☆ Why the City must “prune away” superfluous services and regulations

Honor “Mimi” Robson, the immediate past Libertarian Party of CA chair, explains to Opp Now that if SJ scales back services and regulations to the bare essentials, taxpayers (local gov’t “customers”) are freer to lead productive and happy lives. Part of an exclusive series on SJ’s March Budget Message.

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Woke Transportation Equity commission veers off course

For two years, SJ’s Transportation Equity Task Force has existed to spotlight concerns of marginalization, which has unsurprisingly devolved into Woke anti-police ideology (for one, that East SJ officers have “criminalized Chicano culture, which inflates crime rates”). Coalition for a Better Oakland’s Steve Heimoff questions why local transportation depts centralize racial equity issues instead of working to make travel safe, easy, and efficient.

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Jax Oliver
CA’s drought dilemma: On restrictive policies and contrived gridlock

The Globe’s Edward Ring suggests that rather than fighting against new infrastructure projects (or further stifling laws on collecting, storing, and using water), Californian environmental advocates should be supporting wastewater treatment plant upgrades. Ring’s proposal below.

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Lauren Oliver
☆ Retired SJ officer: Local “defund the police” rhetoric full of holes

Pete Constant unpacks a prominent—and misconception-ridden—anti-policing manifesto on the Silicon Valley Democratic Socialists’ website. Formerly a SJ policeman and SJ council member, Constant is now Chair of the Public Policy Department at William Jessup University (Rocklin) and board president at his local school board. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ First Amendment still sufficient after student org protections revoked: A perspective

The Dept of Education has announced rollback of a “burdensome” exec order preventing public colleges from receiving grants “if they put limits on the activities of religious student organizations.” Conservatives are concerned in the wake of rampant anti-free speech protests, but Kyle Grow at SJSU’s Reformed University Fellowship (RUF) is quietly hopeful for continued First Amendment liberties. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Local gas ban: Gruesome for wallets and power grid, dubiously “green”

A recent vote by the Bay Area Air Quality Management District to wean off and ultimately prohibit gas furnaces/water heaters has been widely questioned by economic and energy experts. Critics say the ordinance will be costly for locals and overwhelming for our electric grid, while meagerly beneficial to the environment. Ryan Mills at the National Review gives the details.

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Lauren Oliver
Why competition, not more resources, solves education inequalities

On March 14th, political commentator Steve Hilton spoke at the Liberty Forum of Silicon Valley, the “largest, most successful grass-roots liberty-minded group in California.” Hilton explains why the underfunded local school system is a farcical myth, and that true competition—thus undermining the “public school monopoly”—is our best shield against indoctrination.

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Lauren Oliver
Stanford case study: What happened to open inquiry in liberalism?

In the wake of Stanford University’s free speech colloquies (following aggressive responses to a conservative guest speaker), Daniel McCarthy of the NY Post digs into Leftism’s dangers. Whereas classical liberalists openly debate their positions, contemporary Leftists feel attacked by “simply not-left-wing speech”—so they belligerently silence any detection of difference, at any cost.

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Lauren Oliver
☆ How to stop the absurd BART extension to DTSJ

Despite escalating costs, declining ridership expectations, a state audit, and a round of dubious excuse-making, the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA) is plunging ahead with its planned six-mile BART extension through downtown San Jose to Santa Clara. While the project has substantial political momentum, it is not yet a fait accompli, and would most likely have to be stopped at the federal level, explains the Cato Institute's Marc Joffe in this Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ Budget analysis: Is SJ actually “focusing on the basics”?

SCC Libertarian Party secretary and Purissima Hills Water District director in Los Altos Hills Brian Holtz critiques San Jose’s March message about the 2023–2024 budget. Holtz wonders if there’s more fluff yet to be cut. Is it time to sacrifice non-essentials, such as public art, to bolster needed expenses in law enforcement and infrastructure? An Opp Now exclusive.

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Perspective: COPA dangerously strengthening ties btwn nonprofits/local gov't

David Eisbach points out the consequences of COPA's underlying idea: that unhoused people must rely on larger entities to advance in life. Putting nonprofit orgs in a tremendous position of power over lower-income SJ residents and gov't officials, says Eisbach, will only compound current conflict-of-interest problems.

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Jax Oliver
Stanford student org: No more nice words; let’s fire Steinbach

Logan Dubil at Campus Reform reports that a group of Stanford students are urging the university to dismiss DEI Dean Steinbach, citing her unapologetic defense of disrespectful anti-free speech protestors. One apology letter and a disastrous couple weeks of infamy after the incident (including multiple “fascists” comparisons), Stanford has yet to publicly discipline Steinbach.

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Lauren Oliver