Seahawks plan to sign 49ers’ nemesis Marshawn Lynch for Sunday’s game

Talk about Back to the Future.  Could it be the Beast Mode will return to torment the 49ers’ one more time this coming Sunday in Seattle?

Breaking News 4.15.2019

Excerpted from San Francisco Chronicle 12.23.2019

The 49ers’ high-stakes meeting at Seattle on Sunday didn’t need any more intrigue, but it arrived Monday anyway: The Seahawks plan to add Beast Mode to their barren backfield.

Seattle head coach Pete Carroll indicated the team would sign five-time Pro Bowl running back Marshawn Lynch, 33, who hasn’t played in an NFL game since Oct. 14, 2018, when he was with the Raiders. Lynch, an Oakland native who played at Cal, played for Seattle from 2010 to 2015.

“He’s really excited about the chance to help us,” Carroll said on 710 ESPN Seattle. “If we get a chance to get the Beast back on the field, we’ll see how that works out.”

Beast Mode II 12.23.2019.jpg

Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson and Marshawn Lynch as teamates

The Seahawks need backfield reinforcements after running backs Chris Carson (broken hip) and C.J. Prosise (broken arm) sustained season-ending injuries in their 27-13 home loss to the Cardinals on Sunday. Running back Rashaad Penny (knee) was placed on injured reserve Dec. 14, the first major hit to the NFL’s third-ranked rushing attack.

On Sunday, after Carson and Prosise were injured, the Seahawks’ lone running back was rookie Travis Homer. The sixth-round pick had 16 yards on five carries and a 15-yard reception against Arizona. He has 52 yards on eight carries this season, with his season-long, 29-yard run coming on a fake punt.

The Seahawks have leaned heavily on their run game since Carroll arrived in 2010: They rank second in the NFL in rushing attempts over the past 10 seasons.

“We do kind of like running the football, you know?” Carroll said when asked about the backfield attrition. “It’s a challenge. (General manager John Schneider’s) got to get working. He had a plan.”

That plan doesn’t involve just Lynch. The Seahawks reportedly also have interest in two other veterans, C.J. Anderson, 28, and Robert Turbin, 30. Anderson, then with the Rams, had 132 yards on 23 carries and a touchdown in the 2018 regular-season finale against the 49ers.

For his part, Lynch was a 49ers destroyer who routinely gashed their perennially sturdy run defense when he was with Seattle. Lynch had six 100-yard performances in 10 games against the 49ers in his last five seasons with the Seahawks. During that time, the 49ers allowed nine 100-yard performances in their other 88 games, including playoffs.

Even if Lynch improbably channels his glory days against the 49ers, the Seahawks (11-4) have other significant injury issues entering a game that will determine the NFC West champion.

Pro Bowl left tackle Duane Brown (knee) won’t play Sunday and free safety Quandre Diggs (ankle) is also likely out. Carroll expressed optimism Monday that Pro Bowl defensive end Jadeveon Clowney (core muscle) and starting cornerback Shaquill Griffin (hamstring) will return from two-game absences to face the 49ers.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/49ers/article/Seahawks-plan-to-sign-longtime-49ers-nemesis-14928201.php

 

 

Berlin celebrates start of Hanukkah by lighting biggest menorah in Europe

While Christmas trees are lit throughout much of the World the eight day Hanukkah commemoration,”Fetival of Lights,” is a spiritual time of the year for people of the Jewish Faith.

Deutsche Welle 12.22.2019

Over 2,000 people attended the event at Brandenburg Gate, while Jews in Munich recognized International Holocaust Survivors Night. Religious and political leaders denounced anti-Semitism and far-right extremism.

Chanukah, also known as the “Festival of Lights” commemorates the rededication of the Second Temple in Jerusalem after the Maccabees’ victory over the Syrian armies in 164 BC.

Jews in Germany kicked off the eight-day Hanukkah celebration on Sunday by lighting Europe’s largest menorah at Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.

Anti-Semitism on the rise
The celebration comes after a turbulent year for Jews and other minority groups in Germany and across Europe, with far-right extremism on the rise and headline-making anti-Semitic attacks, including the October shooting of a Jewish synagogue in Halle, which left two dead and two others injured.

Hanukkah II 12.19.2019.jpg

Holocaust survivor Margot Friedländer and Josef Schuster, the president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, and a Jewish boy from Berlin lit the first candle on the 10-meter-high menorah.

