cps-sues-byrd-bennett-supes-pals-65-million

CPS sues Byrd-Bennett, SUPES pals for $65 million

Mar 12, 2016 by

The cash-strapped Chicago Public Schools has filed a civil lawsuit against disgraced former CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett and her associates at the SUPES Academy, seeking $65 million in damages and civil penalties for defrauding the school system.

The lawsuit, filed today in Cook County Circuit Court, comes a day after district officials asked principals again to curtail spending as the district tries to cobble together a pension payment that comes due in June. Schools already have undergone a series of mid-year layoffs, and now are looking at unpaid furloughs and still more cuts.

“With scarce resources, staff furloughs and painful budget cuts, CPS is keeping a close watch on every dollar,” CPS CEO Forrest Claypool said in a statement. “Barbara Byrd-Bennett and her co-conspirators knew the District’s dire straits and still concocted this scheme to divert needed resources away from classrooms and line their own pockets.”

Attorney Thomas Smith, who is representing Byrd-Bennett in the civil case, did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.

The 17-page lawsuit names Byrd-Bennett, who pleaded guilty to a federal corruption charge for steering district contracts to SUPES in return for kickbacks, and Gary Solomon and Thomas Vranas, co-owners of SUPES and a related company, Synesi Associates.  

CPS officials are relying on a state law that allows government agencies to sue individuals to recoup fraudulently obtained public funds — and ask for three times the amount of lost money.

In total, CPS spent about $16 million on contracts to SUPES and its related companies before cutting a contract in the midst of the federal corruption probe. The lawsuit also lists payments to Byrd-Bennett of about $900,000 for salary, benefits and other expenses while she worked for the district as a consultant, administrator and eventually CEO between 2012 and 2015.

Federal prosecutors indicted Byrd-Bennett, Solomon and Vranas in October. The case was sparked by an investigation by the CPS Inspector General, who started his own probe after a Catalyst report in 2013 questioned why CPS awarded a $20 million, no-bid contract to a former employer of Byrd-Bennett.

While Byrd-Bennett has pleaded guilty and is cooperating with federal authorities, attorneys for Solomon, Vranas and their companies remained in plea negotiations as of their last status hearing in January. The next hearing before Judge Edmond Chang is scheduled for March 23.

In the lawsuit, CPS General Counsel Ronald Marmer says the district has “made a good-faith attempt” to recoup the money spent on the contracts for SUPES and related companies since December. But, Marmer writes, instead of paying the money back, Byrd-Bennett and her co-conspiracies have spent money on lawyers “to insist that defendants’ ability to pay be kept secret from public scrutiny.”

The 10-count complaint also charges Byrd-Bennett and her co-defendants with civil conspiracy, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract and unjust enrichment.

Even if CPS were to win the lawsuit, it’s unlikely the district could recoup any cash from Byrd-Bennett and her SUPES co-defendants anytime soon — or in time to make a dent in the district’s current budget crisis. CPS needs to make a $700 million pension payment in June.

Source: CPS sues Byrd-Bennett, SUPES pals for $65 million | Catalyst Chicago

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On campus, a new civil rights era rises

Mar 12, 2016 by

Student protesters are demanding a sense of belonging that goes further than the antiracism movements of the past, experts say.

By Harry Bruinius, Staff writer Jessica Mendoza –

Alex Zhang is not satisfied.

The stained-glass window of a shackled black slave, kneeling at the feet of John Calhoun, no longer looms over the students at the Yale University resident college bearing the American statesman’s name.

But the arched window in the common room is still there celebrating Calhoun, the valedictorian from the class of 1804, former US vice president, and orator who famously proclaimed slavery “a positive good.”

The more appropriate image of what Yale aspires to, Mr. Zhang says, is in the wood-paneled library at the top of the stairs. There, students place roses under a picture of Roosevelt “Rosey” Thompson from Little Rock, Ark., a beloved student and campus activist who died in a car accident during his senior year in 1984.

And if Zhang and the other Yale student activists get their way, the roughly 400 students who live in the neo-Gothic stone residence would no longer be known as “Hounies.” They would be “Roseys.”

“For me, it’s not about erasing history, it’s about how we remember history – and how we make history, today,” says Zhang.

The campaign to rename Calhoun College is still under way. After protests, which roiled the campus last fall, and a massive teach-in at Battell Chapel across the street, the university’s governing body held “listening sessions” at the end of January.

For Zhang, the quest for a more appropriate namesake for the building in which he lives embodies the hopes of students now engaged in a wide-ranging wave of campus protests sweeping across the country on a scale not seen since the 1960s, bringing demands for a new environment within America’s institutions of higher learning.

