Lion Dance, Evening Glass and LumaCon

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Petaluma

Lunar Lions

The fortnight of Lunar New Year approaches, bringing in the Year of the Dragon. Marin County Asian Community Alliance celebrates the turning back of the Earth in her orbit with a performance of the traditional Lion Dance. Similar to the perhaps more familiar dragon dances famous in San Francisco’s Chinatown, the Lion Dance manifests good luck, prosperity and health for the new year. The ornately constructed, multi-person lion and vibrant costumes offer the perfect start to an auspicious year. Gung hay fat choy! 3pm, Saturday, Feb. 10 at Pho Sonoma Vietnamese Cuisine, Petaluma Downtown Theatre Square, 140 Second St., Ste. 120, Petaluma. Family and children friendly event. No purchase required.

 
Napa

Smooth As Glass

Evening Glass is a local four-piece rock outfit which, in the words of the Bohemian, “carves along the edge of surf and noise, all at the pace of the sun setting slowly off the edge of the continent until the rush of the horizon accelerates to meet it.” Truly, audiences of the band swoon to the downtempo rock rooted in the noise and surf-revival sounds of the ’90s. And as those with teens will know, the ’90s are back. Last Pleasure and Evening Glass, 7:30pm, Saturday, Feb. 3 at the Napa Valley Distillery’s Hollywood Room, 2485 Stockton St., Napa. 21+. $10 cover.

 
Petaluma

Art Geeks Unite!

Those seeking a celebration of creativity and fandom may look no further than the annual LumaCon. This event is a free comic convention for youth and families and so much more. Dive into bins of back issues from Sonoma County comic stores, peruse drawing and artwork by local artists of all ages and see intricate costumes of favorite characters from every universe known to humankind, and beyond. Dang, even wear a cosplay fit. LARPing, drawing and crafts, and plenty of activities full of joy, all courtesy of the public and school librarians of Sonoma County. 10am to 4pm, Saturday, Feb. 3. Petaluma Community Center, 320 N McDowell Blvd., Petaluma. Free.

Tiburon

Not Ready for Some Football?

“For those looking for an alternative to wings, guac, chips, cheering, cursing and half-time shows,” the Petite Left Bank will be hosting an Anti-Super Bowl Party on game day. Get re-civilized with a Mimosa Bottle Service and All Day Happy Hour. The restaurant invites Super Bowl detractors to “revel in an atmosphere of tranquility while savoring our delectable menu additions featuring caviar chips and dip, grilled oysters, duck confit croquettes and indulgent short rib poutine.” Now that will make one want to get up and cheer. 11am to 8pm, Sunday, Feb. 11. Petit Left Bank, 1696 Tiburon Ave., Tiburon.

Time Capsule: Kingston Trio revives folk hits in Petaluma

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Against all odds, three dangerously coordinated boomers are still singing and strumming the tunes of the Kingston Trio, nearly seven decades after the band first took shape in the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco. Bohemian pop aesthetic was never the same. The three original band members have since passed away — but the latest stand-ins all have close ties to their Trio forefathers. Plus they look and sound eerily identical. Now they get to brag they’re one of the oldest bands still touring today. The modern iteration of the Trio will bring their time capsule of an American folk-revival set to the North Bay’s time capsule of an old Vaudeville theater at 7 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 2. It’ll be a folksy summer’s night in winter at the cozy Mystic Theatre in Petaluma. Think Appalachian murder ballads, flower-child harmonies, odes to ecology, border-town sagas and other vagabond nostalgia trips for the ages. (Tickets: Eventbrite)

Lotus Life: Surinder ‘Pal’ Sroa of Novato

Surinder Sroa has made Marin somewhat of a destination for authentic Indian cuisine, and “Pal,” as he likes to be called, is often there greeting both loyal and new customers alike.

What do you do?

I’m the founder and owner of the Lotus Family of Restaurants. Our flagship restaurant is Lotus Cuisine of India in downtown San Rafael. We even have an Indian grocery store right next door now. Cafe Lotus is a more casual outpost in Fairfax, and we just opened Salt-N-Pepper to serve up great sandwiches and breakfast.

