Volume 5, Issue 27, Jan. 31, 2025 View as Webpage

Power Hungry

BY KEITH MCHENRY FOOD NOT BOMBS CO-FOUNDER


There is a growing realization that the left right divide is mostly a fiction and that we all share the same struggles of paying our bills and keeping our families safe. We have never needed unity more than we do today.


One suggestion that this is true is the response to the assassination of United Health CEO Brian Thompson. People across the political spectrum are starting to see the billionaire vulture class as our common enemy. The response in the comments on Ben Shapiro’s podcast in support of Luigi was epic. Class war is replacing the culture wars as it gets more difficult to survive realizing that we have more in common with one another than what is claimed by politicians and media.


The TikTok ban was another sign that the human spirit cannot be crushed so easily. Americans on both the so-called left and right turned to RedNote as the days ticked towards the TikTok ban. Popular TikTok personalities invited their followers to the Chinese app Xiaohongshu with #RedNote racing across the American social media.


As the day of the Jan. 19 ban grew closer, people started to post their RedNote content on X and other platforms. Americans realizing that they had been lied to about China as the Chinese RedNote members welcomed the #TikTokRefugees.


I have been inspired by the posts. The app has an instant translation feature that makes it easy for people across the Pacific to talk. Chinese people express shock that Americans are charged for ambulance trips to the hospital. Americans and Chinese are showing one another the contents of their refrigerators and comparing prices. Chinese members expressed shock that the homeless crisis was not Communist Party propaganda. One gruff MAGA hat wearing fellow was almost in tears at what he had experienced on the platform in just a couple of days. He had been lied to about China.


If there is one person that has the pulse of public opinion it is billionaire CIA contractor Peter Thiel, the man behind VP Vance. He owns what he claims is the world’s most powerful AI surveillance data company Palantir. He is worried for the survival of his economic class.


Thiel appeared on “Piers Morgan Uncensored,” where the host asked him, “to those who think this shooter is a hero because he did it, because he said this healthcare executive is presiding over a healthcare system which kills thousands of Americans by denying them coverage. What would you say to them?”


After being speechless for nearly 20 seconds, Thiel offered up a halting answer, telling Morgan, “It’s, I don’t know what, what to say? I, I think I still think you have, you should try to make an argument. And I, I think this is, this is you should, you know, there may be things wrong with our health care system, but you have, you have to make an argument, and you have to try to find a way to convince people and and change, change it by by that, and this is, you know, this is not going to work.


“I don’t know. It’s, it’s, it’s, it’s, yeah, I mean, all sorts of things I, I could say about it, but I don’t, I don’t think, and I again, I think, you know,” he added.


On May 9, 2024 Palantir CEO Alex Karp at the Ash Carter Exchange on Innovation and National Security in Washington D.C. expressed fear that the protests for Gaza meant that they were losing control. “We think these things that are happening across college campuses are a sideshow. No, they are the show…If we lose the intellectual debate, you will not be able to deploy any army in the West, ever.” They know the pitch forks are coming if we can see our fellow working class Americans as allies rather than fall for the false divisions of Democrats and Republicans.


The TikTok ban not only also demonstrates the possibility of class unity, but it reveals what could be a central feature of our future. The CIA founded company Oracle switched off TikTok after the US Supreme Court ruled its elimination was not a violation of the Constitution, only to turn it back on less than 24 hours later. When you logged back on, millions of Americans were greeted by this message. "We thank President Trump for providing the necessary clarity and assurance to our service providers that they will face no penalties providing TikTok to over 170 million Americans and allowing over 7 million small businesses to thrive.” It wasn’t long before people started to discover that you can’t post “Free Palestine”on the new TikTok.


On Jan. 21, Trump, flanked by Oracle’s Larry Ellison, OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Japanese CEO of SoftBank Masayoshi Son, announced the $500 billion AI total surveillance Project Stargate. “I’m gonna help a lot through emergency declarations, because we have an emergency, we have to get this stuff built. So they have to produce a lot of electricity. And we'll make it possible for them to get this production done easily, at their own plants if they want." Trump trumpeted.


And the outrage by Trump supporters at Larry Ellison’s glorification on the individual mRNA cancer vaccines made possible by AI was instantaneous on social media. Many in the MAGA crowd were already posting anger at all of his Neocon appointments, the prominence of billionaires like Elon Musk on his team and disappointment at Trumps support of the immigrant H-1B visa program.


“We're going to have supervision," Ellison said to investors in 2024. "Every police officer is going to be supervised at all times, and if there's a problem, AI will report that problem and report it to the appropriate person. Citizens will be on their best behavior because we are constantly recording and reporting everything that's going on."


