After several days of rain, the sun finally came out, and stayed out all day.
Went to the monthly Citizens Climate Lobby (CCL) meeting. This is the first time I remember that the main speaker was an Alaskan - from Ketchikan - Kiera O'Brien. She's also a Harvard grad who was head of the Harvard Republicans, and she's organized a national group called Students for Carbon Dividends.
You can watch to the video of the national call here, and see the CCL website here. Kiera was on a delayed flight, so one of her co-workers Alexander Posner also participated. He did an excellent job as well.
Now that most people accept the reality of Climate Change, it's important to know that there are things that can be done to reduce the impacts. The Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act is CCL's main focus. It's been called the most effective single act that can be done to reduce carbon. You can learn more about that here. If you feel you want to do something about climate change, I urge you to check the link and then call your members of Congress and tell them you want them to pass the Act.
Then a stop at the library to pick up a book and then a short loop on the bike trail to enjoy the sunny - if chilly - morning.
The snow is much lower on the mountains that before the rain. This is from the Alaska Native Medical Center campus.
Here are some late grasses shining in the morning sun. As we go toward winter, the sun gets lower and lower on the horizon during the day.
There was ice on most of the puddles on the trail.
And here's a picture from yesterday. Not sure where else to put it. It's dinner at the Queen of Sheba Ethiopian restaurant last night.
I planted most of the leftover daffodil bulbs. I've had mixed results in the past, but I'm going to be optimistic. I hope I can post pictures of yellow flowers in the spring.
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Saturday, October 12, 2019
Friday, October 11, 2019
OLÉ Courts Class Does Tour of State Court Buildings Anchorage
This first picture is to remind my non-Alaskan readers that since we are post equinox, we're losing 5 minutes a day of daylight. So waiting at the bus stop at 7:25am it was still dark!
Here's the courthouse directory on the wall.
Then back through the tunnel to the Boney Courthouse and up to the Supreme Court chamber, where I wanted to be Wednesday afternoon to hear the case of the Alaska youths suing the state for policies (development of oil and gas) which endanger their future by worsening climate change. I had been up here once when i was covering redistricting. It's a much nicer space than the cells we'd just been in.
Appellate Judge Tracy Wollenberg was our host here. She talked about conditions for appealing a case. A small percentage of cases actually go to trial. So those that do are people who feel strongly and she said a large number appeal.
She did point out that in Alaska only criminal cases go to the appellate court and are heard by three judges.
Civil cases that are appealed go directly to the Supreme Court. But the court only hears a relatively few cases. I think I got that right, but check before you bet money on that.
The tour was over at 10 am (we met at 8:15am) and it was plenty light out by then. We didn't have any snow in the Anchorage bowl yet, but someone on the tour said there was snow falling (but not sticking) at her Hillside home. Not sure where this truck started out this morning.
Here's the courthouse directory on the wall.
We first stopped in a courtroom and Superior Judge Una Gandbhir talked about the kinds of cases she normally hears (civil) and answered questions. OLÉ folks tend to have lots of questions. The comment that got my attention was that there was a growing number of people who defend themselves these days. Fortunately, someone else asked a follow up on that and she expanded. This only works with civil cases (not criminal) and without a jury. It's difficult if one side has an attorney and the other is self representing.
In civil cases, there's no court appointed attorney for those who can't afford one, so that's probably one reason for this. The judge also said there are lots of material available to help people find the forms they need and learn what they need to do.
Here's a link to the Alaska Courts main self-help page.
I didn't know what the rules for photos was. I know that reporters take pictures in state trials. So I took this one as we were settling down and didn't take a picture when the judge came in.
There's a tunnel between the Nesbitt and Boney Courthouses, that goes under the street. We watched the video they show jurors, which I'd seen when I was called to jury duty. It's quite good going explanations that jurors should hear about their role, the judges' role, the jury's role, etc.
Then retired Superior Court Judge Elaine Andrews came in and started talking about work she's doing now to help educate people about the court system. But time was short and we went back through the tunnel to the security office. This office is responsible for the prisoners who come to court each week and they had a selection of cuffs on the table. After that we got to see the room where they monitor all the security cameras - including the cells with awaiting prisoners. We could see some of the cells from that room. It did not look like a cheerful space. And I was thinking I'm glad I'm taking the Innocence Project class at the same time as this one.
Appellate Judge Tracy Wollenberg was our host here. She talked about conditions for appealing a case. A small percentage of cases actually go to trial. So those that do are people who feel strongly and she said a large number appeal.
She did point out that in Alaska only criminal cases go to the appellate court and are heard by three judges.
Civil cases that are appealed go directly to the Supreme Court. But the court only hears a relatively few cases. I think I got that right, but check before you bet money on that.
Thursday, October 10, 2019
International Ombuds Day Finds 3 Alaskan Ombuds At Loussac
My first book chapter was on the Alaska State and Anchorage Municipal Ombudspersons. And later I did some follow up chapters. So I have a special place in my heart for people serving in this office.
