Volume 3, Issue 33, Feb. 17, 2023 View as Webpage

Next Serf City Times issue on March 3.

Everyone on Earth Dies for Democracy

By KEITH MCHENRY - CO-FOUNDER OF FOOD NOT BOMBS



“Feb. 8, 2023 - The US Air Force announced earlier today that a test launch of a Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile with a mock warhead will take place late between 11:01pm Thursday and 5:01am Friday from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.” - Leonard Eiger, Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action


My grandfather loved me. He also directed the most deadly bombing campaign ever and claimed he killed more than a million people in Tokyo during his Operation Meeting House. I watched him spin around his den surrounded by his 63 framed black and white photos of the firebombing arguing with his friends Robert McNamara and Curtis LeMay, demanding they send the communists a message by dropping a nuclear bomb on Hanoi.


Like many of the architects of the rush towards World War III he attended the best schools: Phillips Academy, Dartmouth and Harvard Law. He was recruited into the Office of Strategic Services and was stationed In Burma. 


I slept in his Needham, Massachusetts finished basement next to the two file cabinets of formulas that he would sell to Ken Olson, the founder of Digital Electronic. A photo of thousands of shirtless Burmese slaves pounding rocks with hammers or balancing baskets of stones on their heads sat next to my bed. He shared stories about how he helped set up the opium trade to the United States so they could flood the black community with heroin to keep them busy with addiction knowing the GI Bill wouldn’t offer equal benefits to those who shared the horrors of war. 


I was expected to follow in his foot steps. I would grow up to determine who would live and who would die, saying that this was the “white man’s burden.” Those I killed would not have to worry about the responsibility of such decisions. He shared that elections were theater designed to give the impression of Democracy. We couldn’t give real power to the ignorant masses. I was one of the genetically special people who would help defend corporate power. 


In the months before Russia’s Special Military Operation I could see my 

grandfather in the words of the Brookings Institute, the Atlantic Council, Victoria Nuland and her husband Robert Kagan -- suggestions that a first strike against Russia might be necessary. 


The call for a direct conflict and a suggestion the US could and should use nuclear weapons against Russia was outlined in the long rambling essay, “The Price of Hegemony – Can America Learn to Use Its Power?”’ by Robert Kagan in the May 2022 issue of Foreign Affairs outlining the rationale for going to war with Russia. 


Kagan writes, “It is better for the United States to risk confrontation with belligerent powers when they are in the early stages of ambition and expansion, not after they have already consolidated substantial gains. Russia may possess a fearful nuclear arsenal, but the risk of Moscow using it is not higher now than it would have been in 2008 or 2014, if the West had intervened then.”


In the opinion piece “The U.S. Should Show It Can Win a Nuclear War" by Seth Cropsey, the founder of the Yorktown Institute, wrote is but one of dozens of articles preparing us for a nuclear conflict.


Cropsey writes, “The reality is that unless the U.S. prepares to win a nuclear war, it risks losing one.”


"The ability to win is the key. By arming surface ships with tactical nuclear weapons, as well as attacking a nuclear-missile sub and thus reducing Russian second-strike ability, the U.S. undermines Russia’s ability to fight a nuclear war.” 


The foreign secretary Liz Truss told a Tory hustings event in Birmingham in August 2022 that she was willing to hit Britain’s nuclear button if necessary – even if meant “global annihilation”.



Calls for regime change in Russia is dangerous. Is there any leader who would let themselves be topped without a fight?



During a speech in March 2022 in Warsaw, Poland, President Biden said of Russian President Vladimir Putin: "For God's sake, this man cannot remain in power.” Thankfully the White House staff tried to tamp this statement down.


Sen. Lindsey Graham suggested that Russians should assassinate 

President Vladimir Putin.


"Is there a Brutus in Russia? Is there a more successful Colonel Stauffenberg in the Russian military?" the South Carolina Republican asked in a March 2022 Tweet.


Roman Emperor Julius Caesar was assassinated by Brutus and others in the 

Rome Senate on the Ides of March. Graham was also referring to German Lt. Col. Claus von Stauffenberg, who tried to kill Adolf Hitler in the summer of 1944.


"The only way this ends is for somebody in Russia to take this guy out. You would be doing your country - and the world - a great service," Graham said.


