Tuesday, January 2, 2007

The DISSENT the BLOG year in review, Part I

“Those who cannot remember the past obviously have some sort of dementia.”

--George somebody
January 1

EXACTLY one year ago, we reprinted an interview of Linguist/Philosopher Noam Chomsky concerning the state of ACADEMIC FREEDOM. Right-wingers have promoted the idea that conservatism and conservatives are oppressed at American colleges and universities. Not so, said the good professor. In fact, it's the other way around, he said.

Subsequent events (see below) seemed to illustrate the Noamster's point.

At the time, I decided not to mention an amusing fact: that a certain notorious conservative operator (and Friend-o-Fuentes) signed up for one of my summer philosophy courses.

Was he lookin' for dirt? Did he have a secret tape recorder? Who knows. He stopped comin' after a while.

January 4

It was during the Chancellor’s Spring ’06 “opening” session, you’ll recall, that Chancellor Raghu P. Mathur offered his impersonation of “Carnac the Magnificent”—the old Johnny Carson routine—complete with an Ed McMahan-type 2nd banana.

You know the skit: Ed holds up the sealed envelope; Carnac divines the answer to the question it contains; Carnac opens the envelope and reads the answer; hilarity ensues.

The Raghu Players’ version went like this:
Carnac: “Piggly Wiggly.”

Ed McMahon: “Piggly Wiggly!”

(Carnac now opens the envelope and reads the question:) “Describe Kermit the Frog’s wedding night.”
Har har har! Well, it was a nice try, truly, but the routine was more embarrassing than entertaining. Well, no, it was so embarrassing that it was incredibly entertaining. Let’s hope Raghu revives it for tomorrow morning! More Piggly Wiggly!

January 6

As we reported two days later, during the Faculty Association (union) luncheon that followed the Chancellor’s session, CCA President Carolyn Inmon spoke, alerting everybody to the "hidden tidal wave" of students who failed to receive High School diplomas owing to their performance in the state’s new exit test.

January 17

We unveiled our blog’s theme song: “You Did a Raghu Thing.”

January 19

On the 19th, we offered some updates. Months earlier, Rebel Girl had highlighted the district’s miserable accommodations for part-timers. We showed pictures of their squalid little room in IVC’s A200. But, on this day, we were able to report improvements! We showed pics.

Further, Chunk offered photos of the less-than-honest signs appearing at the IRWD facility across the street from Irvine Valley College, where, contrary to signage, they’re cleaning up toxic waste in the water table below us.

Have you ever noticed that IVC glows in the dark? Further, it is redolent of formaldehyde. It's a modern college, preserving the corpse-like past.

January 25

DtB reported on some stolen art-work at IVC’s Humanities Center. Evidently, the work was too LIBERAL for some right-wingers. It was never recovered. There was no outcry. Nothing. Bupkes.

Nevertheless, as you know, our colleges are hotbeds of mindless left-wing radicalism and liberal cardio-exsuanguinatude.

We reported, too, on the story of the CLUELESS organization at UCLA that offered cash to students who would provide recordings of instructors who were “abusive, one-sided or off-topic.” It was part of a larger effort to expose UCLA’s “radical professors.” You know, they were huntin' witches!

As you are no doubt aware, conservatives (Christians, Druids, et al.) are a stifled and oppressed minority on college campuses, like classicists. It’s like McCarthyism or something.

YEAH BUT you’ll recall that the whole thing blew up in the right-wingers’ faces, like a Republican war. The cash payment angle was a tad too much for people, and, amid talk of unamericanism and worse, righties washed their hands of the little group, joining in the chorus of condemnation and righteous peevitudinal indignation. (Shawn Steele, a Friend-of-Fuentes [FOF], continued to defend them. But of course!)

We’ve got some right-winger profs it Saddleback and IVC, y’know. Some of ‘em aren’t bashful about spouting their views neither. OK, so how often do you hear about leftists and Democrats recording 'em and making a stink about their “one-sided” rhetoric and their “abuse” of, say, Noam Chomsky or The Hillary? That would be: NEVER.


FEBRUARY

February 1

We reported on the board meeting that occurred the night before. Trustee Don Wagner motioned to remove the AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, that refuge of pornographic child-abusers and “liberal busybodies,” from the list of institutional memberships. He really seemed to say that the ALA is in favor of letting kids view porn! Um, evidently, those librarians were desperately trying to stop something called the "Keep Porno from Tykes" Act, if I remember correctly. Plus they supported the "Unamerican Act," the curs.

Amazingly, Don got his way. State-wide ridicule soon ensued, at least within the college circuit.

