Happy birthday, Vida Blue

I am going to the Giants game tonight if that makes me feel any better

I am going to the Giants game tonight if that makes me feel any better

Vida Blue turned 65 yesterday.

When I was 10 years old, my dad took me to a World Series game to see the Swingin’ A’s win the World Championship of baseball for Oakland. I don’t recall if I ever saw Vida pitch in person, but I definitely was a fan, and had his trading card.

There’s also a jam band called Vida Blue I saw once at the Fillmore. It says in wikipedia that Vida Blue the pitcher came on stage with them. I remember seeing Dan from Fog City in front of the hall, before I got sorted. I think one of his bands was the support act that night.

I also approached Pumpsie Green once about borrowing his name for a funk band I wanted to build around my then-client, Henry Butler. He said no. I guess if I was Page McConnell of Phish I would have been more persuasive or persistent.

Meanwhile just last week my former client Henry Butler and my rabbi Steven Bernstein released a co-led project (not named for a baseball player), on Impulse Records, the resurrected imprint, part of Blue Note, and I wish them well. I did present Steven Bernstein’s Disapora Suite cd release show a few years ago, in San Francisco but whiffed on bringing his Sly Stone thing here.

What a weird mix of baseball, music and philosophy is this plastic alto.

The HB SB thingy is called Viper’s Drag, got a jelly roll to it:

That kinda rhymes you know

Vida Blue

Pumpsie Green

Henry Butler

and Steven Bernstein

my tags

I have a strangely vivid memory, that I could not this minute repress, of leading Henry Butler

his hand on my shoulder

thru and airport,

maybe in Paris France

and him whacking me

with his cane

in my upper V

like Vida

between my pants

that’s life I guess

that’s kind of a poem

I used to know ’em

and show ’em

Eli Eli Eli

but not Elijah Pumpsie Green

and tell me little stevie who might be those 9 — hey that’s a baseball number: who’s on first? I don’t know. third base. 

I was Henry Butler’s manager for six months in 2002-2003; I missed by Gunn 20-year reunion for instance because I was with Henry in Clermont-Ferrand that week. I spent about 40 nights with him during that stretch, either he in the Bay Area — he stayed at my parents’ house some of that – or me in New Orleans or on the road. Steven Bernstein meanwhile met Henry on the set of Robert Altman’s “Kansas City” in about 1990. I probably met Steven by phone in that period when I was working with Henry. Steven meanwhile has worked with Peter Apfelbaum and Jeff Cressman since they were at Berkeley Junior High, circa 1975.

This is a remarkable little video of the band at Yoshi’s. While the horn section leaves the stage and re-emerges in the house, as a type of second line meme, Henry takes the spotlight, his hands moving at super-human speed, like a John Henry myth, and his blue jacket glowing almost supernaturally — can he sense that?

I wonder if he tried to drive the tour van after the show.

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Andrew Bird and Jessica Johnson, two free shows I would try to catch

Andrew Bird has a free show Sunday at Stern Grove in San Francisco, which will draw about 7,000 fans, maybe Terry and I will make the trek; I love Stern Grove. Have not been in a few years, however.

Closer to home, I like Jessica Johnson, the Panamese-American jazz singer from San Jose. Last I saw of her was either at Pour House in San Jose or something on the pier in SF; She is playing Wednesday twilight hours in the Menlo Park series.

San Jose singer Jessica Johnson goes full San Mateo Wednesday or full Portola or something: it's actually in Menlo Park

San Jose singer Jessica Johnson goes full San Mateo Wednesday or full Portola or something: it’s actually in Menlo Park

Palo Alto has a Santana tribute band next Saturday at Rinconada. That always makes me think we should do more to honor Gregg Rolie, a founder of two bands in the rock hall of fame, Journey and Santana, who lived for a while on Nelson Drive behind Cubberley. Dan Olmstead said he moved the Rolie’s lawn.

Andrew also has hard-ticket shows at Mountain Winery in Saratoga and Henry Miller Library (Folk Yeah!) at Big Sur. Rumor is that Gunn grad Hannah May Allison will be last minute addition to the bill in Saratoga, in front of Tift Merrit.