Indeed, in what might be called a new Millennial zeitgeist, thousands of students in campuses across the nation, from state universities like Missouri and Maryland to highly selective private schools like Amherst, Brandeis, and Brown, have been infused with a restless impatience.

Diversity vs. inclusion

Minority students and their supporters say that diversity and inclusion aren’t the same thing, and they are no longer willing to settle for a token of the former. Instead of feeling isolated on campus, they want to feel at home.

“They’re really starting to look at this in a very nuanced way, and beyond ideas about diversity and access,” says Ajuan Mance, professor of English at Mills College in Oakland, Calif. “In some ways, they are moving even beyond the notion of equality, and they’re really kind of parsing this new notion of ‘equity,’ and what that would feel like.”

“They are expecting their college experience to ‘feel’ as it would for a white student,” he continues. “They’re looking for that sense of belonging, and that, I would say, that is a very different approach and a very different goal than we’ve seen in previous generations with antiracism movements.”

In the sometimes fractious process playing out on campuses, which so far has cost several faculty members, administrators, and one university president their jobs, the student activists have brought terms such as “safe spaces” and “tokenism” into the mainstream. Going further, they are seeking to broaden the definition of “white supremacy” far beyond skinheads and the Ku Klux Klan to include their view of a society that, they say, overwhelmingly looks at issues from a white male perspective.

This expanded definition can make even those who see themselves as liberal uncomfortable. When critics point to what they see as a disregard for the First Amendment rights of those who question their approach or disagree with their definition of progress, these students say they are, in fact, exercising their right to free speech.

Rejecting hierarchies and “great” figureheads, they say they are willing to “defy the status quo, buck the momentum of centuries of flawed civilization, and move in a different direction,” as Kate Groetzinger, who graduated from Brown University in 2015, wrote in Quartz.

They have come of age during the tenure of the nation’s first black president and witnessed the social revolution that last year made same-sex marriage legal in all 50 states.

And in the aftermath of events like the Charleston, S.C., shootings, in which nine black churchgoers were gunned down last year by a man enthralled with white supremacy, as well as the dozens of highly publicized killings of unarmed black men that launched the parallel and overlapping “Black Lives Matter” movement, students demanding campus change say they have a new sense of urgency.

“We are in the context of the Black Lives Matter era,” says Kimberly Ashby, a doctoral student in psychology at Boston College and founding member of the protest group Eradicate Boston College Racism. “We’re a little more radical about the way we think about diversity and multiculturalism now…. There’s really been a shift from multiculturalism to combating white supremacy – something we’re all soaked in.”

And the country is waking up a bit, says Ms. Ashby, an African-American clinician from Philadelphia. She points to a growing number of people coming to grips with the historical reasons why black and brown men fill the country’s prisons, why lead-poisoned water is pumping into poor Flint, Mich., homes and not those in wealthy Grosse Pointe, and why so many Americans want to summarily expel unauthorized immigrants.

Some early victories have centered around the renaming of buildings, as students seek to carve in stone and brick a new ethos that prizes social justice over fame or august titles.

So far, Georgetown University has expunged from campus buildings the names of former presidents who traded in slaves to pay school debts. The University of Maryland, College Park removed the name of a former president and white supremacist from its football stadium. And in January, Amherst College disowned its unofficial mascot, “Lord Jeff,” the colonial-era commander who advocated giving native Americans smallpox-laden blankets in order “to extirpate this execrable race.”

Student protesters at Princeton University in New Jersey, too, have also demanded a reevaluation of the legacy of Woodrow Wilson, the nation’s 28th president and one of the architects of modern liberalism. He was not simply a genteel racist of his day, they and many historians say, but in many ways a white supremacist and eugenicist.

Viewed in a larger frame, experts say the current student protests could be seen as growing pains as the country struggles to accommodate an increasing pluralism. By 2045, according to the US Census Bureau, the percentage of white Americans will fall below 50 percent for the first time, and America’s founding Anglo-Protestant legacies will be one part of the tapestries of time.

On the one hand, minority students are demanding that their own histories in the United States be acknowledged. Student group after student group is demanding more ethnic studies scholars – as well as curriculum requirements that all students become aware of what happened to their ancestors in America, and a more sophisticated understanding of how these histories affect the reality of their experiences today.

‘I feel tokenized every day’

Yet on the other hand, minority students mostly agree that they are sick of being treated like “minorities.”

One of the most frequent demands on campuses is that more people of color make up university faculties and student bodies. “I certainly feel tokenized every day at Boston College,” says Ashby, noting that only 3 percent of undergraduates are African-American. “I see very few people who look like me. There are more black students in grad school, but I’m the only African-American student in all my classes.”