February 2

By this time, the Accreditors (ACCJC) were breathing down our necks, having already recommended that we deal with trustee micromanagement, a plague of despair, hinky exec hiring procedures, and violations of the Thespian Apiary Act.

On the 2nd of February, we reported that the Accreds had just finally responded to our two colleges’ recent reports, which were supposed to describe progress made re those troubling recommendations.

Alas, according to these new “action letters,” our efforts were judged to be inadequate. Uh-oh. (But wait! Can't you see? It is all part of a conspiracy of South County Anthro instructors who seek to teach polyandy with impunity and Reassigned Time!)

Essentially, the whole ACCRED situation pointed a finger of blame, not at the faculty or staff, but at the chancellor and board. So you’d think the trustees would try to give the Accreds what they wanted. But no. At least some trustees (well, Mr. Tom Evil) soon settled into a pattern of open defiance.

In the meantime, the Accreds were expecting another progress report (in the fall)! It was like a cliff-hanger!

February 7

During the January board meeting, Trustee Nancy Padberg questioned a request for $20,000 to pay for a “junket” by trustees + Chancellor to Orlando, Florida—where trustees were to stay at the lovely and opulent “Peabody & Donald Duck Orlando” (see http://www.peabodyorlando.com/).

The discussion seemed to suggest that trustee John Williams goes to this Peabody place on the district’s dime every chance he gets, even when there are local conventions that offer the same crap (you know, “good trusteeship” and all). Johnny Boy won’t go to those. Nope.

Williams responded by attacking Padberg (something about frequent flier miles!) and suggesting—get this!—that it would be unethical for him not to go to Florida!

You gotta love Johnny. It's like he's from a movie!

February 8

The Reb pointed out that the Saddleback College “Gaucho” icon is, in fact, a sombrero-wearing Mexican, not a Gaucho, which, as literate persons know, is an Argentinean cowboy with a totally different sense of style, plus a different continent.

We dutifully reported on a “BOMB SCARE” at IVC. In fact, the knucklehead IVC Chief of Police mistook a simple camera weight (i.e., sand in a bag) for a bomb. So, naturally, he and Rocky, having reflected carefully on the bag-o-sand, called in the bomb squad, and those guys brought in their little robot, B9, which commenced grabbing and dropping the “bomb” and sputtering aimlessly.

Students sold tacos in the parking lot. I giant pumpkin was rolled onto the lawn. Everyone had a good time.

February 9

On the ninth of February, we reported on the first “Technical Assistance” (T&A) shindig, an attempt to bring together the various governance groups—the board, the faculty, et al.—to make progress on the Accred’s recommendations. On hand was Ian Walton of the State Academic Senate, representing faculty, and Dianne Woodruff of the CCLC, representing Satan.

We offered extended cyber-yappage about this so-called T&A shindig. Fuentes was defiant. When someone suggested that the parties were there to come to some kind of agreement, Fuentes stopped the whole show, saying, “It’s not an evening of agreement!” He was really saying: hey, nobody tells US what to do. He was very nearly out of control!

People took turns offering suggestions. The always hate-filled Fuentes, in full eye-rolling mode, looked to the heavens and suggested that everyone should be “guided by love.” My head popped.

February 14

We had fun noting the utter inanity of the “be nice” and “respect others” IDEAS that Chancellor Mathur brought to the T&A. UnFRICKINbelievable. And yet charming.

February 20

At one point during the T&A, trustee Fuentes tired of hearing about board micromanagement. Stop stop stop! What about the “macromanagement” of others?!, he roared.

As we reported, during the February board meeting, the Academic Senates read a resolution asking the board to keep out of the faculty’s business. They were referring, of course, to the decision to cease institutional membership in the American Library Association.

The classified contract was finally approved.

Fuentes and Wagner objected once again to the Santander, Spain “study abroad” program. Nothing about “abandoning our fighting men and women” this time. Nope, it’s too costly, they said. Plus you’ve got kids sleeping with goats and Gypsies.

Luckily, Tom and Don were outnumbered. So it's back to Spain and the goats!

The board was feeling pressure to deal with the Accreds’ nasty old recommendations: all that stuff about board micromanagement and all.

Pressure? Fuentes got pissed. "We don't need no stinkin' pressure," he seemed to say. So a discussion of the recommendations was put off, not for the last time, despite the urgings of the Academic Senates.

Fuentes blathered about the ALA and its love of pornography. Creepy, man.


