The Dog End of the Street
THINK GLOBALLY, ACT YOKELLY: When Irrational People Do Rational Things
Thursday, November 17, 2011
THINK GLOBALLY, ACT YOKELLY: Don’t look now, but experts with the Centers for Disease Control have warned we may be in for an outbreak of sanity. It’s possible this is yet another media-induced sky-is-falling frenzy of Chicken-Little-ism. Who, after all, can forget the keening disappointment when the worldwide paralysis promised by Y2K failed to deliver? Or when the mass swarms of Africanized killer bees never arrived as predicted? It’s too soon for hysteria, but there’s evidence to suggest sanity might be poised to go viral. For starters, the house of cards that is the world economy somehow managed to survive for one more week despite the debilitating fiscal crisis that brought Greece — a nation with a gross national product less than Yolo County’s — to the brink of economic extinction. And at least for the time being, Israel and Iraq have not begun chucking nuclear weapons at one another. On a related note, the Brookings Institute just released a report indicating the federal government could save $35 billion — over 10 years — by reducing the number of times the United States could blow up the entire planet. This savings would be achieved by reducing the number of nuclear warheads we keep at our proverbial fingertips. Even with this reduction, it turns out, the United States will still have the capacity to blow up the world more times than all the other nuclear powers combined.
Angry Poodle
Of course, some of this savings will be needed to be used to clean up the $100-million nuclear mess at the UC Davis campus — reported this week by the Sacramento Bee — which has been home to a an unlined toxic pit holding the carcasses of 800 dead beagles that were force-fed strontium-90 and a host of other intensely radioactive compounds. This was all part of a decades-long Cold War study, initiated in the 1950s, to determine exactly how much atom bomb fallout a human body can endure and still look good stuffed into an evening dress. The answer, they discovered, is yes, that mushroom cloud does make your ass look fat.
Last Tuesday, citizens of the late, great state of Mississippi voted in large measure to reject a proposed constitutional amendment hatched by ardent right-to-lifers that would have endowed any collisions of sperm and egg — whether in a Petri dish or the walls of a human uterus — with all the legal rights of a full-fledged person. Had the measure passed, the morning-after pill could have been deemed murder. Exit polls showed that Mississippi voters were nervous about what’s known as “the personhood” movement because of negative connotations stemming from the Supreme Court’s recent ruling giving corporations personhood status, as well. As such, the court gave corporations the same inalienable free-speech rights as the rest of us, meaning they can donate as much money under as many tables to as many political candidates as possible. In this new campaign-finance universe, it’s worth remembering that the only force capable of exerting any sustained countervailing pressure to uncontested corporate control are the labor unions.
Keep that firmly in mind the next time some well-intentioned but hopelessly misguided Ivy League libertarian utopian type starts spouting off about how unions are destroying society. And yes, Lanny Ebenstein, I am talking about you. Lanny, who now writes regularly for the News-Press — which both practices and preaches union busting at the highest levels — is pushing a statewide ballot initiative that would prohibit public-employee unions from any form of collective bargaining. I always regarded Ebenstein’s initiative DOA, done in by its own extremity. But after Ohio voters overwhelmingly rejected a measure that would severely hamstring public-employee unions there last week, I’m even more convinced Ebenstein’s political pitch pipe is in desperate need of recalibration. But similar retooling is clearly in order for Santa Barbara’s very own POA — short for the Police Officers Association — which, while not clinically DOA, is perilously close. For the first time in Santa Barbara’s existence, not one of the City Council candidates endorsed by the POA managed to get elected. (It should be noted that the firefighters union was joined at the hip with the POA in this failure.) Two of the more conservative candidates to win — Dale Francisco and Randy Rowse — were actively opposed by the guns-and-hoses bloc. Cathy Murillo, the real never-given-a-serious-chance lefty-progressive Cinderella story in the race, won without their endorsement.
That means when the new council is sworn in next January, there will be only one councilmember on the dais endorsed by the public safety unions — Frank Hotchkiss. The good thing about Frank is that he gets right to the point and he’s quick to make jokes at his own expense. But when you vote against opening up fire stations as repositories for babies that might otherwise get tossed into dumpsters —
as Frank recently did — then maybe such humor is a necessary defense. I know everyone is making a historical fuss over Murillo being the first Latina to be elected to the City Council. And that’s a big deal. But she’s also the first ex-Santa Barbara Independent reporter — she worked here six years as a staff reporter — and ardent champion of all things pit-bullish to achieve so exalted an office. Regardless of her multiple and historic genealogies, Murillo, I’m betting, will bring a freshness of spirit that will improve the otherwise congenially constipated chemistry of that body.
Lastly, it’s worth noting that the citizens of Arizona — in their first recall election ever — yanked from office Russell Pearce, President of the Arizona State Senate and the man most responsible for Senate Bill 1070, which requires Arizona cops to enforce federal immigration laws and is not just “politically incorrect,” but really bad law enforcement. Pearce, drunk on his success, got in trouble when he upped the ante and tried to require teachers and medical professionals to determine the immigration status of their charges. Like I say, we might be experiencing the first wave of a sanity epidemic. I’m just hoping the federal government has a vaccine stockpiled in some underground bunker.
