Thursday, September 25, 2025
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Meme Cats with Nine Lives

[slideshow]
By John Farrell, Theater Writer

There is an old wives tale that cats have nine lives.

Apparently meme cats live on even longer than their flesh and blood avatars. Meme cats are those funny and sometimes curious pictures of cats that have become a source of fun on the Internet. Cats that are hugely fat, cats that are dressed in human clothes, cats that, to humans, at least, are warm (and of course fuzzy) and have been unlucky enough to be captured on cell-phone cameras in embarrassing positions, live on even longer than their flesh-and-blood avatars.

POLA Container Volumes Jump in April

By Zamna Avila, Assistant Editor
San Pedro — The Port of Los Angeles has released its April 2012 cargo volumes. POLA container volumes jumped 14.5 percent in April with balanced import-export growth. The volumes reflect the busiest April in Port history.

Imports increased by 16.7 percent, from 312,359 Twenty-Foot Equivalent (TEU) containers in April 2011 to 364,555 TEUs this April. Exports increased 11.5 percent, from 167,448 TEUs in April 2011 to 186,838 TEUs in April 2012.

Combined, total loaded imports and exports for April increased 14.9 percent, from 479,808 TEUs last April to 551,393 TEUs in April 2012. Factoring in empties, which increased 13.3 percent year over year, overall April 2012 volumes (707,182 TEUs) increased 14.5 percent compared to April 2011 (617,272 TEUs). Those figures reflect the busiest April in Port history, surpassing April 2007 volumes of 679,575 TEUs.

For the first four months of 2012, overall container volumes have increased 6.1 percent (2,582,003 TEUs) compared to the same period in 2011 (2,433,499 TEUs). Current and past data container counts for the Port of Los Angeles may be found at:
http://www.portoflosangeles.org/maritime/stats.asp

Local 26, ILWU President Doesn’t Get It

By Chuck Hart, President of San Pedro Peninsula Homeowners United

We are in receipt of a copy of a letter written by ILWU, Local 26, President, Luisa Gratz, on April 11, 2012. Their letter is to request that the Commission ignore and dismiss the Port Community Advisory Committee’s Motion to revoke the Port’s revocable rail permit servicing the Rancho LPG facility until a proper risk assessment has been performed establishing the level of risk and liability exposure to residents, the City and to the port.

Read related storyBuscaino Requests Safety Hearing on Rancho LPG .3

Why America Should be Angry

The ghost of Reagan, and my endorsement for Hahn
By James Preston Allen, Publisher

With this editorial, I fully and unequivocally endorse Janice Hahn’s candidacy to return to Congress and represent the new 44th Congressional District. I have chosen to do this not for the many reasons that others have previously voiced, such as her support for union workers, or her stance on equity for women and the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community. I endorse her because of something that is quite unique to this newspaper. Hahn is the only person, aside from myself, that attracts the ire of certain right-wing letter-writing critics. This, in my mind, means that over and above everything I agree with her on politically, she must be doing something right!

Now, this may be one of the races in which Hahn doesn’t mind coming in second. I believe I hold the title for receiving the most snide and vitriolic attacks for my political writings. But I do enjoy the company and I will remind you, my loyal readers, that I wouldn’t have it any other way. I support and defend “free speech” rights of all the citizens enshrined in the First Amendment, even when it doesn’t suit me personally. I have been asked quite adamantly, yet politely, by both friends of Hahn and by the congresswoman herself to refrain from publishing “any more of those horrible” letters. To which I’ve responded, “I have no control over what some people choose to write and send.”

“But you have the publisher’s prerogative not to print,” they rejoin. I end the conversation by noting that I only use that prerogative to avoid litigation.

“I don’t tell you how to run the congressional office, so don’t tell me how to run the newspaper,” I say.

So let’s talk about why people are angry. They get absolutely apoplectic when I argue that one of their sacred cows, Ronald Reagan, is the cause for much of our current malaise. The president who sold the country on “trickle down” economics; the one who started us on the path of “free trade” as he facilitated the shipping of good industrial jobs south of the border and west of the Pacific. He’s the one who was hired by the private sector back in the 1950s to sabotage national health care. He probably still would if he were alive today. He is the one who signed the law deregulating the Savings and Loans industry only for it to implode a short while later in the same manner we witnessed with the current banking crisis.

