Sunday, October 5, 2025
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From 9/11 To Trump’s Death Threat To American Democracy

 

“Anyone who is willing to drive a plane into a building to kill Jews is alright by me. I wish our members had half as much testicular fortitude,” white supremacist Billy Roper wrote in an email to members of the neo-Nazi National Alliance on Sept. 11, 2001, even before the World Trade Center towers had collapsed.

Today, 24 years later, white supremacists have gained enormous political power in America. America belongs to real Americans — the white people who’ve been here since at least the Civil War, according to Vice President Vance, and it really doesn’t matter which side of that war they fought on. Hardcore white supremacists remain junior partners to a more sophisticated identitarian creed, claiming to stand for traditional Western values, even as they destroy them in practice. And the rules-based international order — which they falsely accuse of being Jewish-controlled — is in a state of chaos, with its once-prime guarantor, the United States, abandoning its commitments to democracy, the rule of law, and universal human rights.

Those commitments were always imperfectly honored, at best, and those imperfections played a key role in the tale of how the Al Qaeda terrorists, with their hatred of Western secular democracy, and their white supremacist fans, have succeeded so dramatically in undermining American democracy as it existed before the 9/11 attacks.

The attacks themselves were clearly a crime carried out by terrorists attacking civilians, not an act of war carried out by soldiers on the battlefield. Yet the neoconservative George Bush administration responded by declaring war — though not constitutionally, and not against those who had attacked us — but rather on the governments of Afghanistan, which had sheltered them, and Iraq, which had nothing to do with 9/11, but did have a lot of oil. In the process, the violence we employed created far more terrorists than it killed — and not just on the other side.

Overwhelming majorities of the world’s people opposed these actions, but the U.S. government and its NATO allies pursued them nonetheless, and the eventual, inevitable flood of refugees from the region did a great deal to turn mass opinion from one form of opposition to another: from an open-hearted humanitarian opposition to needless war to a xenophobic response to the resulting failures: the emergence of ISIS, the flood of refugees in Europe, and the loss of elite credibility, due to the magnitude of the lies and the lack of accountability.

Along the way, the Bush administration’s many failures led to disillusionment so widespread that many conservatives stopped seeing him as one of their own, calling him a “globalist” instead; and Democrats who had gone along with him — particularly on Iraq — were so damaged that a relative newcomer, Barack Obama, was able to become America’s first Black president. This, in turn, supercharged the reactionary shift in the Republican base, in synergy with the wider disillusionment with elite politics. Baseless conspiracy theories about Obama’s birth certificate were a prime organizing narrative in fueling this shift, and Donald Trump switched parties to take advantage of it, laying the ground for his eventual run for president.

There was a strange moment in U.S. history in early 2011, when Obama finally released his long-form birth certificate, and days later teased Trump a bit at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, after which he oversaw the operation in which Osama bin Laden was killed. It appeared to be a peak moment of accomplishment in compensating for errors of the past. Obama didn’t oppose all wars; he had assured the donor class — only the dumb ones. Finally getting bin Laden, whom Bush had tellingly lost interest in, was right in line with that. And the seriousness of ridding the world of bin Laden contrasted nicely with Trump’s frivolous foolishness that Obama had mocked just hours before.

But all that proved quite mistaken. Killing bin Laden, like releasing Obama’s birth certificate, was closing the barn door after the horse had gone. ISIS soon emerged as a far more organized and effective terrorist force, and the release of Obama’s long-form birth certificate only reduced birtherism temporarily. A poll one year later found birtherism was stronger than ever within the GOP. And with that base of support, Trump was elected president in 2016.

The year 2011 was an inflection point. Less than three months after bin Laden’s death, a white supremacist terrorist attack left 77 dead in Norway. It was justified as a defense of Europe against looming destruction in a 1500-page conspiracist manifesto, which called for the deportation of Muslims from Europe, blaming both Muslims and “cultural Marxism” — an alleged Jewish conspiracy to destroy Western culture and civilization by promoting multiculturalism and undermining traditional values. That attack inspired a series of copycats across the globe in the years to come — including several in America.

That same year, French conspiracy theorist Renaud Camus published Le Grand Remplacement, advancing the great replacement theory that the ethnic French and white European populations were being replaced by non-whites — especially from Muslim-majority countries — with the complicity or cooperation of “replacist” elites. This echoed the plot of a 1973 novel, Camp of The Saints but with a new urgency in the post-9/11 world.

