Archive for the ‘Ideas & Opinions’ Category

Eyewitness ID, MCE #4

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

In my last blog entry, I explained how some of the opponents of MCE are claiming that a “whereas” clause in a LULAC resolution quoted in a letter is being taken out of context.  The best defense against inability to understand normal grammatical usage of words for these people is that they are deliberately taking it out of context.

Now I’m going to explain another “whereas” clause in the same letter that has drawn heat.  Specifically, I have been excoriated for supposedly accusing police officers of being racists since I quoted the resolution language supporting SB 202 in the letter (which expressed the sentiments of the “Same Page Coalition”).  Anyway, here’s the contentious paragraph:

And whereas, training in the science and ethics of eyewitness identification procedures can help alleviate wrongful convictions, most of which victimize Latinos, African Americans and other minority groups;

If somebody has actually taken the time to understand the controversy over eyewitness identification procedures they would not consider this a criticism of law enforcement as “racist.”  All they’d have to do is attend one of my educational seminars that I’ve done for CALI and the NAACP state conference.  What they’d understand is that it doesn’t matter whether or not a police detective is racist or non-racist; it’s the witnesses who are unreliable, especially when it comes to cross-racial identification.

The overwhelming majority of mis-identifications that sent people to prison who were later cleared of wrong-doing by DNA evidence (showing somebody else to be the perpetrator) were African American or Hispanic.   A significant number of these identifications were done by witnesses on a cross-racial basis, i.e., Caucasians identifying African Americans.  That is a simple fact, just as it is a simple fact that in 50% of the first 179 of 239 DNA exonerations a bad eyewitness identification was the only reason that a person was wrongfully convicted.

It is likely that these convictions could have been avoided if people were properly trained according to the procedures advocated by the National Institute for Justice and the California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice.

So, how does that clause of the LULAC resolution, which is entirely accurate, somehow justify my supposedly accusing all peace officers of being racists?  The only way to rationalize that question is, well, guilty conscience on the part of the persons making the accusations?  Ya’ think?

First Amendment Rights & Non-Rights

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

A member of CALI (the California Association of Licensed Investigators) recently resigned in a huff over his opposition to Mandatory Continuing Education for private investigators, citing his staunch belief that the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States gives him the right in a private association to voice any opinion he wants to on an internet list-serve designed for professional advice and referrals.  Specifically, he believes that the Constitution of the United States gives him the right to spout off on political issues within an NGO (non-governmental organization).

The fact is that he believes this is an argument for why the legislature was wrong and the governor is right about the desperate need for MCE for private investigators (after SB 202 got unanimous votes in every committee and on the Senate floor, the Governor’s opposition to MCE for any profession got in the way of seeking final bill passage in the Assembly).  What is scary is that as a former law enforcement officer, if his understanding of the First Amendment is below elementary level, one wonders what his understanding of the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth amendments is and how he applied those understandings while he was a peace officer.

CALI recently adopted a new ethics code.  One of the ethical standards we adopted was  adapted from the State Bar Rules of Professional Conduct.  In essence, it says that if somebody isn’t personally competent to do a particular kind of work they should either obtain the knowledge of how to do it or associate or sub-contract with a licensee who is competent.  This is just common sense.

So, it follows that if a private investigator keeps getting told that the constitutional right to free speech doesn’t apply to private groups, that he or she would be minimally competent enough to seek out the unbiased opinions of people who could render an opinion on the subject, like political scientists, government teachers, or lawyers.  If this guy had talked to any political science professor, high school government teacher (or even junior high school civics teacher), or constitutional lawyer, they would probably look at him cross-eyed if he asked them whether the First Amendment protects his rights to “free speech” in a private association.  Like, “say what????”

The constitution protects not only individuals from the government, it also protects groups of people from the government.  The First Amendment also contains the right to “assemble,” which has come to mean the right to associate for the advancement of political beliefs.  That right is in direct conflict with the concept that the government can, will, or should protect a person’s right to say whatever they want to within a private organization.  Private associations have their own right to limit themselves and to not associate with people whose beliefs are incongruent with the organization’s reason for existence and whose behavior is detrimental to the smooth functioning of the group.

