Saturday, October 28, 2006
Friday, October 27, 2006
Priceless letters
"Lastly, as to candidates for office, if you believe you are better off now than you were six years ago, you need to vote Republican.
Conversely, if you are worse off than you were six years ago, you ought to vote a straight Democratic ticket."
IRS Politics
Rate your realtor
"Some people do not belong in the classroom, OK?"
New builder sales technique: auctions
Drinkers of cheap CA swill, rejoice!
Drew University at King/Drew to loose accrediting
City of LA looses 1/3 of potential ticket revenue
SF Chronicle welcomes chance to use 'Campaign' and 'Orgy' in same lede
Thursday, October 26, 2006
Wine Notes #10: Walla Walla

Owen Roe Sharecropper's 2004 Cabernet Sauvignon: So yes, the label reads Pinot Noir, but this review really is of the Cab. For some reason a Cab label could not be found . . .
Owen Roe produces the wine from Washington vineyard grapes. The company uses a co-operative growing arrangement under which the grapes are provided to the winery, which handles bottling and distribution. I imagine that this arrangement helps to keep costs down as less financing would be involved-the winery then splits the proceeds with the growers once the bottles are sold.
The result is a delicious Cabernet at a reasonable cost (a smidgeon over $20, depending upon the retailer). The wine is full, and ready to drink young. Lots of sumptuous fruit, and a good nose.
Owen Roe
AQMD sued by environmentalists over power plants
MTA Decree Lifts
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Tribes fight back
Pelosi generates $50 million
Schrag on slate mailers
Kidnappings on the rise in Tijuana
Tuesday, October 24, 2006
Unsurprisingly, Feinstein confident of victory
TV manufacturing comes to Ontario
LA football dealt another setback
Greater weight consumes one billion gallons annually
Monday, October 23, 2006
Wine Notes #9: A bargain Pinot

At $8 or less per bottle at most California retail locations (of course, I've seen at high as $15, or what one should be paying for the same brand's Carneros district Pinot), the Robert Mondavi Coastal Selection Pinot is a great bargain. Nice flavors, very accessible, and again, a great value for the price. I have one or two bottles of this a month, and although there can be significant bottle variation, on the whole it performs quite well.
Robert Mondavi Private Selection
Amusing internal battles
Light rail to LAX
Sunday, October 22, 2006
Skelton on the November ballot
"Any Californian who doesn't vote for these bonds might as well just pack up and move to Nevada, Idaho or Mississippi. And business owners should take their jobs and employees with them.
Because soon it's going to be impossible to get to work in urban areas. Freeways will be impassable. Rails impractical. Moreover, public schools will be depressingly overcrowded. Housing unaffordable for the working stiff."
He then proceeds to recommend that voters defeat the interest-group written 84, 87, 88, and 89.
Full story
Government big enough for its own Facebook
48 vulnerable seats?
"It's one thing to be close," said Scott Lasley, a political scientist at Western Kentucky University, who is tracking the contest between Lewis and Democrat Mike Weaver. "It's another to defeat an incumbent."
Full story
Panama to expand canal
More absentee voting news
Money and politics
SF Chronicle on workers' comp
Wine Notes #8: From Chile with pride

