Riverside Rants

United America Network

Riverside County residents sound off about current events and political activity.

Episodes

  1. Is 86 47 violent? Try 63 68 | Janet Dagley

    Jun 15

    Is 86 47 violent? Try 63 68 | Janet Dagley

    It's Janet Dagley with another Riverside Rant. Is 86 47 violent? Try 63 68. [Note: political violence is never appropriate. I condemn not only such violence, but threats of and calls for any kind of violence ] The U.S. Justice Department has charged that four digits, 86 47, in themselves constitute a death threat, and they have charged the former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation with threatening to kill the president for posting a photo of those numbers spelled out in seashells and rocks on a beach. The number 86, prosecutors charged, meant kill, and they claimed 47 meant Donald Trump. The president himself later stated that 86 was a mob term that meant kill. Never having been in the mob myself, I wouldn't know. To many, 86 simply means throw out, as one would toss spoiled food in a restaurant kitchen.[00:01:00] In the wake of yet another unsuccessful assassination attempt on the president of the United States, but strangely without reference to the successful assassinations of a Minnesota legislator, her husband, and even the killings of their dogs, or the arson attack on the Pennsylvania governor's mansion, pundits decades my junior are declaring that we are in an unprecedented era of political violence. Unprecedented? When a shaken reporter covering the incident at the White House Correspondents' Association dinner made that claim, my husband yelled at the TV, "When were you born?" To the Justice Department, as well as political pontificators, I offer two more numbers, numbers associated with violent turning points in my childhood, not to mention the history of our nation, 63 and sixty-eight. I was a 10-year-old sixth grader when one afternoon in November 1963, our class was studying our nation's 16th president, Abraham Lincoln. We were [00:02:00] working our way through time to April 1865. One of our classmates, Lila, was attending school from home since she was bedridden in a full-body cast. The school district had set up a closed-circuit speaker system with one end on her bedside table and the other on our teacher's desk. At the time, it was state-of-the-art communications technology. Suddenly, Lila interrupted the lesson, shouting, "The president's been shot!" At first, we thought she and our teacher were performing a reenactment of the Lincoln assassination, but our teacher's shocked reaction showed us instantly that it was not. Lila had a transistor radio, as most of us kids did then, and her mother placed it on the nightstand facing the speaker, volume up to the max. The class listened for more than an hour as the news of President John F. Kennedy's assassination unfolded, and soon other classes, teachers and even the principal crowded into our classroom to listen, too. Eventually, school was dismissed and students wandered home. My [00:03:00] contemporaries and I have remembered all this time exactly where we were when Kennedy was shot. Even dementia patients remember the distant past better than what happened yesterday. Even though we knew there had been other presidential assassinations in our history, we were stunned. Two days later, as we watched the nonstop TV coverage of the aftermath of Kennedy's death, the nation saw its first live televised murder, as accused presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was shot at point-blank range while being transferred from one jail to another. My generation grew up with the image of his face contorted in agony burned into our brains. The schools adjusted their curriculum to include recent events. Assassination became one of our spelling words. We learned about the assassinations not only of Lincoln, but of Presidents James A. Garfield and William McKinley. We learned the song "White House Blues" about the McKinley killing, in which Mrs. McKinley allegedly said, "Look here, you rascals, see what you've [00:04:00] done. You shot my husband and I've got your gun. I'm carrying you back to Washington." It was only after McKinley's death in 1901 that the U.S. Secret Service was ordered to provide protection for the president. We learned about the legendary Curse of Tippecanoe associated with presidents elected in years divisible by 20, beginning with 1840's William Henry Harrison, who died barely a month into his presidency, allegedly from an illness he caught by not wearing a hat at his chilly inauguration. President Warren G. Harding, elected in 1920, died in office of a heart attack. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, elected in 1932, 1936, 1940 and 1944, died of a cerebral hemorrhage, and President Kennedy, elected in 1960, was shot to death. Sixty-eight. Five years after the Kennedy assassination, I was in high school when the news broke one April evening that the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had been [00:05:00] gunned down by an assassin in Memphis. Again, the nation was shocked and fearful of what might happen next. It didn't take long for us to find out what was next. Weeks later, I was on summer break visiting my aunt and uncle on their farm, where there was no TV or phone. We were already in bed that night when a neighbor came running down the lane shouting, "Robert Kennedy's been shot." We woke up in disbelief. Another Kennedy shot? How could it have happened? Those too young to recall 1963 or 1968 may remember September 1975 when, days apart, two female would-be assassins took aim at President Gerald Ford. Secret Service agents wrested the gun away from the first attacker before she could fire. The second attacker managed two shots that went wild as a bystander grabbed her arm. Ford was uninjured, but he began wearing a bulletproof coat at later events. Or they might remember March 30, 1981, [00:06:00] when outside the same Washington Hilton Hotel where the most recent incident occurred, President Ronald Reagan was shot and seriously wounded. "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadelphia," he joked before being put under for surgery. Reagan's survival and full recovery was said to have broken the 140-year-old Curse of Tippecanoe. For years, I studied the JFK assassination, trying to solve an insoluble mystery. During my research, I learned that in the days before he was shot, posters with his photo and the words "Wanted for Treason" were being distributed in Fort Worth and Dallas. Kennedy knew that, and he went anyway, despite warnings from, among others, the Rev. Billy Graham, who told him not to go because, quote, "Something bad," end quote, might happen. Kennedy did not call for those who distributed those hateful messages to be criminally charged, nor did he sic the Justice Department on those who placed a full-page ad criticizing him in the local newspapers there. As it turned out, those notices were never connected to the [00:07:00] assassination. Ironically, the Kennedys, along with Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson and Mrs. Johnson, Texas Gov. John Connally and Mrs. Connally, were enjoying a warm welcome from the local crowds just before the fatal shots were fired. Threats of violence and calls for it are also not unprecedented. What is unprecedented are the many such threats and calls made by President Donald Trump during his campaigns and presidencies. Over the years, he has made various calls for those who disagree with him to be beaten, shot, locked up, hanged or otherwise executed. A few examples. 1989, Trump took out a full-page newspaper ad calling for the executions of the Central Park Five, now known as the Exonerated Five, after DNA proved they were not guilty. 2015, regarding protesters, "Just knock the crap out of them, would you? Seriously, OK? Knock the hell ... I promise you, I will pay for the legal fees." 2016, [00:08:00] "I would bring back waterboarding, and I'd bring back a hell of a lot worse than waterboarding. I'd like to punch him in the face." 2017, to New York police officers, "Please don't be too nice." 2018, "Any guy who can do a body slam, he's my kind of guy." 2019, he recommended a trench filled with snakes and alligators to catch migrants and suggested shooting them in the legs. 2020, "Can't you just shoot them?" about those protesting the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. 2024, "If you had one really violent day, one rough hour, and I mean really rough, the word would get out, and it will end immediately." Over the years, he's also called those who disagree with him sick, evil, enemies, thugs, traitors and more. I'm old enough to remember the phrase, "the loyal opposition." Those words have never come from Trump's mouth or his social media-spewing fingers. As I noted at the beginning, political violence is never appropriate. I condemn all violence, as well as threats of and calls for violence. That includes such calls, unprecedented, from the president of the United States. And the numbers 8647 are not a call to violence -Janet Dagley is a proud member of the Riverside County Democratic Party.

