Sunday, October 29, 2006

Framing the Issue

Where's George Lakoff when you need him?

Hey.... he's on Blogger, too.

PLAN (People for Land and Nature) characterize Measure A an "Open Space" initiative. But the 13 pages of Measure A text are about "land use", with a labrynth of slope/density regulations and restrictions, and subdivsions requirements on private Santa Clara County land. It is a LAND USE intiative. PLAN promoted the measure as an "open space" initiative to endorsers. The Republicans for the Protection of the Environment were led to believe it was a conservancy "set-aside." The assumption was that lands would be obtained by way of purchase or market negotiation, and then set aside for open space, without any possibiity for development of any kind. Now that this grass-roots organization has read the text, and realized the controversial impact on private land owners, they have decided to withdraw their endorsement support. The intiative is considered beyond the scope of their mission, which includes open space, but not private land use.

Similarly, Carl Guardino, the preseident of the Silicon Valley Leadershiop Group, gave Measure A a very influencial endorsement. In the PLAN press release he described their endorsement in these terms:
http://www.openspace2006.org/release_091206.htm
SAN JOSE – Thursday, September 7

“The Leadership Group has a long and strong history of support for Open Space measures, dating back to the 1990 Open Space measure in Santa Clara County, when our founder David Packard personally led his Board colleagues on a nature hike to underscore the importance of open space to the health of our companies and the quality of life of our employees,” said Carl Guardino, President and CEO of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group.

Once again, the language is framed as an "Open Space" intiative, not as a "Land Use" initiative.

Oh... and let's not overlook Mr. Guardino's assertion that open space is necessary for the "health of our companies" and "the quality of life of our employees." Private land owners exist only as "open space" with sole purpose to support the prosperity of Silicon Valley business. No corporate financial investment in the objective at all.

But doesn't that hiking thing sound real nice?

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Double double, toil and trouble

Fire Burn and cauldron bubble

Our egos here at Silicon Valley Truthiness Bureau are still pretty bruised over the curious fact that Google apparently removed us from their regular search index, three days after we posted "The Truthiness of Measure A." Was it something we said?

But... there is hope. The folks at the Berkman Center for Law and Society at Harvard have been very helpful. They are sensitive to clever weasel stuff like this, just hard to prove. http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/home

Also, for those experiencing similar unexplained difficulties or other issues in citizen journalism, you may want to visit Dan Gillmor's citizen media website:http://citmedia.org

The Truthiness Bureau is happy to know that Mr. Gillmor and Berkeley have teamed up to do a CA congressional race media project that mirrors (on a much larger scale, of course) our obsession with similar issues over press coverage on Measure A(slanted and incomplete arguments, among other things.) http://citmedia.org/blog/2006/10/24/voteguide-soft-launch

The Berkeley law (Boalt) cyber clinic website is:
http://www.law.berkeley.edu/clinics/samuelson/


Ain't life grand? When open source democracy and citizen journalism weasel around the weasels?

More whining....

Distributive Fairness and Corporate Responsibility

Measure A places all burden and financial responsibility for environmental conservation on only one group of Santa Clara County residents, rural residents. One might ask, "How important are these lofty environmental ideals to this community, to urban Silicon Valley residents, if they are unwilling to spend a dime of their own money on any of it." It is always easy to take something for nothing, but what kind of society does that make? (Of course, there are those with a much longer historical view on this.) Where is the real commitment to environment if an affluent urban citizenship, including prosperous Silicon Valley corporations, are not willing to sacrifice a penny in land conservancy or compensatory relief?

Of course our environment is important. The protection and integrity of our environment should be a priority on all levels, community, national, and global. The issue is how this objective is being pursued here in Santa Clara County. Measure A trivialize the complexity of our environmental problems with benign sloganism, no attention to facts or consequential impact, or broad-based solutions. We know the feel-good intent of the initiative, but who has really read all thirteen pages of text? Even County Counsel Ann Ravel had to remind its author, Robert Girad, what the text set in motion, that all regulatory authority was given to the courts (litigation costs), and not the Supervisors. Furthermore, no impact analysis for Measure A was ordered by County Supervisors. Voters have no real information for basing their votes, for understanding who will be harmed, and to what extent, and for what benefit. The County established no basis for showing compelling public need to replace present County plan with the proposed new restrictions. Not a great way to go into takings litigation. What we do know is that all financial burden will be placed on one socio-economic group. The distribution of this financial burden may then extend to all taxpayers in subsequent litigation.