The influence of that terrorist attack and the great replacement theory first spread in hard right circles before gaining new prominence during Trump’s first term in office, with Trump’s solicitations of armed rightwing supporters — who eventually showed up at the Jan. 6 insurrection — and Tucker Carlson’s repeated broadcasts combining great replacement theory with voter fraud conspiracies hundreds of times.

Throughout all this, the corporate media failed the basic responsibility of journalism: to make the world legible, so that the public can make informed decisions shaping our collective future. This failure was evident from the beginning. The media watch group FAIR found that alternatives to war were “nearly non-existent” in the op-ed pages of the New York Times and the Washington Post in the three weeks following the attacks. Forty-four columns were pushing for a military response, versus only two stressing non-military solutions.

Yet, a global Gallup poll painted a very different picture: American public opinion was more divided, while the worldwide public overwhelmingly opposed going to war.

Super-majorities of 2-1 or 3-1 up to 10-1 and more in some cases opposed the war in almost every country across the world. Finding the terrorists and putting them on trial had far more support. It was 75-18 in Britain, our main ally in the push for war, the high was 94-2 in Mexico. There were three exceptions: There was strong support for war in India (72% supported, 28% opposed) and Israel (77% supported, 19% opposed), who both had generations of conflicts with Muslim adversaries, which war had only made worse. And there was a modest 54% majority for war in America itself (with 16% undecided, 30% favoring trials), where there was virtually no discussion of any alternative.

These facts alone should have been enough to prevent any war. The lesson of Vietnam was clear: that sustained war required sustained public support, and clear goals, both of which were lacking from the very beginning. And the only countries whose people favored war were ones whose own histories showed its folly and their own inability to learn from past mistakes.

Nonetheless, the U.S. and allies swiftly rushed into war against Afghanistan, ignoring the government’s offer to turn the terrorists over to an Islamic court, where, contrary to Western opinion, they would not have faced sympathetic judges. The war against Iraq took longer to arrange because there was simply no connection, and it took time to manufacture one.

On the first anniversary of 9/11, USA Today ran a story detailing how the decision to go to war with Iraq came about “without a formal decision-making meeting” within weeks of 9/11. It was later revealed by Bush’s Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill that getting rid of Saddam Hussein had been a Bush administration goal since their first day in office. 9/11 was just an excuse. Yet, at the same time, repeated intelligence community warnings of a planned terrorist attack by al Qaeda were simply ignored — in part precisely because it wasn’t linked to a state sponsor.

If most of the world’s people were united in opposing the war as a response to 9/11 terror, they were far more divided in how to deal with the catastrophic outcome. It was a predictable result of war, and one of the reasons it was so broadly opposed. Different people found different facets of the catastrophe more alarming, and ultimately more orienting in their political views. And this was complicated not just by the continued insistence that war was just and good, but by the addition of multiple new false narratives.

One such narrative was that of Islam as an existential threat to America and the West. This narrative didn’t arise spontaneously. In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, the American public responded with an increased level of acceptance and support for Muslims. President Bush, who’d successfully courted the Muslim vote in 2000, visited a mosque shortly after the attacks and publicly praised American Muslims multiple times in the following year.

Yet, a handful of ill-informed extremist voices — mostly centered in three small organizations — were eventually able to spread their profoundly paranoid views into the mainstream, in a fact-free process described by sociologist Christopher Bail in his 2015 book, Terrified: How Anti-Muslim Fringe Organizations Became Mainstream. They hijacked public discourse about Islam, first by stoking fears with emotional, attention-grabbing messaging, then by forging ties with established elite organizations, and ultimately building their own organizational and media infrastructure. As a result, Islamophobia became completely normalized within the GOP and beyond.

While the processes Bail describes unfolded primarily in elite networks, with neoconservative institutions and individuals playing key roles, the results helped drive a mass-based shift toward a nativist, paleoconservative worldview. Other factors facilitated this as well.

Even as Bush explicitly praised American Muslims, his claim that terrorists and their sympathizers “hate us because of our freedoms” obscured the long history of U.S. involvement in thwarting their political self-determination, falsely painting foreign Muslims as implacable, irrational enemies of an enlightened West, led by America. This basic war on terror anti-jihadi narrative was ripe for hijacking by far-right groups, which was exactly what rightwing terrorists and great replacement ideologues did.