Over 2,000 people were there to attend the 15th anniversary of the Brandenburg Gate menorah lighting, including Germany’s Minister of Justice and Consumer Protection Christine Lambrecht, Berlin Governing Mayor Michael Müller and Bundestag Vice President Petra Pau.

Read more:Hanukkah in Berlin: German president calls Jewish community ‘a gift’

Berlin Chabad chairman Rabbi Yehuda Teichtal was also present at the ceremony. He spoke about the liberation of the Auschwitz concentration camp, the 75th anniversary of which will be observed on January 27, 2020, and decried modern anti-Semitism. “Anti-Semitism is a poison, no matter where it comes from,” news agency EDP quoted him as saying. “We won’t give in.”

Schuster added that religious freedoms could again be at risk in Europe.

Read more:Germany synagogue attack: Who were the victims in Halle?

According to the Federal Prosecutor’s Office, the assailant confessed to having both anti-Semitic and far-right motives.”After the attack on October 9, there have been many signs of solidarity. That gives us courage,” said Schuster.

A new candle will be lit on the candle at the onset of darkness each evening until December 30. The menorah consists of eight candle holders, and a ninth holder in the middle for a candle that is used to light the rest.

Keeping the memory of the Holocaust alive is one crucial and increasingly difficult task,” said Charlotte Knobloch, President of the Jewish Community of Munich and Upper Bavaria.

“If we light this year’s Chanukah candle in Munich, there will be another light that reminds us that the darkness will never prevail and that our minds the world can illuminate,” she said. The ceremony took place as part of the International Holocaust Survivors Night. New York and Moscow are also participating today, while Paris and Jerusalem follow on December 23.

https://www.dw.com/en/berlin-celebrates-start-of-hanukkah-by-lighting-biggest-menorah-in-europe/a-51774457

49ers’ QB brother murdered. Team tragedy puts big game in perspective

TERRIBLE.  The 49ers won the game tonight but it all takes a back seat to the human element.

San Francisco Chronicle – Ann Killion 12.21.2019

This is a big game for the 49ers. An epic game.

But it’s still just a game.

The 49ers sadly got a shocking dose of perspective before Saturday’s game against the Rams. Backup quarterback C. J. Beathard (pictured above) flew early Saturday morning to Nashville to be with his family after learning that his younger brother Clayton (pictured below)  was stabbed to death Friday night. The 22-year-old, who played quarterback at Long Island University, was one of two young victims killed outside a bar.

CJ Bethhard III 12.21.2019

The tragedy will certainly resonate with the team. Beathard, who was the 49ers starting quarterback for parts of 2017 and last season, is popular with his teammates.

The team released a statment before the game: “”The 49ers family was shocked and deeply saddened to learn of the tragedy involving C.J. Beathard’s younger brother, Clayton. We extend our heartfelt sympathies to C.J. and the entire Beathard family as they cope with the unthinkable loss of a loved one. C.J. has traveled home to join his family knowing he has the support of our entire organization as they grieve the passing of Clayton.”

CJ Bethhard II 12.21.2019.jpg

This is an unusually close team, as I wrote about in an interview with general manager John Lynch. There is a connectedness that is often missing on NFL teams. The team talks about itself as a family, and we saw how raw the emotions were when head coach Kyle Shanahan presented game balls to John and Jed York following the game in New Orleans.

The family has suffered a tragedy. There’s a game to play. But everyone is well aware that it’s just a game.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/49ers/annkillion/article/49ers-team-tragedy-puts-big-game-in-perspective-14924676.php

 

Germany to reintroduce rabbis into army. Hitler expelled Jews from military in 1933

Nearly 90 years after Hitler expelled Jews from the military, the German government will have Rabbis as part of its armed forces.

Deutsche Welle 12.20.2019

Rabbis haven’t had a place in the German military since Hitler expelled Jewish soldiers. Decades after the Holocaust, Germany has restored the tradition.

Germany’s defense minister on Friday signed an agreement to reintroduce rabbis into the armed forces to look after the spiritual needs of Jewish soldiers, saying it was a “strong sign” of diversity and openness.

Ten rabbis will begin working for the Bundeswehr in the coming months, Defense Minister Annagret Kramp-Karrenbauer said. 