Basically, an ombudsperson's job is to take complaints about government service, investigate it, and make recommendations. An honorable job and the people who carry out these jobs well are on my hero list.
After dropping off a book due at the Loussac library today, I saw the big ombudsman signs and learned it was International Ombudsman Day (2nd Thursday of October for those looking ahead to next year.) From the International Ombudsman Association website:
Here's Anchorage Municipal Ombudsman Darrel Hess and his Deputy May Ramirez-Xiong today.
I also got to talk to the State Ombudsperson, Kate Burkhart, who works out of Juneau, but Anchorage also has a state ombuds office as well. (Note: She was standing in front of the Long Term Care Ombudsman sign, so, to avoid confusion, I blocked out some of the writing on that sign.)
Also, there was Kathryn Curry, Deputy Long Term Care Ombudsman, of the State's Long Term Care Ombudsperson. That's a very specialized office that's mandated by Federal Law Older Americans Act. They specialize, as the name suggests, in investigating complaints about long term care facilities.
And maybe I'll find some time to write about the next installments of the Project Innocence and Pebble Mine classes I attended before the library.
[There's always a non-sexist way to say something. Ombudsman is the original Swedish word that comes from Old Norse. The ombuds community discusses different ways to actually say it in non-sexist ways. My preferences are ombuds and ombudsperson. I suspect the names above are in statute and people rather not go through the process of changing it.]
Basically, an ombudsperson's job is to take complaints about government service, investigate it, and make recommendations. An honorable job and the people who carry out these jobs well are on my hero list.
After dropping off a book due at the Loussac library today, I saw the big ombudsman signs and learned it was International Ombudsman Day (2nd Thursday of October for those looking ahead to next year.) From the International Ombudsman Association website:
"On Thursday, 10 October 2019, IOA invites you to participate in National Ombuds Day. This is the second celebration of a profession that has existed for centuries, yet remains relatively unknown and underutilized.
This Year’s Theme Is
Ombuds: Unusual Name. Important Service.
Ombuds Day serves as an additional opportunity to educate and raise awareness among the public about the history and practices of the ombuds profession including the various ombuds models, the roles they play, the services they offer and the value provided."
Here's Anchorage Municipal Ombudsman Darrel Hess and his Deputy May Ramirez-Xiong today.
I also got to talk to the State Ombudsperson, Kate Burkhart, who works out of Juneau, but Anchorage also has a state ombuds office as well. (Note: She was standing in front of the Long Term Care Ombudsman sign, so, to avoid confusion, I blocked out some of the writing on that sign.)
And maybe I'll find some time to write about the next installments of the Project Innocence and Pebble Mine classes I attended before the library.
[There's always a non-sexist way to say something. Ombudsman is the original Swedish word that comes from Old Norse. The ombuds community discusses different ways to actually say it in non-sexist ways. My preferences are ombuds and ombudsperson. I suspect the names above are in statute and people rather not go through the process of changing it.]
Tuesday, October 08, 2019
"All of this violates the Constitution, the rule of law, and every past precedent. Never before in our history has the House of Representatives-under the control of either political party- taken the American people down the dangerous path you seem determined to pursue." [UPDATED]
[UPDATE Oct 9: Here's a Lawfare analysis that's more informed than my comments were, but comes to the same conclusions.]
Here are the second and third paragraphs of an eight page letter Donald Trump's counsel sent to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and to three House Committee Chairs (Eliot L. Engel Chairman
House Foreign Affairs Committee, Adam B. Schiff Chairman House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, and Elijah E. Cummings Chairman House Committee on Oversight and Reform).
Let's hope that Trump retains this attorney as one of his top legal defenders as things drag down into the chaos ahead. As Kellyann Conway's husband George tweeted about this letter:
"violates every past precedent" - truly an amazing claim. Every one of them, so he doesn't have to list them or show how they are violated I wonder how many past precedents there are. Hundreds? Thousands? Just name a few, ok?
Overturning the 2016 election claims - Well, yes, if a president is eventually convicted in the Senate, it has the effect of ending that president's tenure in office. Just like when a criminal is convicted and sentenced to prison, it ends the criminal's right to freedom. But the problem began with the criminal behavior, not the conviction. His argument would mean that a president could never be impeached.
And let's remember that Hillary Clinton had about 3 million more votes than did Trump in 2016, so let's cool it with the crocodile tears.
So, I'm guessing this is just part of Trump's long time standard operating procedure - Attack, Counterattack, and Never Apologize. It's the bullies' creed - make it so hard and so expensive that most people give up and let you have your way. It's how Trump has gotten away with so much shit. (Sorry, there's no really polite word.)
One point of this letter is to waste time, possibly intimidate some members of Congress, and to drag out the handing over of any documents to Congress.
