The Stranger’s morning news roundup.

by Ashley Nerbovig

Good morning! The weather today should be a mix of a little drizzly in the morning and then sunny the rest of the day, according to the National Weather Service. A high near 67 degrees, but with winds up to 21 miles per hour, so wear maybe like a light jacket.

Prosecutors charge off-duty security guard in teen’s death: Aaron Brown Myers, 51, faces second-degree murder charges after he allegedly shot and killed unarmed 17-year-old Hazrat Ali Rohani, according to KING 5. King County prosecutors argued for a high bail for Myers given his obsession with vigilante security. Apparently, Myers had a habit of acting like a spare cop, once even calling the police on someone who was riding around on a bike with what Myers thought was a gun. Myers told officers he may need to shoot the person, according to charging documents. Turns out the cyclist was holding a bike part.

Tragically, Myers’s supposed obsession with fighting crime led to him allegedly shoot 17-year-old Rohani in a parking lot that Myers had singled out for his “overwatch” surveillance. He allegedly shot Rohani seven times, despite Rohani putting his hands up and slowly backing away, according to security footage. Prosecutors said they believe Myers’s “self-imposed ‘duty to intervene,’ threatens public safety.” Washington’s own George Zimmerman. 

A 15-year-old pleads guilty in 2022 Ingraham shooting: A boy who shot and killed another Ingraham High School student in November 2022 pled guilty Monday to first-degree murder, first-degree assault, and unlawful possession of a firearm, according to the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office spokesperson. The boy who pled guilty was 14 years old when he shot and killed 17-year-old Ebenezer Haile five times. As part of the plea agreement, the 15-year-old will remain in a juvenile rehabilitation facility until his 21st birthday.

King County says it did a whoopsie when it ignored “dozens, if not hundreds” of discrimination complaints between January 2022 and September 2023, according to the Seattle Times. The King County Office of Equity, Racial and Social Justice failed to respond to people who made complaints about discrimination at workplaces, in housing, and by businesses for more than a year. Apparently, the office had some issues with coordination and an overall messy working environment. Ironically, the office also may have had some issues with inequity in pay. 

Burger week begins! The Stranger has teamed up with 20 different restaurants all offering specialty burgers for $12 from now until Sunday, June 16. Megan wrote up the Stranger staff’s debate over their favorite burgers. I’m one of the “polite votes for Red Mill.”

Out of context Needling headline: 

No one understands Seattle like The Needling https://t.co/fDHVQNihpD

— 💕 xenobriotic 🐘 (@xenobriotic) June 11, 2024

Seattle Rep layoffs: Struggling to rebound after the COVID-19 pandemic, and with federal aid to arts venues ended, the Seattle Rep has plans to lay off and combine about 12% of its staff. The cuts include a large chunk of its “artistic, arts engagement and Public Works departments,” according to the Seattle Times

An Apple a day keeps AI on its way: Apple now says AI stands for “Apple Intelligence.” LMAO. At the World Wide Developers Conference, the company promised to start incorporating more AI into its devices, according to the Associated Press. Apple users who have downloaded the latest software update already have some of these new features. (I can’t tell you anything about that because I haven’t downloaded the latest update, not out of protest, but because I’m deeply addicted to this technology and even 15 minutes of it powered down makes me physically ill.) Effectively, the additional AI features just make Siri a little better at her job of looking up the weather for the day and telling me the name of the guy I saw in that thing.

Israel kills 274 to save four: Israeli Defense Forces launched an operation Saturday to rescue four hostages, killing 274 Palestinians in the process. The Gaza Health Ministry said many of the casualties included Palestinian women and children, according to the Washington Post. The number of deaths made the Post finally ask the question, is Israel “doing enough to protect civilians in its war against Hamas in Gaza?” The UN says Israel may have committed war crimes during the raid. 

Meanwhile, the UN Security Council has approved a ceasefire resolution: The Security Council passed its first ceasefire plan since the Oct 7 attacks in Israel started intense airstrikes on Gaza. The US has said Israel has accepted the plan (though Israeli officials beg to differ), and now Hamas must also agree, according to the Associated Press. Hamas seems interested. The three-phase plan seeks to entirely end the eight-month war.

Hunter Biden found guilty on all counts: Prosecutors charged the president’s son with owning a gun while being a drug addict, a wildly dumb charge. The jury began deliberating Monday, but the judge released them after about an hour, according to CBS News. The young Biden now faces up to 25 years in prison, but the conviction is his first offense, so he probably won’t get that much. 

The Baltimore Key Bridge shipping channel reopens: After almost three months of clean up, boats can once against pass through the Port of Baltimore’s shipping channel, according to the Baltimore Sun. The channel has remained at least partially blocked since late March, after a container ship crashed into a support pier for the Francis Scott Key Bridge. The crash caused the bridge to collapse and killed six men filling potholes on the bridge at the time. 