Do we really think that sending Ukraine F16 jets, long range missiles and tanks will force Russia to agree to end the war? Was bombing the Nord Stream pipelines and the Kerch Bridge the best way to reduce tensions? Will launching intercontinental nuclear capable missiles reduce the threat of a global nuclear war? 


We might not be able to stop World War III but we should try. That is why I am helping organize Rage Against the War Machine protest on Feb. 19. See poster above.

Santa Cruz is Marching for Peace Sunday, Feb. 19 Meet at Noon at the Clock Tower in Santa Cruz

By KEITH MCHENRY                                                                                              

This march will coincide with the larger Peace Rally happening in Washington D.C.. Bring your own signs, or join the sign making party on Sat., Feb. 18 at 435 Cayuga St. from 10:30am – 12:30pm.


More information about the national protest: Rage Against the Machine and "It's 90 seconds to midnight" The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientsit's Doomsday Clock.


Our demands:

Not One More Penny for War in the Ukraine

Negotiate Peace

Stop the War Inflation

Disband NATO

Global Nuclear De-Escalation

Slash the Pentagon Budget

Abolish the CIA and Military Industrial Complex

Restore Civil Liberties

Abolish War and Empire

Free Julian Asange

Contributed by WFF

Stories of Culture: Oaxaca in Santa Cruz is one of the world premieres being shown in the Watsonville Film Festival.

Watsonville Film Festival Celebrates Actors & Activists: Inspiring Stories about Beating the Odds 

By CONSUELO ALBA


The 11th Annual Watsonville Film Festival runs from March 3–12 with screenings at the Mello Center and the Watsonville Public Library. There will also be online viewing opportunities. This year’s Festival presents an exciting line-up of films about ordinary people overcoming great obstacles to do the extraordinary.


Pepe Serna will receive a hero’s welcome when he walks the Red Carpet at Opening Night of the Watsonville Film Festival where the celebrated actor will present his latest films, Abuelo and Life is Art. Serna will be joined by the film’s director, Luis Reyes, author of “Viva Hollywood” on Fri., March 3 at 7pm at the Mello Center.


Pepe Serna’s acting career spans more than fifty years, 100 films, and 300 TV shows. He played Al Pacino’s partner in Scarface, a lowrider in Steve Martin’s hit comedy, The Jerk, and was cast with Edward James Olmos in American Me. Serna received the prestigious Screen Actors Guild Heritage Achievement Award for his many iconic character roles at a time when Latino and Latina actors were rarely given the spotlight in Hollywood. 


Highlights of the festival include the following world premieres of local shorts:


The world premiere of Strawberry Picker, a short film documenting the life of Juan Fuentes, renowned Chicano artist who grew up in Watsonville. Fuentes created the main images of the  beautiful mosaic murals in downtown. The Festival is proud to co-host the opening of his Retrospective “RESILIENCE: Works of Strength and Dignity” at the Porter Building on Sunday, March 5. 


Stories of Culture: Oaxaca in Santa Cruz County was filmed during the Covid pandemic. Elder members of the indigenous group Senderos share how their food, medicine and music are tools for healing their communities.


Living in Exile: Carlos Mejía Godoy by filmmaker Jon Silver. Forced into exile and now living in California, Carlos Mejía Godoy is a legendary musician and poet of Nicaragua’s Sandinista Revolution of the 1970s and 1980s.


Sansón & Me is an award-winning documentary about an unusual friendship that grows out of a young immigrant who gets caught up in the criminal justice system.


Los Tigres del Norte tells the story of the legendary Norteño band that came to San Jose with nothing in the 1960’s and rose to sell more than 60 million records, winning 6 Grammys and 12 Latin Grammys along the way. Co-presented by the Mexican Consulate of San José.


The Watsonville Film Festival was created to bring the community together and shine a light on our cultures and traditions, our creativity and our resilience. After all we’ve been through over the past three years, we wanted to make this year’s Festival accessible to everyone on a "pay what you can" basis. This is possible thanks to our generous sponsors and supporters who truly understand our vision.” 

Photo by TARMO HANNULA 

A male mallard perches on a island of mud at Pinto Lake City Park in the Pajaro Valley.