Where do you live? Novato

How long have you lived in Marin? I moved here from India over 40 years ago.

Where can we find you when you’re not at work?

At the end of a very long day, I just go home to enjoy time with family, especially my grandchild.

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin is, where would you take them?

On a drive out to Drakes Beach in Point Reyes National Seashore, with a quick pit stop in downtown Fairfax for a bite and a stroll.

What’s one thing Marin is missing?

A vibrant Indian community, as in some other Bay Area counties.

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites?

Give it your all, whatever you do. Always aim to give 100%. No, more than 100%!

If you could invite anyone to a special dinner, who would they be?

The people in Marin who cannot afford to eat at our restaurants. In fact, it’s become our Lotus Family Thanksgiving tradition to do that. One year, over 1,000 people showed up; I was glad we did not run out of food!

What is some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago?

I wish I was calmer sometimes. So if you get really angry, sleep on it before you act.

What is something that in 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy?

Looking back at all the things I did in a real rush, I will realize that I should have taken more time in order to avoid big mistakes.

Big question. What is one thing you’d do to change the world? Give the needy a bigger break. I try to lead by example. Those who are well off really need to share more.

Keep up with Sroa and the Lotus Family at lotusrestaurant.com.

Nish Nadaraja was on the founding team at Yelp, serves on the San Anselmo Arts Commission and attempts to play pickleball at Fairfax’s Cañon Club.

Marinshroom: MycoMarin finds fungus among us

Fungus is all around us, and so too are the fun-guys and fun-gals who gather together in the great outdoors to appreciate the arrival of California’s mushroom bloom each year.

The North Bay’s wet and rainy winters make for a rich mycological community, one which can be observed in the mycelium network underneath the earth, the mushrooms that fruit from it and the people who just can’t keep their minds off of said mushrooms.

Though the appearance of fungus is perhaps less readily apparent than a springtime swathe of purple and orange wildflowers across a hillside, mushrooms are no less enchanting a sight—at least for those who know where and when to look for them.

Once one begins to notice the amazing, often unseen world of mushrooms, it can be hard to stop seeing and even searching out new and intriguing sights of fungal delight: a log covered in turkey tails, jaunty jack-o-lanterns (orange by day, glow in the dark by night), puffballs in unlikely places…

West Marin, especially Point Reyes, is one of California’s most prolific places for finding and foraging many different varieties of mushrooms. Though foraging fungus is legal within the Point Reyes National Seashore Park, be sure to read up on the park’s rules and regulations before embarking on a foraging adventure. Or, if learning about fungus from local experts instead of reading about it sounds more enjoyable, consider connecting with Marin’s local and enthusiastic mycologists.

The Mycological Society of Marin (aka MycoMarin) is a 501c3 nonprofit organization, run by local mushroom lovers for other local mushroom lovers. MycoMarin and its members are dedicated to their mission of educating and delighting the community with their collective and extensive mycological expertise.

Alongside their annual fungus festival, MycoMarin also hosts speakers throughout the foraging season, as well as workshops and exclusive foraging excursions for a select number of members.

“One of the goals of our society is to get people outdoors,” said Kevin Sadlier who, along with his wife, Xander Wessells, owns Green Jeans Garden Supply in Mill Valley and helped to found the Mycological Society of Marin. “By holding a fungus festival, we expose people to the wonders of fungus, and hopefully thereby stimulate them to explore the outside fungal world around them.”

The Fourth Annual Fungus Festival, Wild in Marin, took place earlier this month and was met with significant enthusiasm from the local community, who created quite the crowd in and around the Mill Valley Community Center on Jan. 6.

Despite the torrential downpour the North Bay hosted alongside the festival that weekend, droves of dedicated mushroom enthusiasts celebrated their love of all things fungal in style. Quite literally, considering the number of red and white mushroom hats, earrings shirts and more worn to add a certain festive fungal energy to the day.