MARCH

In March, we reported on that month’s board meeting, which was a doozy! Some highlights:

• ILLIGITIMATE PROCESS. During public comments, IVC Academic Senate Prez Wendy noted that the district planning process (imposed by Chancellor Mathur) was illegitimate, given that it was developed without Academic Senate input. Hence the Academic Senate was forced to pursue a “minimum conditions” complaint with the State Chancellor’s Office.

• BOARD RESOLUTION? On this night, Mathur recommended the board’s adopting a (already-written) resolution re-committing it to addressing (i.e., taking seriously!) the Accreds’ recommendations (namely, ceasing micromanaging, dealing with despair, etc.).

• But the GREAT OBSTRUCTIONIST—Trustee Fuentes—objected to the resolution’s wording, complaining that it made no mention of the really real problem in the district, namely, the “macromanagement” of “others.” (Fuentes embraces some sort of WACKED OUT conspiracy theory according to which faculty control the Accreds plus they—or Wendy—seek to control or to run the district. I wonder who he thinks killed JFK? The ALA?)

• YEAH, BUT Trustee Milchiker expressed puzzlement, for, as she noted, the Accreds made no mention of “macromanagement” by anyone!

• IMAGINARY CRAP. No matter. The board modified the resolution as per Fuentes’ request, adding the imaginary crap about “macromanagement.” Absurdity ensued.

• A MEMORABLE MATHURIAN SPEECH. Chancellor Mathur insisted on making a speech, an obvious effort to seem “leaderly.” In it, he blamed certain “faculty leaders” for bad press and harm done to the district’s reputation. He asserted that the board was getting a bad rap (presumably from the Accreds) about micromanagement; that was really the sin of an earlier board, he said. (I’m not making this sh*t up.) Further, Mathur seemed to blame any trustee micromanagement on others (aka faculty). Those others, he said, should stop “inviting” board micromanagement. The room was bathed in red from the terrible glow of feminist fury.

• TEAT. At this meeting, the board discussed a report, requested earlier by Trustee Padberg, concerning trustee travel expenses. Reading between the lines, its findings were evidently embarrassing especially for trustee John Williams, a notorious beneficiary of the public teat. Padberg, looking slyly towards Williams, requested that the report now be expanded to include the last “five years.” Williams, Fuentes, Wagner, and Lang voted that down. Now why would they do that?

Well, I'm sure i just don't know!

• DUCKS BRIEFLY NOT IN ROW. The American Library Association was back on the agenda. There was an opportunity to reinstate it among institutional memberships. At the crucial moment, however, Padberg was called away on a matter concerning her run for judge. The reinstatement failed, 3/3.

DtB did a search of news articles over the previous three years. As Mathur suggested, the district’s reputation had indeed suffered owing to bad press. Horribly so! But, in truth, virtually all of the bad press was caused by the actions of Trustee Fuentes (his peculiar reasoning re the “study abroad” trip to Spain) and Trustee Wagner (his innovation of excluding the “liberal busybody” American Library Association from the list of institutional memberships).

So, Chancellor Raghu P. Mathur, "faculty leaders" had nothing to do with our shitty reputation, did they? Now, tell the truth!


APRIL

April 2

DtB described the content of the aforementioned report on trustee travel expenses. Among the report's highlights: during 2005, the "fiscally conservative" Mr. John Williams spent over $10,000 on trips, including two to Orlando, FL (likely at the Peabody Orlando—very pricey). Most trustees spent 2k or less. So I figure you owe the public 8 grand for that year alone, Junket Boy.

April 5

Glenn held a pizza party in A200. People even showed up for it. On the walls were signs saying, "Happy retirement Tom Delay!" We sensed the glacial deceleration, then stop, of the great Pendulum.

April 7

Rebel Girl poked her finger through the ceiling of one of the hideous, stinking temporaries. Ants emerged from the hole. We took pics. We made posters.

April 19

Jonathan carped about the inexplicable failure of librarians to stand up and fight the board’s American Library Association action. Where the hell were they?

Chunk had a simple suggestion: henceforth, the library should be known as the LIBARY. But of course!

April 22

Chunk and friends visited a famous local Polish utopian farm experiment plus monkey berry trees. Lots of pics.

April 23

Pressure from the Accreds continued. “Just what are you people doing about your trustee micromanagement? Your despair? Stupidity? Corruption? YOUR EVIL?

So, naturally, there was a 2nd “Technical Assistance” (T&A) meeting. It was MCed by a manifestly pessimistic Ian Walton (for faculty), a plainly discombobulated Dianne Woodruff (for board/Chance), and a palpably chirpy BIG BEANO (aka Babs Beano), representing the Accreds.

In truth, it was a snoozefest and a monument to the human capacity for unwitting RubeGoldbergian architectonic. Know what I mean?

