An invasion, not an economic question
The Register has done it again. On the front page of the Sept. 28 edition, it has pushed illegal immigration as being necessary for the livelihood of the wine industry, it makes stealing IDs an acceptable practice, and honors management companies for skirting the law.
Preparing for a safe nuclear future
Jeremy Rifkin (a.k.a. "the most hated man in science" -- Scientific American, August 1997) is at it again with his Luddite views and latest pseudoscience book, "The Hydrogen Economy: The Creation of the World Wide Energy Web and the Redistribution of Power on Earth." He advocates the hydrogen economy, which sounds great, yet currently the energy web he proposes is technically nonfeasible and to some physicists, it appears theoretically impossible. (Maybe we can violate some laws of physics?)
Seeing the face of California in a manhole cover
My wife and I grew up in the San Fernando Valley and recently returned for a short stay. The occasion was the wedding of our niece, one of three Korean girls adopted by my sister.
Making safety happen in Browns Valley
This is a response to Chris Craiker's commentary in the paper on Oct. 9 ("Mott understands Browns Valley issues") regarding emergency services response into Browns Valley.
AmCan Chamber endorsements took a wrong turn
As signs start to pop up on our landscape to announce candidates and measures, I have noticed that there seems to be a group appearing in American Canyon -- I'll call them the "three amigos." This is a very scary scenario. The American Canyon Chamber of Commerce, in its infinite wisdom, spelled it out in a recent press release: two or possibly three candidates are running as a "team," while a fourth awaits their election to council.
89: A rare chance to make democracy real
What would we call it if a baseball player gave the umpire a $25,000 check before sliding into home plate? What would we call it if a lawyer offered a judge a similar payment before he announced his verdict? What do we call it when a lobbyist gives a public official such a check before he makes the public policy that shapes the context of our lives?
California coming to a crossroads
In little more than two weeks Californians will decide on $37 billion worth of proposals on government bonds to rebuild roads and levees, improve public school campuses and boost subsidies to create housing that average wage-earners can afford to live in.
Iraq struggles causing strife in Washington
American patience with the war in Iraq is wearing thin. It's no longer just liberal blue-staters fed up with the Bush administration's foreign policy, or Republican members of Congress annoyed at this albatross during campaign season. The administration itself seems to be growing impatient with the situation in Iraq -- especially the unwillingness or inability of the government in Baghdad to put an end to sectarian violence.
Let me hear you, financial advisors
Dear editor,
Access denied at Vets Home
Dear editor,I sent the following letter to the enforcement division of the Fair Political Practices Commission, and to the California Department of Veterans Affairs and the Allied Council California Veterans Home at Yountville:
A safe haven for teens
Dear editor,
A dangerous weapons proposal
Dear editor,
Too good to keep secret
Dear editor,
Losing trust in Land Trust
Dear editor,
Time is now for Napa parks
Dear editor,
Let us in to Goodman building
Dear editor,
Yes on I, for the future
Dear editor,
I stands for incomplete
Dear editor,
Protect Napa's open space
Dear editor,