Monthly Archives: February 2010

So Long, Carol –It’s Been A Blast!

Carol Fondiller Berman

June 22, 1936 – Jan. 9, 2010

A Community Celebration
of the life of
Carol Fondiller Berman who
dedicated herself and her writings
to the preservation
and betterment of Venice

Saturday, February 13
at Beyond Baroque
681 Venice Blvd.

1pm – Reception
2-4pm – Program

All Beachhead Readers are invited. For more information: Beachhead@freevenice.org
or 310-306-7372/399-8685

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be sent  to Carol’s favorite newspaper, the Free Venice Beachhead, Venice 90294

Leave a Comment

Filed under Beachhead, Carol Fondiller, Obituary, Writers

Interview with Thomas Paine Haag Duggan

By Greta Cobar

Carol Fondiller used to baby-sit Thomas Duggan, formerly known as Thomas Haag, Anna’s son. Yes, Anna Haag, who with John Haag operated the Venice West Cafe at 7 Dudley from 1962-66. John, Anna and Carol were also on the collective of the first Beachhead in 1968. One person who knew all of them from the beginning was Thomas.

Thomas, tell me about Carol. I had just talked to her on the phone about a month ago. I told her that I had just opened a bike shop, and she was proud. She said that she remembers how much fun she had with her little red Schwinn. I really wanted to interview her on camera, to just let the camera roll while we talked. I regret not getting around to that.

I have lots of fun memories of Carol. She was part of the group that my mom always hanged with. It was her, my father Bob Duggan, Jay the Bubbleman, Tomito, Lil’ Joe and Gloria Scott. I remember Carol baby-sitting me. I remember that I could always go to her house, any day, any time. I was around 5 years old, I remember them sitting around smoking pot. They always gave me the roach, and I would eat it. When they were through with the joint, they always said: “save the roach for Thomas.”

My mom and Carol used to hang out on the boardwalk all the time. As a matter of fact, my mom was one of the first, if not the first, vendor on the boardwalk. She made beautiful jewelry.

Tell me about your childhood. I grew up as Thomas Haag, but when I was 17 I had my son Jasen, and it was at that time that my mom told me that Bob Duggan was my father. I figure John must have cheated on her or something, and they were still married, but separated, and she got pregnant. I then changed my name to Thomas Duggan. But both John and Bob were a big part of my childhood, they both took me camping and stuff. One time John ran out of money during a camping trip, and we had to go through some really weird shit. Anyways, I have a sister, Duanna, who is 3 years younger than me. She lives in Colorado with her child. She is the one child that Anna and John Haag had together.

How was growing up in Venice? I remember going to Westminster Elementary School, and all doors had to be locked when Venice High students got out. They would come to get us. But I stayed out of trouble by staying out of certain places at certain times. I even graduated from Venice High.

My mom used to take us to Umbria, Italy, where she was from, every summer. We would leave a few days after school was over and did not come back till a few days before school started again. It was cool because I got to experience another culture, but I always felt like I was missing out on what was going on in Venice during that time. It was funny how different my life here was compared to my cousins’ in Italy. Over there they would get in trouble for not having their shirts tucked in, while over here I was really big into biking, skating, baseball, but also drugs and alcohol. I did so many drugs that I was through with all of that by 16. Same thing with alcohol, by 20 I had had enough. One time, I was 11, and our plane for Italy was supposed to leave at like 3 pm or something, but by noon I was so drunk that my mom got really pissed. God, she was so pissed! It was probably because I couldn’t help her carry anything. We used to have duffle bags full of stuff to take to Italy for presents.

But one common ground that I found with my Italian cousins was soccer. That’s what we played. And I also got to know another culture. My grandfather would send me to the store to buy him alcohol. And I learned to speak fluent Italian. While in Italy, I spoke Italian to my mother. But over here we always spoke English.

And what have you done since? I left Venice for 13 years, from 1987 to 2000, to live with my dad Bob Duggan in Aspen, Colorado. I graduated from the security school that my father has going on there, worked for him, taught shooting. Really did not like the weather, just too much snow.