Vendors aplenty assembled at the fungus festival to show off their wares and sell their creative, eclectic and downright delicious mushroom-centric merchandise, ranging from forms of clothes and linens stained with natural mushroom dyes, leather bags embossed with mushroom decals and other visual art to do with fungus (both wearable and not)—and, of course, more mushrooms than imaginable to buy, take home and cook up into a delicious meal.

Apart from mushroom merchandise available for purchase and perusal, guests at the festival were also able to enjoy live music—from a folk band called The Hot Clams—and partake in gourmet dishes such as fresh-foraged chanterelle soup, porcini grilled cheese and much more.

The delicious aromas and flavors alone are enough to make Wild in Marin an event worth attending, especially considering the unmistakable and enchanting scent of truffle wafting throughout the day.

“The truffles that came down from Oregon…those truffles were supplied by our friend, John Getz,” said Sadlier.

And as if all that music and mushroom-related food, merchandise and festivities weren’t enough to make this event well worth attending, the educational opportunities certainly did the trick.

The upstairs level of the fungus festival, for instance, hosted an entire room of fresh-foraged mushrooms that were gathered by MycoMarin members and volunteers, to be identified by experts the night before the festival. This allowed attendees to view real-life examples of mushrooms they may see in the wild, giving greater context and exposure to local fungi in a safe environment.

Meanwhile, the downstairs auditorium hosted speakers including Mayumi Fujio of Mayumix Botanical Design; Chad Hyatt, the author of The Mushroom Hunters Kitchen; Noah Siegel, the author of Mushrooms of the Redwood Coast; and Maria Finn, who was accompanied by her truffle dog named Flora Jayne. The festival also welcomed Alan Rockefeller and J.R. Blair alongside MycoMarin board members Edmond Allmond, Eric Multhaup, Cherry Allen Driscoll, Else Vellinga and Finola Diaz.

“I would love for Finola [Diaz, MycoMarin’s membership chair] to get more recognition…she is the backbone of MycoMarin!” said Wessells.

Upcoming events for MycoMarin include a presentation from Dr. Else Vellinga on Wednesday, Feb. 21 at the Mill Valley Library. Vellinga is a mycologist who has described 22 species of fungus as new for California.

The next MycoMarin event is set to take place on Wednesday, March 20, also at the Mill Valley Library, and will feature guest speaker Chad Hyatt. Hyatt is a classically-trained chef known for his expertise in not only foraging and preparing gourmet edible mushrooms but also in surprising diners with dishes made from the less-sought-out but still edible fungus among us. Finally, on Wednesday, April 17, San Francisco State University biology lecturer J.R. Blair will talk all about fungi name changes.

Other MycoMarin events to look forward to include Christine Lamour’s drawing workshop, Sarah Kleiner’s dyes workshop and a workshop for inoculating logs with Lion’s Mane.

MycoMarin members will also have the opportunity to attend forays to forage fungus under the guidance of experienced members who can teach the difference between a jack-o-lantern and a chanterelle. The former fungus glows in the dark and will give gastrointestinal problems to those who consume it, and the other is a delicacy in high demand.

To learn more about mushrooms and the people who can identify, find and cook them, visit the official Mycological Society of Marin website at mycomarin.org, call 415.389.8333 or send an email to in**@*******in.org. And for all those first-time foragers, just remember to follow the golden rule of mushroom hunting: When in doubt, throw it out (i.e. please do not eat unidentified wild fungi without the thumbs up from an expert mycologist).

Chamber Music Marin hosts The Black Oak Ensemble

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Mill Valley

Unsilenced

Chamber Music Marin hosts The Black Oak Ensemble as part of their 2023-24 Chamber Music Concert Series at 5pm, Sunday, Jan. 28, at Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church, 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley. This concert showcases the ensemble’s poignant “Silenced Voices” project, highlighting string trios by Jewish composers affected by the Holocaust and reflecting resilience and hope in adversity. The ensemble features violinists Aurélien Fort Pederzoli and Desirée Ruhstadt, and cellist David Cunliffe. In a visit to Budapest, Hungary, in 2016, the latter two discovered string trios in a local shop that were penned by young musicians who would not survive the Holocaust. The pieces featured in “Silenced Voices” were among them. Tickets are $48, with free admission for youths under 18. For more information, visit chambermusicmarin.org.

