Arrogance of elected elite?  Mayors don’t like it when “protesters” show up at their house.   Remember Democrat Mayor Lightfoot of Chicago who got her hair done during the pandemic?
Progressive mayors seem to suddenly have a change of heart about protesters when they show up at their own homes. That appears to be the case in Chicago as well. The Chicago Tribune got hold of a police directive preventing protesters from gathering outside Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s home or, in fact, anywhere on her street. Police have literally been checking ID’s for anyone who tries to enter the street where the mayor lives. One neighbor dubbed it “Fort Lori.â€
The Chicago Police Department has effectively banned protesters from demonstrating on Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s block in the Logan Square neighborhood, ordering officers to arrest anyone who refuses to leave, the Tribune has learned…
Some neighbors in the Logan Square area have complained about the city’s approach to protests around Lightfoot’s house, which at times has included checking residents’ IDs before letting them close. Ron Kaminecki, a 69-year old patent attorney and bike shop owner who lives on Bernard Street a few houses from Lightfoot, said some neighbors have been frustrated by the police presence and barricades.
“I came up with the name ‘Fort Lori’ because it’s so hard to get in and out,†Kaminecki said.
______________________________
Firenze Sage:Â Â This is the broad [Mary Lightfoot]Â who broke curfew to get her hair done. And screw you.
What the 2020 election is all about?  Drain the swamp.
And Biden — with 8 years connected at the hip with Obama –is part of that swamp. James Comey was a willing ‘swamp dewller’ who says he can’t remember while he was in charge of the FBI and his employees were buying insurance to protect themselves from wrong doing.  And Comey just did not know?
The businessman Trump was propelled to office on the fury of those who had seen too much. The public watched for decades as an insulated elected class—Democrat and Republican alike—broke promises, failed to solve problems, and blamed it on the system….
Gender identity? California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) signed a bill Saturday allowing transgender inmates to be placed in prisons based on their gender identity.
The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) will now house inmates based on their gender identity rather than their sex assigned at birth — but only if the state does not have “management or security concerns†with individual inmates.
The law Newsom signed Saturday requires officers to ask inmates privately during the intake process if they identify as transgender, nonbinary or intersex, then inmates can request to be placed in a facility that houses either men or women.
The CDCR cannot deny requests solely because of inmates’ anatomy or sexual orientation. When a request is denied, the state must provide a written statement to the inmate explaining the decision and give them an opportunity to object.
What about the homeless living in Santa Cruz CA enviorns?  Locally elected Santa Cruz CA ‘leaders’ — mayor, chief of police, city council, county board of supervisors — don’t know what to do about the homeless living in Santa Cruz. Or at least they aren’t saying.
Will Santa Cruz soon look like San Francisco which has a legally sanctioned encampment in front of city hall?
And the Santa Cruz CA elected ‘leaders’ are not doing anything about  the growing illegal homeless encampments.
It might be said that our local ‘leaders’ are not answering phone calls and questions about what’s being done or not done.
Much in the news a year ago, how and where to put transitional homeless camps are no longer in the news.   That’s what Grossman & his wife Dehlen report in a guest commentary published 10/1/2020 in the Santa Cruz Sentinel.
Of all persons and organizations contacted, only one of the ‘leaders’, board supervisor Ryan Coonerty, responded and ‘ got back to Kevin Grossman & Amy Dahlen about transitional camps for homeless folk. [Grossman & Dahlen live in the community; no other information available.]
The word ‘leaders’ is placed in  ‘  ‘   because what stands out in the TV nightly news is the lack of leadership that so local officials in so many Democrat run cities show routinely. Politicians  especially in Democrat run cities, fold at the first sign of violent confrontation. The highest violence occurs in Democrat run cities. Â
Remember — CA and Santa Cruz are run by the Democrats and Santa Cruz is a Sanctuary City. And remember — the Santa Cruz council voted unanimously to permit a huge Black Lives Matter mural in front of City Hall.
Other than that they are ‘community members’ there’s no information provided by the Sentinel about who K. Grossman and A. Dahlen are and what their involvement has been locally. [There’s one listing in Facebook for a Grossman of Santa Cruz but that concerns a single man.]
