The 49ers are NFL’s biggest bully. Even Aaron Rodgers couldn’t stand up to them

Perspective from the East Coast.  The San Francisco media is too awash in its wine and cheese to make such a bodacious statement about the Red and Gold Super Bowl bound 49ers. Bullies in San Francisco????

Washington Post – Jerry Brewer 1.20.2020

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — There was the thought, as nostalgia drifted into minds, that maybe Aaron Rodgers had some vintage greatness under his sleeve. Maybe he could do something magical. Maybe he could avenge his worst performance of the regular season, find a way to hogtie the San Francisco 49ers’ mammoth defense and transform this NFC championship game into a triumphant homecoming.

It was a cute, fleeting thought.

The San Francisco 49ers are the NFC’s greatest force, and they are just getting started. It leaves Aaron Rodgers in a place familiar to many who persist in this game: as an aging legend in need of help.

 

On Sunday, with a Super Bowl berth at stake, the 49ers bludgeoned all quarterbacking fairy tales with their brand of harsh reality. They pounded Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers, 37-20. They led 27-0 at halftime and needed only eight total pass attempts from their quarterback, Jimmy Garoppolo, to be so dominant. There are blowouts, and then there are completely demoralizing beatdowns that make you reexamine everything you know about the game. This was definitely the latter.

Rodgers II 1.20.2020

Given that San Francisco stomped Green Bay, 37-8, in the regular season, it’s no great surprise that the 49ers proved to be superior again. Nevertheless, it was stunning to witness Rodgers — that baaaaad man for so long, the NFL’s most feared something-out-of-nothing genius — yield to a greater force without the least bit of adjustment. Rodgers and the Packers had seen the 49ers at their mightiest, underestimated them, gotten embarrassed and taken the time to reflect and revise their approach. But the rematch wasn’t much different from their November meeting, when Rodgers threw for just 104 yards on 33 pass attempts.

 

In fact, this humiliation felt worse because they knew what was coming, and not even the league’s improvisational master could come up with a better way to combat the ferocious defensive pressure.

 

San Francisco didn’t just want to win. It wanted to pound Green Bay into submission, something that hardly ever happens with Rodgers under center making miracles happen. But the Packers lost their spirit early in this game. Rodgers could not extend plays; when he tried, he looked foolish and helpless as he took sacks. He muffed a snap and gave little effort as 49ers defensive tackle DeForest Buckner fell on the fumble. Later in the second quarter, he threw an interception to Emmanuel Moseley that led to the third touchdown of the first half for 49ers running back Raheem Mostert, who finished his career day with 220 of San Francisco’s 285 rushing yards and four touchdowns.

 

Rodgers improved in the second half and finished with respectable statistics: 31 for 39 for 326 yards, two touchdowns, two interceptions. He did not quit. But those numbers were deceiving because they were accumulated mostly against a defense that had turned conservative.

The first half was more indicative of the kind of game Rodgers had. He went into halftime having completed 9 of 12 passes for just 64 yards. He had those two turnovers and posted a 52.1 passer rating. He was sacked twice, so the Packers had only 41 net passing yards at the break.

 

And that should be the largest feather in the 49ers’ conference championship cap. They ruined one of the last good chances Rodgers had to win a second Super Bowl. They may have also sent him officially into a new existence as an old quarterback.

“It definitely hurts, I’d say, a little more than early in the career,” Rodgers said. “It’s just because you realize how difficult it is to get to this spot.”

 

Happiness is a warm gun. Welcome to America. Gun rights whack jobs take aim

John Lennon sang “Happiness is a warm gun.”  He was cut down by an assassin’s bullet.

It’s a fitting commentary that on Martin Luther King Day, an advocate of non-violence, who was assassinated 52 years ago the gun toting crazies strut their warped view of civil rights for all the world to see.

Washington Post 1.20.2020

Thousands of gun rights supporters from Virginia and across the country are coming to Richmond for a rally in opposition to gun-control laws being advanced by the General Assembly’s new Democratic majority. After threats and indications of potential violence, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) ordered a state of emergency and banned guns from Capitol Square; gun-control groups and advocates for other causes are staying away from what in the past has been a day of citizen lobbying on a wide range of issues. Gun rights activists and militias are dividing into two groups: those who will shed their weapons and enter the secured area, and those who will remain armed and in the streets outside the capitol complex.

