#New York City Department of Education
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An antisemitic âbait and switchâ appears to be happening in New York Cityâs Department of Education (NYC DOE). The ruse, facilitated by the department and its Chancellor David Banks, claims they are addressing the rampant antisemitism in its public schools while at the same time, facilitating it.
Specifically, the department is taking steps to educate the next generation of New York Cityâs children against Israel and into the pro-Hamas, âanti-colonialistâ ideology now prevalent on the cityâs streets.
The NYC DOE, over which Bank presides, is the largest K-12 public school system in the United States and among the largest in the world. NYCâs public schools serve over 1.1 million students across the cityâs five boroughs in 1,800 separate institutions.
A month after the Hamasâ October 7, 2023 massacre of 1,200 Israelis and the kidnapping of 250 more, Chancellor Banks sent an email to teachers prior to a planned November 9, 2023 student and staff walkout billed as part of a national âshutdown for Palestineâ event.
In the email, Banks cautioned teachers about violating the education departmentâs rules on political speech, even going so far as to warn them that this type of activity, âeven on oneâs personal time,â can violate city rules if it âdisruptsâŚthe school environment.â
The email continued:
âAll employees should ensure that expressions of their personal political views are kept separate from their NYCPS job. School leaders, teachers, and other school staff should not express their personal views about political matters during the school day, while on school grounds, or while working at school events, and it is critical that they set aside their personal views during class discussions about current events.
However, what has happened in practice tells a different story. Not only did staff participate in the November 9 walkout, but there have been no perceivable consequences for their actions. In addition, instances have been reported where teachers directly facilitated student involvement in the protests.
Teachers have not only been emboldened by Banksâs lack of disciplinary action, but some consider themselves impervious because they are tenured. (Unlike many public school systems around the country, the NYC DOE has a system of quasi-tenure, which makes it harder to fire a teacher who has been granted this status.)Â
But arguably some of the most egregious violations of the NYC DOEâs rules have come from the chancellor himself. Since the conflict began, Banks has hired or rewarded a number of blatantly anti-Israel activists, some for the explicit purpose of educating students and staff on Israel and the war. Â
#david banks#new york city#New york city department of education#NYC DOE#antisemitism#anti israel activists
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Tracey Collins Retires Amid Investigation into Allegations of No-Show Job
Tracey Collins Retires Amid Investigation into Job Allegations Tracey Collins, a prominent figure within the New York City Department of Education and the longtime partner of Mayor Eric Adams, has officially retired this week as an investigation unfolds regarding allegations that her well-compensated position was essentially a âno-showâ job. Collinsâs retirement took effect on Monday, with herâŚ
#corruption scandal#Eric Adams#investigation#New York City Department of Education#no-show job#public service#retirement#salary#Sheena Wright#Tracey Collins
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The Best News of Last Month
Sorry for being not active this month as I had some health problems. I'll start posting weekly now :) Meanwhile here's some good from last month
1. Widow donates $1 billion to medical school, giving free tuition forever
Ruth Gottesman surprised by her late husband's $1 billion in Berkshire stock, decides to donate it in full to the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, New York City's poorest borough. The donation is intended to cover students' tuition indefinitely, ensuring access to medical education for generations.
A video capturing students' emotional reactions to the news, cheering and crying, circulated after the announcement, highlighting the profound impact of the donation on the medical school community.
2. Electric school buses outperform diesel in extreme cold
In Colorado's West Grand School District, electric school buses outperformed their diesel counterparts, particularly in the bitterly cold temperatures of towns like Kremmling, where morning temperatures can drop below -30 degrees Fahrenheit. Despite common concerns about reduced range in extreme weather, the electric buses maintained their battery charge even in these frigid conditions, providing reliable transportation for students.
This success has been welcomed by the school district, as diesel vehicles also face challenges in starting in Colorado's harsh winter weather.
3. Christian Bale unveils plans to build 12 foster homes in California
Christian Bale has led a tour round the new village in California where he plans to build 12 foster homes, as well as two studio flats to help children transition into independent living, and a 7,000 sq ft community centre.
The actor has spearheaded the building of a unique complex of facilities with the aim of keeping siblings in the foster care system together, and ideally under the same roof.
4. Average lifespan of a person with Down syndrome has increased from 25 years in 1983 to 60 years today
Today the average lifespan of a person with Down syndrome is approximately 60 years.
As recently as 1983, the average lifespan of a person with Down syndrome was 25 years. The dramatic increase to 60 years is largely due to the end of the inhumane practice of institutionalizing people with Down syndrome.
5. Greece legalises same-sex marriage
Greece has become the first Christian Orthodox-majority country to legalise same-sex marriage. Same-sex couples will now also be legally allowed to adopt children after Thursday's 176-76 vote in parliament.
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said the new law would "boldly abolish a serious inequality".
6. Massachusetts police K9 tracks scent for over 2 miles to find missing 12-year-old in freezing cold
A Massachusetts police K9 followed her nose to help find a 12-year-old who went missing in frigid temperatures last week, tracking the childâs scent for over two miles, authorities said.
K9 Biza, a female German shepherd, was called on to help after officers learned the child left their home at around 10:30 p.m. Wednesday and was last seen in the Pakachoag Hill area of Auburn, the Auburn Police Department said.
7. Good News for the Socially Anxious: People Like You a Lot More Than You Think They Do, New Research Confirms
The "Lake Wobegon effect" or "illusory superiority" phenomenon highlights people's tendency to overestimate their abilities, but recent research suggests that in social interactions, individuals often underestimate their likability and charm.
Studies indicate that people consistently fail to recognize signals of others' liking toward them, leading to a "liking gap" where individuals believe they are less likable than they actually are.
Techniques such as focusing more on others during conversations and genuinely expressing interest in them can help alleviate social anxiety by shifting the focus away from self-criticism. Ultimately, understanding that others may also experience similar anxieties can lead to a more relaxed and enjoyable social experience.
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That's it for this week :)
This newsletter will always be free. If you liked this post you can support me with a small kofi donation here:
Buy me a coffee â¤ď¸
Also donât forget to reblog this post with your friends.
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Things Biden and the Democrats did, this week #27
July 12-19 2024
President Biden announced the cancellation of $1.2 billion dollars worth of student loan debt. This will cancel the debt of 35,000 public service workers, such as teachers, nurses, and firefighters. This brings the total number of people who've had their student debt relived under the Biden Administration to 4.8 million or one out of every ten people with student loan debt, for a total of $168.5 billion in debt forgiven. This came after the Supreme Court threw out an earlier more wide ranging student debt relief plan forcing the administration to undertake a slower more piecemeal process for forgiving debt. President Biden announced a new plan in the spring that will hopefully be finalized by fall that will forgive an additional 30 million people's student loan debt.
President Biden announced actions to lower housing coasts, make more housing available and called on Congress to prevent rent hikes. President Biden's plan calls for landlords who raise the rent by more than 5% a year to face losing major important tax befits, the average rent has gone up by 21% since 2021. The President has also instructed the federal government, the largest land owner in the country, to examine how unused property can be used for housing. The Bureau of Land Management plans on building 15,000 affordable housing units on public land in southern Nevada, the USPS is examining 8,500 unused properties across America to be repurposed for housing, HHS is finalizing a new rule to make it easier to use federal property to house the homeless, and the Administration is calling on state, local, and tribal governments to use their own unused property for housing, which could create approximately 1.9 million units nationwide.
The Department of Transportation announced $5 billion to replace or restore major bridges across the country. The money will go to 13 significant bridges in 16 states. Some bridges are suffering from years of neglect others are nearly 100 years old and no longer fit for modern demands. Some of the projects include the I-5 bridge over the Columbia River which connects Portland Oregon to Vancouver Washington, replacing the Sagamore Bridge which connects Cape Cod to the mainland built in 1933, replacing the I- 83 South Bridge in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and Cape Fear Memorial Bridge Replacement Project in Wilmington, North Carolina, among others.
President Biden signed an Executive Order aimed at boosting Latino college attendance. The order established the White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity through Hispanic-Serving Institutions. Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) are defined as colleges with 25% or above Hispanic/Latino enrollment, currently 55% of Hispanic college students are enrolled in an HSI. The initiative seeks to stream line the relationship between the federal government and HSIs to allow them to more easily take advantage of federal programs and expand their reach to better serve students and boost Hispanic enrollment nationwide.