But there was much verbiage. Somebody brought a huge pile of “ideas” unified by a extra large paperclip. Several persons noticed the smell of sulphur.

Trustee Fuentes said he was there to speak for the poor taxpayer. Members of the audience—classified & faculty—immediately responded by saying aloud, in unison “I’m a taxpayer.” Fuentes hissed and spit. The audience smiled hideously.

Babs craned her neck and seemed to say, “Gee, things are great. And I really like this building!”

It was HELL, I tell you.

MAY

May 3

In Santa Ana, over 10,000 gathered in the Plaza of the Flags to celebrate May Day, and Rebel Girl was there!

May 7

DtB reported on the Chancellor Mathur’s visit with the School of Humanities and Languages at IVC. Five faculty showed up, including the Reb, who got in the Chancellor’s face over the unavailability of reassigned time for academic chairs.

May 11

Nancy Padberg runs for Judge and she’s endorsed by an impressive group of prominent Republicans. Could it be, though, that she’s run afoul of the Schroeder “mafia”? All of her fellow trustees have endorsed her—except for one.

May 13

Amid a shower of praise from the Chancellor for its “excellence,” the Lariat alleged steroid use among student athletes at the two colleges. DtB was skeptical of the Lariat’s journalism in this instance.

Clockwork Orange picked up our story (namely, “Premature congratulation”) and, soon, the sh*t hit the fan. Athletics faculty at IVC were hoppin’ mad.

May 17

Rebel Girl reported that “the IVC Lasers are the 2006 California Community College Commission on Athletics Competitive Yoga Champions.” Wink wink.

May 19

DtB scholars have been at work on the SOCCCD “Lexicon Project.” Among the project’s entries:
“To Beno” – as in “The faculty were totally Benoed by ACCJC.”

Shockingly to be abandoned by a presumed guardian or watchdog….

“Going to Orlando” – as in “Is that rat bastard goin’ to Orlando again? Doesn't he have a job or something?”

"Going to Orlando" is junketing or otherwise contriving to receive perks in a manner that is of dubious value to the taxpayer, who pays for it.
Also, the Academic Senate presidents met with a highly peeved Chancellor regarding his new planning process. Title 5 and district bylaws say that the faculty (faculty senates) should be relied upon primarily in developing planning process(es). Nevertheless, Raghu unilaterally developed his own process and then showed it to everybody like it was a done deal. Then faculty told leadership that, if Mathur doesn’t back off, they’ll want to pursue a “minimum conditions complaint” with the State Chancellor’s Office.

Mathur did not back off. The senates pressed the point. Mathur was angry.

May 20

We observed the IVC Commencement Ceremony. Fuentes prayed, inspiring laughter when he thanked the Lord for “the taxpayers.” A gal there explained that she once danced with the Ziegfeld Follies. The fish taco guy spoke. There was a student speaker; he seemed utterly unprepared, or worse. (The Reb was pretty peeved about that.)

“The earth is flat,” said the Chancellor.

May 22

The Lariat retracted its earlier published claim that coaches knew about steroid use among student athletes. The paper had been “misled” by “sources,” and it erred by not seeking the coaches’ side of the story, it said.

Yet another Fuentes crony—Chriss Street, who is running for Treasurer—seemed to be in ethical trouble. Yet another one? What difference does it make? (Meanwhile, rumors flew that Dave Lang coveted the Treasurer position and was hoodwinked into thinking that Fuentes and his pals would come through for him.)

May 23

Trustee Tom Fuentes was appointed to the Elections Assistance Commission (EAC) advisory board (Dennis Hastert had nominated him). The EAC was created after the scandalous 2000 national election to assist in insuring smooth and clean elections. It has seemed more interested in promoting electronic voting.

At the May board meeting, IVC Academic Senate Prez Wendy G attempted to explain the faculty’s issue with the Chancellor’s district planning process. Dave Lang seems incapable of understanding the point.

May 30

DtB researched trustee Don Wagner’s rhetoric. Among the highlights: Don’s fulminations re the “liberal agenda,” the laws that protect “cross-dressers” or that “harass the Boy Scouts.” Then there’s Don’s desire to “greatly expand the right of law abiding citizens to carry weapons” and Don’s advocacy of spanking: “Corporal punishment in the lower grades works,” he once said.

JUNE

June 1

We reported on a NY Times story about the Feds’ abuse of the Patriot Act: “Four Librarians Finally Break Silence in Records Case.” During his ALA action, Trustee Wagner had suggested that the Patriot Act has proved unproblematic. The ALA had predicted government abuse.