Richmond Gun Rally I I 1.20.2020.jpg

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_violence_in_the_United_States

San Francisco Chronicle vile “red baiting” hit piece on DA an insult to The City

January 19, 2020

Has the Chronicle no decency? It’s fitting the Chronicle would print this Red baiting  Opinion piece just after the American Experience Documentary on Joseph McCarthy. The Kimberly Guilfoyle hit piece is a 2020 version of McCarthyism. The Chronicle is continuing its crusade to undermine DA Chesa Boudin. The Chronicle has become the forum for the Police Officers Association and others who look unfavorably on the criminal justice reforms DA Boudin will be implementing. These attacks will only serve to strengthen the resolve of the San Franciscans who voted Chesa into office.

Guilfoyle I 1.19.2020

Kimberly Guilfoyle with Trump, Jr.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion/article/San-Francisco-s-dangerous-new-DA-14986239.php

Kansas City here we come. 49ers grind down the Pack. Next stop Super Bowl

Breaking News 4.15.2019

Washington Post 1.19.2020

San Francisco Chronicle 1.19.2020

https://www.sfchronicle.com/49ers/article/49ers-Mostert-rush-back-to-Super-Bowl-with-37-20-14988611.php

Big Brother 2020: US police departments using ‘dystopian’ face recognition app

The Surveillance State in America continues a pervasive and unsettling march into the daily lives of its citizens.

Where’s the Outrage?

Sad but true.  Americans are willing to surrender their right to privacy and give away their Civil Rights all in the name of keeping us safe?

George Orwell was correct.

Deutsche Welle 1.18.2020

A new report in US media has people worried about their privacy as more police forces sign on to use the program. Clearview AI offers facial recognition software that can identify a person even in poor-quality images.

An explosive new US media report published on Saturday revealed that a secretive company has been selling the world’s most advanced known facial recognition software to local law enforcement agencies for at least 2 years. Clearview AI searches through public images on social media and can identify an individual even if their face is obscured or not entirely visible.

According to The New York Times, although Clearview has been selling its technology to police forces since 2017, it only really came to public attention at the end of 2019 when its name came up in court documents in a Florida robbery case.

Company knows who police search for

Dystopian I 1.18.2020.jpg

What would become Clearview began in 2016, when Australian entrepreneur Hoan Ton-That met Richard Schwartz, a former aide to President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, when the latter was mayor of New York. The pair hired engineers and went to work on their app, but it was only when they hit upon the idea to sell the technology to US police forces that they attracted the attention of major investors.

One of these investors was Peter Thiel, the co-founder of PayPal who famously funded a lawsuit that bankrupted the media blog Gawker, which had run a story about Thiel that he allegedly did not like.

The Times reported that the first attempts to reach out to Clearview were murky, as the company’s website listed an address in New York City that did not exist. Furthermore, shortly after a reporter asked someone in law enforcement to run their picture, the officer was contacted by Clearview and questioned about whether they were speaking to the media. This likely means that the company is keeping tabs as police watch suspects.

When Ton-That finally spoke to the media, he acknowledged that there was code in his program that would allow police to wear augmented-reality glasses and be able to tell the name, job and acquaintances of anyone they saw on the street. However, he denied plans to actually sell this technology to anyone.

‘Facebook knows’

Pressed to answer whether he was violating Facebook’s terms of service by taking their images without consent, Ton-That replied: “A lot of people are doing it. Facebook knows.”

The company claims that its software has been used to solve child sexual abuse cases, identify a John Doe and solve identity-fraud cases at banks, though there did not appear to be any proof of this.

The app reportedly has about 75% accuracy.

These revelations immediately sparked fears about what the software means for privacy, with many social media users calling the news “scary” and “dystopian.”

In authoritarian China, high-level facial recognition software is already in widespread government use. Since December, a new law requires everyone who buys a SIM card to submit facial recognition scans that are registered with their phone. Throughout China, these kinds of apps are already in use in schools, on public transportation and in places like concert venues.