In a 2012 paper, “Blind Spot? Security Narratives and Far-Right Violence in Europe,” Dr. Arun Kundnani noted that since the 1980s the French National Front and similar rightwing parties began downplaying their neo‐Nazi roots and “speaking of the need to preserve cultural identity” which was supposedly “under threat from a ruling elite that enabled excessive immigration” and “promoted policies of multiculturalism,” allowing them to “maintain their own cultural identities.” He went to say:

“Following 9/11, a new version of this identitarian narrative began to circulate. … In the ‘counter‐jihadist’ narrative, the identity that needs to be defended is no longer a conservative notion of national identity but an idea of liberal values, seen as a civilisational inheritance. Islam becomes the new threat to this identity, regarded as both an alien culture and an extremist political ideology. … Unlike the traditional far‐Right, these new movements rhetorically embrace what they regard as Enlightenment values of individual liberty, freedom of speech, gender equality, and gay rights.”

In short, by adopting this new “counter-jihad” narrative, we have European neo-Nazis pretending to be liberals, in the ultimate wolf-in-sheep-clothing move:

“In moving from neo‐Nazism to counter‐jihadism, the underlying structure of the narrative remains the same, but the protagonists have changed: the identity of Western liberal values has been substituted for white racial identity, Muslims have taken the place of blacks, and multiculturalists are the new Jews.”

Of course, treating universalist liberal values as an identity fundamentally disfigures them, making them tools of repression. Sadly, there’s a long history of doing this — denying rights to women, Black people, Indigenous people, non-white immigrants, gay people, the disabled, etc. This was just more of the same.

Nothing this sophisticated was happening at scale in America in 2012. But similar ideas were circulating in more limited circles and began emerging after Trump first took office. They now lie at the heart, for example, of Trump’s heavy-handed attacks on higher education, and of his attempts to control cultural institutions more generally — from national museums to local public schools and libraries.

When trumpeting “viewpoint diversity” goes hand-in-hand with getting rid of entire academic departments, as Trump has demanded, the gaslighting involved is obvious. But it goes much farther than higher education, or even cultural institutions as a whole. The inversion of democratic values lies at the very heart of the neofascist project seen around the world today, taking on similar, but distinct forms in different situations.

Almost everywhere there are elections, for example, but there are different ways in which elections are rigged so that they can’t result in the transfer of power. The Trump-demanded Texas gerrymander is just one facet of that here in America. Troops in the streets to suppress dissent and voter turnout is another, which Trump is just starting to use, more than a year before the midterms, when a Democratic victory could begin to check his autocratic power-grab.

To defeat Trump in the short run, we need all the allies we can get, including Republicans and former Republicans who oppose him. But to defeat the deeper reactionary authoritarian threat that he is the current superspreader of, we need to understand how we got here, as summarized above. Those who helped bring us here from 9/11 may be welcome allies in the moment. But their errors — and yes, even their sins — must be squarely faced, accounted for, and corrected, for the long-range task of rebuilding the promise of America with liberty and justice for all.

Same Script Different Day

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Every time the Orange Felon gets caught, it’s the same script: it’s a hoax

Russia’s efforts to interfere with the 2016 election? Hoax. Losing an election in 2020? Hoax. January 6? Hoax. His sexual assaults? Hoax. Now, even the Jeffrey Epstein files—which he ran on releasing—are supposedly a hoax.

It’s pathetic—but dangerous. Millions believe him. The media follows each new turn like a cat following a feather toy. And little by little, the truth gets buried under his landslide of lies.

And yet, the closer the investigation gets to Jeffrey Epstein’s relationship to the Orange Felon, many of the past “HOAXES” begin to make more sense when you string them all together. The main link that we learned from the Watergate scandal many years ago is to “Just follow the money.” It appears now with every twist and turn of the Epstein affair, he was not just trafficking teenage girls, but was probably laundering hundreds of millions upon millions of dollars from the Russian mafia and Middle Eastern royalty, which sounds vaguely familiar to what the Orange Felon has been doing for years selling his overpriced condos to Russian oligarchs, making deals with the Saudi Prince and unbelievably bankrupting Atlantic City casinos. Just how does one lose money running a casino when the odds are all stacked against the gamblers? Just the GENIUS in the White House.

This is the guy who wrote “The Art of the Deal” and touts himself as the ultimate businessman. How many times has he gone bankrupt? He has never filed for personal bankruptcy, BUT companies he has owned have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection six times. All of the corporate bankruptcies were related to his casino and hotel businesses in Atlantic City and New York. Such a GOOD deal maker!!!!! The book should have been titled “The Art of the Steal”!