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I don’t wanna be your hero I just wanna fight like everyone else

Thank you,  Kerry Yarkin and one other, for diverting the cavalcade of trolls who attacked me on the Weekly’s site, under the back-handed article about entering the race. What Gennady Sheyner strangely leaves out is that I got nearly 6,000 votes in 2012 and my residentialist campaign platform presaged the referendum on Maybell and was validated by the Grand Jury of June 16, 2014. No I was not the whistle-blower, but I’d like to be next time.

Taking a break from the campaign trail and “fear and loathing” I ducked into the new Richard Linklater movie, at Palo Alto Square. Besides being an interesting look at family, it features one of my favorite cities, Austin, Texas, and one of my favorite places to hear music, The Continental Club. The soundtrack made me seek out “Hero” by Family of the Year. The film is “Boyhood” by the way. I also recommend his 1988 debut “Slacker” and “Thru a Scanner Darkly” an adaptation of a Philip K. Dick novel.

I also watched exactly one hour, recently of the Planet of the Apes movie, then walked out — which means either the movie is really bad or I am already stressing about time management in this 100-day run-up to the polls. The way the apes could communicate, the makers would have you believe, with sign language and gesture — we saw the subtitled purported actual meanings – reminded me of my post earlier in the day about the three carpenters trying to communicate the rights of workers while standing in front of a wine bar on Emerson.

Anyways here is the song from which I crib my title here: I don’t want to be a hero, or a big man.

Posted by Kerry Yarkin, a resident of Palo Verde
on Jul 27, 2014 at 9:47 am

Good Luck Mark Weiss. You have my vote. It seems that you know a lot about the ins and outs of the development process here in Palo Alto. It is unfortunate for native Palo Altans (myself included) to see all this runaway development and loss of wonderful stores that once made Palo Alto a unique place. Your perspective will definitely make a difference on the status quo.

Posted by Weiss voter, a resident of College Terrace
on Jul 27, 2014 at 6:29 pm

Let the people decide. Weiss is a serious thinker whose only fault I see is underselling himself.

What GS said is accurate but I called him on deliberately provoking the trolls by framing the article as me being one of two candidates who has run unsuccessfully multiple times (the other being someone who does  not really campaign but qualifies for a ballot and is more known for challenging our sit-lie ban; I called GS and challenged him to support his claim or implication that I am not any more viable than that).

I did, by the way, greet Victor Frost my fellow candidate, who I spotted sitting in front of the stationary store near Printer’s Ink on Cali Ave.

This, by Gennady Sheyner, would be more objective outside of that framing. (Meanwhile I noted that Lydia Kuo, a realtor from Barron Park, got substantial play, especially in the print edition, while this story didn’t make the cut at all; notice that the Weekly is roughly one third realty ads).

Weiss, 50, has been vocal in his criticism of new development, particularly the proposal to turn Varsity Theatre on University Avenue into a hub for high-tech workers. He has also been a proponent for public art and an advocate for new performing-art venues. He is the founder of the concert-production company Earthwise Productions.

Weiss has also been critical of the 2012 proposal by billionaire developer John Arrillaga to build an office-and-theater complex at 27 University Ave., a plan that ultimately fizzled in the face of community opposition. In an interview Wednesday, Weiss told the Weekly that he believed that “the leadership is not listening to citizens as much as to downtown interests.”

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Obscure labor action in Palo Alto

Three men in dubious battle against hedge funds and venture capital, and their assets, in Palo Alto, summer, 2014, when corporations are people, some say, although Krugman in the times rebuts

Three men in dubious battle against hedge funds and venture capital, and their assets, in Palo Alto, summer, 2014, when corporations are people, some say, although Krugman in the times rebuts

Three men who say they are part of a carpenters union are standing around on Emerson with a banner and say that in San Leandro a company I never heard of is building its new headquarters with non-union labor.

They are standing between the wine bar that used to be an ice cream parlor and the best place in Palo Alto for Venezualan coffee and pitching your next $19 billion app to your b-school buddies or people from your 11-year-old’s play group.

The tie-in — if I believe the shocking pink flyer they handed me — is that a Palo Alto based venture firm (ok, hedge fund –even I am a little unclear on the distinction — I probably do not have to mention that I am not an investor in the firm or the San Leandro low-flying tech start-up — it uses the math symbol of the ratio between circumference and diameter of a circle, a popular irrational, known for a Greek letter, it’s product not its corporate name, excuse the shaggy-dog and non-repeating digression) has offices right there, up the cute little alley, near the mural of the magic dragon.