HUD announced $325 million in grants for housing and community development in 7 cities. the cities in Tennessee, Texas, Alabama, Florida, Nevada, New York and New Jersey, have collectively pledged to develop over 6,500 new mixed-income units, including the one-for-one replacement of 2,677 severely distressed public housing units. The 7 collectively will invest $2.65 billion in additional resources within the Choice Neighborhood area â so that every $1 in HUD funds will generate $8.65 in additional resources.
President Biden took extensive new actions on immigration. On June 18th The President announced a new policy that would allow the foreign born spouses and step children of American citizens who don't have legal status to apply for it without having to leave the country, this would effect about half a million spouses and 50,000 children. This week Biden announced that people can start applying on August 19, 2024. Also in June President Biden announced an easing of Visa rules that will allow Dreamers, Americans brought to the country as children without legal status, to finally get work visas to give them legal status and a path way to citizenship. This week the Biden Administration announced a new rule to expand the federal TRIO program to cover Dreamers. TRIO is a program that aims to support low income students and those who would be the first in their families to go to college transition from high school to college, the change would support 50,000 more students each year. The Administration also plans to double the number of free immigration lawyers available to those going through immigration court.
The EPA announced $160 million in grants to support Clean U.S. Manufacturing of Steel and Other Construction Materials. The EPA estimates that the manufacturing of construction materials, such as concrete, asphalt, steel, and glass, accounts for 15% of the  annual global greenhouse gas emissions. The EPA is supporting 38 projects aimed at measuring and combatting the environmental impact of construction materials.
The US announced $203 million in humanitarian assistance for the people of Sudan. Sudan's out of control civil war has caused the largest refugee crisis in the world with 11 million Sudanese having fled their homes in the face of violence. The war is also causing the gravest food crisis in the world, with a record setting 25 million people facing acute food insecurity, and fears that nearly a million will face famine in the next months. This aid brings the total aid the US has given Sudan since September 2023 to $1.6 billion, making America the single largest donor to Sudan.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau put forward a new rule that would better regulate popular paycheck advance products. 2/3rds of workers are payed every two weeks or once a month and since 2020 the number of short term loans that allow employees to receive their paycheck days before itâs scheduled to hit their account has grown by 90%. the CFPB says that many of these programs are decided with employers not employees and millions of Americans are paying fees they didn't know about before signing up. The new rule would require lenders to tell costumers up front about any and all fees and charges, as well as cracking down on deceptive "tipping" options.
#Joe Biden#Thanks Biden#Politics#US politics#American politics#student loans#debt forgiveness#housing crisis#rent control#wage theft#sudan#sudan crisis#climate change#climate action#immigration#hispanic#latino#college#bridges#Infrastructure
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Photographing at the MET
Julie, our photography blogger, spent the day at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in the Temple of Dendur and Modern Art wing to capture some street photography style portraiture and the results are fantastic! Take a look! #MarywoodArt #Photography #MET
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#Art#Art History#Art Museum#Color photography#educational trip#Gallery#Marywood Art#Marywood Art Department#Marywood University#MET#Metropolitan Museum of Art#museum photography#New York City#NYC#photographer#Photography#portrait photography#Portraiture#Street photography#The Met#Where Creativity Works
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"Research on a police diversion program implemented in 2014 shows a striking 91% reduction in in-school arrests over less than 10Â years.
Across the United States, arrest rates for young people under age 18 have been declining for decades. However, the proportion of youth arrests associated with school incidents has increased.
According to the U.S. Department of Education, Kâ12 schools referred nearly 230,000 students to law enforcement during the school year that began in 2017. These referrals and the 54,321 reported school-based arrests that same year were mostly for minor misbehavior like marijuana possession, as opposed to more serious offenses like bringing a gun to school.
School-based arrests are one part of the school-to-prison pipeline, through which studentsâespecially Black and Latine students and those with disabilitiesâare pushed out of their schools and into the legal system.
Getting caught up in the legal system has been linked to negative health, social, and academic outcomes, as well as increased risk for future arrest.
Given these negative consequences, public agencies in states like Connecticut, New York, and Pennsylvania have looked for ways to arrest fewer young people in schools. Philadelphia, in particular, has pioneered a successful effort to divert youth from the legal system.
Philadelphia Police School Diversion Program
In Philadelphia, police department leaders recognized that the cityâs school district was its largest source of referrals for youth arrests. To address this issue, thenâDeputy Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel developed and implemented a school-based, pre-arrest diversion initiative in partnership with the school district and the cityâs department of human services. The program is called the Philadelphia Police School Diversion Program, and it officially launched in May 2014.
Mayor-elect Cherelle Parker named Bethel as her new police commissioner on Nov. 22, 2023.
Since the diversion program began, when police are called to schools in the city for offenses like marijuana possession or disorderly conduct, they cannot arrest the student involved if that student has no pending court case or history of adjudication. In juvenile court, an adjudication is similar to a conviction in criminal court.
Instead of being arrested, the diverted student remains in school, and school personnel decide how to respond to their behavior. For example, they might speak with the student, schedule a meeting with a parent, or suspend the student.
A social worker from the city also contacts the studentâs family to arrange a home visit, where they assess youth and family needs. Then, the social worker makes referrals to no-cost community-based services. The student and their family choose whether to attend.
Our teamâthe Juvenile Justice Research and Reform Lab at Drexel Universityâevaluated the effectiveness of the diversion program as independent researchers not affiliated with the police department or school district. We published four research articles describing various ways the diversion program affected students, schools, and costs to the city.
Arrests Dropped
In our evaluation of the diversion programâs first five years, we reported that the annual number of school-based arrests in Philadelphia decreased by 84%: from nearly 1,600 in the school year beginning in 2013 to just 251 arrests in the school year beginning in 2018.
Since then, school district data indicates the annual number of school-based arrests in Philadelphia has continued to declineâdropping to just 147 arrests in the school year that began in 2022. Thatâs a 91% reduction from the year before the program started.
We also investigated the number of serious behavioral incidents recorded in the school district in the programâs first five years. Those fell as well, suggesting that the diversion program effectively reduced school-based arrests without compromising school safety.
Additionally, data showed that city social workers successfully contacted the families of 74% of students diverted through the program during its first five years. Nearly 90% of these families accepted at least one referral to community-based programming, which includes services like academic support, job skill development, and behavioral health counseling...
Long-Term Outcomes
To evaluate a longer follow-up period, we compared the 427 students diverted in the programâs first year to the group of 531 students arrested before the program began. Results showed arrested students were significantly more likely to be arrested again in the following five years...
Finally, a cost-benefit analysis revealed that the program saves taxpayers millions of dollars.
Based on its success in Philadelphia, several other cities and counties across Pennsylvania have begun replicating the Police School Diversion Program. These efforts could further contribute to a nationwide movement to safely keep kids in their communities and out of the legal system."
-via Yes! Magazine, December 5, 2023
#philedelphia#pennsylvania#united states#us politics#school#high school#school to prison pipeline#prison system#arrests#education#students#schools#good news#hope#rare case of police not completely sucking#police#policing#law enforcement
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William Barr
Physique: Average Build Height: 6Ⲡ1Ⳡ(1.85 m)
William Pelham Barr (born May 23, 1950) is an American attorney who served as the United States attorney general in the administration of President George H. W. Bush from 1991 to 1993 and again in the administration of President Donald Trump from 2019 to 2020. Barr was the second person in U.S. history to serve twice as attorney general (the first was John J. Crittenden).
Bill looks like a human Droopy. Then I see him smile and I go aww⌠want some dick? What? Iâm not voting for or marrying him. Iâm just using him as a cum dumpster then kicking him to the streets. And something tells me, he would be good in bed.
Born and raised in New York City, Barr was educated at the Horace Mann School, Columbia University, and George Washington University Law School. From 1971 to 1977, Barr was employed by the Central Intelligence Agency. He then served as a law clerk to judge Malcolm Richard Wilkey of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Before becoming attorney general in 1991, Barr held numerous other posts within the Department of Justice, including leading the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) and serving as deputy attorney general.
