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Did you see this? A video of more violence by cops at a UC campus a week ago

 Source  January 27, 2012  6 Comments on Did you see this? A video of more violence by cops at a UC campus a week ago

Editor: Here’s some news that fell under the radar: police go on a violent rampage on another UC campus, injuring and arresting students. This was up at UC Riverside on Thursday, January 19th. Check out the video on the original site.

By Jamie Applegate / The Daily Californian / Originally published Jan. 20, 2012

Police officers arrested two protesters and struck several others with plastic pellets during a demonstration Thursday [1/19/12] surrounding the UC Board of Regents meeting at UC Riverside.

The two individuals arrested — identified as Kenneth Ehrlich, 39, and Humberto Rivera, 25 — were booked on suspicion of felony assault on a police officer, according to Riverside campus spokesperson Kris Lovekin.

Nine police officers also sustained minor injuries, and about 11 people in the crowd suffered bruises from the pellets, Lovekin said.

For UC Riverside junior Stephen Fong, the protests on his campus marked a dramatic shift in the atmosphere of the student body.

Continue Reading Did you see this? A video of more violence by cops at a UC campus a week ago

Only $13,375 more needed to save Palomar Mountain State Park

 Source  January 27, 2012  0 Comments on Only $13,375 more needed to save Palomar Mountain State Park

By Miriam Raftery / East County Magazine / January 26, 2012

Last week, we reported that Friends of Palomar Mountain State Park launched a pledge drive to save this beautiful place from closing forever. They asked the state to keep the park open if their group can raise $60,000 to fill the gap between revenues and operating expenses. Already, $16,625 has been raised.

Today [1/26/12], chairman Rick Barclay revealed, “We’ve received a generous matching pledge challenge from Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Wilson of Rancho Santa Fe: If we can raise $30,000 in pledges and donations, they’ll match that amount.”

Now only $13,375 more is needed to reach the $60,000 total.

Continue Reading Only $13,375 more needed to save Palomar Mountain State Park

Attorney General and Sierra Club join law suit against SANDAG’s flawed transportation plan

 Source  January 27, 2012  1 Comment on Attorney General and Sierra Club join law suit against SANDAG’s flawed transportation plan
by Lucas O’Connor / Two Cathedrals / January 26, 2012

Some big news for sleepy little San Diego this week, as both Sierra Club of California and Attorney General Kamala Harris joined a local lawsuit challenging SANDAG’s 2050 regional plan.

For her part, the Attorney General had previously weighed in on the plan, cautioning that it failed to meet the state’s standards for emissions reductions and warning of trouble on the horizon if action wasn’t taken. And yet, no action was taken. Despite being explicitly warned that its plan would have significant legal problems, SANDAG’s leadership just went ahead and did it anyways. And now SANDAG Chairman Jerome Stocks is very sad that the state’s Attorney General would spend tax dollars to ensure the law is followed.


Continue Reading Attorney General and Sierra Club join law suit against SANDAG’s flawed transportation plan

Did Twitter Just Commit Social Suicide?

 Source  January 27, 2012  0 Comments on Did Twitter Just Commit Social Suicide?

By Mark Gibb / rsn – Forbes / January 27, 2012

Starting today, we give ourselves the ability to reactively withhold content from users in a specific country – while keeping it available in the rest of the world. We have also built in a way to communicate transparently to users when content is withheld, and why.

With those words earlier today, in a blog posting titled “Tweets still must flow” the management of Twitter’s went over to the dark side and may well have dug their own grave.

In what can only have been a fit of corporate insanity, Twitter announced that it has the ability to filter tweets to conform to the demands of various countries.

Thus, in France and Germany it is illegal to broadcast pro-Nazi sentiments and Twitter will presumably be able to block such content and inform the poster why it was blocked.

Continue Reading Did Twitter Just Commit Social Suicide?