DW Chinese Police Officer 4.3.2018

In the US, less advanced types of facial recognition have been in use for decades. Recently, Britain, France and Russia have all embraced it as well, though they do not yet have access to programs as high-tech as Clearview’s.

Germany, famously critical of surveillance and having one of the lowest numbers of CCTV cameras in the developed world, still has no legal framework for such technology, although pilot projects have been tested on very small scales.

https://www.dw.com/en/hundreds-of-us-police-departments-using-dystopian-face-recognition-app-report/a-52054957

Arrests linked to Nazi group ‘The Base’ continue on East Coast of America

The increase in these cancerous Nazi cells is a Clear and Present Danger.

The Government must avail itself of all the tools at its disposal to eradicate this scourge by any means necessary.

Excerpted from the Washington Post 1.17.2020

WASHINGTON — Three men linked to a violent white supremacist group known as The Base were charged with conspiring to kill members of a militant anti-fascist group, police in Georgia announced Friday, a day after three other members were arrested on federal charges in Maryland and Delaware.

The arrests show an intensified focus on the group from law enforcement officials who are concerned that the supremacists may go beyond plotting to violent acts, a threat made more urgent ahead of a pro-gun rally Monday in Richmond, Va. It was unknown if the men in Georgia had any plans to attend the rally.

The Base, a collective of hardcore neo-Nazis that operate as a paramilitary organization, has proclaimed war against minority communities within the United States and abroad, the FBI has said. Unlike other extremist groups, it’s not focused on promulgating propaganda — instead the group aims to bring together highly skilled members to train them for acts of violence.

The Base I 1.17.2020

Its organizers recruit fellow white supremacists online — particularly seeking out veterans because of their military training — use encrypted chat rooms and train members in military-style camps in the woods, according to experts who track extremist groups.

The group, which has the motto “learn, train, fight,” brings together white supremacists with varying ideologies.

These undated photos provided by Floyd County, Ga., Police show from left, Luke Austin Lane of Floyd County, Jacob Kaderli of Dacula, and Michael Helterbrand of Dalton, Ga. FBI spokesman Kevin Rowson said Friday, Jan 20, 2020, that agents assisted in the arrests of the three Georgia men linked to The Base, a violent white supremacist group, on charges of conspiracy to commit murder and participating in a criminal street gang. Details of their cases have been sealed by a judge, Floyd County police Sgt. Chris Fincher said. (Floyd County Police via AP (Associated Press)
These undated photos provided by Floyd County, Ga., Police show from left, Luke Austin Lane of Floyd County, Jacob Kaderli of Dacula, and Michael Helterbrand of Dalton, Ga. FBI spokesman Kevin Rowson said Friday, Jan 20, 2020, that agents assisted in the arrests of the three Georgia men linked to The Base, a violent white supremacist group, on charges of conspiracy to commit murder and participating in a criminal street gang. Details of their cases have been sealed by a judge, Floyd County police Sgt. Chris Fincher said. (Floyd County Police via AP (Associated Press)

There’s an intensified focus on The Base after three members were arrested Thursday in Maryland and Delaware on federal felony charges. A criminal complaint included details of how some of the men built an assault rifle using parts, purchased thousands of rounds of ammunition and traded vests that could carry body armor. They were believed to be planning to attend the pro-gun rally in Richmond, according to a law enforcement official who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss an active investigation.

The arrests only added to rising fears that Monday’s rally could quickly devolve into violence, with thousands of protesters planning to descend on Virginia’s capital, and become a repeat of the 2017 white nationalist rally when a man drove his car into counter-protesters in Charlottesville, killing Heather Heyer, a 32-year-old paralegal and civil rights activist.

 

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam signed an executive order banning guns from the state Capitol grounds for Monday’s rally, but pro-gun groups filed an appeal seeking to overturn the ban. The Virginia Supreme Court upheld the ban Friday.

“These extremists are going to try to attach themselves to these events in order to exploit these strong feelings, to try to bring in new recruits,” said Oren Segal, vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism.

In encrypted chat rooms, members of The Base have discussed committing acts of violence against blacks and Jews, ways to make improvised explosive devices and their desire to create a white “ethno-state,” the FBI has said in court papers.