I did speak to them for about three minutes, took a flyer, and said something vaguely supportive like “I believe in standing up for the rights of the working class”.

They said they had never heard of COPE, the labor headquarters for Santa Clara County — they said they were from Hayward.

Coincidentally or not, Breena Kerr of the Post said, in a brief article about my campaign for City Council of Palo Alto I am “staunchly pro-Union.” Gee, Breena, I don’t know. I am pretty sure I said I was “pro-worker”. I think there is a difference.

I am pro-worker in that I brag of shaking hands once and riding an elevator –two floors, short trip — with Budd Schulberg, author of the book and screenplay “On the Waterfront” (“I coulda been a contender”).

I also wrote a buff piece about William Gould and his love of baseball. He is a Stanford law emeritus and former head of the national labor board, but also the father of two schoolmates from mine at Gunn High.

In fact, when I ran for City Council in 2012 — and got 5,749 votes — I refused to sign a contract offered by Labor orgs that would have pledged me to vote with them in exchange for supporting my campaign. I did sit thru a panel interview — as did Marc Berman — but neither of us got an endorsement. I believe Gail Price is the only recent Council electee who was also endorsed by organized labor.

I am a critic the venture capital and hedge fund communities here, and wonder about their role in policy and land use here — I wrote about that recently and even spoke to a board. (ARB, and that reminds me that they mischaracterized in their minutes what I actually spoke about and I may seek to amend that).

I doubt the efforts of the three men on Emerson will have much impact. In some ways it does as much to raise profile of the target as it does to urge reform or change.

Here is a link to a video about a product of the so-called offensive company

A basic point about my interest in these events is that I believe they are within their first amendment rights to stand around and talk to people like me, and perhaps display that banner (hard to see from the  photo). Meanwhile I am still concerned and researching when restaurant tables encroach on the commons, the sidewalk, perhaps beyond what We The People permit or regulate, which is something I tried to describe to Breena Kerr, in contrast to something her boss Dave Price wrote about “boot on the neck of small business”.

I am more pro-speech than pro-tapas.

COPE is Council of Public Education of the South Bay Labor Council, of which Ben Fields is the head, getting that straight(er).

I also snapped a photo last week of what I thought was a job action, at a mattress outlet here, but was told it was only a photo shoot.

edit to add, three weeks later: in theory weat –that’s an adler and marvell reference — world enough and time — I could log into my sleeping sleeping Patch account and cut and paste this more properly like but this cache catch is the best I can do, me on bill gould, father of my school mates tim and billy:

I ran into William B. Gould IV, the famous labor law professor and baseball nut, at the dry cleaners today. I go to , on Cali Ave, in the building that used to hold the fabled Keystone Palo Alto and several other lesser nightclubs.

I didn’t recognize Gould at first, although I went to his reading at Stanford Book Store a few months back. I bought and had him sign his recent book on the history of baseball as told in labor terms (Curt Flood and all that).

I noticed a set of credentials on his dashboard from civic events and baseball games gone by, then double-taked and back-tracked to greet him. His sons Bill the V and Tim were at Gunn when I was there, back in the early 1980s. I recall that his book, although mostly about Major Leagues had a photo of the professor’s grandson, William B. Gould VI, hitting a game-winning homer in a youth game in SoCal. (His Carlton Fisk moment, I guess, or the first such).

Gould’s car is a red Chevy Camero Z-24 that has a personalized plate reading BOSOX98 which I will have to look into whether it references a year (1898? as in the first World Series or something, or 1998 as in I don’t recall, what, Wade Boggs top season? Or maybe it’s a jersey number? What did Yaz wear?).

Most people know him, if at all, as a Stanford professor who was on National Labor Relations Board and helped end a baseball labor dispute. I also recall running into him and mentioning Alan Davis and the No on D campaign and I think Gould did send a letter out expressing his concern over the measure (which won anyways, i.e. we of the working class lost, but I am here to talk baseball, not politics).

I recall that local writer Gennady Sheyner wrote a nice review of Dr. Gould’s book.

Gould said he is throwing out the first pitch tomorrow Friday, February 17, at Stanford Sunken Diamond, Cardinal versus Vanderbilt, at 5 o’clock. I bluffed my way through mentioning that I had noticed we have an impressive list of pre-season All America — I think Bill said that five of our nine starters rate that highly and that Stanford is #2 in the nation.