But this letter is really for Trump's supporters who will eat up every accusation and start filling FB and Twitter with quotes that show Trump as the victim of Democratic abuse. And the hypocrisy of Abuser In Chief accusing others of his modus operandi? Well, bashing Democrats and keeping them from trampling on their values and destroying their way of life appear to be the things Trump's hard-core supporters like best. From Jane Coaston at Vox:
One more thing. Here's Trump's legal counsel's signature on page 8 of the letter:
It's about 10 lines high! John Hancock would be impressed. I'd love to have a scientific graphologist do some analysis of this signature. I'm guessing this suggests confidence, maybe the kind you get when you live in a bubble where everyone agrees with you.
Here are the second and third paragraphs of an eight page letter Donald Trump's counsel sent to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and to three House Committee Chairs (Eliot L. Engel Chairman
House Foreign Affairs Committee, Adam B. Schiff Chairman House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, and Elijah E. Cummings Chairman House Committee on Oversight and Reform).
"For example, you have denied the President the right to cross-examine witnesses, to call witnesses, to receive transcripts of testimony, to have access to evidence, to have counsel present, and many other basic rights guaranteed to all Americans. You have conducted your proceedings in secret. You have violated civil liberties and the separation of powers by threatening Executive Branch officials, claiming that you will seek to punish those who exercise fundamental constitutional rights and prerogatives. All of this violates the Constitution, the rule of law, and every past precedent. Never before in our history has the House of Representatives-under the control of either political party- taken the American people down the dangerous path you seem determined to pursue.
Put simply, you seek to overturn the results of the 2016 election and deprive the American people of thePresident they have freely chosen. ManyDemocratsnowapparently view impeachment not only as a means to undo the democratic results of the last election, but as a strategy to influence the next election, which is barely more than a year away. As one member of Congress explained, he is "concerned that if we don't impeach the President, he will get reelected." 1 Your highly partisan and unconstitutional effort threatens grave and lasting damage to our democratic institutions, to our system of free elections, and to the American people."
Let's hope that Trump retains this attorney as one of his top legal defenders as things drag down into the chaos ahead. As Kellyann Conway's husband George tweeted about this letter:
There are so many outrageous claims in these two paragraphs, it's overwhelming. First, the House impeachment is to determine if there should be an indictment. It's sort of like a grand jury that is closed to the public and only the prosecutor presents information. The 'court' part doesn't happen until an impeachment is accepted by the Senate for trial. So all this about violating civil rights is nonsense.It’s hard to count the number of ways that this letter is, constitutionally and legally, garbage. https://t.co/OIrf1awCHX— George Conway (@gtconway3d) October 8, 2019
"violates every past precedent" - truly an amazing claim. Every one of them, so he doesn't have to list them or show how they are violated I wonder how many past precedents there are. Hundreds? Thousands? Just name a few, ok?
Overturning the 2016 election claims - Well, yes, if a president is eventually convicted in the Senate, it has the effect of ending that president's tenure in office. Just like when a criminal is convicted and sentenced to prison, it ends the criminal's right to freedom. But the problem began with the criminal behavior, not the conviction. His argument would mean that a president could never be impeached.
And let's remember that Hillary Clinton had about 3 million more votes than did Trump in 2016, so let's cool it with the crocodile tears.
So, I'm guessing this is just part of Trump's long time standard operating procedure - Attack, Counterattack, and Never Apologize. It's the bullies' creed - make it so hard and so expensive that most people give up and let you have your way. It's how Trump has gotten away with so much shit. (Sorry, there's no really polite word.)
One point of this letter is to waste time, possibly intimidate some members of Congress, and to drag out the handing over of any documents to Congress.
But this letter is really for Trump's supporters who will eat up every accusation and start filling FB and Twitter with quotes that show Trump as the victim of Democratic abuse. And the hypocrisy of Abuser In Chief accusing others of his modus operandi? Well, bashing Democrats and keeping them from trampling on their values and destroying their way of life appear to be the things Trump's hard-core supporters like best. From Jane Coaston at Vox:
"Trump stands accused by his enemies of, in essence, fighting dirty. But to conservatives who sincerely believe themselves to be under assault from an increasingly left-wing movement that itself fights dirty, that’s more a feature than a bug." (emphasis added)
One more thing. Here's Trump's legal counsel's signature on page 8 of the letter:
It's about 10 lines high! John Hancock would be impressed. I'd love to have a scientific graphologist do some analysis of this signature. I'm guessing this suggests confidence, maybe the kind you get when you live in a bubble where everyone agrees with you.
Monday, October 07, 2019
What We Need To Know About Homelessness In Anchorage - Working My OLÉ Class Notes
Our Friday Homelessness OLÉ class speaker was late Friday afternoon. The class monitor, at one point, was going to call the day's class off. But someone in the class suggested we get to know each other and why we were taking the class. And as we did that, we learned the speaker was on the way besides. I had my iPad and took notes.