 

On Friday, police in Georgia confirmed that three other men linked to The Base were arrested on charges of conspiracy to commit murder and participating in a criminal street gang. Authorities said the men planned to kill a married couple who were anti-fascist protesters — part of the Antifa movement — and believed killing the couple would send a message to enemies of The Base.

 

The arrests came after an undercover FBI agent infiltrated the group and participated in shooting drills in the mountains of northern Georgia, according to a police affidavit obtained by the AP. The drills were being done in preparation for what they believe is an impending collapse of the United States and ensuing race war. At the end of the firearms training, the Georgia men wore tactical gear and balaclava hoods that expose only part of the face while posing for photos with the undercover agent and the photos were later used in the group’s propaganda, the affidavit says.

The men were identified as Luke Austin Lane, Michael Helterbrand, and Jacob Kaderli. The three remained in custody and it was not immediately clear whether they had attorneys who could comment on the allegations.

 

Lane, Kaderli and the undercover agent drove to the couple’s home in Bartow County to scope it out, according to the affidavit. After checking out the property and the surrounding neighborhood, Lane suggested using a sledgehammer as one way of breaching the door, then kill them with revolvers, according to the affidavit. Kaderli suggested they should burn the house down after the killings, it states.

 

Members of The Base also believe in an extreme form of survivalism and preparation, offering real-life survivalist training to resist the “extinction” of the Caucasian race, the FBI has said.

 

A New Jersey man who authorities say was a recruiter for The Base was arrested by the FBI in November after he allegedly used the group to find fellow neo-Nazis to vandalize synagogues in Michigan and Wisconsin. Authorities said the group’s plan to vandalize synagogues with anti-Semitic graffiti and break windows was part of what the group called “Operation Kristallnacht,” a reference to a 1938 incident when Nazis torched synagogues in Germany, vandalized Jewish homes and business and killed close to 100 people.

 

The man, Richard Tobin, 18, had also discussed carrying out a suicide bombing and said he had saved manuals about how to carry out an attack, filling the back of a truck with barrels packed with explosive materials similar to the Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people in 1995.

 

Prosecutors said recruitment posters for The Base were put up at Marquette University in Milwaukee and the group also held a separate training session for members in Wood County, Wisconsin.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts_law/3-more-linked-to-neo-nazi-group-arrested-in-georgia/2020/01/17/fe87c57c-398a-11ea-a1ff-c48c1d59a4a1_story.html

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Former SF DA Terence Hallinan — a brawler civil rights fighter — dies at 83

A genuine Progressive.

San Francisco has lost a true icon.  The City is fortunate to have such an outspoken advocate in its fabled history. 

People like him are a precious rarity to be treasured.

San Francisco Chronicle – Bob Egelko 1.17.2020

Terence Hallinan, a onetime teenage brawler who became a fighter for civil rights and then an against-the-grain politician, serving as a San Francisco supervisor and the city’s district attorney, died Friday. He was 83.

“He passed away this morning, in his sleep, peacefully,” his son, Brendan Hallinan, told The Chronicle.

Hallinan gained the nickname “Kayo” from his prowess as a boxer — he was on the boxing team at UC Berkeley and nearly made the U.S. Olympic team in 1960 — and from his pugilistic tendencies that led to a criminal record and almost cost him his legal career. It took a state Supreme Court ruling in 1966 to overturn the State Bar’s decision that the 30-year-old was morally unfit to practice law.

Thirty years later, after his election as district attorney, prominent developer Joe O’Donoghue said Hallinan slugged him at a restaurant where O’Donoghue had berated him for firing the son of a business partner, in a post-election office purge intended to shake up and diversify the office. The two reconciled shortly afterward with prodding from newly elected Mayor Willie Brown.

But Hallinan also fought the status quo.

He was beaten and arrested as an antiwar protester and civil rights demonstrator in the 1960s. As a supervisor from 1988 to 1995, he was an early sponsor of transgender rights and a supporter of decriminalizing prostitution. As San Francisco’s top prosecutor for the next eight years, he hired women, minorities, gays and lesbians in unprecedented numbers, sought alternatives to prosecution for nonviolent crimes and declined to seek the death penalty for any capital cases — a practice his successors, Kamala Harris and George Gascón, continued.