The article notes that about 120 families are homeless in Sana Cruz. Intact families with kids to care for probably jerk the heart strings of more people than do drug addicted single men with little family or job history.
So maybe that’s the place to start — what to do about 120+ homeless families residing in the Santa Cruz enviorns.
How help 120 families that are homeless. Move ‘leaders’ aside and figure out how to ask individuals, groups and organizations how they can assist.
 We have ZOOM now, an easy way to connect for free for 45 minutes. Keep meetings short and do them standing up and that ‘s one way to move decisions along.
2. Type Santa Cruz into Facebook and up pops several organizations worth exploring.  United Way of Santa Cruz County runs a 211 advertisement worth knowing about.  211 will connect individuals with health and human services so it says.
3. Use tools such as Survey Monkey to find out how people can and will help.  It’s easy to put up a simple survey and ask people what they are willing to do.  Here’s one question that people can be asked:
Can you help one (1) homeless family?  Telephone contact and listening. Referral to resources and finding out about other resources.  Referral or assistance of little cash a week, bus pass, money to clean clothes. Listen, listen and listen.
What are you willing to do?
written by Cameron Jackson, psychologist  JAJ48@aol.com
Open the economy!  Bring back the pre-COVID jobs and economy.
The Wealth Gap Shrinks:  The pre-COVID economy Trump brought has resulted in substantial wealth gains for Hispanics and Blacks. Will it translate into votes for Trump?
Growth in business equity 2016 – 2019:Â Â Black wealth grew 138%, Hispanic (63% and Americans without a high-school diploma 104% ….
Home ownership is more affordable and ticked up 1.4 percentage points in three years including 1.8 points among Hispanics and 2.3 points among blacks …
Corporate stock buying: 14.5% of Americans in the lowest income quintile coned corporate stocks in 2019 up from 11.5% in 2016 …
About Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s connection with Praise of People — Below is a tribute to a Praise of People member whose life is celebrated below  at the Roman Catholic cathedral in St. Paul.   His life was about service to others and love of Jesus.
If Trump nominates her as expected by the WSJ and other papers,  will the Democrats rip Amy Coney Barrett for membership in Praise of People? Remember Feinstein’s message: ‘The dogma lives strongly in you …”   If so, the Democrats may regret it. So thinks Peggy Noonan of WSJ.   Service to others without violence is a better commodity than what Black Lives Matter Inc offers,
On the West coast, there’s a branch of Praise of People located in Portland, Oregon. For the Vancouver / Portland area Charlie Fraga is People of Praise’s contact person pop.vanport@gmail.com  503 345 7764
A member of the Brotherhood of Praise of People,  Pope Francis appointed Peter Leslie Smith (2-58 born in South Africa) as auxiliary bishop of Portland in 2014.  There are Roman Catholic and Lutheran clergy who are members of People of Praise.
Portland Oregon — on nightly TV due to burning, looting and violence – has a current population of 1,379,000, 207,300 of whom are Catholic, with 168 priests serving in different roles in the diocese, and with 42 permanent deacons and 347 religious from various communities and congregations.
“On a frigid Wednesday last December, hundreds gathered for a funeral at the Cathedral of St. Paul, packing the center section of one of the largest churches in the United States. Some circled the downtown blocks near the cathedral looking for parking, and eventually gave up and went home.
Outside, the mailman asked at the rectory what was going on, and the hired motorcycle escort asked the funeral director how he’d gotten such a large event.
“As the gospel was read, a man wearing a bandanna and carrying a backpack came in the side door and walked across the front of the cathedral. On a day with a high temperature of 10 degrees Fahrenheit and a wind chill well below zero, he wore sandals with white socks, and white pants. While the crowd stood in their pews, he walked right up to the casket at the front of the church, bent down and kissed it. Then he walked down the center aisle and out the door.
Later, as the casket was carried out of the cathedral, 12th-grade girls from Visitation School wearing white gloves teared up as they lined the aisle. The school declared a day off in his honor.
Who was this man loved by so many?
