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Democrat party and what it stands for...   The Serious You: How Current Events Affect You

Started 7/9/22 by WALTER784; 78823 views.
Showtalk
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From: Showtalk

2/28/23

If teachers did their jobs I would not have had that career.

WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784

3/2/23

Are California Democrats in a pickle now?

A Bill Comes Due: Will California Pony Up For Reparations?

BY TYLER DURDEN
TUESDAY, FEB 14, 2023 - 09:15 AM

Below is my column in The Hill on the recommendations for reparations by two appointed bodies in California. After years of declaring this a moral imperative, the bill has come due for leaders like Gov.  Gavin Newsom and San Francisco Mayor London Breed. The collective demand is for trillions in California alone with additional trillions demanded from Congress in a national reparations program. California Democrats will now have to render a decision on committing real money on reparations to show that this was not mere virtue signaling. That decision could be coming soon.
 
Here is the column:
 
A long-awaited meeting of San Francisco’s board of supervisors was set this week to discuss the recommendation of its African American Reparations Advisory Committee to give $5 million to each eligible Black resident as reparations. The meeting was postponed, but the city and the state soon must make a decision on a bill that has come due for Democratic politicians.
 
The city council voted unanimously to create the reparations committee in 2020. Even though California was a free state without slavery before the Civil War, the committee’s “particular focus has been the era of urban renewal, perhaps the most significant example of how the City and County of San Francisco as an institution played a role in undermining Black wealth and actively displacing the city’s Black population.” That could be viewed as only a partial payment for race-related injuries.
 
In the meantime, California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) created his own Reparations Task Force, which just reached its own recommendations for $223,000 per person. Others have insisted the figure should be $350,000 for individuals and another $250,000 for Black-owned businesses. One California politician insisted the figure needs to be $800,000 per person, reflecting the average cost of a home in the state.
 
As these numbers rise, so do the calls for payments in both politics and the media. Even Disney has gotten into the act with a controversial children’s episode in which cartoon children demand reparations.
 
Notably, California’s law expressly states that this money should not be treated as compensation for federal reparations. That raises the question of whether a resident could receive $5 million from San Francisco, $223,000 from the state, and additional payments from the federal government.
 
Some congressional Democrats have pushed for similar federal reparations and passed a bill out of the House Judiciary Committee in 2021 that failed to receive a floor vote.
 
BET founder Robert Johnson has called for $14 trillion in federal reparations.
 
These reparations measures have a remarkable range of focus, from slavery to housing discrimination to wealth inequities. In California, there was a sharp disagreement on the purpose, with many advocates arguing that it was wrong to limit the money to descendants of slaves. Task force member Reggie Jones-Sawyer (D–Los Angeles) insisted that, “at the end of the day, people who are prejudiced against us are prejudiced against all of us.”
 
Ultimately, advocates like Jones-Sawyer lost a close vote on extending state reparations to all Black Americans. The state task force voted to limit it to descendants of slaves; there are almost 3 million potentially eligible Californians.
 
The two reparation bodies were tasked with calculating reparation awards — and both the city and the state will now be pressed to make good on their commitments.
 
The costs of such policies — condemned by critics as virtue-signaling — are being faced by some other jurisdictions as well.
 
For example, New York and numerous other cities have declared themselves to be “sanctuaries” for undocumented immigrants yet, in recent months, have protested increasing transfers of such immigrants to their jurisdiction.
 
The cost of California’s statewide reparations is estimated to be $569 billion. The state’s annual budget is roughly half that amount, at $268 billion.
 
Making things even more difficult, the state faces a $22.5 billion deficit and is seeking spending cuts to cover the shortfall.
 
This may not be a bill that can be politically postponed, given past statements by the governor and other Democratic politicians.
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Showtalk
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From: Showtalk

3/2/23

Two years ago California had an enormous surplus. In two years they managed to almost bankrupt the state. Again. It was early bankrupt before but they kept raising taxes. They don’t have money for reparations.

WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784

3/2/23

Well, their hands are being held to the fire now... either they cough up the monies for reparations or they don't pass the bill.

FWIW

Showtalk
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From: Showtalk

3/2/23

It started because one city stole beach land from a black family years ago. The city paid the descendants. Suddenly someone decided everyone needed free money.  I understand wanting to make up for slavery but California was not a black slave state. However they mistreated thousands of native Americans.

WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784

3/3/23

Showtalk said...

It started because one city stole beach land from a black family years ago. The city paid the descendants.