“I’ve shown that you can be a tough prosecutor and still be true to your progressive ideals,” Hallinan said in 2003 after Harris, a former prosecutor in his office, defeated him in his bid for a third four-year term. Harris has gone on to become California’s attorney general and a U.S. senator.

KO Hallinan IV 1.17.2020.jpg

“His storied legal career was intertwined with so much of our great city’s history,” Mayor London Breed said in a statement. “He was outspoken and fierce in his pursuit of justice, his defense of those in need, and his love for this city.”

Hallinan had radical roots. His father, Vincent, a renowned defense lawyer, ran for president on the Progressive Party ticket in 1952 from jail, where a judge had sentenced him for contempt of court during his defense of union leader Harry Bridges.

Hallinan grew up in a mansion in Marin County. At age 12, on a camping trip near Yosemite National Park, he fell off his horse, fractured his skull and was stranded for five days before being rescued by helicopter.

As a member of what the district attorney described as a “wolf pack,” Hallinan had at least six run-ins with the law between ages 16 and 22. A juvenile court judge convicted him of theft and battery at age 17. He pleaded guilty to assaulting the owner of a Sierra ski lodge at 18. And he was charged with felony assault for breaking a young man’s jaw at 22, but the jury deadlocked.

“I was a tough guy — in those days, people said, the toughest guy in Marin County,” Hallinan recalled in a 1995 interview. “I had a lot of anger.”

After graduating from UC Berkeley in 1960, he attended the London School of Economics and was arrested again — but this time for taking part in a nonviolent protest, a sit-down near the U.S. embassy as part of a disarmament demonstration led by philosopher Bertrand Russell.

While studying law at UC Hastings in San Francisco, he spent the summer of 1963 registering black voters in Mississippi as a member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and was arrested and beaten by local police.

KO Hallinan III 1.17.2020

Candidate Kamala Harris and DA Terrence Hallinan – 2003 campaign debate

He joined further protests in San Francisco with the NAACP, the Congress of Racial Equality and other civil rights groups. He was arrested six times in 1963 and 1964 and was twice convicted of unlawful assembly and disturbing the peace during sit-ins against auto dealers’ racial practices.

Hallinan graduated from Hastings in 1965 and passed the bar exam, but the bar’s Committee of Bar Examiners found that he lacked the “good moral character” required of lawyers, citing his violent past and numerous arrests. In a December 1966 ruling, however, the state’s high court said Hallinan had renounced violence since joining the civil rights movement, and he had not shown disrespect for the law as a protester.

If California disqualified from its licensed professions everyone who had been convicted of crimes for engaging in nonviolent civil disobedience, “we would deprive the community of the services of many highly qualified persons of the highest moral courage,” Justice Raymond Peters said in the 6-1 decision.

Hallinan worked as a private lawyer for nearly three decades. His clients included soldiers who were being held as prisoners in the San Francisco Presidio in 1971, in some cases for their opposition to the Vietnam War and for holding sit-down protests over stockade conditions.

He also represented the Diggers, a late-1960s Haight-Ashbury group who ran a free store on Haight Street but ran afoul of the police when they held a poetry reading and food giveaway on the steps of City Hall in 1968. The criminal charges, which included defaming the U.S. flag after one member wore a stars-and-stripes shirt, were quickly dismissed.

In 1978, Hallinan took up the case of Juan Corona, who had been convicted in 1971 of murdering 25 farmworkers. Arguing that Corona’s trial lawyer should have told jurors about his client’s schizophrenia, the attorney persuaded a state appeals court to overturn the convictions. Hallinan then represented Corona at his second trial in 1982, when Corona was again convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

Hallinan also served briefly on the defense team for newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst in her bank robbery case.

He entered politics in 1977, running for the Board of Supervisors but losing to gay-rights leader Harvey Milk. Hallinan was elected on his third try a decade later.

After eight years as a member of the board’s progressive wing, he launched a surprising candidacy for district attorney in 1995, telling one interviewer that defense lawyers and prosecutors practice the same law. He defeated veteran attorney Bill Fazio with 52% of the vote, despite opposition from police and prosecutors’ groups, as well as major local newspapers.

Among his first acts as district attorney was to fire 14 longtime prosecutors, all men, including the son of developer O’Donoghue’s business partner. It was the beginning of a series of personnel moves that gave women and racial minorities a combined majority on Hallinan’s staff.