Suit Filed to Restrict Harmful Naval Sonar Training Off West Coast

 Source  January 27, 2012  0 Comments on Suit Filed to Restrict Harmful Naval Sonar Training Off West Coast

Groups Claim National Marine Fisheries Service Fail to Protect Thousands of Whales, Dolphins, Sea Lions and Other Animal Life From U.S. Navy Warfare Training Exercises Along the West Coast

By Ed Joyce / KPBS / January 26, 2012

A coalition of conservation and American Indian groups sued the National Marine Fisheries Service Thursday, Jan. 26, over the use Navy’s use of sonar and other training exercises. The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Northern California.

It claims the National Marine Fisheries Service failed to protect thousands of whales, dolphins, porpoises, seals and sea lions from U.S. Navy warfare training exercises along the coasts of California, Oregon, and Washington.

Continue Reading Suit Filed to Restrict Harmful Naval Sonar Training Off West Coast

US Supreme Court Upholds Need for Warrant for GPS Tracking

 Source  January 25, 2012  3 Comments on US Supreme Court Upholds Need for Warrant for GPS Tracking

The Court considers the 4th Amendment implications of new surveillance technologies.

Jacob Sullum / Reason.com / January 25, 2012

“If you win this case,” Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer told Deputy Solicitor General Michael Dreeben during oral argument in U.S. v. Jones last fall, “there is nothing to prevent the police or the government from monitoring 24 hours a day the public movement of every citizen of the United States.” That prospect, Breyer said, “sounds like 1984.”

Fortunately, the government did not win the case. But the Court’s unanimous decision, announced on Monday, may not delay Breyer’s 1984 scenario for long. Unless the Court moves more boldly to restrain government use of new surveillance technologies, the Framers’ notion of a private sphere protected from “unreasonable searches and seizures” will become increasingly quaint.

Continue Reading US Supreme Court Upholds Need for Warrant for GPS Tracking

SDG&E to PUC: ‘We don’t need no stinkin’ hearings!’

 Source  January 25, 2012  1 Comment on SDG&E to PUC: ‘We don’t need no stinkin’ hearings!’

By Don Bauder / San Diego Reader / January 24, 2012

San Diego Gas & Electric has told the California Public Utilities Commission that there is no need for local public hearings now on its attempt to get customers to pick up uninsured costs of the 2007 wildfires. Recently, the Mussey Grade Road Alliance asked for such a hearing.

Continue Reading SDG&E to PUC: ‘We don’t need no stinkin’ hearings!’

Has the Occupy Movement Co-opted the Medical Marijuana Issue?

 Source  January 25, 2012  7 Comments on Has the Occupy Movement Co-opted the Medical Marijuana Issue?

By Gail Powell / Special to the OB Rag

The Occupy movement has some people thinking that the anti-Wall Street political group has co-opted the medical marijuana issue. Where once the closing of dispensaries would have incited the wrath of medical marijuana activists; now many of those same people are off doing their Occupy thing. That is not to say that the issues of the people supporting the utilization of medical marijuana is dead: it is not.

And I do not wish to make it seem that political protesters are dilettantes who jump from one exciting activity to another. But the federal pressure on the clinics that has come down from the Obama administration is a part of the bigger picture of injustice from the national level filtering malice upon the local level.

Continue Reading Has the Occupy Movement Co-opted the Medical Marijuana Issue?

OB Mainstreet Association Makes Call to Save Special Events in the City of San Diego

 Source  January 25, 2012  7 Comments on OB Mainstreet Association Makes Call to Save Special Events in the City of San Diego

Editor: The Ocean Beach Mainstreet Association has issued a call for OBceans to join a city-wide campaign to save special events in San Diego. There’s a press conference on Friday – see below – and also a petition to sign – also see below.

Action required to save special events in the city of San Diego!

By OBMA

The Ocean Beach MainStreet Association would like to get you involved in a critical movement to save special events throughout the city of San Diego. Make your voice heard today by signing the petition on the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce “Save Our Events Coalition” website.