To illustrate how ludicrous the idea is that the First Amendment somehow gives somebody a right to advance beliefs in any way they see fit in private groups, remember that in the free society that we live in, the government tolerates and even protects the right of many unpopular organizations to exist and their right to propagate their beliefs.  Can the government tell the Nazi Party to let Jews join its ranks and argue at meetings that Hitler was a dirt-bag?  Would the United States ever tell the Ku Klux Klan that African Americans are allowed to join the organization, attend its cross-burnings, and argue that Martin Luther King Jr. was one of the greatest Americans who ever lived?

The answer is ‘obviously not.’  Neither can the government tell most organizations how to organize their affairs internally.  The United States Supreme Court has ruled for example, that political parties don’t have to let non-members vote in their primary elections to nominate candidates or elect party officers if they don’t want to.  This is why some parties let independents vote in their primaries and some don’t.

If an organization wants to be deemed to be non-profit and claim exemption from most taxes, that’s another thing.  The states and the federal government can impose certain basic structures on these organizations.  But precisely because of the First Amendment’s freedom of association, as long as the organizations don’t discriminate against people on arbitrary bases like race or ethnicity and maintain a fundamentally representative form of governance, the government can’t tell private non-profits that they must be run according to the strictures of the Constitution of the United States, nor should government try to do so.

Aside from the constitutionality of the issue, the fact is that you will always have gadflies in organizations who simply don’t understand the sociology of organizational arrangements.  It would be a lot easier to explain this if everybody in the world–or at least if everybody reading this blog–had taken political science 100 or anthropology 100 (the course is the same or similar in a lot of colleges and universities) because they start out by explaining the four basic structures of society and government:  every social grouping has a structure of ideology, a structure of authority, a structure of power, and a structure of society.  In the most primitive groups, these structures are all the same (like in hunter-gatherer groups like the Bushmen of the Kalahari desert).  In complicated nation-states, these structures are all inter-related and yet distinct.

But whether one exists in a primitive hunter-gatherer society or a nation-state with separated executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government, or something in between like a professional association, there is always to contend with what Robert Michels identified and described as The Iron Law of Oligarchy.

The fact is, that only in extraordinary times, such as during revolution, there is larger than normal mass participation in organizations, including government.   During more normal times, most people leave governance of every social institution, including government, to others who have the time and inclination to spend the time and effort.  Those people form an oligarchy and the overwhelming majority of people in every group acquiesce to it because it is most convenient to do so.  I hate to come out sounding like John Locke, but when it comes down to this basic debate from 17th Century philosophy, Locke has it over Hobbes and Rousseau, at least when describing normal human behavior during times of relative calm and peace.

Some people are probably wondering why I’m writing this in the first place.  It’s because I’ve been recently attacked, vociferously, by opponents of MCE for private investigators who’ve demanded that I resign, especially in light of a letter from the Same Page/Misma Pagina coalition in favor of MCE to the Senate Business & Professions Committee.  This is the first of a series of essays I’ll do explaining why I’m right and they’re, well, not just wrong, but in a number of cases, semi-literate, lacking impulse control, obscene (literally), and in at least one case, outright defamatory.

Venceremos companeros! — jt

Children of Abraham

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

The Bible tells us that the children of Isaac, the Jews, and the children of Ishmael, the Arabs, are all the children of Abraham.  If true, we’re all cousins.  When you follow the DNA trails of Jews, Arabs, and other Middle Eastern peoples, you find that there’s some considerable truth in us all being related way back when.

So it really pains me and pisses me off when we behave like this towards each other, as reported today by the Associated Press:

Palestinians have long accused those among them who sell land to Jews of betraying their homeland, and last week similar language was heard from a group of rabbis. Meeting in Pisgat Zeev, they issued an edict denouncing Jews who sell land to Arabs as “traitors” and barring them from participating in communal prayers.

“This is a war, and if the Arabs conquer one neighborhood, they will conquer others and they will strangle the Jews,” said Hillel Weiss, a spokesman for the “New Sanhedrin,” which takes its name from the supreme court of ancient Israel.

—-

When my parents were first getting ready to buy their first house in the San Fernando Valley, my dad was being taken around by a real estate agent to look at various neighborhoods.  My dad didn’t fit the stereotype that most people had of Jews in those days:  his name as Tucker (an Anglo name) and he was a millwright – machinist (Anti-Semites think we’re all rich and definitely can’t work with our hands).

My father looks down this street, sees some nice homes as the real estate agent was driving, and asks to check out the area.  The agent tells him, “no, you don’t want to live there.  That’s where we put all the Jews.”

My father punched him in the nose and walked home.