He was a security guard. He was a realtor who had once fallen deeply into debt. He wasn’t a rich man or a famous personality. He was Bill Kenney and, above all, as his son, Fr. Kevin Kenney, explained in his homily at the cathedral, he had three words that he wanted said at his funeral: “Jesus, Jesus, Jesus.â€
* * *
In the early 1970s, Bill Kenney was a hardworking husband and father in the throes of growing a small business. Kenney Realty had three offices in the Twin Cities and 40 licensed realtors. Bill put in long hours showing homes, but he still found time to take his seven kids water-skiing. He bought a beautiful large home for his family near Lake Harriet in South Minneapolis. He loved to talk and meet new people, he loved a good joke, and he loved his wife, Dorothy, often bringing flowers home for her along with the groceries.
He had learned his work ethic early. His father died when Bill was 16, and Bill had taken on two jobs to help support a family of 11, mostly younger siblings. His son Kevin recalls, “From the minute we could walk, we had to have a job of some sort, oftentimes just in his real estate office. I remember as a little kid emptying wastebaskets and vacuuming and cleaning.â€
 Students at Visitation School lined up as an honor guard for his funeral at the Cathedral of St. Paul.
In the fall of 1973, Dorothy’s life changed when she decided to attend a weekend introduction to the charismatic renewal put on by their parish. At the retreat, Anna Brombach, a fellow mother Dorothy knew from church, came over to pray with her. Dorothy remembers, “I looked down, and it wasn’t Anna’s hand taking mine. It was Jesus’ hand. I got home the next day, and I was so on fire.â€
A full turkey dinner was Bill’s favorite thing to cook, and he had one waiting for Dorothy when she came home from the retreat. As the kids started washing the dishes after the meal, Bill and Dorothy went for a walk around Lake Harriet. Dorothy recalls, “I’m jumping and dancing, and I said, ‘Would you ever go to a prayer meeting with me?’ He said, ‘Oh, Dorothy. You’ve always been joyful. What’s such a big deal about this? You go to the prayer meeting. I sure as heck don’t want to go.’â€
For two and a half years, Dorothy went to the prayer meetings alone. Then, in 1976, Jim Cahill caught Bill and Dorothy as they were leaving mass, and mentioned that Bishop Lucker, a friend of Bill’s, would be at the prayer meeting that night. As Dorothy remembers, Jim said, “Bill, why don’t you come?†and Bill said, “Maybe I will.â€Â “I nearly fainted away,†Dorothy recalls. At the end of the prayer meeting that night, Bill greeted Bishop Lucker. Says Dorothy, “The bishop said, ‘Bill Kenney! What are you doing here?’ Bill said, ‘I don’t come to these things. My wife does,’ and Bishop Lucker said, ‘You come back five times, and then decide if you’re ever going to come again.’ Well, Bill obeyed him, and he never stopped coming.â€
* * *
Bill quickly became involved in the charismatic renewal, attending conferences and praying with people. He and Dorothy joined the growing covenant community in the Twin Cities that would eventually become Servant Branch. Bill insisted that his teenage children attend charismatic conferences, and all seven of them were eventually prayed with for the baptism in the Holy Spirit. Bill started asking for the Lord’s help in the details of his life. Kevin recalls him praying over broken washing machines, as well as his response to car troubles on a road trip. “I think the block cracked in the car. He says, ‘We have to pray over it and it’ll get fixed.’ That was his faith.†Many of Bill’s friends recall him counting how many times priests mentioned the name “Jesus†in their Sunday homilies so that he could encourage them later to get their numbers up.
 The Cathedral of St. Paul, Bill’s parish and the site of his funeral.
This shift in Bill’s focus impacted his business life, too. By the late 1970s, with the economy struggling, it became clear that Kenney Realty was overextended. The company, and therefore Bill as its owner, had fallen hundreds of thousands of dollars into debt. Many years later, Bill told the story to the Twin Cities Catholic charismatic renewal: “Because of my finances, I decided I needed help. I received the Holy Spirit in my life, and got serious about getting out of debt. I always made decisions to do things, and then I asked God to bless it, but now I was asking God’s opinion as to what I was doing.†Bill started referring to Kenney Realty as a Christian business and instituted an optional daily morning prayer at the office.