Just this past April, Thomas opened a bike shop in the heart of Venice, just three blocks north of the post office on Main St. and San Juan. It’s a cool little place, and you should all check it out. He sells all kinds of old Schwinns that I almost drooled over, but also Backward Circle Bikes, those colorful skinny bikes that people ballet on at a stop light. What’s up with these bikes, Thomas? Well, I sell more of these than anybody else. My friend who started the company told me today “you’re in the lead.” When they bring these bikes in from Taiwan, they have to have a break on them and a chain guard, for security purposes. But then people take the chain guard and the break off, and they stop them by skidding the back wheel with a foot. I recently learned how to do that, but I still like beach cruisers best.

We rode bikes together to Carol’s memorial. He rode a wheelie most of the way.

I felt honored to be part of Carol’s memorial and to be able to continue her legacy with the Beachhead.


Leave a Comment

Filed under Bicycles, Interviews, Venice

Letters

  • Carol Fondiller – Ingrid Mueller
  • Carol Fondiller – Cher Oakes
  • Carol Evelyn Fondiller Berman – Mary Jane
  • Silent Running – Bonnie Wolfe
  • Weed Blowers – Simone White
  • Plain English – DeDe Audet
  • Supports the Beachhead – Marcy Winograd

————-

Carol Fondiller

It’s truly sad to lose Carol’s mighty voice.
When ‘checking out’ her renovated boardwalk building a couple of months ago, I hoped to ‘run into’ her, but the new young manager wouldn’t reveal her apartment location.
We have taken buses or rode to or met at L.A. City Council, it’s Planning Committee, the Housing Dept. and Coalition for Economic Survival meetings over the past 20 years, always knowing that our ‘bodies’ alone might count.
And her opinions were certainly heard when it came to our now 20-year-old Lincoln Place Garden Apartment saga.
We are grateful, indeed.
Ingrid Mueller, Lincoln Place

———–

Dear Beachhead,

Carol Fondiller’s sense of loyalty and deep natured devotion was evident in her humor & extreme talent of naming. I love her! And don’t worry; she can fly.

Cher Oakes

————

Carol Evelyn Fondiller Berman

Merci beaucoup! Femme extordinaire! For being part of our sea shore lives here… essential activist, paramount orator, literary legend, core of community, voluptuous romantic, and infinite wit!

You observe us each and all, from your ascension on the eve and night of 9th January 2010. Your ascent: not of surprise. The lament of your loss in our midst: staggering.

The slave labors for your earthly life include mine, bien sur, among your potpourris of friends as family. Therefore, my poem for your celebration – memorial gathering, still cocoons, unable for publication in the Free Venice Beachhead for 13th February. This emergency note, alone, must suffice till March.

We were co-founders of the volunteer newspaper. Your writings put forth in it, continuously. Even labored its first 25 years: 1968-1993 (public note: no issues from early 1993 till June 2002.) I attempted to work with the restart of it, for 5 months, in 2002, per their pleas.

Je t’aime toujours!      Mary Jane

Silent Running

Dear Beachhead,

I personally have walked up and down Venice Blvd talking to 103 residents, asking how often they see police cars patroling Venice Blvd. late at night. Seventy-Eight people said yes, every night, late. Sixty-one added they see them racing, sometimes without any lights on. Forty-three said they hear their engines racing, loud acceleration. Twenty-eight added the police use Venice Blvd as a drag strip, but without any lights. Eighteen asked me why they would drive so fast but not have any lights on. Thirty-one expressed concern for people’s safety with their excessive speeds along the streets. And finally, 61 would agree to signing a sworn statement if one should come about.

Then there are the cell phone pictures which clearly show the patrol car with no lights on before any other patrol cars arrived. Then their lights are on, responding patrol cars can clearly be seen in these pictures. It makes no difference in what sequence these pictures are displayed, pretty darn easy to arrange them in the proper order…..

Then they call it a crime scene but refuse to take anyone’s statements rather ordering them away from the scene and begin making arrests of anyone caught without a green card! Then there’s the fire department claiming they responded to the WRONG Glyndon Ave, claiming they arrived at a another “Glendon” location thus taking 15 minutes to arrive on the emergence call. If they know – which they certainly should – there are two streets by the same name (NOT the same spelling why on God’s Earth would they not confirm the correct location BEFORE they roll? Smells like a fish tank here to me boys. They’ve changed their story so many times they probably don’t even know what the truth is anymore! .