Among Germany’s 180,000 soldiers there are around 90,000 Christians, 3,000 Muslims and 300 Jews. German soldiers can report their religious beliefs on a voluntary basis.

German Rabbis II 12.20.2019.jpg

Read more: Opinion: Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer — a battle is won, but the war isn’t over

Together with the President of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Josef Schuster, the minister signed the agreement at a Jewish conference in Berlin.

Schuster called the day “historic” for relations between Jews and the German army.

“People who consider themselves to be part of a democratic society should and must take responsibility for it,” he said, adding that the introduction of rabbis into the military is “a signal for… the strength of democracy.”

A ‘broken history’

The military has not employed rabbis since Hitler came to power in 1933 and expelled all Jewish soldiers from the army. 

Kramp-Karrenbauer spoke of the “broken history” between Jews and the military. She said that the step to restore the position of rabbis within the military is a sign of the organization’s diversity. Jews have a home within the army just as they do in Germany, she said.

Read more: One in four Germans hold anti-Semitic beliefs, study finds

The military rabbis will be headquartered in Berlin. They will serve Jewish soldiers stationed both in Germany and abroad, covering the same duties as Evangelical and Catholic chaplains. Plans to introduce Muslim religious counselors are also in the works.

Parliament is likely to approve the measure early next year.

Among Germany’s 180,000 soldiers there are around 90,000 Christians, 3,000 Muslims and 300 Jews. German soldiers can report their religious beliefs on a voluntary basis.

https://www.dw.com/en/germany-to-reintroduce-rabbis-into-army/a-51753983

San Francisco politics. Dept. Building Inspecton pushes out planning commish

The real scandal is with the Department of Building Inspection not Planning Commissioner Dennis Richards.

The Commissioner is totally correct in labeling DBI, “a cancer on this City.”

If Richards was part of the DBI in crowd, none of this would be happening.

He is being pushed out because he knows too much and tells it truthfully.

Building Inspection is the worst entrenched bureaucracy in San Francisco.

There has never been a Mayor with the political will to go in there and clean up the place. 

San Francisco Examiner 12.20.2019

After publicly criticizing the San Francisco Department of Building Inspection and allegedly violating tenant law, Planning Commissioner Dennis Richards will be taking a leave of absence from his duties on the commission, the San Francisco Examiner has learned.

Richards pushed back against allegations, describing DBI as “a cancer on this city” at a recent Planning Commission hearing, and even indicating that he would sue the department. He also defended violating a 2014 tenant buyout law by describing his failure to report deals struck with four tenants of the property as an “oversight.”

Richards has not been present for the last two meetings of the commission, which is currently in the midst of vetting candidates for the vacant position of planning department director, a spokesperson for the department confirmed.

Board of Supervisors President Norman Yee told the Examiner on Friday that Richards, who was appointed to the commission in 2014, notified him of his intent to take some time to tend to personal matters and address permitting issues at a Mission District property he co-owns.

The Examiner reported previously that Richards had nine permits revoked in October on a house at 3426-32 22nd St. he initially purchased with an LLC for $2.7 million and planned to sell for $7.5 million. Richards was reprimanded by DBI for allegedly performing work on the house that exceeded the permits he had obtained.

Dennis Richards III 12.20.2019

Richards is also accused of failing to report tenant buyouts at the property in accordance with local law.

Richards did not respond to the Examiner’s request for comment on Friday.

In his role as a commissioner, Richards is required to work closely with the DBI, and his statements have led Yee to question whether Richards’ continued tenure on the commission could lead to a conflict of interest.

Yee told the Examiner Friday that Richards informed him during a phone call earlier this week that he needed a temporary break from his duties.

“He asked whether it makes any sense for him to take a leave from the commission for a short period, so he can clear personal issues …and address some of the permit stuff,” said Yee, who added that Richards penned a letter with his request that he planned to submit to the Planning Commission.

On Friday, the commission’s secretary said that the letter had not yet been submitted.

Commission President Myrna Melgar said that she also has not yet received Richards’ written communication, but confirmed that she spoke with him on Wednesday evening and that Richards “told me verbally that he had this conversation with Supervisor Yee and that he would be taking a leave of absence from the commission.”

Melgar said that Richards had told her he would be out through February.

Both Yee and Melgar were confident that Richards’ absence would not impact the ongoing selection process for planning director.