Continue Reading OB Mainstreet Association Makes Call to Save Special Events in the City of San Diego

Irwin Jacobs’ Balboa Park Plan Dealt Legal Setback

 Source  January 24, 2012  1 Comment on Irwin Jacobs’ Balboa Park Plan Dealt Legal Setback

Judge Faults Balboa Park Traffic Plan – A $40 million plan to take traffic out of the heart of Balboa Park has been dealt a legal setback

By Gene Cubbison / NBC San Diego / Jan 24, 2012

A $40 million plan to take traffic out of the heart of Balboa Park has been dealt a legal setback.

Critics say they hope the Superior Court ruling by Judge Judith Hayes will prod the plan’s backers — led by Qualcomm founder Irwin Jacobs — to consider other options. The Plaza de Panama project is among the preparations for the centennial celebration of Balboa Park’s 1915 Panama-California Exposition, which helped raise San Diego’s national and worldwide prominence at the time.

But historic preservationists say it’s misguided.

“There are probably ten really good alternatives that we could wholeheartedly support,” says Bruce Coons, executive director of Save Our Heritage Organisation (SOHO), which filed the lawsuit.

Continue Reading Irwin Jacobs’ Balboa Park Plan Dealt Legal Setback

Robert Reich: The State of Our Disunion

 Source  January 24, 2012  2 Comments on Robert Reich: The State of Our Disunion

The State of Our Disunion: A Globalizing Private Sector, A Government Overwhelmed by Corporate Money

By Robert Reich / RR’s Blog – RSN / January 24, 2012

Who should have the primary strategic responsibility for making American workers globally competitive – the private sector or government? This will be a defining issue in the 2012 campaign.

In his State of the Union address, President Obama will make the case that government has a vital role. His Republican rivals disagree. Mitt Romney charges the President is putting “free enterprise on trial,” while Newt Gingrich merely fulminates about “liberal elites.”

American business won’t and can’t lead the way to more and better jobs in the United States. First, the private sector is increasingly global, with less and less stake in America. Second, it’s driven by the necessity of creating profits, not better jobs.

Continue Reading Robert Reich: The State of Our Disunion

The U-T Finds Politicos in South Bay Who Question DA’s Election-Year Prosecutions

 Source  January 24, 2012  3 Comments on The U-T Finds Politicos in South Bay Who Question DA’s Election-Year Prosecutions

Editor: Finally some pushback against DA Bonnie Dumanis’ persecution of the Democrats in the South Bay Sweetwater school district. U-T reporters Fry and Moran have spoken with people in the South Bay who are upset with what they see as Dumanis’ apparent election-year grandstanding and over-arching hypocrisy. Even the U-T poll showed this doubt with its readers. The U-T asked: Are Bonnie Dumanis’ prosecutorial decisions for elected officials affected by politics? “Yes” was the response of 86% with 334 votes, whereas “No” was received by 13% with 54 votes, for total of 388 votes (as of 9 am today).

by Wendy Fry and Greg Moran / U-T San Diego / Jan. 21, 2012

The elected official accepted hundreds of dollars of theater and opera tickets, all the while steering millions of taxpayer dollars to the people paying the bills.

A South Bay official charged with corruption? No.

Supervisor Pam Slater-Price accepted the tickets, while dispensing grants to the opera and the Old Globe Theatre. After The Watchdog revealed she failed to report the gifts on state forms, she was given a $2,000 administrative fine in 2010.

Slater-Price’s act — failing to report gifts on state-mandated forms — is what has four current and former officials of the Sweetwater schools in trouble with the District Attorney’s Office.

They are accused of taking meals (and theater tickets) from a contractor and then steering public money toward his contract. They have pleaded not guilty to perjury and filing false statements, 24 felonies total related to the failure to disclose the gifts.

Continue Reading The U-T Finds Politicos in South Bay Who Question DA’s Election-Year Prosecutions