There were about 30 students. Everyone's 'older' since OLÉ classes are aimed at retired folks. A lot more women than men. I gave the class monitor my notes to go along with hers to give to the speaker - there are seven more sessions.
I went home and sifted through the notes which were chronological by speaker. I wanted to focus more on the ideas than the speaker. I grouped similar comments. Then I tried to see differences in the kinds of comments, the different perspectives they represented, etc. I was trying to condense this as much as possible without losing content, but also to help make us as conscious as possible of how different kinds of comments reflected different needs and interests.
Then I did that again. Here are my final two iterations of people's comments.
Here's the second cut:
And here's the third cut.
There are a lot of savvy people in the class coming at this from different perspectives. I hope I've been reasonably faithful in how I've pulled together the comments. Once I had these frameworks, I did add a few more items in (particularly things we want to know). I was concerned that we distinguish between short term fixes to help individuals who are homeless and people who are affected negatively by nearby homeless cams on the one hand, and how to 'fix' the societal changes in the US that are causing homelessness, that Anchorage, on its own can't 'fix'. Changes in wages, job security, student debt, veteran's physical and mental health issues resulting from their service, access to health care, etc. It's in there, but not that explicitly.
We've got different people coming in to talk to us over the next seven weeks. Though I don't think that we've got any homeless folks coming in to talk.
There were about 30 students. Everyone's 'older' since OLÉ classes are aimed at retired folks. A lot more women than men. I gave the class monitor my notes to go along with hers to give to the speaker - there are seven more sessions.
I went home and sifted through the notes which were chronological by speaker. I wanted to focus more on the ideas than the speaker. I grouped similar comments. Then I tried to see differences in the kinds of comments, the different perspectives they represented, etc. I was trying to condense this as much as possible without losing content, but also to help make us as conscious as possible of how different kinds of comments reflected different needs and interests.
Then I did that again. Here are my final two iterations of people's comments.
Here's the second cut:
General Issue | Specifics |
---|---|
Opinions - general |
Never seen it so bad System isn’t working Need to do something |
Opinions - Specific |
Protect public spaces In My neighborhood Tired of being afraid |
Solutions - housing | Build Housing Homeless Housing on Park Strip Use empty buildings - like Sam’s Club Tiny Houses |
Need to Know more | Learn from the homeless What are the resources? What are the different types of homeless?
How much low income affordable housing is there in Anchorage?
What are trends from past until now?
Definitions of homelessness.
|
Things individuals can do to help out Larger societal problems that create homeless people |
- |
And here's the third cut.
General | More Specific |
---|---|
Perspectives for Looking at Homeless | View of ‘victims’ of the homeless View of the homeless population View of ‘solvers’ of homelessness |
Ways to ‘solve’ homelessness | Solve problems caused by homelessness -To community -To homeless Solve problems that cause homelessness |
Information we want | Definitions of homeless Categories of homeless (assuming different categories can be handled in different ways) Total # of homeless # in each category of homeless # of those transitioning out of homelessness each year # of new homeless each year # of chronic homeless Definitions/categories of low cost housing Data on available low cost housing in Anchorage Data on successful approaches elsewhere Current costs of homelessness to -MOA -Residents with homes -Homeless residents -Others Resources available -Funds allocated -Positions allocated -Expertise available -Resources still needed Sources of homeless people (why people become homeless) |
Solutions | Money -Taxes -Lottery More low cost housing Mental health services Addiction help Employment help Health Costs help |
We've got different people coming in to talk to us over the next seven weeks. Though I don't think that we've got any homeless folks coming in to talk.
Sunday, October 06, 2019
Please Go To The Alaskan Youth Climate Change Lawsuit At The Supreme Court Wednesday - I Have A Conflicting Obligation
I saw this message today:
But Wednesday is also Yom Kippur. Although I have lots of issues with the persona of the Old Testament God, the time between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur is an important, traditional period set aside to think about one's deeds of the last year. Whom have I wronged? Who has wronged me? How can I make things right? Can I forgive those who did me harm? And just as important, it is time to think about how I can be a better person in the next year.
And there is something much greater than thinking about attending Yom Kippur as one individual act. Going to high holiday services, even though I miss most of the other services during the year, is a way to honor my ancestors who struggled hard, and even died, because of their membership in this family of people that goes back to Moses and Abraham. I can't just walk away from that. So I cringe at the demanding, paternalistic diety in the prayer book, and the fatalistic sealing of people's fate:
But other parts of the prayer book are more subtle and relevant to today's world. So I concentrate on those parts. Such as:
These are behaviors that people do every day and these lines force them to face the consequences of their seemingly minor and benign behavior. And I'm comfortable with "O Lord" being a metaphor for humanity or nature, or some other collective being other than a tyrannical deity demanding obedience of the imperfect creatures he's created. (So very much like many parents.)
*After writing all this, I found a discussion above of the list of ways people might die, by Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg who shares some of my reactions, but offers this more as a collective rather than individual fate.