I have been watching a lot of basketball lately so missed the fact that spring is already here.

Shout out to my cousin Jenny Moats the former Vandy cheerleader recently married to Pat Falloon in St. Louis in a hotel decorated by Stan Musial, excuse the Cardinals not Cardinal nor BoSox backslide not headfirst like Rickey Henderson.

My tip to Gould was to err on the side of a wild pitch rather than a wicked curve in the dirt. He said that people are telling him to throw from the stretch rather than wind-up and get into a run down and cheat toward the plate and down from 60’6″.

Tip of the cap (or the Patch) to the ol’ perfessor.

and 1:
or the record, I was the only one among 12 council candidates and 6 PAUSD board candidates to go to the Labor Council briefing session, if that says anything. I actually kind of grilled the three different panels there about labor issues and how Palo Alto says them.

For the record, and sorry to post on Lydia’s site — someone asked — and I did meet with Lydia the other day and saw her at three other events, and John — I would accept a Labor endorsement or from a specific union but will not sign a contract or ask or consider a quid pro quo. And I do not, unique about these 18 public figures and want to be’s, I DO NOT accept campaign contributions. In sympathy with Citizens United and McCutcheon, or the backlash and fight, rather.

I was the first Palo Altan on record about problems with Citizens United ruling.

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Open letter to Diana Diamond: on Arrillaga, et al

Diana, you are on-point here in many ways. I think staff actually supported The Arrillaga Towers proposal to the tune of $500,000 not $250,000.

‘Our Palo Alto” meanwhile, as if we haven’t learned anything, or it is too soon to react, is a $325, 000 slush fund to help the incumbents AND a subsidy to the developers; it is more like a dog-and-pony show selling to the participants than a dialogue or an opportunity for residents to speak up.

When I first heard of the Arrillaga 27 Uni proposal I commented on a blog that council member Pat Burt seemed unconvincing when he said “we are taking the lead here”. In fact, Burt confronted me in person and told me to back down, tried to intimidate me (and did). Little did I know how right I was: he did know things such that his body language belied his words.

Further: Palo Alto city staff used the public interest in the historic 456 University, the Varsity Theatre to sugar-coat the 27 Uni office towers: they suggested adding a theatre to the plan. Staff meanwhile stonewalled an initiative to find a concert-industry tenant for The Varsity.

I like your idea about having a rule against the revolving door, based on San Jose example.

When I was in school they still taught one-person one-vote (I am Gunn High of Palo Alto, 1982; Dartmouth College of Hanover, NH, 1986); when did we switch over to one-dollar one-vote?

When did Democracy become Dollarocracy? How do we switch it back?

b/w (backed with — it’s music ling0) because the computer wanted me to see this:

1.4 million: Current annual number of prescriptions for hydrocodone, a powerful pain reliever, to Bay Area residents.
5.6: Percent of people age 12 and older in Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco and San Mateo counties who take prescription pain relievers for nonmedical purposes.
638,000: Number of California residents age 26 and up who use illicit drugs, excluding marijuana; that’s 2.7 percent of the population
159 per 100,000 population: Number of visits to hospital emergency rooms each year in San Francisco, Marin and San Mateo counties for stimulant abuse; the national average is 30 visits per 100,000 people.

Sources: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Association, data from 2012; City and County of San Francisco Department of Public Health

by Patrick May and Heather Somerville, San Jose Mercury News:

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This machine surrounds hate

Kudos to Rachel Garlin for writing this song, in honor, I am guessing, of Martin Luther King and Barack Hussein Obama, and the work of editors to create this video, using, I am guessing, Rachel’s students in 2009 at King Middle School in Berkeley.

Rachel Garlin is a former Harvard basketball player who returned to her hometown to teach but also writes and performs new song and gets involved with local affairs, as time permits.

In the special edition of “Inside Llewyn Davis” there is a video surveillance film of Rachel Garlin and I sneaking into a Bob Dylan concert, at Regency Ballroom on Van Ness, circa 2007. Afterwards I recall being slightly over-zealous in approaching concert organizer Gregg Perloff of Another Planet Entertainment and asking him to help me get the lease on Palo Alto’s historic Varsity Theatre.