Criticizing what he called the “revolving door of incarceration,” Hallinan expanded the office’s programs of supervision and rehabilitation as an alternative to punishment for nonviolent crimes, and steered juvenile offenders into training and treatment programs. And after declaring himself “America’s most progressive district attorney,” he squeaked through to re-election in 1999, again beating Fazio by 1,800 votes out of more than 200,000 cast.

But the felony conviction rate plummeted to just above 50%, among the lowest in the state, during his tenure. Hallinan, in explanation, noted that violent crime was also plunging in San Francisco, faster than it was dropping statewide, and attributed the drop in convictions in part to his alternative rehabilitation programs and the city’s liberal jurors.

When he told The Chronicle in 1998 that he suspected the slaying of an organized crime figure was related to the unsolved killing of Hallinan’s former campaign finance manager, an irate judge removed the district attorney’s office from the crime figure’s murder case, and the State Bar privately reprimanded him.

Perhaps his highest-profile case, known as Fajitagate, ended in legal and political embarrassment.

After three off-duty police officers allegedly beat a man for refusing to hand over a bag of steak fajitas in 2002, Hallinan accused the Police Department of a cover-up. He secured a grand jury indictment against seven senior officers — including Police Chief Earl Sanders and Assistant Chief Alex Fagan, whose son was among the three officers on the scene — for allegedly obstructing justice.

But Hallinan soon dropped the charges against Sanders, admitting he could not prove the chief was part of a conspiracy, and a judge dismissed charges against the other senior officers. The three off-duty officers were acquitted at a criminal trial, although a civil jury later ordered Alex Fagan Jr. and a second officer to pay damages. The case widened the gulf between the police force and Hallinan, contributing to his 12-point defeat to Harris in December 2003.

Hallinan returned to private law practice, teaming with his son, Brendan Hallinan, and specializing in medical marijuana cases. He remained largely out of public view, but in December 2014 the State Bar effectively ended his legal career with a 90-day suspension for using a bank account he had designated for clients’ funds as his personal account. No clients were harmed, but the misconduct was “willful,” said the bar’s disciplinary court.

In a statement Friday, Hallinan’s family said: “Terence was a visionary in the battle for social, economic and racial equality in the United States. A fierce advocate for the underdog, he fought for justice for the most vulnerable members of society and worked to reform the criminal justice system. Terence was a pioneer in the decriminalization of cannabis laws and the treatment of substance abuse as a public health issue.”

Former Supervisor Tom Ammiano recalled his former board colleague as a true San Franciscan, unbowed by any criticism or popular opinion.

“I just loved and admired him,” Ammiano said. “I served on the Board of Supervisors with him, and I learned so much about government from him. He fit that San Francisco template of being very colorful. He was pugnacious — literally — he had been a boxer. He took on a lot of causes that were not very popular. He had that San Francisco bite, and he was also brilliant. When he became D.A. he was also under attack from the police union, from your newspaper. And he took the heat in the Hallinan way: It made me more resolved and more outspoken.”

Hallinan is survived by his wife, Lisa, daughters Savoy, Audrey and Vivian and son Brendan, and five grandchildren.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Former-SF-DA-Terence-Hallinan-a-brawler-and-14984046.php

Let them eat cake night. SF Ballet opening attracts glamorous crowd to City Hall

The homeless are camped out nearby. The streets are one big construction project. The cost of living in San Francisco is sky high. 

Nonetheless, there’s still time for the Swells to party on down.

SF Ballet III 1.16.2020.jpg

San Francisco Chronicle 1.16.2020

The San Francisco Ballet sought to leave the crowd “Spellbound” on Thursday, Jan. 16, during the dance company’s opening gala at San Francisco City Hall and the War Memorial Opera House.

This year marks artistic director Helgi Tomasson’s record-breaking 35th season with S.F. Ballet and the first season for executive director Kelly Tweeddale.

More than 3,000 guests are attending the performance, including gala chair Patricia Dale Roberts, dinner chair Freddi Wilkinson and actor Tony Hale, who is appearing in ACT’s “Wakey, Wakey.”