Any Jew who has learned the lessons of what discrimination means for ourselves or our parents or earlier ancestors ought to punch any Rabbi in the nose for suggesting that we behave as people have behaved towards us.


Leviticus 19:33

“When a stranger sojourns with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong.


Leviticus 19:34

You shall treat the stranger who sojourns with you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

Since the Bible tells us that the Arab people are our cousins, we should treat them as family.

Guantanamo–in the name of the “Volk?”

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

I’ve been watching the pundits a lot on television recently and following the ongoing national debate about whether torture was or was not used and whether it was justified.  Often, it’s a semantical discussion in which defenders of the Bush administration claim that waterboarding isn’t torture, but that whatever it was, it was absolutely necessary.

One point of contention is whether the lawyers who wrote the legal opinions ought to be prosecuted and/or disbarred or otherwise disciplined for writing those opinions in bad faith in order to justify illegal torture.  Last year I read a book by German historian H.W. Koch, called  “In the name of the Volk:  Political Justice in Hitler’s Germany.”

If anybody has doubts as to whether lawyers should be held accountable for these actions, they should read that book.  They should also watch the Costa Gavras film from France, “Special Section,” about the courts of the Vichy regime and how they were perverted to fulfill Nazi demands to produce bodies for execution in a way that seemed to meet the requirements of “law” and the “constitution,” even if it defied the substance of justice.

Equally important is the movie, “Judgment at Nuremberg,” which starred Spencer Tracy, William Shatner, Richard Widmark, Marlene Dietrich, Judy Garland, Burt Lancaster, Maximillian Schell, Montgomery Clift, and Werner Klemperer amongst others.  It’s all about why we prosecuted judges who served the Nazi regime.

Finally, think about the legislation passed in the haste of the September 11, 2001 catastrophe when the administration began jailing people without releasing their names and/or whereabouts, giving them no access to lawyers.  Then read Jacobo Timmerman’s book, “Prisoner without a name, Cell without a number,” about his experience in Argentina, arrested for the crime of being a newspaper publisher.  It’s more than vaguely reminiscent….

Jury Duty

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

I’m sitting here at the Torrance courthouse on jury duty.

Jury duty is always inconvenient to me, but going to prison and losing your liberty, or worse yet your life as a result of a death penalty case, is even more inconvenient.  If people use excuses to get out of jury duty, they dishonor those who died for the rights of all people to serve on juries to insure that people get fair trials.

Many people know that Viola Liuzzo, Medgar Evers, Michael Schwerner, James Chaney, and Andrew Goodman, amongst others, died for the right of people to vote.  They also died for the right of everybody to serve on juries.

Viola LiuzzoMedgar EversMichael Schwerner James Chaney Andrew Goodman

“The Garden” by Scott Hamilton Kennedy: Photo-Journalism or Propaganda

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Scott Hamilton KennedyThe ultimate question about “The Garden,” a purported “documentary” about the fight to save the “South Central Farm” in Los Angeles produced by Scott Hamilton Kennedy is, ‘is Scott a photo-journalist who produced a truthful documentary or is he Leni Reifenstahl in drag.’  Now that “The Garden” is up for an academy award at tonight’s Oscar presentations for best documentary, this will become a salient issue.

Kennedy crafted the film to make certain people appear as heroes:  Rufina Juarez, Tezozomoc, and the law office of Hadsell & Stormer.  The film makes others, especially Mayor Antonio Villaraigoza and City Council Member Jan Perry, look like villains.

The fact is, that for an inquiring mind, something that a photo-journalist documentarian would be concerned about is the search for truth.  Now, I do know something about the search for truth, having been a private investigator for thirty years come March 2009, serving as a sixth term Chair of the Board of CALI, the world’s largest private detective organization, and as somebody who teaches a course in Epistemology & Formal Logic for the Private Investigator (covering the applications of Goedel’s “Impossibility Theorem,”  Heisenberg’s “Uncertainty Principle,” and “Ockham’s Razor” principle to private investigation).  I also know something about journalism, having served as First Vice President of Newspaper Guild Local 69 for years.

So, here are some of the questions that need to be answered for somebody to make an intelligent  judgment about the quality of “The Garden” and whether or not it deserves an Oscar.  I will not attempt to answer them today (even though I know most of the answers or at least know why they should be asked); I’ll reserve explanations for after the Oscars presentations tonight:

1.  In the original version of “The Garden,” Miguel Perez was sub-title identified as a “ex” Brown Beret.  Kennedy had that corrected in the current version.  Who told Kennedy that Perez was a “former” Brown Beret and why didn’t he verify the purported fact by asking Perez before printing something that could potentially cause someone harm?  Or, is he so out of touch with reality that he didn’t perceive the potential harm he could have caused?