So, in my life, I've accepted that attending High Holiday services is something I should do. My mother took me with her, even though she didn't go to weekly services. And there were times when going was difficult - as a student in Germany when the Jewish community was not yet visible again, and as a Peace Corps volunteer in a remote Thai province. But I usually attend. I work past the language that's troubling, and focus on the language that connects me, individually, with righteousness and humanity.
And so, I hope that many of my friends who believe in the importance of fighting Climate Change in as many ways as possible, are at the Supreme Court Wednesday afternoon to support the 16 who are suing the State of Alaska.
As wildfires rage across Alaska and salmon die in the state’s warmed rivers after a summer that reached the hottest temperatures on record, these young Alaskans are standing up for their rights and for a future free from climate chaos.I should be there!
WHO: The 16 young Alaskans who are suing the state of Alaska for violating their constitutional rights by knowingly contributing to climate change.
WHAT: The youth plaintiffs have a hearing before the Alaska Supreme Court after appealing a lower court’s ruling against them and they need YOU in the courtroom to show the public that their community stands behind them in their fight for climate justice.
WHY: The lower court mistakenly ruled that the youth had not identified a state policy that contributes to climate change, even though the youth clearly identified the statute declaring the State’s Energy Policy to promote fossil fuels and explained how the State’s implementation of that policy causes climate change and violates the constitutional rights of young Alaskans.
WHEN: Wednesday, October 9 at 1:30 p.m. Arrive early to secure your seat in the courtroom. There will be a press conference following the hearing at about 2:30 p.m. near the courthouse (location TBD) where you will have a chance to hear from some of the youth plaintiffs and their attorneys.
WHERE: 303 K Street, Anchorage 99501
But Wednesday is also Yom Kippur. Although I have lots of issues with the persona of the Old Testament God, the time between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur is an important, traditional period set aside to think about one's deeds of the last year. Whom have I wronged? Who has wronged me? How can I make things right? Can I forgive those who did me harm? And just as important, it is time to think about how I can be a better person in the next year.
And there is something much greater than thinking about attending Yom Kippur as one individual act. Going to high holiday services, even though I miss most of the other services during the year, is a way to honor my ancestors who struggled hard, and even died, because of their membership in this family of people that goes back to Moses and Abraham. I can't just walk away from that. So I cringe at the demanding, paternalistic diety in the prayer book, and the fatalistic sealing of people's fate:
Oh Rosh Hashanah it is written,OK, you've got ten days to change what is written, before it is sealed, in this narrative. You do have some say in this. And while some of these seem like ancient fates, most are still fairly common even in the US. And around the world there are people still being stoned to death, but how are these sorts of fates due to an individual's unholy behavior? Are the people dying by fire more sinful than those who have less painful deaths or even those who live for another year? Are the rich really better people than those who are poor? There are so many examples of this not being true. (Of course I'm accepting our society's belief that rich people are somehow better than poor people.)
on Yom Kippur it is sealed:
How many shall pass on, how many shall come to be;
who shall live and who shall die;
who shall see ripe age and who shall not;
who shall perish by fire and who by water;
who by sword and who by beast;
who by hunger and who by thirst;
who by earthquake and who by plague;
who by strangling and who by stoning;
who shall be secure and who shall be driven;
who shall be tranquil and who shall be troubled;
who shall be poor and who shall be rich;
who shall be humbled and who exalted.*
But other parts of the prayer book are more subtle and relevant to today's world. So I concentrate on those parts. Such as:
We sin against You when we sin against ourselves.
For our failures of truth, O Lord, we ask forgiveness.
For passing judgment without knowledge of the facts,
and for distorting facts to fit our theories.
For using the sins of others to excuse our own,
and for denying responsibility for our own misfortunes.
For condemning in our children the faults we tolerate in ourselves,
and for condemning in our parents the faults we tolerate in ourselves.
For keeping the poor in the chains of poverty,
and turning a deaf ear to the cry of the oppressed.
For using violence to maintain our power,
and for using violence to bring about change.
For waging aggressive war,
and for the sin of appeasing aggressors.
For obeying criminal orders,
and for the sin of silence and indifference.
For poisoning the air, and polluting land and sea,
and for all the evil means we employ to accomplish good ends.
*After writing all this, I found a discussion above of the list of ways people might die, by Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg who shares some of my reactions, but offers this more as a collective rather than individual fate.
". . .how can we accept that tefillah (prayer) and teshuvah (repentance) and tzedekah (acts of righteousness, usually translated as “charity”) are going to save us from earthquakes, car accidents, persecution? We know that lots of very good people suffer every day, and that many people who do horrible things prosper. One could write off the prayer as reflective of an era in which people found solace in trying to control their fate, but I think that’s unfair and dismissive of the liturgy. . .