But what's maybe even more important than the ability to implement Biometric Digital ID, programmable digital currency and total surveillance, is warfare. Biden’s Jake Sullivan told Axios, “Regardless of what was said in public, every background conversation we had with President Biden's high command came back to China. Yes, they had concerns about the ethics, misinformation and job loss of AI. They talked about that. But they were unusually blunt in private: Every move, every risk was calculated to keep China from beating us to the AI punch. Nothing else matters, they basically said.” AI targeting in Gaza, and autonomous swarm drone warfare is already being used on the battle field.


The Moss Landing Lithium-ion battery fire on Jan. 16 provides a number of lessons that may bridge the artificially magnified left right divide. It is turning out that the UN’s Agenda 2030 Sustainable Development Goals may not be so green as the toxic gasses and heavy metals raining down across “America’s Salad Bowl,” farmland that provides 70% of our country’s vegetables.


This mental struggle is apparent in the public statements of Monterey County Supervisor Glenn Church who both supports the Green Agenda but wants the battery storage facility to be safe, saying to the media the morning after the fire started, “This is a Three Mile Island event for this industry” We really don’t know much about this technology.”


“There are a lot of really powerful forces in this state and in this country that want to see these batteries in place and going out here... and we don’t really matter,” Church told a public meeting at Prunedale Grange 388 on Jan. 20. The State of California adopted legislation on June 30, 2022, that allows state authorities to bypass local laws in permitting large-scale renewable energy projects.


The case of OpenAI whistleblower 26-year-old Suchir Balaji found dead in his San Francisco apartment on Nov. 26, 2024, suggested Supervisor Church may be correct about what the community is up against. Suchir Balaji worked on the ChatGBT program and quit after Sam Altman turned OpenAI from a nonprofit to a for profit company. He started raising the alarm about AI’s use of copy written material to make OpenAI a profit.


In a new interview with KTVU, his mother insisted there were things out of place in his “ransacked” apartment where his body was found four days before he was due to be called as a witness to the OpenAI case.


The New York Times wrote in Oct. 2024, “But after the release of ChatGPT in late 2022, he thought harder about what the company was doing. He came to the conclusion that OpenAI’s use of copyrighted data violated the law and that technologies like ChatGPT were damaging the internet.” His mother claims flash drives were taken during the murder that San Francisco authorities ruled was a suicide.


Amanda Gerut writes in Fortune Magazine, “President Trump on Tuesday announced an eye-popping investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure in the U.S., funded through a joint venture called the Stargate Project. According to Trump, the investment is likely to spur an increase of 100,000 jobs and will be accompanied by a spate of executive orders to ensure new data centers built in connection with the investment will have enough energy.”


A Scientific American article of Oct. 2023 reported, “A continuation of the current trends in AI capacity and adoption are set to lead to NVIDIA shipping 1.5 million AI server units per year by 2027. These 1.5 million servers, running at full capacity, would consume at least 85.4 terawatt-hours of electricity annually — more than what many small countries use in a year, according to the new assessment.”


The mantra of “saving the climate” may morph into “made in America” but America’s move to an electric future will march on. Robotic warfare preparation, digital surveillance and the production of autonomous vehicles will increase. Teslas will continue to roll off the assembly lines and the 15 Minute Smart City and the Internet of Things programs will advance. Essential features of the digital panopticon of Stargate.


We are facing an existential crisis and its time to unite the working class against this billionaire technocracy.

Caution! Do Not Sign Up for Care Alert

BY LAURA CHATHAM


Through their Care Alert program, the first in the state, the Santa Cruz County Sheriff's office is collecting information about people that they think might have a mental illness.

 

Please do not sign up anyone for this dangerous program. I was on the County Mental Health Advisory Board (MHAB) when they talked about introducing this new dangerous program last year. The police want to know if someone who may have mental health challenges is living at a particular residence so they can "be prepared" if they're called to that residence.

 

One of the most "conservative" members of the MHAB at the time mentioned

that, "This program sounds like 'big brother.'" But Santa Cruz County Supervisor Manu Koenig thinks it's a great idea.

 

And of course, it is presented in the Santa Cruz Sentinel as if it were a good thing. Now the police will know when to draw their weapons, before they even get to the house.

 

There are only two kinds of people who can call a 5150 and lock a person up for up to 72 hours without charges. They are a Mental Health Professional with a master's degree and years of experience, or a police officer with essentially little training; I understand that the police will have around 3 hours training.


If a person gets 5150ed, they will leave with a police record, even if they did not have one before, and if they did not break any laws.

 

All the folks that I know who have been 5150ed tell me that they did not get any help. People are just traumatized by the dysfunctional system. Please don't do this to your loved ones.

