Saturday, December 31, 2022

FAIR covers Ukraine

 See the whole story here (from January 8, 2022).

Excerpt: "On February 6, 2014, as the anti-government protests were intensifying, an anonymous party (assumed by many to be Russia) leaked a call between Assistant Secretary of State Nuland and US ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt. The two officials discussed which opposition officials would staff a prospective new government, agreeing that Arseniy Yatsenyuk—Nuland referred to him by the nickname “Yats”—should be in charge. It was also agreed that someone “high profile” be brought in to push things along. That someone was Joe Biden.

"Weeks later, on February 22, after a massacre by suspicious snipers brought tensions to a head, the Ukrainian parliament quickly removed Yanukovych from office in a constitutionally questionable maneuver. Yanukovych then fled the country, calling the overthrow a coup. On February 27, Yatsenyuk became prime minister."

And just so it's not so grim in 2023, here are Dave Barry's comments about 2022.

Excerpt: "In entertainment news, the venerable Rolling Stones announce that they will hit the road this summer for their Drool on the Microphone Tour. This will be the Stones’ seventh tour since 2003, when their physical bodies finally disintegrated into small piles of dust and they were replaced by holograms. The good news is, ticket prices for the new tour will start as low as $150. The bad news is the $150 seats are so far from the stage that the sound will not reach them until after the concert is over."

Even Red States Get It

From the Davis Vanguard

REPORT: Oklahoma Republican-Led Coalition Contributes to Criminal Justice Reform

Posted by Leslie Acevedo
Date: December 31, 2022



By Leslie Acevedo

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK – A Republican-led coalition has contributed to criminal justice reform in this normally red-colored state, according to a report from “Arnold Ventures,” a philanthropy dedicated to analyzing societal problems in the U.S.

Oklahoma, in the last half-decade, has “[e]nacted a series of landmark legislation that has reclassified drug offenses, removed barriers to reintegration, and reappropriated funding to social services — all with stunningly positive outcomes,” according to AV’s David Gateley.

The work Oklahoma has done in criminal justice reform is an example to states, whether Democratic or Republican, on “[h]ow change is possible across the political spectrum,” wrote Gateley.

Gateley added, “When we can find common ground on issues, that’s where the most work can get done. And that’s really true for Oklahoma” despite common belief Republicans don’t necessarily support criminal justice reform.

Initial reform began due to high incarceration rates in Oklahoma, said Gateley, explaining, “In 2018, Oklahoma kept behind bars 1, 079 per 100,000 people- roughly 1.3 percent of its entire adult population. Black citizens making up seven percent of Oklahoma residents but 26 percent of its prison or jail inhabitants.” [Compare this to the U.S. average of ~750 per 100,000, or the world average of ~50 per 100,000]

Reasons, he said, for the incarcerated rates were the same reasons nationwide: “The War on Drugs, tough-on-crime policies, a lack of social safety net, and a ruthless approach to sentencing.”

Gateley also noted Oklahoma’s three-strikes-rule, which “sends anyone convicted of three criminal charges (with one being a violent felony) to life in prison, and a truth-in-sentencing measure required people convicted of violent crimes to serve 85 percent of their sentence before becoming eligible for parole, regardless of good behavior.”

Prisons in Oklahoma hit, Gateley pointed out, 110 percent capacity, then-Gov. Mary Fallin signed HB 3052, criminal justice reform legislation, which was not supported or funded in 2012. In 2016, Gov. Fallin created the Oklahoma Justice Reform Task Force, as criminal justice reform was a priority for her administration.

Oklahomans for Criminal Justice Reform, led by the state’s former Republican House Speaker Kris Steele, placed State Question 780 (reclassified some drug and property crimes from felonies to misdemeanors) and State Question 781 (requires money saved from 780 to be distributed to substance abuse and mental health services) on the ballot for the year’s general election in 2016, as voters approved both and went in effect in July 2017.

Gateley said, in 2018, political newcomer and Tul[s]a businessman Kevin Stitt, was able to gain success in the primary election, later winning the Republican nomination focusing on criminal justice reform and finding bad policies the reason for high incarceration rates in Oklahoma.

Gov. Stitt, within his first few weeks, in office improved State Question 780 with HB 1269 resulting in “largest single-day commutation in American history, with 462 inmates released,” Gateley wrote.

He added, “The governor’s office, the Oklahoma’s Pardon and Parole Board, and the Department of Corrections also teamed up with nonprofits across the state to host transition fairs to provide men and women leaving prison with information and resources for rejoining free society.”