From 1973 until he was elected president in 2016, the Orange Felon and his businesses were involved in over 4,000 legal cases in United States federal and state courts, including battles with casino patrons, million-dollar real estate lawsuits, personal defamation lawsuits, his fraudulent Trump University, a charity, and over 100 business tax disputes. And how many more since his reelection?

He has been charged with a total of 88 felony counts across four criminal investigations. He has already been found guilty of 34 of them, which is why I continue to call him the Orange Felon.

What he fears most is that the Democrats will take back Congress and impeach him for yet a third time, which would end most of the immunity of prosecuting him for all the crimes from the Jan 6 investigations and racketeering in Georgia elections after being removed from office. Remember the phone call he made to the Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger? “Just find me 1178 votes,” he was recorded as saying.

It is a pending criminal case against the Orange Felon and 18 co-defendants. The prosecution alleges that he led a “criminal racketeering enterprise”, in which he and all other defendants “knowingly and willfully joined a conspiracy to unlawfully change the outcome” of the 2020 U.S. presidential election in Georgia. All defendants are charged with one count of violating Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) statute, which has a penalty of five to twenty years in prison. The indictment comes in the context of his broader effort to overturn his loss in the 2020 presidential election. Which he still claims he won after 40 losses in courts, again claiming it was all a HOAX.

The one thing you can count on is that the truth is the opposite of whatever comes out of his mouth.

The crass hypocrisy is that he didn’t call out the National Guard on Jan 6 when there was an actual INSURRECTION taking place. Now, as he invades Chicago after occupying Washington, D.C., and raiding Los Angeles on false premises, what could possibly be his motive? TO SUPPRESS THE VOTE, OVERTURN THE RULE OF LAW, AND TAKE THE SPOTLIGHT OFF THE EPSTEIN SCANDAL. AND TO CREATE CHAOS.

In doing so, the corporate media remains distracted, the republicans are mostly muted, and the Democrats are forced to change the rules of the election game that the Republicans have been rigging for years in other states–just not as blatantly as in Texas now.

My advice to all of you is to watch the money, follow the trail, and see who it brings down this time.

City Attorney, County, and Cities Nationwide Oppose LA National Guard Deployment in Amicus Brief

 

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto announced that her office – along with the cities of Chicago, New York, Baltimore and Boston, as well as local governments here in the Central District lead by the County of Los Angeles and the cities of Long Beach, Santa Ana, Santa Monica, West Hollywood, Monterey Park, Bell Gardens, and Santa Paula – filed an amicus brief supporting Gov. Newsom in the appeal pending before the Ninth Circuit over the federalization of the National Guard (Newsom v. Trump, Case No. 25-3727).

This appeal is just one part of the pending litigation challenging the federal government’s deployment and use of National Guard troops and Marines in the City. The multicity amicus brief lays out the arguments for why the federalization of the National Guard is unlawful and asks the Ninth Circuit to let the District Court’s decision to grant a temporary restraining order (TRO) returning the Guard to the Governor’s control to stand.

As noted above, not only was the brief joined by jurisdictions here in the Central District, like the County of Los Angeles, that have been directly impacted by the current deployment, but includes partner cities from around the country – specifically, Chicago, New York, Baltimore, and Boston – that have been threatened with similar unlawful deployments by the President.“The City has a critical interest in ensuring the safety of its residents and taking a stand against this unprecedented assault on the constitution and fundamental American values,” said LA City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto. “The fact that the military remains in our City is an extraordinary abuse of power that should not be allowed to continue in our City or any other City in the United States. We will continue to take action to protect our communities and defend our constitutional rights.”

Details: Read the brief here: https://shorturl.at/5V6FC and read the order here: https://shorturl.at/vHfSK

‘Trump Traffic Jam’: Republicans Slash Popular Clean Air Carpool Lane Program

 

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom Sept. 10 announced there will be more traffic and more smog is on its way to California, thanks to Trump and the Republican-led Congress.

Starting Sept. 30, California drivers with the Clean Air Vehicle or CAV decal will no longer be able to use carpool lanes without meeting vehicle occupancy requirements because the Trump administration and Congress decided to let the program sunset. California and other states’ ability to continue their decal programs relies on the federal government to extend the program, which has enjoyed broad bipartisan support in the past.

The decals represented an additional incentive for drivers to make the switch to cleaner cars because they offered access to carpool lanes. The misguided decision to let this program lapse eliminates the successful program that has driven innovation in California and reduced air pollution at virtually no cost to taxpayers.