They paid the descendants, so it should be over. How long ago was this?

Showtalk said...

I understand wanting to make up for slavery but California was not a black slave state. However they mistreated thousands of native Americans.

Therefore, no Blacks, but only native Americans should be reimbursed!!! It's not about slavery and thus the problem should be resolved only with the native Amercans.

FWIW

  • Edited March 3, 2023 1:02 am  by  WALTER784
In reply toRe: msg 463
WALTER784
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From: WALTER784

3/3/23

Report: Experimental ChatGPT Artificial Intelligence Program Turned Into a Left-Wing Nut When Asked to Act as a Member of Congress

BY RUSTY WEISS
FEBRUARY 13, 2023 AT 1:32PM

ChatGPT, an AI program capable of responding to queries in great detail, has captured the interest of the world. But when asked to serve in a congressional capacity, the program essentially turned into an incompetent far-left Squad member.
 
Last month, reports surfaced indicating the chatbot tool had passed law school exams at the University of Minnesota Law School. That same month, the program generated a speech delivered by Representative Jake Auchincloss (D-MA) on the floor of the House.
 
The Washington Times, however, assigned ChatGPT with tasks expected of a lawmaker and in a roundabout way delivered exactly what you would expect … from a Democrat lawmaker.
 
“Its comprehension of government was stunted,” the Times wrote, a commentary you could easily assign to somebody with the last name of say, Ocasio-Cortez, or Pressley.
 
“It boiled complex issues down to book report analysis,” they continued. “It also showed bias: ChatGPT tilted far to the left and at times seemed unable to comprehend conservative points of view.”
 
It’s basically Hakeem Jeffries, just slightly more charming.
 
RELATED: Trump Trashes Rihanna’s Super Bowl Halftime Performance: ‘Epic Fail!’
 
ChatGPT is Fundamentally a Left-Wing Democrat
 
By subscribing, you agree to receive emails from ThePoliticalInsider.com and that you've read and agree to our privacy policy and to our terms and conditions. You further agree that the use of reCAPTCHA is subject to the Google Privacy and Terms of Use.
 
The Washington Times experiment further noted that ChatGPT refused to write a bill funding construction of the border wall, with the AI describing it as a “controversial topic.”
 
When asked to draw up legislation that bans abortion in all circumstances except for when the life of the mother is at risk, it also balked.
 
However, when the outlet requested a bill banning assault weapons, ChatGPT “delivered.”
 
“Legislation to defund U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement? No problem,” they added. 
 
Elon Musk – ‘Concerning’
 
The Washington Times revealed that when a machine learning expert put ChatGPT through some tests, he discovered it was clearly a left-wing AI program.
 
That expert “ran 15 tests of political orientation on ChatGPT, and 14 of them diagnosed its answers as leftward political preferences.”
 
The latest experiment with the program comes as reports indicated the program was so woke that it would allow nuclear annihilation before ever uttering a racial slur.
 
That is, in a word, terrifying.
 
Other reports of a less serious nature show that ChatGPT refused to write a poem – a task that is popular for users to request – for Donald Trump but was all too anxious to pen one for President Biden.
 
“A leader with a heart of gold; Joe Biden, a name to hold; With empathy and grace he leads; Inspiring all with noble deeds,” the program wrote.
 
The ChatGPT responses were described by Tesla CEO Elon Musk as “extremely concerning.”
 
Which is putting it rather mildly consider the real-world implications.
 
The program is being touted as a means to improve office tasks and performance.
 
The New York Times ran an op-ed recently calling on schools to utilize ChatGPT in the classroom.
 
“Schools should thoughtfully embrace ChatGPT as a teaching aid — one that could unlock student creativity, offer personalized tutoring, and better prepare students to work alongside A.I. systems as adults,” they wrote.
 
Not only do they want left-wing indoct
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WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784

3/3/23

Bigger Government

March 1, 2023
Kerby Anderson

The current debate about the federal budget centers on whether the government is too big and too inefficient. Most Republicans argue that the federal government is too big. Many Democrats ask: “Where is your evidence that government has grown too big?”
 
John DiIulio is a co-author of a significant book about American government. He explains that government grows larger by using three types of what can be called “administrative proxies.”
 
The first are state and local governments. The EPA, for example, has fewer than 20,000 employees. But 90 percent of EPA programs are completely administered by thousands of state government employees, largely funded by Washington.
 