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Comments
Although the Poodle Dogs comments about the UC Davis site were snappy and cute, the reality is that the majority of the data that is used to understand radiation safety and the long term effects of low level radiation came directly from those life span and multi generational studies performed on beagles. When the project started, nobody knew the chronic and longitudinal effects. Even the theories were off base. The ex Director of that lab was the primary consultant to the Chernobyl disaster and the lab models saved 100's of lives from that mess alone.
Using beagles was a better method than using humans. At the time they made the best choice to help understand a real and present problem and their studies are still used today.
Thanks god the lab is gone-thank god the lab did the studies.
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 6:20 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Sanity, a hopeful premise and promise. But the sanity wave seems to have escaped Santa Barbara with the retention of paranoid electro-shock advocate Dale Francisco and 3-fingas-down EastSide-Mesa chamber gang banger and yachtsman Randy Rowse.
Remember we have the mother of all elections coming up and with a half-frican still in the white house there will probably be more hateful, divisive and confused right wing spawned ballot measures nationwide than ever before. And there will be tons of 1% Koch and Rove $$$ behind the insanity.
I don't want to give Lannys' petition and ballot measure any air but it may actually be successful because unlike Ohio Californians haven't gone through the draconian measures that their Governor and Legislature put the people through. And Californians have proven to be gullible time and again and once the airwaves are filled with right wing propaganda.
And we haven't even hardly begun to hear Faux News insane fans spittle about, Fonda, Streisand, Che, Castro, Clintons and Pah-low-see (<<< especially said with even more spittle.)
DonMcDermott (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 6:23 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The limiting of the collective bargaining power of public employee unions is hardly radical or extreme. Even the democratic icon FDR opposed collective bargaining by public employees unions as being against the public interest.
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/ind...
Botany (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 7:15 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Labor unions are not destroying society in general. It's the public employee labor unions that Lanny, and others, are writing about, and correctly so. The corrupt link between public employee labor union election activity and subsequent largesse awarded the public employee labor unions have brought many cities and states to the brink of bankruptcy. Wake up, Nickie.
And speaking of hateful and divisive, McD is on his usual rant. More spittle, less logic. As always.
JohnLocke (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 8:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Why don't Lanny and his three friends advocate that corporate interests that want their projects approved, zoning changed, and permits issued also should be corporate interests prevented from contributing $$ to candidates for elected office? Et tu, SBAOR?
And buy the way, Nick Welsh, Mayor Helen(e)* Schneider was endorsed by the POA in 2009 after the POA had no choice when Iya Falcone dropped out of the mayoral election and especially when Dale Francisco dropped into that election.
* The POA really may not have been too enthusiastic about Mayor Helene then, as evident that one of their independent political advertising mailers incorrectly spelled her name without the last e.
John_Adams (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 10:29 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I think public employees deserve some recourse, i.e. a union. You get these people like Francisco or Wisconsin's Scott Walker in positions of power and quality of life goes down for everyone. Public employees deserve a voice at the table.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 12:33 p.m. (Suggest removal)
A voice at the table has nothing to do with collective bargaining and the ability to become among the greatest funders of our State politicians. Why aren't the Occupy folks railing against the influence that the Teachers Union and the prison guards have on Sacramento?
Further, every actuarial table shows that every major city in California will be bankrupt from their retirement plans in the next 25 years. Some much sooner.
If a company I work for goes bankrupt I do not get a guaranteed pension. Why does a public employee? These pension deals were made on revenue projections that were incorrect, never came to pass, and are not sustainable. Even Willy Brown now openly admits he gave away the farm to the San Francisco cops, fireman, and city workers to keep their votes and he used incorrect data for their contracts.
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 2:41 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Their pensions should be guaranteed, just as the pensions of private employees should be guaranteed because they are legal contracts made with those specific employees. They were offered a compensation to work for said organization, once that work has been done you can't change the contract.
However when it comes to the Prison Guards Union, there many critics of unions have a very definite case. The Prison Guards union is out of control, bankrupting the state while often promoting the unjust incarceration of citizens merely to benefit their own coffers.
In the end, generalizations once again will get us nowhere, but reigning in corrupt organizations like The Prison Guards Union specifically (and Charles Schwab as another example) is productive for all.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 3:58 p.m. (Suggest removal)
"the pensions of private employees should be guaranteed because they are legal contracts made with those specific employees."-kv
Those pensions can be discharged by bankruptcy or if the company goes into default there is no pension.
The government in theory cant bankrupt or we would be at war with china.
whateversb (anonymous profile)
November 17, 2011 at 7:51 p.m. (Suggest removal)
The Teachers Union is equally as heinous. This is not a statement about individual teachers or their particular rates of pay.
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 18, 2011 at 2:03 p.m. (Suggest removal)
We're already in a war with China, an economic-trade war- a trap we walked into with shopping carts.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
November 20, 2011 at 12:01 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Agreed KV. However, I'm not sure who is worse, the Chinese government or our own SEIU. The Chinese government is less corrupt...
italiansurg (anonymous profile)
November 21, 2011 at 5:46 a.m. (Suggest removal)