Stritt’s administration, according to the AV story, passed HB 1373 “[m]aking it easier for people with a criminal record to receive occupational licenses, and HB 2765 “(appropriating) more than $10 million to expand drug court options and fund diversion programs and substance abuse services.”

HB 1795 made it attainable, said Gateley in his report, for people leaving the system to obtain a driver’s license and difficulty for license to be revoked, leading the way for the Sarah Stritt Act: “Requiring the Department of Corrections to supply individuals leaving custody with a REAL ID card, a résumé noting any trade proficiency, copies of their work records and vocational training, and other documentation to help them secure employment and housing.”

In May 2022, the passing of HB 4369, granted “[o]ffenders on supervised parole to earn time credits to decrease their supervision, and HB 3316, which automated the expungement of those who were eligible,” added Gateley.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Ukraine update - the war itself is a racket

 

Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Life Expectancy

 





And to tell you how crooked is economics:

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

A letter to the Sacramento County Supervisors

 It's with profound disgust I read the Supervisors have approved a $450m expansion of the County's jail.

In light of that colossal misallocation of resources, I suggest we revise our county's motto to "The beatings will continue until morale improves."

Here's from a NY Times article The Root Cause of Violent Crime Is Not What We Think It Is

"If throwing money at police and prisons made us safer, we would probably already be the safest country in the history of the world. We are not, because insufficient punishment is not the root cause of violence. And if people are talking about how tough they are and how scared you should be, they care more about keeping you scared than keeping you safe....

"In Denver, a five-year randomized control trial of a program that provides housing subsidies to those at risk of being unhoused found a 40 percent reduction in arrests among participants. These kinds of results are why localities from New Jersey to New Mexico are restructuring their local governments to invest in the social determinants of health and safety...

"If you want policies that actually work, you have to change the political conversation from 'tough candidates punishing bad people' to 'strong communities keeping everyone safe.' Candidates who care about solving a problem pay attention to what caused it. Imagine a plumber who tells you to get more absorbent flooring but does not look for the leak. "

I say shame on all of you who voted for this monstrosity, and who continue to believe that more incarceration will solve anything.

--Your constituent
--Mark Dempsey

Monday, December 19, 2022

Dennis Kucinich Describes Peacemaking

 

 
 
This interview with Dennis Kucinich is a reminder of just how advanced he is, spiritually speaking. Kucinich is a genuine peace-maker ("Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called sons of God"...say the beatitudes) We're lucky to even know such people exist.
 
Something to think about: What if war settles nothing? After all, we're still re-fighting the Civil War more than 100 years after it "concluded"...

Update, from a NY Times article The Root Cause of Violent Crime Is Not What We Think It Is

"...if people are talking about how tough they are and how scared you should be, they care more about keeping you scared than keeping you safe."

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Is Houston a Model for Ending Homelessness?

(c) by Mark Dempsey

The Davis Vanguard recently wrote that the city of Houston has handled homelessness far better than California, with a follow-up that confirms how badly California has done (California Has Largest Affordable Housing Deficit in the Nation). To quote the first article: "A decade ago, Houston had an out-of-control homelessness problem—sixth worst in the nation—and now according to a recent report in Smart Cities Dive, the area has seen the homeless population decrease by 63%." 

The three key factors to Houston's success: 1. Housing comes first (and Houston has cheaper housing) 2. A steering committee integrates the various services so the unhoused are not just supplied with a roof over their head, they have services beyond housing. 3. Decisions are data-driven.

Despite billions spent on a similar "housing first" strategy to deal with homelessness, California's slow progress has local governments frustrated and returning to "policing first" (rousting out homeless camps) as their preferred solution. As evidence this remains so, Sacramento County just approved a $450 million addition to its jail, despite opposition from several citizen groups, the ACLU, and most of the local media. Homeless people fill the current jail to capacity, even when they are just awaiting trial. Meanwhile, studies of the policing-and-emergency-room approach to homelessness reveal it is both cruel and more expensive than providing housing.

Not mentioned in the Davis Vanguard article is the fact that Houston has no planning department or zoning. Except for road standards, and some minimum lot sizes, Houston has nothing resembling California's "planning." If you want to open a bar in your living room--and your (private) subdivision's rules don't forbid it--you can do it in Houston.

In contrast, thanks to a state mandate to provide them, California's local governments are awash in "General Plans"--most of them a waste of time and paper since these "plans" are discarded at the drop of a hat. Think of it as a full employment program for planners. 