Frequently Asked Questions: https://tinyurl.com/Clean-Air-Vehicle-Decals

The Trump administration is ending the CAV decal regulations at midnight on Sept. 30, 2025. All CAV decals will be invalid starting Oct. 1, 2025, and every vehicle, regardless of whether it is a hybrid or ZEV, must follow posted vehicle occupancy requirements. The DMV stopped processing CAV decal applications on Aug.t 29 and notified the public.

Last year, Gov. Newsom signed a Republican-sponsored bill that extended California’s CAV decal program under state law, AB 2678 (Wallis, 2024). However, without action by Congress, California was stripped of its authority to keep the bipartisan CAV program alive – even though Congress extended the program in a Republican-sponsored bill with bipartisan support only a decade ago.

Air pollution is a silent killer that causes heart and lung diseases, and cancer. Over the last 50 years, the state’s clean air efforts have saved $250 billion in health costs through reduced illness including reducing diesel-related cancer risk nearly 80%.

California’s clean car record

  • Around 1 in 4 new cars sold in California are ZEVs, according to the California Energy Commission – with the state hitting its goal of two million ZEVs ahead of schedule.
  • 56 ZEV and ZEV-related manufacturers are operating in California — leading the nation in ZEV manufacturing jobs.
  • 178,000 public or shared private electric vehicle chargers have been installed throughout California – nearly 50% more chargers than gas pumps.

Details: For more information on the ending of the CAV decal program, click here.

Update: Unified Command Continues Response to Fallen Containers at the Port of Long Beach

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LONG BEACH – The Unified Command continued its response Seot. 10 to an incident that caused an estimated 75 shipping containers to fall from the cargo ship Mississippi at Pier G at the Port of Long Beach.

An investigation led by the U.S. Coast Guard and the National Transportation Safety Board is underway to determine the cause of the incident, which occurred just before 9 a.m. Tuesday.

The Unified Command – consisting of federal, state and local agencies – is working to ensure a safe and timely recovery of the cargo containers. Sonar surveys are being conducted to locate approximately 25 to 30 containers submerged in the harbor to ensure the safe navigation of ship traffic.

A salvage plan is being developed and will be implemented as soon as possible. One of the Unified Command’s top priorities is continuing to ensure the safety of workers and others on scene while also assessing security of the surrounding area to prevent further damage.

A pollution response vessel remains on scene to address any potential discharge and a boom has been deployed to contain the containers in a designated area.

Dockworkers are unloading containers from a separate ship that was berthed at Pier G before the incident and truck drivers are moving containers to and from the terminal. No other terminals or port operations have been affected.

The Coast Guard continues to maintain a 500-yard safety zone on the water surrounding the Mississippi. Nonresponding personnel are asked to remain clear of the affected area until further notice.

The Coast Guard is broadcasting hourly marine safety information to alert mariners of navigation hazards.

 

Original report Sept. 9

A unified command has been established to respond to an incident the morning of Sept. 9 that caused an estimated 67 shipping containers to fall off the cargo ship Mississippi and into the water at Pier G within the Port of Long Beach just after 9 a.m.

Representatives from the U.S. Coast Guard, Long Beach Fire Department, Long Police Department, Port of Long Beach, Army Corps of Engineers and other commercial representatives are responding to the incident.

A smaller clean air barge was connected to the Mississippi at the time of the accident and was damaged by several fallen containers.

No injuries have been reported. No other terminals or port operations have been impacted.

Cargo operations have been temporarily suspended at Pier G, as operations continue to ensure the safety of dockworkers and other port personnel.

Unified command agencies have dispatched numerous vessels and aircraft to assess the situation and provide assistance.

The Coast Guard established a safety zone 500 yards around the Mississippi and is issuing marine safety broadcasts every hour to alert other vessels of the navigation and safety hazards. The Coast Guard is also leading the effort to determine the cause of the incident.

The unified command is asking nonresponding personnel to remain clear of the area around the containers.

Last-minute intervention needed to save Long Beach low-waste market

Low waste, high impact — we make ethical shopping easy.

Katy Impellizzeri still believes in the mission. In an economic milieu that prioritizes big profit over little things like environmental sustainability and fair labor practices, Impellizzeri thinks there’s a place for an indie business that “make[s] ethical shopping simple and accessible,” one where you can buy “100% vegan, cruelty-free, and low waste essentials that are ethically produced to prioritize people, fairness, and transparency,” where “every product aligns with our values of equity and sustainability.”

