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Indybay Feature

Prop 98 can provoke a city-wide rent strike in San Francisco, and elsewhere..

by Nestor Makhno
Housing activists have absolutely no plan to effectively confront the passage of Proposition 98, which will abolish rent control statewide.
The first thing I heard about Prop 98, the election scheme to gut rent control in California, was an editorial by Ted Gullicksen the main person of the San Francisco Tenants Union, in the SF Bay Guardian, a wretched corporate liberal rag here in SF. Gullicksen summoned up the spectre of literally hundreds of thousands of tenants sheepishly up and moving out of San Francisco if this measure passes, all leaving town quietly at the same time.

Noticibly absent from the perspective of the main person of the San Francisco Tenants Union was the notion of everyone who stands to be adversely affected by Prop 98 going on a huge city-wide rent strike at the same time.

Friends who have been involved in quote-unquote direct action housing struggles have always slung this dual strategy line at people like me, people who are against any participation in electoral politics. The line goes, well, we fight for small measures like rent control by getting people out to vote for it, and then we also organize tenants, and help working people get themselves organized in a context of the permanent market-generated housing crisis, too. What seems to be more often the case is that so much time and efforts gets absorbed by fighting to get rent control measures passed, and then trying to keep them from being overturned or from dying the death of a thousand cuts that the housing activists in question have no time and energy left for the direct action element of their dual strategy. And this involvement in an unending loss of ground doesn't result in any upswing in the learning curve of of self-styled housing activists; they remain beholden to the system in general and to the Nancy Pelosi branch of its political class in particular. Ted Gulliksen's assumption in his Bay Guardian opinion piece was that in the face of the downfall of rent control we should all just move out of our homes, and that we will have absolutely no choice -- and no other options are available to us.

Actually, the capitalist class themselves wouldn't want some kind of mass exodus of a quarter million-plus tenants from SF, since it would result in economic turmoil for them on many levels; skilled workers having to leave town would disrupt numerous businesses, and probably all major ones, the retail sectors would take a huge hit since there would suddenly be a lot fewer people with money to spend in the face of across the board massive rent hikes, ect.

Now we face a situation where all the work-within-the-system stuff will go completely and utterly down the tubes if this Prop 98 measure passes, and there will be nothing to lose by throwing caution to the wind and trying an all-out, go-for-broke approach -- but the housing activist folks have been so psychologically and functionally domesticated by their endlessly losing involvement in electoral politics, and in other attendant aspects of channeling all efforts around renters/tenants needs into petitioning the powers that be, that any notion of mass direct resistance has been completely scrubbed from their consciousness.

Aside from the fact that electoral politics was effectively annexed by the advertising industry many decades ago, I think the election hustle acts in an organic and "natural" manner to keep any kind of working people's counter-power around what we need from coming into being. The way the psychology of voting works is to imbue the voter with the idea that if you think you have a voice, and you refrain from using it, or you play the game fairly and the side you vote for loses then you have to go along with whatever results from it, no matter how much damage this does to you.

This is examined a little more in this poster titled 'VOTING CHANGES NOTHING:'

http://www.infoshop.org/myep/cw_posters9.html

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by waa
Nestor, you sound just like Kevin Keating when he was using that name. Perhaps you are Kevin. It really doesn't matter.

You do realize that non-payment of rent is an offense leading to eviction? And eviction ruins one credit rating (yes, they do matter to people in the real world. Don't know about yours). And do you think that property owners will just sit there and allow tenants to withhold rent without taking action againt the tenant? Do you really think landlords would wait until the Sherrif gets around to evicting tenants months later?

I suggest you figure out how many city attorneys it would take to prosecute tens of thousands of landlords for throwing your ass in the street for non payment of rent. That's where idiot proposals such as yours end up.

At the end of the day, it's MY house, not yours. And if you don't pay me to live there, you won't be there long.

by AoT
If you think landlords have the resources to throw people out without the help of the sheriff you are sadly mistaken.
98 we hate; 99 is fine; Spread the Word; Vote June 3rd. (Thank you to the May 2008 Street Sheet with its front page poem and article protesting Prop 98. Your contribution to the homeless salesperson goes 100% to that person and you get an outstanding newspaper with this fabulous little campaign jingle and lots of news, unlike the local daily rag.)