Barr has been married to Christine Moynihan Barr since 1973, and together they have three daughters. Lets see what else I can find out about him. Hmm⌠Barr is an avid bagpiper having played competitively in Scotland with a major American pipe band.
OK that one is WAY too easy.
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For US unions like the UAW â which has thousands of members in weapons factories making the bombs, missiles, and aircraft used by Israel, as well in university departments doing research linked to the Israeli military â the Palestinian trade union call to action is particularly relevant. When the UAWâs national leadership came out in support of a cease-fire on December 1, they also voted to establish a âDivestment and Just Transition Working Group.â The stated purpose of the working group is to study the UAWâs own economic ties to Israel and explore ways to convert war-related industries to production for peaceful purposes while ensuring a just transition for weapons workers.
Members of UAW Labor for Palestine say they have started making visits to a Colt factory in Connecticut, which holds a contract to supply rifles to the Israeli military, to talk with their fellow union members about Palestine, a cease-fire, and a just transition. They want to see the unionâs leadership support such organizing activity.
âIf UAW leaders decided to, they could, tomorrow, form a national organizing campaign to educate and mobilize rank-and-file towards the UAWâs own ceasefire and just transition call,â UAW Labor for Palestine members said in a statement. âThey could hold weapons shop town halls in every region; they could connect their small cadre of volunteer organizers â like us â to the people we are so keen to organize with; they could even send some of their staff to help with this work.â
On January 21, the membership of UAW Local 551, which represents 4,600 autoworkers at Fordâs Chicago Assembly Plant (who were part of last yearâs historic stand-up strike) endorsed the Palestinian trade unionsâ call to not cooperate in the production and transportation of arms for Israel. Ten days later, UAW Locals 2865 and 5810, representing around forty-seven thousand academic workers at the University of California, passed a measure urging the unionâs national leaders to ensure that the envisioned Divestment and Just Transition Working Group âhas the needed resources to execute its mission, and that Palestinian, Arab and Muslim workers whose communities are disproportionately affected by U.S.-backed wars are well-represented on the committee.â
Members of UAW Locals 2865 and 5810 at UC Santa Cruzâs Astronomy Department have pledged to withhold any labor that supports militarism and to refuse research collaboration with military institutions and arms companies. In December, unionized academic workers from multiple universities formed Researchers Against War (RAW) to expose and cut ties between their research and warfare, and to organize in their labs and departments for more transparency about where the funding for their work comes from and more control over what their labor is used for. RAW, which was formed after a series of discussions by union members first convened by US Labor Against Racism and War last fall, hosted a national teach-in and planning meeting on February 12.
Meanwhile, public sector workers in New York City have begun their own campaign to divest their pension money from Israel. On January 25, rank-and-file members of AFSCME District Council (DC) 37 launched a petition calling on the New York City Employeesâ Retirement System to divest the $115 million it holds in Israeli securities. The investments include $30 million in bonds that directly fund the Israeli military and its activities. âAs rank-and-file members of DC 37 who contribute to and benefit from the New York City Employeesâ Retirement System and care about the lives of working people everywhere, we refuse to support the Israeli government and the corporations that extract profit from the killing of innocent civilians,â the petition states.
In an election year when President Joe Biden and other Democratic candidates will depend heavily on organized labor for donations and especially get-out-the-vote efforts, rank and filers are also trying to push their unions to exert leverage on the president by getting him to firmly stand against the ongoing massacre in Gaza. NEA members with Educators for Palestine are calling on their unionâs leaders to withdraw their support for Bidenâs reelection campaign until he stops âsending military funding, equipment, and intelligence to Israel,â marching from AFT headquarters to NEA headquarters in Washington, DC on February 10 to assert their demand. Similarly, after the UAW International Executive Board endorsed Biden last month â a decision that sparked intense division within the union â UAW Labor for Palestine is demanding the endorsement be revoked âuntil [Biden] calls for a permanent ceasefire and stops sending weapons to Israel.â
#palestine#free palestine#labor#union strong#recommend reading the whole article bc as the author points out#us labor has had a long history of collaborating with israel and imperialist projects in general#pressure to stop the genocide is not going to come from union leadership#itâs coming from rank and files who are organizing their own initiatives and putting the heat on their leadership#uawâs divestment and just transition group is intriguing to me bc it sets a precedent to pressure other machinist unions to follow#and bc part of their efforts involves building solidarity with palestine among rank and files nationwide
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People often say to me that I wouldnât personally be affected by a second Donald Trump presidency. After all, I live in a blue city in a blue state, and Iâm a married, heterosexual woman who isnât looking to have any more children. I wonât need medication like mifepristone for a miscarriage (though I do have girls in my family who I assume will someday want to have children), and I donât personally rely on the federal government for education, because my kids donât go to public school.
So, again, how would any of this affect me? The most likely answer is that, as a public-facing person, I will continue to be subjected to threats, as many in the mainstream media already are. But attacks on the media could escalate if Trump returns to power, given that he doesnât hesitate to demonize journalists and call them out before his millions of followers. And given what Trump says on television, he may target American citizens for unfavorable speech.
âI think the bigger problem is the enemy from within,â he told Maria Bartiromo on Fox News on Sunday. âSick people, radical-left lunatics. And it should be very easily handled by, if necessary, by the National Guard, or, if really necessary, by the military.â The âlunaticsâ in question could be anyone from protesters to opinion columnistsâor even mainstream reportersâhe doesnât agree with. Trump has referred to CBS as a âA FAKE NEWS SCAMâ whose operations are âtotally illegal,â and has similarly suggested that ABC should lose its broadcast license.Â
What would it mean to have a president who, in this fashion, targets what little is left of the free press? Itâs hard to fathom, but thereâs a world where Trump imitates his strongman friends like Vladimir Putin or Viktor OrbĂĄn or Kim Jong Unâall of whom participate in jailing or killing journalists in countries with state-regulated media. Heâs already taking a page from Joe McCarthy this election cycle in targeting the âenemies within,â something my family is all too familiar with.
Few aspects of Trumpâs second-terms plans are more openly authoritarian than his immigration platform. On Friday, Trump traveled to Aurora, a suburb of Denver, Colorado, where he is shopping âOperation Aurora,â a policy he said would target âevery illegal migrant criminal network operating on American soilâ by use of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. According to the Brennan Center, the law is âa wartime authority that allows the president to detain or deport the natives and citizens of an enemy nation. The law permits the president to target these immigrants without a hearing and based only on their country of birth or citizenship.â The last time the United States used the Alien Enemies Act, it was to put Japanese and Japanese Americans into internment camps during WWII.
What would internment camps actually entail in the modern day? Well, Trump has talked about deporting up to 20 million undocumented immigrantsâan operation of staggering scale that he freely admits will be âbloody.â (The Department of Homeland Security, in 2018, estimated there were 11.4 million undocumented immigrants; Pew put the number at roughly 11 million in 2022.) Itâs impossible to imagine what deporting that many people would really look like; maybe blue-state governors would be strong enough to prevent deportation camps from being built in states like California and New York. Maybe the camps would only be in red states, or maybe theyâd be erected on federal land, like national parks. Then thereâs the question of who would run these camps. Trump, for his part, has mused about using the National Guard. Who would stop any of this, you might ask? Would a Republican Congress stop it? Who would be the grown-ups in the room.
At least during the first Trump administration, the courts prevented Trump from doing some of the things he wanted to do, like ending DACA. But this time, Trump would be starting out with a 6-3 conservative-majority Supreme Court, featuring three justices he appointed. Last year, we saw the Trump-friendly high court issue two rulings that will pretty much serve as a blank check to an emboldened Trump: The first ended the Chevron deference, which will curb the power of federal agencies and expedite the death of regulatory expertise. The other decision, which is perhaps more worrying, Trump would have a blank check to do whatever he wants if he says itâs in the service of the presidency, essentially granting him blanket immunity against any crimes he commits in office. As Ninth Circuit judge and Ronald Reagan appointee Stephen S. Trott wrote, it means that Richard Nixon could have âlegally ordered his plumbers to burgle the office of Daniel Ellsbergâs psychiatrist.â
Trump is telling us all about his potential plans: internment camps, going after his enemies foreign and domestic, including, presumably, journalists. Will I be one of them? Will he clamp down on the free press? Will he take away the licenses from networks he deems insufficiently supportive of his presidency?