Measure A ignores the property rights of farmers, ranchers, and rural property owners, while property rights of urban residents remain intact and privileged. Peter Drekmeier claims that the initiative "does not devalue land" but will simply "reduce the speculative valuation of lands." Common sense tells us, this is a devaluing. And if common sense is not enough, rural policy and land use studies readily document devaluation after similar land use restrictions. Mr. Drekmeier has also characterized farmers and rural residents as not understanding the issue, and as puppets of other interests, as if opposition is not coming from real people, real families, real business ventures with sovereign needs. He has worked hard to silence the voice of those who will bare all burden. But we know from history, time and again, that there is need to challenge the agendas of those who would so easily silence others in the pursuit of "public good." If Mr. Drekmeier had genuine concern for farmers, ranchers, and rural residents, he would recognize their property and free speech rights, and perhaps help establish avenues for fair compensation.

High tech prosperity is the engine for our growing Santa Clara County population. Ironic that Silicon Valley Leadership Group has endorsed Measure A, and yet SVLG member companies exist because of strong property rights laws and protections. SVLG companies know the value of intellectual property rights. They wage fierce battles over these rights every day. Would they want the speculative value of their intellectual property reduced by a general election that would threaten or limit their freedom of action? Not likely. They could not survive in a competitive global economy. Intellectual property is the most important asset of Silicon Valley businesses, much like land is the primary capital asset of rural and agricultural families. Why is it SVLG companies protect their own property rights, but endorse a sweeping dismissal of the property rights of rural land owners? How are rural families going to survive in a competitive Silicon Valley economy if they are left uncompensated for land restrictions that amount to forced conservancy easements.

And what is the corporate responsibility of Silicon Valley companies, what is their shared financial burden, in protecting local environs from their own high tech prosperity?

---DMD, silly whiner

It's A Truthiness!

(From a letter sent in to the Truthiness Bureau. Our first letter to the editor. We are so proud.)

It's a Truthiness: Family Farmers Won't be Hurt by Measure A!

A tip of the hat to Peter Drekmeier, Palo Alto City Councilman, Campaign Coordinator, Yes on Measure A. In his truthiness-filled Gilroy Dispatch editorial "It's a Lie: Family Farmers Won't Be Hurt by Measure" Saturday, October 28, 2006, he sets the record straight. Measure A supports working farms – and that is the key - working. Any farmer who would every want to subdivide, and sell a portion of the farm isn't really that interested in farming, now are they? As Drekmeier points out subdivisions are incompatible with farming. Interviewed on KGO-TV (Land Battle Brews Over Measure A, by Carolyn
Johnson - http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=local&id=4579290):

Peter Drekmeier, Measure A campaign coordinator: "It does strengthen some of the protections, but as far as subdividing the land for future development, it's the same minimum parcel size that currently exists. So for them to say it devalues the land, that's simply not the case." As long as they keep working the farm, it's the same minimum parcel size.

Peter Drekmeier: "What we're trying to do is create a balance between the private property rights and the rights of the community to have clean air, clean water, and the beautiful backdrop that we enjoy here."

As far as we rightous defenders of Truthiness are concerned, it is Peter Drekmeier who speaks best for working farmers and their property rights. The 440,000 acres of affected lands, are only about 33,000 parcels of land -- Peter Drekmeier speaks for far more people and far more parcels. Peter Drekmeier speaks for a double majority, urban voters who want a pretty view AND those whose property rights are unaffected by Measure A -including all those working farmers, who want to keep working the land, and never sell out or subdivide, or use their land value in any way, like for business loans, retirement, health care, or other silly expenditures.

As long as they keep working the land, we'll all get along just fine.


