☆ (#10) Woke follies on display at SJCC

In February, SJ's Dept.of Racial Equity raised some eyebrows at a Council meeting, in which any questions of its sweeping goals and contortions of language were met with howls of--you guessed it--"racist" by councilmembers and city staffers alike. Our editorial team reviewed the theater. An Opp Now exclusive.

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ExclusiveLauren Oliver
Why school choice (not diversity-based admission) combats segregation

Larry Sand, renowned educational analyst, argues that the National Education Association should fight for local school choice initiatives rather than racially-based admission criteria. Without the freedom to choose, lower-income students are frequently “imprison[ed]” in subpar schools that reside in their zip code — a far cry from NEA’s (and CA Teachers Association’s) purportedly equitable ideals.

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Lauren Oliver
A long overdue call for civility at 4th and Santa Clara

Maybe it was the explosive device found on a CM's lawn. Or the mayor's house being vandalized. Or CMs falsely calling their colleagues and whole neighborhoods racist. Or city staffers publicly—and inaccurately—accusing citizens of bigoted motives. Or maybe it was all the yelling and name calling and overall nastiness that overwhelmed the Dec. 5 public meeting on special elections. But CM Chappie Jones has had enough, and offered, on Dec. 5, a call for a return to civility in the City Council Chambers. His comments excerpted below, edited for clarity.

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Jax Oliver
Housing First takes a body blow--now from the Left

Economists have always known that hyper-regulation and an unrealistic reliance on taxpayer-subsidized affordable housing to solve CA's housing woes was a non-starter. And now, even high-end liberal opinionmakers are realizing the folly of the progressive housing playbook. Dan Walters at CalMatters parses how the influential liberal publication The Atlantic's recent takedown of progressive housing strategies is making waves.

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Jax Oliver
Did the pandemic (finally) signal the end of dreams for a vibrant downtown SJ?

After nearly a half-century and a billion dollars in taxpayer-funded redevelopment, downtown San Jose remains California's most moribund big-city downtown. And then: the pandemic. Is it time to finally give up on aspirations for a vibrant city center and try something else? Even S.F. has been hollowed out by COVID and progressive mismanagement. NY Times reports on what's next for America's downtowns.

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Jax Oliver
☆ Rules for Radicals—2023 SV edition

Ex-pat contributor Philip Davenport writes: "I was researching a lecture for my high school seniors on political dissent, and as I leafed through my battered copy of Saul Alinsky's Rules for Radicals, I realized that your lefty colleagues in Silicon Valley are still following the Saul's playbook pretty closely. I offer up an updated version for your holiday reading pleasure, inspired by your Trump Tactics piece from October as well as comments at the special elections kerfuffle. Happy Holidays..—PD" An Opp Now exclusive.

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Jax Oliver
☆ How to do a meaningful homelessness audit

Politicians are finally starting to wonder: Where does all the money spent on homelessness go? And are demanding an audit of the city and county's spending. But don’t expect that audit to unearth certain core truths about incentives and behavior. Market Urbanist's Scott Beyer explores the waste and misguided strategies from the Housing Dept's flawed Housing First strategy, and offers some useful direction as to how to conduct a meaningful audit in this Opp Now exclusive.

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Jax Oliver
☆ FUHSD board member-elect: District needs new voices

Fremont Union board member-elect Stanley Kou discusses his takeaways as a first-time campaigner and immigrant. Kou then lays out his priorities for the upcoming term —  such as tackling enrollment rates, transportation, and mental health education in this highly competitive district. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Lauren Oliver
☆ Libertarian detangles SJ housing market’s biggest blunders

Silicon Valley Taxpayers Association president Mark Hinkle examines zoning laws, construction codes, and permit fees as three key hindrances to a thriving San Jose housing market. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Special ReportsJax Oliver
What happened to Newsom’s Middle Class stimulus payouts?

T. Logan Dayne (from the San Diego News Desk) reports that months after Gov. Newsom’s promise to aid Middle Class families through a tax refund, myriad families across the Golden State have yet to receive their checks. Was Newsom’s ambitious program paltry political theater — and if not, what’s halting the process at a critical financial time for many residents?

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Lauren Oliver
CA’n lawmakers demand greater penalties for fentanyl sales crimes

The liberalization perspective on hard drugs appears to be fading away, in favor of the hard enforcement approach — particularly on fentanyl dealers (who sell the opioid responsible for 1 in 5 young adult CA’n deaths) distributing fatal doses to clients. CalMatters’ Emily Hoeven summarizes the state’s mounting fentanyl overdose crisis, and lawmakers’ efforts (from both sides of the aisle) to clamp down on crime.

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Lauren Oliver
Academic interventions needed after local school Covid shutdowns

In Front Page Magazine, educational commentator Larry Sand analyzes local teachers unions’ pressure to keep public schools closed during and post-pandemic, and how recent data highlights the academic achievement consequences students face today as a result.

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Lauren Oliver