SF Ballet I 1.16.2020.jpg

Stories and other coverage by The Chronicle’s Datebook team can be found on datebook.sfchronicle.com.

https://www.sfchronicle.com/performance/article/SF-Ballet-s-opening-gala-attracts-big-crowd-to-14982311.php#photo-18893022

 

The Chron’s bizarre (but predictable) attack on Chesa Boudin

Political operative and POA water carrier aka consultant Nathan Ballard is the San Francisco Chronicle’s voice of choice to trot out the official line in attacking DA Chesa Boudin’s staffing decisions.

The following piece by Tim Redmond lays out in grim detail the strategy being employed by the corporate daily news organ.

To wit: Undermine DA Boudin on a daily basis.

Chronicle Beat reporter Evan Sernoffsky is a good writer, smart, diligent and hard working.  But, there is only so much Evan can do in spinning the story which ultimately appears in the paper.

48 Hills – Tim Redmond 1.15.2020

A former POA consultant is the only source for a ridiculous headline and a story that makes an ordinary political transition look like a scandal. Why?

To read the San Francisco Chronicle headlines, a rather routine decision by the new district attorney to bring his own staff to leadership positions was a massive scandal, something on the order of Watergate:

SF District Attorney Chesa Boudin hires 4 attorneys after ‘Friday Night Massacre’

The story refers to a “controversial purge,” which in fact amounted to a perfectly predictable series of modest personnel moves. Boudin, who was elected on a promise of profoundly changing the criminal justice system in San Francisco, replaced exactly seven members of a staff of close to 200.

He wants his own leadership team. That’s entirely normal for a new elected official who ran on a platform of change. He personally met with each of the seven. They are at-will employees who can be replaced at any time by the elected DA.

Every one of them will have a new job within a week, if they are in the market.

There really is no “controversial purge” here. In fact, hardly anyone in local politics thinks there’s a bit of “controversy” involved, much less a scandalous “massacre.”

KQED had a bit more perspective:

It’s not unusual for a newly elected district attorney to restructure the management team, said Lara Bazelon, a law professor at the University of San Francisco. The attorneys are at-will employees, which means they can be fired without reason.

Bazelon was a member of Boudin’s policy team during his campaign.

“It’s common to fire people who are in management at the top level who are not going to be enthusiastic about the new agenda,” Bazelon explained.

Bazelon gave the example of Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner, another progressive prosecutor who campaigned on criminal justice reform. Krasner fired 31 members of his staff in 2018, three days after he was sworn in.

So where did the term “Friday Night Massacre” and the idea of “controversy” come from? Exactly one source: Nathan Ballard, who was described as a consultant to the Municipal Attorneys Association.

Nathan Ballard, a political strategist hired by the San Francisco Municipal Attorneys Association, said Boudin’s decision to fire the veteran attorneys was “unfair and it should be reversed.”

“This ‘Friday Night Massacre’ occurred after Boudin had given his word to his staff that there would be no group terminations, even going so far as to specifically name one of the employees who was eventually fired,” Ballard said in a statement. “Regrettably, Boudin’s first act in office was to break that promise.”

Nathan Ballard 1.15.2020.jpg

Boudin did not promise that there would be no terminations. I saw him meet the press the day of his inauguration, and he said, very clearly, that there were likely to be some personnel changes.

But the Chron editors took Ballard’s claim as a fact, and used his term in a headline.

How much credibility does this single source have? Let’s take a look.

Nathan Ballard is a former consultant for the San Francisco Police Officers Association who was hired to counter efforts at police reform. The head of the Municipal Attorneys Association is Sean Connolly, who is a former lawyer for the POA.

The POA spent more than $700,000 trying to defeat Boudin.

And it turns out that the attorneys union – which represents lawyers in the Public Defender’s Office and the City Attorney’s Office as well as the DA’s Office – isn’t entirely happy with Ballard’s attack on Boudin.

After the original Chron story, the union released a statement saying that Ballard didn’t at that point speak for it, and reporter Evan Sernoffsky updated his story:

Some members of the leadership in the attorneys union on Monday questioned Ballard’s hiring and told him to stop sending statements regarding Boudin until the executive board can discuss the issue.

He also put out on Twitter the statement from the Municipal Attorneys Association, which demanded that Ballard stop saying he represents that group.