Charli XCX drops Brat: Charli XCX sounds like she’s having fun on this album. Enjoy one of your most online friends trying to walk across the table at your next dinner table.  

banger but i can’t focus too hard on the lyrics or i start to get embarrassed for her https://t.co/7Z26KJoKjz

— carey (@brokebackstan) June 9, 2024

The Stranger

One of the officers captured on video repeatedly hitting a man with a baton has a history of complaints and lawsuits for excessive force.

by Ashley Nerbovig

The Stranger identified the two Seattle Police Department (SPD) officers captured on video repeatedly hitting a person suspected of arson on May 31 as Sergeant Nathan Patterson and Officer Cody Alidon. The Office of Police Accountability (OPA) opened an investigation into both officers, and SPD Interim Chief of Police Sue Rahr said her office also plans to gather information and review the arrest.

Patterson, who has a history of complaints and lawsuits against him for excessive force, can be seen in the video hitting the suspect three to five times with his baton as the man appears to resist arrest by tensing his arms. This wouldn’t be Patterson’s first time wielding his baton, either. Back in 2012, a YouTube user posted footage of him taking pride in breaking a nightstick over someone. 

In that video, a crowd confronts a group of cops outside the Northwest African American Museum (NAAM) on Juneteenth 2012. Patterson tells a crowd, “I’m the one that broke the nightstick.” Then someone asks him what he broke the nightstick on, and he says, “One of you.” They ask him if he’s proud of that, and he says, “Yeah.”

The video claims the nightstick-breaking incident referred to a night in July 2011, when SPD officers broke up a party in Columbia City. Attendees of that party later filed a lawsuit against the City, claiming that SPD officers arrived at the party, charged through the gate, and began hitting guests. One of the plaintiffs in the case described a moment when Patterson and other officers had the plaintiff handcuffed and continued hitting him “with flashlights, batons, knees, or fists.” The City settled that lawsuit for $195,000. 

(The video also claims that SPD officers had beaten three people inside the event at NAAM, but an article from that time does not mention any aggressive actions by SPD, just that officers escorted two people from the event.)

In 2020, video showed Patterson repeatedly punching a protester during an arrest. An OPA investigation found he violated department policy around disproportionate use of force in that incident, saying he’d used up to eight punches two seconds after the person had swung a water bottle, whereas another arresting officer only “used two punches over two seconds immediately after he was struck with the water bottle.”

Patterson joined SPD back in 2005, before the US Department of Justice (DOJ) came to town to investigate SPD for a pattern of excessive force, especially against people of color. The DOJ actually used a Patterson arrest as an example of SPD’s disproportionate uses of force. In the example from June 2010, Patterson and three other officers arrived to investigate a possible stabbing at a party. They found a 50-year-old man, who the DOJ report described as 5’ 3” and 130 pounds, passed out on a couch. Despite the fact that the report from the party described a suspect in his 20s, the SPD officers decided the sleeping man presented a threat. The four officers beat and tased the man, according to a lawsuit. The DOJ found the use of force by four officers excessive against “one unarmed man of relatively slight stature.” The City settled the suit for about $90,000.

Patterson made about $155,000 in 2023 and the City owes him about $60,000 in back pay under the new Seattle Police Officers Guild Contract. 

The Stranger

There is no best burger in Seattle; the best burger lives in your heart.

by Megan Seling

I suppose it’s my own fault. A few weeks ago, in Slack, I asked my colleagues for their favorite burger and veggie burger recommendations. I was hoping to round out the food section of our city guide. I figured there’d be one runaway option—a burger to beat all burgers. 

I should’ve known better.

We here at The Stranger are passionate and opinionated. Even a topic as innocuous as “favorite burger” can devolve into a shouting match. (More than a few of us are former high school and college debate clubbers—old habits die hard!)

Things started friendly enough. Social media manager Christian Parroco praised Le Coin, saying, “Hear me out because it may seem bougie to go to a French restaurant just for a burger, but Le Coin in Fremont, hands down, serves the best burger I’ve had in Seattle. High-quality meat cooked to perfection, extremely pleasant mouth feel from the caramelized onions and Mimolette fondue, and the frites are easily a top-five french fry, which is really important to my burger experience.”

FONDUE?? ON A BURGER? Yes. I like where this is going.

Julianne Bell, our food and drink calendar editor, said, “I love the Pick-Quick Drive In burger!! Kinda a classic fast food burger like Dick’s but heaped with more veggies (lettuce, tomato, onion), not unlike In-N-Out. For a more bougie burger situation, I’m also fond of the secret menu burger at Bateau and Boat Bar, which is made with dry-aged beef.”

Indecisive and a vegetarian, I threw two options into the ring: Red Mill’s Red Onion Garden Burger and Lil Woody’s housemade black bean patty on the Pendleton, which is a messy, saucy beast stacked high with BBQ sauce, cheese, and a fat, deep-fried onion ring. 

Just as a few more polite votes for Red Mill and Loretta’s Northwesterner came in, our director of video production, Shane Wahlund, dropped a burger bomb: “I’m an Island Soul boy so I’m a big fan of their Soul Burger + Fries. Their beef is excellent—plus you get a fried egg, American cheese, a hot link, bacon, and the jerk mayo—all on a brioche bun. It’s a gut-buster not for the faint of heart.”