That, in a nutshell, is Ethikli Sustainable Market, which in February 2022 began providing conscientious consumers in Long Beach with an easy opportunity to reduce their [full disclosure: our — I’m a proud and loyal customer] waste footprint while steering dollars away from corporate greed and toward businesses with conscience. Beans and legumes, herbs and spices, coffee and tea, cereal and granola, pasta and noodles, nuts and seeds, bread and chocolate, baking products, personal care items, cleaning and laundry supplies — there are few essentials you can’t find here, and at surprisingly affordable prices.

But barring an 11th-hour financial windfall, Ethikli will cease operations at the end of October.

The reasons are manifold, says Impellizzeri, Ethikli’s founder and majority owner. A perception that downtown Long Beach is unsafe. Increased operational costs. Decreased foot traffic. Insufficient marketing. Tariffs. Rising costs of living without a corresponding bump in wages.

“I’ve been paying out of my own pocket just trying to keep this place open,” she says, “and my savings is gone. […] But I still really believe in the mission, and I’m holding out hope. That’s part of the reason why I’m giving it until October, even though I really can’t afford it. I at least want to give it one last shot.”

***

Despite growing up in the restaurant industry, Impellizzeri did not envision a career having anything to do with comestibles “because I know all the headaches that come along with food.”

Having her own business, however, seemed a natural fit. Shortly out of high school she founded a pet-sitting company, which became so successful — over 100 clients and a few employees — that she was able to buy a house in her native Virginia with the proceeds from its sale. She sold the house to finance a move to Santa Monica in 2013, where she worked full-time as a yoga teacher.

During the next several years Impellizzeri began to home in on the idea for what would eventually be Ethikli.

“I’ve been super passionate about living a low-waste lifestyle for a long time,” she says. “Even as far back as high school I was conscious of it and then started getting really serious around the time I moved. It’s always been a dream of mine to do something in this realm. I don’t know that groceries specifically was my dream, but making a difference in something related to the environment was something I had dreamed of for a long time. And helping to change the food system.”

Over the course of numerous visits to Long Beach (where her best friend resided), Impellizzeri came not only to love the city but to feel it might be the place where that dream could become reality.

“I met a lot of like-minded, down-to-earth people who supported my cause,” she says. “I was shocked there wasn’t already a refill grocery store in LB. […] I needed a place like this, and I saw that the Long Beach community needed a place to get groceries without creating a lot of waste and supporting a broken system.”

She moved to Long Beach in 2020 and started doing no-waste pop-ups around town, the success of which made her believe that a brick-and-mortar store might work. She signed a lease on her East Village Arts District storefront in August 2021, although “we didn’t officially open until February [2022], because it took a really long time to cut through red tape with the City, get permits. That was a big hurdle to overcome right at the beginning.”

But once Ethikli opened its doors, the initial response was overwhelming.

“I’ll never forget our first week open,” she recalls. “My friend was helping me out, and at the end of the day we looked at each other and said, ‘Is this how it’s going to be?!’ It was amazing, the turnout and the passion that people had.”

After the first year, business slowed (“perhaps excitement over the zero-waste food movement died down a little bit”), which made the City’s “high permitting and licensing fees that [much more] unaffordable for a small business.”

Meanwhile, Impellizzeri was running herself ragged, not only with the store but also vending at various farmers’ markets to support Ethikli and help spread the word.

“I was literally doing everything, wearing all the hats all the time, and I just couldn’t maintain that, so I had to hire some help,” she says. “That made [the financial bottom line] a little more challenging.”

Some of the best months came after Impellizzeri restructured Ethikli from operating as a sole proprietorship to a worker-owned LLC. But then came a series of setbacks, made all the more unwieldy when she unexpectedly got pregnant and moved back to Virginia to be closer to family. These included “a bit of drama between some of the worker-owners, [so] we had to get rid of the folks that were creating the drama.”

Around the same time, Ethikli went from being allotted a weekly space at the Marina Farmer’s Market to every other week, “and that was one of our big moneymakers, so that hit us really hard at an already difficult time” — difficult because foot-traffic declined, partly due to a widespread perception that downtown has become increasingly unsafe. And because some of Ethikli’s suppliers are located in Canada, Donald Trump’s tariffs have recently hit home.

But perhaps more than anything, Impellizzeri laments her inability to market Ethikli sufficiently.