Napa

Tour of Tastes

Compline Restaurant in Napa is set to host an immersive culinary event, “24 Hours in Mexico City,” in collaboration with chef Diego Isunza Kahlo, Frida Kahlo’s great-great nephew. From Thursday, Feb. 8 to Saturday, Feb. 10, chef Kahlo will present an eight-course tasting menu, a tribute to his hometown, Mexico City. The menu, representing a day in the city, will take guests on a gastronomic journey through its diverse neighborhoods, starting and ending with breakfast dishes. Each course is paired with personal stories from chef Kahlo, enhancing the dining experience. Guests can follow their culinary tour on a provided map of CDMX. Reservations for this unique dining experience are $125 per person, with an option for an international wine pairing. Bookings can be made at Compline Restaurant’s OpenTable, bit.ly/compline-24.

Petaluma

Archive Live

Petaluma Historical Library and Museum has announced the launch of its new archival website, a significant step in making Petaluma’s rich history widely accessible. This digital platform offers high-quality versions of photographs, documents and artifacts, catering to researchers, scholars and the general public. The website, funded by a grant from Sonoma County Supervisor David Rabbit’s office, is a collaborative effort led by collections manager Solange Russek, data content manager Amy Hogan and web designer Martin Ferrini. It features an easy-to-navigate, searchable interface, with options for the public to purchase and download digital copies. As the team digitizes and uploads thousands more items, the site will regularly expand its content. Explore Petaluma’s historical treasures online at petaluma-historical-library-and-museum-archive.org.

Napa

Projection Project

The di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art presents “We the People,” a video projection by photographer Jock McDonald, to be displayed on the center’s exterior and visible from Sonoma Highway. The installation runs nightly from 6-10pm. It features dynamic black-and-white portraits of San Franciscans, seamlessly morphing into each other, symbolizing our interconnectedness and shared humanity. Conceived during the pandemic’s isolation, McDonald’s work emphasizes themes of pluralism, diversity, equity and inclusion and kicks off with a Tailgate Opening Reception from 5-7pm, Saturday, Feb. 10, at di Rosa’s parking lot. The event includes bites from Oakville Grocery Food Truck and a special screening of Godzilla, following an address by McDonald. Free for members and $10 for non-members, tickets are available at dirosaart.org. The center is located at 5200 Sonoma Hwy., Napa.

Your Letters, Jan. 24

Incendiary Irony

It’s my right, even if you think I’m wrong, to express the truth about what I see in America. Americans could care less about others who exist anywhere past the ends of our noses. Americans could care less about the lives of Muslim citizens in Gaza. Not our problem; let the president handle it.

Folks trying to get past our southern border to start a life free of the savage conditions in their homelands? We’re full; go back home. Folks in neighboring states? State borders might as well be closed to them too, unless they bring money in here to spend.

Next-door neighbors? Don’t know ’em. Don’t want to meet ’em. Only way we’d tolerate their faces is if they agreed to come to church with us. Employees? No loyalty to employers; vice versa too. People we hook up with socially? Don’t stumble for a second, or we’ll cancel your sorry butts.

Spouses? Marriage is only good if it works for me. If it works best for spouse or children, too bad; we’ll exit the situation anyway. Celebrities? Get as close as humanly possible and worship forevermore.

Kimball Shinkoskey

Santa Rosa

Love Letter

I’m an occasional resident of Sonoma County. Meaning, I love it there, and when my remote work schedule allows it, I haul ass from Wisconsin and get to a tiny house I rent in, believe it or not, Healdsburg.

