Things often seem to have a new beginning around Easter. In some ways it is more rejuvenating than even New Year’s Day in the minds of many. I am one of those who feel this way. The idea of resurrection is, and should be, a fine chance to start again. It is in the center of my mind this week and presents us with a real opportunity.
Read More 9Opinion
Single Gal and Do We Have the Right to Know?
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I recently read that a Hudson, Kansas judge ordered a man, who had admitted to molesting a boy, to post signs around his house and to put a decal on his car—for the duration of his five years of probation and house arrest—proclaiming that he is a sex offender. My first reaction was: Why shouldn’t we know what he did? Then more questions came up, including: How much do we have the right to know about our neighbors?
Read More 9Metropolitan Opera Comes to San Jose
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Digital technology is definitely a two-edged sword, but it has brought many good things to all of us that we never imagined possible. In a new twist, I have seen a couple of live satellite broadcasts into local movie theatres of musical performances by Pink Floyd guitarist Dave Gilmour in the past year. Although I was skeptical that such a thing could compete with a real concert, what I found, in fact, was that the advantages far outweigh the disadvantages. The sound is superior (and not TOO LOUD like a concert), the visuals are much better, there are no crowds or parking problems, and the ticket cost of $10 is a mere fraction of the price of a concert ticket.
Read More 1Viewing Past Performance and Future Needs When Voting
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Federal Reserve Acts to Save Mexican Heritage Plaza
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Bernanke says $2 billion not a “bailout”
Hoping to avoid a systematic meltdown in cultural institutions in San Jose, the Federal Reserve on Sunday approved a $2 billion credit line for the beleaguered Mexican Heritage Plaza in East San Jose. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke vowed that the money was not a bailout but a “friendly loan” that he fully expects the cultural institution to pay back once the venue is running in the black.
Read More 8Amended San Jose Inside Comment Policy
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As I recently explained, San Jose Inside has joined an alliance with other local news and information outlets that we will be sharing content with, including Metro Newspapers, Boulevards, NBC11, and the Los Gatos Observer. This means that anything that is posted on San Jose Inside might appear in some form in the publications or broadcasts of the other members.
Read More 22San Jose’s Favorite Daughter
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No, it’s not Brandi Chastain, Sarah Winchester or Madison Nguyen. Since I grew up watching reruns of Maude, I am compelled to cast my vote for Adrienne Barbeau, who graduated from Del Mar High School in 1963. About a year ago, she came back to San Jose to fill in for George Romero at a horror convention and I asked her about Del Mar High. She said it was a flagship school in those days.
Read More 3The New Plan for the Mexican Heritage Plaza
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Tuesday the San Jose City Council voted 10-1 to approve the plan put forward by Mayor Reed and Councilmember Campos to rebuild and sustain the operation of the Mexican Heritage Plaza. As we stated in a recent e-mail to our Plaza friends, this decision is the right one and has been nearly ten years in the making. In that time, many different groups, committees, and policy makers have struggled to solve the structural and financial challenges inherent in operating the Plaza safely, making it available to meet the community’s needs and programming it with critically and popularly successful artistic and cultural events. Since the facility opened:
Read More 9Protest No More and Coyote Farewell?
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The protestors have left for the time being and quiet has returned to the plaza of the smoking fountains at San Jose City Hall. How long the peace will last is an open question. It is far too early to discern the answer. But one thing is clear: the primary heroes in the enterprise are evident to all. First and foremost is Sam Liccardo, the District 3 council member who seized the reins and achieved a resolution, snatching stalemate from the jaws of defeat. Then there is Mayor Chuck Reed, who dug the cement out from around the feet of many in City Hall and gave his approval to the agreement that ended the hunger strike of the redoubtable Ly Tong. Vice Mayor Dave Cortese is one who clearly knew that ending this protest, for whatever reason, was the correct course.
Read More 28Ganged Up On In the Courts
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Joshua Herrera May be Facing Life in Prison Because of an Unevaluated Gang Enhancement Law
On the steps of the Main Jail, Rebecca Rivera called out to God and her son at the same time. She asked that God save her son from a life in prison, and that her son hear her prayer. 24-year-old Joshua Herrera, housed on the fourth floor of that jail, did in fact hear his mother and the 200 or so supporters who chanted and cheered through Rebecca’s impromptu speech, many of whom also had sons, uncles, nephews somewhere in that building. And from the fourth floor, it must have been quite a sight, an unlikely movement that Rivera has pieced together since Joshua was convicted of home invasion robbery with gang enhancements in 2006. Marching alongside the Herrera family were young Chicano men who also have been labeled as gang members themselves, college students sporting their banners, firefighters who met Joshua, and about 50 leather-clad bikers sitting on Harleys that roared like they had jet engines inside them.
Read More 69Single Gal and How We Handle Tragedy
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This past week, I was saddened to read about the tragic deaths of two competitive bicyclists in the horrible accident involving a deputy from the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Department. The young deputy’s life will never be the same, as he will have to live with the consequences and, probably worse, his own memories of this tragedy.
Read More 3Happy St. Patrick’s Day
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St. Patrick, Ireland’s primary patron saint, died on March 17, 461, in his hideaway at Saul, Downpatrick, near the County Down monastery he founded (now in Northern Ireland).
Born in Wales around 389, a native of Roman Britain, Patrick was abducted and taken to Ireland as a slave at the age of 16 where he worked as a shepherd in County Antrim. He escaped after six years and made his way to continental Europe where he became a pupil of St. Germanus. Made bishop in 431, Patrick was charged with the conversion of the entire island of Ireland to Christianity.
Read More 4Black, White and Grey
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Last week I wrote about exploring furloughs instead of layoffs to balance the budget. Part of my job is to come up with ideas/solutions to issues/problems. There are lots of departments in a city our size and lots of different opinions. What one department sees as black, another may see as white, and yet another, grey.
When it comes to the question of the December shutdown of City Hall (200 East Santa Clara), the reality is that it is not the same as a private sector shutdown where employees simply do not get paid regardless of accrued vacation hours.
Read More 43Pimps Nationwide Retire Client Number 9
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Spitzer’s Significant Contribution to Whoring Recognized
Just one day after his resignation, the United Pimp Union has told all of its members all across the United States and certain areas of Canada to honor soon-to-be-former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer by retiring the number 9, thereby bestowing on him the designation as the first John in world history to have his client number retired.
Read More 11Teachers, Roads and the Oil Industry
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There must be a better way of dealing with California’s budget crisis and $8 billion deficit than by laying off teachers as part of an across-the-board 10 percent spending cut. Our schools are in a pretty sorry state as it is due to inadequate funding. Many teachers that I know have to supply their students with classroom necessities and pay for them out of their own pockets. Now many of these dedicated educators are going to be getting their pink slips.
Read More 21Chinatown, Japantown and the Road to Little Saigon
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The naming of places and the honoring of icons is an often confusing and sometimes treacherous country to enter. Walking by the empty lot on Jackson between Sixth and Seventh Streets that was once the city corporation yard led me to a number of thoughts about that problem, our government, and local history. For many years this was site of the city-owned garage and maintenance facility. Its acquisition is shrouded in a bit of mystery from the sordid days of the forced internment of Japanese Americans. It is alive in the memories of many members of that community who believed their area and property were seized during that tragic time. But the story goes back even further than the recent focus on the World War Two chapter. As L. A. Chung pointed out in the Mercury News, it goes back to the destruction of our old Chinatown in the area of the Fairmont Hotel.
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