At Tufts University in Medford, Mass., about 200 students held a November walkout to demand that, among other things, the administration work to increase the number of black students on campus and that the percentage of African-American faculty be increased from 3 percent to 13 percent.

“I think the biggest issue is that students, myself included, want to feel like they’re part of a community that is diverse and that accepts all types of communities,” says Anna Del Castillo, a Latina sophomore studying international relations. “We don’t feel comfortable at an institution that only has 3 percent of people who identify the way that we do,” she says, citing the campus protest group, the Three Percent Movement – or the percentage of black students at Tufts.

“So I think it’s like creating a space where we feel comfortable and where we can look around and see people that are like us,” continues Ms. Del Castillo, who came from Ocean Springs, Miss., as part of the university’s Bridge to Liberal Arts Success at Tufts program, which aims to bring in students from underrepresented areas. “I want to feel comfortable going into class with people who aren’t of one type.”

Kevin Ferreira, another graduate student in psychology at Boston College, says he has struggled to find his place in the school – both in his research in developmental and educational psychology and in his everyday life in academia.

“I’m the first born in the US; I’m from an immigrant family. A lot of my work has been with immigrant communities … and then also, I’m a queer man. And so, social justice is one of the major lenses that I view the world through,” says Mr. Ferreira, who along with other Eradicate protesters received disciplinary warnings for a carol-singing protest they held in December. Among the songs rewritten for the occasion: “Walkin’ in a White Man’s Wonderland.”

“Most of the readings that I have do not represent who I am at all,” he says. “I don’t read much about immigrant families. I don’t read much about queer people. And when I ask about how [psychological attachment theory] works for same-sex parents, it’s just like, ‘There might be fringe research about this.’ That is the response. Or ‘Go talk to the one gay faculty member.’ ”

‘Safe spaces’

In an era when the megaphones of social media can amplify an ill-chosen set of 140 characters – let alone racist graffiti or video of unarmed people killed by police – a siege mentality has appeared to emerge among some protesters and their allies.

At places such as the University of Missouri, some protest groups have aggressively demanded “safe spaces,” and a number of public incidents have evoked both outrage and concern about what appears to be the emergence of a new kind of racial intolerance and even separatism.

The most infamous occurred at Mizzou in the fall, when student journalists were ordered to leave a protest on the campus quad, a space public under state law, by a professor who pushed one and called for “some muscle” to eject them. (Melissa Click was charged with misdemeanor assault and was fired from the university in February.)

In February, the same Mizzou protest group, Concerned Student 1950, tried to eject journalists from a public forum advertised for “black students and students of color.” When a student journalist asserted his right to attend, the group stopped the meeting and moved to another space.

For her part, Ashby says she’s had an evolution of thought over the years about the value of “safe spaces.” “No space is ever truly safe. That’s a reality for people of color, for trans people, for minorities,” Ashby says.

Under the new questioning ethos, even events that many people regard as patriotic have come under scrutiny. At the University of Minnesota last fall, the student association initially voted down a resolution to honor the anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. “The passing of this resolution might make a space that is unsafe for students on campus even more unsafe,” said one student, saying it would add fuel to Islamophobia. “When will we start having moments of silence for all of the times white folks have done something terrible?” After a backlash, the student group approved an annual moment of silence.

What about the First Amendment?

The resulting furor has prompted critics from the right and left to describe this generation of students as coddled narcissists, thin-skinned and self-absorbed, as one Cornell alum wrote in an open letter last fall.

Others have decried a threat to the country’s traditions of robust freedom of speech. Indeed, according to a survey by Pew Research last November, 40 percent of Millennials say the government should be able to prevent people from saying offensive statements about minority groups. Only 25 percent of baby boomers and Generation Xers said such limits were OK.

But many student protesters reject the idea that they are trying to limit free speech or expression on campus.

“A lot of people are bringing up free speech and freedom of expression, and saying, you’re sheltering these students from the real world,” says Kafaya Shitta-bey, a student at Hunter College in New York and a first-generation Nigerian American. “And I just find that so ironic. Like, this is why these kids are standing up for themselves, and using their own freedom of speech.”

Last December, Ms. Shitta-bey wrote an article for the Hunter student publication The Bridge Magazine, describing racially offensive Halloween costumes that were being posted on social media. Her article came after an uproar at Yale University, when professor Erika Christakis asked in a philosophical e-mail, “Is there no room anymore for a child or young person to be a little bit obnoxious, a little bit inappropriate or provocative or, yes, offensive?”

“Even though I was shocked, I could still understand where she was coming from,” says Shitta-bey of the e-mail.

“This is why we’re protesting and pushing back, because we deal with this outside of school. And now we have to come to school and see people mocking us?” she says. “People are going to act the way they act, but that doesn’t mean we can’t say something about it.”