Today's selection is the 2004 Montes Alpha Cabernet Sauvignon (yes the label is for 2003). Montes is located central Chile. The 2003 vintage received 90 pts., so the $15 being asked at Costco for the 2004 seemed quite reasonable. The finish had far too much excessive alcohol initially, courtesy of the 14% ABV, although this problem diminished quickly.
The wine succeeds in being inoffensive in almost all regards, although this leaves it without many distinguishing features. Some complexity and an unexpectedly long finish were present.
Vina Montes
Voters are not cynical enough
Pressing political updates
Saturday, October 21, 2006
That's what that smell is
"Blood-stained equipment"
"Few people are likely to feel much sympathy"
Bush: No Pull Out Until 'Mission is Complete'
"How long is it going to take before the Samaritan says, 'Hey, maybe we ought to patrol this road,' "
Friday, October 20, 2006
More records
California sets record of distinction
Radio show backfires?
"Only days after urging Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to renounce questionable sexual comments made to high school students by a Republican assemblywoman, Democratic challenger Phil Angelides sat through a morning radio talk show Thursday without objecting to a series of dubious gags about sex, ethnicity and an elderly female guest."
The excuse you ask? "Angelides said his performance was not inconsistent with his earlier comments about Schwarzenegger. He defended it as being within the context of a comedy-based radio show." Hasn't he lived in California long enough to know that our are politics are comedy-based to, at least at their finest?
Some of the jokes Phil let slide?
"an earlier African American guest was described as a "tall glass of chocolate milk" while Angelides was in the station"
"Angelides' appearance came after a segment in which a 20-year-old African American man named Master agreed to kiss a 72-year-old white woman named Sara to win a ticket to an upcoming promotional event at Hugh Hefner's Playboy Mansion in Holmby Hills."
"Carolla made a joke about a "May-casket" romance, playing off "May-December," and said Sara had a case of "jungle fever," a pejorative reference to white women attracted to black men."
"An anonymous voice-over also alluded to Angelides' ethnic background with a sexual innuendo."
"You get a Hacky Sack and a dime bag and a moped, you're into any community college," Carolla said, then added after Angelides said 300,000 students have dropped out over the cost: "That's because their stepdad kicked them out of the garage and they had to get a job."
"If you can't afford junior college…. ," Carolla cut in. "I'm going to ask that once you're elected, Phil Angelides, you change it to 'junior, junior college' just to bring a shame element to it because I feel like it's a graveyard that stupid people go to to die."
Full story
Security clearance revocation rising
Desert justice
"A Corona woman accused of exposing herself to a 14-year-old boy will not be tried for indecent exposure because the law against such behavior applies only to men, a visiting judge in Riverside County has ruled. " The specific statue punishes any person who "exposes his person." The District Attorney's office later realized that the penal code specifies that masculine pronouns apply to the feminine and neuter as well, and plans to appeal the ruling on these grounds. At trial, their strategy was to argue that the judge's interpretation of the statute was unconstitutional. While that might be used to invalidate a statute (for example, in the 1970s when the New Jersey Supreme Court held that the common law crime of being a common scold was not enforcable because of its gender specitivity), but it seems hard to believe that this argument could justify widening its criminal application. Full story
LA Times compilation of Angelides anecdotes
Full Los Angeles Times story
Heard of Phil?
A delightful Times romp
Full story in the Los Angeles Times
Alhambra Council transition
The art of political wagering
Parisian Mayor: This wine is too good for us
Thursday, October 19, 2006
Desperation sets in
Governing Newark is hard work . . . really
Chinese auto exports to US delayed
"It's how they express them"
"Angelides Under a Bus"
Capitol Weekly follows up on this theme by exploring whether or not Schwarzenegger has coattails
Homeowners in trouble
"Just Wednesday morning, Zhang dealt with a Lancaster resident who had taken out a $310,000 adjustable-rate mortgage with a starter interest rate of 5.4% and a monthly payment of $1,050. In July, the interest rate climbed to 8.5% and the monthly payment jumped to $2,306. A year-end adjustment will send the monthly payment to $2,744."
Favorite quotation from an agent:
"We were putting buyers in homes with loans they could not afford to sustain over the long haul," said Bob Casagrand, a San Diego real estate agent. "If you're a marginal buyer with an adjustable mortgage, you're rolling the dice on the future."
Full story
Lewis tops list
A welcome distraction from the real world
WSJ Polling not good for Congress
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Proposition 90 vs the bonds
Tuesday, October 17, 2006
Is India running out of labor?
Things you can't have
Education a non-issue on the campaign trail
Sonoma County Chardonnay grapes in trouble
Red light cameras grow
Caltrans dispute continues to grow
Bonnie Garcia, Arnold in the press again
City of Industry building own power plant
Target adds Diamond Bar location
Financial District to get new tower
Actors get audited?
Monday, October 16, 2006
Letter to the editor, RE: page program
As a former House page (2001-02), it was disheartening to read your editorial calling for the termination of the congressional page program.
Being nominated to serve by Rep. Curt Weldon was one of the greatest honors I could imagine, and the year of working in the House remains the defining experience of my life. I encouraged my sister to following in my footsteps, and she did, receiving a nomination to serve during 2003-04 from Rep. Tom Tancredo. When the time comes in a few years, I will encourage my brother to seek an appointment as well.
As noted in your editorial, the Foley scandal follows the Crane/Studds misdeeds of 1983, making it the first charge of misconduct in 23 years. This suggests that Congress has eliminated abuses almost entirely and is still worthy of the public trust. The program's worth is further demonstrated by the fact that no pages, current or former, have stepped forward to condemn the program or to suggest its end.
If Congress abolishes pages, they will not be brought back. The program may need reform, but a centuries-old tradition of great value should not be eliminated out of hand because it is the easy solution.
Wine Notes #7

