The Opinion Pages

Editorials

Heading for the Freedom Land

By Becky O’Malley
Thursday November 06, 2008

“It’s been a long time coming,” said the president-elect on the big screen. From the back of the packed room at Bobby G’s Pizzeria, an earnest youthful voice: “Twenty months!” -more-


Editorial Cartoons

We, Not You, Shall Overcome

By Justin DeFreitas
Monday November 10, 2008

Obama's Victory

By Justin DeFreitas
Thursday November 06, 2008

Proposition 8

By Justin DeFreitas
Thursday November 06, 2008

Letters

Letters to the Editor

Thursday November 06, 2008

Letters to the Editor

Monday November 10, 2008

Police Misconduct Complaints: The Right Not to Remain Silent

By Terry Francke
Thursday November 06, 2008

Do Police Get Any Cultural Sensitivity Training?

By Ayodele Nzinga
Thursday November 06, 2008

UC Democracy: After 140 Years, It’s Time for Change

By Matthew Taylor
Thursday November 06, 2008

Obama Is My Lama ... And also My President

By Boona Cheema
Thursday November 06, 2008

Reader Commentaries

Mayor Bates: Taking and Giving Nothing Back

By Reya Aimes
Thursday November 06, 2008

I grew up in this city and I am so disappointed in it I could just spit. How its citizenry can keep electing someone as mayor who quite obviously doesn’t care about their wants, needs or rights escapes me. -more-


The Devil You Know: Dean Vs. Bates

By Carol Denney
Thursday November 06, 2008

By the time this story hits print, either Tom Bates or Shirley Dean will have won the election for mayor in Berkeley. The Berkeley voters will be able to count on one thing for certain; a back burner for civil rights, police accountability, and honestly affordable housing. -more-


Choice Voting Is the Way to Go

By Preston Jordan
Thursday November 06, 2008

As a resident of Albany, I have read Sharon Hudson’s series on the problems created with Berkeley’s electoral system with fascination. Her commentaries, published in the Oct. 9, 16 and 30 issues of the Berkeley Daily Planet, present a brief history of Berkeley’s previous “at-large” system of electing the City Council, the current district system of election, and the problems created by each. -more-


Barack Obama and the Great Yearning

By Jean Damu
Thursday November 06, 2008

The election of Barack Obama as 44th president of the United States is a benchmark event in African American’s long, long history in this country. However the overwhelming support Obama received from the nation’s black communities, support that saw unprecedented numbers of African Americans marching as one to the polling booths, stemmed from emotions and events far removed the world of modern politics. -more-


Measure KK Aftermath: Perish by the Sword

By Alan Tobey
Thursday November 06, 2008

As Jesus says in Matthew 26:52, “those that take up the sword shall perish by the sword.” In the case of just-defeated initiative Measure KK, the “sword” its proponents took up was their conviction that the issue would be considered an up or down vote on one specific Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project—AC Transit’s proposal to run dedicated-lane buses on Telegraph Avenue and on into downtown. As mayoral candidate Shirley Dean said at a neighborhood meeting early in the campaign, “Measure KK is the best way we have to stop the BRT in Berkeley.” -more-


Unlikely Prospect for Peace in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

By Ralph Stone
Thursday November 06, 2008

In her book, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, Naomi Klein posits that Israel’s embrace of disaster capitalism has diminished the need for it to engage in meaningful peace negotiations with the Palestinians and its Arab neighbors. For years, it was conventional wisdom that you needed political stability to have steady economic growth. However, Israel has turned this conventional wisdom on its head. Israeli occupies Gaza and the West Bank, engages in violence with the Palestinians, is experiencing political turmoil, yet the country is experiencing an economic boom. How? -more-


Silence on Immigration

By David Bacon
Thursday November 06, 2008

The first of the 388 workers arrested in the immigration raid on the Agriprocessors meatpacking plant in Postville, Iowa, were deported in mid-October, having spent five months in federal prison. Their crime? Giving a bad Social Security number to the company to get hired. Among them will be a young man who had his eyes covered with duct tape by a supervisor on the line, who then beat him with a meathook. The supervisor is still on the job. -more-