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The 2008 Democratic National Convention is being held in Denver, Colorado, August 25th through August 28th.
Wednesday, 8/27/08: Anti-DNC convergence space raided by police and two people were arrested.
Reports: 1 | 2
Tuesday, 8/26/08: The Iraq Veterans Against the War orchestrated guerrilla theater in downtown Denver to show the brutality of the U.S. Occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. The war veterans, dressed in full military gear, staged realistic portrayals of actual interactions between U.S. troops and Iraqi civilians.
Audio: 1
Monday, 8/25/08: Activists goal for the day was to crash lavish fund raising parties throughout downtown Denver. Five community organizers from Kansas and Missouri were arrested this morning by the FBI and Denver PD. Late in the day, a police "kettle" operation (whereby police surround, contain, and arrest large numbers of protesters at once) led to about 100 arrests near a delegate meeting in a Denver hotel.
Video: 1 ·
Audio: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 ·
Photos: 1 | 2 | 3 ·
Reports: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
Sunday, 8/24/08: Two pink tanks blasting raucous music and masked protesters took over the downtown of the Mile High City on Sunday on the eve of the Democratic National Convention. Denver's 16th Street Mall — a 16-block pedestrian and public transit corridor in the center of the city — was overrun by an Unconventional Denver orchestrated action at 3 p.m. on Sunday. The day started off with a Recreate '68 morning action that brought out 2,000 people to the corporate gates of the Pepsi Center in the End the Occupation March to protest of the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and other occupations throughout the world. Dead Prez kicked off the march from the Civic Center. World Can't Wait headed the march. Many smaller groups and individuals participated in the Recreate '68 action. Towards the end of the march, a Fox News reporter was surrounded by demonstrators and physically removed from the action. As the day wore on, the Alliance for Real Democracy held a Funk the War march at 2:15 p.m. on the 16th Street Mall in downtown. The event brought out more than 1,000 people, including members of Code Pink and Iraq Veterans Against the War.
Video: 1 ·
Photos: 1 | 2 | 3 ·
Reports: 1 | 2
More on Indybay:
Schedule: DNC response starts Saturday! | '68 — Then and Now | Misunderstanding causes cancelled DNC Public Enemy concert | Riot Manifesto (IAC)
Other Coverage: Colorado-IMC | Infoshop
Organizers: Recreate 68 | Unconventional Denver | DNC Disruption 08 | Unconventional Action | Alliance for Real Democracy | World Can't Wait
Previous Indybay Coverage of 2008 DNC Protest Planning
Indybay Coverage of 2008 RNC in St Paul

The RNC Welcoming Committee created a " Swarm, Seize, Stay" strategy which involves dividing St. Paul, Minnesota into sectors to facilitate coordination of blockades and other creative resistance to the RNC. Northern California radicals have banded together as "Unconventional Action (UA) in the Bay" and collectively chosen to adopt SECTOR 4 in downtown St. Paul. Sector 4 is one of seven sectors that surround the Xcel Center, home of the 2008 Republican National Convention. Organizers from coast to coast representing a variety of different communities are adopting other sectors.
UA in the Bay recently announced a Barricade Building Contest with categories that include Biggest-Baddest, Best Use of Found Materials, Best Use of Vehicle(s), Best Strategic Location, Most Creative, and Most Difficult to Remove. In addition, three street intersections in Sector 4 have been named as convergence points for the morning of September 1st before demonstrations are expected to become mobile.
A pre-RNC UA in the Bay meeting will be held in St. Paul on August 30th.
Read More · St. Paul Maps: 1 | 2 · NoRNC.org · Unconventional Action
From the Indybay Newswire: Minneapolis PD Detains Three Indy Journalists; Confiscates Equipment | RNC Videos | UA in the Bay show at Albany Bulb cancelled by police | UA in the Bay Benefit Show in Albany | UA in the Bay Benefit Show in SF | CRASH THE RNC: Sector 4 Barricade Building Contest | Tactics and Prognosis for Successful RNC Protest | UA in the Bay Final Organizing Meeting | More mapage of St. Paul area | Coldsnap Legal Collective to provide legal services related to 2008 RNC | UA in the Bay RideShare | Indymedia at the RNC: Callout and Update from TC-IMC | CRASH THE RNC: a call to action for activists and radicals of all stripes | St. Paul to provide stage for RNC protesters near Xcel Center | Trans/Queer/Womyn Housing @ RNC | Santa Cruz RNC Strategy Session, Aug. 2nd | UA in the Bay to Join the Resistance Against the RNC in St. Paul | UA in the Bay to Join the Resistance Against the RNC in St. Paul | RNC Strategy: Swarm, Seize, Stay / Sectors / Three-Tier Strategy / St. Paul Principles | Spokescouncil Against the Conventions (RNC/DNC), July 27th | RNC Welcoming Committee July Update | RNC/DNC Consulta for Bay Area Radicals | Be Prepared for Police Violence at the RNC Protest | Shut Down the Republication National Convention | RNC Welcomming Committee Comes to The East Bay | Unconventional Action: Call for Endorsements of RNC StrategyMore: Who's Paying for the Conventions? Corporate Sponsors | Thinking Beyond The Conventions: What Comes Next? | Regional organizing against the 2008 political conventions growsIndybay DNC 2008 coverage