Voting is very important and a high voter turnout in San Francisco and Los Angeles will defeat Prop 98. The San Francisco Tenants Union (http://www.sftu.org) is conducting a grassroots, door-to-door campaign, as is the Sierra Club since Prop 98 repeals both rent control and environmental regulations. This means this illegal proposition has at least 3 subjects: Repeal of rent control, repeal of environmental regulations and perhaps some change to the eminent domain laws. This is grounds for a lawsuit as a proposition can have only 1 subject.

Prop 99 also has a poison pill against Prop 98 in that if both pass but Prop 99 gets more votes, Prop 99 becomes law and Prop 98 dies. See the 2 Propositions, going to the very end, the last section, Section 9 at: http://voterguide.sos.ca.gov/text/text.pdf

The broad spectrum of people and organizations who are No on 98/Yes on 99 may be found at:
http://www.no98yes99.com/go/who-we-are/prop.-98-opponents/
Please note all the senior citizen organizations. Most voters are over age 40 and all American citizen seniors (over age 60) vote in every election. That is not enough of course. WE NEED EVERY PRO-RENT CONTROL CITIZEN TO REGISTER TO VOTE RIGHT NOW AND VOTE RIGHT NOW AS WE CAN VOTE THE 29 DAYS BEFORE JUNE 3 BY MAIL/ABSENTEE. Go to your County Registrar any weekday to (1) register and (2) vote absentee. Also, sign up to be a permanent absentee voter so you can vote in the comfort of your home and never have to worry about voting on a Tuesday. IN SAN FRANCISCO, you should have received your County booklet. There is an absentee voter application on the back cover. COMPLETE IT TODAY AND MAIL IT OR WALK IT TO YOUR COUNTY REGISTRAR BEFORE MAY 27, 2008. The California booklet with the state propositions should arrive soon.
Here are the No on 98/Yes on 99 supporters:
Public Officials
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
Former Governor of California Pete Wilson
Speaker of the House, U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco)
U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein
U.S. Representative George Radanovich (R-Mariposa)
California State Treasurer Bill Lockyer
Patricia Wiggins - California State Senator
Lloyd Levine - California State Assemblymember
Fran Pavley - Former California State Assemblymember
Good Government
League of Women Voters of California
Water
Association of California Water Agencies
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
Friant Water Users Authority
San Diego County Water Authority
Castaic Lake Water Agency
El Dorado Irrigation District
Monterey Peninsula Water Management District
Newhall County Water District
Soquel Creek Water District
South San Joaquin Irrigation District
Turlock Irrigation District
Vallecitos Irrigation District
Vista Irrigation District
Business
California Chamber of Commerce
California Building Industry Association
California Black Chamber of Commerce
San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce
Fresno Chamber of Commerce
Greater Riverside Chamber of Commerce
Silicon Valley Leadership Group
Valley Industry and Commerce Association (VICA)
Consulting Engineers and Land Surveyors of California (CELSOC)
South Bay Association of Chambers of Commerce
Fairfield-Suisun Chamber of Commerce
Kern County Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
Los Altos Chamber of Commerce
Monterey Peninsula Chamber of Commerce
Mountain View Chamber of Commerce
Napa Chamber of Commerce
Petaluma Chamber of Commerce
Redondo Beach Chamber of Commerce
Richmond Chamber of Commerce
Salinas Chamber of Commerce
San Marcos Chamber of Commerce
Santa Clarita Valley Chamber of Commerce
Santa Cruz Chamber of Commerce
Santa Rosa Chamber of Commerce
California Mexican American Chamber of Commerce
Senior
AARP
California Alliance for Retired Americans
Older Women's League of California
Gray Panthers California
California Senior Advocates League
San Francisco Gray Panthers
Senior Action Network
Senior Council
Infrastructure
California Transportation Commission
Transporatation Agency for Monterey County
California Chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers
Consumer
Consumer Federation of California
Consumers Coalition of California
Public Safety
California Professional Firefighters
California Police Chiefs Association
California Fire Chiefs Association