So: A former POA consultant who may or may not have the right to speak for a union, working for a former POA lawyer, is the only source the Chron can find to attack the new DA for doing what any reform-oriented elected official would do.

Here’s John Crew, a longtime police accountability lawyer and activist, on Facebook:

The reality is that after any change election resulting in significant new directions for a top prosecutor’s office — at the federal, state or local level — the new office holder will always bring in their own team to better implement and reflect the new priorities and programs. ALWAYS. That means some of the old guard will be let go to make room for the new team.

So why are members of SF’s law enforcement establishment — the old guard — squealing so loudly (if anonymously) in outrage when newly-installed DA Chesa Boudin predictably does the exact same thing? Because they want to undercut his agenda. Because he represents the most serious local challenge to their vision of how to best achieve greater public safety in their professional lifetimes.

Crew remembers when the POA brought in Ballard:

With much fanfare, the SFPOA hired Nathan Ballard to launch what was widely called a “counterattack” on the drives for reform and on what the Chronicle described then as “other perceived enemies of the (police) union.”

These are the people and organizations who will seemingly stop at NOTHING to prevent San Franciscans from getting the type and degree of criminal justice reform we voted for when we elected Boudin DA. They have their motivations. And, they DEFINITELY have their long track records which, by all rights, should leave journalists at least skeptical of their claims.

This is just the start. The mainstream news media is going to do everything possible, it appears, to undermine the person the voters chose to change the culture of the DA’s Office and to shift the way San Francisco addresses criminal justice.

Oh, and Nathan Ballard, who has worked for Gavin Newsom and was close to Ed Lee, thinks this whole thing — a media attack on the city’s new progressive DA — is a joke. Just in case any reporters were still wondering about his credibility.

https://48hills.org/2020/01/the-chrons-bizarre-attack-on-chesa-boudin/

Academy Awards goes white while Spike Lee will chair Cannes Film Festival jury

The French are upstaging America.

The American Academy Awards pay lip service to diversity. Sadly this years list of nominees is sadly lacking in people of color. And, it’s an all male list for best director.

You would think that with the ongoing Henry Weinstein scandal Hollywood would shake its foundation, root out the old regime and bring in the Class of Diversity.  Nope.

Deutsche Welle 1.14.2020

Spike Lee has been named president of the jury for the 2020 Cannes Film Festival, making him the first black director to lead the panel. This comes amid criticism that film competitions and awards lack diversity.

Cannes Film Festival directors are aiming to “shake things up” with the choice of US filmmaker Spike Lee as jury head. Lee said he was “honored to be the first person of the African diaspora” selected for the position.

“When I got the call … I was shocked, happy, surprised and proud all at the same time,” Lee said in a statement, adding that the Cannes festival had “changed the trajectory of who I became in world cinema.”

Spike Lee IV 1.14.2020

Read more: When rap and film meet to spark a revolution

Festival organizer Thierry Fremaux stressed that the naming of the first black president of the Cannes jury was not a political move, but instead, “a message of universality.”

In an interview with France’s RTL radio Tuesday, Fremaux noted the diverse nationalities of jury members and directors whose films are shown at Cannes.

An array of Spike Lee’s films have been screened at Cannes, with his BlacKkKlansman garnering a major prize at Cannes last year. The 62-year-old filmmaker succeeds Mexican director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu as head of the panel that will award the 73rd Palme d’Or prize.

Countering criticism on lack of diversity

The announcement comes amid criticism of the lack of diversity among global film competitions. Cannes and its rival Venice, for instance, have gotten flack for the lack of female directors in their main competitions, even as they have selected gender-balanced juries.

Spike Lee I 1.14.2020.jpg

Denzel Washington with Spike Lee – Mo Better Blues (1990)

French actress Isabelle Adjani, whose father was Algerian, was the first person of African descent to lead the Cannes jury in 1997. In addition, only one Asian, Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai, has ever presided over the French festival’s jury in its over 70-year history.

The debate on diversity in the film industry has also been making recent headlines through the nominations for the Oscars and the British Academy Film Awards, which included exceptionally few or no women and minorities in their top categories.

https://www.dw.com/en/us-director-spike-lee-to-head-cannes-film-festival-jury/a-51994923