MADERA -- The Lawyers' Committee filed a lawsuit today on behalf of Latino voters against the Madera Unified School District (MUSD), charging that the school district's at-large method of election is racially polarized and violates the California Voting Rights Act of 2001 (CVRA). The suit challenges the school district's discriminatory voting system and seeks to protect the Latino community against vote dilution.
Latinos constitute approximately 44% of MUSD's voting eligible population. Yet, only one of the current school board members is Latino. And over the past 25 years, no more than one Latino has ever occupied a seat on the board. This is a result of MUSD's at- large voting system, which along with a racially polarized electorate, has repeatedly resulted in a school board with little or no Latino representatives despite the significant Latino population in MUSD. The at-large method of election prevents Latino residents from electing candidates of their choice or influencing the outcome of school board elections.
The Lawyers' Committee recently sent letters to 25 school districts encouraging them to voluntarily end their practice of at-large elections or risk litigation. Approximately 90% of the school boards in the state are elected at-large.
Robert Rubin, Legal Director of the Lawyers' Committee and co-lead counsel, said: "We have put on notice city councils, school boards and other bodies throughout the state that conduct at-large elections that we will sue them if their voting is characterized by racially polarized voting. Voting is perhaps our most cherished liberty and any attempt to dilute that vote will be challenged."
Photos, Video, Story
Glen Chase, a Professor of Systems Management, has released a second report identifying the California Department of Food & Agriculture (CDFA) Light Brown Apple Moth (LBAM) eradication program as a fraud. Professor Chase's first report revealed the falsehoods the CDFA delivered after June 19 when courts and public pressure stopped the CDFA from aerial spraying synthetic pheromone based pesticides directly on cities. This second report reveals the fraud and misinformation delivered by the CDFA from the fall of 2007 until June 19, 2008.

On Thursday, August 12,anti-torture and anti-war activists came to disrupt Pelosi’s book promotion at the San Francisco’s Cowell Theatre. Pelosi was promoting her new book “Know Your Power- a Message to America’s Daughter.” While speaking, activists yelled and disrupted Pelosi’s talk, calling her “traitor” and yelling “torture,” “impeach.” Two people were escorted out by security personnel, and arguments erupted between Pelosi supporters and the activists.
Pelosi tried to keep speaking and avoid the disruption but the yelling grew stronger. Pelosi called on people interrupting her to “use their energy to get Obama elected, so we can stop the war,” but one activist answered back saying “this is what we elected you to do.” When Pelosi asked the crowd to be civil a woman answered, “Torture is not civil.”
Many Activists accuse Pelosi for not stopping the war in Iraq, and for knowing in 2002 about torture being conducted on detainees and not opposing it. Pelosi has stated in the past her opposition to impeachment of President Bush saying if somebody know of crime "that the president had committed, that would be a different story.”
Pelosi book promotion disrupted, or how I gave up on liberal pseudo-feminism |
Pelosi event report | Pelosi & The People of the Lie |

Outraged by the shenanigans that led to the "stolen" elections of 2000 and 2004, the Raging Grannies teamed up with the Open Voting Consortium in lobbying against proprietary voting machines. On August 6th, the Grannies helped demonstrate a new, easy to use voting machine that uses open source software at LinuxWorld in San Francisco, the largest single gathering of the open source community.
Open source voting technology has workings that are entirely transparent to auditors and can also be voter-verified, unlike some of the electronic voting machines recently decertified by the state of California due to security problems.
Photos:
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2
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Black Box Voting
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Bay Area Raging Grannies