In 1979, Bill brought in some community members with business experience to form a board of directors for Kenney Realty. Robert Regan, who worked in investment counseling and served on the board, recalls Bill asking for help with the administrative side of the business. “He was always gregarious, a great salesman, not as good as an administrator and manager, or financial guy.†Good advice from brothers and a demand for houses that came from groups of brothers and sisters moving to the Twin Cities to join the community (from North Dakota, Iowa and Washington) kept the business growing for a few years until another economic downturn in the early 1980s.
Also in 1979, Bill and Dorothy began a process of downsizing that would continue into the 1990s. Dorothy remembers, “To get out of debt, he never filed for bankruptcy, but he said, ‘We have to sell the big house.’ “Dorothy loved their block because they were surrounded by at least eight other large community families, and the Kenneys used their house to host morning prayer for the neighborhood, but they left it behind for a smaller place on Minnehaha Parkway. Bill’s eye for real estate showed in the deal: the new house was more affordable, but still in a lovely spot.
Three years later, Bill told Dorothy that they would need to sell the smaller house and rent something. To Bill’s surprise, the first thing Dorothy asked about was curtains. “I said, ‘If you rent a house, you don’t want to put fancy curtains in there.’ Of all the crazy things for me to say, but that’s what was on my heart at the time.†Soon after that, Bill and Dorothy went to look at a condo at the Commodore, an old converted hotel in St. Paul. The owner reported, “We furnished the whole place, and I just spent $10,000 on window treatments.†They moved in and eventually bought the condo. Bill set up a small office downstairs, where he kept Kenney Realty running as a smaller and smaller business until it finally disbanded in the 1990s, when Bill went to work as a realtor for another firm.
 Dorothy Kenney stands in front of a photo of herself and Bill on their wedding day two days after he returned from Korea. They were married 62 years.
Finally, in 1999, a confluence of events ended Bill’s remaining debt for good. Both a community member and a minister Bill had borrowed from separately decided to forgive him those large debts. A year or two earlier, Bill and Dorothy had thought about selling the condo to move into a smaller apartment across the street from the Cathedral of St. Paul, but it hadn’t sold. Then another apartment opened up in the same building, so they put the condo on the market again, and it sold for $20,000 more than the original listing. Dorothy says, “Bill always said, ‘God dumped $20,000 in my lap.’ So, totally, totally, totally out of debt, we started over.â€
Robert remembers, “Bill had been living an upper-middle-class life and he made the transition to less money. He had to change dramatically. He made the transition, just no problem at all. He trusted the Lord and never had a depressed day as far as I recall. The Lord let him down very gently, step by step, and gradually out of debt.â€
In the midst of all this, Bill was busy for the Lord, too. He was in Christians in Commerce. He was on the board of DeLaSalle High School, his alma mater. He was chairman of the Catholic charismatic renewal in the Twin Cities. He and Dorothy joined the cathedral parish in St. Paul, and Bill volunteered to run the men’s club pancake breakfasts. He was also constantly engaged in his favorite pastime, talking to people about Jesus.
Mark Lauer, Bill’s head, remembers going out to lunch with Bill. “He would get to know the waiter or waitress by name and a little bit about the person’s story. If any need came up, he would say, ‘I’ll pray for you.’†Bill and Robert played golf together regularly, and sometimes they would pair off with a couple of golfers they didn’t know. Robert says, “No matter who we were playing golf with, Bill would somehow bring the Lord into the conversation: ‘Do you know the Lord? Are you going to church?’ A lot of people would say, ‘I quit going 25 years ago.’ He’d tell them, ‘You gotta get back in touch.’â€
* * *
Around the year 2000, Bill took a newly created job as a security guard at Visitation School, a Catholic school of about 600 students in Mendota Heights. Visitation starts with pre-K, and the older students in grades six to twelve are all girls. Bill arrived in the afternoons and stayed to close the building at night, watching the security cameras, greeting visitors, and walking the last few girls to their cars after dark. He discovered that the parking lot was a little chaotic in the afternoon, with students crossing the street at the same time that vehicles needed to leave, so he started coming in earlier to direct traffic, sometimes in a funny winter hat.
 A blanket from Visitation sits on Bill’s favorite recliner.
