We as in You and Me?

T Village of University Heights is undoubtedly a liberal haven—or at least for those who demand to be heard. For all I know (and don’t), Republicans might outnumber Democrats, but you’d never know from the cacophony the liberals make. Their numbers matter less than who makes more demands. They’re a noisy group for sure.

Several overly-liberal areas stand out from others in the neighborhood. Shirley Ann is one street. Panorama Drive is another. Slogan signage tends to be loudest there. Take the Featured Image as an example. (Vitals: f/1.7, ISO 50, 1/200 sec, 23mm (film equivalent); 9:27 a.m. PST, today; Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra.)

The “No Dumping” sign is the same one shared with you on Feb. 28, 2021. Ha! What serendipity, five years to the day! The other sign is relatively new. I don’t recall seeing it the day before yesterday. Portland, Ore.-based small business Signs of Justice produced the placard. The owners are avowed adversaries of Donald Trump. Make what you will of that. They also promote Progressive values.

Judging from the company’s catalog, a significant number of the signs seen in the neighborhood’s most liberal areas are produced by this family-owned business.

Disclosure: I disagree with many of them. Not all.