The misguided and DeVos-deranged teachers unions
The misguided and DeVos-deranged teachers unions
Even during a national crisis, the nearsighted (and, very possibly, soon to be blindsided) NEA and AFT are happy to see private schools wither and die. When government-run schools next open, social distancing, masks, obsessive cleaning, etc. will be mandated throughout much of the country. The education establishment is claiming it will need a...
By Larry Sand
Unions Run the City of Santa Ana
Unions Run the City of Santa Ana
With rare exceptions, most cities in California are run by public-sector unions. There is the appearance of democracy, with public employees accountable to elected officials, who in turn are accountable to voters, but appearances can be deceiving. Because political campaigns to attract voters require money, and public-sector unions have money. Lots of money. In California...
By Edward Ring
The American Media Has Betrayed America
The American Media Has Betrayed America
There aren’t enough epithets in the English language to adequately describe “journalists” such as ABC Nightly News anchorman David Muir, the dashing forty-something actor who pretends to share important national news with America. Five days a week, Muir recites agenda-driven propaganda as if it were truth, while his allies who run the social media monopolies...
By Edward Ring
Did Ballot Harvesting Impact March 3 Bond and Tax Proposals?
Did Ballot Harvesting Impact March 3 Bond and Tax Proposals?
Next day returns on the special election for California’s 25th congressional district indicate that a Republican, Mike Garcia, is holding a 56 percent to 44 percent lead over Democrat Christy Smith. That looks awfully good for Garcia. And while in this case Garcia’s lead does look insurmountable, in California, early returns don’t always equal final results. According...
By Edward Ring
Rethinking Diversity Bureaucrats, Rethinking College Education
Rethinking Diversity Bureaucrats, Rethinking College Education
In an interview posted last month by the Hoover Institution, the estimable Victor Davis Hanson, speaking in character, made a typically provocative comment, saying “for what we are paying for every provost of diversity and inclusion we could probably hire three professors of electrical engineering.” That can be fact checked. And the results are illuminating. On the...
By Edward Ring
A different kind of pandemic is stalking California’s cities
A different kind of pandemic is stalking California’s cities
Image: San Gabriel (Creative Commons) If you’re looking for dark entertainment, you could do worse than the reality show unfolding throughout California. First, state and local officials supported the nearly total shutdown of the state’s economy as a necessary response to Covid-19. That killed the sales and other tax revenues that are the life’s blood...
By California Policy Center
The coming upheaval in education
The coming upheaval in education
Due to Covid-19 related economic realities, the unions demand the Feds pour billions more into education. There is no way to sugarcoat it. The economic impact of Covid-19 will take its toll on education funding. The National Education Association is in full freak-out mode, “calling for an additional $175 billion to stabilize education funding—the $30.7...
By Larry Sand
California is Ready to Get Rid of Newsom
California is Ready to Get Rid of Newsom
Across California on May 1, tens of thousands protested in defiance of the lockdown orders. In Sacramento, the west lawn of the state capitol building was filled with protesters, with thousands more marching along the sidewalk surrounding the capitol grounds. Additional thousands driving their cars and honking their horns created three hours of total gridlock on...
By Edward Ring
State Legislature Continues Its Assault On Local Zoning Decisions
State Legislature Continues Its Assault On Local Zoning Decisions
With the introduction of the latest housing density mandate, AB 725 in the California state legislature, the battle between state control and local control in California intensifies. At the same time, the pandemic crisis and its economic consequences add additional complexity to an already complex issue. The debate over California’s housing policies offers an unusual combination: vehement...
By Edward Ring
Mega Cities Require Mega Suburbs
Mega Cities Require Mega Suburbs
Housing is unaffordable in California, and, increasingly, housing is becoming unaffordable in every other part of the United States where bad policies preside. The shame of these policies is not only the misery they impose on growing proportions of Americans, but the pessimism they represent. Read beyond the initial recitation of mundane obstacles to share...
By Edward Ring
The Regulatory Taking of Venice Beach
The Regulatory Taking of Venice Beach
With great crisis comes great opportunity… On April 18 LA City Councilmember Mike Bonin held a telephone town hall to discuss public health issues. His district includes Venice Beach, which has a high number of homeless still living on the streets and it was brought up that this is a major health concern. Towards the...
By Edward Ring
The Needs of the Few and the Paralysis of Perfectionism
The Needs of the Few and the Paralysis of Perfectionism
“Logic clearly dictates that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.” – Leonard Nimoy’s character Spock, Wrath of Khan, 1982 For anyone who has questioned whether or not the COVID-19 pandemic constitutes a severe enough threat to justify a soft version of martial law and a possible economic depression, Spock’s classic claim...
By Edward Ring
How the Homeless Industrial Complex Will Destroy Venice Beach
How the Homeless Industrial Complex Will Destroy Venice Beach
“I intend on putting in another proposal in the next week or two that asks the city to look at the federal bailout or stimulus funds we’ll be getting as a result of this crisis…and using some of that to either buy hotels that go belly up or to buy the distressed properties that are...
By Edward Ring
Huntington Beach denies pandemic reality, dispenses pay raises
Huntington Beach denies pandemic reality, dispenses pay raises
On Monday, April 6 the Huntington Beach City Council voted to increase pay for its police officers and city employees. The cost for these raises over the next three years is estimated at $5 million. In a city that reported general revenues of $188 million in the fiscal year ended June 2019, this raise can accurately be described as...
By Edward Ring