The Save Prop 13 Campaign

 Source  December 30, 2025  20 Comments on The Save Prop 13 Campaign

Note: Author’s views do not necessarily reflect the views of the OB Rag.

By Lisa Mortensen

Our city and county governments are looking for any avenue available to obtain revenue to feed their over-sized staffing.  Rather than pop the staffing balloon, our elected officials would like to tap into our property taxes by placing initiatives on the ballot that would require only a 51% threshold to approve these measures into law that would threaten to uncontrollably increase our property taxes and jeopardize our Prop 13 protections.

Currently the county of San Diego wants to place a measure on the ballot that would increase the real estate sales transfer tax from 55 cents for every $500 in assessed property value to $30.55 for every $500.  This would basically burden both buyers and sellers to have to come up with this excessive additional transfer tax during a for-purchase transaction.

Let’s not forget the trash tax assessment that was placed on our property tax bill ($539 and rising in 2026-2027 tax bill) by just a 51% threshold.

Continue Reading The Save Prop 13 Campaign

2026: The Year We Leave Tyranny Behind

 Kate Callen  December 30, 2025  42 Comments on 2026: The Year We Leave Tyranny Behind

By Kate Callen

The year 2025 hit San Diego with a double dose of political wreckage.

Along with the rest of the country, we watched a president take a sledgehammer to democracy. Here at home, we saw a mayor extort taxpayers to replenish a treasury he looted.

Donald Trump and Todd Gloria began their second terms with the same playbook: They would use their executive powers to do whatever they damn well pleased.

This is called “tyranny,” and it’s the subject of a book that a wise friend gave me in 2025 to raise my hopes for 2026.

Tyrants have been with us since cave people learned to conquer one another. Sooner or later, they all topple. But the wait can be agonizing. Are there steps we can take to speed things up?

Continue Reading 2026: The Year We Leave Tyranny Behind

More Thoughts on the Passing of 2025 and What 2026 Will Bring

 Staff  December 30, 2025  6 Comments on More Thoughts on the Passing of 2025 and What 2026 Will Bring

By Geoff Page

2025

The Rag’s editor-in-chief challenged Rag writers to provide “thoughts on the passing of 2025 and what the future portends.” That’s a big Magilla because it was a year like none other in my three-quarters of a century.

I’m not a pessimist or an optimist, some of both. But, this year, it was nearly impossible to have any sense of optimism. However, two important, positive things happened this year in my personal world. My little girl got married and a dog bit me.

By “little girl,” I mean my 32-year-old child who is beginning her seventh year in the legal profession. I did the big walk down the aisle and it was more emotional than I had imagined. It was a great experience, seeing her so happy. I’m not a fan of the institution of marriage, as a rule, but that day was an exception.

After a long professional career as a construction claims expert, I had managed to avoid ever owning – or wearing – a suit. I wore one that day and it felt right. I have a new son-in-law now that we all like and is a perfect fit for my girl.

Much as I love my girl, I will say I don’t envy parents who have to go through weddings for multiple daughters. There is this level of stress…

The dog bite was not pleasant when it occurred.

Continue Reading More Thoughts on the Passing of 2025 and What 2026 Will Bring

Editordude: Cleaning Out My In-Basket for the New Year — California Utopia, Charlie Kirk Purge, Beach Drones and Midway Rising

 Source  December 29, 2025  1 Comment on Editordude: Cleaning Out My In-Basket for the New Year — California Utopia, Charlie Kirk Purge, Beach Drones and Midway Rising

Here’s a bunch of seemingly unrelated articles that have been sitting in my “in-basket” for a while — some for months. Yet, they deserve attention –so here they are:

It was supposed to be a California utopia. It turned into a ghost town.

By Tessa McLean, California Editor – SFGate / June 17, 2024

Just off the Pearblossom Highway, 75 miles northeast of Los Angeles, six crumbling stone columns rise from patches of dusty brown weeds. Two of the wider set pillars contain capacious brick fireplaces, the blocks deteriorating inside. The foundation of a once-grand building stretches out into the flat plain, carpeted with shards of glass and rusty beer cans. At its northern end, a short staircase leads to nowhere.

From 1914 to 1918, an actual building stood here — a bustling gathering place for California’s most important utopian commune-turned-doomed desert experiment. When wandering the site today, close your eyes and you might be able to imagine happy residents dancing or talking politics on a cool California desert evening, the snow-capped San Gabriel Mountains in the distance.