On the campaign trail, Trump has recently posed a question of his own when it comes to voting for him, asking the crowd, âWhat the hell do you have to lose?â Actually, a lot. While we donât know precisely what a second Trump term will look like, itâll surely be chaotic and bleak, and could mark the end of something we certainly donât want to lose: democracy as we know it.
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Peanut was an eastern gray squirrel found and rescued in 2017 by Mark Longo after the squirrel's mother was killed by a car in New York City. Longo sought a shelter for Peanut but was unsuccessful, and he bottle-fed the squirrel for the next eight months before deciding that Peanut should be returned to the wild. Longo released the animal into his backyard, but about a day later, he found Peanut on his porch with half of its tail missing. Longo said he "opened the door, [Peanut] ran inside, and that was the last of Peanut's wildlife career." It is illegal to keep squirrels as pets in the state of New York, and in the seven years spent in Longo's care in his hometown of Norwalk, Connecticut, no license was obtained to legally keep Peanut. Longo has stated that he was in the process of filing paperwork to have Peanut certified as an educational animal at the time of the seizure, however, he has not explained why he did not pursue a license in the preceding seven years.
While in his care, Longo created an Instagram account sharing videos of Peanut, and by October 2024 the account had amassed 534,000 followers. Peanut's social media following also helped steer viewers to Longo's OnlyFans account, where he called himself "Peanut's dad" and produced pornography, drawing in $800,000 over one month. In April 2023, Longo and his wife moved from Norwalk to upstate New York to found the P'Nuts Freedom Farm Animal Sanctuary. They contributed to half of the sanctuary's expenses, most of which was raised through Peanut's social media presence. According to them, the sanctuary had rescued over 300 animals by November 2024, however, Longo was not licensed as a wildlife rehabilitator.
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) began investigating Mark Longo in January 2024 after complaints were received alleging that Longo was keeping wildlife illegally. In an interview with the New York Post, Longo speculated that the anonymous complaints were motivated by jealousy due to the success of his OnlyFans account.
On October 30, 2024, the NYSDEC took Peanut, along with a pet raccoon named Fred, from Longo's home in Pine City, New York. Two days later, government officials alleged that after his seizure, Peanut had bitten one of the personnel involved, and the pets were euthanized to test for rabies, as there are no ante-mortem rabies testing methods for animals approved by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Longo stated that the decision to euthanize the squirrel "won't go unheard". The incident has been widely criticized as an example of excessive government intrusion into personal lives and pet ownership rights. Longo claimed that the NYSDEC used excessive force during the raid, which, according to Longo, lasted five hours.
Peanut's death triggered widespread public backlash, social media outcry, condemnation from several lawmakers, and a proposed bill aimed at preventing similar incidents in the future.
The death of Peanut was used as a cause cÊlèbre by the MAGA movement, who blamed it on Democrats. Several prominent Republican figures complained about the killing of the squirrel, with some Trump campaign supporters claiming that the Biden-Harris administration was too firm regarding licenses for owning wild animals like squirrels as pets. Both New York governor Kathy Hochul and Vice President Kamala Harris turned down a request to comment on the incident. The Republican vice presidential candidate of the 2024 U.S. election, JD Vance, posted on X that "Don is fired up about P'Nut the squirrel"; the official Trump campaign TikTok account also condemned Peanut's death. Nick Langworthy stated his irritation with the NYS DEC, saying that "instead of focusing on critical needs like flood mitigation in places like Steuben County, where local officials have to struggle just to get permits from the DEC to clear debris-filled waterways, they're out seizing pet squirrels." Former New York governor Andrew Cuomo of the Democratic Party also criticized the DEC, as did actor William Shatner. On X (Twitter), Elon Musk commented that "Government overreach kidnapped an orphan squirrel and executed him."
Jake Blumencranz, a NYS Assemblyman from Long Island's 15th Assembly District, has proposed a bill called "Peanut's Law: Humane Animal Protection Act", an amendment to the New York State Environmental Conservation Law limiting government animal seizures
Really an incredible tale
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With COVID-19 relief gone, teachers are losing their jobs. It's a blow to diversity. - Published Sept 3, 2024
Erica Popoca's ninth grade English students were livid in the spring when she told them she wouldn't be back to teach this fall.
The district where she works in Hartford, Connecticut, terminated her contract because the COVID-19 relief money that covered her salary was about to dry up. Newer teachers such as Popoca were the first to be cut. Her students wrote letters urging school board members to change their minds.
Popoca, the founding adviser of the multilingual student club, worried she would lose bonds with Latino students she had taught for two years who identify with her culturally as a Latina and as one of the few teachers who speaks Spanish at the school.
The district ultimately came up with other funding to pay her, and in a win for her and her students, officials reversed the layoff.
Popoca is among the thousands of teachers and school staffers across the U.S. at risk of losing their jobs as districts balance their budgets and prepare for the shortfall after COVID-19 relief money expires. Districts have been scrambling to put unfunded staffers into different roles. The reality is that many students will lose contact with adults with whom they have built relationships in recent years.
The Biden administration granted schools $189.5 billion over the past few years through the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ESSER) under the American Rescue Plan Act. School officials have until the end of September to commit the remainder of their money, and districts will no longer be able to pay for nonteaching staff roles with that money after Sept. 30. Schools nationwide used most of their relief fund money to pay for classroom teachers and support staff, according to a U.S. Department of Education analysis of district spending for fiscal year 2022. Districts across the country are now laying off recently hired educators, teaching assistants, counselors, restorative justice coordinators and other key staff at schools, or they're scrambling to find ways to retain them.
A recent survey of 190 district leaders by the nonprofit research group Rand found that teacher reductions were "the most common budget cut" officials anticipated. Conversations about staff layoffs cropped up in at least 28 districts ahead of the upcoming fiscal cliff, according to a tracker of media reports from the Georgetown University-based research center Edunomics Lab, which monitors potential layoffs at districts.
The post-pandemic layoffs have been widespread. Montana's Helena Public Schools cut 36 positions, including 21 teachers. The Arlington Independent School District in Texas cut 275 positions, including counselors, tutors and teaching support staff.
Newer teachers are the first to go in states that allow or require districts to use "last-in-first-out" policies, which protect tenured teachers â and many people terminated will be staffers of color, said Aaron Pallas, a professor of sociology and education at Columbia University. States that diversified their educator workforce in the past several years will see a backslide in that progress since "recently hired staff who are often more diverse" will be "laid off more than experienced staff who often are more traditionally white," he said.
Schools serving low-income students will be hit hardest by the shift in funding because those campuses received more federal relief money, Pallas said.
Schools were required to comply with some equity provisions when obligating the relief money. The end of the funding will disparately affect students of color and kids in high-poverty neighborhoods.
Popoca, who comes from the Bronx in New York City, is concerned about what the losses will mean for her school.
"I am relieved but wary because quite a few positions are still vacant," she said. "We donât have the amount of staff we're supposed to have, and I'm concerned about how the lack of staff is going to impact the students and the school."
Which states are likely to lose new teachers? At least 11 states â Alaska, California, Hawaii, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio and Rhode Island â last year had policies explicitly requiring districts to consider seniority in layoff decisions, according to a 2023 analysis from Educators for Excellence, a New York-based nonprofit organization that supports state laws that rid of seniority-based considerations from layoff decisions. Some other states, including Connecticut, where Popoca lives, allow districts to consider seniority in layoff decisions among other factors, but it's not required. Some states ban districts from considering seniority as a factor.
Because junior teachers tend to begin their careers in higher-poverty schools, there could be cases in which schools lose high percentages of their staff, said Marguerite Roza, director of Georgetown University's Edunomics Lab.
"It's really disruptive for students," Roza said. "And it's not great for teachers."
When Popoca told her class of mostly Black and Latino eighth graders last spring that she would be laid off, they were heartbroken. She's one of a few new staffers of color returning to the district this year. A few of her colleagues lost their jobs in the spring and won't be back when school starts, she said.
What should families expect to see at schools? In addition to the emergency funding layoffs, Roza said, many teachers may leave of their own accord. Some districts may also try to shrink their staffing pools with attrition rather than layoffs.
"They're going to hope and pray teachers just leave," Roza said.