What if it weren’t about my individual repentance as it affects my individual fate? What if our repentance as a society (which demands that each individual do his or her part) is the thing that affects our collective fate? What if the reason a person gets cancer is not because he or she personally has done something wrong, but because we as a nation and a globe have poisoned our air, our water, and our food with toxic chemicals and negligence? Are the tsunami of two years ago and the hurricanes of last year a sign that entire sections of the world were filled with sinners, or a tragic by-product of global warming? Are the women killed by stoning–yes, today–in honor killings around the world guilty of insufficient prayer, or should we assign responsibility to everyone who perpetuates a culture in which this is considered acceptable? Are the war refugees (like those fleeing the genocide in Darfur or the Lost Boys of Sudan) who sometimes fall to wild beasts personally responsible for their situation, their fate? Of course not. "I can live better with this interpretation, but why not change the language of the prayerbook to reflect this?
So, in my life, I've accepted that attending High Holiday services is something I should do. My mother took me with her, even though she didn't go to weekly services. And there were times when going was difficult - as a student in Germany when the Jewish community was not yet visible again, and as a Peace Corps volunteer in a remote Thai province. But I usually attend. I work past the language that's troubling, and focus on the language that connects me, individually, with righteousness and humanity.
And so, I hope that many of my friends who believe in the importance of fighting Climate Change in as many ways as possible, are at the Supreme Court Wednesday afternoon to support the 16 who are suing the State of Alaska.
Saturday, October 05, 2019
A Recovery Day
That's me, like the sun, trying to see through the clouds. 101˚F, chest full of crud. It wasn't quite that bad yesterday when I went to my OLÉ classes. But I did try to sit away from others.
I'm staying in today. I'm not good at being sick I'm drinking lots of hot water with honey. But I'll try to get some stuff done.
The sun has broken through a couple of times. The trees are losing their leaves. I do want to write a bit about SB 91 - the criminal justice reform bill that was essentially repealed this year because that was the main topic of our state and federal courts class yesterday. And also about how our class talked about homelessness (the other class) while waiting for the speaker to come. Actually, it was a good thing we had time to get to know each other better.
I'm staying in today. I'm not good at being sick I'm drinking lots of hot water with honey. But I'll try to get some stuff done.
The sun has broken through a couple of times. The trees are losing their leaves. I do want to write a bit about SB 91 - the criminal justice reform bill that was essentially repealed this year because that was the main topic of our state and federal courts class yesterday. And also about how our class talked about homelessness (the other class) while waiting for the speaker to come. Actually, it was a good thing we had time to get to know each other better.
Thursday, October 03, 2019
OLÉ - The Innocence Project: "50 To 150 People In Alaska Prisons Are Innocent"
It's sort of like I ordered way more off the menu than I'm going to be able to eat. Yesterday was the Pecha Kucha (pronounce in the four syllables you see) class and today began with the Innocence Project and the Pebble Mine. And I seem to be coming down with a cold.
But let me get a little up here since I didn't post yesterday. Let's get some of the Innocence Project up. This is the work of saints - helping people wrongly convicted to get out of prison. The speakers were Mark Johnson, (sitting) the head of the board for the IP, and Bill Oberly the employee who does most of the work. I took the picture after the presentation when they were answering individual questions.
Every time I read about a prisoner getting out of prison after 10, 15, 30 years because of evidence that clearly exonerates them, or a confession by another of the crime, it breaks my heart thinking of someone taken from the family and thrown into a cell. For example from The National Registry of Exonerations.
Many prisons are inhumane for guilty prisoners. Imagine if you didn't do the crime.
If imagining that is hard to do, watch Netflix's When They See Us* about five teenagers who were imprisoned for a rape they didn't commit because of a prosecutor who coerced confessions and ignored evidence that didn't fit her story. This is the story of the kids convicted of the Central Park jogger rape. I confess, that I didn't want to watch it, but saw it was getting awards and so we decided to try the first episode. It's mostly painful, but the actual rapists eventually confesses (after meeting one of the five in prison) and they do get out. There's an extra episode which is an Oprah show of sorts (she was the producer I think) where all the actors who played the boys and their older selves are interviewed. And then the original real prisoners are interviewed as well.
*This is not a great link here, but when I link to Netflix, to goes to my subscription which won't work for others. It may go to the right place for other Netflix subscribers, I don't know. And reviews at Washington Post and New York Times have paywalls. You might also want to check Wikipedia.
It's pretty powerful, and one line from the film's director really caught my attention. She challenged people who talk about the system being broken. It's not broken, she said, it was designed that way. And when it comes to people of color and poor folks that seems to be accurate.
So that was my most recent connection to this sort of injustice and was good background for understanding the enormity of the wrongs that the Innocence Project tries to right.
A little bit from today's class from my notes.
Innocence Project's MISSION
- Identify , investigate, and exonerate individuals who have been wrongly convicted in the State of Alaska
- Education - doing that today (at OLÉ). Provide ed opportunities for advocates and for the public that foster a culture that champions the defense of the innocent.