DOES THAT EVEN COUNT AS A BUGER?!!? Responses started flying in a little faster, people started doubling down on how their favorite could possibly stand up to a burger topped with pretty much an entire breakfast. Katie Phoenix came to Mean Sandwich’s defense, vegan Shannon Lubetich insisted no Seattle burger could top Juicy J’s Smoked Burgers in Poulsbo (fighting words if I’ve ever heard them), and then Evanne Hall, who previously claimed the Floozy Burger from Tin Table as her favorite, chided everyone for not thinking of Bait Shop’s burger sooner, with its In-N-Out double patty vibes and perfectly melted cheese. 

Once Caroline Dodge reminded everyone of Virginia Inn’s hand-cut fries, well, shit went off the rails. It stopped being about burgers and started being about mood, the time of day, hunger levels, and cost. Turns out, there is no best burger in Seattle; the best burger lives in our hearts.

The point? The Stranger loves burgers. All burgers. We love them so much that we teamed up with Jack Daniels and made a WHOLE FUCKING WEEK FOR THEM! Today through Sunday, June 16, 20 restaurants are offering specialty burgers for $12. This isn’t about finding the best burger in Seattle; this is about celebrating all a burger can be, from Angus beef to blackened salmon to spicy turkey to marinated tofu. See the full menu of innovative offerings here, then get out there and eat, eat, eat! (And remember to tip, tip, tip, too.)

Happy burger week! I’m never going to ask my colleagues for recommendations on anything ever again. (JK, yes I will, I’ve had a hankerin’ for a milkshake lately…)

The Stranger

Memories are more than just tears in the rain.

by Charles Mudede

The key to Netflix’s new and limited series Eric should entirely be its time (1985) and location (Manhattan). But this key—which concerns the twilight of a period that began with President Gerald Ford refusing to bail out civil New York City from debts it could no longer service (1975), and ended with Jean-Michel Basquiat overdosing on heroin in his Noho flat (1988)—only works on the first half of the six-episode series. Eric also begins as an impressive mystery (missing child, detective with secrets, powerful people pulling all sorts of strings) and ends [SPOILER ALERT] as a fanciful Freudian family drama (daddy was mean to his son because his daddy was mean to him). Had the show stuck with its time and space, and kept the disappearance of the boy a crime that had to be solved, it would have produced a masterful narrative that presented the social forces that shape family life.

Let’s go back to 1985. What’s happening in New York City? The struggle between labor (city employees) and capital (which runs city hall) is soon to end with the latter claiming victory. Wall Street’s power is rapidly expanding. The poor are being swept out of Manhattan. Gentrification is gaining steam. HIV is still seen as “the gay disease.” And hip-hop is not only popular but on the verge of entering the mainstream. All of these developments are, at first, represented in Eric.

For example, when the show’s main character, Vincent Anderson (Benedict Cumberbatch), is informed in “Episode 1” that the children’s show he co-created, Good Day, Sunshine!, is becoming stale and needs to include a beatboxing puppet to keep up with the times, his rejection of the idea not only goes unchallenged (by even the Black puppeteers) but hip-hop is never again mentioned. There’s no breakdancing on street corners, no rapping on the radio or booming from ghetto blasters, no nothing of the kind. (There is, however, lots of folk rock and, due to the—weak—gay characters and—unconvincing—gay club scenes, some disco.) One would be surprised to learn that “The Show,” the song that introduced beatboxing master Doug E. Fresh and one of rap’s first superstars Slick Rick, is a huge hit in the show’s year, 1985. Or that Run DMC’s Raising Hell (hip-hop’s first platinum album) and Beastie Boys’ Licensed to Ill (hip-hop’s second platinum album) are right around the corner.

True, Vincent Anderson’s son, Edgar Anderson (Ivan Morris Howe), is enamored with a two-bit tagger, Yuusuf Egbe (Bamar Kane), but nothing becomes of it. The boy is not really into graffiti, which exploded in the ’70s and had already entered the gallery world by 1985. Edgar doesn’t revolt against his father’s vision of art, which is stale and in decline, but instead reinforces it. Indeed, his father appropriates one of his drawings (a monster that has Maurice Sendak written all over it) to revive his enervated career.

Nearly 40 years after the fictional Edgar ran away from his home (his crazy father, his feckless mother) and entered the underground world of the homeless to be close to a tagger with a heart of gold, I visited Manhattan. And what caught my eye here and there was how so much of it had become a museum of the 1980s—its nightlife, its dingy shops, and, of course, its music. On the corner of Houston Street and Eldridge Street, I came across a mural of a young LL Cool J sporting gold jewelry and a remixed Kangol hat. A block from Riverton Street and Ludlow Street (now officially called Beastie Boys Square), I entered a bar, Thief, devoted to the Golden Age of Hiphop (1979 to 1988). The small establishment had a Run DMC shrine below a blue speaker, a grimy boombox surrounded by tape-gutted cassettes and spent spray cans, and expertly executed graffiti all over its walls. In fact, there seems to be as much graffiti inside of remodeled hotels and new apartment buildings as there is on the street.