Tonight we have the 2001 Argyle Brut. The Brut posesses a long yet crisp structure. Notes include fruits and minerals. The yeast fermentation and bottle aging really pays off here. I can see why Wine Spectator bestowed a 90 here.
Argyle Winery
Napa/Sonoma wine tastings changing
More non-news
A moving story
"Democrats seem to be fielding an uncommonly high number of uncommonly good-looking candidates."
Democratic operatives do not publicly say that they went out of their way this year to recruit candidates with a high hotness quotient. Privately, however, they acknowledge that, as they focused on finding the most dynamic politicians to challenge vulnerable Republicans, it did not escape their notice that some of the most attractive prospects were indeed often quite attractive."
This follows the great LA Times stories this morning . . . good day indeed. Full story
Chivas coming to Pomona?
Chivas USA is a sister team to Mexico's Club Deportivo Guadalajera, and the region's demographics are certainly favorable to Chivas moving to the San Gabriel Valley. Pomona alone had nearly 100,000 Latino residents in the 2000 Census. The San Gabriel Valley and Inland Empire demographics are favorable as well, and this will only grow with time.
San Gabriel Valley Tribune articles:
Chivas Looks to Pomona, Pomona greets sports center with 'open arms'
Series wrap-up
Schwarzenegger pushes cooperation on emissions markets
Wine bargains!
Caltrans land issue grows
Orange County officials want to form local committees to determine whether or not Caltrans property should remain in the states possession or be sold. Full story
Meanwhile, BTH Secretary Sunne Wright McPeak, head of Caltrans' parent agency, issues a press release defending Caltrans' record. Full story
Measure 37 Lessons
Bus fare dispute
Film down, TV up in LA
Where change would come
Secrets in the line of succession
News that isn't
The article quotes Colin Hanna of conservative group Let Freedom Ring as saying that "If Rick Santorum were to lose, it would be cited as a turning point in the social conservative movement." At the article's end, Hanna is quoted as saying that the election's outcome hinges upon which group of supporters is more motivated to go to the polls. Any guesses there? As a reminder, Governor Ed Rendell is also on the ballot, which will push up Democratic turnout across the state. Of course, Santorum's prior campaigns have been tought too, which is why his 5 point deficit in the polls (he's polling 41% or so) is not quite considered lethal. Full story
Radar Online ranks your Congress
Pay to play on the ballot
Oil tax fight reaches $100 million
"Most people don't read footnotes"
"One bipartisan leader"
Sunday, October 15, 2006
RNC cutting DeWine, others to concentrate resources
Coast Guard arms the Great Lakes
Snow Blazes New Trail
Caltrans as slumlord?
More redistricting fallout
Important Political Gossip
Measure L Heats Up
To publicize their views, the campaign's Chairman, Allen Wilson, has started his own blog, No Library Tax.
Married households now in the minority
Arnold's appeal to drive downticket Republican wins?
Initiatives seek to reign in judges
CA Looses $52B/Year
Saturday, October 14, 2006
Wine Notes #6: Back to Napa

Tonight's selection: 2001 Freemark Abbey Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon
Possessed of a nice, dark, and very pleasing color. Looks positively gorgeous in the glass. This is a very fruity Cabernet. Medium finish that lingers on the palate nicely. Mostly cherry flavors, the oak is present but kept to a minimum. Thank you Liquorama for stocking this one.
Freemark Abbey
CA NAACP Scandal?
High Turnout=Higher Initative Costs
No on 89
Enthusiasm Vs. Machine
Yes, the Feds watch MySpace
Wiccan Rights
Religion Fights Global Warming
The Tridentine Rite is coming back?
NYT Shocked By Economics
Gay Marriage Issuing Waning in Salience?
Abstinence Education and the ACLU