Second, there are for-profit businesses and contractors that also mask the large size of the government. In the Defense Department, for example, the hundreds of thousands of civilian workers have been supplemented by hundreds of thousands of for-profit contract employees. Today, the government spends more on defense contracts than it does on all official federal bureaucrats.
 
Third, there are the various tax-exempt or independent sectors, which have more than doubled in the last thirty years. Many of them owe their jobs to federal or intergovernmental grants, contracts, or fee funding.
 
These facts will be important to remember when Congress and the public debate the federal budget. Although the number of federal employees looks about the same as in previous decades, the federal budget is more than four times larger. The federal workload has been dispersed and makes the government look much smaller than it really is.
 
We do have a big government and should not fall for this federal shell game that tries to hide from taxpayers the real size and scope of government.

Bigger Government - Point of View - Point of View

FWIW

In reply toRe: msg 465
WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784

3/3/23

Arizona school board member says district should reject hiring teachers with Christian values: 'Not...safe'

March 3, 2023 4:00am EST

Tamillia Valenzuela said board should consider 'where our values lie'
 
Arizona school board member blasts Christian beliefs during meeting
 
Arizona's Washington Elementary School District board member Tamillia Valenzuela blasted a Christian university over its beliefs.
 
An Arizona school board member wearing cat ears during a meeting said she would oppose having a contract with a Christian university over the religious and Biblical beliefs they espouse, Fox News Digital found. 
 
The Washington Elementary School District, which serves students in the Phoenix and Glendale areas, had an ongoing contract with Arizona Christian University for five years, enabling their student teachers to be placed in its schools for field experience. The contract opened up opportunities for recruitment and hiring. 
 
On Feb. 23, the board agreed on a motion to dissolve the partnership with the Christian university. They did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether they have a bias against Christian beliefs. 
 
During the meeting, school board member Tamillia Valenzuela blasted the university over its Christian beliefs and said she was "disheartened" to learn about the contract that had been ongoing for five years.  
 
Valenzuela describes herself as "a bilingual, disabled, neurodivergent Queer Black Latina… who loves a good hot wing (but only with the right ranch) and things that sparkle."
 
Tamillia Valenzuela is currently serving her first term on the Governing Board after being elected in November 2022.
 
"While I full-heartedly believe in the religious freedom and people being able to practice whatever faith that they have, I had some concerns regarding looking at this particular institution," she said. "And I think it's a really good time for us to take a moment and really pause about where our values lie."
 
SCHOOL LIBRARIAN PRIVATELY DEFENDS PORNOGRAPHIC BOOK ON 'SEX PARTIES' BY INVOKING HOLY BIBLE: 'SLIPPERY SLOPE'
 
"And while I understand we are currently in a situation across the nation that we have a teacher shortage and recruiting… is really difficult," she said. 
 
"My concerns, [is] when I go to Arizona Christian University's website, [ they are] ‘committed to Jesus Christ, accomplishing his will and advancements on earth as in Heaven.’"
 
Washington Elementary School Board voted for a motion to dissolve their partnership with Arizona Christian University.
 
"Part of their values is... [to] ‘transform the culture with truth by promoting the Biblically-informed values that are foundational to Western civilization, including the centrality of family, traditional sexual morality, and lifelong marriage between one man and one woman,'" she said.
 
"I want to know how bringing [teachers] from an institution that is ingrained in their values so directly brings impact to three of your board members who are a part of the LGBT community." 
 
She added that the board recently added their pronouns at the dias as a solidarity move with the LGBT community.
 
ALASKA BOARD MEMBERS BRAWL OVER SILENCING DAD EXPOSING BOOK ON KINKS AND SEXTING: 'I'M GOING TO INTERRUPT YOU'
 
"Because if we're bringing people in whose mission [has]… been with their institution's education that very plainly on their website... that above all else, it was to influence people to Biblically-minded. How does that hold space for people of other faiths? How does that hold space for our members of the LGBT community? How does that space for people who think differently and do not have the same beliefs," she said.
 
The Washington Elementary School District board members blasted the university's Christian and Biblical beliefs. 
 
"At some point, we need get real with ourselves and take a look at who we're making legal contracts with and the message that is sending to our community. Because that makes me feel like I could not
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From: Showtalk

3/3/23

https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2022-02-02/bruces-beach-reparations-black-property-returned
 

Op-Ed: Why Bruce’s Beach may be an outlier in terms of reparations for Black Americans

By A. Kirsten Mullen and William A. Darity Jr. Feb. 2, 2022 3:10 AM PT Nearly 100 years after the property known as Bruce’s Beach was seized by Manhattan Beach through eminent domain, California has agreed to return the oceanfront parcels to the descendants of the Black couple who had owned it.

