggle millions are facing across the country. His 3 R’s – retribution, rejection, and a complete detachment from our reality – are exacerbating the lives of Americans and others around the world.

For one, Trump is incapable of speaking without spewing hatred and dehumanizing entire groups of people, particularly the LGBTQ+ community and legal immigrants. All he wants to do is quickly cast blame and sow division rather than protect all our communities as his job demands.

He rejects every analysis that shows tariffs are bad. He rejects the history of tariffs having caused and worsened recessions. And he rejects his own past advice from the market crash he caused:

And much like Elon, he’s lost touch with reality. Just think of his claim, “the days of rule by unelected bureaucrats are over.” He’s the president. Declaring everything that’s good is his doing, and everything bad is somebody else’s fault.

And who has he made the scapegoats? The nurses who care for our veterans. The workers who keep our public parks clean and safe. The monitors who alert us of oncoming storms and natural disasters so we can prepare, potentially saving communities millions of dollars. The investigators who protect us from fraud. The family farms who feed our children.

Donald Trump has claimed he has a mandate to deliver real results that improve lives. None of this is it. None of this is okay, and we need to push back now.

While many elected officials stay on the sidelines, I’m fired up and ready to fight back against Donald Trump’s chaos. I’m on the ground in our communities right now. And as your governor, I will provide a firewall for California against extreme attacks on our state and provide a roadmap that the rest of the country can follow.

Betty Yee,

former CA Secretary of State

 

Musk accused me of treason

It’s a Thursday. The sun rose this morning and will set later today. And Elon Musk accused me of treason. The more I hold him accountable for his flagrant conflicts of interest, the more he lashes out.

It won’t stop me.

Elon took to social media earlier this week to share right-wing lies about my leadership of Trump’s first impeachment, over, that’s right, Trump’s effort to shakedown President Zelenskyy of Ukraine.

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

But it’s not my leadership of Trump’s impeachment that has Elon seething. It’s my exposure of his massive conflicts of interest, and his potential violations of the law against self-dealing.

You see, I demanded information from the head of the Office of Government Ethics as to whether Elon was violating 18 U.S.C. Section 208, which makes it a crime to participate in government decisions affecting your own business interests, something Elon seems to be doing every day.

But before I could get an answer, the head of that office was fired. Along with the firing of Inspector Generals, this action was designed to facilitate the grift that is going on in the Trump Administration.

Nevertheless, I couldn’t help but be struck by the irony: accused of treason just days after Donald Trump withdrew all military aid for our ally, Ukraine, to bow down to Vladimir Putin and Russia. I told Elon that if he was looking for someone betraying our country and its national security interests, he needn’t look very far.

Now, these attacks aren’t new. I’ve had a target on my back for years, James Preston.

What is new is the authority that Elon Musk, Donald Trump, and countless right-wing officials have to weaponize the government against me and others.

Trump has given Musk unfettered access to millions of Americans’ data. Kash Patel is in charge of the FBI and can investigate whomever he wants. Pam Bondi can order the Justice Department to seek vengeance against any and all of Trump’s rivals – including me. We have already seen the Justice Department threaten Democratic officials for speaking out.

And we need to fight back.

We cannot let Elon’s lies go unanswered. And we certainly cannot turn our backs on Ukraine and our fellow democracies around the world.

It’s unfortunate that Elon and Trump are spending their time seeking revenge on their rivals instead of making a difference and lowering costs.

While I respond to their attacks, I’m also delivering relief for Californians. Your support helps me do both.

Thank you,

Adam Schiff, US Senator CA

 

Love Letter to LA

In my dream

I woke to tell the story

Still uncertain what it was:

A city, our city

However transient

By heritage or adoption

Lay open as a map before us

Sliced like an orange down the middle

Displaying its sections

Some of these had been destroyed

What to make of the fires of late?

Nobody seems to know.

Black market fashions

Hummocks of remaindered clothes

Shaped beneath the rain

Like massacred corpses

Drawing the empty lot

Partitioned by chain-link fence.

Our city, I say! uncertain how to write

The violence of elsewhere

Upon which we depend.

It first comes home

In vacant words

Then chapter and verse to follow

Postmarked letters stamped and sealed

Into the mud

You cared for me

To the missing one, I failed to engage:

Grant me the wisdom to know

That one is me.

Eric Kongshau

San Pedro

 

Humanity, Kindness and Honesty

In just over two months on December 8, 1980, John Lennon was murdered at age 40. No more Zeppelin, no more Beatles.

Then I thought, what a thing man – at the beginning of Sept ’80 Zeppelin were to tour and all four Beatles were still walking this earth, still a chance they may do something together. BAM! They’re gone and ronald raygun tramples all over our lives and half the country fell for it.

Just a little more than 10 years earlier, down goes Hendrix, down goes Morrison, down goes Joplin, then fucking Nixon tramples into our lives and half the people dug it.

Now we have half the country believing firing working people is a better idea than taxing the rich.

How did humanity, kindness and honesty become such a horrible threat to these people?

Garrick Rawlings

Marvista, CA

Blue Water Clay Cone 10 High Fire Glaze Workshop with John Britt

 

Join a fun and informative workshop with glaze master John Britt. The workshop will be a general overview of ceramic glazes, focusing on cone 10 high-fire glazes. It is designed for beginner to intermediate potters but all levels of experience could surely benefit from the wide-ranging discussions.

Britt Wkshp 2025 1
Blue Water Clay Cone 10 High Fire Glaze Workshop with John Britt

The workshop will discuss cones, kilns, firing dynamics and principles as well as apply those principles to various firing cycles. This will lead to some basic classifications of glazes, like ash, celadon, temmoku, shino, etc. Attendees will learn how and why each type of glaze works and how you can achieve various effects in your studio. John will discuss how to maintain and how to adjust your glazes, how to find new ones, and introduce students to the many tools available on Glazy.org.

There will also be a discussion about glazes from John’s book: The Complete Guide to High-Fire Glazes: Glazing and Firing at Cone 10, which will delve into more detail than the book allows.

Students will mix and test glazes with raw materials from John’s recipes and apply them to three different clay bodies and analyze and compare results. Tiles will be fired to cone 10 in a reduction atmosphere in a Geil downdraft gas kiln. We recommend that you purchase John’s book: The Complete Guide to High-Fire- Glazes: Glazing and Firing at Cone 10, but it is not required.

Link to buy the book: https://tinyurl.com/Britt-pottery

See more about John Britt: https://johnbrittpottery.com

 

Payment and schedule information

Payment can be made using Zelle (preferred) or by credit card on the phone. Zelle

payments should be sent to bluewaterclay@gmail.com (receipts will show the recipient

as Jomon LLC). Registration requires payment in full and is non-refundable afterward.

Time: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., April 4, 5 and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., April 6 (Friday through Sunday)

Cost: $600, including firing and lab fee.

Details: To register, contact Blue Water Clay at 424-264-5364

Venue: Blue Water Clay, 801 S. Pacific Ave., San Pedro