New religion in the public square debates . . . how far can "secularized" versions of religious dogma (in this case, abstinence) go without crossing the line in public schools? WaPo story
Azusa Arouses Public Opposition over Redevelopment Plans
Isn't unsurprising news fun?
Full story
Air America Enters Chapter 11
Tribune writeup
A good satire revisited
Thursday, October 12, 2006
Rising Use of Trackers
Follow the Cruz
More on Proposition 90
LA Times Says No on 90
Here are the other newspapers that have also editorialized against 90:
Los Angeles Daily News, (10/10/06)
Sonoma Index-Tribune, (10/10/06)
Fresno Bee, (10/9/06)
Santa Maria Times, (10/8/06)
Modesto Bee, (10/6/06)
Palm Springs Desert Sun, (10/6/06)
Milpitas Post, (10/5/06)
San Francisco Examiner, (10/5/06)
Woodland Daily Democrat, (10/4/06)
San Francisco Bay Guardian, (10/4/06)
Paradise Post, (10/3/06)
San Jose Mercury News, (10/2/06)
Pasadena Star News, (9/27/06)
Whittier Daily News, (9/27/06)
San Gabriel Valley Tribune, (9/27/06)
Riverside Press-Enterprise, (9/25/06)
Gilroy Dispatch, (9/22/06)
Sacramento Bee, (9/16/06)
Napa Valley Register, (9/14/06) Mountain View Voice, (9/08/06)
Santa Rosa Press Democrat, (9/11/06)
Torrance Daily Breeze, (8/23/06)
San Diego Union-Tribune, (8/22/06)
Silly Ads
The first, sponsored by the California Teachers' Association (CTA) and others, propped up Proposition 1D from the bond package, describing all of the wonderful benefits it would bring (highlights: reduced class sizes, getting rid of absbestos, safer playgrounds).
Soon comes another ad, sponsored by "California's Workers" (who could that be?) slamming the Governor for lacking any strategy for improving education, amongst other things. Like, say, Proposition 1D?
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
Redistricting Protects
AQMD Moves AQMP
Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Wine Notes #5: Triple Review

2004 Archery Summit Premier Cuvee
The problem here is that the alcohol (13.9%) has a way of overpowering the balance of the cuvee. Once one sees past the alcohol and the accompanying hot finish, the wine stands in good stead. Should get a bit better with age.

This got a 90 from Wine Spectator, and I have to wonder why. It is similar to the 2003, which was excellent for the price range, but the 2004 has excessive sugar. Kind of like drinking liquid Pepsi? I'm sure this appeals to some part of the population, but it doesn't make for good Pinot. Stick to the 2003 and wait for next year. I will be sampling this again to make sure that bottle variation didn't destroy this sample.

2003 Stag's Leap Wine Cellars Artemis Cabernet Sauvignon
Although some perceive this as more of a weakeness for the SLWC brand than an asset, it is quite wonderful and comes at a very nice price break for quality Cab. Subtle and wonderful.
More problems for Airbus
More religion news
Ratkovich in the news
Math education reform
Debate Summarized
Save the Pets
Full story
State to loose $1.5B in annaul revenues
Full story
Sunday, October 08, 2006
More Religion News
Main Series Stories This Week
In the SF Chronicle: The Chronicle is running a series on sex trafficking, which seems to frequently end in California. Link is to the current installment.
Champagne Culture In LA
Full story
Religious Exemptions and Government Regulation
Full story
Related discussion in Slate
Economist Roundup
While transportation advocates and others have cited the need to raise the excise tax on gasoline for quite a while (cf: inflation, increased vehicle fuel economy pinching revenues, and the coming bankruptcy of the Highway Trust Fund), the new consensus includes national security and other arguments to justify the increase.
Full story
"How Office Politics and Real Politics Can Mix"
NY Times Story
Azusa Gun Club Forced Out
Tribune article
Debate fails to change dynamic
LA Times coverage
SGV Tribune coverage
Army Outflanks Rumsfeld
NY Times Story
Older background story from Slate's Fred Kaplan
Friday, October 06, 2006
Proposition 90 Web
Shocking News Update From WaPo
Full story
Evangelical Movement Fears Loosing Youth
Full story
Sunday, October 01, 2006
Times Focuses on Board of Supervisors
Unsurprising Poll Results: Arnold Up By 17%
Am I Reading The Onion or The NYT?
Full story