Speaking of which – -and sorry Rachel for the shared limelight — I had a nice chat with Brian Judd the architect who worked on the conversion of 456 University theatre from to retail and then office use. I am still holding on to thinnest of hopes that indeed there is a concert-promotion entity who can make it work there. And no the lunchroom of a corporation that permits we wee plebeians to eat there crumbs is not a public house, nor an acceptable use. This actually goes before ARB and HRB in coming weeks. We should still hold Liz Kniss’s toes to the fire on this, from 1997. It’s a bit of a red herring case, but I think fits the pattern of leadership here listing to the few and not the many. Given the urgency, Buena Vista Mobile Home permit is probably a better litmus test for candidates and council in the near term. (I think leadership should help broker the deal that permits residents there to buy out their current owner, at a fair profit but not his wet dream, which would require council to upzone, to increase allowable density).

Maybe a Rachel Garlin show in Palo Alto, even the humblest thing, like busking at Lytton Plaza, or in front of 456 Uni, would cheer our spirits and who knows change the world. This machine surrounds hate and forces it to surrender.

Posted in music, Plato's Republic | Leave a comment

NEWS FLASH: WEISS PICKS UP 1,400 MORE VOTES IN CONTINUED TALLY

Casting 1 of 5,79 residentialist votes for Mark Weiss, new residentiaist of Palo Alto

Casting 1 of 5,749 residentialist votes for Mark Weiss, new residentiaist of Palo Alto

Wow. I had been telling people, for about two years, that I garnered 4,300 votes in the 2012 Palo Alto City Council race. (I came in sixth, with four seats open). But I just noticed, on SmartVoter, that as of December 17, of that year, that is, more than a month after the results were announced, that I am now credited with 5,749 votes, still not enough to be seated but about a third better than I had thought.

Thanks, people. I did sense that this Residentialist thing (started by Enid Pearson in the 1960s, re-booted by Tim Gray and Mark Weiss in 2012) had some momentum.

Right on.

Power to the People!

(This was triggered by meeting Ken Dauber today and him telling me that he got 15,000 votes for School Board. A glance at the Weekly’s coverage of the election had it more like 12,000 — I will have to double-double-check to figure out if Ken, who I do like, or want to like, and learn from, is exaggerating or his numbers, in defeat jumped as dramatically as mine did. I’m also thinking of Russ Cohen, who works in Palo Alto as admin for Palo Alto Downtown Business group but lives in Burlingame and I had thought I read that he was elected to Council there but recently told me he had lost in tight race. This is all so Dewey Beats Truman to me. Also, Steve Cohen, son of Paul J. Cohen, the Fields Prize winner, of The Flying Cohen Brothers, Down With Gravity, The Dancing Twins, he ran for Mayor of San Francisco in 1992 — I was his campaign manager; he ran as a registered-write-in candidate and was credited with 2 votes (two); despite the fact that at least three of us, Steve, myself and another Gunn classmate I think it was Many Mir, said and swore we voted for him. A fifty-percent undercount! I think I later read that the city of SF’s clerk later was fired for incompetence or forced out. I also remember, if you are down this rabbit hole still, rushing back and forth at City Hall SF trying to keep Steve on the ballot, and I ran into Quentin Kopp in the elevator and I tried to explain to him, literally an elevator pitch, what Steve and I were doing, why, and how he could help us, with this obvious injustice and red-tape and Quentin, who I knew from Dartmouth events, and his son Shep is a classmate, Q looked at me kinda funny and thru gritted teeth said: WE ARE TRYING TO GET FRANK JORDAN ELECTED. He did.)

edit to add: I found the link to SCGOV not just SmartVoter, and indeed I have 5,497. Meanwhile Ken Dauber is right in saying, in such casual settings, that he got fifteen thousand votes. It has him at 14.9. Heidi Emberling got exactly 1,200 more. Keep fighting, bro.

And just because this is a music column that moonlights as a campaign headquarters and not  the other way around I want to shout to Rachel Garlin, the former Harvard basketball star and link to her cover of Bob Dorough cardinality I mean three is a magic number. I’m also thinking Ethan Iverson Bad Plus do the math, something but only because he looks like Dauber.

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Don’t get your Dauber down (note to self)

Ken Dauber

Ken Dauber

I was pleased to meet Ken Dauber at the farmer’s market today, and that he signed my petition for Palo Alto City Council. (It does not imply an endorsement, merely qualifies me for the ballot; I would hope to earn his vote over the next several months, and perhaps his endorsement).