2.  Miguel Perez stops appearing in the film about half-way through?  Is that accidental, was it inadvertent, was he no longer an important factor, or…..(pregnant pause) would including his continuing perspective have changed the villains into heroes and the heroes into villains?

3.  What happened to the money that was raised at the concert depicted in the film?

4.  Why didn’t the film explain that the farmers themselves claim, all of whom were dirt poor, that they had been “taxed” by Rufina and Tezozomoc  to pay for legal fees, when the attorneys maintain publicly and Rufina herself claimed at the Landmark Theater presentation of “The Garden” the attorney work was pro-bono?

5.  Since Juan Gamboa (featured in the film) is a named Plaintiff in Case No. BC 311110 of the Los Angeles Superior Court (appealed all the way to the California Supreme Court) along with Tezozomoc and Rufina Juarez (and other farmers) and since Hadsell & Stormer have been Juan’s attorney of record for the past several years, when was the last time that Hadsell & Stormer communicated with Juan Gamboa (or any of their clients other than Rufina and “Tezo”)?  When was the last time they communicated with their clients Ediogenes Luvianos “Don Eddie” Rumbos, Margarito Salgado, and Pedro Barrera (whose plots were also seized by Tezo and Rufina)?

6.  After Tezo got Juan and his sister arrested and Juan prosecuted for allegedly attacking Tezo, why did Hadsell & Stormer continue to represent all the original parties to the action?

7.  Did Hadsell & Stormer obtain the informed written consent to continue representing everybody concerned that may have been required by State Bar Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 3-310 after Tezo and Rufina had one of their other clients arrested and seized his farm plot?

8.  After Scott Hamilton Kennedy personally heard me ask Tezo at a showing of “The Garden” on behalf of a number of the farming families to produce copies of two 501(c)(3) IRS Form 990’s so that they could figure out where their money went (990’s are public record and IRS Regulations require them to be made available on request) didn’t he think that there was something funny about Tezo’s long rambling explanation of what happened to the money that he admitted had been collected for legal fees since Tezo admitted that they weren’t spent on legal fees?

9.  When I told Kennedy yesterday that Tezo had promised in writing to produce the 990’s and now — months later — he still hasn’t produced them, Kennedy said, “Great!  I’m thrilled to hear that!” (and he actually said it in front of witnesses).  Why isn’t Kennedy concerned to find out whether the farming families he glorified in his film, and who made it possible for him to appear tonight before the Oscars in what he described would be his Hugo Boss suit, were ripped off by the people he makes look like heroes, or whether the money they scraped together for the fight was spent honestly and appropriately (California law defines embezzlement from money held in trust as utilizing the funds for a purpose for which it was not intended)?

10.  The film at the end points out that farmers got other land from “the City.”  Why doesn’t it mention that they got the land thanks to the efforts of Mayor Villaraigosa and Council Member Jan Perry, or is that an inconvenient truth?
Well Scott, inquiring minds want to know the answers to these and other questions your film raises and leaves unanswered.  If anybody out there in the blogosphere wants some answers to these questions, email me at admin@janbtucker.com.

Prop 8 & Same Sex Marriage

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

Bubble Bath21.jpgOpen Letter From a former customer of Proposition 8 Supporters to Ken and Wendy Lee

Dear Mr. Ken Kiwook Lee and Wendy Wonok Lee:

As the owners of the Bubble Bath Hand Car Wash located at 1831 W 213th St Torrance CA 90501 I wanted you to know that while I always used to be very satisfied with the service I received when I used to patronize your business, I haven’t been there since before the November election and I am enclosing the Bubble Bath get one for free after ten washes card which I have cut in half.

Because of your having allowed or directed the placement of Yes on Proposition 8 signs at your business, I will no longer be patronizing the establishment.  It means that instead of driving to a location in my immediate neighborhood, I will have drive several miles to another car wash, but I am willing to do so because I do not give my dollars to promote a message that discrimination against minority groups in society is alright.