The remains of a grand hotel and social hall are the only recognizable infrastructure left of the failed town, which is visible even from the highway — if you don’t blink. The foundations of other nearby buildings sink into the ground, faded blue and purple graffiti covering the splintering stone, the lettering disappearing into low concrete walls. From the middle of the ruins, trailers and warehouse structures under the power lines jolt you back to the modern day from any dreams of early 1900s life.

Continue Reading Editordude: Cleaning Out My In-Basket for the New Year — California Utopia, Charlie Kirk Purge, Beach Drones and Midway Rising

See Censored ’60 Minutes’ Segment About Deported Venezuelans at the CECOT Prison in El Salvador

 Source  December 29, 2025  4 Comments on See Censored ’60 Minutes’ Segment About Deported Venezuelans at the CECOT Prison in El Salvador

Here is a screen recording of a 60 Minutes segment about the Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo (CECOT) prison in El Salvador, which was intended to be aired December 22, 2025 but was pulled last minute for unclear reasons. Despite being pulled, it aired on Global-TV in Canada anyway.

It was pulled due to corporate censorship.

Here is an analysis by Salon – Reader Supported News

CBS News segment yanked off the air at the last minute by editor-in-chief Bari Weiss was apparently showcased in Canada, with its content quickly spreading online.

The “60 Minutes” story, “Inside CECOT,” featured testimonies from Venezuelan men deported by the Trump administration from the U.S. to CECOT, a notoriously brutal prison in El Salvador. Weiss canned the segment on Sunday, just three hours before it was set to air, saying it “wasn’t ready” to be presented.

Continue Reading See Censored ’60 Minutes’ Segment About Deported Venezuelans at the CECOT Prison in El Salvador

Lawsuit Challenges County of San Diego Approval of Controversial Harmony Grove Project

 Source  December 29, 2025  1 Comment on Lawsuit Challenges County of San Diego Approval of Controversial Harmony Grove Project

Edited From JP Theberge

Following the October 2025 approval of the Harmony Grove Village South (HGVS) project by the San Diego County Board of Supervisors, a number of groups filed a lawsuit challenging the County’s decision, citing serious wildfire safety risks and violations of state and local law. These groups include the Elfin Forest / Harmony Grove Town Council and the Endangered Habitats League.

The approved project would allow more than 450 homes to be built in a designated Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone, relying on a single dead-end road as the only evacuation route. That road far exceeds current fire safety limits, and the project was approved without secondary access that is required to protect residents and first responders during a wildfire.

The Town Council represents residents of the largely rural, fire-prone Harmony Grove and Elfin Forest communities near Escondido. Endangered Habitats League is a statewide environmental organization that opposes unsafe, fire-prone sprawl development.

Continue Reading Lawsuit Challenges County of San Diego Approval of Controversial Harmony Grove Project

Tree Falls on House in Ocean Beach on Christmas Eve – a Video

 Source  December 29, 2025  2 Comments on Tree Falls on House in Ocean Beach on Christmas Eve – a Video

Wild weather caused a tree to fall on a house in Ocean Beach. No one was injured, but the person inside had to exit through a skylight due to the doors being jammed by the fallen tree. The house at 4720 Narragansett was red tagged until the tree is removed. Bad luck on a Christmas Eve.

Check out Ed Baier’s video.

Continue Reading Tree Falls on House in Ocean Beach on Christmas Eve – a Video

Keep the Love Flowing, America

 Ernie McCray  December 29, 2025  1 Comment on Keep the Love Flowing, America

by Ernie McCray

2025.
A year in which I often
watched, in disbelief and grief,
as a president who, between
cheating at golf
and decorating
the White House with gawdy appearing gold leaf,
constantly and relentlessly
stood before a mic
spewing
disgraceful overly racialized
cockeyed jive
in braggadocious tones
about the crackdowns,
featuring ridding the country of dark-skinned immigrants,
he had going on
on our borders
and in our cities and towns,

Continue Reading Keep the Love Flowing, America

The Holiday Spirit of the Octopus

 Source  December 29, 2025  7 Comments on The Holiday Spirit of the Octopus

By Joni Halpern

It is often said by holiday revelers that they are exhausted by the holiday season. Too much pressure to meet expectations. At the close of the season, those who participate in the festivities are ready to seek rest and distance from others. Those who spend the holidays alone await the return of the everyday hum of relationships among colleagues, neighbors, and acquaintances who might have been away spending time with loved ones.