The makers of Eric might have forgotten or ignored this New York, but the city itself, despite being in its billionaire stage of gentrification, refuses to. 

Here, I must admit that a personal memory affected my experience (and subsequent interpretation) of Eric. The memory recalls an afternoon in the spring of last year. It was around 3 pm, and I walked into the Shell on Genesee Street to buy wine for the hour or so I planned to spend at the section of Genesse Park that’s next to Lake Washington. After selecting a pricey bottle of Grüner Veltliner, “The Show” began to rock on the station’s speakers. Because I had not heard this track in a minute, I decided to listen to it on my way to the park. When I reached my destination (Doug E. Fresh beatboxing and Rick the Ruler rapping to the theme of Inspector Gadget), I was suddenly overwhelmed by an upwelling of emotion and burst into tears. I almost never cry, but here I was on a park bench beneath the temple-like shelter balling like nobody’s business. What just happened? It was all in the music. “The Show” transported me to 1986, to a little cottage in Chisipite, Harare. 

The cottage was next to a two-story house on eight acres of land by Bay Bokes Road. My family (my brother, sister, and parents) were in the house; I was in my cottage listening to a recording of Mr. Magic’s Rap Attack on WBLS, New York City’s second-best hip-hop show (number one was, of course, Kool DJ Red Alert’s on Kiss FM). And then it happened: Magic’s DJ, Marley Marl, began cutting up “The Show.” I cried in the park because all who were in the house at that moment in time were now dead. When my sister became a shade near the middle of April, my first family was down to just me. I stopped the music. But I could not stop crying. Then I saw someone I knew approaching me with a concerned expression. I stood from the bench, and, without saying a word, walked away from them, walked toward the recently cut field, walked into a swirl of swift and low-flying swallows. That person no longer talks to me.

As you can see from this memory, Eric had little to no chance of getting a fair shake from me. Memories are more than just tears in the rain.

The Stranger

Cavetown/Mother Mother, The Stranger’s Burger Week, and More

by EverOut Staff

It’s a new dawn, it’s a new day, it’s a new week…and we’re feeling good. Go forth and enjoy yourself at events from Cavetown, Mother Mother, and Destroy Boys to a Solid Pink Disco with DJ Trixie Mattel and from the Seattle International Dance Festival to The Stranger’s Burger Week.

MONDAY
FILM

Collide-O-Scope: Pride Edition – Hosted by Shane Wahlund & Michael Anderson
Collide-O-Scope is the brilliant brain baby of Shane Wahlund and Michael Anderson, two local filmmakers and pop culture know-it-alls who cut, clip, and splice their way through hours and hours of music videos, movies, television shows, old commercials, and other footage to piece together spellbinding video collages. It’s not a slap-dash memeification of vintage clips to get an easy laugh from 13-year-old YouTube addicts, Collide-O-Scope is an art form, a thoughtful and smart curation of strange, hilarious, surprising, and at times even touching moments of our history. (And I’m not just saying all these nice things because Wahlund is The Stranger‘s director of video production. I liked Collide-O-Scope long before knowing Wahlund, as its been a Seattle staple for more than 12 years!) A tip: Collide-O-Scope often sells out, so get your tickets sooner than later. STRANGER ARTS AND CULTURE EDITOR MEGAN SELING
(Here-After at the Crocodile, Belltown)

The Stranger

Some Washingtonians could get the chance to replace their war hawk representatives in Congress with progressive challengers running in the name of a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

by Hannah Krieg

As some voters discuss third-party candidates and ballot box boycotts for a presidential race that all but promises to install one of two genocidal geriatrics in the Oval Office, some Washingtonians could get the chance to replace their war hawk representatives in Congress with progressive challengers running in the name of a permanent ceasefire in Gaza. But with money and institutions stacked against the anti-genocide challengers, it will take an enormous movement of canvassers, door-knockers, and, of course, voters to get these underdog candidates out of the primary, let alone in the position to dethrone the Democrats’ darlings come November. 

Ceasefire from Sammamish

Imraan Siddiqi, a Muslim and first-generation American, has fought for his community his whole life. As one of the only Muslim students at his school, he remembered taking on de facto responsibility to speak up in class to educate his peers. Later in life, during the surge of Islamophobia following the 9/11 attacks, Siddiqi started writing op-eds in local papers debunking racist tropes. 

Eventually, that passion led him to the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), an advocacy group that promotes social, legal, and political activism among Muslims in the US. He sat on the board of CAIR in Arizona for nine years, serving as the executive director of the organization for five years of that. At the end of 2020, he moved his family to Sammish and became the executive director at CAIR Washington.

When he moved to Washington’s 8th Congressional District—which straddles the Cascade mountains to include portions of King, Pierce, Snohomish, Chelan, and Kittitas counties—-his new neighbors told him to vote for Rep. Kim Schrier (WA-08) to keep the purple-ish district from flipping red, to maintain a Democratic majority in Congress, and to stave off the rise of facism. 