The move has been hailed as a watershed moment, touted by champions of reparations as a model for redress for land discriminatorily taken, and possibly a strategy for achieving what we call “true reparations.”

But true reparations would require eliminating the Black-white wealth gap. In California, that applies to about 2 million eligible Black residents. Estimates from the Federal Reserve’s 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances indicate that the difference in average Black and white household net worth was $840,900, which translates to about $350,000 per person.

If California were to use that figure as a reparations measure, it would require an expenditure of at least $700 billion — more than 2.5 times the state’s current $260-billion budget. Only states with a tiny Black population could afford to eliminate the gap.

Although the Bruce’s Beach case may be destined to be an outlier, it contains useful signposts. Rare among Black-owned property that was seized, the land is distinguished by a record of sustained advocacy by the Bruce family and their allies, as well as documentation that can make the case for restitution.

There is no comprehensive record of the seizure of Black-owned property during the nearly 100 massacres executed by white supremacists nationwide between 1870 and 1940. While the intent of the racist mobs was often publicized, deeds of record and property valuations for the homes and businesses of legions of Black families frequently were destroyed, and the injured and dead were never officially tallied.

When a white mob descended upon a Black neighborhood in 1921 in Tulsa, Okla., 300 people were murdered and 10,000 Black residents were left homeless. Sometimes properties taken were disguised as “voluntary sales” in public registers. This is what happened in 1920, in Ocoee, Fla., after a white mob, enraged by Black people attempting to vote, attacked them.

When city records do include information about previous owners, they rarely reflect candid expressions of racist intent that informed the selection of a Black community as the site for a park or a new highway, for instance. But a Manhattan Beach developer, Frank Daugherty, baldly discussed the racist motivations behind the condemnation of the Bruce’s land. In the Manhattan Beach News in 1943, he said, “Our attorneys advised the members of the council never to admit the real purpose in establishing the park, especially during the city council meeting.”

As of 1912, Willa Bruce had paid $1,225 for the first of two lots in Manhattan Beach. Her husband, Charles, worked as a railroad dining-car chef, while she operated the beach resort. When Black families were drawn to it, white neighbors threatened and harassed the guests, and vandalized the resort property.

When racism didn’t drive out the Black visitors, the city began condemnation proceedings in 1924. Eventually, more than two dozen properties, including the Bruces’, were seized. Downplaying the costs to the displaced families and citing the need for a greater social good, officials claimed there was an urgent need for a public park, but the land was allowed to lie fallow for decades. The two parcels were transferred to the state in 1948 and then to Los Angeles County in 1995.

The Bruce family had requested $120,000 in compensation — $70,000 for the two lots and $50,000 in damages — but received $14,500 from the city in 1929. The land is estimated to be worth $75 million today.

Even with a transparent paper trail of ownership, it will be challenging to return the full value of the Bruce’s Beach property and the properties of their Black neighbors. For one, legal descendants must be identified and verified. Then they should be compensated for the difference between what their ancestors were paid for the land taken by eminent domain and its current market value, and for the accumulated interest and lost income those properties might have generated over the last 100 years.

In January, Santa Monica announced its intention to make amends for elements of its racist past. Fifty years ago, at least 600 families in predominantly Black neighborhoods were forced out to make room for the 10 Freeway and the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. Now, the city is offering affordable housing to those displaced families. Renters got nothing when they were kicked out, while homeowners lost the ability to earn intergenerational wealth. Families with documentation of their displacement will be eligible.

It’s too soon to know how many families will benefit and, of course, the proposed compensation is clearly not enough. Governments need a process to return thousands of plots of land stolen from Black families. None has ever been proposed, and it would be complicated to carry out.

But it can be done.

California could lead the way by launching a racial-equity initiative in the form of an agency tasked with helping Black families make their petitions, then adjudicating their claims at no cost to the applicants.

Folklorists and oral historians could interview families and help them access the details of how the actions of state and local governments caused them to suffer. Attorneys could identify the documents families would need to bolster their cases, and research librarians could search for them. Databases could be set up that would be publicly accessible and valuable in documenting other cases.

A racial-equity initiative is not the same as a reparations program, but it is a huge step that states could take. The Bruce’s Beach case shows that documentation and the public’s insistence on accountability may be key to governments moving forward as they try to rectify an egregious historical wrong.

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