The evidence is mounting and it’s only a matter of time before the the TRUTH is heard. Too many witnesses to pull this one off boys!

Bonnie Wolfe

Dear Beachhead, It’s truly sad to lose Carol’s mighty voice. When ‘checking out’ her renovated boardwalk building a couple of months ago, I hoped to run into her, but the new young manager wouldn’t reveal her apartment location.  We have taken buses or rode to or met at L.A. City Council and PLUM and Housing Dept. and CES meetings over the past 20 years, always knowing that our ‘bodies’ alone might count. And her opinions were certainly heard when it came to our now 20-year-old Lincoln Place Garden Apartment saga. We are grateful, indeed. Ingrid Mueller at Lincoln Place

I personally have walked up and down Venice Blvd talking to over 100 residents, (103) asking how often they see police cars patroling Venice Blvd late at night. Seventy-Eight people said yes, every night, late. 61 added they see them racing, sometimes without any lights on. 43 said they hear their engines racing, loud acceleration. 28 added the police use Venice Blvd as a drag strip, but without any lights. 18 asked me why they would drive so fast but not have any lights on. 31 expressed concern for people’s safety with their excessive speeds along the streets. and finally 61 would agree to signing a sworn statement if one should come about.

Then there are the cell phone pictures which clearly show the patrol car with no lights before any other patrol cars arrive. then their lights are on, respopnding patrol cars can clearly be seen in these pictures. It makes no difference in what sequence these pictures are displayed, pretty darn easy to arrange them in the proper order…..

Then they call it a crime scene but refuse to take anyone’s statements rather ordering them away from the scene ande begin making arrests of anyone caught without a green card!Then there’s the fire department claiming they responded to the WRONG glyndon ave, claiming they arrived at a another “Glendon” location thus taking 15 minutes to arrive on the emergence call. If they know – which they certainly should there are two streets by the same name (NOT the same spelling why on Gods earth would they not confirm the correct location BEFORE they roll? Smelll like a fist tank here to me boy’s. They’ve changed their story so many times they probably don’t even know what the truth is anymore!

. The evidence is mounting and it’s only a matter of time before the the TRUTH is heard. Too many witnesses to pull this one off boys!

Bonnie Wolfe

———–

Leaf Blowers

Dear Beachhead,

WHAT?! Gasoline powered leaf blowers are illegal within 500 feet of a residence? (C.V. Beck letter, January issue)

Anyone who lives in LA knows this isn’t enforced.

I called the city to see if it was really true. Turns out you have to tell them in advance when exactly the leaf blower will be blowing and there’s also some loophole about private land.

Here are some chilling facts I found online:

“According to a report by the California EPA published in 2000, commercial leaf blowers run for 30 minutes emit CO2 equivalent to a car being driven 7,700 miles and carbon monoxide equivalent to 440 miles of driving. Another way of putting it, commercial leaf blowers emit over 500 times the amount of CO2 as cars. Residential leaf blowers are quite different, but still not good; these leaf blowers emit CO2 equivalent to 2,200 miles of driving and carbon monoxide equal to 110 miles.” http://eco-guides.us/blog/?p=125

Please, Venice Beachhead, tell us what steps we can take to stop this ridiculous pollution and waste. As I write this there’s one outside, in the RAIN!

Sincerely, Simone White

From the Beachhead:  Here’s the section of the Municipal Code, 112.04, that bans leaf blowers. It can be found at http://bit.ly/4pz12i (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of Subsection (a) above, no gas powered blower shall be used within 500 feet of a residence at anytime.  Both the user of such a blower as well as the individual who contracted for the services of the user, if any, shall be subject to the requirements of and penalty provisions for this ordinance.  Violation of the provisions of this subsection shall be punishable as an infraction in an amount not to exceed One Hundred Dollars ($100.00), notwithstanding the graduated fines set forth in L.A.M.C. Section 11.00(m).  This website gives a phone number to report violations: http://www.zapla.org

————-

Plain English

Dear Beachhead Readers,

It was a famous fiction writer who said that the best writing was “words meant for children with meanings meant for men.”  That “men,” of course, meant both sexes.

The English language is a wonderful thing.  Looking at the multi-language directions for use included with most of our new electronic gadgets you may have noticed that the English sections are shorter.  I take that to mean that English is simpler.

