Legal expert sees big free speech threats from CA Community College bureaucracy

Noted author and attorney Greg Lukianoff on Substack explores the ways that Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) statements at California colleges function as political litmus tests on campus, creating a very difficult barrier to entry for anyone not in lockstep with the prevailing ideological orthodoxy. He calls it the Conformity Gauntlet.

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Why SCC voters took the reins in support of Prop 13 in 1978

Since voters overwhelmingly approved it by a 2:1 margin, Prop 13's endured constant attacks by Big Gov't advocates who'd rather mount taxes than cut expenditures. Even SJ's City Council is open to ballot measures that undermine Prop 13. In the Power Line blog, Independent Institute's K. Lloyd Billingsley analyzes what about Prop 13 resonated with 1978 voters—and why blaming it for CA's budgetary woes is plain ridiculous.

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☆ Tanaka on BART debate: Fix procurement failures while pursuing region's transportation vision

There's increasing disagreement among area pols re: the controversial (and costly) BART extension to SJ and Santa Clara. Palo Alto CM (and congressional candidate) Greg Tanaka, however, suggests that effective public transit needn't be a financial mess—and that strong oversight and businesslike procurement reform can deliver 21st Century transit solutions at reasonable costs. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Oakland PD can't chase smash-and-grab offenders due to absurd “nonviolent crime” laws

Since Oakland's airport-adjacent In-N-Out closed its doors over increased crime (cue Hunger Games' death cannon for another lost tribute local retail establishment), Bay Areans have branded the area America's “most dangerous square mile.” But who, or what, is the real culprit? Daily Mail reports that City officers are curbed from adequately protecting residents, thanks to nonsensically “restrictive” policies.

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☆ Opinion: Batra and Doan are right; Math doesn't check out on SJ's homeless housing plan

Local housing provider Roberta Moore concurs with SJ Councilmembers Batra and Doan, who criticized our countywide Plan to End Homelessness as wildly unsustainable at $1.2–1.4 million/unit, adding up to a brutal $15 bn price tag. Rather than perpetuate reckless and ineffective gov't spending, Moore argues SJ's Housing Dept and its regional partners must prioritize "meaningful results." An Opp Now exclusive.

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Report: Chilling attack on media and First Amendment by SF City Attorney

Website Instapundit reports that SF City Atty is subpoenaing a national media site because he doesn't like their ranking of hospitals, and is accusing them of misinformation when it comes to healthcare. Somewhere, Orwell smiles.

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Do locals actually want to kill property transfer protections?

Taxpayer advocate Susan Shelley shines a light on California's Proposition 19, which nullifies existing protections for parent–child property transfer, thereby treating a gift of property like a sale. Shelley wonders if many Californians—who voted against one-time estate taxes in 1982—truly want their yearly property tax payments hiked up. From the OC Register.

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Mr. Jennings, what is “yet another SF nonprofit scandal”?

Last week, San Francisco taxpayers were horrified to clue in that local org SF Safe—which receives millions annually from the Police Dept—has been forging invoices, stiffing vendors, and reimbursing lavish staff expenses (Tahoe vacations and limo rides, anyone?). SF Standard rounds up the fiasco, and asks why cities aren't doing the work to, you know, properly oversee affiliated nonprofits.

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☆ BART director: Stop tragic train overdoses at the source by enforcing existing rules

2023 was inundated with headline after headline about the latest overdose death on the BART system; countless more riders regularly abuse illicit substances on the trains, creating unhygienic and dangerous situations for others. In this Opp Now exclusive, Debora Allen—BART director since 2016—analyzes the alarming overdose spike, and what it'll take to eliminate drug use on BART (hint: actually enforce laws for fare payment/code of conduct, and recruit officers like crazy).

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CA lawsuit tries to eliminate taxpayer rights initiative from 2024 ballot

As the age-old political adage goes: if you can't beat 'em, join 'em cancel the fight entirely. Household Stories magazine unpacks Newsom & Co.'s ongoing lawsuit against the Taxpayer Protection Act (TPA). The suit aims to disqualify TPA from our ballot as an “illegal” constitutional revision—though, as Household Stories discusses, it'd actually protect taxpayers' preexisting Prop 13 rights from sneaky workarounds.

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Opinion: Left's response to war in Gaza “opened the eyes of ... traditional liberals”

Columnist Doug McIntyre isn't alone in positing that DEI's oppressor/oppressed labels cultivate racial, ethnic, and religious division (recently sounded in threatening antisemitic rhetoric against District Attorney Jeff Rosen, a flyer that's been widely slated by Jewish leaders, a language expert, and Palo Alto CM). Since October 7, McIntyre discusses in L.A. Daily News, locals on the Left have been forced to address the—hitherto neglected—radicals in their party.

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Opinion: CA's Death Tax needs to kick the bucket

Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association says it's about time Prop 19's “Death Tax” (which spikes up taxes on inherited/transferred property by reassessing at market value) shuffles off its mortal coil, instead of swiping more of residents' hard-earned money. In the Globe, HJTA breaks down Prop 19 and how it wrote over valuable protections in Props 58 & 193.

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