Most of the cuts will likely hit the pool of support staff districts beefed up during the pandemic to help kids recover, Columbia's Pallas said.
The counselors, nurses, restorative justice coordinators and teaching assistants added to campus staff in recent years will be gone, and students and their school communities will start to feel that loss by the start of this school year, he said.
Francis Pina is one of several staffers and one of few Black men hired by Boston Public Schools to train teachers how to infuse social-emotional learning into classroom teaching. At the end of last year, he learned his role and the jobs of most new staffers on his team would be dissolved because it was considered a short-term position. Boston Public Schools paid Pina with COVID-19 emergency money through the end of the past academic year.
Pina will return as a high school math teacher this year, but he worries about what will happen to the district's social-emotional learning program.
When he heard his role was coming to an end, Pina said, he was nervous because he felt it was "really important to support students" still facing pandemic-related academic, social and emotional setbacks. He says students in the district haven't worked through all of those losses, even if the district has gone back to the "status quo."
As a Black man who attended Boston Public Schools, he believes he offers a unique perspective to kids, including Black students, and helps them thrive academically and emotionally in school.
"Prioritizing this is important," Pina said. "Kids need to know we care about them."
Teacher diversification will face a setback Diversity among the teaching staff has improved in recent years in Massachusetts, where Pina teaches. But the state's last-in-first-out policy means schools will lose diversification in the workforce, Roza, from the research lab at Georgetown, said.
That's a problem considering students of color are the majority at public schools in the U.S. Nearly one-fourth of public schools did not have an educator of color on staff, according to a May analysis of state-by-state data from TNTP, a nonprofit organization focused on the needs of students of color and those in poverty. Academic studies show students of color perform better academically when they have teachers from diverse backgrounds
There's a surprising reason: Why many schools don't have a single Black teacher
Representation on campuses may be further diminished when the emergency funding ends.
To stave off those losses and rescind seniority-based layoffs, some lawmakers tried to change how layoffs work, but they ran into pushback from the state teachers union, which said the policies harmed protections for senior educators. In March, the Massachusetts Legislature rejected sections of education bills that would have removed seniority considerations as the sole factor for layoffs.
âWhile we are happy to see the legislature taking strides to improve teacher diversity in Massachusetts, it is disheartening to see that the Education Committee chose not to prioritize protecting these very educators in the event of district layoffs,â Lisa Lazare, executive director of Educators for Excellence's Massachusetts chapter, said in a news release.
More new staffers of color are expected to face layoffs this year, Roza said.
For now, Popoca, in Connecticut, is looking forward to returning to the classroom and seeing her students â many of whom come from Latin American countries and with whom she feels a special bond. She's worried about the cuts, she says, because the school needs more teachers and support staff, not less.
She already has heard from people she knows who had considered entering the teaching profession in Hartford or elsewhere who have pulled back because of the district's lack of money.
"It's really concerning," she said.
#covid#mask up#pandemic#covid 19#wear a mask#coronavirus#sars cov 2#public health#still coviding#wear a respirator
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Matt Wuerker, Politico
* * * * *
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
October 30, 2024
Heather Cox Richardson
Oct 31, 2024
On Friday, October 25, at a town hall held on his social media platform X, Elon Musk told the audience that if Trump wins, he expects to work in a Cabinet-level position to cut the federal government.
He told people to expect âtemporary hardshipâ but that cuts would âensure long-term prosperity.â At the Trump rally at New York Cityâs Madison Square Garden on Sunday, Musk said he plans to cut $2 trillion from the government. Economists point out that current discretionary spending in the budget is $1.7 trillion, meaning his promise would eliminate virtually all discretionary spending, which includes transportation, education, housing, and environmental programs.
Economists agree that Trumpâs plans to place a high tariff wall around the U.S., replacing income taxes on high earners with tariffs paid for by middle-class Americans, and to deport as many as 20 million immigrants would crash the booming economy. Now Trumpâs financial backer Musk is factoring in the loss of entire sectors of the government to the economy under Trump. Â
Trump has promised to appoint Musk to be the governmentâs âchief efficiency officer.â âEveryoneâs going to have to take a haircut.⌠We canât be a wastrel.⌠We need to live honestly,â Musk said on Friday. Rob Wile and Lora Kolodny of CNBC point out that Muskâs SpaceX aerospace venture has received $19 billion from the U.S. government since 2008.
An X user wrote: âI]f Trump succeeds in forcing through mass deportations, combined with Elon hacking away at the government, firing people and reducing the deficitâthere will be an initial severe overreaction in the economyâŚ. Markets will tumble. But when the storm passes and everyone realizes we are on sounder footing, there will be a rapid recovery to a healthier, sustainable economy. History could be made in the coming two years.â
Musk commented: âSounds about right[.]â
This exchange echoes the prescription of Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon, whose theories had done much to create the Great Crash of 1929, for restoring a healthy economy. âLiquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate,â he told President Herbert Hoover. âIt will purge the rottenness out of the system. High costs of living and high living
will come down. People will work harder, live a more moral life. Values will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick up the wrecks from less competent people.âÂ
Mellon, at least, was reacting to an economic crisis thrust upon an administration. Musk is seeking to create one.Â
Today the Commerce Department reported that from July through September, the nationâs economy grew at a solid 2.8%. Consumer spending is up, as is investment in business. The country added 254,000 jobs in September, and inflation has fallen back almost to the Federal Reserveâs target of 2%.Â
It is extraordinarily rare for a country to be able to reduce inflation without creating a recession, but the Biden administration has managed to do so, producing what economists call a âsoft landing,â rather like catching an egg on a plate. As Bryan Mena of CNN wrote today: âThe US economy seems to have pulled off a remarkable and historic achievement.âÂ
Both President Joe Biden and Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris have called for reducing the deficit not by slashing the government, as Musk proposes, but by restoring taxes on the wealthy and corporations.Â
As part of the Republicansâ plan to take the country back to the era before the 1930s ushered in a government that regulated business and provided a basic social safety net, House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) expects to get rid of the Affordable Care Act.Â
At a closed-door campaign event on Monday in Pennsylvania for a Republican House candidate, Johnson told supporters that Republicans will propose âmassive reformâ to the Affordable Care Act, also known as âObamacare,â if they take control of both the House and the Senate in November. âHealth-care reformâs going to be a big part of the agenda,â Johnson said. Their plan is to take a âblowtorch to the regulatory state,â which he says is âcrushing the free market.â âTrumpâs going to go big,â he said.â When an attendee asked, âNo Obamacare?â he laughed and agreed: âNo ObamacareâŚ. The ACA is so deeply ingrained, we need massive reform to make this work, and we got a lot of ideas on how to do that.âÂ
Ending a campaign with a promise to crash a booming economy and end the Affordable Care Act, which ended insurance companiesâ ability to reject people with preexisting conditions, is an unusual strategy.
A post from Trump last night and another this morning suggest his internal polls are worrying him. Last night he claimed there was cheating in Pennsylvaniaâs York and Lancaster counties. Today he posted: âPennsylvania is cheating, and getting caught, at large scale levels rarely seen before. REPORT CHEATING TO AUTHORITIES. Law Enforcement must act, NOW!âÂ
Trump appears to be setting up the argument he used in 2020, that he can lose only if he has been cheated. But it is increasingly apparent that the get-out-the-vote, or GOTV, efforts of the Trump campaign have been weak. When Trumpâs daughter-in-law Lara Trump and loyalist Michael Whatley became the co-chairs of the Republican National Committee in March 2024, they stopped the GOTV efforts underway and used the money instead for litigation. They outsourced GOTV efforts to super PACs, including Muskâs America PAC.
In Wired today, Jake Lahut reported that door-knockers for Muskâs PAC were driven around in the back of a U-Haul without seats and threatened with having to pay their own hotel bills if they didnât meet high canvassing quotas. One of the canvassers told Lahut that they thought they were being hired to ask people who they would be voting for when they flew into Michigan, and was surprised to learn their actual role. The workers spoke to Lahut anonymously because they had signed a nondisclosure agreement (a practice the Biden administration has tried to stop).