June 7

Thanks to the hard-ball tactics and connivery of Michael Schroeder, the IVC Foundation’s “Hometown Hero,” County Sheriff Mike Carona, squeaked out an election victory against challenger Bill Hunt. The latter, a Republican, was immediately sidelined and ultimately demoted within the Sheriff’s Department. The moral: don’t screw with the “Republican mafia.”

Nancy Padberg comes in third for Judge (but not by much).

June 23

At the board meeting, trustees considered the proposed district “mission statement”:
Our mission is to facilitate opportunities for learning, cultural enrichment and social experiences to foster student success and contribute to a diverse community.
Trustee Tom Fuentes didn’t like the way the word “diversity” was used. Efforts to appease him failed. The matter was tabled.

During a grim discussion of the budget, VC Gary Poertner noted IVC’s “budget hole of $1.5 million.” Fuentes and others pressed for return to the rule that “basic aid” money not be used for ongoing expenses, but Poertner seemed to argue for a more gradual return to that principle.

June 27

The state budget was passed by lawmakers and would likely be signed by the governor. Among its provisions: a cut in community college fees from $26 per credit to $20 per credit.

New year, new semester

This morning, Sunny was disgusted with the ubiquity & eternality of the death of Our Ford

▲ YEAR IN REVIEW. Coming soon: Dissent the Blog’s (DtB) “year in review”

▲ TEXTBOOK RENTAL PROGRAM? As DtB readers know, SOCCCD trustees are aware of the high cost of textbooks. Some trustees (Tom Fuentes, Don Wagner) have pressured our bookstores and student government to try to lower costs. Well, that's one approach.

Another approach to the problem of high textbook cost, evidently, is a “textbook rental program.” Well, according to the North Coast Times, Palomar College faculty have rejected the rental program approach. They seem to have good reasons. Not sure. Check it out.

▲ BANISHED WORDS. For a laugh, take a look at Lake Superior State University’s annual list of "banished words.". Among the banished: “we’re pregnant,” “undocumented alien,” and “Gitmo.”

THOSE WONDERFUL PEOPLE OUT THERE IN THE DARK! I’ve got my own list. It’s a list of the peculiar ways in which Trustee Tom Fuentes refers to the dear taxpayers. Every time he talks about ‘em, you’re left with the impression that, in Fuentes’ world, those “good people” (imagine his deliberate and melodramatic articulation of each consonant, his odd verbal love-making) are a community of pious innocents in white. They've got donkeys.

And us? Well, we’re just Fred C. Dobbs. We're a bunch of greedy rat bastards.
I think I'll go to sleep and dream about piles of gold getting bigger and bigger and bigger.

--From The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
▲ Don’t know about you, but I didn’t get an INVITE to Governor Schwarzenegger’s inaugural ball. But the SPECIAL INTERESTS sure did. Check out today’s Wall Street Journal. According to WSJ,
Chevron Corp. maxed out on its permissible yearly political contributions to California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's re-election campaign…early in 2006. But that didn't stop the big oil company from chipping in $50,000 to be a "Gold Sponsor" of the governor's inaugural celebration. The contribution, one of the five largest that the inaugural committee received, gives Chevron officials access to the Republican governor at two events for sponsors and an invitation-only black-tie ball.
▲ MEAT MACHINES. It doesn’t often happen that what I discuss in my classes and what’s in the New York Times are the same thing! Check out “Free Will: Now You Have It, Now You Don’t” in this morning’s edition. The “free will” debate, if it ever goes mainstream, will undoubtedly become a part of the “culture wars.” You know, the wars that trustees Fuentes and Wagner seem to be waging. An excerpt:
“Is it an illusion? That’s the question,” said Michael Silberstein, a science philosopher at Elizabethtown College in Maryland. Another question, he added, is whether talking about this in public will fan the culture wars. “If people freak at evolution, etc.,” he wrote in an e-mail message, “how much more will they freak if scientists and philosophers tell them they are nothing more than sophisticated meat machines, and is that conclusion now clearly warranted or is it premature?”
One of Sierra's recent pots

Sunday, December 31, 2006

Sometimes, you get to use common sense

Novel or terrible events, when they’re BIG and loaded with implications, are hard to get one’s mind around. One tends to ignore them, forget them. —You know, like the fact that our Iraq adventure has probably cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians.

This morning, I read an article in the New York Times about an enormous ice shelf off the northern coast of Canada’s Ellesmere Island. The shelf existed for 3,000 years. (Arctic Ice Shelf Broke Off Canadian Island.)

Now, we are told, it broke off and floated out to sea.

That can’t be good.