He voted for her, but for him Schrier crossed the line in November when she voted with Republicans and 21 other Democrats to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib, the sole Palestinian American serving in the House of Representatives, over her anti-Zionist rhetoric. Siddiqi noted that he did not hear a similar public condemnation from Schrier over the genocidal rhetoric her Republican colleagues spewed at Palestinians. Schrier’s Office sent The Stranger a letter to all her constituents, in which she condemned Tlaib and Rep. Brian Mast, who called Palestinians “Nazi civilians.” She wrote that she supported legislation to censure Mast, but according to The Hill, Democrats yanked it before it went to a vote. 

Siddiqi said Schrier didn’t redeem herself after that, either. In March, she approved a controversial spending bill that cut funding to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, which provides humanitarian aid to Palestinians. Then in April, she approved more than $26 billion in additional weapons to Israel. And in all these nine months, after Israel has killed at least 36,000 Palestinians, injured at least 83,000, and displaced about 1.7 million, Schrier has never called for a permanent ceasefire. 

“You know, as somebody who’s voted Democrat their entire life, I ask: How are Democrats differentiating themselves from Republicans at this point?” Siddiqi said in a phone interview with The Stranger. “If they’re not standing on any type of moral ground, they’re just perpetuating the military industrial complex and devaluing the lives of Arabs and Muslims abroad.”

Too Little, Too Late

Melissa Chaudhry—a longtime advocate in the nonprofit sphere for environmentalism, housing justice, and peace—felt a similar dismay over the actions of her congressperson, Rep. Adam Smith, in Washington’s 9th Congressional District.  

Smith, a ranking member of the House Armed Service Committee who wins elections on the defense industry’s dime, became a clear target for protesters advocating against Israel’s assault on Gaza. But he eventually caved somewhat when he finally called for a ceasefire at the end of March, after Israel had killed 32,000 Palestinians. Chaudhry said she would have called for a ceasefire with Rep. Pramila Jayapal in mid October after Israel had killed 3,000 Palestinians.  

Despite his words, Smith’s not behaving like a lawmaker that really wants a ceasefire. The month after he called for one, he voted to send more weapons to Israel. 

“Smith seems to be deeply blind to the fact that the United States has immense leverage and power and responsibility in this situation,” Chaudhry said in a phone interview. “It is our weapons that are being dropped. And if we were to threaten to cut off those weapons, if we were to actually properly cut off those weapons in accordance with international law, in accordance with our own laws, then we’d be doing the morally right thing, and the Palestinians would stop dying.”

In a phone call with The Stranger, Smith took issue with Chaudhry’s analysis of his vote.

“The vote we took on continuing to provide Israel with arms is not mutually exclusive to supporting a ceasefire, primarily because of what Hezbollah and Iran are doing and the need for Israel to be able to defend themselves against that,” Smith said. He also noted that he twice voted down funding to Israel because it did not include humanitarian aid for Gaza. 

But Israel does not exclusively use its weapons to defend against Hezbollah and Iran. Last week, Israel bombed a UN school-turned-shelter, killing at least 30 people, with what US defense officials identified as a US-made bomb. When asked about that instance, he doubled down in his disagreement with Chaudhry’s logic. Smith redirected, “There’s also an argument that all the focus on Israel, the fact that the UN to date has still not condemned Hamas, incentivizes Hamas to not agree to the ceasefire.”

One of 535

But both Chaudhry and Siddiqi understand that they would each be just one more voice for a ceasefire in a body that overwhelmingly supports Israel. According to the Working Families Party tracker, as of May 8, only 94 members of Congress have called for a ceasefire. That leaves more than 80% of Congress who won’t even say the “C” word, let alone vote and apply pressure to achieve that end.

“It has to be a long game,” Chaudhry said. “But we also have to fight the fights available to us with the tools available to us. I cannot change the makeup of 535 people right now. I cannot convince 535 people of anything, but I can become one of them. Right?”

Similarly, Siddiqi said he would be “just one voice, obviously,” but, “one voice for a ceasefire is better than one rubber-stamping everything for Israel.”

With their campaigns, Siddiqi and Chaudhry join other pro-Palestine candidates who are also challenging Israel-friendly incumbents across the Country. Even in Washington state, WA Congressional District 2 candidates such as Lynnwood City Council Member Josh Binda and Green Party candidate Jason Call recognize the horrors in Gaza as a genocide and would advocate for a ceasefire in office. 

Plus, the tides are changing in general. In larger numbers than ever before, celebrities have started to express public support for civilians in Gaza, which helps to normalize the position. 

Perhaps this view seems optimistic, but Israel and Hamas could strike a deal before November. At the end of May, President Joe Biden, a self-proclaimed Zionist, laid out a three-phase plan that stipulates Israel must withdraw from all densely populated areas of Gaza, and Hamas must release the remaining hostages. It is unclear if either party will accept.

Still, Siddiqi and Chaudhry both said that ending the bombardment will be just one step toward Palestinian liberation, something that a candidate backed by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) likely will not fight for. Chaudhry said she would use her office to punish Israel for war crimes and start a serious conversation about its apartheid system. Siddiqi would fight for Palestinian statehood. 

But Wait, There’s More!

While both candidates adopted pro-ceasefire branding in their campaigns, Siddiqi and Chaudhry know that’s just one part of the job.