I just want to say I love your paper. It fills me with joy, even if the news is concerning. It reminds me that aside from liking to spend a few months there every year because the hiking puts me in the trees or on the Pacific, there are also a lot of really cool people there who think a lot like I do. I embrace that. I look forward to more.

Jack Kear

Madison, WI, and Healdsburg

American Innovation: Don’t give away our IP

Federal officials may soon decide to give away key domestic assets—American intellectual property (IP)—to our rivals. This will have profound and dangerous consequences for U.S. workers and our economy.

At issue is a proposal before the World Trade Organization. It would waive patent protections for Covid-19 tests and treatments, which would normally be guaranteed around the world under the 1995 Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property, or TRIPS.

The WTO already approved one TRIPS waiver—with support from the United States—for Covid-19 vaccines in June 2022. Advocates for that waiver, primarily China and India, claimed that, by rejecting patent rights and allowing others to make copycat versions of vaccines, the waiver would make vaccines more readily available around the world.

However, as of today, more than enough vaccines have been made and distributed to inoculate the entire global population without anyone ever relying on the IP waiver.

Companies such as Pfizer and Merck made their innovations available to qualified generic manufacturers, thereby expanding access to those products in low- and middle-income countries. Today, largely due to these voluntary licensing agreements and the end of the pandemic, the global supply of diagnostics and therapeutics exceeds demand.

In other words, if the Biden administration decides to support an expansion of the TRIPS waiver, it will signal to American innovators and investors that research and development in healthcare is not valued and cannot reliably be protected.

Without robust protection of intellectual property, investment in American research and development will decline. The U.S. biopharmaceutical industry supports more than 4.4 million jobs. Our life sciences companies and their partners contribute more than $1.4 trillion in economic output.

One of the waiver’s principal sponsors, China, has a well-documented history of IP theft to support its domestic industry. Put simply, the Biden administration has an obligation to protect the fruits of American innovation—for the sake of our technological and economic interests, our labor force and for global health.

Brian O’ Shaughnessy is chair of the IP Transactions and Licensing Group of Dinsmore & Shohl, LLP.

FLOTUS State: Member of the de-press

The most interesting souvenir from Dr. Jill Biden’s recent SoCo sojourn was the official “White House Press Pool” pass issued by the Secret Service. 

The fact that they were left blank, unfettered by some wine country journo’s smudgy byline, only raises their resale value. That said, I’m keeping mine as a memento of the hours spent waiting in an airline lounge for FLOTUS. Here’s a factoid courtesy of Nexis: “The abbreviation FLOTUS (pronounced /ˈfləʊtɪs/) was first used in 1983 by Donnie Radcliffe, writing in The Washington Post.” 

When doing a presser, waiting for a politico is like waiting for Godot but longer. I’ve done it before. Sometime near the Jurassic period of my career, I covered 2000’s Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, where nothing notable happened apart from Rage Against the Machine’s frontperson’s Zack de la Rocha rock-splaining to a concert crowd across the street that “our democracy has been hijacked,” obviously before we knew how good we had it.

Nearly a quarter-century later, the vibe is about the same. Dr. Jill Biden was in town to participate in an event at Healdsburg’s Puma Springs Vineyards for the Biden Victory Fund. Local journos were invited to Sonoma County Airport to cover her deplaning. And clearly, we had nothing better to do. The event was exactly like going to pick someone up at the airport, only to have them whisked away in a shiny, black Suburban.

No questions, no waves. Just a bunch of educated and trained professionals corralled behind an orange traffic barricade humming Peggy Lee’s “Is That All There Is?”  

The usual suspects were there, including nearly half a dozen reporters from the Oakleaf, courtesy of the junior college. Our Man Kallen from the Healdsburg Tribune was present; ditto the editor of Made Local Magazine, who arrived with me, seeing as we’re married. Our gang raised the median age of the operation by a few decades and was evidently at the shallow end of the press pool since the Press Democrat’s guy got to be the official “pool reporter.” 