As I understand it, Ken Dauber is a local parent and homeowner who has taken an exceptionally keen interest in our schools. He ran for School Board in 2012 and got 15,000 votes. (Heidi Eberling got about fifteen thousand and one, and won).

His group is called We Can Do Better. I think that being a Gunn graduate is one of the biggest privileges I have been offered, in 50 years here (on Earth, I’ve spent about 32 years, on and off, in this community, or roughly since 1974, backing out four years in Hanover, New Hampshire while at Dartmouth, and four years in San Francisco, as the world’s most conflicted ad guy, and three years in Chicago, where I was born, and six years in Saratoga, where I did K-4 at Foothill Elem).

I think our schools are very good, maybe not quite what they were pre-Serrano Priest and Prop 13, but yes, I agree with Ken that we can do better. Always.

Maybe it’s just me to I am also thinking of Roger Craig when he was the Giants’ baseball manager and he had an expression — I think about self-esteem: Don’t Get Your Dauber Down.

Anyhoo, I look forward to trading notes with Ken Dauber the education activist and leader as we both proceed in our respective campaigns, he for School Board and me for Council.

rogercraig(I am especially curious to hear his thoughts on the “Gunn graffiti hate crime case” — strictly put, I am wondering about lenience for the young man whose misguided act in May, 2014 was surely offensive but dubiously criminal. I wrote to Dennis Burns Chief of Police seeking more information on the actual content of said-crime; the Gunn Oracle reports that one message read “Thank God Villalobos is leaving” Sounds more like a prayer than a threat, but I’m a reform, mustard not mayo type. Let’s teach our kids better, not lock them up. Ken?)

Speaking of which — and this is after all my blog and for now at least my second life cushy campaign headquarters for my Chicago-style deep dish political operations — I enjoyed meeting these fellow citizens — maybe they don’t realize that their names will become a public document that can be inspected at City Clerk Donna Grider’s office — I’m willing to redact if one of you reads your name here and would prefer more privacy, but I did enjoy meeting so all six of you:

Nancy Pleibel (whose actually a friend and neighbor, and is teaching me about the vast world right of McCloskey, although we often talk baseball, I think she might remember Roger Craig, and may have seen him pitch); Lynn Rubinson or Robinson, everyone knows her from St. Michael’s — its a cafe not a church, for you greenhorns; Scottie Zimmerman, who with Jeremy Robinson were telling us about Frankie the dog and his or her cataracts, or lack thereof, thanks to Friends of Palo Alto Shelter – -and I promise to take a tour and bug City Manager Jim Keane to do so also, my two fellow candidates, Eric Filseth and Tom Dubois, who shared a table, and our hosting an invite-only event in Professorville next week which they invited and then dis-invited me to. I signed Eric’s page, and he just may earn my vote. Tom has an inside track for that, if I had to choose between them.  Check back on these pages for all of above

edit to add: and this started as a simple little shout out to Dauber, but like a lot of things on the internet – and he should know, being a Google honcho — they sprawl out. So here is something I posted on PaloAltoVille a website somehow connected to PASZ Palo Alto Sensible Zoning — 411 likes on popular social media site — and thought would  go discretely to leadership of the org or webmaster of the site but for whatever reason it is staying public (Eric Filseth it seems is on the board to this fledgling NGO, which came out of the Maybell Referendum — I vote for but did not work on, and running for office):

Meanwhile, if you’ve read the Grand Jury Report, of June 16, 2014 you could argue that Karen Holman is as culpable as Scharff and Shepard about the corruption evidenced by the two projects it describes. Although I tend to agree with Karen more often than I do with Scharff and Shepherd, I am not sure that people don’t want more change than merely a self-described shift toward ‘residentialism”. It almost looks like Karen is using Eric and Tom as a shield; maybe she is sinking them all. Or, alternately, you could argue that PASZ if it offers a slate of candidates — and the Weekly is practically already describing it as such,100 plus days before the election — you could say there has already been some compromise between the Establishment to defuse or diffuse the reform. Their enthusiastic greeting of the Filseth-Dubois-Kuo quasi-slate smacks of their backing of Berman, who is reality is way right of his press, Scharff in 2009 who they let describe himself as a “country lawyer” and not the more factual “real estate lawyer…and developer”.