Santa Cruz County Covid-19 Report 

By SARAH RINGLER


The Santa Cruz County Health Department regularly releases data on the current status of Covid-19 in the county. There were no new deaths in the county over the past week.


Because of the availability of home testing I don't report on changes in the active cases in the county. The Health Department is now collecting data for Covid and Mpox from wastewater at the City Influent, for the city of Santa Cruz, and from the Lode Street pump stations for the county. See webpage HERE. The first chart below shows the latest county data. The fourth chart below shows wastewater projections.


The county's Effective Reproductive Number is now above 1.0. See the second chart below. Numbers above one show the spread of the virus is increasing. Below one means the spread is decreasing. The chart, released from the California Department of Public Health below shows several predictions from different agencies. For information, click here.


The third graph below shows hospitalizations. Click to see more information on hospitalizations HERE.



The county has finally altered vaccination data for the county. It has divided the data into three categories with the percentages inoculated: Primary Series, 77.1%, Primary Series and Boosted, 61%, and Bivalent Boosters, 32.3%.


This webpage also has a link where you can get a digital copy and scannable QR code of your vaccination record. Keep track of your four-digit code because that is your access to the site.


To get information on COVID-19 testing locations around the county visit this site. You can make an appointment for a Rapid Antigen Test here.

2/16/23 

Deaths by age/276:

25-34 - 5/276

35-44 - 8/276

45-54 - 10/276

55-59 - 4/276

60-64 - 15/276

65-74 - 49/276

75-84 - 64/276

85+ - 121/276


Deaths by gender:

Female - 136/276 

Male - 140/276 

Deaths by vaccination status: 

vaccinated - 39/276

unvaccinated - 237/276


Deaths by ethnicity:

White - 163/276 

Latinx - 90/276

Black - 3/276

Asian - 16/276

American Native - 1/276

Unknown - 0

Photo by TARMO HANNULA

Fashion Street - A man heads down West Beach Street to cash in metal, plastic and glass at A&S Metals at 1080 W. Beach St., Watsonville.

Labor History Calendar - Feb. 17 - March 2, 2023

a.k.a Know Your History Lest We Forget


Feb. 17, 1906: WFM leaders Haywood, Moyer and Pettibone framed on murder charges.

Feb. 17, 1936: Goodyear sit-down strike.

Feb. 17, 1992: Yale University unions strike solidarity with T.A.s.

Feb. 17, 2020: Thousands strike JY Ja Nam Co. over Covid fears in Vietnam. 

Feb. 18, 1916: Magon brothers arrested near Los Angeles, charged with treason for publishing Regeneración.

Feb. 19, 1942: FDR sends 120,000 West Coast Japanese, including US citizens, to concentration camps.

Feb. 19, 1948: Death of Joe Ettor, IWW organizer. 

Feb. 20, 1908: Rally for unemployed becomes a riot; 18 are arrested for demanding jobs in Philadelphia.

Feb. 20, 1990: UMW settles 10-month Pittston strike.

Feb. 21, 1934: Augusto Cesar Sandino assassinated in Nicaragua. 

Feb. 22, 1855: Trials of Eureka Rebellion miners begin – ends in acquittals for all in Australia.

Feb. 23, 19904: Hearst’s San Francisco Chronicle attacks Japanese workers.

Feb. 23, 1996: 2-day general strike begins in Hamilton, Ontario.

Feb. 23, 2018: Teachers’ strike shuts down public schools across West Virginia.

Feb. 24, 1834: Six British farm laborers arrested and deported to Australia for organizing a union. 

Feb. 24, 1912: Women and children beaten by police during Lawrence strike. 

Feb. 25, 1913: IWW Paterson silk strike begins. 

Feb. 25, 1914: 2-day Dutch strike against Nazi deportation of Jews begins.

Feb. 25, 2010: 21 killed in Garib sweater factory fire in Bangladesh.

Feb. 26, 1941: Mine disaster kills 75 miners at Red Lodge, Montana.

Feb. 27, 1921: El Salvadoran shoemakers win strike for higher wages; prompts government crackdown. 

Feb. 28, 1877: Vancouver Island’s first Coal Miners’ Union.