My detail was drinking the complimentary coffee and helping the sharpshooters focus their sights. KRON’s camera-op theoretically got some footage, and Northern California Public Media’s Noah Abrams quipped that his hearing will never be the same whilst recording audio of Biden’s idling jet (up to about 140 dB, FYI). 

The day’s highlight was Jimmy the Bomb dog, a golden English labrador with whom Supervisor James Gore was chuffed to share a nickname.

Free Will Astrology: Week of January 17

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries chemist Percy Julian (1899–1975) was a trailblazer in creating medicine from plants. He patented over 130 drugs and laid the foundation for the production of cortisone and birth control pills. Julian was also a Black man who had to fight relentlessly to overcome the racism he encountered everywhere. I regard him as an exemplary member of the Aries tribe, since he channeled his robust martial urges toward constructive ends again and again and again. May he inspire you in the coming weeks, dear Aries. Don’t just get angry or riled up. Harness your agitated spirit to win a series of triumphs.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus actor Pierce Brosnan says, “You struggle with money. You struggle without money. You struggle with love. You struggle without love. But it’s how you manage. You have to keep laughing, you have to be fun to be with, and you have to live with style.” Brosnan implies that struggling is a fundamental fact of everyday life, an insistent presence that is never far from our awareness. But if you’re willing to consider the possibility that his theory may sometimes be an exaggeration, I have good news: The coming months could be less filled with struggle than ever before. As you deal with the ease and grace, I hope you will laugh, be fun to be with and live with style—without having to be motivated by ceaseless struggle.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Gemini author and activist William Upski Wimsatt is one of my role models. Why? In part, because he shares my progressive political ideals and works hard to get young people to vote for enlightened candidates who promote social justice. Another reason I love him is that he aspires to have 10,000 role models. Not just a few celebrity heroes, but a wide array of compassionate geniuses working to make the world more like paradise. The coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to gather new role models, dear Gemini. I also suggest you look around for new mentors, teachers and inspiring guides.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): I want you to fulfill your desires! I want you to get what you want! I don’t think that yearnings are unspiritual indulgences that divert us from enlightenment. On the contrary, I believe our longings are sacred homing signals guiding us to our highest truths. With these thoughts in mind, here are four tips to enhance your quests in the coming months: 1. Some of your desires may be distorted or superficial versions of deeper, holier desires. Do your best to dig down and find their heart source. 2. To help manifest your desires, visualize yourself as having already accomplished them. 3. Welcome the fact that when you achieve what you want, your life will change in unpredictable ways. You may have to deal with a good kind of stress. 4. Remember that people are more likely to assist you in getting what you yearn for if you’re not greedy and grasping.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I regard Leo psychologist Carl Jung (1875–1961) as a genius with a supreme intellect. Here’s a quote from him that I want you to hear: “We should not pretend to understand the world only by the intellect; we apprehend it just as much by feeling. Therefore, the judgment of the intellect is, at best, only the half of truth, and must, if it be honest, also come to an understanding of its inadequacy.” You may already believe this wisdom in your gut, Leo. But like all of us, you live in a culture filled with authorities who value the intellect above feeling. So it’s essential to be regularly reminded of the bigger truth—especially for you right now. To make righteous decisions, you must respect your feelings as much as your intellect.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Poet Rainer Maria Rilke exalted the physical pleasure that sex brings. He mourned that so many “misuse and squander this experience and apply it as a stimulant to the tired spots of their lives and as a distraction instead of a rallying toward exalted moments.” At its best, Rilke said, sex gives us “a knowing of the world, the fullness and the glory of all knowing.” It is a sublime prayer, an opportunity to feel sacred communion on every level of our being. That’s the erotic experience I wish for you in the coming weeks, Virgo. And I believe you will have an expanded potential for making it happen.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Even if you are currently bonded with a spouse or partner, I recommend you consider proposing matrimony to an additional person: yourself. Yes, dear Libra, I believe the coming months will be prime time for you to get married to your own precious soul. If you’re brave enough and crazy enough to carry out this daring move, devote yourself to it with lavish abandon. Get yourself a wedding ring, write your vows, conduct a ceremony and go on a honeymoon. If you’d like inspiration, read my piece “I Me Wed”: tinyurl.com/SelfMarriage

