9th Circuit says SJ religious student club can keep “statement of faith” for leaders

Several years ago, San Jose's Pioneer High School de-recognized its Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) student group because leaders were required to attest agreement with the group's religious values. This fall, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 9–2 that FCA has the constitutional right to exercise freedom of speech and religion when selecting student leaders. WORLD has the story below.

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Jax OliverComment
Fired local DEI director: DEI doesn't just tolerate antisemitism—it encourages it

Behind the Black reports on Dr. Tabia Lee's disputed dismissal from Cupertino's De Anza College, where she briefly served as faculty director for the Office of Equity, Social Justice, and Education. Today—amidst rampant anti-Jewish hate at higher ed institutions—Lee reflects on DEI's dangerous oppressor/oppressed dichotomy, and how the ideology has long supported vilifying Israel/Jewish people.

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Jax OliverComment
The ever-growing blob of city governments

Mark Moses is the author of The Municipal Financial Crisis: A Framework for Understanding and Fixing Government Budgeting. In this interview with National Review, he explains why Mission Creep is systemic in municipal governments, and how it empties city treasuries and leads to crummy services for taxpayers and residents.

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SF shoplifting analysis: Prop 47 binds police, shifts burden of arrest to citizens

GrowSF analyzes the Golden City's elevated property crimes post-Prop 47, and explains that reclassifying felonies as misdemeanors has put the onus on eyewitnesses to pursue laborious “citizen's arrests,” since police now can't directly arrest folks who steal under $950. As SJ's mayor Mahan remarks, does it make sense to slap offenders on the wrist for “repeatedly harm[ing] our community”?

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Expert: SJ's on the right path to cultivating an “AI-centric ecosystem”

Dan Lesovodski, Head of AI Incubator in Sunnyvale, assesses Mayor Mahan and CM Cohen's 10.10 proposal for incentivizing artificial intelligence innovation in San Jose. Lesovodski attests that attracting AI companies involves developing incubators with orgs like Plug and Play (which has a thriving tech center already in Sunnyvale and, potentially next year, SJ), partnering with local universities to recruit top talent, and providing meaningful tax/rent breaks. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Opinion: Free market-based healthcare would promote price transparency, lower service costs

PointHealthTech's Josie Rasberry argues that a healthcare system directed by the free market would encourage patients to “shop around” for the most high quality, cost-effective care. This, in turn, would prompt local providers to be more upfront—and reasonable—about prices. Hear that, proponents of gov't-ruled healthcare like SJ Assemblymember Kalra?

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Jax OliverComment
Gilroy's camping ban goes into effect

In tandem with cities like San Jose, Sacramento, and San Diego, the Bay Area's Gilroy passed a partial camping ban this summer designed to keep areas near schools and parks safer. As the Santa Cruz Sentinel reports, the City of Gilroy recently ordered a sweep of illegal homeless encampments at Uvas Creek Park—one of its first clear-outs under the ordinance.

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Jax OliverComment
Retired San Diego police chief: Prop 47 “went too far” to coddle criminals without requiring accountability

In the San Diego Tribune, past police chief Shelley Zimmerman critiques Prop 47, which Californians approved in 2014 to reclassify property thefts under $950 in value from felonies to misdemeanors. Since then, cities like SJ have observed higher property crime rates, leaving many like Zimmerman (and SJ's mayor Mahan) to question Prop 47's premise: that downgrading consequences of lawbreaking will make people do less of it.

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Jax OliverComment
Ousted Bay Area college dept head: DEI “deliberately stokes” antisemitic hate

According to recently-fired De Anza College DEI head Tabia Lee, we shouldn't be surprised at rising antisemitism on college campuses. During Lee's DEI stint—before she was sacked for not being Woke enough—program leaders constantly pushed anti-Jewish sentiments (comparing them to “oppressor” whites) and shut down her attempts at inclusion. Many are questioning if DEI is less a foundational reality than the Left's "litmus test."

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Jax Oliver Comment
Citing SF's new “economic reality,” Breed demands drastic budget cuts

Concerned about backsliding revenue, San Francisco's mayor London Breed insists city departments cut $206 million in total ASAP. Breed adduces SF's looming $500 million deficit projected for 2025–2026, thanks in part to post-Covid metropolitan “doom loops.” Meanwhile, the city's depts scramble to consolidate resources and preserve core services. From the Daily Mail.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Education researcher: Bill to remove defiance-based suspensions goes overboard, yields squally consequences

Local media remarks that SB 274, which deep-sixes the ability for schools to suspend students for “willful defiance,” is being questioned by some SJ teachers who prioritize safe learning environments. Lance Christensen, Education Policy VP at California Policy Center, discusses why defiant behavior is a valuable indicator of family life and future safety risk—and why teachers, admin, and students suffer when class discipline is curtailed. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ Perspective: Recent Stanford scandal “profoundly troubles the Jewish community”

Rabbi Dov Greenberg, Chabad at Stanford University executive director, comments on a now-removed professor's disturbing activity of singling out Jewish students for what the university acknowledges as “identity-based targeting.” An Opp Now exclusive.

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