In either case, people seem spent emotionally and financially by the holidays. They are relieved when the Holiday Spirit retreats into its lair like the octopus off the island of Maui who I heard escaped the commotion and expense of energy from too many visitors by sliding into a Coke bottle on the ocean bottom, reaching out one last tentacle to slap sand over the bottle and align small rocks to cover the opening. Like that octopus, the Holiday Spirit can almost be heard breathing a watery sigh of relief as it settles back for another nine months until the merchandising gods dig it up and force it to overtaxed prominence.

In America, it is at least substantially true that the Holiday Spirit involves a full-court press to convince us that those to whom we desire to show love or friendship, respect or neighborliness, connection or concern can only become aware of this message by conveyance of some material object, preferably purchased, sometimes homemade, and only rarely labeled “fruitcake.”

Continue Reading The Holiday Spirit of the Octopus

Update on Corey Bruins’ Criminal Fraud Case — Preliminary Hearing Set for January 26

 Frank Gormlie  December 23, 2025  12 Comments on Update on Corey Bruins’ Criminal Fraud Case — Preliminary Hearing Set for January 26

The Rag has an update on the Corey Bruins’ criminal fraud case stemming from allegations against him that he stole thousands of dollars of funds from the then-OB Town Council.

A Rag reporter attended his readiness conference just recently. During that brief conference, the parties agreed that the preliminary hearing scheduled for January 26th in the New Year will go as scheduled — unless a plea is reached before then.

Preliminary hearings — or “prelims” — are part of the process in which any felony is charged. It gives the prosecution a chance to place sufficient evidence before a judge in order for the case to proceed. It also causes much of the evidence to be brought out into the light of day, before the public as it were.

Continue Reading Update on Corey Bruins’ Criminal Fraud Case — Preliminary Hearing Set for January 26

Judge Blocks Massive 136-Unit ADU Development in Pacific Beach

 Source  December 23, 2025  5 Comments on Judge Blocks Massive 136-Unit ADU Development in Pacific Beach

Friday’s injunction requires city officials to stop processing permits for the controversial Chalcifica project until after they determine how to analyze its impacts.

By David Garrick / San Diego Union-Tribune / Dec. 23, 2025

A new court injunction could jeopardize a controversial 136-unit ADU development proposed for eastern Pacific Beach by requiring the city to thoroughly analyze its potential impacts, including on Native American artifacts there.

The ruling by Superior Court Judge Katherine Bacal could also lead to more rigorous approvals for other projects with large numbers of accessory dwelling units, or ADUs, that were proposed before the city rolled back a generous incentive in late August.

The injunction, issued Friday, requires city officials to stop processing permits or other approvals for the Pacific Beach project, called Chalcifica, until the city determines how to analyze its impacts.

Continue Reading Judge Blocks Massive 136-Unit ADU Development in Pacific Beach

Michael Smolens: End of Year Review of Homelessness in San Diego — Not Looking Good

 Source  December 22, 2025  6 Comments on Michael Smolens: End of Year Review of Homelessness in San Diego — Not Looking Good

By Michael Smolens  / San Diego Union-Tribune / December 19, 2025

[Go to original here for links]

It seems there’s hardly anything good to say about reducing homelessness in San Diego these days.

Keep that word “hardly” in mind for a minute.

San Diego’s perpetually stressed rental voucher program faces rent increases for recipients, some of whom are at risk of becoming homeless. Some cities may no longer add people to their years-long voucher waiting lists.

Greater state and local cooperation to clear out encampments on freeway-adjacent property was cheered by some officials. But the subsequent surge in shelter requests was mostly met with a no-room-at-the-inn response at the packed facilities, as reported by Blake Nelson of The San Diego Union-Tribune.

The safe parking program in Encinitas that gives homeless people a place to sleep in their cars may shut down at the end of this month amid a funding dispute.

The prospective rent increases planned by the San Diego Housing Commission are moving forward in anticipation of sweeping Trump administration cuts in homeless and housing programs that have yet to take effect. The other problems are largely independent of those coming reductions.

Continue Reading Michael Smolens: End of Year Review of Homelessness in San Diego — Not Looking Good