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Talking about a problem can be healthy. But in most cases, it should be a preliminary stage that leads to practical action; it shouldn’t be a substitute for action. Now and then, however, there are exceptions to this rule. Mere dialogue, if grounded in mutual respect, may be sufficient to dissolve a logjam and make further action unnecessary. The coming days will be such a time for you, Scorpio. I believe you and your allies can talk your way out of difficulties.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian cartoonist Charles M. Schulz wrote, “My life has no purpose, no direction, no aim, no meaning, and yet I’m happy. I can’t figure it out. What am I doing right?” I suspect that in 2024, you may go through a brief phase similar to his: feeling blank, yet quite content. But it won’t last. Eventually, you will be driven to seek a passionate new sense of intense purpose. As you pursue this reinvention, a fresh version of happiness will bloom. For best results, be willing to outgrow your old ideas about what brings you gladness and gratification.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): We all go through phases that feel extra plodding and pedestrian. During these times, the rhythms and melodies of our lives seem drabber than usual. The good news is that I believe you Capricorns will experience fewer of these slowdowns than usual in 2024. The rest of us will be seeing you at your best and brightest on a frequent basis. In fact, the gifts and blessings you offer may flow toward us in abundance. So it’s no coincidence if you feel exceptionally well-loved during the coming months. PS: The optimal way to respond to the appreciation you receive is to ratchet up your generosity even higher.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In the fall of 1903, The New York Times published an article that scorned human efforts to develop flying machines. It prophesied that such a revolutionary technology was still at least a million years in the future—possibly 10 million years. In conclusion, it declared that there were better ways to apply our collective ingenuity than working to create such an unlikely invention. Nine weeks later, Orville and Wilbur Wright disproved that theory, completing a flight with the airplane they had made. I suspect that you, Aquarius, are also primed to refute an expectation or prediction about your supposed limitations. (Afterward, try not to gloat too much.)

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Your sweat and tears are being rewarded with sweets and cheers. Your diligent, detailed work is leading to expansive outcomes that provide relief and release. The discipline you’ve been harnessing with such panache is spawning breakthroughs in the form of elegant liberations. Congrats, dear Pisces! Don’t be shy about welcoming in the fresh privileges flowing your way. You have earned these lush dividends.

Homework: Indulge in ‘Healthy Obsessions’—not ‘Melodramatic Compulsions’ or ‘Exhausting Crazes.’ Newsletter: FreeWillAstrology.com.

The G-Word: Understanding the banality of evil

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Many survivors of the Nazi concentration camps and the Holocaust wrote memoirs to permanently record what had happened, with a belief that such atrocity should never happen again.

Many authors credited their survival to the desire to make sure they lived to tell the story. If it was so important to them that the world know what happened, then reading seemed the least I could do.

The banality of evil was a term coined by Hannah Arendt to capture the ordinary and mundane daily lives people lead while atrocities were being committed. For example, one reads about the stench of death and the impossibility of ignoring the smell; how could the people of Auschwitz pretend they did not know what was going on?

It does not take a case like South Africa has now brought to the International Court of Justice to beg many of these questions. South Africa is accusing Israel of genocidal acts, according to the charges. As Al Jazeera reported, during the “three-month war in Gaza, more than 23,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have been killed, lawyers told the top United Nations court. Most of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million has been displaced, and an Israeli blockade severely limiting food, fuel and medicine has caused a humanitarian ‘catastrophe.’”

Genocide is a serious charge, and crimes against humanity have a burden of proof like all others. I am troubled by even more latent questions; if it is not ruled genocide, does that make it somehow OK?

Israel dropped 6,000 bombs on Gaza within the first six days of war—for comparison, that is about what the U.S. dropped in Afghanistan in 2019—how many of those bombs do we want to assume responsibility or pay for?