“I’m not just a single-issue or a protest candidate,” Siddiqi said. “I’m standing for the people who are not in this 1% of the population, the people who are struggling right now and who want to see their tax dollars go to things that are going to benefit them, not death and destruction.”

Siddiqi would prioritize universal health care, lowering the cost of higher education, and making the US immigration system less punishing and dehumanizing. He said he and his team are still hammering out the details of his platform, so he did not have many specifics. 

Chaudhry would try to slash the US’s bloated defense budget and reallocate the money to human services, specifically expanding SNAP benefits that currently do not cover basics such as diapers and dish soap. She would also try to tackle deeply embedded Islamophobia in the immigration process.  

Chaudhry said she realizes that first-year lawmakers don’t typically pass much legislation, but she would join “The Squad” as soon as they would let her, always vote on her principles even if they’re unpopular, and use the position of power as a pulpit for important issues. 

A New Frontier for WA-08

Siddiqi and Chaudhry both have difficult races ahead of them. 

While Siddiqi flamed Schrier for not distinguishing herself from the Republican party, that might be her most attractive quality in their purple district. Before Shrier won her seat in 2018, Republicans represented the district for 32 years. Though she beat Trump freak Matt Larkin in 2022 by seven points, in 2020 she only beat Army Ranger and Republican Jesse Jensen by four points.

Siddiqi does not think he’s “too left” for his district. He can see himself scraping a lot of votes from Redmond Ridge, Sammamish, and Issaquah, which have large Asian and South Asian populations. He also sees potential voters in the Latino populations of Wenatchee, Ellensburg, and Leavenworth. But voters from all demographics, he said, may feel compelled in this “moral moment” to jump Schrier’s ship, which seems headed straight for the annihilation of Gaza. 

The Lefties That Came Before Her

Chaudhry also faces an uphill battle. Smith has held his seat firmly for 27 years, easily defeating challenges from the left and the right. Most recently, he faced a lefty challenge in educator Stephanie Gallardo. Chaundry said Gallardo did not make it out of the primary because she didn’t earn an important endorsement from the Stranger Election Control Board (SECB). The SECB wrote that Gallardo did not demonstrate a strong command of the issues, and her election would guarantee that an even crazier war hawk would replace Smith on his committee. 

Chaudhry doesn’t see losing Smith as a “risk.” Smith, funded by war profiteers, big tech surveillance, and what Open Secrets calls the “Israel industry,” has “never used his position to meaningfully stand for peace,” Chaudhry said in a follow up email. 

During “The Squad’s” ascendancy in 2018, Smith drew another lefty challenger, Sarah Smith, who earned the SECB’s endorsement, won second in the primary, and ultimately lost because the incumbent outspent her. 

With that in mind, Chaudhry does not expect to outraise her AIPAC-backed opponent. She does think she will out-mobilize him, though. “I’m not trying to beat him on fundraising. I’m trying to win hearts and minds,” she said. 

Where’s the Movement?

Gallardo also took the ground-game heavy approach to her campaign, but she started months earlier and found a big volunteer base in the Seattle chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). DSA has yet to endorse in Chaudhry’s race. It’s a safe bet that the group won’t let Smith put their logo on mailers—they basically follow him around booing at this point—but their hands-off approach to the current congressional elections could mean trouble for outsiders like Chaudhry and Siddiqi. 

DSA Palestine Solidarity Working Group member Carl Thomas said that he celebrates any candidate who rejects AIPAC and the US war machine. “But for us, individual politicians, they’re just one tool that a movement can use,” he said in a phone interview.

Sometimes the juice is totally worth the squeeze, though. For example, Tacoma DSA co-chair Zev Cook worked on Tacoma Council Member Jamika Scott’s campaign in 2023. It made sense to dedicate time to electoralism in that case because Scott could win the race and organizers trusted Scott to use her office to build the movement rather than use the movement to win office and lock the door behind her. 

At the same time, Cook said, “I see so much more power coming from communities and young people being conscious around Palestine than flowing directly out of some elected office.”

That said, some community organizers will run the numbers and conclude that it’s worth skipping a few shifts at the mutual aid feed to door-knock for Shiddiq, Chaudhry, or Seattle Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal. And some won’t see a viable path to victory or even a clear return on investment if they do get one more congressperson vowing to change the US machine from within. 

The Stranger

Every jurisdiction in Washington State must take a hard look at their comprehensive plan and recognize its potential to address housing shortages.

by Girmay Zahilay

If you’re a resident of King County, chances are you’ve experienced the housing crisis in deeply personal ways. Perhaps you’ve felt the strain of rising rents, the frustration of searching for an affordable home to purchase in a market with dwindling inventory, or even the despair of facing homelessness. In the day-to-day struggle to secure stable housing, it can be easy to overlook the broader forces of public policy shaping our experiences.

Yet, when we examine the numbers and the policy decisions, the reasons behind our housing woes become clearer.

