The battle for equity will go on forever

The second round of San Jose's Equity Training  Workshop occurred in early February, with much discussion of slippery concepts such as systemic injustice and concealed bias. It recalled William Voegeli's observations on the never-ending nature of identity politics in the Fall 2019 issue of the Claremont Review of Books.

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Simon Gilbert
Why are fewer people joining unions?

Santa Clara County workers' labor dispute lingers against a backdrop of decreasing union membership nationwide. Jarrett Skorup of the Mackinac Center explores the role of the 2018 Supreme Court Janus decision (which ruled that workers cannot be required to pay union dues or fees) in the decline.

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Simon Gilbert
A singular voice for freedom passes

Eccentric, insightful, controversial, and never dull, Roger Scruton, who passed away last month, shook up the philosophical and political world for most of his 92 years.  He was a conservative, of a uniquely British sort, and his writings stood athwart tyrannical ideologies of every kind, and for freedom and beauty. Anne Applebaum in the U.K.'s Spectator offers a fitting tribute.

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Simon Gilbert
Why blaming big tech for housing woes is scapegoating

Using San Francisco as a case study, James Sutton of NationalReview.com examines the arguments behind attributing the housing crisis to local business growth, and finds them unconvincing attempts to divert blame from local government.

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Simon Gilbert
A regulatory scheme that actually helps growth, employment, and equity

Task forces come and go, but city and county regulations still stymie new business and expansion of existing businesses, to everyone's detriment. Howard Baetjer, Jr. in Reason magazine explores a radical way to provide effective regulations, but without all the downsides (hint: use markets).

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Simon Gilbert
Do we really need all these new taxes?

State and local tax revenues are soaring, yet 231 local sales and parcel taxes increases and bond issues on the March 3 ballot in California. Dan Walters in CalMatters re-tells the age-old story: pensions.

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Simon Gilbert
Why do governments have to vote twice to support what their citizens want to do with taxes?

This time, sanity prevails. But escape clauses and tricky book-keeping hide how tax monies can get spent in opposition to voter preference, as recent Measure B kerfuffle illustrates.

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Simon Gilbert
New data suggests Santa Clara County employee pensions, salaries, higher than reported

Edward Ring of California Policy Center continues his analysis of the ongoing Santa Clara County worker dispute, and reveals that payouts to employees are surprisingly high, causing unavoidable financial trouble for the County Supervisors.

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Simon Gilbert
How California cities hide pension payouts behind new tax hikes

San Jose's upcoming Measure E says it's all about subsidized affordable housing, but the reality is future councils may spend its proceeds on exploding pension costs. Robert Fellner, of Transparent California, explains how cities hoodwink voters.

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Simon Gilbert
Race comes first: What to expect when the Equity Warriors come to town

The City of San Jose has engaged a group of consultants to help the city better understand its perceived systemic injustices and develop more "equitable" policies. Steven Malanga of the Manhattan Institute unearths the surprising and extreme measures these groups champion.

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Simon Gilbert
Property rights, law enforcement issues emanate from moms4housing standoff

In mid-January, an activist group moms4housing illegally moved into and were subsequently expelled from a vacant building in Oakland, to much media attention. Tony Francois of the Pacific Legal Foundation examines, in an exclusive interview with Opportunity Now, the legal and policy issues surrounding the occupation.

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Simon Gilbert
Anti-gig economy legislation AB5 hurts local musicians

California has overreached in its effort to address the challenges in today’s tech platform gig-work economy, notes Brendan Rawson of San Jose Jazz in CalMatters.

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Simon Gilbert