Or how much is PASZ willing to spend on the Weekly to get its way?

Karen, to my mind, and she is a sort of ally, will have to come clean on what she did or did not do regarding 27 Uni and what she was thinking, and there are two or three other things she said or did that I never got her story on, before I would support her. It’s far more tempting and probably expedient to push the issue of GJ and throw her along with Scharff and Shepherd under the bus, or try to.

I am disappointed better candidates have not stepped forward.

I’d appreciate if whoever reads this memo identifies him or herself to me.

PASZ is a promising development but let’s not build a castle with five bricks, or please don’t claim you’ve cornered the market on change, reform or dissent.

This is more about my curiosity about PASZ then a reaction to Eric Filseth per se so perhaps better if this is stored internally and not kept viewable. Most blogs are moderated before they are made public. Not that I don’t stand by these ideas but they are not meant as public attacks.
Or you can leave this up, I guess, and let Eric respond, but that was not my intention. I think of PASZ as a type of arbiter but not a hegemony.

Don’t get me wrong I’d like to cultivate supporters among the membership of PASZ or as an organization — and I presume many of them voted for me in 2012 — but it looks like deals are already made. And I’m pointing out some obvious flaws.

and this, I posted on July 23, pretty late in eve:

I pulled papers to run for Council. I presume I am running to the left of corporate types like Eric and Tom and to a realtor like Lydia. I actually like Lydia, she sold my brother’s house.

I may vote for all 3 of them, but they have yet to earn my vote, or support.

Mark Weiss

I think I am the only Gunn or Paly grad in the race…

I did not work on Measure D, but did have discussions during that period with Maurice Green and Tim Gray. I met Ken Scholz when he rang our buzzer.

A lot of people will vote for me before Filseth, Dubois or Kuo.

Tim Gray and I were the only people willing to stand up in 2012 for “residentialist” ideals. In some ways we paved the way for the referendum, or where I am wrong about that?

Why does PASZ think it speaks for all Palo Altans? It seems a little inbred to me…

By the way, I’ve posted in other places that I like what I’ve seen of Cheryl L — if she ran, I’d vote for her.

Meanwhile Jason Green of the Merc / Daily news has this in today’s paper: “Four more pull nomination papers for city council race: At least 2 newcomers will get seats, with (Gail) Price opting out, (Larry) Klein termed out”. Which is overall a better treatment of me than what I saw in the Weekly, commented on, and spoke with the reporter. So the 11 are: Mark Weiss, Eric Filseth, Tom Dubois, Karen Holman (i), Lydia Kuo, Richard Wendorf, Victor Frost, Hans Gregory Scharff (i), Nancy Shepherd (i), “John Karl Friedrich” (that cannot be right – I have him as John Fredrich), and Seelam Reddy (to whom I offered, via the blogs, the tagline “I’m Reddy R U?”). I’m somehow predicting one more to pull but only 11 on the ballot.

When I ran into Greg Schmid the other day he indicated he had read my post, in other realms, that fewer than 10 candidates would be Palo Alto’s way of indicating it was throwing in the towel, on Democracy.

Yesterday at Withers’ hamburger joint – I was there for the milkshake, in 85 degree heat, I met a math professor named Rich Peterson who signed my petition and gave me a clue on Riemann, and a man named Garrett told me in passing he is for small government and no pensions. (He said he lives nearby but hopefully soon will be moving to a hand-made cabin in Montana). Firm grip, his hands at least.

Meanwhile, Karen had written me a brief note via email; it is brief enough that I don’t feel bad moving it from private to public, and it rebuts what I had posted (that which I thought was private but is actually public — I presume I will see Karen in person in good time and give us of us a chance to re-set with the other):

HI, Mark.
I did speak out about the Arrillaga proposal on a number of occasions, both to staff and in public.
I surely hope that my 13 years standing up and speaking out is not forgotten so easily.
Take good care.
Karen

 

Ah, Democracy. (In describing this, and Karen, I think with Dubois, I had referred to her service, in Council and on Planning as “15 years”, but I do like the ring of 13, my old Gunn Titans hoops jersey number).

Don’t get your dauber down!