Washington State currently holds the unenviable title of having the fewest number of housing units per capita in the entire nation. This is, in large part, because the zoning and land use codes of cities, towns, and counties across the state restrict the number and types of homes that can be built. Apartments and more modest multi-family homes are banned in many residential areas throughout the state. These bans create a housing scarcity that drives up competition for available units, leading to skyrocketing prices. As our state’s population and job market continue to grow, the gap between housing supply and demand widens, exacerbating the affordability crisis for countless individuals and families.

There is, however, a glimmer of hope. Across the state, there is a growing movement among advocates and policymakers pushing for a solution: building more housing of all types in more places. House Bill 1220, recently passed by the State Legislature, requires cities and counties to update their comprehensive plans to ensure they “plan for and accommodate housing affordable to all economic segments of the population.” The previous iteration of the Growth Management Act required that localities only “encourage the availability of affordable housing” rather than actively planning for and accommodating it. This is a crucial step in the right direction, forcing local governments to actively address our housing shortage.

But the State Legislature isn’t the only government taking action. Look to Spokane. In 2022, their city council made a bold move, eliminating single-family zoning and allowing the construction of modest multi-family homes throughout the city. The results have been remarkable. In the short period since the ordinance took effect, Spokane has seen a surge in housing permits. In 2023, the city allowed 225% more homes than it did in 2022, 218% more than in 2021, and 241% more than 2020. This is a powerful testament to the power of removing bureaucratic hurdles and letting the market respond to the clear demand for housing options.

This movement to build more homes inspired me to propose the King County Missing Middle Housing Motion in February of 2023. My legislation directed the King County Executive to complete a comprehensive study on ways to expand “missing middle” housing in unincorporated King County. “Missing middle” is a term used to describe modest multi-family homes that more than one household can live in, like duplexes, triplexes, quadplexes, and townhouses.These types of homes bridge the gap between single-family homes and large apartment buildings, offering a wider range of options and greater affordability.

The code study that resulted from my legislation, delivered in June of 2023, outlined effective ways to significantly reduce barriers to building missing middle housing. Executive staff’s recommendations don’t just deal in numbers; they address the human need for diverse housing options. They represent a chance for families to put down roots, for young professionals to live near their jobs, and for seniors to age comfortably in place with access to essential services. Many of these great recommendations have been incorporated into the Executive’s proposed 2024 Comprehensive Plan Update, a document that sets the course for King County’s development for the next decade.

The Comprehensive Plan Update presents a unique opportunity for King County to lead the way on housing. The plan, currently under review by the County Council, has the potential to substantially increase housing supply by reducing zoning and regulatory barriers. Through the Local Services and Land Use Committee, the Council has taken the Executive’s recommended changes a step further, proposing to allow for more density and a wider variety of housing types in urban areas, all while streamlining or eliminating the often lengthy and expensive permitting processes.

It should be noted that King County’s land use and zoning jurisdiction extends primarily to rural areas and small urban unincorporated pockets like Skyway and White Center. Since the capacity for development in these urban pockets tends to be smaller than that of larger cities, and the Growth Management Act directs us to reduce development in rural areas, the County will not be able to close the housing gap on its own. But the inability to do it alone is true of every single jurisdiction in our state. It is only together that we can solve these problems and provide everyone an affordable place to live.

The urgency of this situation cannot be overstated. Up for Growth, a housing advocacy group, estimates a statewide shortage of 225,000 housing units. Washington State’s Department of Commerce estimates we will need more than one million homes in the next 20 years. In King County alone, we need thousands of new homes just to keep pace with population growth. This lack of supply isn’t just an economic burden–it’s a major factor contributing to our growing homelessness crisis. As a community, we cannot stand by while our neighbors face the devastating consequences of a broken housing market.

We need bold, coordinated action across every level of government, and our respective comprehensive plans offer us a roadmap to get there. Let’s learn from the success stories from the State Legislature to Spokane, embrace innovative solutions, work together across governments, and finally tackle the housing crisis head-on. Every jurisdiction in Washington State must take a hard look at their comprehensive plan and recognize its potential to address housing shortages.

The Stranger

The Stranger’s morning news roundup.

by Nathalie Graham

Fire in the ID: A vacant two-story building on the 1000 block of South Jackson Street caught fire late Sunday night. It’s been burning through the night and will likely burn well into Monday morning. More than 85 firefighters are working to stifle the flames. Roads around the fire are closed, including Jackson Street between 8th and 12th Avenues.

Swimmer in critical condition: A 30-year-old man leaped off a pedestrian bridge in South Lake Union near the Museum of History and Industry (MOHAI) on Sunday. He went under the water and never resurfaced. Three rescue swimmers hauled him out of the lake. He is currently in critical condition. Just because it’s nice and warm outside for the first time this year doesn’t mean the lake water is warm. Cold water is dangerous to swim in, you freaks! 

Protect our Bulldogs: The Garfield High School community mourned the tragic loss of 17-year-old Amarr Murphy over the weekend. Murphy, a linebacker and defensive end on the football team, broke up a fight at school on Thursday afternoon and was shot multiple times. Aside from football, people at Garfield knew Murphy as an aspiring rapper, known online as Babyyanks. He was apparently getting ready to release an album. The community is still reeling after Murphy’s death. The school remains closed on Monday. When students return on Tuesday, they will do so with a heavy Seattle Police Department presence. 

