Story of want
Posted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wednesday, 29 December 2010Counterpunch.com
December 27, 2010
The Story of Want
Out Here in the Sticks
By BILL HATCH
Merced, California
http://www.counterpunch.com/hatch12272010.html
Badlands Journal
Social, Economic, and Environmental Justice
Counterpunch.com
December 27, 2010
The Story of Want
Out Here in the Sticks
By BILL HATCH
Merced, California
http://www.counterpunch.com/hatch12272010.html
Site 1B -- Riverside Motorsports Park (formerly Pacific ComTech Park and Morimoto Industrial Park:)
This property was foreclosed upon and subsequently purchased at public auction on November 12, 2009 by Castle Farms, Inc.---Merced County Board of Supervisors Agenda Item 52, December 14, 2010.
State officials said the billions will be spent on buying rights of way, realigning roadways, relocating existing rail and utilities and building the two stations and rail bridges. Constructing the initial segment is expected to create more than 80,000 jobs.
Well, folks, this year's high speed rail season is over and now it's back to the peripheral canal again, but the team remains the same. It is the team that brought us UC Merced to educated us and enabled the Great Real Estate Boom and Bust that brought so much security to so many in their own homes.
“If anyone is a master’s student in international relations and they haven’t heard of WikiLeaks and gone looking for the documents that relate to their area of study, then they don’t deserve to be a graduate student in international relations,” ...Professor Gary Sick, Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs
12-06-10
Wired.com
Columbia University Reverses Anti-WikiLeaks Guidance
By Sam Gustin
The story below is about the collision of agriculture and oil industries in Kern County on land that a few decades ago was mostly reserved for oil wells in sagebrush, habitat for roadrunners and coyotes. Irrigation development has brought orchards and row crops to a lot of it now, leading to a confrontation between the two industries.
We imagine that as natural gas drilling increases in the San Joaquin Valley that similar issues will arise between groundwater and the chemicals injected in the gas-drilling process.
Badlands Journal editorial board
11-30-10
San Jose Mercury News
Millions of Americans face loss of unemployment benefits
By Dana Hull and Patrick May
http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_16745250?nclick_check=1
The U.S. Senate on Tuesday failed to meet a deadline to extend federal unemployment benefits, threatening half a million Californians with the prospect of losing their benefits by the end of December.
We have been scratching our heads about the recent University of California fee hike, which brings the total increase to 40 percent over what tuition was two years ago, and the alleged attack on a campus policeman by a UC Merced student at the student demonstration against the fee increase.
It was good to see that Regent Odessa Johnson, from Modesto, voted against the increase.
The Merced Sun-Star reported on what the fuss was about:
Several years ago, a young man new to Merced but active in local politics at the time, asked a Badlands Journal reporter, “What is Diana Westmoreland Pedrozo saying? I can’t understand a word she says.” Pedrozo was the executive director of the county Farm Bureau and president of the California Women for Agriculture at the time.
The Badlands editorial board, including members of the San Joaquin Raptor Rescue Center, Protect Our Water (POW), Central Valley Safe Environment Network and San Joaquin et al, have in the last five months discussed very thoroughly Measure C, the development—plebiscite initiative in Merced County. We have extensive experience reading land-use and environmental documents, laws, legal briefs and court decisions.