Guest writer to Truthiness, Letter to the Editor

Friday, October 27, 2006

Forget about Gulliver.... it's the Lilliputians we should worry about

All this worry over "Big Brother."
It's the little brothers that may have equal covert impact on social discourse. That's my take on the fact that the Silicon Valley Truthiness Bureau (SVTB) is no longer searchable on Google's regular search. Pity.

And to think....Mountain View, the home and heart of Google, is overwhelmingly in support of Measure A. A curious thing.

Yes, it's true. This blog was searchable in Google's "regular" search for several days, and has since suddenly "vanished" from their regular index. Not a trace in regular results, even though other postings on October 21 in other blogs (blog search "October 21" + blogspot), both newly established and older, are indexed in both 1) the popular regular search, as well as 2) the less-used blog search. The SVTB was available, but now can only be searched on the blog feature. Not as easily accessible, but hey.

I don't think any of us really understand the power that Google has over our information, what we are exposed to, how we are led to think, how an information giant could advance its own agendas, whether as a "Big Brother" company, or as a band of "little brothers" who have the means to manipulate the conversation. Nope, I don't think any of us fully realize the implications of that kind of power.

And their "Ethics Committee?" Just try to find a way to contact them. Go ahead, try.

"Do no evil?" How would we ever know?

Saturday, October 21, 2006

The Truthiness of Measure A

The Myth of Minority Rights in Santa Clara County Land-Use Policy


The great thing about living in a democracy is, majority rules.

Majority rule will soon be apparent to Santa Clara County rural residents who are now opposing Measure A, a county-wide land-use initiative that sets harsh subdivision requirements and building restrictions on 411,700 acres of privately owned rural land. Rural residents are complaining that an urbanite majority, who has no understanding of agricultural business or rural life, will soon be deciding their fate.

But really, what problem do these farmers, and ranchers, and rural families have with us putting more restrictions on the use of their private lands, especially when there are enough of us who want a pretty view and a fun place to go on weekends? We are the majority. This is a democracy. That is the rule. What does it matter if these restrictions disrupt their lives? Rural people in Santa Clara County are a minority, not even a recognized minority at that. Why do they expect special treatment from us, like conservancy easements, or fair compensation for land devaluation, or some other distributive remedy?

Haven't affluent urbanites already made a monumental contribution to Santa Clara County by transforming this valley into the prosperous Internet economy that it is? Measure A finally addresses the compelling reciprocal responsibility that rural residents have in meeting the amenity needs of this prosperity. Land is such a small sacrifice. Compensation for a regulatory taking of this land is also over-rated. Rural neighbors can still find any number of ways to scrape up monies for retirement, health care, and kid's education in an opportunistic Silicon Valley economy. It's the American way.

Our rural residents want us to believe that their land is their only family resource. This is patently untrue. Many of these families have grandparents who can readily tap into the labor needs of a nearby Walmart. The fact is, rural residents should have practiced more strategic capital allocation, or like their urban neighbors, found livelihoods that encouraged diversification, such as stock options, annuities, and 401k's. But we know from the press, as well as the promoters of Measure A, that farmers and ranchers are only puppets of insidious business interests, that they cannot think for themselves. This innate reasoning defect clearly mandates a social response. By restricting rural resident lands to ensure our recreational needs, we will also help rural residents prioritize monies, limiting their foolish spending on educational opportunity, and in doing so, we can protect their children from the stresses of an increasingly technological world, and the confusion of career directions that may go beyond their innate abilities. Santa Clara County rural families have been both myopic and unappreciative. It may not be apparent to them now, but future rural generations will thank the sponsors and urban voters of Measure A for binding their families to these regulated lands, soon to be our recreational playgrounds; rural families do not understand the great custodial opportunities that lie ahead. (At least we can be sure these disgruntled folk will never be our neighbors, unless they find cheap rent, but that's another initiative, another day.)