Trumpâs boast that he is responsible for the Supreme Courtâs overturning of the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision recognizing the constitutional right to abortion is one of the reasons his support is soft. In addition to popular dislike of the idea that the state, rather than a woman and her doctor, should make decisions about her healthcare, the Dobbs v. Jackson Womenâs Health Organization decision is now over two years old, and state examinations of maternal deaths are showing that women are dying from lack of reproductive healthcare.Â
Cassandra Jaramillo and Kavitha Surana of ProPublica reported today that at least two pregnant women have died in Texas when doctors delayed emergency care after a miscarriage until the fetal heartbeat stopped. The woman they highlighted today, Josseli Barnica, left behind a husband and a toddler.Â
At a rally this evening near Green Bay, Wisconsin, Trump said his team had advised him to stop talking about how he was going to protect women by ending crime and making sure they donât have to be âthinking about abortion.â But Trump, who has boasted of sexual assault and been found liable for it, did not stop there. He went on to say that he had told his advisors, âIâm going to do it whether the women like it or not. I am going to protect them.âÂ
The Trump campaign remains concerned about the damage caused by the extraordinarily racist, sexist, and violent Sunday night rally at Madison Square Garden. Today the campaign seized on a misstatement President Biden made when condemning the statement from the Madison Square Garden event that referred to Puerto Rico as a âfloating island of garbage.â They tried to turn the tables to suggest that Biden was calling Trump supporters garbage, although the president has always been very careful to focus his condemnation on Trump alone.Â
In Wisconsin today, when he disembarked from his plane, Trump put on an orange reflective vest and had someone drive him around the tarmac in a garbage truck with TRUMP painted on the side. He complained about Biden to reporters from the cab of the truck but still refused to apologize for Sundayâs slur of Puerto Rico, saying he knew nothing about the comedian who appeared at his rally.Â
This, too, was an unusual strategy. Like his visit to McDonalds, where he wore an apron, the image of Trump in a sanitation truck was likely intended to show him as a man of the people. But his power has always rested not in his promise to be one of the people, but rather to lead them. The pictures of him in a bright orange vest and unusually dark makeup are quite different from his usual portrayal of himself.
Indeed, media captured a video of Trumpâs stunt, and it did not convey strength. MSNBCâs Katie Phang watched him try to get into the truck and noted: âTrump stumbles, drags his right leg, almost falls over, and tries at least three times to open the doorâŚ. Some transparency with Trumpâs medical records would be nice.âÂ
The Las Vegas Sun today ran an editorial that detailed Trumpâs increasingly obvious mental lapses and concluded that Trump is âcrippled cognitively and showing clear signs of mental illness.â It noted that Trump now depends âon enablers who show a disturbing willingness to indulge his delusions, amplify his paranoia or steer his feeble mind toward their own goals.â It noted that if Trump cannot fulfill the duties of the presidency, they would fall to his running mate, J.D. Vance, who has suggested âhe would subordinate constitutional principles for personal profit and power.â
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
#political cartoon#Matt Wuerker#Politico#Heather Cox Richardson#Letters From an American#Las Vegas Sun#MAGA extremism#garbage truck stunt#women's health#reproductive rights#Musk#Affordable Care Act#Obamacare#project 2025#MAGA's plans for you
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Things Biden and the Democrats did, this week #9
March 9-15 2024
The IRS launched its direct file pilot program. Tax payers in 12 states, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming, Arizona, Massachusetts, California and New York, can now file their federal income taxes for free on-line directly with the IRS. The IRS plans on taking direct file nation wide for next year's tax season. Tax Day is April 15th so if you're in one of those states you have a month to check it out.
The Department of Educationâs Office of Civil Rights opened an investigation into the death of Nex Benedict. the OCR is investigating if Benedict's school district violated his civil rights by failing to protect him from bullying. President Biden expressed support for trans and non-binary youth in the aftermath of the ruling that Benedict's death was a suicide and encouraged people to seek help in crisis
Vice President Kamala Harris became the first sitting Vice-President (or President) to visit an abortion provider. Harris' historic visit was to a Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Paul Minnesota. This is the last stop on the Vice-President's Reproductive Rights Tour that has taken her across the country highlighting the need for reproductive health care.
President Biden announced 3.3 billion dollars worth of infrastructure projects across 40 states designed to reconnect communities divided by transportation infrastructure. Communities often split decades ago by highways build in the 1960s and 70s. These splits very often affect communities of color splitting them off from the wider cities and making daily life far more difficult. These reconnection projects will help remedy decades of economic racism.
The Biden-Harris administration is taking steps to eliminate junk fees for college students. These are hidden fees students pay to get loans or special fees banks charged to students with bank accounts. Also the administration plans to eliminate automatic billing for textbooks and ban schools from pocketing leftover money on student's meal plans.
The Department of Interior announced $120 million in investments to help boost Climate Resilience in Tribal Communities. The money will support 146 projects effecting over 100 tribes. This comes on top of $440 million already spent on tribal climate resilience by the administration so far
The Department of Energy announced $750 million dollars in investment in clean hydrogen power. This will go to 52 projects across 24 states. As part of the administration's climate goals the DoE plans to bring low to zero carbon hydrogen production to 10 million metric tons by 2030, and the cost of hydrogen to $1 per kilogram of hydrogen produced by 2031.
The Department of Energy has offered a 2.3 billion dollar loan to build a lithium processing plant in Nevada. Lithium is the key component in rechargeable batteries used it electric vehicles. Currently 95% of the world's lithium comes from just 4 countries, Australia, Chile, China and Argentina. Only about 1% of the US' lithium needs are met by domestic production. When completed the processing plant in Thacker Pass Nevada will produce enough lithium for 800,000 electric vehicle batteries a year.
The Department of Transportation is making available $1.2 billion in funds to reduce decrease pollution in transportation. Available in all 50 states, DC and Puerto Rico the funds will support projects by transportation authorities to lower their carbon emissions.
The Geothermal Energy Optimization Act was introduced in the US Senate. If passed the act will streamline the permitting process and help expand geothermal projects on public lands. This totally green energy currently accounts for just 0.4% of the US' engird usage but the Department of Energy estimates the potential geothermal energy supply is large enough to power the entire U.S. five times over.
The Justice for Breonna Taylor Act was introduced in the Senate banning No Knock Warrants nationwide
A bill was introduced in the House requiring the US Postal Service to cover the costs of any laid fees on bills the USPS failed to deliver on time
The Senate Confirmed 3 more Biden nominees to be life time federal Judges, Jasmine Yoon the first Asian-America federal judge in Virginia, Sunil Harjani in Illinois, and Melissa DuBose the first LGBTQ and first person of color to serve as a federal judge in Rhode Island. This brings the total number of Biden judges to 185
#Thanks Biden#Joe Biden#Democrats#politics#US politics#good news#nex benedict#abortion#taxes#climate change#climate action#tribal communities#lithium#electronic cars#trans rights#trans solidarity#judges
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by Richard Goldberg
Anti-Semitism is spreading in Kâ12 school districts. Even in primary and secondary education, Jews are often viewed as privileged whites and oppressors, with Israel branded as an egregious example of âsettler colonialismâ and oppression of âindigenous people.â âLiberated ethnic studiesâ curricula, like the one mandated by California, have created a distinct variant of critical theory aimed at Jews for being Zionist colonial oppressors.
Teachersâ unions are the leading purveyors of this approach. Two years ago, the United Educators of San Francisco adopted a resolution calling for a boycott of Israel. The Chicago Teachers Union instigated pro-Hamas demonstrations in the Windy City after October 7. The union persuaded Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson (a former CTU lobbyist) to condemn Israel in the city council, and it organized a student and faculty âwalkoutâ to show solidarity with Hamasâa city-authorized event that left Jewish students and teachers feeling intimidated. In suburban Seattle, kids as young as seven were recently encouraged to condemn Israel and join in anti-Semitic chants. Oakland Unified School District faces a federal investigation after 30 Jewish families removed their kids from school due to rampant anti-Semitism. And at a high school in New York City, hundreds of students hunted down a female teacher they saw on social media holding a sign supporting Israel.