Peace Officers Research Association of California (PORAC)
San Francisco Black Firefighters Inc.
Agriculture
Western Growers Association
Nisei Farmers League
Grower Shipper Association of Central California
American Farmland Trust
Education
California Teachers Association
California School Boards Association
Association of California School Administrators
Renter Advocates/Housing Providers
Housing California
California Housing Consortium (CHC)
California Coalition for Rural Housing
California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation
Coalition for Economic Survival
Coalition to Protect California Renters
Tenants Together
Eviction Defense Collaborative
California Council for Affordable Housing
Mercy Housing California
Affordable Housing Coalition of San Diego
Coalition L.A.
Coalition to Save Parkmerced
Community Housing Partnership
Concilio de Inquilinos: Local 1012
Council of Tenants- Los Angeles
EAH Housing
Eviction Defense Network
First Community Housing
Housing Justice Campaign
Housing Leadership Council of San Mateo County
Housing Rights Center
Housing Rights Committee of San Francisco
Housing Rights, Inc.
Inquilinos Unidos
Just Cause Oakland
Lincoln Place Tenants Association
Los Angeles Rent Adjustment Commission
Novato Housing Coalition
Oakland Housing, Residential Rent and Relocation Board
Oakland Tenants Union
Parkmerced Residents' Organization
Rural California Housing Company
Sacramento Housing Alliance
Sacramento Mutual Housing Association
St. Peter's Housing Committee
San Diego Housing Federation
San Diego Renters Union
San Francisco Council of Community Housing Organizations
San Francisco Tenants Union
Santa Monicans for Renters' Rights
Southern California Association of Non-Profit Housing
Tenant Associations Coalition of San Francisco
Tenderloin Housing Clinic (THC)
Venice Community Housing Corporation
Homeowners
League of California Homeowners
Golden State Manufactured-Home Owners League, Inc. (GSMOL)
California Mobile Homes Resource and Action Association
Coalition of Mobile Home Owners- California
Resident Owned Parks, Inc. (ROP)
Alta Laguna Mobile Home Park Residents Committee
American Canyon Manufactured Home Owners Coalition
Butte County Mobile-Home Owners Association
CMRAA/Cal Hawaiian Home Owners Association
Contempo Marin Homeowners Association
County Mobilehome Positive Action Committee
EMPAC (Escondito Mobile/ Manufactured Home Positive Action Committee)
GSMOL Chapter 1613
GSMOL Chapter 1539
GSMOL Chapter 1517
GSMOL Chapter 1279
GSMOL Chapter 1200
GSMOL Chapter 820
GSMOL Chapter 708
GSMOL Chapter 161
Hayward Mobilehome Owners Association
Home Owners Acting Together H.A.T.
Homeowners Association of Cameron Mobile Estates
Los Rancheros Association, Inc.
Mobile Home Owners Coalition
Mobile Parks West Homeowners Association
Mobilehome Residents Alliance of Nevada County
Monarch Country Mobile Home Owners Association
Mountain Springs Homeowners Association
Neighborhood Friends
New Frontier Homeowner Association
Oceanside Manufactured Homes Association
Palos Verdes Shores Homeowners Association
Portola Heights Homeowners Association
San Lorenzo Mobile Home Park Homeowners' Association
San Marcos Mobilehome Residents Association
San Rafael Mobile Home Estates Homeowners Association
Santa Ana Mobile Home Owners Association
Sonoma County Mobilehome Owners Association
Sonoma No Condo Conversion Coalition
Environmental
National Wildlife Federation
Audubon California
California League of Conservation Voters
Natural Resources Defense Council
Sierra Club California
California Coastal Commission
Trust for Public Land
California Council of Land Trusts
California Park and Recreation Society
Wild Heritage Planners
Defenders of Wildlife
Environmental Defense
Center for Biological Diversity
Planning and Conservation League
Endangered Habitats League
LandWatch Monterey County
Save the Bay
California Oak Foundation
Greenbelt Alliance
Healthy Homes Collaborative
Mariposans for the Environment and Responsible Government
The Nature Conservancy
Pacific Forest Trust
Peninsula Open Space Trust
San Joaquin River Parkway and Conservation Trust, Inc.
Sonoma County Conservation Action
Faith
Lutheran Office of Public Policy-California
California Church Impact
LA Voice - Pico
Marin Interfaith Worker Justice
St. Anthony Foundation
Public Interest/Community
California ACORN
Western Center on Law and Poverty