“That’s also what’s really killed us: so many people don’t know we exist,” she says. “We just haven’t had the funds for marketing. […] I’ve gotten feedback [from people] that it looks so beautiful inside that they just assumed it was super expensive. […] We probably haven’t priced things as high as we could have or perhaps should have, but it’s always been important to me to make things as accessible as possible while checking all those [ethical] boxes, [including] paying people fair wages all along the supply chain, which inevitably makes the [end] cost higher. […] So I think it’s a lack of marketing, the inability to educate folks on the fact that we’re not more expensive. But after doing the bookkeeping and scheduling and ordering and product resourcing, […] I simply didn’t have any time left to make a bunch of Instagram reels to tell people about that. I think that was our biggest weakness, for sure. And we’ve gotten so close to being profitable, so close, quite a few times. We were on the way, but there’s always something that comes up, throws a hiccup in the plan; and not having a safety net of capital to quickly recover from those hurdles…. There were many, many issues stacked against us, and it’s incredible that we made it even this far.”

***

Although at present Ethikli is slated to close October 24, Impellizzeri hopes against hope for another outcome.

“If somebody wants to take over and buy us out and continue the mission, that’s great — we’re accepting offers. Or if someone wants to step in and save us by investing, that would be even better, because I would love to continue. […] Basically, we need $150,000 to keep going for things to stay exactly as they are [operationally]. That would allow us to really do some marketing. But all that’s negotiable, depending on how much [potential investors] want to be involved.”

But even if this is the end, she doesn’t want you to think that the moral of Ethikli’s story is that alternatives to the status quo are impossible.

“I want people to know that even if we close, it’s not a failure,” she says. “Ethikli would be successful had we the necessary funding. I don’t want people to get discouraged […] and say, ‘No ethical business is possible, so we might as well just give up and let Amazon take over the world.’ I want it to stay a positive thing, because we did do a lot of amazing things. We did keep hundreds of thousands of dollars out of the pockets of billionaires who are destroying the world.”

Ethikli Sustainable Market is located — at least until October 24 — at 352 E. 4th Street, Long Beach. Phone: (562) 614-3647. For partnership/ownership inquiries, call or e-mail katy@ethikli.com. Those who’d like to help on a smaller scale can donate via GoFundMe — and/or shop, of course.

After Statewide Action, AG Bonta Sues L.A. County, Sheriff’s Department

 

LOS ANGELES—In-custody deaths in Los Angeles Sheriff Department custody have reached the highest rates in the last twenty years. On Aug. 19, Terry Lovett, the mother of Jalani Lovett who died in LA’s Men’s Central Jail, led a statewide action with the support of labor unions, justice advocates and other impacted families. Organizers dropped off 1200 signatures in long scrolls to every office of Attorney General Rob Bonta across the state demanding he take action to investigate deputy gangs, negligence within the facilities, and that he meet with the families of the deceased.

On Sept. 8, AG Bonta announced a lawsuit against the Sheriff and the County citing their repeated refusal to prevent ‘unnecessary’ deaths in the jails He stated “Los Angeles operates the largest jail system in the United States, and one of the most problematic. When we’re talking about feces smeared on the walls and medical care denied to those in need, we’re talking about a disrespect for the basic dignity of our fellow humans and a violation of their most fundamental constitutional rights. We’re confident the court will agree.”

Terry Lovett’s son, Jalani Lovett, was one of at least 55 people who died in LA County jails in 2021. Jalani was found dead in solitary confinement in the 3000 block of Men’s Central Jail, notorious as the home to the LA County Sheriff Deputy Gang known as the ‘3000 boys.’ While LASD asserts that Jalani’s death was an ‘accidental’ overdose, Jalani’s death certificate is still incomplete, listing the cause of death as “deferred” which indicates that the medical examiner is still investigating. Additionally, Terry has received photos depicting physical abuse to Jalani’s body. The Department has a history of rampant abuse that has warranted federal intervention and consent decrees. An investigation into Jalani’s case is necessary, along with the cases of many other deceased community members..

Terence Keel, UCLA Professor, Founding Director of The BioCritical Studies Lab:

“The Attorney General’s lawsuit will wake people up who have not been paying attention to the humanitarian crisis inside the Los Angeles County jails. This lawsuit forces LASD to merely uphold the Constitutional rights of people in jail—we need to see with clear eyes that this is a reset to the legal bare minimum. Real solutions include healthcare, affordable housing, mental health, living wages, and other wrap-around services—resources we know prevent people from going to jail to begin with. It would be a miscarriage of justice if this lawsuit brings in more resources for policing instead of resources for the people of Los Angeles.”