It's Cold Outside

BY BRENT ADAMS



Warming Center Program's robust Hypothermia Protection Project is going strong, but we need your help to sustain it through this winter season. Our programs are 100% community supported and this work receives no sustaining funds from city, county, state or federal government. We are a community of caring individuals who take responsibility for each other and ensure that not one person must suffer extreme cold outside.


Warming Wednesday is 12-3pm at 150 Felker St. At the river side gate, anyone who sleeps outside can obtain a tent, blankets, jackets, shoes, clothing, hygiene items, first aid supplies, etc. Many items are purchased new including: tents, blankets, men's pants, underwear, beanies and gloves, umbrellas, rain ponchos, handwarmers and hygiene stuff. You might imagine how expensive this project can be, given that most people will need to revisit this program multiple times this season.


Donated items can go to the Donation Barrel at REI Sports, Commercial Way and 150 Felker St. where there is a Donation Portal through the fence.


Donate funding support: At warmingcenterprogram.com or write a check and send to: Warming Center Program

PO Box 462 Santa Cruz, CA 95061


Contact:

Emergency Homeless Hotline: (831) 246-1234. Office: (831) 588-9892

warmingcenterprogram@gmail.com IG: @warmingcenterprogram

Waste Free Santa Cruz "Just Bring It"

 

BY SARAH RINGLER


From Jan. 18 - April 18, Waste Free Santa Cruz is launching a campaign to try and reduce the environmental impact of single-use coffee cups. They estimate that more than 10,000 cups go to the landfill daily. Through this 3 month campaign, they hope to reduce that amount by 20%. Click HERE for participating coffee shops. For information click HERE. Shop Local.


CARTOON BY ELIZABETH WILLIAMS



Roadmap Journey

BY WOODY REHANEK  


Frostproof & Naranja, hello

Florida orange country.

Stumbled from Corkscrew to Wetumpka


by the grace of God

made Intercession City,

found peace in Panacea

traveling light as a finger 

on the highway map.


Crisscrossed Georgia

bypassing Social Circle

& Dixie, being a Yankee

of undetermined pedigree


wound up dazed & confused

in Enigma, Georgia

& headed toward Bogart

to share a smoke

sought romance in Loving

& intimacy in Naomi.


Best of all was Rising Fawn

where each morning the deer

steeped in saffron

            so sweetly sing

                         our planet's 

                                                                  sacred songs.




PHOTO TARMO HANNULA

An American crow sounds off from atop a post in Moss Landing.

Santa Cruz County Covid-19 Report - Covid Cases Rising

By SARAH RINGLER


The California Department of Public Health and Santa Cruz County Health Department regularly release data on the current status of Covid-19 in the county as well as information on influenza, Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV), and Mpox. Since cases of Covid are still appearing, and there are still vulnerable people, I will continue reporting the graphs below.


The three graphs below were updated on Jan. 29.


The first graph is the Effective Reproductive Number. When the line rises above one, it shows that the spread of the virus is increasing. Below one means the spread is decreasing. 


The second graph below shows data that the Health Department collects for Covid from wastewater at the City Influent, for the city of Santa Cruz, and from the Lode Street pump stations for the county.



The third graph below shows hospitalizations.

PHOTO BY TARMO HANNULA

Fashion Street - A man demonstrates a gramophone in Monterey during the weekly farmers' market.

Labor History Calendar - Jan. 24-30, 2025

a.k.a Know Our History Lest We Forget


Jan. 24, 1911: Labor journalist Shusui Denjjiro Kotoku and 11 other anarchists hanged in Japan. 

Jan. 25, 1851: Sojourner Truth addresses first Black Women’s rights convention.

Jan. 25, 1926: 16,000 textile workers strike in Passaic, New Jersey. 

Jan. 26, 1990: South African railroad workers win 12-week strike – 30 killed. 

Jan. 27, 1920: Kansas miners strike against compulsory arbitration.

Jan. 27, 1986: 500 Hormel workers locked out for honoring picket line in Ottumwa, Iowa.

Jan. 27, 1994: Spanish general strike against labor “reforms.”

Jan. 28, 1861: American Miners’ Association formed.

Jan. 28, 1942: Australian troops armed with machine guns, rifles and bayonets attack 500 striking Chinese sailors killing one. Many were arrested in Fremantle.

Jan. 29, 1737: Birth of Thomas Paine.

Jan. 29, 1936: Sit-down strike helps establish United Rubber Workers as national union in Akron, Ohio.

Jan. 29, 2017: Airports occupied in solidarity with victims of US travel ban.

