Wednesday, March 16, 2011

John and Ken attack community colleges

John and Ken, opining. 
March 16, 2011: The website for the Community College League of California (CCLC) features comments by well-known President/CEO Scott Lay. Evidently, the feature is called “A Defining Moment.”
     In today’s DM, Lay describes the latest rant of notoriously rabble-rousing louts “John and Ken” of KFI radio:
     Community colleges are a "scam" serving "parasites."
     That's what California's most listened-to radio hosts said during their drive time show last night. Oh, and they called our most financially challenged students—single moms transitioning from welfare to work—“parasites."
     I wish we could ignore John and Ken's drivel, but as they work to drive their ratings, they are also driving the budget conversation in Sacramento.
     Yesterday, they want on a warpath against our students and the community colleges generally (beginning at 19 minutes [here’s the link]). They started by blasting our students who rallied from Fullerton College on Monday. In talking about the students, they said:
     "The community colleges are the least useful in society . . . Community colleges are the first thing you'd cut. You're not going to get much of a job out of it."
     "The community college thing is a scam. Doesn't get you anywhere."

     Wow, that would have … been enough to get me riled up, but then they went on about me personally (beginning at 27 minutes)….
     They introduced me as a graduate of "Orange Coast College," sarcastically saying that it means that I must be a "really smart guy." (They left off UC Davis and UC Davis School of Law, which yesterday became a Top 25 law school in the US News rankings!)
     But, I could care less about what John and Ken say about me, the League or Orange Coast College. [They] went on to describe our CalWORKs students, single moms that are in the most rigorous welfare-to-work program in our state's history, as "parasites.". . .
     They generally hold their "Tax Revolt" hour at 5 pm, and you can count on them trashing public employees, students and the generally less fortunate Californians in their campaign to grow listenership. I urge you to e-mail them at johnandkenshow@kfi640.com before today's show or call 1-800-520-1534.
     After weighing in, turn your radio to NPR….

Fun with Orange County images

A 1926 "OC" poster, courtesy of the Orange County Archives. Click on it to enlarge it.
It is, of course, impossible to live in this county without thinking about its, um, image. I'm not sure precisely what Orange Countians had in mind with the phrase "prolific wonderland." Lotsa fruit maybe. Look closely and you'll find the hills sprouting oil derricks, and not just palm trees and orange trees!)
OK, I added a little something in the middle of the image for the sake of, uh, retroactive verity. Check it out.
UCI c. 1964. Few realize that, in the early days of the Irvine campus, the "Young Republicans" dominated the social scene and even managed to discourage "hippyism" and "bell-bottom" trousers for a time. That all went to crap when, in 1968, Eldridge Cleaver offered a fiery speech, encouraging UCI Anteaters to "get loaded" and to "chill the f*** out."
Swastika truck bling. Recently, I posted this pic (also courtesy of the Orange County Archives) of downtown of the benighted town of Yorba Linda, circa 1920.  (Yorba Linda was the scene of those anti-Muslim protests a month ago.) Since the photo has an unusually high resolution, I decided to blow it up to read the signage, etc. That yielded a surprise. Below is a detail of the truck and building at left--and then a further blowup of the truck.

See what I mean? Swastikas! (This is for real; it's no Photoshop trick.) The photo was likely taken during the early days of the National Socialist Party, but that scene was thousands of miles away, and otherwise obscure. If not Naziism, what does the symbol mean, if anything?

The swastika is an ancient symbol that was adopted by many cultures long before the Rosenberg/Hitler crowd got hold of it in 1920. At around the turn of the century, it was widely used as a "good luck" charm. That seems to be its meaning in this 1912 photo of an aviatrix.
Don't know what that Yorba Linda swastika is all about. Any ideas?

Blast from the Past: Rebel Girl Contemplates the Inherent Risks of Nuclear Energy

Rebel Girl is on the road, hiking the canyons of New Mexico and eating her weight in green chile and sopapillas. It's been pretty damn idyllic for her and the little family except for the moment at the end of every long desert day when they return to their small hotel room and tune into the latest grim update from Japan.