    9 min
  2. May 20

    Sorry, Republicans. Our State Has Not Failed.

    It's Janet Dagley with another Riverside rant... Sorry, Republicans. Our state has not failed. It's a ploy as old as politics itself. Make a clearly false statement, all the while acting as if it's an accepted fact. For added effect, nod and look around while stating it as if everyone in the room agrees with you. Here's an example from the current crop of Republicans campaigning in our primary election. California is a failed state, they declare repeatedly, nodding authoritatively. Excuse me. They act so sure of themselves when they say it. But they are, to put it politely, sorely mistaken. In the first place, they don't even know what a failed state is. If they did, they wouldn't be so foolish as to try to pull that one over on us. A failed state is a nation whose government cannot provide even basic services or security to its citizens. Somalia, for example, is generally considered a failed state. Other nations that have recently been considered failed states include Afghanistan, Haiti, South Sudan, Syria, Yemen and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where a precarious shell of a government is now struggling with a deadly Ebola virus outbreak. That's what a failed state looks like. Here in California, our government is fully functional, our laws are enforced, and we provide more services to our residents by far than most other US States. Outgoing term limited governor Gavin Newsom just presented his final budget to the legislature, a balanced budget that not only would eliminate the deficit through 2028, but build reserves for the future, all while making transformative investments in child care, education, public safety, health care, housing, clean energy, businesses and natural resources. Even the DMV runs smoothly and efficiently. Not only are we far from failure, but the Golden State has grown to become the world's fourth largest economy, recently surpassing Japan. Not coincidentally, our state is controlled by Democrats in both houses of the legislature, the governor's office, the secretary of state and attorney general. It's been that way in the legislature for 30 years, although we did have a Republican governator for a few years. In fact, the closest thing to a threat to the stability of our state government has been Republican generated recall attempts. One in 2003, which replaced Governor Gray Davis with Arnold Schwarzenegger, and another in 2021 in which voters reaffirmed our support for duly re elected governor Gavin Newsom. And both of those recall elections were done by the book. All those facts make it difficult for the opposition party. They have to insist that we need change desperately and that they are just the change we need. I'm not saying that California has no problems. We do. But that doesn't make us unique, let alone a failure. Life is expensive here. We don't have enough affordable housing or enough doctors. Our over dependence on the automobile leaves us particularly vulnerable when gas prices spike, as they have since our president attacked Iran without consulting either Congress, military experts, or even a map that would have shown him the strategic importance of the Strait of Hormuz. California has environmental problems. Prolonged drought and climate change have left us vulnerable to devastating wildfires, along with water shortages and eroding beaches. And eventually we're going to have to do something about the shrinking Salton Sea. But we're at least working on finding solutions to all of those, plus the new problems piled on us by the antagonistic Trump administration. What solutions are Republicans offering? The same old tired tricks. Cutting taxes for the wealthy and rolling back regulations that's all they ever offer, along with hateful divisiveness to nudge their voters to the polls. And dividing our diverse California culture into us and them doesn't work as well here as it might in, say, Alabama. Besides, tax breaks for the rich and deregulation will only make our problems worse. The failed state fallacy might be merely a spelling error. F A I L E D should be spelled D O N O R. We are a perennial donor state, which means we contribute far more to the federal government than we receive. The states most likely to call us a failed state are also those most dependent upon those contributions. Go figure. Even though we give more than we get, we are woefully underrepresented in Washington. We only get two senators to represent all 40 million of us. Wyoming, with under 600,000 residents, also gets two. Occasionally someone suggests that California could address that inequity. But splitting into two states, those campaigns, 220 of them in Golden State history, never get very far. One of them even suggested dividing us into six states. If any of those proposals ever succeeded, we might indeed have more senators, but the power of the world's fourth largest economy would be severely diluted. Then there are those who argue that California should secede from the Union and become an independent republic, as it was for 25 days in 1846. But we are big fans of the concept of e pluribus unum out of many one rather than the other way around. Besides, you know who would really love that? Vladimir Putin, among others. So call us what you will, Republicans, sticks and stones and all that. We are an indisputable success under Democratic leadership, and I hope we will be for decades to come. And a note to my fellow Democrats, if you haven't voted already. Don't delay. Our continued success depends on it. This is Janet Dagley, proud member of the Riverside County Democratic Party.

    6 min
  3. Apr 11

    Trump Publicly Ghosts His Favorite Cop

    Janet Dagley examines the growing political fallout surrounding Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco in this episode focused on his alignment with Trump-era politics and his failed gubernatorial ambitions. Her report traces Bianco’s public actions, including his support for election denial narratives, controversial uniformed campaigning, and attempts to challenge California’s voting systems after certified results. Dagley highlights how his political positioning has shifted as he pursued higher office, ultimately drawing national attention and criticism. The episode also explores the broader implications of his candidacy in California’s top-two primary system, including how vote splitting among multiple Democratic contenders could reshape the general election landscape. As endorsements shift and political alliances harden, Bianco’s prospects appear increasingly uncertain. The conversation places his career within the wider context of partisan polarization, election integrity debates, and state-level power struggles influencing the 2025 gubernatorial race. California’s shifting electorate continues to shape outcomes across statewide races political landscape. Takeaways • Bianco’s political identity is closely tied to Trump-aligned positioning • He faced criticism for campaigning in uniform against state rules • The episode highlights his past election denial rhetoric • His gubernatorial bid has struggled to gain strong polling traction • California’s top-two primary system plays a key strategic role • Vote splitting among Democrats could impact final election outcomes • Trump’s endorsement choices intensified scrutiny of Bianco’s campaign • Broader themes include polarization and election integrity debates

    10 min

About

Riverside County residents sound off about current events and political activity.