California Partnership
California Alliance
Strategic Actions for a Just Economy
National Lawyers Guild
Center on Race, Poverty & the Environment
Accountable Development Coailtion
American Civil Liberties Union, Northern California
American Civil Liberties Union, Southern California
Progressive Jewish Alliance
Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)
Southern California Chapter National Lawyers Guild- Los Angeles
Friends Committee on Legislation of California
Accountable Development Coalition
ArtsCorpsLA
Asian Law Caucus
Bay Area Immigrant Rights Coalition
Bernal Heights Neighborhood Center
California Association of Human Relations Organizations
Californians for Justice
California Immigrant Policy Center
Centro Legal De La Raza
Charles Houston Bar Association
Chinese for Affirmative Action
Community Advocacy Center
Community United Against Violence
Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund
East Bay Alliance for a Sustainable Economy
Equal Justice Society
Ella Baker Center for Human Rights
Greenlining Institute
Impact Fund
Inner City Law Center
La Raza Centro Legal
Law Center for Families
Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area
Legal Services for Prisoners with Children
Los Angeles Coalition to End Hunger and Homelessness
Los Angeles Community Action Network
Los Angeles Community Legal Center and Educational
Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority
Los Angeles Metropolitan Alliance
Mexican American Bar Association
Miracle Mile Action Committee
National Center for Lesbian Rights
National Center for Youth Law
National Latina/o Law Student Association
Oakland ACORN
One Stop Immigration Counselor
Online Policy Group
Our City
People's CORE
People Organized for Westside Renewal (POWER)
Pride at Work San Francisco
Public Advocates
P.U.E.B.L.O.
Rainbow - PUSH
Public Counsel
San Francisco Human Rights Commision
San Francisco Planning and Urban
Research Association (SPUR)
Union de Vecinos
Valley Women's Club
Tax
San Diego County Taxpayers Association
California Tax Reform Association
Labor
California Labor Federation
SEIU California State Council
State Building and Construction Trades Council
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
National Organization of Legal Services Workers NOLSW, UAW Local 2320, AFL-CIO
(AFSCME) Los Angeles Retiree Chapter 36
(AFSCME) Chapter 2712
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
San Francisco Labor Council
Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance
Marin County Building and Construction Trades Council
People Organized to Win Employment Rights (POWER)
Plumbers and Steamfitters Local 159
Ethnic
National Coalition of Hispanic Organizations
Black, Asian, Minority and Ethnic Renaissance CDC
South Asian Network
Health
California Council of Community Mental Health Agencies
Mental Health Association in California
Physicians for Social Responsibility - Los Angeles
National Health Law Program
AIDS Legal Referral Panel
Women
California National Organization for Women
California Women's Agenda
Center for Young Women's Development
Political
California Democratic Party
Democratic Women's Club
Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club
Burbank Democratic Club
Democrats of Pasadena Foothills
Democratic Club of Santa Maria Valley
Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club
Metropolitan Greater Oakland Democratic Club
Santa Monica Democratic Club
Women Democrats of Placer County
Associations
League of California Cities
California State Association of Counties
California Special Districts Association
California Association of Councils of Government
California Chapter of the American Planning Association
California Redevelopment Association
ALTOGETHER NOW, THE 27 MILLION ADULTS IN CALIFORNIA, 1/3 OF WHOM LIVE IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA:
98 WE HATE; 99 IS FINE; SPREAD THE WORD; VOTE JUNE 3RD.
and better yet
DO NOT DELAY, VOTE TODAY! NOW IS THE TIME TO GET OFF THE DIME!
THE HOME YOU SAVE WILL BE YOUR OWN!
by Nestor Makhno
There's no way that the courts would be able to deal with several tens of thousands of evictions per city resulting from a combative across the board response to the passage of Prop 98, and if you are under the illusion that they could even begin to take this on you should think about buying this bridge I own in Brooklyn.