Rene Gavic, the head of school at Visitation, remembers, “He was the go-to person. He knew everything. He had keys for everything. He was a good problem-solver, so if someone’s car wouldn’t start, they would go to Bill first. He cared about you and would help you and support you in any way.â€
Bill noticed when the students were having difficulties. Mary McClure, who teaches religion at Visitation, recalls, “He would ask, ‘Would you like me to pray with you?’ He waited until he knew there was an opening. Sometimes girls would share a healing: they needed to run, and they’d had an injury, so Bill prayed and they were able to participate the next day.â€
Rene adds a story about her own daughter at Visitation. “When she was 12, she fell in a cross-country race, and other runners stepped on her face with their spiked shoes. She needed 22 stitches in her face. As a 12-year-old girl, that was challenging for her. I remember her coming to school the very first day back, and what she wanted to do was have Mr. Kenney pray with her. He prayed with her, and her situation and her self-image–all of that–never bothered her again.â€
At Visitation, Bill developed a strategy for generosity. Once a month, the students give one dollar to charity for permission to be out of uniform for the day. Bill dropped by the campus minister’s office on the day she collected the dollars, and exchanged larger bills for her pile of ones. “In one of his pockets, he had a little vial of oil to pray with people, and in the other pocket, he had maybe twenty single ones. That would be for the kids whose dollar got stuck in the vending machines,†Mary remembers. Those ones also often made their way into the hands of the homeless.
 Bill as St. Nicholas at his church in 2015.
There’s no way to know for sure if the man who kissed his casket at the funeral knew Bill, but we can be quite sure that Bill would have cared about him if he had ever met him on the street. In his later years, Bill’s friends remember him always going up to homeless people standing on corners, telling them that Jesus loved them, and giving them one or two dollars for a cup of coffee. That human contact was important to him. Bill’s son Kevin adds that he would also offer a dollar or two when someone at the grocery store didn’t have enough to pay. “I think it was because people had helped him when he was in a time of need. It became a way of life for him,†Kevin recalls.
* * *
On December 4, 2016, Bill stayed after church at the cathedral to play St. Nicholas for the children, while Dorothy went home. As he was leaving, he fell on the sidewalk outside, and a passerby called 911. He’d had a stroke and died within a few days.
For Christmas, Dorothy and the Kenney family gathered at the home of one of her daughters. Bill had dressed as Santa Claus for many years, and Santa Claus wasn’t there that year. Dorothy’s kids coaxed her to the front door of the house. Dorothy recalls, “Out the front door they had all these jars with candles in them spelling out ‘Jesus’ on the front lawn. It was so beautiful, because Bill preached Jesus. I mean, he preached Jesus, preached, preached Jesus.â€
Let’s help create Marx’s ‘classless society’ in San Francisco by favoring Blacks?  Government has gotta get rid of income gaps between Blacks and others?
   London Breed, the Mayor of San Francisco, recently announced an innovative new program designed to provide financial support for women expecting a child both during the pregnancy and for six months after the baby is born.
 Breed said in a statement. “The Abundant Birth Project is rooted in racial justice and recognizes that Black and Pacific Islander mothers suffer disparate health impacts, in part because of the persistent wealth and income gap.â€
Given the costs associated with prenatal care, medical expenses and the costs associated with raising an infant, that’s a nice idea, isn’t it?
I’m sure plenty of mothers-to-be could use that sort of help. But as with so many things in this world, there’s a catch.
Or a couple of catches, actually. First of all, it won’t be available to everyone. You have to be selected by the people in charge of the project.
Oh, and don’t bother applying if you happen to be a Native American, Latina, or White woman expecting a child. The offer only applies if you are either Black or of Pacific-Islander background. (Yahoo News)
Think about Trump’s Art of the Deal approach. Trump needs to win 270 electorial votes and Florida may be a key state. Barbara Lagoa can appeal not only to women in general but also to  Hispanics, Cubans and Florida voters.
“Kavanaugh chooses his words very carefully, and this is a dog whistle for going after birth control. He was nominated for the purpose of taking away a woman’s constitutionally protected right to make her own health care decisions. Make no mistake – this is about punishing women.”.    Kamala Harris led the attacks on Kavanaugh — remember?