From its inflective beginnings in the Romance languages to its distributive presence in the now, it is a bridge to the most distributive language, Chinese.  I have been told that Chinese do not understand how we can talk about the “front half of the car.”  If that information is correct, to the Chinese a thing split in half has a new front and rear.  So Chinese appears to be a bit more technical than English.  Take note!

Right now our government is awash in more English than it can handle. Abandoning the ten commandments of Old English Law that included the intent required to establish guilt, our statutes abound with more damn regulations than can be enforced. I believe that Rome fell because its statutes could not be enforced in its far flung dominions.  Statutes beget more statutes until nobody knows what is right or wrong.

Legislators spew out more and more legislation to prove to themselves that they are doing something.

But why in hell do they not do something about removing all of the old laws that serve to confuse the new laws?

Or, when they make new laws, why don’t they look to see if the new laws fit with the old?

I believe that our government is stuck in a morass of laws that defy any kind of a fix.  Immigrants to the U.S. haven’t the foggiest notion of law because most have lived under the Code Napoleon, the rule of statute law.

Yet we congratulate ourselves by saying “you are innocent until  proven guilty”

Oh yeah. Try that in traffic court when the officer says you are guilty.

Here is another instance: health care. No one should be deprived when care is needed. But no one talks about health care in the home, the place of first need. That’s because there is no money in health care at home, except for a few low income health care workers.

More than two thousand pages of health insurance legislation should be a tipoff to the ripoff. Why does it take two thousand pages to care for the sick?  Either we care for sick people or we do not.  It is as simple as that.

We have a lovely language.  If we keep it simple, it will be easy to do the right thing.

DeDe Audet

————

Winograd Supports Beachhead

Dear Beachhead,

Thanks for your local independent press & for fighting the good fight against corporatism. I proudly join the $100 sustainers.

Best wishes, Marcy Winograd

(Winograd has filed in the Democratic primary)

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Historical Status for 7 Dudley Advances

Historical status for the building that housed the Venice West coffeehouse (see photo, right), the Potpourri coffeehouse, the Vox Populi coffeehouse and Sponto Gallery was approved by the Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Commission, Jan. 7. That’s just the beginning, says Alan Leib, who initiated the application for historical recognition.

Leib, who previously was instrumental in saving the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium and other historical sites around L.A. County, would like to create a historical district on Dudley Avenue and revive the Venice West coffeehouse, an important gathering place for Venice Beats in the 1950s and 60s.

While the Dudley Avenue building still must get past the Planning and Land Use Management committee (PLUM) and the L.A. City Council to make historical status official, Leib has already set his sights on historical status for the Cadillac Hotel across the street.

Then, Dudley Avenue west of Speedway could be refurbished with cobblestones and closed to traffic. A fountain or statue could be erected, and the new plaza could be named after a Beat poet, or as Leib prefers, after Jim Morrison of The Doors, although there is no evidence he ever went to the coffeehouse. Ray Manzarek, former keyboardist with The Doors, is one of Leib’s supporters.

Leib says he would like to personally run a new Venice West cafe at 7 Dudley. However, the Piccolo Restaurant at 5 Dudley recently signed an eight-year least for the next-door storefront. Meanwhile, the personal property of Mark “Sponto” Kornfeld, who died in his 7 Dudley gallery last year, were sold at auction. Some of them have turned up on eBay. Sponto also dreamed of reviving the Venice West cafe someday, says Leib.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Culture, History, Venice

Sluice Gates slush fund

Six years after the project was approved by the Grass Roots Venice Neighborhood Council (GRVNC), new sluice gates are in operation on the Venice canals. The gates regulate the flow of sea water into and out of the canals. On April 22, 2004, the GRVNC Board, including this reporter, unanimously approved “$560,000 expenditure for repair, replacement, and maintenance of (the) gates.”

The funds were to come out of the Venice Surplus Property Fund, which is funded by the sale of real estate that belonged to the city of Los Angeles or the city of Venice. The funds can only be spent in Venice. Some of the funds were recently spent to pave the parking lots behind the Abbot Kinney merchants. Canal resident Darryl DuFay says that the project was finally accomplished when Councilmember Bill Rosendahl obtained “emergency funding.”