I know: things get complicated. But, sometimes, even when things are complex, you get to use common sense. These ice shelves are much thicker and older than the thin stuff floating at the North Pole. I mean, there's ice, and then there's ice.

And this enormous hunk of ice hung around for 3,000 years. And now it’s gone. Melted.

Not good.

Saturday, December 30, 2006

One big moron

BLESSED ARE THE LITTLE MORONS

Gosh, when I was a kid, we did some stupid things, but THIS YOUNGER GENERATION TODAY, boy, they're something else.

Evidently, there is a stunt, called “Ghost riding the whip,” in which “a driver gets out of his car and dances around and on top of the slowly moving vehicle to a thumping hip-hop beat….” The stunt has “gotten at least two people killed, led to numerous injuries and alarmed police on the West Coast and beyond.” So says an article on the AP wire: "Ghost riding the whip".

Evidently, the fad has something to do with a “a West Coast strain of hip-hop music called 'hyphy'….”

It’s news to me.

You can actually watch some of this nonsense on YouTube: Ghost riding goes wrong.

Does everybody already know about this? Am I the last person on earth to learn about it? I woke up this morning, thinking, “I’m SO out of it. Take me out of my misery!” I looked at my cat. She stared at me.

You’d tell me, wouldn’t you?

OH YEAH? THE WHOLE COUNTRY IS ONE BIG MORON

Learn about educational “Sputnik moments” in an article in yesterday’s Inside Higher Ed. A Sputnik moment is when a BIG NEWS STORY OR EVENT spurs an effort to overcome a deficit in public education, such as the Soviet Sputnik launch and our panic over scientific ignoramitude back in the 50s.

The IHE article discusses the perception that Foreign Language instruction in the U.S. has been subject to a series of Sputnik moments, like random jolts of thought, each one fading faster than the last.

If we weren’t a nation of morons, we’d maintain a prominent discussion about just what our schools and colleges should be teaching. We’d understand the importance of pursuing a knowledge of “foreign” languages and cultures. We wouldn't have to be busted upside the head to think about it.

But, no. A bunch of terrorists have to get lucky and kill 3,000 people in one fell swoop. Then somebody says, “Hey, does anybody around here know Arabic?”

We look around. Nobody.

Someone shouts: "My God, man! Do something!"

(While we're on the subject: how long will it be before it is acceptable to discuss WHY all these people hate us so much? History makes that pretty clear, I think. You might have to go to college for that.

But no. Trying to understand the motives of the "enemy"--something that those horrible academics might try to do--is gay or French or unAmerican.)

WHY AREN'T THEY MORE GRATEFUL?
A team of American and Iraqi epidemiologists estimates that 655,000 more people have died in Iraq since coalition forces arrived in March 2003 than would have died if the invasion had not occurred...Both this and [an] earlier study [also finding a high death toll] are the only ones to estimate mortality in Iraq using scientific methods. The technique, called "cluster sampling," is used to estimate mortality in famines and after natural disasters…A Defense Department spokesman did not comment directly on the estimate. —Washington Post 10/10/06
WILL THE TUITION CUT SAVE OUR BACON?

As you know, recently, the Governor signed into law a price break for community college students. Starting Monday, students will pay only $20 per unit, down from $26.

For what it’s worth, there are some early indications that the tuition decrease will have the desired effect on enrollments, which have trended downward statewide. See Tuition cut 23 percent (this article concerns San Diego County in particular).

TEACHERS CAN’T SPEAK AT BOARD MEETINGS?

Here’s a disconcerting story in this morning’s Ventura County Star: Brown Act challenge goes to state.

The question is: do public employees (in this case, an instructor with the Oxnard Union High School District [OUHSD] in Ventura County) have the right “to attend [board] meetings and address local school boards that employ them”?
[Thomas] Ito, who has taught biology at Oxnard High School since August, said he went to [the March 8 OUHSD board] meeting to address the board about his reassignment. However, according to a statement signed by Ito in May, he was approached by Superintendent Jody Dunlap as he was filling out a yellow speaker card at the back of the meeting room. Dunlap told him he couldn't address the board and to leave the building, according to his statement, and he left.
Who the !@*# does this Dunlap person think she is?

Well, to make a long story short, the Ventura County DA has written to the Attorney General for clarification (i.e., for a legal opinion).

So they're waiting to hear from the AG, who no doubt will make things crystal clear. While he’s at it, maybe he can explain how it is that a town gets a name like “Oxnard.” I mean, why not “Pigb*lls” or "Horsea**"?

Friday, December 29, 2006

A year ago in the SOCCCD


MY GOD! THERE MIGHT BE—CRONYISM!