It reminded her of the short essay she'd written over a decade ago. The essay was inspired by the accidental activation of the official warning from the San Onofre plant (Stand by for evacuation information) — instead of the reassuring warning: "this is just a test."

In the original draft, there was extended reference to a recent nuclear accident at Japan's Tokaimura plant. Rebel Girl had been disturbed to hear reports of parents being directed to wipe the rain off their children's faces and arms.

The editor at the Times excised the references to Japan, claiming that readers just wanted to read about local issues. She recalls him saying quite explicitly, "Orange County doesn't care about Japan."

She argued that O.C. readers needed to care about Japan and that nuclear energy wasn't just one country's problem — its very nature made it everyone's concern.

She lost. What ran was a pleasant enough meditation about nuclear energy amidst bird watching on the beach.

from the Los Angeles Times:
ORANGE COUNTY VOICES:

Nuclear power: Stark contrasts between nature's beauty and human hubris spoil the view at San Onofre ~ October 10, 1999

It was an accident. That's what south Orange County cable viewers who called about a civil emergency announcement on Sept. 29 were told. Southern California Edison was conducting its annual test of San Onofre warning sirens, but this year activated the wrong message. It was not an accident, it was an accident.

In the late 1970s, nuclear power politicized me, a suburban high school student. The Three Mile Island accident occurred two days before my 18th birthday. A friend, a foreign exchange student from West Germany, invited me to my first anti-nuke demonstration.

Scared, I didn't go. Later, I got scared of what would happen if I didn't get involved. So, years before I moved to Orange County, I joined protesters at the gates of San Onofre. My brother-in-law worked there. He'd kid me. "What do you want to do," he'd say, "put me out of work?"

Later, after I moved here, I accompanied my husband and a friend to Trestles, the surfing spot. They surfed while I stalked a great blue heron picking its way along the shore. My binoculars forced me to focus on the bird's lean silhouette. Finally, when the heron ascended, folding its neck and head together, spreading its broad wings, I followed its flight, pointing my sights inland. The twin gray domes of San Onofre filled the binoculars.

I was genuinely startled to find where I'd wandered. I'd never seen it from this perspective, nestled between bluffs, snug against the beach, sipping the ocean waters. I snapped a photo: heron, nuke, both reflected in the glossy mirror of sea. I turned and left, unsettled at where my walk had led me....
To read the piece in its entirety, click here.

In today's New York Times, novelist and Sendai local Kazumi Saeki recounts his earthquake experience and reflects on the ongoing nuclear crisis in his essay, "In Japan, No Time Yet for Grief" -

excerpt:
Reports of a catastrophe at the nuclear power plant in neighboring Fukushima Prefecture, involving hydrogen explosions and radiation leaks, have come in. Now an invisible pollution is beginning to spread. People have acquired a desire for technology that surpasses human comprehension. Yet the bill that has come due for that desire is all too dear.

Even as I write, strong aftershocks continue. As he left, Ben spoke of a “calm chaos.” It is true that faced with this calamity, the people of Sendai have maintained a sense of calm. This is perhaps due less to the emotional restraint that is particular to the people of the northern countryside, and more to the hollowing out of their emotions. In the vortex of an unimaginable disaster, they have not yet had the time to feel grief, sadness and anger.
To read the piece in its entirety, click here.

*

City Council distances itself from Pauly’s stunning anti-Muslim remarks

"Enemies of America," said Polly
Villa Park City Council Issues Statement on Muslim Charity Protest (Voice of OC)

     Villa Park City Council released a statement Tuesday saying that council members who speak in public do not automatically represent the city, a declaration meant to address Councilwoman Deborah Pauly's controversial remarks made in February at protest of a Muslim charity event in Yorba Linda. ¶ Pauly made several vitriolic statements about the Muslims attending the event. Among other things, she said "these who are assembling are enemies of America." She also said she knew "quite a few marines who would be very happy to send these terrorists to an early meeting in paradise."….

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...