However, Nate Kaplan, press aide to Rosendahl, confirmed that the funds came out of the Surplus Property Fund. Rosendahl told the Beachhead that the city bureaucracy (public works department) dropped the ball. But, in a June 13, 2006 press release announcing the repair of the gates, Rosendahl stated “This swift repair would not be possible without the collaboration of community leaders and City staff.” He continued, “I would like to thank the Venice Canals Association and my Venice Field Deputy, Mark Antonio Grant, for the hard work and commitment shown on this project.”

Although this might seem like the end of the story, it wasn’t. Even though the gates were repaired in 2006, work proceeded on replacing them with new gates. The new gates are supposed to last for 20 years, however, the old gates were replaced after 17 years.

-Jim Smith

Leave a Comment

Filed under Canals, Politics

Can Medical Marijuana Cure Bad Politics?

In the midst of a depression, the Los Angeles City Council wants to create 30 empty storefronts where thriving businesses now reside and throw hundreds of people out of work. And that’s just in Venice. Throughout the city of L.A., thousands would be out of work, a good proportion no doubt would become homeless for lack of income. California’s unemployment rate is now 12.4 percent, the highest since 1940.

The animosity of the city council toward cannabis is apparently fueled by a discredited notion that it is a dangerous drug rather than a medicine that helps tens of thousands of the terminally ill and chronic pain sufferers.

On Jan. 26, the City Council passed 9-3 a mean-spirited ordinance that could eliminate all but one medical marijuana dispensary in Venice. Councilmember Bill Rosendahl was the only opposition to the measure. Two others, Bernard C. Parks, Jan Perry, voted against the measure because they felt it wasn’t strong enough.

The ordinance would ban dispensaries within 1,000 feet of a school, another indication that the city council considers cannabis to be a dangerous drug. No such rules apply to drug stores, where really dangerous drugs are routinely dispensed. The ordinance would set a goal of only 70 dispensaries in Los Angeles. There are far more dispensaries of alcohol, including liquor stores, grocery stores and bars; however, the City Council seems unconcerned about their proliferation.

No attempt was made by the city council to tailor the ordinance to the varying attitudes within the city. For instance, a number of Venetians have spoken out in support of the dispensaries and legalization of cannabis.

Rosendahl told the Beachhead that he had made a motion to leave it up to the various councilmembers to craft rules for their districts but that the motion had died for lack of a second. A lawsuit by the dispensaries has been promised to overturn the ordinance.

More evidence that the city council is on the wrong side of history came Jan. 29 when petitions were filed to put a proposition on the November ballot in California that would legalize and tax the sale of cannabis. More than two-thirds of a million Californians put their names on the petitions, thereby nearly guaranteeing that the initiative will qualify for the ballot.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Drugs, Politics

Carol Fondiller

By Pam Emerson

When I met Carol in 1975, she was engaged in a struggle to preserve space for poor people – benches to sit on, apartments to live in, small groceries and small places to eat. She had been doing this for years in several venues, including the Beachhead.

She was also a story teller and a fun lover and an appreciator of cats. When I knew her best we were near neighbors and could visit in the evenings and have endless discussions of fairness and foolishness, selfishness and justice, self-righteousness and pomposity and the deceptions of men – and women.

In the seventies Carol was concerned with preserving the two sided benches on Ocean Front Walk where elderly residents had been accustomed to sit.  Roller skating had become popular.  Roller skaters were moving the wood and concrete benches that had stood on Ocean Front Walk for years to separate themselves from slow-moving pedestrians, creating a need for repairs. The City budget was again limited, and the Bureau of Street Maintenance decreed that it would no longer repair the benches.  Carol was a vocal participant in the ensuing controversy that was resolved only after the construction of the bike path out on the beach.

She was scathing about the lack of consideration of the young for the old, and of the rich for the poor but in discussing other issues; she could turn around and point out the need for room for families, for small merchants, even for vendors.  Carol did not hew an ideological line; she was more interested in fairness.  She would raise an issue so that it could not be ignored, but she was not entranced by ideological purists.

She appreciated people who saw things differently but detested bullies. In fact, Carol could scent a bully a thousand miles away, pluck the stuffing out of his coat and describe each wiggling string for the benefit of her cats.  She was suspicious of abstractions because abstractions describing programs often left out the people they were supposed to benefit.

