Archive for the ‘Labor’ Category

The Scratch Papers, Page 82: “Sal Slummo, Mayer of Hobotown”

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

The Scratch Papers, Page 82: 'Sal Slummo, Mayer of Hobotown'

Colored pencil, 2010.

“I Am an Amanuensis” 68: Elvis Costello

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Lip Service — well, that’s all you’ll ever get from me
Well, how could you believe I’ll take you seriously?
With your cheap rewards, your blackmail, and your comical rage
Just remember you’ll only be the boss so long as you pay my wage

Elvis Costello in “Cheap Reward,” from the rerelease of his album, My Aim is True. The lyrics are reminiscent of Bob Dylan’s “Maggie’s Farm.” Here’s a video of Costello performing “Cheap Reward” with Stephen Colbert on The Colbert Report.

Amanuensis –noun.  A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

Jesse and the CAERP Make a Web Site

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

After years of flailing about in the dark with web design, I finally took a class on CSS and realized how much I didn’t know I didn’t know about creating web sites (or to paraphrase Donald Rumsfield, “There are known unknowns and unknown unknowns, by golly”).

The result: I’ve created my first standards-compliant, XHTML and CSS web site from scratch for the honorable folks at the California Association of Equal Rights Professionals (CAERP). There will be more web sites (and web design classes) to follow, plus some changes around here, so stay tuned.

Fight Tonight Over Nestlé Bottled Water Plant!

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

As reported in Sacramento Press yesterday, the City of Sacramento issued a stop-work order on construction of a Nestlé water-bottling plant in Sacramento, and at a 6pm meeting tonight the City Council will consider “amending the city’s zoning code to immediately require special permits for beverage bottling plants.”

The stop-work order is based on questions of whether or not Nestlé filled out the appropriate paperwork to build the plant, and Brendan O’Rourke, who works for Nestlé, says they did. The larger issue being asked by City Councilman Kevin McCarty and the advocacy group Save Our Water Sacramento is whether Nestlé should be allowed to bottle water in Sacramento at all (full disclosure: I am friends with some of the members of Save Our Water Sacramento). While some of the water will be shipped in from nearby springs, the majority of the water Nestlé wants to bottle, an estimated 81 million a year according to an article by McCarty in Sacramento Press, will be taken directly from Sacramento’s municipal water supply, despite California being in its third year of drought. This water will then be resold to Californians (to avoid regulation by the FDA) at a profit of 10,000%!

Certainly, Sacramento has already made money off of the proposed plant; Nestlé says they’ve already paid “‘$3.7 million [. . .] in [the] form of permitting fees, construction costs, due diligence payments and [other associated] costs [. . .],’” and Mayor Kevin Johnson was quoted in another Sacramento Press article as saying the new plant could create “‘40 to 60′” jobs. But do the costs outweigh the benefits? 40 to 60 jobs is certainly not a lot, and any money Sacramento has made so far will pale in comparison to what Nestlé will make reselling tap water. Last week Save Our Water Sacramento hosted a special screening of the as-yet-unreleased documentary Tapped at The Crest. The film is pretty horrifying, detailing the problems with the bottled water industry: besides those already discussed, citizens in a city with a Nestlé water-bottling plant in Maine were cut off from their water supply for two days while the plant’s supply kept going; bottled water faces far less stringent safety requirements than bottled water and has been found by various studies to be contaminated; people who live near plants that create the plastic bottles for bottled water have a higher risk of getting cancer; and of course, water bottles that are not recycled often end up in the ocean, forming islands of plastic trash larger than Texas that are killing wildlife and affecting the food chain.

However, there are already two water-bottling plants in Sacramento, according to yet another Sacramento Press article (boy, they are on this issue!). And the best way to stop bottled water might be to simply stop drinking it. While I’m definitely a bleeding-heart liberal, I’ve drank my fair share of bottled water over the years (Tapped slackened my thirst for the stuff, however). A comment left on one of the Sacramento Press articles called local opponents of the Nestlé plant “NIMBYs,” an acronym that stands for “Not In My BackYard” and refers to people who enjoy the use of certain products or processes, such as nuclear power, but whom nevertheless refuse to let the uglier aspects of the product or processes, such as nuclear waste, come anywhere near their backyard. Those uglier aspects then end up in parts of the country or world where people are too poor to keep them out.

In any case, whether you oppose or support the Nestlé plant, your voice can be heard tonight if you show up at the City Council meeting, and that’s what democracy is all about!

How Hipsters are like Superheroes

Monday, September 21st, 2009

“I Am an Amanuensis” 64: Pulp

Monday, September 14th, 2009

You’ll never live like common people,
you’ll never do what common people do,
you’ll never fail like common people,
you’ll never watch your life slide out of view,
and dance and drink and screw,
because there’s nothing else to do.

Common People” by Pulp, from their excellent 1995 album Different ClassMy karaoke interpretation of the song was similar to the Ben Folds-produced William Shatner version with Joe Jackson (is she really going out with him?).

Amanuensis –noun.  A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

Apropos of Nothing 8: Pick a Winner!

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

“I Am an Amanuensis” 59: John Massé

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

“My Dad always said, ‘Son, if you can draw beautiful women, you’ll never starve.’  Thanks Dad!”

Illustrator John Massé in the March / April 2009 issue of Layers Magazine, page 32.

Amanuensis –noun.  A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

The New York Times Hates the Japanese

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

On the front page of today’s New York Times there was a report on the repercussions of Japan’s economic troubles during the ‘90s.  The second paragraph is especially interesting, “The economic malaise that plagued Japan from the 1990s until the early 2000s brought stunted wages and depressed stock prices, turning free-spending consumers into misers and making them dead weight on Japan’s economy” (emphasis added).

That seems a little like blaming the victim, wouldn’t you say?

“I Am an Amanuensis” 57: Eugene V. Debs

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

These are the gentry who are today wrapped up in the American flag, who shout their claim from the housetops that they are the only patriots, and who have their magnifying glasses in hand, scanning the country for evidence of disloyalty, eager to apply the brand of treason to the men who dare to even whisper their opposition [. . .]. No wonder Sam Johnson declared that “patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel.” He must have had this Wall Street gentry in mind, or at least their prototypes, for in every age it has been the tyrant, the oppressor and the exploiter who has wrapped himself in the cloak of patriotism, or religion, or both to deceive and overawe the people.

You need at this time especially to know that you are fit for something better than slavery and cannon fodder. You need to know that you were not created to work and produce and impoverish yourself to enrich an idle exploiter. You need to know that you have a mind to improve, a soul to develop, and a manhood to sustain.

Eugene V. Debs, five-time Socialist Party Candidate, in his Canton, Ohio anti-war speech.  The war in question was World War I and, under the Sedition Act, he was prosecuted and sentenced to 10 years in prison for interfering with the draft.  Thankfully, his sentence was commuted by Warren G. Harding and he was released after two years and eight months.  For giving a speech.  In America.  Fortunately, things were never quite this bad during the Bush years, although it should be pointed out that two American citizens were subjected to Bush’s extra-judicial war on terror techniques:  Jose Padilla was in military custody for three-and-a-half years without charges, and while in military custody he was “[. . .] held in solitary confinement without a mattress, clock, books, human contact or legal representation [. . .],” and tortured; Yaser Hamdi, who was born in the US but raised in Saudi Arabia, was detained for almost three years without receiving any charges and, in order to avoid an “[. . .] embarrassing courtroom showdown [. . .],”  released by the Bush Administration to Saudi Arabia on the condition that he renounce his US citizenship.

Hundreds of non-US citizens have received the same and worse.

Amanuensisnoun.  A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.