“Right now there are six people on the commission,” said Yee. “If they are working together to get the best director, what they should do is have some consensus regarding the person they want. It shouldn’t be a three-three split. If it is, in my mind, whoever [the candidate] is shouldn’t be the one they decide on.”

Melgar declined to disclose details about the selection process but said that the remaining members of the commission “are still going at it.”

In regard to the open question of whether Richards should step down due to a possible conflict of interest, Yee said that Richards’ leave of absence “provides breathing room for me to think about that.”

“There are allegations, but you don’t want to base a decision just on allegations,” he said.

https://www.sfexaminer.com/news/embattled-planning-commissioner-to-take-leave-of-absence/

 

PG&E profit increase blocked; CEO projects five more years of blackouts

I had to read this article a couple of times. I’m shocked at the audacity of Pacific Gas & Electric.

PG&E had the nerve to request that California regulators allow its profit margins to be increased at the expense of ratepayers. PG&E is in bankruptcy. The public utility is responsible for the series of catastrophic wildfires which have burned through California.

Fortunately the California Public Utilities Commission denied the request.

PG&E stopped paying dividends to its shareholders in 2017.  So, who would benefit from the increase in profit margins?

San Francisco Chronicle 12.19.2019

Pacific Gas & Electric Co. and other California utilities can’t raise their profit margins even as they face billions of dollars in wildfire liabilities, the California Public Utilities Commission ruled Thursday.

PG&E Rate Increase I 12.19.2019.jpg

In response to the CPUC denial of a higher profit margin on Thursday, PG&E said it expects to invest $28 billion through 2024 to expand and protect its electric and gas infrastructure.

“We recognize that any increase to customer bills can be challenging, and PG&E is committed to keeping costs as low as possible while meeting our responsibilities to safely serve our customers,” the company said.

PG&E, Southern California Edison, Southern California Gas and San Diego Gas & Electric had sought higher profits to help attract investors.

But the commission said new state policies such as a law passed this year that creates a $21 billion wildfire fund would help the utilities. It unanimously rejected the profit increase.

The decision blocks higher customer bills that could have started in January and means PG&E’s profit margin will stay at 10.25%. In April, PG&E sought to increase profit margins to 16%, with a monthly bill increase of 7%, or $7.85, for average residential electricity customer. The average residential gas customer would have seen a monthly 7.7% increase, or $4.25 per month.

People’s bills can rise due to other factors; PG&E didn’t have finalized information on other rate changes because other regulatory decisions haven’t been made.

Also on Thursday, PG&E Corp. CEO Bill Johnson testified in Washington before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources about his company’s vulnerability to wildfires and its efforts to prevent them.

After apologizing for his company’s role in starting deadly blazes, Johnson urged senators to fund initiatives including making communities more resilient against wildfires; forest management; and sharing of military satellite data for wildfire detection.

Remembering the Leslie Salt Mountain: Bay Area’s odd, glistening landmark

Stanford researcher Michael Wara, who also testified at the Senate committee hearing, discussed PG&E’s use of planned blackouts to stop its equipment from sparking more fires. The outages in 2019 “likely cost customers more than $10 billion,” he said.

Johnson said it would take five years for PG&E to stop using large-scale blackouts, though he noted San Diego Gas & Electric was still using “surgical” outages 12 years after it began the fire-prevention measure.

The timeline Johnson outlined appeared to be shortened from an estimate he gave state utility regulators in October, when he said the blackouts could go on for a decade, though with diminishing reach.

“We do plan to underground more distribution lines … but this is not going to be a complete answer,” Johnson said.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W. Va., asked about the company’s financial strength given its bankruptcy: “Are you going to make it?”

“I’m not the Wikipedia of bankruptcy,” Johnson said, noting he’d only arrived at PG&E this year. He discussed the settlements the company had recently reached with wildfire victims, insurers and government bodies. “Who the eventual owner will be will be decided in Bankruptcy Court,” he added. He said the costs of the bankruptcy would not be borne by consumers, though they would shoulder some cost of upgrades planned before the bankruptcy filing.

Asked about climate change and PG&E’s shift to cleaner energy sources, Johnson said that “in the short term” the utility would “put safety first,” prioritizing infrastructure fixes and fire-prevention measures over clean energy, “but this will not get in the way of meeting California’s energy goals.”

https://www.sfchronicle.com/business/article/PG-E-blackouts-could-go-on-for-five-years-CEO-14919406.php

The Battle of France: Ballerinas dancing the Paris streets in protest

On a day when the American political class and the bloviating masses step into the morass of Impeachment,  this slice of culture news from across the Atlantic gives us some perspective on the important things in life. There’s more to life than talk talk talk.