She criticized community improvement programs that included no housing; loans to enable people to restore housing for low income people that had catches and loopholes such as twenty year limits for the low-income housing, or contracts that allowed the recipient of the loan to refinance and opt out once the market went up.   She would not get into the technicalities; she would just point out that the housing was supposed to be there and somehow it was not; the program had the name, but did not deliver the goods.

People who did not understand her view of public, open space may not have understood the growing conflict she had with vendors along Ocean Front Walk who now did not permit her, grown old and feeble, to sit on the very benches she had fought so long to replace.  Whenever you talked to Carol any opinion you had turned out to be a little bit wrong because she had noticed something and you had not and the conversation was off.  Carol was a moralist and an essayist and a humorist and a generous person.  We will miss her.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Carol Fondiller, Writers

Obama’s First Year

By Jim Smith

It’s been a year since George W. Bush left the White House (and he has yet to be arrested for war crimes). When Barack Obama took his place, the big majority of Americans applauded because his name was not Bush. Many, perhaps a majority, were thrilled because a Black man, a man of mixed race, had been elected to the top position in the country.

The Beachhead’s headline for November 2008, (we held the paper for the election results) roared, “It’s Obama!” with a subhead, “America’s Finest Hour.”

A year later, the majority of Americans are wondering what went wrong. A CBS poll in January recorded that only 46 percent approved of his job performance. A Gallup poll says that only 40 percent like the way he is handling, or not handling, the economy. Even less approved of his performance on health care.

Obama’s slide from grace cannot be attributed just to the inept Republican opposition. In a more-than-year-old comedy routine, Lewis Black said the “Democrats were the party of no ideas, and the Republicans were the party of bad ideas.” Since Obama’s election, that’s been reversed with the Republicans offering no ideas and the Democrats coming up with clunkers like Wall Street bailouts and mandatory health care without a public option or a single payer alternative.

While a lot of Obama’s misfortune is due to being allied for the past year with a Democratic-majority Congress that has behaved like a branch office of Wall Street, he must bear much of the blame, himself. In spite of his year as Commander-in-Chief, the U.S. is still occupying Iraq. He has escalated in Afghanistan, and the infamous Guantánamo prison is still operating. Belligerence has been expressed by Obama and his hawkish Secretary-of-State, against Iran, Yemen and Venezuela. Gaza continues to be a bleeding sore which his administration seems unwilling to seriously address.

Obama’s response to the devastating Haiti earthquake has not been to send in medical and rescue teams and construction workers, but to send 10,000 troops and an aircraft carrier, named after former Congressmember Carl Vinson, whom Wikipedia calls a “staunch segregationist.” Is the intent to help the Haitians, or to maintain U.S. control and ensure that Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the former president who was kidnapped by U.S. troops in 2004 and dropped off in Africa, does not return by popular demand. If not for the earthquake, would Obama have acted to stop Haiti’s descent into a hell of extreme poverty that the Rev. Pat Robertson says it so richly deserves?

In November 2008, this newspaper wrote and published an open letter to Obama. We have yet to receive an acknowledgement that it was received. In it, we urged Obama – who won 88 percent of the vote in Venice – to withdraw from Iraq and Afghanistan, repeal the Patriot Act, restore habeas corpus, end torture, close Guantánamo, and end wiretapping of American citizens. We also asked that he take the lead in reducing carbon emissions and that he bail out those most in need, not Wall Street.

Last April, I wrote that he was in serious danger of losing his popularity due to his inaction, or bad actions (President Obama and Mr. Abajo, Beachhead, April 2009). Like many economists, pundits and ordinary citizens, I urged a massive jobs program, a moratorium on foreclosures and evictions, stopgap measures to protect the growing number of homeless people, and more. Unfortunately, none of this type of Rooseveltian program has been taken up. There has not even been legislation to prevent the “casino capitalism” that plunged the nation into depression in the first place.

Obama, and his pro-Wall Street aides including Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Zbigniew Brzezinski – the Democrats’ answer to Henry Kissinger – are clearly in bed with the big banks and investment houses. Did Obama have any choice but to follow Bush in giving Big Capital hundreds of billions of dollars? Well, yes. Instead of propping up AIG, Goldman Sachs, and the big banks, he could have used the money to protect working people’s pensions and bank accounts. Instead of saving GM from tripping over itself, he could have protected the jobs and pensions of the auto workers. If he had done that, we would not be seeing hundreds of millions of dollars being paid out in bonuses for jobs not well done. AIG is paying $165 million this month in bonuses to corporate big shots. This insurance giant was given public funds totaling $170 billion in bailouts!