Marxist ideology is the primary culprit influencing this mind-set, but not the only one. Qatar, a tiny Persian Gulf country that supports Hamas, is funding anti-Semitic âscholarshipâ not only in American universities but also in Kâ12 schools. Qatar Foundation International gave $1 million to the New York City Department of Education between 2019 and 2022 for a program featuring a map of the Middle East that erases the Jewish state. The same story played out at a public charter school in Irving, Texas. What other districts in the country might be taking money directly or indirectly from a chief Hamas sponsor? Brown Universityâs Choices Program, used by more than 1 million high school students nationwide, exhibits a clear anti-Israel bias. According to Brown, the Qataris âpurchased and distributed a selection of existing Choices curriculum units to 75 teachers whose districts didnât have funding to buy them.â
Tools to fight back, however, are available. Governors and state legislatures can begin by blocking âethnic studiesâ from the Kâ12 curriculum and by imposing new teacher-certification requirements. To curb foreign meddling, states should ban school funding or in-kind donations from entities connected with countries that harbor U.S.-designated terrorist organizations. School districts and state boards of education should use the International Holocaust Remembrance Allianceâs working definition of anti-Semitism to root out conduct meeting its standard. Several groups sued the Santa Ana, California, school district in state court for failing to notify parents before approving ethnic studies courses that contain anti-Jewish bias and for harassing Jewish parents at school board meetings.
At the federal level, parents could file formal complaints with the Department of Education for discrimination under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. Such complaints are increasingly common against colleges and universities, but any school that receives federal funding must comply with Title VI. The House Committee on Education and the Workforce should consider holding a hearing on anti-Semitism in Kâ12 schools, putting the national spotlight on anti-Jewish administrators and school board leaders.
Local, state, and federal officials have played meaningful roles in fighting back against critical race theory in the classroom. They need to fight equally hard to stop anti-Semitism masquerading as Middle East or ethnic studies.
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Some tangible Black queer history for you!
In case you needed any more proof that we've always been here - this amazing collection is courtesy of the Stonewall National Musuem and Archive!
Rafiki: The Journal of the Association of Black Gays, Vol. 1 #1 (Fall 1976)
"Rafiki was a quarterly publication from the Association of Black Gays (ABG), a Los Angeles, California gay activist group that organized through education, political engagement, and grassroots activism to improve the conditions for Los Angelesâs Black gays and lesbians.
According to the journal, the title Rafiki was chosen because it means âfriendâ in Swahili and âthatâs what [ABG] hope to be for you.â This first issue includes an article on the history of ABG and the fact that Black gays and lesbians have been largely excluded from the political, social, and economic advances of the gay community.
Included in this issue are articles such as âHomosexuality in Tribal Africaâ and âDisco Discontentâ (an open letter to the owner of Studio One, Scott Forbes), as well as poetry by Steven Corbin and Frances Andrews, and book reviews. It even contains an ad for the famous Catch One Club owned by Jewel Williams, which is still operating today!"
I Am Your Sister: Black Women Organizing Across Sexualities by Audre Lorde (Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press, 1985; from the Freedom Organizing Series)
You can read this one here!
"This small twelve-page publication derives from a speech Audre Lorde gave at the Womenâs Center of Medgar Evers College in New York City regarding the exclusion of Lesbians in the feminist movement and how Lordeâs identity as both a Black woman and lesbian are inextricably linked.
Primarily, heterosexism and homophobia are major issues Lorde states are âtwo grave barriers to organizing among Black women.â Lorde ends the essay with the statement: âI am a Black Lesbian, and I am your sister.â
Her emphasis on the duality of this identity stems from a 1960s poster that said âHeâs not black, heâs my brother!,â which Lorde states infuriated her because âit implied that the two were mutually exclusive.â
Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press was founded by Barbara Smithâanother Black Lesbian feministâand Audre Lorde in 1980 to create a publishing apparatus for women of color who at the time did not have control over how they were published except through the white-dominated outlets."
Flawless! The Life & Times of T.B.D.J. AKA Tiffani Inc. AKA Mrs. ⌠(Manuscript) by Tiffany Bowerman (July 2007, A&E Publishers)
This autobiographical manuscript traces the life of Tiffany Bowerman aka Tiffany B.D. Johnson (b. 1959), who states that she âwas the first African-American Transsexual to have state issued birth certificate reissued [1990]⌠was the first to legally marry three different active duty military men⌠[and] first⌠to found their own Christian Denomination⌠The Agape-Ecumenical Christian Denomination.â
Further, she states âI have tried to put together something striking and original[,] a journey from childhood to self aware adult. A life that was and is with all regrets included.â
This manuscript is a preliminary copy of a rough draft, and contains various memoirs, photographs, legal documents, and ephemera.
Out in Black and White: A Directory of Publications By, About, For People of Afrikan Descent In-The-Life by the Broward County Library Outreach Services Department Exhibit/Programming Services with direction by Eric Jon Rawlins (January, 1996)
Out in Black and White is a directory of various serial publications (magazines, newsletters, journals, etc.) throughout the United States that are focused on the Black LGBTQ experience. According to the directory, â[t]his project was inspired by the atmosphere of strength, oneness and productivity created by the Million Man March [on October 16,] 1995.â
The Million Man March was a political demonstration that took place at the National Mall in Washington, D.C. with the purpose of encouraging involvement in the improvement of the conditions of African Americans. Eric Jon Rawlins was a Broward County, Florida librarian who at one time was also the second vice president of the NAACP Fort Lauderdale branch in the late 1980s.
Currently, the Eric Jon Rawlins Collection consisting of personal and professional papers, as well as his 6,000 vinyl record album collection, are housed at the African American Research Library and Cultural Center Special Collections in Broward County, FL.
#it gets better#black history month#bhm#black trans lives matter#lgbtqia#queer history#lgbtq history#black history#queer archive#queer lit#studyblr
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Featuring Nesta Archeron as the beautiful, but witchy leading lady and Eris Vanserra as the tall, quirky investigator.
Chapter 1 of 6
In the bosom of a spacious cove, which indented the eastern shore of the Hudson, lay a small market-town or rural port, which by some is called Greensburgh, but it is more generally and properly known by the name of Tarry Town. Not far from this village, perhaps about two miles, there was a little valley, or rather lap of land, amongst high hills. It was one of the quietest places in the whole world. A small brook glided through it, with just a murmur enough to lull one to repose; and the occasional whistle of a quail, or tapping of a woodpecker, was almost the only sounds that ever broke in upon the uniform tranquillity.
Along one side of the valley was a grove of tall walnut-trees. If one ever wished for a retreat, to steal from the world and its distractions or to dream quietly away the remnant of a troubled life, no land was more promising than the little value. From its listless repose and the peculiar nature of its inhabitants, the sequestered glen was long known by the name of Sleepy Hollow.
A drowsy, dreamy influence seemed to hang over the land and to pervade the very atmosphere. Some say the land was bewitched by an ancient settler. The place held a spell over the minds of the good people, causing them to walk in a continual reverie.
Others held the view that the land was cursed.
It was on the first Monday of the tenth month that Eris Crane was called upon to attend matters in Sleepy Hollow from the constabulary department of New York City. Three murders, most vile, had occurred. A father, a son, and a widow, all murdered. Such crimes occurred regularly, as was the state of the world, but three murders within a week in the small glen of Sleepy Hollow was unheard of.
Eris turned the missive over in his hands as the carriage rattled over uneven stones.
Three bodies. Decapitation. No blood loss. Heads not recovered. Â
The decapitation did not move him, however the missing heads did. A lack of blood loss did not marry together with arterial bleeding either.
Eris Crane would solve this mystery, for all unexplained situations were merely waiting to be unravelled.
When his carriage stopped, the dark had settled into the peaceful village. A chill was in the air of Sleepy Hollow. Tendrils of mist stroked the hard earth as he pressed a coin into the hand of the driver then proceeded towards the home of the townâs lord and lady â Rhysand and Feyre Van Tassel.
A party was being had. Lights lit up all of the downstairs windows and music seeped towards him. Eris was not a man who revelled. The arts were a waste of an education. He would make his greetings then depart to his room using the excuse of a long day of travel to escape.
A circle had formed where a young woman was blindfolded. A tall, strapping male with an arrogant gloat about him held her by the shoulders to spin her five times before releasing her into the centre with a low laugh.
âThe pickety witch,â she said. âThe pickety witch. Whoâs got a kiss for the pickety witch?â
As she spoke, she made lunges for people who dodged her with a giggle. Eris, whom the game was unknown to, remained rooted to the floor as she grasped his waistcoat.