On July 7th through 9th, the G-8 countries held their annual meeting high above Lake Toyoaka in Hokkaido Japan at an exclusive spa resort. This is part of the usual pattern of the annual G-8 meetings to hold them in the most remote areas possible. Hokkaido, a land of beautiful lakes and volcanos is the most rural and least populated of the four major islands that make up Japan. The Japanese government spent $250 million in security measures and deployed 22,000 national police to Hokkaido and another 20,000 were on reserve in Tokyo.
All the G-8 countries; Germany, France, Russia, Italy, England, Japan and of course the U.S. make up less then 35% per cent of the world's population but control the great majority of the wealth. The emerging economies of Brazil, China, India, were not included, but they along with Mexico and South Africa got to have meetings on the side. (The little G-5)
The one agreement that was reached at the summit was that the G-8 countries would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by the year 2050, 42 years from now. Fidel Castro commented in his reflections of July 15, that this "is about the time that hell freezes over".
Photos & Report
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Resistance and Repression in Japan continue: Inside the Anti-G8
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G8: Summits and summits
Previous Indybay Coverage of the G8 Summit And Protests

On July 10th, Bush has signed into law the FISA Amendment Act. The law allows the government to spy on emails, phone calls, web surfing, and other communications without warrants. The law also includes immunity to telecommunication companies who participated in an illegal spying by the government. An older version past by the House was threatened to be veto by President Bush for not including this immunity.
The ACLU has issued a statement calling the law unconstitutional, while others have pointed that this law is an assault on fundamental rights such as the first and fourth amendments.
According to Mark Klein a person who worked for AT&T for 22 years, the government built secrets rooms in communication companies across the U.S. and have been monitoring countless citizens in all forms of internet communications.
Numerous democrats have voted for the bill, among them Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama. Obama voted for the bill, although he had promised to oppose the bill if it guaranteed immunity to the telecommunication companies. Obama has justified
this by stating that the government should have the ability to defend the American people from terror attacks and that the newer version of the FISA bill allows a secret court, not the president, the right to decide who can be spied on.
In 2004, according to the government’s own figures, all of the 1,758 wiretap warrants submitted to the FISA secret court were granted.
New Wiretapping Law: A Big Leap in Big Brotherization of Society | Obama joins Senate vote to legitimize Bush's domestic spying operation | Today—U.S. Senate Votes Whether to Shoot Down 1st and 4th Amendments l SF AT&T Whistleblower And CWA Member Urges Against Immunity for Telecoms in Bush Spy Program l Compare Provisions in “Hitler’s Laws” with FISA AMENDMENTS ACT OF 2008 l EFF Speaks Out Against Telecom Immunity Deal l Senators Dodd and Feingold Criticize Bond's False FISA "Compromise" l Spying Telecoms Receive Billions in Government Contracts l Interview on the Wiretapping Bill & the Unprecedented Expansion of Presidential Powers l AT&T Works in More Places, Like NSA Headquarters l The FISA Amendment Law is signed into Law l HR 6304 Sets New Referendum

Glen Chase, a Professor of Systems Management, has released a report identifying the California Department of Food & Agriculture (CDFA) Light Brown Apple Moth (LBAM) eradication program as a fraud. "CDFA claims the moth is an emergency and pretends that they can eradicate it in order to steal $100's of millions from taxpayer emergency funds, set aside for real emergencies."
"CDFA's fraudulent goal of eradication is based on a fake emergency, which was confirmed invalid by The Monterey and Santa Cruz County Superior Courts when both ruled that the CDFA violated California's Environmental Law by claiming an emergency exemption and spraying pesticides on populated areas." Both courts also found that no damage from this moth had occurred, contrary to CDFA's claim.
After the court rulings and after 31 cities passed resolutions to stop the spray of pesticides from this program, the CDFA gave up the aerial spray of synthetic pheromone based pesticides directly on cities. CDFA claimed it was the only method to eradicate the moth within the window of opportunity of only months that existed for eradication.
Now the CDFA reports they will instead use an untested sterile moth release program that won't be fully operational for three years, in 2011. "How the window of opportunity to eradicate the moth magically jumped from just months to years is a story that the CDFA is still working on." Read More and Download the Report