Many of these Santa Clara rural families have owned lands in the area for three or four generations. They should know by now how a true democracy works. This country was built on the confiscation of good land. It worked then, it works now. They are being unAmerican in opposing this solid tradition. Sure, they had their use in past years, but today's leadership is about technology. There's not a farmer, or rancher, or vintner in the whole lot. That is the past. (Has anyone even seen one of these rural people other than maybe on an organic food label?) Agricultural people insist they have real-world perspectives on environmental conservation and sustainability, and that, as stakeholders, they were denied a voice in this November initiative. More silly minority whining. They do not understand that Measure A was written behind closed doors, by a very smart man not unlike the Wizard of Oz, who excluded all voices equally. And besides, common sense tells us that real-world land-use expertise lies with the environmentalists. They have maps. They have Birkenstocks. And they know where they want to walk. Environmentalists, by their very name, understand the challenge of environmental frontiers, and have the courage to take their SUV's where no public has ever gone before.

Measure A offers us thirteen pages of sheer poetry, as elegant as the Gettysburg address. The initiative's author, Stanford emeritus law Professor Robert Girad, is undeniably Linconish. He stands privileged in the ideals of equal protection and due process, with learned expertise into who should bear all burden for our pretty views and recreational needs. Mr. Girard is a man who puts privileged democracy to work. And we should also applaud the campaign manager of Measure A, Peter Drekmeier of Palo Alto City Council, and ALL the Palo Alto City government endorsers who unselfishly propelled this initiative through their political networks. These Palo Alto officials know how to use and enjoy land; they, too, have real expertise. With their own keen democratic sensibilities over the years, they have enforced restrictions on all non-Palo Alto residents, prohibiting non-resident entry into their own 1400-acre Foothill Park, the only municipal park in all of Northern California to practice such strategic land-use protection. These conservation patriots have protected a recreational sanctuary for the enlightened few, keeping fragile land unsullied by messy, marauding county demographics. They know the power of land, the power of law, the gift of democracy. And they understand pending threat to our American ideals, our recreational entitlements, when minorities presume equal rights. These Measure A sponsors and endorsers don't see race, they just know where where their city boundary is.

Our adolescent Silicon Valley democracy is finally showing signs of maturity. Over the past few years, even Democrats and environmentalists have taken a few pages from Papa Rove. We are finally becoming one recognized people, one recognized law. Distributive fairness and progressive democracy have long been distractions, antiquated dalliances, that only muddy the waters of privileged freedom. As for Measure A, we know that beautiful open space is not free, it comes at a price, but fortunately, in a privileged democracy, it can be as cheap as your vote.




We always welcome praise in support of our righteous exploitation. You can email our staff at Silicon.Valley.Truthiness.Bureau@gmail.com or alternatively send your praiseworthy comments to your local Palo Alto officials.

"Together we can all put privileged democracy to work."




***********************************************************
From: Palo Alto Municipal Code
22.04.150 Foothills Park.
a)Only residents of the city and regular or part-time city employees, members of their households related by blood, marriage, or adoption, and their accompanied guests are entitled to enter on foot or by bicycle or vehicle and remain in Foothills Park. No person who is not a resident of the city may enter on foot or by bicycle or vehicle unaccompanied by a person entitled to enter and remain in Foothills Park...

Demographics taken from Wikipedia:
PALO ALTO: As of the censusGR2 of 2000...There were 26,048 housing units at an average density of 424.9/km² (1,100.3/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 75.76% White, 2.02% African American, 0.21% Native American, 17.22% Asian, 0.14% Pacific Islander, 1.41% from other races, and 3.24% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 4.65% of the population.

EAST PALO ALTO : As of the censusGR2 of 2000....The racial makeup of the city was 26.98% White, 23.03% African American, 0.83% Native American, 2.23% Asian, 7.63% Pacific Islander (mainly Tongan and Samoan immigrants), 34.73% from other races, and 4.56% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 58.79% of the population.

GILROY: As of the United States 2000 CensusGR2.....The racial makeup of the city was 58.91% White, 1.80% African American, 1.59% Native American, 4.37% Asian, 0.25% Pacific Islander, 27.73% from other races, and 5.35% from two or more races. 53.78% of the population were Hispanic.