When I was a young boy growing up in California, the Unruh Civil Rights Act, now Section 51 of the California Civil Code was being debated.  To protest this new law, which prohibited segregation in California businesses, some business owners made their views very dramatic and very plain.  As a child I had to witness a restaurant off the freeway heading North out of the San Fernando Valley towards the Antelope Valley where a gigantic sign had been put on the wall of the restaurant by the owner.  It said, “No Niggers, Jews, or Dogs Allowed.”

I gather from your names that you are probably Korean immigrants or of Korean heritage.  I have many Korean friends and I welcome them to my country as I do all immigrants.  If somebody were to put up a sign in their business that made Koreans feel unwelcome, I would be the first to stop patronizing that establishment.

I feel the same way about my Gay and Lesbian friends and I know that they must feel the same kind of humiliation and anger that I felt seeing that sign as a child–because I am Jewish–that they feel when somebody tells them they don’t have the right to marry because some religions in America have a different definition of marriage that they want to impose on everybody.

Maybe it never occurred to you, but the Unitarian-Universalist Association, the Union for Reform Judaism, and the United Church of Christ amongst others have a different religious outlook than yours which accepts same-sex marriage on an equal basis with opposite-sex marriage.  Who are you, or anybody else, to say that their personal or their church’s definition of marriage has a right to be imposed as a theological outlook on anybody else in America by putting it in a state constitution?

The United States Supreme Court wrote in 1985 in Wallace vs. Jaffree that:


The fundamental concept of liberty embodied in that Amendment embraces the liberties guaranteed by the First Amendment. The First Amendment declares that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. The Fourteenth Amendment has rendered the legislatures of the states as incompetent as Congress to enact such laws. The constitutional inhibition of legislation on the subject of religion has a double aspect. On the one hand, it forestalls compulsion by law of the acceptance of any creed or the practice of any form of worship. Freedom of conscience and freedom to adhere to such religious organization or form of worship as the individual may choose cannot be restricted by law. On the other hand, it safeguards the free exercise of the chosen form of religion.”  [citing Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U.S. 296, 303  (1940)]

Rocky Delgadillo’s Pay to Play in L.A. Business

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Rocky DelgadilloRocky Delgadillo….hmmmm…..

Some people think that Governor Rod of Illinois is bad.

City Attorney Rocky is worse.  His “pay to play” schemes are publicly recorded…and nobody cares.


On March 8, 2006, the Los Angeles City Attorney’s office sued a bunch of downtown businesses under eminent domain laws, including the NAACP and Grant Parking.  The NAACP doesn’t make campaign contributions to City Officials, but Grant Parking’s owners do.On March 15, 2006, “Californians for Rocky” received $5,600 from one Grant Parking owner and another $5,600 from another Grant Parking owner on March 16.  On March 16, 2006, the case was dismissed solely as to Grant Parking.  Surprise, surprise!Rocky Delgadillo’s wife got into an accident in a Los Angeles City owned vehicle while her drivers license was suspended and got the City to foot the insurance bill on the vehicle that her husband was supposed to be using.  She did business with the City utilizing a corporation that was suspended by the Franchise Tax Board and which didn’t have a City business license or pay city taxes.  Nobody bothered to prosecute her when it was publicly exposed.

This is typical municipal behavior in Los Angeles.

Some years ago, the City allowed four suspended corporations all owned by the same Caucasian ex-police officer to have Police Commission permits to run dance hostess clubs.  In aggregate, between federal, state, and local tax liens on the corporations and the owner personally, he owed around $13 million in back taxes.

The City didn’t bother him about that, but it did prosecute his Asian competitors’ business after vice-cops went in and offered Latino dance-hostesses $50 for a blow job and claimed that some said “yes.”  When you’re a young single mom trying to get through community college on minimum wage, $50 might be the difference between the next meal for your children, the toys you can’t buy them for Christmas, or the school books that could mean the difference between passing and failing.  If his competitors had learned the “Pay to Play” game in L.A., i.e., grease politicians with campaign cash, maybe they wouldn’t have been singled out.

More recently, Iranian immigrants in the parking business have been singled out for shake downs by the City government.  Many of them get jacked up with repeated audits conducted by an out of state business the City hired while it was a suspended corporation in its home state and had never qualified to do business in California.  Most of the Iranians put up with it, but when one stood up for his rights and refused to put up with the so-called auditors (who were in essence conducting illegal unlicensed investigations) repeatedly harassed his customers, employees, impersonated city officials in pretext calls, the City criminally charged him with failing to pay city business taxes and filed two civil suits against him for the same thing.

PS…remember that Rocky’s wife did not get prosecuted for failing to pay City business taxes.