Jan. 29, 2024: The workers of City Lights Bookstore and Publishers in San Francisco have been recognized voluntarily by the CEO of City Lights Books, Elaine Katzenberger and are thrilled to announce they have a union, part of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)

Jan. 30, 2015: Turkish government bans strike by 15,000 metalworkers. 


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



"Every day you don't do something, it makes it less likely that you will ever do something. So you've got to get started right away."



— Timothy Snyder



PHOTO BY TARMO HANNULA

Out of This World - Meteora, a rock formation in northwestern Greece that contains in its cliffs complexes of 14th century Eastern Orthodox monasteries.

Photo by TARMO HANNULA

Cooking from the Spice Road

By SARAH RINGLER


Dolmades, or dolmas, are typically little packages of meat and rice, or just rice, wrapped in grape leaves. They are very portable and nice to take to lunch or bring on picnics. 


Dolmas date back to the Ottoman Empire that controlled land on three continents in the 16th and 17th century and lives on in the modern cooking of Turkey, Armenia, Greece and much of the Balkans. The spices used below in the vegetarian version reflect the influences that came from the Spice Road, a vast network of trade that spanned from China to Europe and was under the control of the Ottoman sultans who took their cooking very seriously. Topkapi Palace in Istanbul for instance, was famous for its many kitchens that at one time employed 1,300 staff and fed ten thousand people a day. Chefs specialized in various dishes and also formed guilds to protect the integrity of their profession.

 

The recipes below are from a cookbook, “Turkish Cookery” by Inci Kut. The fillings may also be used to stuff bell peppers, tomatoes or cabbage leaves.

 

Etli Yaprak Dolmasi - Grape leaves stuffed with meat

 

1 pound of grape leaves packed in brine (8 ounce jar)

2 tablespoons butter

meat filling below

2 cups water

3 tablespoons lemon juice – optional

1 cup yogurt (mixed with minced garlic if desired)


Bring a saucepan of water to a boil and submerge grape leaves. Cook for about 5 minutes and then drain. Cut off the tough stems and remove the tough veins. If the leaves happen to be very large, you may want to cut them in half so your dolmasi are all about the same size.


Prepare the meat or vegetable filling. 


Place each leaf on a plate. Spoon a walnut-sized part of filling in the larger top size of the leaf. Fold each side over the filling and roll up tightly from the top to the pointed bottom. Arrange the rolls in tight rows inside a large fry pan or shallow saucepan. 


Finally, add butter and 2 cups of water into the pan. Add some lemon juice if desired. 


Cover tightly with an inverted plate or lid. Cook over low heat for 35 minutes. 


Serve warm with yogurt. Serves 4 -6 people

 

 

Etli Dolma Ici - Meat filling

 

1 pound of ground meat (lamb, beef or a mix)

2 tablespoons butter

2 medium chopped onions

¾ cup uncooked rice

¾ cup of water

2 medium size fresh tomatoes, peeled and chopped

1 teaspoon fresh or dry dill weed, chopped

1 teaspoon salt 

½ teaspoon ground pepper


Chop the onions. Heat the butter in a fry pan, add the onions and cook until onions are golden. Add the rice and continue to stir until the rice is coated with the butter and mixed in with the onions. Add ¾ cup water, cover and cook over medium heat for about 10 minutes or until the water is absorbed and the rice is cooked. Remove from the heat.


Stir in the ground meat, chopped dill weed, tomatoes, salt and pepper. Mix well and knead with your hands for about 5 minutes. 


Zeytinyagli dolma ici - no meat


1 1/2 cups rice

1 ¼ cup warm water

10 chopped medium size onions

¾ cup olive oil

1 medium size peeled and chopped tomato

2/3 cup pine nuts

2/3 cup currants

1 tablespoon chopped fresh mint

2 tablespoon chopped fresh or dry dill 

½ teaspoon pepper

3 teaspoons salt

5 teaspoons sugar

1 ½ teaspoons cinnamon

1 ½ teaspoons allspice


Cover the rice with lukewarm water and let cool. Pour the water out and wash the rice well and drain.


Chop the onions finely. Mix in the nuts, 1 teaspoons of salt and the olive oil. Heat a large fry pan on medium heat and add the onion mixture. Stir constantly for about 20 minutes. 


Add the drained rice to the onion mixture and toast the rice for about 10 minutes. Add the peeled and chopped tomato, rest of the salt, pepper, sugar and 1 ¼ cup warm water. Mix well and cover the pan with a lid. Turn the heat down and simmer for 10-15 minutes until the water is absorbed. 


Add the spice and the chopped herbs. Under the lid, cover the mixture with a cloth and steam for about 30 minutes with very low heat. Mix well before. 

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