March 1, 1907: IWW strikes Portland, Oregon saw mills.

March 1, 1921: Kronstadt rises demanding workers’ rule in Russia.

March 2, 1911: IWW winds Fresno, CA free speech fight.

March 2, 1937: US Steel – now USX – begins to bargain with CIO.


Labor History Calendar has been published yearly by the Hungarian Literature Fund since 1985.


"The role of the artist is that of a soldier of the revolution." 

Diego Rivera


Photo by TARMO HANNULA

Mahogany Eggplant

By SARAH RINGLER

  

Viva la vegetable. Here is a simple way to bring out the best in eggplant. Brush it with olive oil and pomegranate molasses, then put it under the broiler until it turns a dark reddish brown, the color of mahogany wood. Served with a plop of whole milk Greek yogurt and pomegranate seeds, it is a study in contrasts. The sweet and vinegary flavors of the molasses bring out the best in the soft, smooth texture and savory flavor of the eggplant. 


The recipe is adapted from Maureen Abood's "Rose Water and Orange Blossoms," a 2015 cookbook available at the Watsonville Public Library. 


Eggplant is a commonly eaten vegetable in eastern and western Asian cooking. The first written mention of the plant was in a Chinese agricultural book, the "Qimin Yaoshu" from 544 ACE, according to Fuchsia Dunlop in her book, "Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province." Although we commonly see purple eggplants, they come in a variety of colors like white, yellow, green, reddish purple, pink to black. There are large ones and small ones. A smaller white oval version brought to Europe in 18th century contributed to the name "egg plant."


Because of the peculiarities of ovens, the broiling times below are approximations. Variations depend on whether you use a gas, electric or toaster oven. Just keep an eye on the eggplant. You may need to move the pan closer or farther away from the broiling elements. Labneh is well-drained whole milk yogurt that has thickened in the process. Greek style yogurt basically is the same thing. Pomegranates are beautifully in season right now. Pick ones that are firm and dark red. 


Mahogany Eggplant with Labneh and Pomegranate


1/4 cup olive oil

1/4 cup pomegranate molasses

1 large, 8x5 inch eggplant or two smaller

3/4 cup drained or Greek yogurt

Handful of pomegranate seeds - optional


Oil a baking sheet with olive oil. Place your oven rack on the second shelf from the top for broiling. 


In a small bowl, whisk the olive oil and pomegranate molasses until the mixture is smooth.


Cut off the stem and bottom of the eggplant. Leave the skin on and cut in half crosswise. Then cut the halves into wedges you have 8, 1" thick pieces. Place the wedges on the baking sheet close together. Brush with the olive oil and molasses mixture, and sprinkle with salt.


Broil wedges under high heat until they are dark mahogany colored, about 8 minutes. Keep an eye on them. Then, turn wedges and continue to broil for about another 5 minutes. Cool to room temperature.


While wedges cool, whisk thickened yogurt with salt. Arrange slices on a serving plate and top with the yogurt. Sprinkle pomegranate seeds over the yogurt and serve.

Send your story, poetry or art here: Please submit a story, poem or photo of your art that you think would be of interest to the people of Santa Cruz County. Try and keep the word count to around 400. Also, there should be suggested actions if this is a political issue. Submit to coluyaki@gmail.com

Send comments to coluyaki@gmail.com

If you are enjoying the Serf City Times, forward it on to others. We need readers, artists, photographers and writers.

Subscribe, contact or find back issues at the website https:// serf-city-times.constantcontactsites.com
Thanks, Sarah Ringler

Welcome to Serf City Times Our county has problems and many people feel left out. Housing affordability, racism and low wages are the most obvious factors. However, many groups and individuals in Santa Cruz County work tirelessly to make our county a better place for everyone. These people work on the environment, housing, economic justice, health, criminal justice, disability rights, immigrant rights, racial justice, transportation, workers’ rights, education reform, gender issues, equity issues, electoral politics and more. Often, one group doesn’t know what another is doing. The Serf City Times is dedicated to serving as a clearinghouse for those issues by letting you know what is going on, what actions you can take and how you can support these groups.This is a self-funded enterprise and all work is volunteer. 

Copyright © 2023 Sarah Ringler - All rights reserved