If there was any doubt that the Democrats in Congress and Obama dance to the Wall Street tune, it should have been put to rest by these corporate bailouts, which were followed by a health care bill that was slavishly amended to suit the big insurers. The old adage that the Republicans are the party of big business and the Democrats are the party of the “little guy” is long out of date.

The truth is that America is no longer a political democracy. It cannot be called democratic when it has two parties that are both controlled and funded by the same small group of super wealthy oligarchs and the corporations they own. While Obama, and even John McCain, may seem like “just folks” in their carefully constructed media personas, they are, in fact, bought and paid for spokespersons for the global corporations that own America, Inc.

Should this be a cause for despair? Not at all. Nothing lasts, and it appears that cutthroat capitalism is already tottering from the financial earthquakes of the past 18 months, with more on the way. The question is, what will take its place. Will we be able to construct a more humane and peaceful nation and society? Or will we sit by passively while a more and more corrupt and dissolute elite makes the rich, richer, and the poor, poorer, from L.A. City Hall to the halls of Congress?

Here are some suggestions for being part of the solution, not part of the problem: 1) Run, don’t walk, to the Post Office and change your registration from Democrat or Republican to “Peace and Freedom,” “Green,” or even “Decline to State.” Already, more than 5,000 Venetians have rejected the Democrats and Republicans when they registered to vote. I’m convinced that only by breaking the power of the Democrats and Republicans to define our freedom and control our lives can we have a truly democratic country; 2) Get involved in your community, Venice. We can’t have a loving and peaceful country if we don’t have strong, active communities. There are many Venice organizations already working on all sorts of community problems. Join one, or start your own; 3) “We the People,” is the basis of the Constitution and the country. Don’t let the Wall Street vampires divide us from one another. Help those who are less fortunate. Encourage those who are fearful of standing up for their rights. Insist on a democratic process whenever two or more people get together. We can have real change. We can survive a full-on depression. But only if we stick together.

“The Dream is over,” the Beatles once sang. Yeah, that pretty much sums up the first year of the Obama presidency. Now we’re awake and ready for our Naked Lunch, which is, as Jack Kerouac once told William Burroughs, that “frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of every fork.”

Leave a Comment

Filed under Politics

It’s All The Rage

By Roger Linnett

If you’ve paid any attention to the news lately you couldn’t help but notice that – Jeez those Democrats are sure lousing things up! It has even been reported on the front page of The New York Times and by NBC Nightly News (those bastions of liberalism) that the Democrats would take a beating if an election were held today. The main proponents of this contention; conservative radio talk shows, FoxNews opining, and the right-wing print media inundate our 24-hour news cycle with a co-ordinated, non-stop barrage of criticism, hyperbole, abuse and plain old lies. Their collective caterwauling brings to mind the old adage, “An empty drum makes the loudest noise.”

Whatever President Obama does is somehow wrong. It’s either too much, not enough, too late or too soon, too far left or the opposite of what America wants. He is second-guessed daily by the same bunch of mealy-mouthed, professional complainers and whiners who take their daily talking points from, and are the cheerleaders for, the lap dogs of the big business cartels that got us into this mess to begin with. And they have the chutzpah to use their fallacious tirades as the basis of a cause celebre of the coming conservative resurgence.

Such has been the screech of these reactionary harpies and their media echo chambers that some people have been misled into believing that there is some truth to what they are saying, simply because of the overwhelming cacophony of their pervasive ranting. Understand that the vast majority of us in this country don’t really pay much attention to politics on a day-to-day basis and, because the constant droning of the Conservative’s complaint machine is mostly what we hear 24/7 all around the country, after a while some people start to believe it. To quote Lenin, “A lie told often enough becomes truth,” which is exactly their M.O. Most telling, though, is that when their convoluted misstatements and bald-faced lies are held up to open, honest scrutiny and found wanting, they retreat to their favorite tactics – name-calling and ad hominen attacks.

