Wednesday, May 2, 2012
The Mission Viejo dentist's Republican rival for secretary of state did not commit fraud because he once registered as a Democrat, according to the court.
Mission Viejo dentist Orly Taitz has lost another high-profile court battle. An appeals court issued its decision Tuesday that Taitz was not the victim of voter fraud or election fraud in her 2010 battle against fellow Republican opponent Damon Dunn. Taitz and Dunn were competing for the Republican nomination for secretary of state. Taitz lost to Dunn on June 8 during the Republican primary and then sued Dunn June 17, claiming fraud. Dunn later lost to incumbent democrat Debra Bowen. Taitz made headlines last year for arguing in court that President Barack Obama is not a U.S. citizen. She lost that case, too. In the most recent case, Taitz claimed Dunn ran against her unfairly because he had voted as a democrat in Florida in the past. She …
Monday, April 9, 2012
California researchers develop model of how dementia spreads
Filmmaker James Cameron proclaimed that he had opened a “new frontier” when he reached the Mariana Trench’s Challenger Deep last month, 200 miles below the surface of the ocean. Quietly and with less fanfare, California researchers have unlocked an important discovery about the human frontier of the brain, detecting new information about how dementia spreads. Scientists at the University of California, San Francisco concluded that Alzheimer’s disease, as well as other forms of dementia, may move directly between connected neurons in the brain. The degree of connectedness between a nerve region in the brain and a disease “hot spot,” or epicenter, appears to have the strongest influence on how the degeneration of neurons occurs in people …
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Poll: How would you spend a full day in the Magic Kingdom?
It could be a Disney fanatic's dream or -- if you somehow get stuck listening to "It's a Small World" the entire time -- a mind-destroying nightmare. Starting early Wednesday, Disneyland and its Florida sibling will celebrate leap year by staying open 24 hours straight. That's the equivalent of 1,440 great moments with Mr. Lincoln. Officially dubbed "One More Disney Day," the Mickey Mouse house marathon runs from 6 a.m. Feb. 29 to 6 a.m. March 1. What will guests do with a full day in the Magic Kingdom? Here's what several visitors to Disneyland's website said: And now, dear readers, it's your turn. Take our poll...
Saturday, December 31, 2011
State cuts sharks a break in 2012. Among the other new laws are those applying to credit checks, tanning beds, child booster seats, caffeinated beer and sobriety checkpoints.
- POLICE & FIRE
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Saturday, December 31, 2011
The state of California has many new laws for 2012. Among them, California students will be the first in the U.S. to receive mandatory classroom instruction about the contributions of gays and lesbians to the development of the United States. New laws applying to handguns, booster seats, cough medicine and employment credit checks are also in the mix of 2012 California laws. List of new California laws: Employment Credit Check Law With a few exceptions, the use of consumer credit reports by employers when hiring will now be prohibited. Sports Schools will now be required to remove from play a student athlete who sustains a possible concussion, and mandates that the player receive medical clearance before returning to competition. Sobriety …
Thursday, December 22, 2011
ProPublica uncovers a secret scheme to protect liberal incumbents, including in Orange County.
- ELECTIONS
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Thursday, December 22, 2011
By Olga Pierce and Jeff Larson ProPublica This spring, a group of California Democrats gathered at a modern, airy office building just a few blocks from the U.S. Capitol. The meeting was House members only -- no aides allowed -- and the mission was seemingly impossible. In previous years, the party had used its perennial control of California's state Legislature to draw district maps that protected Democratic incumbents. But in 2010, California voters put redistricting in the hands of a citizens' commission whose decisions would beguided by public testimony and open debate. The question facing House Democrats as they met to contemplate the state's new realities was delicate: How could they influence an avowedly nonpartisan process? Alexis …
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
GOP politicos wrestle against letting voters decide Jerry Brown's tax plan and readers can try a do-it-yourself budget chopper.
In our previous episode, the Republican legislator tag team from Mission Viejo and Rancho Santa Margaritaville threw a couple of body slams against letting voters decide Jerry Brown's tax plan. The governor also tangled with the Incredible Shrinking Deficit, which unexpectedly shriveled from $15.5 billion to about $9.6 billion, thanks to rosier tax revenues, hurting Brown's case for temporary tax increases. But Brown insists a scaled-down version of his tax measure is still needed to restore school cuts and repair state finances for the long haul. Republicans aren't buying it. Picking up where our last story left off, state Sen. Mimi Walters and Assemblyman Jeff Miller, who represent RSM and Mission Viejo, offer more rationales for not …
Monday, May 16, 2011
Although two polls say Californians would like the issue on the ballot, GOP legislators representing Mission Viejo and RSM explain their objections.
Updated Monday afternoon with information about Gov. Brown's revised budget and higher state tax revenues. To hear Jerry Brown tell it, Republicans are holding democracy hostage by refusing to let California voters decide for themselves whether to wipe out the state deficit with temporary tax hikes. Naturally, GOP legislators see things differently. For starters, they say voters should have a choice of anti-deficit ballot measures, including pension reform, a spending cap, even tax cuts. However, when asked if adding those other measures to the ballot would change their stance on putting Brown's plan to a popular vote, some backpedaled. What's the hangup with letting voters decide? Below are the top objections of local Republican …
Friday, March 25, 2011
Capo prepares two budgets but focuses on the worst-case scenario.
With Gov. Jerry Brown’s proposed June ballot measure to extend taxes looking less and less likely, the Capistrano Unified School District will have to plan next school year’s budget on its worst-case scenario, which means plugging a $24.8-million hole. “We’ve always been focused on the worst-case scenario,” said district spokesman Marcus Walton. Gov. Brown held a press conference Thursday, saying that budget cuts the Legislature approved last month and that he signed today only get him halfway to his goal of bridging a $26-billion budget gap. His original plan was to put a measure on a June 7 special-election ballot that would extend temporary tax increases on sales, motor and income taxes. His goal was to have Legislature approval by …
Yeparoo
9:10 pm on Monday, May 7, 2012
Emken? Never heard of her. But Thanks for the post regarding the "republican" primary. You must be quite the political junkie. If it were not for your post, no one in California would know about this. I'll look that up to see if that is in 2012. Diane Feinstein is the Republicanish senator here, we really don't need an Emken. Besides, California isn't interested in Repub primaries. What we are …   more ›