This is from Forbes:  “Like several of the court’s more conservative justices, Amy Coney Barrett has described herself as an “originalist,†meaning she bases her rulings on what she believes was the original intent of the Constitution’s authors. A social conservative, Coney Barrett signed a joint letter in 2015, prior to becoming a judge, affirming “the value of human life from conception to natural death†and asserting that marriage is “founded on the indissoluble commitment of a man and a woman†— which raised concerned among LGBTQ groups that she would oppose gay marriage.’
Barbara Lagoa may seem a safer bet for Trump to get ‘on the ticket’ a woman, a woman of ‘color’ [loosely defined], a woman who can appeal to a wide range of voters [Florida, women, Hispanic, Cuban, conservatives] who will not worry Pro Choice voters.
Nominating Amy Barrett or Barbara Lagoa may unleash the same unbridled fury unleashed by the Democrats on Kavanaugh and — if that happens — it may just come back to bite Democrats on election day 2020.
In 1960 a central issue was whether Kennedy — a Catholic — would be inappropriately influenced by his Catholic beliefs. Kennedy had to overcome anti-Catholic bias. . K  Now we have two women — both Cathoic and both ‘conservative’ — nominated to be on the Supreme Court.
Trump must get a certain number of electoral votes. Florida matters. The state of Pennsylvania looks like it may be a mess with elections decided by the courts. The whole ‘vote by mail’ is may tie the actual decision based on vote counting well beyond Election Night. Both women are Catholic and equally likely to un-leash Democrat ire towards ProLife and fears about federal funding for abortions.
Which nominee is more likely to give Trump the necessary electoral votes he needs to get re-elected?
Black Lives Matter uses a financial strategy which obscures transparency and prevents accontability.
BLack Lives Matter formal name is Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation shortened here to BLM Inc.  Though it’s been around 7 years – BLM Inc is hardly a newbee — and it operates via fiscal sponsorship of two front organizations which hides total money received and and also hides how the money was spent.
All money donated to Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation [www.blacklivesmater.com] goes first to ActBlue Charities and later moves to Thousand Currents which then directs the how the money is spent.
What are the actual figures of money donated? How is money actually spent? That’s anybody’s guess. One article said that several efforts to get information from ActBlue Charities and BLM Inc were rebuffed.
Recently, with unanimous consent of the Santa Cruz CA City Council, 500 supporters of BLM painted a huge Black Lives Matter mural directly in front of City Hall.
Following the Democrat National Convention there were huge Black Lives Matter signs prominently displayed. There was ZERO discussion by the DNC speakers concerning of the burning, looting and destruction of property across America in many Democrat-run cities. There are numerous videos showing Black Lives Matter signs as the rioters throw bricks, ignite fires and destroy property.
De-fund the police is an explicit goal of Black LIves Matter.
There are 9 women aspiring to be elected to the Santa Cruz City Council this November, 2020.
Let’s hope that some of them will look afresh at why there’s a Black Lives Matter mural in front of City Hall in Santa Cruz, CA.
written by Cameron Jackson, psychologist  JAJ48@aol.com
“By the time the Clinton White House granted China most favored nation trade status in 2000, all of Washington knew that America was running a vast trade deficit that was destined to increase with accession to the World Trade Organization.
“The price for lifting tens of millions of rural Chinese peasants out of poverty through favorable trade arrangements would be tens of millions of American lives ruined, even as large American companies like Apple and Nike and bankers like JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs got richer.
The elite reasoned that they had no choice: The rise of China was inevitable. Why fight it?”
“American political and corporate elites didn’t choose decline.
“They chose to get rich. By shipping America’s manufacturing base off to China, they seized a business opportunity the likes of which had never been seen before—an enormous captive labor force controlled by an authoritarian regime that guaranteed the steady production of goods at a fraction of what it would cost at home. American cultural elites (Hollywood, sports, art, etc.) who exploited the increasingly large Chinese market for their products provided cover for the China Class cohort with messaging that dovetailed with CCP propaganda.
Understand and oppose the censorship policies of YouTube, e.g., why you can’t see Trump’s health advisor Atlas as he was removed supposedly because what he says contradicts the CDC — which is largely controlled by the Chinese.