To be fair, Houston's lack of planning did lead to homes flooding during Hurricane Katrina, so California's planning is not completely, just mostly useless. Once, Sacramento was second only to New Orleans in flood risk. Yet, with all its massive planning apparatus, Sacramento still approved development in the North Natomas floodplain surrounded by weak levees.

Histrionics rather than effective action is not new in American public policy. Never mind the Trump presidency, the TSA let 95% of bombs through its airport checks when tested.  We don't have airport security, we have airport security theater.

Planning authority Jane Jacobs, author of The Death and Life of the Great American City says modern planning is planning kabuki rather than something effective too: "The pseudo-science of planning seems almost neurotic in its determination to imitate empiric failure and ignore empiric success....to put it bluntly, [sprawl planners] are all in the same stage of elaborately learned superstition as medical science was early in the last century, when physicians put their faith in bloodletting."

So Houston's lack of zoning may explain its affordability compared to California--and unaffordable housing drives homelessness--but California's perverse allegiance to land speculation is far more important in driving up the cost of housing.

Land speculators typically purchase outlying farmland for a few thousand dollars an acre, then, once they have permission to develop, sell it to builders for as much as 50 - 100 times what they paid for it. Because IRS lets real estate owners exchange unimproved land for income-producing real estate like malls, or apartments, without income tax, you can consider that egregious profit tax-free, too.

In Germany, the developers have to sell the ag land to the local government at the ag land price, then re-purchase it at the development-approved price. All "unearned increment" accrues to the benefit of the public. In California, the money goes to the speculators and raises the price of the land. 

The late County Supervisor Grantland Johnson said it was widely acknowledged throughout the state that the region most in the hip pocket of developers was Sacramento. Meanwhile, a study of the reason housing has become so expensive (Rethinking the Economics of Land and Housing by Josh Ryan-Collins, Toby Lloyd, and Laurie Macfarlane) attributes 80% of price rises to land costs. Again: speculation raises land prices.

So there is a tremendous financial incentive for land speculators to purchase influence with local governments, and press them to build more sprawling, commute-lengthening suburbs. But building multi-story housing rather than sprawl not only uses land more sparingly, it produces demographics that make neighborhood commerce possible for pedestrians. It's also helpful in reducing CO2-producing commutes, cutting vehicle miles traveled roughly in half. With the right street design, it makes transit economically viable too.

Impatient or not, Californians are going to have to deal with homelessness and unaffordable housing for years to come unless they curb speculation, and get behind effective planning. Otherwise, California is going to have to deal with the frustration of public policy theatrics rather than effectively addressing these issues.     

Finally, the prospect of free prison labor is a motivation to keep incarcerating the homeless. There has been "a push across the country to lock up homeless people, private prison companies keep upping their bribes to elected officials, and stories of corrupt judges keep popping up and are likely only the tip of the iceberg." (from here)

It's not a pretty picture.

--

Mark Dempsey is a former real estate broker and member of a Sacramento County Planning Advisory Council.

Sick Days (in the civilized world)

 

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Could there be an agenda? (TV News covers the Royal Family, but ignores big labor news)

“TV News Covered British Royal Visit 5,668% More Than Largest Academic Strike in U.S. History” [Adam Johnson, The Column]. “ABC News, CBS News, NBC News, and CNN all have a dedicated ‘royal expert,’ ‘royal correspondent,’ or ‘royal commentator.’ … ABC, CBS, and CNN do not have a “labor expert” or a dedicated labor reporter of any kind. NBC News does, Eli M. Rosenberg, but he has not covered the University of California academic strike. … None of the Sunday morning talk shows, NBC News’s Meet the Press, CBS News’s Face The Nation, ABC News’s This Week, or CNN’s State of the Union—which set the agenda for what people in Washington are supposed to care about that week—have covered the California labor strike since it began in November 14. CNN, which has over 500 hours of news to fill in the three weeks since the strike began, hasn’t done a single segment on it. The largest academic strike in U.S. history is simply a non-story to TV news outlets.”

 --from nakedcapitalism.com    

Sort of like local land-use planning. There are lots of "traffic engineers" (who were educated in programs funded by auto manufacturers) but no "pedestrian engineers" -- which, if you think about it, are necessary if you're going to have people walk to transit stops. No transit patrons? Transit withers to a third-rate excuse to buy a car. 

Cats with jobs

  pic.twitter.com/tZ2t2cTr8d — cats with jobs 🛠 (@CatWorkers) April 18, 2024