By the way, if you type “gunn” into the internal search function here at Plastic Alto, you can sort of sort out my thoughts on local ed, that plus girls softball and wrestling. If you tap the “Plato’s Republic” tag on the right column, you might find that close to 200 of the first 800 posts here are loosely speaking, on policy as much or more than music. This be a hybrid. Give it a drive.

edit to add, again: I like this photo of Ken, more than what was used in 2012, which I thought made him appear stern. I said to Owen Byrd, via email that maybe Ken would look good in a Kangol.

About 40 bucks, might get him another 500 votes: do the math, bro.

edit to add, an hour later, but two hours before leaving to see Tempest, a Celtic rock band, by bike, at Rinconada Park: I apologize to Ken Dauber for making my little shout-out that much more of a hot mess — Democracy is not for the tidy — but I posted about 300 more words on Palo Alto Weekly responding to trolls, including “Seriously?” — that’s her pen-name, I think — who called me out, and presumably had it deleted — that I mistook her for a man and said “man up”, responding to her, and my point that the discourse is made worse by the nature of anonymous or pseudonymous posting. Here is my reply:

I didn’t notice your curves.

I think of my country as a she but vitriolic, cynical and cowardly blog trolls as “he”. That’s how my mother raised me, I guess.

The point would have been moot, if under your own name you said “With due respect I doubt you have the community support and skill set of Sid Espinosa”…

But duly noted. For the record I am not a sexist.

This is ludicrous. How do I know you are a woman and not a man pretending to be a woman to catch me in this trap? (Which apparently you’ve also tagged and has been deleted, the offending sexist comment. It’s actually a compliment to women that I don’t imagine your post to be written by a woman).

I was also responding to an aggregate of anonymous attacks along various lines, which to me sounded like macho male-type locker-room slurs.

But seriously “Seriously?”, who in particular do you think I should drop out of the race and support?.

If you read my blog, talk to any of the 4,300 hundred people who voted for me in the past (it might be 5,000, if a different 700 voted for me in 2009), talk to current and past council and commissioners (including my girlfriend Terry Acebo Davis, a two-term arts commissioner) or my parents, you will find I am a viable candidate. You are free to disagree with me on the issues and not vote for me, or on any criteria.

But I would say closer to the truth, compared to the framing here, is that I am in the tradition of Gary Fazzino, Joe Simitian and Yiaway Yeh as people who were nominated by their peers and teachers to be in student leadership, in my case at Terman and Gunn, and then later in life offered to be involved in local self-governance of Palo Alto.

I am the only candidate in the race who is a product of local schools. I am also a Dartmouth grad. It’s not Stanford but it has a proud history of training people for public service. (Melissa Baten Caswell, of PAUSD trustees, is a Dartmouth class, 1986).

I’m certain if I were a realtor I would get more press and more “love” here. Earthwise Productions, my concert company, was a cover story in the Weekly, not so long ago.

Anyhow, feel free to comment here, on my own blog, Plastic Alto, or approach me if you see me around, between now and November 5.

Bless!

edit to add five hours, a Giants loss and a few slices of pizza later:

went back to PaloAltoVille site – which is probably not the PASZ homepage — to complete the circle and describe and link to my Against D “Fox Says Ding” campaign:

I did work on an Against D campaign but it never got off the ground:
at a friend’s early Halloween Party, i.e. about a month before referendum voting, I became aware of a fad in the form of a talking and dancing Fox from Norway who says “Ding”. An artist and I created a suite of stickers featuring this character that we wanted to be used as the mascot of the referendum or a potential folk icon who is in general the nemesis of development. I also wrote a long post in support of Margot Davis’ idea of preserving the same site for the orchard, as an educational asset.

Here is info on my “Fox Says ‘Ding'” campaign:

https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/2013/10/13/fox-says-ding-in-palo-alto/

Not sure how I started to believe that PaloAltoVille was the PASZ website but, I thought I would round out this round of posts. Tom and Eric have been giving me funny looks but not sure if its because they have read these posts.

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The swingin’ Ms. Seeling

Check back for the post, I just liked the headline.

See also: Reggie Jackson, Sal Bando, Rollie Fingers, the Swingin’ A’s: East Bay thing, dontcha know?

Here

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Hip kitty seeks crash pad

Hep cat seeks new gig

Hep cat seeks new gig

Hip kitty seeks crash pad. Mews along to early Derek Bailey.

This is real, and not sequel to “Inside Llewyn Davis: further adventures of Roland Turner”.

Reach Earthwise Productions via Plastic Alto comment board for more info.

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