Let’s take a moment and examine the track record of these guardians of the nation’s moral compass and the veracity of some past pronouncements, like, say –  Saddam Hussein had a hand in the 9/11 plot – no – even Bush eventually retracted that whopper;  or – Saddam had stockpiles of WMDs and was planning an imminent attack on the U.S. – no – in fact, the I.A.E.A. inspector’s reports showed that they had indeed all been destroyed after Gulf War I, just as Hans Blix repeated til he was blue in the face; then there was – Saddam was in cahoots with bin Laden and Al-Qaeda – no – actually they hated each other, its either a Sunni/Shiite thing or a secular tyrant/fundamentalist revolutionary thing, I’m not sure; or the altruistic-sounding – liberating Iraq would bring Western-style democracy to the Middle East – no – they’re barely able to keep from erupting into civil war and, if not for the billions in oil under their feet, probably wouldn’t want to have a thing to do with each other; and lately, our newest, greatest threat – Iran will have the capability of building a nuclear weapon and delivering it by long-range missile in a year or so – please, gimme a break, the rest of the civilized world, and especially Israel, won’t allow that to happen, at least not until they change their tune, and oust their fundamentalist, theocratic government. Feel free to cite these examples to shoot down the next knuckle-dragging, mouth-breather that starts spouting such bogus right-wing talking points regarding Bush & Co.’s criminal war enterprise, but I digress.

Getting back to the Democrats’ imminent downfall, since taking office President Obama and the Democrats have raised the minimum wage (first time in over a decade), passed an equal pay for equal work law, greatly increased funding for the V.A., passed a new G.I. Bill and earmarked substantial new funds to assist the families of service people and for pay raises (Republicans love the troops as long as they don’t have to spend any money on them), signed the order to close Guantañamo Bay prison by the end of January 2010 (the process is being being thwarted by – you guessed it – Republican legislators – in Illinois.) And that was just the first of couple of weeks of his administration.

Since then, they have pulled the country back from the edge of a banking crisis, saved a major manufacturing sector of the economy by helping to turn around GM and Chrysler and are on the threshold of enacting national health care, a dream first proposed almost a hundred years ago. Not a bad start, I’d say. And by the time the next elections come around, most of the country probably will, too.

So don’t be alarmed when those reactionary obstructionists spew their craven cynicism or claim with welling eyes and anguished voices that Obama and the Dems with their reckless policies have turned this country upside down. After all, upside down is how they got it to begin with.


Leave a Comment

Filed under Politics

When wasn’t there Carol?

By Lance Diskan

The first Venice neighborhood meeting I went to – 1968 – there she was. When I visited Venice to celebrate our Centennial in 2005, there she was. For us, it’s been forty years of shared struggle, joy, language and solidarity. She’s irreplaceable, and a fundamental personality in Venetian history. Abbot would have loved her.

No one has ever written about Venice with more devotion, passion or skill. Her Beachhead articles were always the most worth-reading – with apologies to all the rest of us who added filigree to her essential documentation of not just what goes on, but why we should care. Future historians who want to learn about those times need only read her articles.

She not only had a wonderful way with words, but her prose had deep outrage, humor, insight and a sense of (in)justice that illuminated her expression. Any cause was fortunate to have her as an ally.

But it’s my friend who I’ll miss the most. A familiar face – and unmistakable voice – in the crowd, whether on Ocean Front Walk or along a crumbling walkway at a Canal Festival or at a City Hall public hearing or testifying before the Coastal Commission or lending a sparkle of light to some furiously-heated debate at the Venice Town Council or – you name it.

And Carol was loyal, a value that manifests the notion of community, binding each one of us to one another. Nothing equals the strength and satisfaction of decades of communion with another soul, and every one of us who knew her was a beneficiary of that experience. Lucky us!

I’d like to thank those people who helped Carol get to live at 5 Rose Avenue. No one ever deserved a million-dollar view more than she. It’s, as Abe Lincoln put it, “altogether fitting and proper” that she got to stay in the community she helped protect and define – an uncommon common woman amidst the wealthy. I hope one of the final sights she had was an unobstructed view, over the sand and past the breaking waves to the far horizon.

The Harpy has flown. Happy landings, sweetheart; and thanks for so much everything.


Leave a Comment

Filed under Carol Fondiller, Writers