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Don Bauder: David Crossley: Under the name Aardvark, you have ...
This fan will miss the laughs you brought us, thanks to the local scoundrels. I can testify that a emergency stent saved my life. Dr. Psycholizard recommends Mahler's Ninth and Das Lied at night, and Eric Satie in the morning. I'm certain you will keep writing, but only what relaxes you. Thanks— September 18, 2018 6:57 p.m.
Jefferson1776: It's good to point out that the labor shortage has...
If the labor market were really so tight, wages would rise without hiking the minimum wage. When the economy was healthy, wage hikes led instead of followed inflation. There is real distress, masked by analysis of aggregates instead of specifics. In an economy rising at an aggregate of 3%,for everyone that doubles their income, many go broke. Health care perhaps skews all these statistics. For the broken, California has a vigorous public health system, and taking a job from Manpower and the like, who I suspect doesn't offer full coverage, might toss you into the sharkfest of private plans, and at the end of the day, your new job might cost you both adequate healthcare and money.— September 13, 2018 4:35 p.m.
CPUC wipes away Peevey/Edison collusion, criminal investigation
This result might be disappointing, but we should congratulate Michael Aguirre and Maria Severson. $750 million is not nothing, ratepayers should thank them. They fought for consumers and won. In a just world, their victory would be more complete. But in California, kids do jail time for a few thousand in credit card fraud, while billion dollar con men never are arrested.— July 31, 2018 9:19 a.m.
Onslow, lost in the onslaught
Most historians date the end of the Enlightenment to the shock of the French Revolution and the wars that followed. Onslow, who was three in 1789 when that Revolution started, does belong to that "Classical" enlightenment sound, judged by that excellent excerpt. That style had been superseded long before the First World War by Composers we now call Romantic like Wagner, Liszt, and Chopin. Several generations later, composers like Mahler and Shostakovich pioneered a radically different style well before 1914. I can't see the Great War as fatal to Onslow's memory. his style seemed quaint long before then. It's not remarkable that composers should be forgotten,very few are remembered.— May 10, 2018 4:14 p.m.
DeMaio looking beyond the gas tax repeal
Ken Harrison, you should learn to fake objectivity better. "Hold" DeMaio will never overcome those charges of sexual exhibitionism to win another office. And now a Republican governor candidate *making the November ballot!!!,* is considered a groundswell of Republicanism. Two questions, do our roads need repair? And how will we pay for those repairs. Those of us who don't spend all day holding the mayo and drive vehicles, see the gas tax as a solution. DeMaio, and the wealthy man who holds him as a spouse, are problems.— May 9, 2018 11:51 a.m.
Bruce Henderson sues City over his firing
Now I don't know what makes billionaires spend millions on those luxury suites at stadiums, but sex is my most entertaining guess. It should be true. More likely they want to gamble.— April 30, 2018 1:37 a.m.
Bruce Henderson sues City over his firing
While Bruce Henderson fights to prove how unfair the World is to old White men, the schemers in charge have cooked up a new scheme to build a billion dollar stadium for some imagined NFL team owner. The proposed SDSU Stadium is now to be expandable, with some bizarre new roofing scheme, and of course luxury box brothels for the billionaires. Seems like a stadium roof builder must be part of the kickback, because a totally unnecessary roof is plotted for every proposal pushed. This time to keep the sunshine out. We need Bruce Henderson to keep kicking at the schemers aiming to defraud our City. Should he persuade the City Attorney, his former employer, to pay him pity money, it will seem corrupt at best. At worst they will fight to prove he is unfit, and if he should think to represent himself, perhaps he is.— April 29, 2018 9:36 a.m.
Bruce Henderson sues City over his firing
Attorneys who make points, often end up skewering themselves.— April 26, 2018 8:58 a.m.
San Diego State slick magazine touts Mission Valley plan
Just vote no, and no! It's City land and shouldn't be given away.— April 25, 2018 4:37 p.m.
Bruce Henderson sues City over his firing
For those fortunate enough to avoid the Fox News addled brains trolling social media, there is a persistent pity party of White males blaming failure on discrimination. As an aged White Male, I find them laughable. Bruce Henderson is not a failure, instead he's a famous attorney, which is another word for jackass. I just can't see how he is damaged by being fired from such a crummy job. If he was fired to stop him from pursuing a case, that would be a bridge to fight on. He should let an attorney specialist handle this case, and move on to those public matters that made his name. I hope he isn't representing himself.— April 25, 2018 4:30 p.m.