As Americans, we should be very angry. We live in the wealthiest nation on earth, yet 35 million of our citizens can’t afford health insurance and routinely go to emergency rooms for health care. Since the time of Ronald the “Great Communicator” Reagan, the wages of the working class have stagnated into a flat line, while the price of a middle-class standard of living has doubled or tripled. Public education has been under-funded, then it is attacked for not keeping up with privatized schools––schools that that get their support from the elite few whose salaries have grown exponentially from exporting jobs and importing cheap manufactured goods. Many of those who are the most pissed off misguidedly blame the public sector unions. The public sector makes up only 12 percent of the workforce, but has managed to hold the line against attacks on the middle class, by protecting collective bargaining–something the rest of America, should consider.

People are angry because they’ve been lied to while Wall Street vultures foreclosed on their dreams of a middle class lifestyle. Millions of Americans have been forced into bankruptcy, while the billionaire bankers get bailouts to cover their bad investment bets on derivative bond swaps––a financial product that nobody really understands. Yet, derivative trading continues to plague and embarrass the CEO of one of Wall Street’s largest banks, Chase Bank, which announced it simply lost $2 billion on leveraged bets while spending millions lobbying against Wall Street regulations.

The only folks who seem to be placing their anger in the right place is Occupy Wall Street, who have been routinely abused and arrested for speaking the unsavory truth–that the moneychangers are corrupt. And, in saying this unholy critique of capitalism, they deliver the most unlikely refrain in the public domain of this land of the free: There are some things more important than profit.

So yes, I endorse Janice Hahn for Congress. Precisely because certain right-wing letter-writing tea-bag sympathizers have criticized her, because she stood her ground where it really mattered, and because she unequivocally understands which side of the class divide she represents and because she will occasionally respond to her critics. I have urged her to do it more often. And you should too. For all those that mutter some sotto voce uncertainties about “Janice not being perfect,” I say that this is why she accurately represents this district, which for all of its assets is so much less than perfect. It’s one of those things in life that makes you work harder, an example we all might like to emulate.

Sneek Preview of Ainadmar

By John Farrell

Ainadamaris an unusual, indeed an almost unique work: a modern opera (written in this century) which has already received critical acclaim and won two Grammies for its recording.

Congressman Kucinich Announces Retirement

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By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich announced May 16 that he is not running for Congress in Washington state, where activists had urged him to launch a campaign. Kucinich signaled the end of his 16-year congressional career in an emailed statement to supporters:

Because of my love of public service, I have given a great deal of time and much thought to the advice and encouragement I have received from so many people of good will in Washington State. I certainly want to continue to be of service to our country and to the working men and women who have built it.

No Solicitation Registry Moves Forward

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By Kevin Walker, Editorial Intern

The Long Beach City Council, voted 8–0, Councilwoman Suja Lowenthal absent, to refer a proposals to revise a city code regarding the door-to-door solicitors and handbills to the Housing and Neighborhoods Committee for discussion with business community that potentially would be affected.

Brewing Up the Competition

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By Michael Koger, RLn’s Brew Columnist

Walk to the back of San Pedro Brewing Company, and you’ll find a trophy case called the Hall of Foam filled with first and second place medals, ribbons, and beer mugs from competitions they’ve won at in the last few years. You won’t find any medals or plaques from 2011 because there isn’t any room for them there. But Jason Welke’s pride in those victories are as evident in the pride he takes in the beers he brews.
“I make every single beer to be the best beer possible,” Welke, the brewmaster at San Pedro Brewing Company tells me.

Dana Middle School Marching Band Receives Acclaim

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By Kevin Walker, Editorial Intern

Dana middle school in San Pedro has garnered attention recently for its marching band, which played last month at the Home Depot Center in Carson. The 60-piece band has won a series of competitions throughout Southern California, often against high schools, and has marched in events like the Long Beach Veterans Day Parade.

Murdering Old Folks with Arsenic and Old Lace

By John Farrell

If you only knowArsenic and Old Lacefrom the classic film version starring Cary Grant, you owe it to yourself to see it on stage, where you’ll discover that it is one the best of American farces, a farce with a delicious, odd-ball point of view and characters as memorable as they get.