âAha. Who do I have?â
Her cold, delicate hands roved over his face while the circle fell silent. Even with the blindfold on, Eris could make out the scrunch of her forehead.
A child cried, âA kiss! A kiss!â
âShe has to guess first,â replies a woman, with pleated curls and dark eyes.
Reverently, the woman caresses his face one more time. It was most unusual for Eris who had not been touched with any sort of warmth since the day he entered an orphanage in the heart of the city.
âIs it Azriel?â
Laughter ripples about the circle.
âPardon, maâam. I am only a stranger,â replied Eris.
âThen have a kiss on account.â
She cupped his face again then tipped up onto her toes to press a chaste kiss to his lips. When the woman released him, she peeled away the blindfold. She was the most beautiful woman Eris had ever seen. Her eyes swirled with a silver glow. Her fair hair reminded him of the luminescence of the moon. It was braided neatly into a coronet to highlight the elegant angles of her face. His eyes traced her skin, followed the downward curve of her neck towards-
Eris swallowed and tore his eyes away from the pale blue gown and ample chest.
She did not smile or laugh as the others did, but regarded Eris as one might an opponent.
âI am searching for Rhysand Van Tassel.â
âI am his wifeâs sister, Nesta Van Tassel. Upon their marriage, he took our family name.â
âMost unusual,â Eris concluded.
âQuite,â she agreed.
The male who had spun Nesta stepped forwards. A hand settled on her waist. âAnd who are you, friend? We have not heard your name yet.â
âI have not said it.â
âYou need some manners.â
Nesta removed the hand from her waist. âEnough, Cassian.â
She escorted him through the party-goers to her brother. Where Eris had been expecting a man of stout figure who had indulged himself through many years of gluttony, he found a slim â remarkably young â Lord of Sleepy Hollow. Dark hair was slicked back and matched the sable clothing he wore. Beside him, drinking a glass of wine and speaking to others was his wife, Eris could deduce due to the exceptional resemblance to her sister.
âLord and Lady Van Tassel.â
âEven if you are selling something, you are most welcome here.â
Eris straightened his tie and stood a little taller. âI am constable Eris Crane sent to you from New York with the authority to investigate murder in Sleepy Hollow.â
A silence fell across the room.
âThank God youâre here to arrest the culprit,â Cassian called which was met with a smattering of laughter.
âWhat good will a constable do?â Another voice asked.
âI am quite certain this case will be unravelled,â he replied, directing his attention to the Lord and Lady of Sleepy Hollow. âI daresay the day of travel has been ill and I should prefer to retire rather than enjoy the festivities.â
âI shall see Constable Crane to his rooms,â Nesta swiftly said, cutting in before the others.
The house had a second floor followed by a conversion of the attic into a living quarter for receiving guests. Nesta swept through the room to ensure all was up to standards whilst her lips remained pursed together. She stared from the window towards the mist-covered forests that encompassed the village, bar the single road, then promptly drew the curtains closed.
âMiss Van Tassel,â Eris said, halting her before her departure. âIf I may confirm details with you: Three persons murdered. Atwell Van Garrett and his son, Tamlin Van Garrett, both of them strong, capable men. They were found together. Decapitated. A week later, the Widow Briar. Their heads were unable to be located.â
Nestaâs grey eyes sought the closed curtains again then flitted back to his, a wariness settling in. âTheir heads were not found because their heads were taken, Mister Crane.â
âTaken?â
âTaken by the Headless Horseman. Taken back to Hell.â
Surely a woman of sound mind and education would not be taken in by ghost stories.
âThere is a scientific explanation for everything, Miss Van Tassel.â
Nesta squared her shoulders. âI assure you that in any other regard I would agree with your sentiments. But not in this. The Headless Horseman is real.â
There had been laughter when Eris had spoken of apprehending the suspect.
âIndulge me,â he said.
âThe Horseman was a mercenary, sent to our shores during the war. But unlike his compatriots who came for money, the Horseman came... for love of carnage... and he was not like the others...â She shook her head. âHis name was Jurian. He rode a giant black steed. He was infamous for taking his horse hard into battle... chopping off heads at full gallop. To look upon him made your blood run cold, for he had filed down his teeth to sharp points to add to the ferocity of his appearance.â
She told the story in such a way that Eris could not stop himself from being lured in by her voice. It was a sirenâs call. He forced his hands into his pocket to keep from reaching for her.
âThis butcher would not finally meet his end till the winter of seventy-nine not far from here in our Western Woods. He had lured a general, Clythia, into his tent and tore her to pieces. He paraded her head through an enemy encampment then they captured him. They cut off Jurianâs head with his own sword, Clythiaâs sister among them. To this day, the Western Woods is still a haunted place where none will dare venture for what was planted there was a seed of evil.â Nesta spread out her hands. âAnd so it has been for twenty years. But now Jurian wakes -- he is on the rampage, cutting off heads where he finds them.â
If it were not for the austerity in her voice, Eris might have scoffed at the tale.
âMiss Van Tassel, you cannot believe in such stories.â
âIt is no story,â she vowed.
Eris shook his head. âWe have murders in New York without the benefit of ghouls and goblins.â
âYou are a long way from New York, sir,â she said, sweeping her head into a bow.
âI shall discover the motive of the murders, Miss Van Tassel. This mystery will not resist investigation by a rational man.â
Eris moved to lean against the table, in a display of casualness, but the table wobbled on its uneven legs. The empty glass she had placed there for him juddered onto its side and rolled off the table. He winced as it fell, but â mercifully â it did not shatter.
âYou may be as rational as you like. The Reverend Helion will even press a Bible into your hands so that God may be the salvation in this horror. I speak of what I have heard from the lips of those who have seen. Those whose word I trust.â
âThen, pray, tell me what others have seen.â
âRhysand has set a watch since the first murders. Cassian circles the village night after night on duty. He saw the Horseman galloping away on the night the Widow Briar was found murdered.â
âI had believed you to be a rational woman rather than one in league with the brute from downstairs.â
Nesta stepped back, appraising him with a scowl. âYou cast a judgement on the first night of our meeting.â
Bashfully, Eris dipped his head. âPlease excuse my manners. I am not used to-â
âFemale company?â
Blood burned in his cheeks. âSociety.â
âHow can you avoid society in New York? How I should love the opera - and theatres - to go dancing... Is it wonderful?â
âI have never been.â
âBut there is an art museum? A concert hall?â
âI donât know.â
She gave a disappointed sigh. âThen you have nothing to teach me.â
At once, Eris wanted to take back his words. Or to offer Nesta the opportunity to visit museums and concert halls where they could dance. He would learn for her.
âNesta, you cannot truly believe it is the Horseman.â
âNot everyone does believe.â
âGood,â he replied, relief flooding him.
âSome say it is the witch of the woods who made a pact with Lucifer.â
Eris closed his eyes as he sucked in a breath. âThere are no witches or galloping ghosts. Is everyone in this village in thrall with superstition?â
âWhy are you so frightened of magic, Eris? Not all of it is wicked. There are ancient truths in these woods which have been forgotten in your city parks.â
âIf they are truths, they are not magic â and if magic, not truth.â
She threw up her hands, anger brimming in her gaze. âYou are foolish. When there is fever in the house, it is well known that willow-herb roots and a crow's foot must be boiled in the milk of a pure white goat with special charms uttered over the fire then the fever abates.â
âNext time, try the herb without the rest. And now I must ask you to leave.â
âGladly,â Nesta replied. âI should not have interrupted our townâs saviour from his contemplation. Goodnight. And as for the brute you mentioned, he has proposed to me.��
How could it be? Although Eris did not know the pair, they were already at odds in his mind. She was fair and lovely to look upon. He was big and burly with a rough tongue and rougher hands.
âI, I, I,â he stuttered. âI am happy thatâŚâ
âHe proposed to me several times.â
She gave a faint smile after her ambiguous words then departed with a slam of the door.
#neris#nesta archeron#eris vanserra#acotar fic#did i re-write the entire 133 page script of sleepy hollow#you bet your ass i did#imagine an incredibly stressful moment like moving into a brand new house and trying to finish it#whilst working full time#and thinking yeah i can re-write a script AND write 2 more scripts and book#normal behaviour from me when
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