In a July 14th, New York Times Op Ed, Barack Obama says:
"As I’ve said many times, we must be as careful getting out of Iraq as we were careless getting in. We can safely redeploy our combat brigades at a pace that would remove them in 16 months. That would be the summer of 2010 — two years from now, and more than seven years after the war began. After this redeployment, a residual force in Iraq would perform limited missions: going after any remnants of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, protecting American service members and, so long as the Iraqis make political progress, training Iraqi security forces."
In other words, he does not plan to get all of the troops out of Iraq and he will only get most of the troops out in two years. And what does he explain he will do with these troops? Redeploy them. Redeployed where? His rhetoric has been clear: Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran.
Obama goes on to call for a surge in Afghanistan as well as war in Pakistan:
"Ending the war [in Iraq] is essential to meeting our broader strategic goals, starting in Afghanistan and Pakistan [...] As president, I would pursue a new strategy, and begin by providing at least two additional combat brigades to support our effort in Afghanistan. We need more troops, more helicopters [...]" Read More
see also: Obama outlines policy of endless war

The 4th Annual Old Time American Flag Burn took place on July 3rd at the Far West Fire Ring on Seabright Beach in Santa Cruz. This BYOF (Bring Your Own Flag) event is a ritual celebration of the First Amendment to the Constitution which protects freedom of speech, including the burning of the United States flag. Instead of flag desecration, this is flag consecration.
Two years ago congress attempted to amend the constitution to ban flag desecration and it failed by one vote. Since then congress has continued to attempt to generate a bill that would pass muster, but support has decreased. Justice William Joseph Brennan, Jr. noted that the "Principal function of free speech under our system of government is to invite dispute; it may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even stirs people to anger." Organizers say their "intention is not to anger folks, but to create a safe place for our community to exercise this seldom used freedom. Read More
American Flag Consecration a Success!!
previous years: 2005 | 2006

A group of San Francisco residents called The Presidential Memorial Commission of San Francisco are gathering signatures for an initiative to be put on the November ballot. The Initiative will ask to rename Oceanside Water Pollution Control Plant the George W Bush Sewage Plant.
The group has managed to collect 8,500 signatures so far (15,000 are needed for an initiative).
The initiative is going to read: Should The City And County of San Francisco Rename The Oceanside Water Pollution Control Plant the George W Bush Sewage Plant?
Some San Francisco residents strongly object to the resolution. One commentator on Indybay writes "sewage plants are a vital necessity to our survival, and fertilizer is necessary for plant growth upon which our food depends". The commentator goes on to say that we should "respect the labor that makes possible the work of the sewage plants" and passage of the resolution "honors Bush" and thus should be opposed.
Photos
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Video
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The Presidential Memorial Commission of San Francisco
On June 19th, the California Department of Food and Agriculture and the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that aerial pheromone application will no longer take place over urban areas and will be "limited to agricultural land and undeveloped regions as a tool of last result" to control the Light Brown Apple Moth (LBAM). “The bottom line for eradicating this pest has always been safety,” said Sam Farr, representative of the 17th Congressional District of California. “The public was never convinced that spraying was safe or the only option, and the result has been protests, anger and a series of lawsuits."

In October 2007 the United States, the European Community, Switzerland and Japan simultaneously announced that they would negotiate a new intellectual property enforcement treaty, the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, or ACTA. Australia, the Republic of Korea, New Zealand and Mexico have joined the negotiations. Although the proposed treaty's title might suggest that the agreement deals only with counterfeit physical goods (such as medicines), what little information has been made available publicly by negotiating governments about the content of the treaty makes it clear that it will have a far broader scope, and in particular, will deal with tools targeting "Internet distribution and information technology." To date, disturbingly little information has been released about the actual content of the agreement. However, despite that, it is clearly on a fast track; treaty proponents want it tabled at the G8 summit in July, and completed by the end of 2008.
Skidmark Bob of Free Radio Santa Cruz interviewed media analyst John Anderson about ACTA and H.R. 4279, the Prioritizing Resources and Organization for Intellectual Property (PRO IP) Act of 2007. The PRO IP Act proposes to make substantial changes to federal copyright law, including the appointment of a copyright Czar. Read More and Listen to Audio
see also: Audio Collage on Sharing Music in the Digital Age