Terry Lovett, Mother of Jalani Lovett: “It is the Attorney General’s job to take these cases seriously when they involve families in communities long tormented by law enforcement. His office should be fighting for justice equally for all people. We should not have to pressure him to do his job effectively and accessibly.”

Helen Jones, Mother of John Horton: “Men’s Central Jail is a known breeding ground for the murderous vicious Deputy Sheriff gangs the 2000 Boys, the 3000 Boys, the 4000 floor and more. They have tortured, murdered, beaten, abused, intentionally neglected and falsely imprisoned our children and loved ones.”

John Horton was murdered in Men’s Central Jail in 2009 at the age of 22—one of 38 people who died in county jails that year. The LA County coroner’s office ruled his death a suicide, despite evidence of a “fresh intra-abdominal and back muscle blunt force injury.” and sued the county in a case that was settled for $2 million.

Representatives Press FEMA to Preserve Emergency Alert Lifeline

 

Washington D.C. — Representatives Nanette Barragán (CA-44), Robert Menendez (NJ-08), and April McClain Delaney (MD-06) Sept. 9 led a letter to the Federal Emergency Management Agency or FEMA urging the agency to immediately step in to safeguard the future of the Next Generation Warning System or NGWS program, which helps public broadcast stations modernize their equipment so they can serve as lifelines during natural disasters and emergencies.

The letter, addressed to Acting FEMA Administrator David Richardson, follows the announcement that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting will no longer administer NGWS grants, leaving rural and underserved communities at risk of losing access to life-saving emergency alerts.

Since its creation in 2022, the NGWS program has provided more than $21 million to local stations, strengthening their ability to deliver critical alerts through the Emergency Alert System or EAS and Wireless Emergency Alerts or WEA. The demand for this program has far outstripped available funds, further underlining the significance of the program in meeting the growing public safety needs.

The lawmakers’ letter urges FEMA to:

  • Assume full responsibility for disbursing NGWS funds appropriated by Congress;
  • Provide a clear public plan for administering these funds and preventing gaps in support; and
  • Brief congressional committees of jurisdiction within 14 days on how it will safeguard local alerting capacity, especially in rural and underserved areas.

Join Torrance Refinery Action Alliance’s (TRAA) Monthly Zoom Meeting

 

Hear about the latest news from National Resource Defense Council, or NRDC, Communities for a Better Environment or CBE and about its lawsuit, the Hazard Control Analysis lawsuit, Title 5 information and more.

To attend the virtual meeting if you haven’t gotten the zoom link in the past, RSVP with an e-mail request for a Zoom link to TRAA Board Member Steven Goldsmith at info@TRAA.website. Include your phone number so TRAA can update you before the meeting. Look for the Zoom link and agenda the morning of Sept. 10.

Time: 7 p.m., Sept 10

Solis Spearheads Efforts to Protect SNAP Applicants

LOS ANGELES The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Sept. 9 approved a motion to protect the privacy of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP applicants in the county, and initiate or join existing legal actions in response to the United States Department of Agriculture or USDA mandate for SNAP applicant data.

In July 2025, the USDA requested that states turn over data on applicants to SNAP for the last five years, including applicants’ names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, mailing addresses, and even shopping history. Moreover, USDA suggested that failure to comply with the request could result in withholding of federal funding for the program, putting states and counties in an impossible choice between providing nutrition assistance or protecting the privacy of residents.

With nearly 1.5 million recipients served through SNAP in Los Angeles County, the program supports the county’s most vulnerable residents, including some non-citizens, and parents who legally apply for benefits on behalf of their United States citizen children. Long-standing state and federal laws have historically protected SNAP applicants’ information. However, given ongoing mass immigration raids and changing federal policies, the new USDA demand has pushed immigrants away from programs they are eligible for – even when they are desperately in need of assistance for their health, safety, and well-being.

Alongside 21 other states, California filed a lawsuit challenging USDA’s demand for the personal and sensitive data of SNAP applicants, on the basis that it violates federal policy laws.

The approved motion directs county counsel, in consultation with the Department of Public Social Services and Public Health, to immediately explore all legal remedies available to the county in response to the USDA’s mandate to release SNAP applicants’ personal information. This may include, but not be limited to, initiating, joining, or supporting existing legal actions taken by the State of California on this matter.