Wall Street Journal 12.18.2019

PARIS—President Emmanuel Macron wants to overhaul France’s pension system, and the country’s railway unions aren’t the only militant force standing in his way.

Ballerinas are marching in the vanguard. They usually perform at the country’s vaunted opera house, the Palais Garnier, but now they are hopping mad.

Photo above – Dancers backstage last year at the Palais Garnier. PHOTO: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

At issue is the delicate matter of when France’s finest male and female dancers should be allowed to hang up their ballet shoes and begin drawing a national pension. For centuries, the retirement age has stood at 42, but Mr. Macron’s government wants to stretch their limits by at least two more decades.

The Paris Opera Ballet, as the company is known, has put its foot down. Dancers have taken to the streets, marching with tutus over their trousers and handing out protest leaflets.

“There’s no way they can take this away from us,” Matthieu Botto, a 32-year-old who joined the company’s dance school at the age of 12, said of his approaching retirement. “We’ve earned it.”

Paris Ballet II  12.18.2019.jpg

The dancers are hitting high society—the bulk of the ticket holders—where it hurts. Joined by the Paris Opera’s musicians and singers, the dancers went on strike Dec. 5, forcing the Palais Garnier and Opéra Bastille, another landmark venue where the company performs, to shut down just as some of the season’s biggest productions were under way.

Gloria Browne-Marshall, a playwright and law professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, traveled from New York to catch the last performance of “Lear” at the Palais Garnier on Saturday night. She bought a new dress and had a friend fly in from Ireland for the occasion, only to see the opera canceled hours before curtain time.

“I kept holding hope until the last minute,” she said. “I still can’t accept it. It’s too painful just to think about it.”

Dancers backstage last year at the Palais Garnier. PHOTO: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

Dancers say the physical demands of their profession mean they must glide into their golden years earlier. They begin dancing as children with dreams of attaining the rank of étoile, the lauded soloists who command the spotlight. Many never attend high school, making it hard to find jobs once their dancing days are over. They are flames that burn brightly—and briefly.

The very notion of special treatment, however, is anathema to Mr. Macron’s agenda. The government wants to consolidate 42 different pension plans—each with varying retirement ages and benefits—into one universal system with a retirement age of 62. That would lump ballerinas in with office workers, train conductors and nurses.

“The system will be the same for all French people, with no exceptions,” Prime Minister Édouard Philippe said last week.

Ballet’s retirement benefits date to the 17th century under Louis XIV, the Sun King. The monarch earned that moniker after starring as Apollo, the sun god, in the “Ballet de la Nuit,” one of 70 roles he played before the royal court.

Louis XIV would go on to found the Royal Academy of Dance, the precursor to the Paris Opera Ballet, before retiring from ballet at the age of 32. He continued to reign as king for another 44 years.

The Palais Garnier was erected in the 19th century under Napoleon III. With gilded balconies and a 7-ton bronze and crystal chandelier, the theater gave Paris pride of place in the ballet world. Later, the ceiling was painted by Marc Chagall with scenes from ballets and operas.

“When I was a little girl, dancing at the Paris Opera was my dream,” said Marion Barbeau, a 28-year-old ballerina.

She left home at age 11 to enter the Paris Opera Ballet’s school, known for cutthroat competition and where trainees are known as “little opera rats.”

When the strike began, Ms. Barbeau was scheduled to perform as a soloist in “Raymonda,” French choreographer Marius Petipa’s depiction of the love story between a young countess and the knight Jean de Brienne.

“I’m very disappointed not to dance that ballet, but it felt necessary” Ms. Barbeau said, adding that she might leave the company if Mr. Macron’s changes go through.

A spokeswoman for the Paris Opera said they were waiting for proposals from the government.

If the government insists on making dancers perform beyond a youthful age, it won’t be pretty, said Alexandre Carniato, a dancer who has met with the government to press the company’s case.

“If they keep us until we’re 62, no one will want to come and see us dance,” he said.

Training and performing at that level takes a heavy toll on dancers’ bodies. Many suffer from arthritis, and some require hip replacements as young as 30.