PPS….the guy who’s getting prosecuted by the City has paid millions of dollars in taxes and when the city’s computers crashed, erasing the old account numbers, the city refused to accept payments from his employees since there were no account numbers to apply the payments to.  Not to mention that the City is trying to dun him for parking taxes on vacant lots, parking lots owned and operated by his competitors, vacant boarded up buildings, businesses he doesn’t operate which have nothing to do with parking, and even non-existent addresses.

The State Bar Rules preclude attorneys from advancing their cause by means not consistent with the truth, but apparently prosecuting somebody criminally and civilly for failing to pay parking taxes on a print shop or a gas station is okay when you work for the City Attorney’s office in Los Angeles.

It’s better to Pay to Play in L.A.


For Hilda Solis I was at the right place, right time

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Jan Tucker & Hilda Solis L to R:  Linda Pruett, Hilda Solis, and Jan Tucker
On December 19, 2008, President Elect Obama nominated Hilda Solis to be Secretary of Labor.

In 2000, I was a delegate to the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, representing Local 69 of The Newspaper Guild.  In order for a candidate to be endorsed by the Federation, it requires a 2/3 vote of the Committee on Political Education (COPE), 2/3 of the Executive Committee (consisting of the officers and vice presidents), and 2/3 of the delegates.  In her quest to unseat incumbent 32nd District Representative Matthew G. “Matty” Martinez, Hilda got the COPE and Executive Committee votes, but the endorsement initially stalled amongst the delegates.

The first vote was to adopt the COPE report, which only received 55% of the vote.  A motion was made to divide the question to sever the 32nd District out of the report and then it passed unanimously.

Mike Nye representing the California Federation of Teachers moved to endorse Martinez, noting that AFL-CIO rules required endorsement of any incumbent with a 95% COPE voting record or higher.  That motion was defeated 55-45%.

Then, a brother delegate from the UAW moved to endorse Hilda Solis.  Nye tried to have that ruled out of order.  Speaking as delegate of the Guild, and local parliamentarian, I opposed the point of order because no motion had been made to endorse Hilda, just to approve the COPE report.  It was technically a different motion.  Miguel Contreras overruled Nye’s point of order.

Three people spoke in favor of Hilda and three spoke in favor of Martinez.  Finally I got the floor.  The main issue had been over Martinez’s vote for NAFTA.  I began by asking the assemblage whether anybody remembered how Martinez justified his vote for NAFTA.  Nobody raised their hands, so I explained that he’d come back to L.A. and claimed to have gotten a commitment from President Clinton to set up an Inter American Development Bank (IADB) with billions of dollars of funding to clean up the environment in Mexico and to improve labor conditions.

Then I asked the delegates, “has anybody heard of an IADB being set up?”  “Has anybody here heard of one dime…no…one penny appropriated to clean up the environment and improve labor conditions in Mexico?”  Dead silence.  “I didn’t think so, and if that is the way Matty Martinez delivers on his promises, that’s why we need Hilda Solis in Washington!”

I sat down and the brother from the UAW immediately moved to cut off debate.  Hilda won the endorsement with 77% of the vote!

Bill Callison Bites the Dust

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Bill Callison-Sexual Harasser and Sectarian par excellenceWilliam Alan “Bill” Callison, a perennial wack-job candidate associated with the Peace and Freedom Party’s “Berkeley Bolsheviks” (maybe that should Bullsheviks) has become the most recent victim of the FCOA’s curse on the unworthy and useless.  Callison, a descendant of Virginia slaveowners, graduated from Central Kitsap High School in a wealthy Seattle suburb (some might wonder if his later patronage from John Thomas Condit had anything to do with a potential relationship being Big Boeing Phil Condit???).

A self-published “author” of an insane tract he called “The Coming Revolution,” Callison holds the distinction of being the only person ever expelled from the California Peace & Freedom Party State Central Committee on charges of sexual harassment.  He was accused of battering and sexually attacking then-state party chairperson Kayren Hudiburgh mid-70’s.   In spite of his unabashed and perverse attack on Hudiburgh, Callison was welcomed back into the party by the insanely sectarian Akin-Feinland-Condit alliance who welcomed his utterly sectarian analysis of the world in his book.

The FCOA recently included Callison on its standing curse list.  As a result, he was subjected to the usual cocktail of Roma (Gypsy) black magic, Black Path Wiccan magic, and Voodoo during an FCOA ritual.