In the first six weeks of the war, Israel deployed more than 22,000 U.S.-produced bombs on Gaza, according to intelligence figures provided to Congress. Individually and collectively, we need to stop supporting it with our tax dollars and silent complicity, or, preferably, just stop it. Forget ceasefires; let us finally put an end to war before war puts an end to us.

Wim Laven, Ph.D. teaches courses in political science and conflict resolution.

Lion Dance, Evening Glass and LumaCon

Petaluma Lunar Lions The fortnight of Lunar New Year approaches, bringing in the Year of the Dragon. Marin County Asian Community Alliance celebrates the turning back of the Earth in her orbit with a performance of the traditional Lion Dance. Similar to the perhaps more familiar dragon dances famous in San Francisco’s Chinatown, the Lion Dance manifests good luck, prosperity and...

Time Capsule: Kingston Trio revives folk hits in Petaluma

Against all odds, three dangerously coordinated boomers are still singing and strumming the tunes of the Kingston Trio, nearly seven decades after the band first took shape in the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco. Bohemian pop aesthetic was never the same. The three original band members have since passed away — but the latest stand-ins all have close...

Lotus Life: Surinder ‘Pal’ Sroa of Novato

Surinder Sroa has made Marin somewhat of a destination for authentic Indian cuisine, and “Pal,” as he likes to be called, is often there greeting both loyal and new customers alike. What do you do? I’m the founder and owner of the Lotus Family of Restaurants. Our flagship restaurant is Lotus Cuisine of India in downtown San Rafael. We even have...

Marinshroom: MycoMarin finds fungus among us

Fungus is all around us, and so too are the fun-guys and fun-gals who gather together in the great outdoors to appreciate the arrival of California’s mushroom bloom each year. The North Bay’s wet and rainy winters make for a rich mycological community, one which can be observed in the mycelium network underneath the earth, the mushrooms that fruit from...

Chamber Music Marin hosts The Black Oak Ensemble

Mill Valley Unsilenced Chamber Music Marin hosts The Black Oak Ensemble as part of their 2023-24 Chamber Music Concert Series at 5pm, Sunday, Jan. 28, at Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church, 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley. This concert showcases the ensemble’s poignant "Silenced Voices" project, highlighting string trios by Jewish composers affected by the Holocaust and reflecting resilience and hope in...

Your Letters, Jan. 24

Incendiary Irony It’s my right, even if you think I’m wrong, to express the truth about what I see in America. Americans could care less about others who exist anywhere past the ends of our noses. Americans could care less about the lives of Muslim citizens in Gaza. Not our problem; let the president handle it. Folks trying to get past...

American Innovation: Don’t give away our IP

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Federal officials may soon decide to give away key domestic assets—American intellectual property (IP)—to our rivals. This will have profound and dangerous consequences for U.S. workers and our economy. At issue is a proposal before the World Trade Organization. It would waive patent protections for Covid-19 tests and treatments, which would normally be guaranteed around the world under the 1995...

FLOTUS State: Member of the de-press

The most interesting souvenir from Dr. Jill Biden’s recent SoCo sojourn was the official “White House Press Pool” pass issued by the Secret Service.  The fact that they were left blank, unfettered by some wine country journo’s smudgy byline, only raises their resale value. That said, I’m keeping mine as a memento of the hours spent waiting in an airline...

Free Will Astrology: Week of January 17

Free Will Astrology: Week of January 17
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries chemist Percy Julian (1899–1975) was a trailblazer in creating medicine from plants. He patented over 130 drugs and laid the foundation for the production of cortisone and birth control pills. Julian was also a Black man who had to fight relentlessly to overcome the racism he encountered everywhere. I regard him as an exemplary...

The G-Word: Understanding the banality of evil

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Many survivors of the Nazi concentration camps and the Holocaust wrote memoirs to permanently record what had happened, with a belief that such atrocity should never happen again. Many authors credited their survival to the desire to make sure they lived to tell the story. If it was so important to them that the world know what happened, then reading...
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