On Dec. 19, 2005 (Cronyism & Mirthulence), we reported on the December meeting of the SOCCCD Board of Trustees, in which “Trustee Tom Fuentes, former Big Cheese of the OC Republican Party, expressed a concern that the faculty hiring process up for approval that night might permit faculty ‘cronyism.’”

HA! This, of course, was a stunning instance of the pot calling the kettle black. Naturally, in DtB, we spelled that out in gory detail!

FUENTES’ BUGABOO.

That night (Peevitude in Detail (12/17)) was also the night in which Tom Fuentes expressed his objections to the new and improved faculty hiring policy (up for approval), which had been in development for many months. In Tom’s view, the new policy gave too much power to faculty, and especially to “the union,” Fuentes’ standard bugaboo. (See also Doubting Thomas (12/13).)

According to the new (and old) policy, the union, of course, has no representatives on hiring committees. But, noted Fuentes, the Academic Senates do have representatives. And those reps are likely members of the union.

Oh. The new policy passed.

The policy change arose from an illegal action (so said the court), by Chancellor Mathur, with the Board Majority’s support, to unilaterally impose a new policy on faculty. The faculty’s victory in this case will have far-reaching ramifications in California community colleges with regard to faculty's role in college governance.

In other words, this gang of tough, leather-faced hombres managed to shoot themselves in the foot, letting varmints vamoose into the Hole-in-the-Wall with all the dang horses. Or something.

CLASSIFIED CONTRACT.

At the same meeting, Classified leader MARY WILLIAMS addressed the board, urging its representatives to come to settlement regarding the contract. The room was pretty tense. Since that itme, of course, a settlement has been reached.


THE YEAR OF BOB "DON'T GET CAUGHT" KING
"[G]etting caught hiring someone 'under the table' is easier than you think...."! --From the highly-principled website, Legally Nanny
At the board meeting a year ago, Fuentes announced the hire of BOB KING as Vice Chancellor of Human Resources. King is a lawyer (indeed, years ago, he was on the district's team during my 1st Amendment lawsuit), and this inspired speculation about a hidden agenda. (Gosh, maybe Mathur was just contemplating hiring a nanny? Check out Bob's Legally Nanny. You won't regret it.)

Sure enough, after a few months, Mathur attempted to redefine King's duties to broaden them and to make him essentially the house attorney, but the board didn't support that.

It was King who was left holding the bag when Mathur attempted to sneak through his COLA/raise. There may be signs that King has figured out what others have figured out about his boss. Watch Bob's facial expressions change over time.

Or not.

BOARD LEADERSHIP ROLLOVER.

The December board meeting includes the trustees’ yearly “organizational” meeting. A year ago, trustee BILL JAY nominated the then-existing board leadership--Lang, Padberg, Fuentes--for a repeat performance, and that was approved unanimously.

That’s not what happened a year later, however. This month, Padberg was bumped in favor of Wagner.

By now, it is clear that we have a new BOARD MAJORITY, namely, Lang, Williams, Wagner, & Fuentes. Ironically (considering history), it is Nancy Padberg, among the BOARD MINORITY, who is the target of the most--and the most ugly--BM snipery.

THE “BENEDICT ARNOLD 'THANK YOU'” PLAQUE.

On that night, Chancellor Mathur gave board president Lang a handsome plaque for recognizing his--i.e., Mathur’s--excellence: “…I would like to recognize our board president…. President Lang, … You have been consistently fair and respectful of all people, including me ... You are always willing to recognize excellence.”

Notoriously, Lang’s was the swing vote in the board action, of June ’05, to renew Mathur’s contract. For many years, Lang and Milchiker had been Mathur’s chief detractors. Lang’s surprise switcheroo is one of the great SOCCCD mysteries. Why'd he do it? Why did he take Mathur's side when all of his supporters urged him in the strongest terms not to?

As near as anyone can tell, Lang is still behind his man Mathur. The district is still in the toilet, and we can thank Dave Lang, "changer of men."


PADBERG/WILLIAMS SHOOTOUT.

This was the night of one the noisier Nancy Padberg/John Williams shootouts. This particular gun battle concerned removal of items from the “consent calendar.” Leaving items on the consent calendar means, of course, that they are approved without discussion. That night, Padberg acted to remove a large number of items from the CC in order to raise issues about them, inspiring a revolt on the part of Williams, Wagner, and Lang, who seemed to think her issues could be dealt with informally, before the meeting, in phone conversations with the Chancellor. You know, behind closed doors. (The CC/"Padberg doesn't do her homework" stuff came up again last month. See Board report.)