Eviction Defense Collaborative and Govenor Schwartzeneger as political bedfellows -- that's touching. Hey, it's just like that Michael Jackson and Paul McCartney song!

"You do realize that non-payment of rent is an offense leading to eviction?"

Gasp! Why, do you realize that in the Jim Crow south black people couldn't use the same facilities as whites -- until a lot of courageous people put their collective foot down and made those laws collapse by rendering them unenforcible.

"...And do you think that property owners will just sit there and allow tenants to withhold rent without taking action againt the tenant? Do you really think landlords would wait until the Sherrif gets around to evicting tenants months later?"

Again, I've dealt with this above.

I suggest you figure out how many city attorneys it would take to prosecute tens of thousands of tenants for throwing the landlord's ass figuratively and literally up in the air when we all withhold rent at the same time.

Kevin who?
by avens
"nestor" said: "Gasp! Why, do you realize that in the Jim Crow south black people couldn't use the same facilities as whites -- until a lot of courageous people put their collective foot down and made those laws collapse by rendering them unenforceable"

I find your use of the civil rights movement to back up your arguments amusing, since a major thrust of the civil right movement was winning the right to vote, and also because your ranting against voting really sounds messed up when you consider how many people, specifically but not exclusively, african americans, are de facto disenfranchised here and now.

that said, I agree that widespread direct action is called for if 98 passes, but people who are planning that kind of stuff need to take into account the very real impact all of this can have on people's lives. Your calls to resistance come off as empty and as coming form someone with little to lose. I want to discuss potential resistance to prop 98, should it pass, with single working mothers, with undocumented residents, with african american families in the bayview. I don't want to hear strategies being devised by white middle aged men with no kids and lots of resources (I'm not just talking about money). The people most affected ought to be at the heart of devising any strategy.

Nonetheless, meanwhile, it's unbelievable that you are indirectly discouraging people from voting against 98. What are you, one of those people who thinks things need to get "really really bad" before the "revolution" comes? There is no damn excuse for anyone who supports the rights of renters to not get out there and vote, even though our action should start with voting, not stop there. i think you just want another chance to try out your calls for a general rent strike (based in no community at all) and so are secretly (not so secretly ) hoping prop 98 passes.


by Nestor Makhno
"I find your use of the civil rights movement to back up your arguments amusing, since a major thrust of the civil right movement was winning the right to vote, and also because your ranting against voting really sounds messed up when you consider how many people, specifically but not exclusively, african americans, are de facto disenfranchised here and now."

I saw the late and formerly named Stokely Carmichael -- whose politics I didn't and don't agree with in the slightest -- speak at City College of SF 25-plus years ago. He specifically said that although he fought to register black voters in the Jim Crow south, he himself had never voted, and that voter registration in the south was mainly a tactic to get people mobilized, and with that not mobilized to take part in the formal decision-making apparatus of US society.

The bit about me not being affected is not accurate -- I have a very cheap place in SF, and that's really tough to get, and I need to hold onto my home.

I agree that the people who are most affected by this threat should take the lead. It's certainly not for me to "organize" others; the most fucked-over have to get together their resistance themselves. But what is your alternative to spreading the word for city-wide rent strikes against this initiative in cities where renters will be affected? Are you calling for a great big voter registration drive among people who don't vote because this social order has already disenfranchised them, like people who got fucked over in Florida in 2000?? If so, this voter registration campaign will carry in its wake significant illusions about how much power the right to vote gives the individual voter, in this case the individual atomized, dispossessed, exploited class voter.

All I myself can do is, hopefully, get together with others, quickly, try to spread an idea for mass collective action, and if the time is right for it, and a number of auspicious circumstances all come together at the right time this thing might take off. I definitely agree that it isn't just up to me.

And no, i'm not a Maoist or a Guevaraist (both forms of Stalinism and as such anti-working class and counter-subversive) who thinks things should get even shittier for workign and poor people, but conditions of life are going to continue to deteriorate in the absence of mass collective direct resistance. That excludes voting.
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