Wildfire season is already cooking: A fire in the Lake Chelan area has ballooned to 300 acres in size. Fire crews are battling the blaze.

Ground and air crews have continued work on the #PioneerFire today with new resources arriving. A Complex Incident Management Team (CIMT) has been assigned. NW Team 13 will assume command on 6/10. Further updates as conditions change. https://t.co/Qp6Qx28317 pic.twitter.com/9Dospps9W7

— Washington State DNR Wildfire (@waDNR_fire) June 10, 2024

Marijuana-less Martha’s Vineyard: The dispensaries on Martha’s Vineyard, the island off the coast of Massachusetts, is running out of weed. Despite the state giving ganja the green light, Massachusetts’ Cannabis Control Commission recently decided transporting pot across the ocean was a violation of federal law, thus leaving Martha’s Vineyard and its 230 registered medical users and thousands of recreational users in the lurch, weedless. One pot shop owner has filed a lawsuit against the commission. 

Today’s weather: Will be scrumptious. Some clouds, but mostly sun, and a high of 71 degrees.

I am not going to pretend I understand the EU parliament: But scary things seem to be happening over there. It seems as if the European Union held elections and far-right parties gained a ton of parliamentary seats. Far-right parties in Italy doubled their representation, and Germany’s extreme far-right party now holds more seats than its Social Democrats party. The showing was so bad for French President Emmanuel Macron’s party against competitor Marine Le Pen’s conservative faction that Macron “immediately dissolved the national parliament and called for new elections to start later this month.” All of this is bad for climate, agriculture, and immigration policy. 

This is the future liberals want: 

“It’s all the same train!”

The engine in the foreground is pulling the cars on the viaduct.

From #Switzerland — at 2 kilometers, the longest passenger train in the world.

pic.twitter.com/arYpPmhRlb

— 𝚃𝚊𝚛𝚊𝚜 𝙶𝚛𝚎𝚜𝚌𝚘𝚎 🚇 (@grescoe) June 10, 2024

San Juan Islands plane crash kills famous astronaut: Apollo 8’s William Anders died Friday when the plane he was flying around the San Juan Islands plummeted into he water. Anders, who snapped the iconic “earth rise photo,” was 90 years old at the time of his death. 

Clamming ban: Stop! Put that razor clam down! The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has expanded a coastal ban on shellfish harvesting to include razor clams and bay clam. Previously, the ban only included mussels. The ban is meant to protect people from “a marine biotoxin known as paralytic shellfish poisoning” that has wormed its way into this year’s population of shellfish. In Washington, similar bans are in place along the state’s Pacific coastline. 

Think you’re safe from wildfires? Think again! Just because your house didn’t burn down during a wildfire season doesn’t mean the fire didn’t put your life in jeopardy. A new study out of California shows that “more than 50,000 people died prematurely” between 2008 and 2018 “due to exposure to toxic particles in wildfire smoke,” according to The Guardian. One of the biggest issues is how wildfire smoke contains PM2.5, a tiny pollutant that can embed itself into human lungs and bloodstreams. To make you feel even worse about this, I should point out, while you can attempt to protect yourself against smoke, the real way to protect yourself is to have our governments invest in “forest management, wildland urban interface management, and climate change mitigation.”

Bad balls news: The 40 semen samples used in a Chinese study all contained microplastics. How does having minuscule bits of plastic knocking around with your swimmers impact fertility? Unclear! Can’t be good! That’s just my professional, non-scientific opinion. 

Positive penis news: Apparently, Viagra improves blood flow to the brain and improves blood vessel performance in people with a risk of vascular dementia. 

Tokyo creates government dating app: Marriages are down in Japan, so Tokyo city hall created a dating website and is currently making a dating app version. The goal is to convince people to get hitched and have more kids as Japan’s birth rates keep dropping. Details for the app aren’t set in stone, but it seems users will need to upload driver’s licenses to confirm identities and tax forms to confirm income, as well as a signed form signifying a user’s readiness for marriage. 

More possible abortion restrictions: Overturning Roe v. Wade and curtailing abortion access wasn’t enough for these ghouls. A conservative think tank, the Heritage Foundation, wants to limit private insurance coverage of abortions in states with abortion restrictions. This would make it far harder for people traveling out-of-state for abortions to actually get the abortion. Additionally, the think tank wants to rescind a new federal rule that requires most employers to offer “reasonable accommodations” when it comes to their workers and pregnancy, childbirth, and abortions. The Heritage Foundation has Trump’s ear, and the fear is he could move any of these issues forward if he’s elected, though his stance on abortion remains unclear. 

A long read for your Monday: Washington state law considers any assault on a health care worker a felony. While the law was made to protect workers, it has the unintended consequence of penalizing mentally ill people, throwing them in jail and delaying much-needed treatment. Read the new Seattle Times investigation into the law and its impacts. 

Here’s a song for you: Listening to this on a sunny day is the secret to happiness. Possibly.

The Stranger

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