A leaflet for a faux ballet passed out by protesting dancers. PHOTO: YANN CHAILLOUX

Ballet dancers have hit the streets in protest, passing out leaflets for a mock ballet. The faux piece, called “Seniors,” is scheduled for Garnier’s 2039-2040 season. It stars an elderly ballerina tiptoeing toward her partner, who is using a walker. Sponsors include makers of hearing aids and dentures.

At 41, Mr. Carniato said he can already hear Father Time knocking. He has danced since the age of 6, and his knees and ankles ache.

He had hoped to retire from the stage next year and begin teaching. Starting salaries for dance teachers, however, are just over the minimum wage and only about half of his €2,500 monthly salary, or close to $2,800, that he earns at the Paris Opera Ballet. He was counting on a pension of around €1,000 to make up the difference.

“I grit my teeth and keep going,” he said. “I need to keep smiling. When I’m on stage, the audience should not see that I’m in pain,” he said.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/macrons-stiff-opposition-in-pension-battle-angry-ballerinas-11576604116?mod=searchresults&page=1&pos=1

Impeachment: Missoula, Montana rally draws protesters, supporters

It boggles the mind how anyone can support this worthless lying buffoon who has done more to destroy Democracy in three years than any President in the history of the country.  

Only in this country could such a clown be President. I don’t know if this is a commentary on the Huckster abilities of the current President or the 63 million voters who drank his kool aid.

It’s amazing. The folks who are being screwed the most by this Shyster are his most vocal supporters.  Go figure.

The Missoulian

December 17, 2019

A boisterous crowd representing both sides of the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump took to the streets — literally, at some points — of Missoula on Tuesday.

On the eve of the U.S. House vote on impeachment in Washington, D.C., Missoula police continually herded protesters back to the sidewalks on East Front Street in front of Republican U.S. Sen. Steve Daines’ local office.

“I’m from New York, and when he was doing his thing there — didn’t want to pay people, bankruptcy, bankruptcy, bankruptcy — it was a big hit on the city,” said Tom Marino of Missoula. “To a lot of people, when you mention Trump, it’s a four-letter word. Now he’s doing it to the country.”

Missoula Impeachment II 12.17.2019

“It’s a nice mix. I just hope it’s peaceful and everyone respects one another,” said John Cummings, who held a pro-impeachments sign with battery-powered light bulbs across the top. “We both have a right to be here.”

Cummings said he’s done a lot of gay rights work. “You learn in Montana you’ve got to be out there if you’re doing gay rights work. So this is a good way to do this here,” he said.

But Cummings and 125 or so other Missoulians took issue with that opinion.

“I can’t imagine when they swear to defend the Constitution and then they don’t want any witnesses in the Senate,” said Cummings. “They just want a show trial. It doesn’t sound right to me.”

 

 

At one point nearly an hour into the dueling rallies a red SUV forced its way out of the parking lot and through a knot of demonstrators, where most of those waving and chanting in favor of impeachment were amassed. Witnesses said four people were hit, though no one was injured.

Some people pounded on the car as it barged onto the street. 

“The car was just leaving the parking lot,” Lt. J.C. Denton of the Missoula Police Department said. “Some people say it may have bumped them. There were no injuries. We’re looking into it, and we took a report.”

 

The opposing groups, numbering more than 200 at the peak of the rally, showed up for one of more than 500 “Impeach and Remove” rallies across the nation and elsewhere in Montana, including in Hamilton, Kalispell and Whitefish.

 

The rallies were organized by groups like MoveOn.org and the Democratic group Stand Up America, which says on its website that its community began in the weeks after the 2016 election and has focused on “strengthening our democracy across the country, standing up to Trump’s corruption and pushing Congress to draft articles of impeachment and vote to impeach Donald Trump.”

 

Missoula County’s Republican Party committee leaders organized the counter rally, with at least a third of the crowd waving flags, standing and chanting in support of Trump.

“I’m sure other communities are doing the same thing,” said Keith Baer of Missoula, a Republican committee member. “It’s important to show our support for President Trump. There’s absolutely nothing proved as far as wrongdoing where President Trump is concerned. President Trump is meeting with results. Better employment, protection for the country, opening up markets.”

 

At first the two sides intermingled, sometimes exchanging heated words. As dusk turned to dark and traffic on the busy street increased, some crossed to the south side of the street and Trump supporters were pushed to the side.