Armed with bazookas, instruments and colorful posters, residents of Santa Cruz will show their support on Tuesday, June 10th at 3:30pm in favor of a pending city resolution requesting that all US military aid to Colombia be re-directed to domestic drug prevention and rehabilitation programs, which have been shown to be more effective in the “war on drugs.” Bert Muhly of Tres Americas will speak on the issue, as well as Sandra Alvarez, long time Colombia activist and Ph.D candidate at the University of California Santa Cruz.
“The US has put almost five billion dollars into the Colombian military, and the army has committed massacres and collaborated with death squads and drug traffickers with almost total impunity,” said national campaign organizer Liza Smith of the Fellowship of Reconciliation’s Latin America program. “It’s time US communities stand up for how they want their tax dollars spent.”
Military spending in Colombia was supposed to cut cocaine production in half by 2005. Instead, retail prices for the drug have dropped and purity has increased, according to the Office on National Drug Control Policy. Meanwhile, a recent study showed that killings of civilians by the Colombian army has increased since the U.S. overhauled military training of its forces. Read More
NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness) Santa Cruz County and mental health advocates will rally on Tuesday, June 10th at 9:30am in front of the County Government Building on Ocean Street to call for the protection of mental health services in Santa Cruz County. Children, incarcerated individuals, and individuals with mental illness are losing their services or will receive reduced services.

California held an election on June 3rd. Proposition 98 failed to pass and Proposition 99 passed.
In the CA Assembly, Nancy Skinner beat Kriss Worthington and in the State Senate Mark Leno beat Carole Migden.
Leno Victory Marks New Era in San Francisco Politics
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State Election Results
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San Francisco Election Results
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Alameda County Election Results
Propositions 98 and 99 were aimed at changing the
government’s power to take private property.
Proposition 98 would have abolished rent control and other renter protections.
Proposition 99 will block the government from
taking single family homes or condominiums to transfer
to other private parties, but will allow eminent domain
for public uses and will not ban rent control.
Prop 98 loses, Prop 99 wins
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Tenants Speakout Against Realtors For Supporting Prop 98
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Protect rent control, print out a No on 98 sign
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San Francisco Tenants Rally Against Prop 98, Then Vote Against It
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Prop 98 can provoke a city-wide rent strike
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Four days to Save Rent Control
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Oakland, Berkeley renters oppose Proposition 98
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No on Prop 98 Update
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RHANAC's Steve Edrington Accusses Renters of Being Entrenched Tenants
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Prop 98 Continues To Lose In The Polls
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Expose the Landlords' Scheme
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Non Profit Housing Developers May Be Selling Out The Poor
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Prop 98 would eliminate rent control and tenant protections
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How To Defeat Prop 98
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Progressive Politicos Preach to the Choir
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Housing California Conference Will Have Prop 98 Discussion
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Housing California Conference To Have Bush/McCain Supporter As Speaker On Prop 98 & 99
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Save Rent Control & Tenant Protections Update
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Prop 98 Trailing Badly; Californians Support Rent Control
In San Francisco, Proposition G passed and Proposition F failed to pass. Propositions F & G focused on development by Lennar Corp in Bay View Hunters Point.
Proposition F would have required that half of all Lennar's housing be available to people making less than the median area income, which is $75,000 for a family of four.
Prop. G is the deal Newsom and Lennar were pushing; it will give the financially troubled developer the right to build 10,000 new housing units, office and retail space, and a new football stadium, along with 300 new acres of parks, in one of the city's most economically depressed areas.
Optimism in the Face of Defeat in the Bayview
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Election fraud probably committed for Prop G
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Election Fraud Watch in SF on Prop G-2d 49er Stadium Swindle
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The people are for Proposition F and that is what really matters
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Say Yes to F
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Big Labor Sells Out
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The Labor Council of San Francisco has helped Propostion F is a big way
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Bayview Residents: the Hidden Treasure
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Hold out for Hunters Point
Chris Daly's Blog
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San Francisco Tenants Union
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NoProp98.org
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PropositionF.com
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SF Bay Guardian Endorsements
On May 13th, a huge mob of cyclists rolled peacefully through the streets of Santa Cruz after a 6pm convergence at the Clock Tower. Bikers spanned city blocks in the right lane of Mission Street to raise awareness about California Vehicle Code Section 21202, cyclists may use the full right lane when the lane "is too narrow for a bicycle to safely ride to the side of a motor vehicle." Many people wore yellow shirts with a figure of a bike and the words "MAY USE FULL LANE cvc 21202."
7:30PM Tuesday Sep 9
Considering Democracy
8PM Saturday Sep 13
The Erotic Campaign
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