- Implement policies, practices, and reforms that will prevent wrongful convictions and hasten the identification and release of innocent persons.
Number 1 is the main priority.
History
The Alaska IP is part of a national Innocence Network All independent, but share experiences, best practices. There originally was just one, but it became clear quickly that they couldn't cover the whole country. A Northwest PI was started, but they couldn't even handle all of Washington, let alone the rest of their territory. Alaska's Project Innocence began in 2006.
The Project has 6 criteria for accepting cases.
- Individual is incarcerated
- Individual has at least two years remaining on sentence.
- Factually, the client is actually innocent. (They don't work on technical legal issues for people who aren't innocent.)
- Evidence is available which may prove actual innocence
- Individual has exhausted all court actions under the facts of the criminal conviction upon which the individual is incarcerated where the individual has appointed counsel as a matter of right
- Notwithstanding numbers 1 through 5, the Board of the Alaska Innocence Project may accept any case at its discretion. (but number 1 - actual innocence - is necessary)
They said that research suggests that 1-3% of people in prison are innocent. Given Alaska's prison population, that means 50 - 150 people!
The only people exonerated so far through the Alaska Innocence Project have been the Fairbanks Four, which is a big deal. There are more potential cases in the pipeline.
Here's a link to their website. You can find more there. We've got three more session on this topic.
Sorry for such a truncated post, but really need to get to bed. I have a 9am class on State and Federal Courts tomorrow and a 3pm class on Homelessness.
Tuesday, October 01, 2019
Once Upon A Time I Thought I Might Catch Up. Fat Chance.
As I wrote the title, I realized we never can catch up in life, but I was referring to little things like writing blog posts and paying the bills. Today was my wife's birthday. We went for a movie and dinner. It seemed like a good day to spend the early afternoon in a movie, but the rain had stopped and there were even breaks in the clouds when we got there.
And the snow was mostly gone from the Chugach.
I've already written about my mixed feelings about going to see Once Upon A Time In Hollywood. Now that I've seen it, if I hadn't, I wouldn't have missed anything important.
Even though I've eaten at Musso & Franks, went to movies at the Bruin theater when I was a student at UCLA, and even interviewed George Putnam (there was an ad for his newscast on a bus stop) for my junior high school newspaper. Putnam arrived in a gold limo - a Rolls, I think - and he smoked through the interview even though his bio said he didn't smoke. (At least that's what my memory tells me.)
The movie began in a Pan Am 747, which set alarms off right way, since the date posted was 1969. I'd read that the period details had been carefully done. And yes, I know some odd details. In this case because I first flew on one of the early Pan Am 747 flights - from Honolulu to Tokyo - in March 1970. (I was flying from a Peace Corps training program I worked at in Hilo to the second part of the training in Thailand.) Pan Am 1 and 2 had just started flying. I think it was Pan Am 1 that flew around the world toward the west and Pan Am2 to the east. Did it start earlier in 1969? I've now had time to look it up and the first commercial flight was in January 1970.
It wasn't a bad movie - though I generally skip movies with lots of violence - but it felt artificial throughout. Cardboard. I assume that was intentional since it was about Hollywood and all the phoniness of that life, but as the birthday girl said over dinner at the Thai Kitchen, with all the really good stuff we're seeing on Netflix, it just didn't cut it.
So I'm reduced to writing filler pieces like this because I just haven't had time to finish my thoughts on the Joseph Maguire hearings and several other drafts that probably will never get beyond that stage.
And tomorrow I start a slew of OLÉ classes. (Continuing ed classes aimed at retired folks at UAA. I think they pay for themselves so maybe they won't disappear next year.) I have an actual project in one that I need to spend extra time on and I haven't figured out what I'm going to do. It's a Pecha-Kucha class - you present 20 pictures in seven minutes with narration of the story they tell. Well, I've got plenty of pictures, but organizing a compelling story is the challenge. As I see it now, though I'll probably discover that was the easy part once I get the story figured out.
Other classes I enrolled in include:
And a one time short class that's a trip to an Escape Room.
I'm hoping the classes will provide plenty of fodder for the blog.
And the snow was mostly gone from the Chugach.
I've already written about my mixed feelings about going to see Once Upon A Time In Hollywood. Now that I've seen it, if I hadn't, I wouldn't have missed anything important.
Even though I've eaten at Musso & Franks, went to movies at the Bruin theater when I was a student at UCLA, and even interviewed George Putnam (there was an ad for his newscast on a bus stop) for my junior high school newspaper. Putnam arrived in a gold limo - a Rolls, I think - and he smoked through the interview even though his bio said he didn't smoke. (At least that's what my memory tells me.)