 

Debbie Woodahl stood on the other side of the street and took an opposing view.

“He’s the best president we’ve ever had in this country and he’s been wrongly accused before he was even elected,” she said. “We stand with him and support him 100%.”

Her husband, Doug, said he wasn’t sure what good all the shouting and sign-waving was doing.

 

“But we knew these guys were going to do this, so we decided to come down and support our president. If nothing else we’ll let them know that he’s got a lot of support.”

Montana’s lone House member, Greg Gianforte, will weigh in on the impeachment vote Wednesday. His position on impeachment is well-known.

 

“Adam Schiff, Nancy Pelosi, and House Democrats have been obsessed with overturning the results of the 2016 election since President Trump was elected,” Gianforte said Tuesday in a statement to the Missoulian. “Nancy Pelosi claimed a vote to impeach President Trump would need bipartisan support, but because they failed to make the case, they have none. The American people see through Democrats’ hyper-partisan impeachment efforts, which have been a sham since day one.”

Missoula MT 1.21.2019.JPG

Wintertime in Missoula – Photo by Donna Warren

3 Stories illustrate San Francisco today. Homeless rights, PG&E, Oracle says bye

Say what you will about San Francisco but it’s true, there’s never a dull moment. It’s a tough town and it takes a strong will to survive.

In one day there are three stories which are illustrative of the current political atmosphere in San Francisco. Links to the three stories published in the San Francisco Chronicle are attached.

San Francisco I 12.16.2019.jpg

December 16, 2019

San Francisco III 12.16.2019

Grave of high-ranking Nazi Reinhard Heydrich opened in Berlin

We can never forget the absolute Horror of  the Nazi regime.

In reading the Deutsche Welle article I am struck by the reference to Philip K. Dick’s “The Man in the High Castle” (1962) which is a disturbing dystopian novel and a hit television series on Amazon.

Deutsche Welle 12.15.2019

Unknown perpetrators opened the unmarked grave of senior SS officer Reinhard Heydrich, one of the main architects of the Holocaust, in Berlin. According to preliminary information, nothing was removed, police said.

German police were looking for suspects after the Berlin grave of high-ranking Nazi Reinhard Heydrich was opened, German media reported on Sunday.

Heydrich served as head of the Reich Main Security Office under SS leader Heinrich Himmler. The security office controlled the Gestapo and Nazi security services.

Heydrich was also one of architects of the genocide the Nazis committed against Jewish people.

He had been tasked with finding “a final solution to the Jewish question” by Hermann Göring, another top aide of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler.

Hitler dubbed Heydrich “the Man with the Iron Heart.” Other names attributed to him include “the Butcher,” “the Hangman” and “Himmler’s Evil Genius.” Some speculated that Heydrich, who was 15 years younger than Hitler, aspired to one day lead Nazi Germany.

Man in the High Castle I 12.15.2019

This possibility was explored in works of speculative fiction such as Robert Harris’ Fatherland and Philip K. Dick’s The Man in the High Castle.

In early 1942, Heydrich chaired the top-secret Wannsee conference in Berlin, which finalized Nazi Holocaust plans. In May of the same year, he was attacked by a British-trained team of Czech and Slovak operatives and eventually died in Berlin in June. He was buried with top honors.

No gravestones for senior Nazis

After the Allied forces won the war and occupied Berlin in 1945, they removed markings from the graves of all major Nazi leaders to prevent them from being used as rallying points for Nazi sympathizers. Heydrich’s grave is also currently unmarked.

An employee of Berlin’s Invalids’ Cemetery discovered that the grave had been opened this Thursday, police told the mass-circulation Bild. Police have opened an investigation over grave defilement.

Early findings indicate that “nothing was removed” from the grave, a police source was quoted as saying by the daily Tagesspiegel.

While the motive for the opening of Heydrich’s grave was not immediately clear, a similar case in the year 2000 saw left-wing extremists open the alleged grave of Horst Wessel, Berlin leader of Nazi SA Storm Troopers. The left-wing group said they had taken out Wessel’s skull and thrown it into the Spree River after neo-Nazis started gathering at his grave.

The police, however, denied that any remains were removed and claimed that the grave was actually the resting place of Wessel’s father and not the Nazi sympathizer himself.

https://www.dw.com/en/grave-of-high-ranking-nazi-reinhard-heydrich-opened-in-berlin/a-51685541