Tension often erupts between Williams and Padberg, of course. By this meeting, Williams had fired Padberg at the county Public Administrator office. Why?

CREATIONISTS LOSE, GET SPANKED.

Let's not forget that, exactly one year ago (Just what I wanted (12/23)), Creationists (anti-Evolutionists) suffered a huge legal defeat in the crucial “Dover” case, in which parents with children in the Dover Area School District (in Pennsylvania) fought inclusion of “intelligent design” in science instruction. The inclusion occurred on advice from lawyers provided by the Discovery Institute.

(Aside: the Discovery Institute has received much of its funding from OC’s Howard Ahmanson Jr., who once said his goal is "the total integration of biblical law into our lives." Ahmanson is a close friend of Tom Fuentes.)

The judge presiding over the case was Judge John E. Jones III, a conservative Republican appointed by George W. Bush. Jones concluded that it is “unconstitutional” to teach ID as an alternative to evolution in the public schools. Jones went further. He decided that the parents who brought the suit were entitled to damages!

It was a bad day for the irrationalists and a good day for truth, justice, and the American Way.
"It is ironic that these individuals, who so proudly touted their religious convictions in public would time and again lie to cover their tracks and disguise the real purpose behind the ID Policy." --From the Jones opinion in Kitzmiller v. Dover school Board.

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Young and screwed

“If [Eugene] doesn't get the operation, he's probably going to lose his joint to degenerative diseases in the next few years. We really care about him. We really want him to get better.” --JC
ON SATURDAY, I mentioned the plight of IVC semi-denizen Eugene Ipavec, who, I said, recently suffered a terrible accident, leaving him flat and broken and flat broke (Let’s come to the aid of a friend).

On Tuesday, Jorge Barrientos profiled our desolate friend for the OC Register: Irvine Valley College teachers, students help friend in need. Here are some excerpts from Jorge's article:
...Lisa Alvarez, a professor and chair of the English department at Irvine Valley, her colleagues and college friends are trying to get Eugene Ipavec, 26, on his feet after he broke a leg in a scooter accident that has left him disabled and "in a funk," with no medical insurance, no money and no will to write…Ipavec suffered a vertical fracture on his tibia after a scooter accident Dec. 7. He was taken to Tustin Hospital and Medical Center, where a splint was placed on the leg….

Ipavec came to Tustin from Slovenia when he was 12. He joined [Lisa's] creative writing workshop at Irvine Valley about four years ago where he wowed friends and teachers with his writing about his past home, politics and life as an immigrant.


…[Since then,] He has been published in the Santa Monica Review, the longest-running literary arts magazine in Southern California, and he has had opinion pieces published in the Orange County Register.

…"I haven't done much writing lately," he said. "I haven't been in the right frame of mind. This whole disaster has somewhat changed my perspective." [Note: this is an instance of absurdist understatement on E's part.]

Since the accident, [SMR editor Andrew] Tonkovich, Alvarez and friends have been transporting Ipavec to and from medical centers, searching for ways to get him medical insurance and care.

To make matters worse, Ipavec's father, Gene, 75, fell off the front porch and injured his leg and also needs medical help [both are confined to wheelchairs]. Gene is retired and gets a small government pension – not enough to pay hospital and ambulance bills. The two live alone in a mobile home in Tustin.

…Alvarez and friends have set up a bank account to collect donations for Ipavec, and his best friend, Jonathan Cohen, made a Web site and blog where people can donate and get information on Ipavec.

Eugene Ipavec Medical Fund
Orange County Teachers Federal Credit Union
P.O. Box 11547
Santa Ana, 92711-1547
Account Number: 15674902

See also:

● www.jkcohen.com/eugene --and

● www.jkcohen.com/wordpress
Yesterday, Jonathan wrote me, offering a classic Jonathanism:
Dear [Chunk]:

It’s worth noting … that Governor Schwarzenegger, after breaking his leg on a ski junket to Idaho, received surgery within three days. By comparison, Eugene will not get surgery for several months.

It’s good to be king, with the best health insurance state money can buy; it sucks to be E.
Yup.

Well, Eugene will get his surgery in "several months"--IF we collect enough dough!

And, who knows? Maybe Eugene the scribe will come through this thing, not only sans funk, but par excellence!

Dolt?


If you haven’t read Bob Woodward’s Washington Post piece on Gerald Ford, you really should check it out:
Ford Disagreed With Bush About Invading Iraq
Remember those “Whip inflation now” (WIN) buttons? The gaff concerning Soviet domination of Eastern Europe? I thought Ford was a dope.

Dope? Well, maybe not so much. Read Woodward's account of his interview with Ford in July, 2004.

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...