The movie began in a Pan Am 747, which set alarms off right way, since the date posted was 1969. I'd read that the period details had been carefully done. And yes, I know some odd details. In this case because I first flew on one of the early Pan Am 747 flights - from Honolulu to Tokyo - in March 1970. (I was flying from a Peace Corps training program I worked at in Hilo to the second part of the training in Thailand.) Pan Am 1 and 2 had just started flying. I think it was Pan Am 1 that flew around the world toward the west and Pan Am2 to the east. Did it start earlier in 1969? I've now had time to look it up and the first commercial flight was in January 1970.
It wasn't a bad movie - though I generally skip movies with lots of violence - but it felt artificial throughout. Cardboard. I assume that was intentional since it was about Hollywood and all the phoniness of that life, but as the birthday girl said over dinner at the Thai Kitchen, with all the really good stuff we're seeing on Netflix, it just didn't cut it.
So I'm reduced to writing filler pieces like this because I just haven't had time to finish my thoughts on the Joseph Maguire hearings and several other drafts that probably will never get beyond that stage.
And tomorrow I start a slew of OLÉ classes. (Continuing ed classes aimed at retired folks at UAA. I think they pay for themselves so maybe they won't disappear next year.) I have an actual project in one that I need to spend extra time on and I haven't figured out what I'm going to do. It's a Pecha-Kucha class - you present 20 pictures in seven minutes with narration of the story they tell. Well, I've got plenty of pictures, but organizing a compelling story is the challenge. As I see it now, though I'll probably discover that was the easy part once I get the story figured out.
Other classes I enrolled in include:
- An Overview of the Pebble Copper-Molybdenum-Gold Prospect
- The Innocence Project
- State and Federal Courts and Current Legal Issues
- Homeless, Homelessness and Finding "Home"
And a one time short class that's a trip to an Escape Room.
I'm hoping the classes will provide plenty of fodder for the blog.
Sunday, September 29, 2019
How Did A Jewish Comedian Become President Of Ukraine? Netflix Has Season One of "Servant Of The People"
Volodymyr Zelensky burst into many people's consciousness last week. Some knew that he'd been a Ukrainian comedian with a hit TV show already. In the show he plays a history teacher who's caught on video by one of his students while he's ranting against the corruption of his government. The video goes viral. His students use crowdsourcing to get enough money to register him as a candidate. And he wins.
And then the comedian actually runs for President.
I just discovered that Season one of the television show - Servant of the People - is on Netflix. The episodes are short (about 25 minutes) and we got through about five last night.
The show doesn't tell you much about the actor himself, but it does give you a sense of what caused Ukrainians to elect a man with no previous political experience. And you get a sense of the overwhelming corruption in the Ukraine government. And it's fun.
So if you have Netflix, this is definitely worth your time to give you a better sense of the Ukraine and Kiev and the man Trump tried to force into finding dirt on Biden's son by withholding several hundred million dollars in aid.
Of course, you may want to know more.
This April 4 Slate article looks into the crystal ball to predict what sort of president he might be.
An April 27 Al Jazeera report.
Here's an alternative bio with some quirky English from Height Of.
In the episodes we've seen on Netflix, the school teacher/president is having some problems dealing with the layers of corruption and wealth of the many, many friends and relatives of government officials whorls hold positions in the government. It's not clear how the now real president of Ukraine is handling these problems. At least he's been introduced to the dilemmas he's facing through his role in the show.
But there may be more to this. He's an owner of the production company and a writer of the show. Was the show a setup to get him elected? It will be interesting to see how this all unfolds.
[I'm not linking to the Netflix show because while I know how to get there from my Netflix account, I'm not sure how to send others there. In any case, when you're into Netflix, just put Servant of the People into the Netflix search.]
And then the comedian actually runs for President.
I just discovered that Season one of the television show - Servant of the People - is on Netflix. The episodes are short (about 25 minutes) and we got through about five last night.
The show doesn't tell you much about the actor himself, but it does give you a sense of what caused Ukrainians to elect a man with no previous political experience. And you get a sense of the overwhelming corruption in the Ukraine government. And it's fun.
So if you have Netflix, this is definitely worth your time to give you a better sense of the Ukraine and Kiev and the man Trump tried to force into finding dirt on Biden's son by withholding several hundred million dollars in aid.
Of course, you may want to know more.
This April 4 Slate article looks into the crystal ball to predict what sort of president he might be.
An April 27 Al Jazeera report.
Here's an alternative bio with some quirky English from Height Of.
In the episodes we've seen on Netflix, the school teacher/president is having some problems dealing with the layers of corruption and wealth of the many, many friends and relatives of government officials whorls hold positions in the government. It's not clear how the now real president of Ukraine is handling these problems. At least he's been introduced to the dilemmas he's facing through his role in the show.
But there may be more to this. He's an owner of the production company and a writer of the show. Was the show a setup to get him elected? It will be interesting to see how this all unfolds.
[I'm not linking to the Netflix show because while I know how to get there from my Netflix account, I'm not sure how to send others there. In any case, when you're into Netflix, just put Servant of the People into the Netflix search.]
Labels:
impeachment,
Movies,
Netflix,
Trump
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