But critics point to the fallout surrounding the e-mail, which included a video of a student screaming profanity at Ms. Christakis’s husband, a master at one of Yale’s residential colleges, as an example of political correctness run amok, trampling the well-meaning as well as the ill-intentioned. In the turmoil’s wake, Christakis resigned and her husband took a leave of absence.

Last semester, the campuses of Sarah Lawrence College and Fordham University in New York were roiled by reports of racist taunts, as well as anti-Muslim and anti-Jewish graffiti.

“The campus was churning about it, and we decided, let’s put this out here for everyone to take part in a conversation about racism, and challenge them to kind of respect differing ideas, and to engage in meaningful conversations that were civil and respectful, even though they were difficult and uncomfortable,” says Allen Green, dean of equity and inclusion at Sarah Lawrence.

It’s the type of conversations that administrators around the country are struggling to foster. “It was trying to challenge us to take this to a level where we would have some civil discussions, and we’ve been meeting with students around these issues who have felt that they’ve been aggrieved,” Mr. Green says. “And I think that’s been very helpful, that we’re listening to them; we’re trying to elevate this to a discussion that can be transformative.”

Source: On campus, a new civil rights era rises – CSMonitor.com

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New legislation would halt adoption of Common Core in Michigan

Mar 12, 2016 by

A bill that would halt the adoption of Common Core curriculum standards in Michigan schools was introduced to the House of Representatives on Wednesday.

LANSING — A bill that would halt the adoption of Common Core curriculum standards in Michigan schools was introduced to the House of Representatives on Wednesday.

House Bill 5444 would terminate all plans relating to the implementation of the Common Core initiative in the state. The legislation would also prohibit the adoption of any other national or multi–state standards, instead calling for the state to come up with its own set of requirements.

Representative Ed McBroom (R-Vulcan), who is among the co–sponsors of the bill, believes those state standards should be narrow, allowing locals to adapt to their area’s needs.

“We need adaptability and flexibility to make sure that students are learning a set of skills and a set of standards that allow them to move forward with available career opportunities,” said McBroom. “That’s one of the most disturbing things in the hearings and research I’ve done and the visits I’ve made to Detroit — is seeing that we don’t give those students a lot of things that they can aspire to and hope for, and that’s something we risk here as well if we have a handed–down from on–high standard that’s not really reflective of the local school board and the local community’s desires.”

The bill has been sent to the House Committee on Education for consideration.

Source: New legislation would halt adoption of Common Core in Michigan – Upper Peninsula ABC 10

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Former Eton head says ‘gilded youths’ need to learn to fail

Mar 12, 2016 by

High-achieving, “gilded” young people who had an easy time at school need to understand what it is like to fail, says the former head of Eton.

Tony Little said clever children who never had difficulties needed to have the resilience for struggles of adult life.

He said schools should help young people learn from the “experience of failure”.

Mr Little said children needed to find out how to “bounce back”.

Speaking at the Global Education and Skills Forum about young people’s well-being, he said he was concerned by pupils leaving school who had never seemed to have struggled.

“The only ones who worried me, as I shook hands and said my farewells, were the boys and girls who had gilded school experiences.

“The golden schoolchildren, for whom it had been very straightforward, always good at exams, always popular, always found the flow easy to deal with.

“They never really had anything significant to bump up against,” said Mr Little, who is now chief academic officer of the GEMS international education group.

“I think it behoves all great schools to make sure all their children fail.

‘Lessons from sport’

“Not just have the experience of failure, but of course within a supportive context, to learn from that experience of failure.”

There have been concerns about a rise in young people with mental health problems and growing interest in schools teaching ideas such as well-being.

Mr Little said that schools needed to think about what they celebrated.

There could also be lessons from sport.

“It’s not the fact of being dropped from the sports team, it’s how that is dealt with, how young people are enabled to bounce back and find their way to regain that level or even higher,” he said.

There were also warnings that education systems needed to focus on more than exams and academic success – and to think about emotional well-being.

“The education system did a great job in the past to focus on the top six inches of our head but we need to address the needs of students a little lower – the heart – to teach children about their emotional and social happiness,” said Abdulla Al Karam, director general of Dubai’s knowledge and human development authority.

Source: Former Eton head says ‘gilded youths’ need to learn to fail – BBC News

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It’s 2016, So Why Are We Still Thinking (and Arguing) About Education Like It’s 1999?

Mar 12, 2016 by

Tamara Hiler –

The 1990s & 2000s called, and they want their education policy back.

It’s no secret that over the last two decades, the K-12 education policy landscape has shifted dramatically. During this time period we’ve seen two iterations of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), the introduction and expansion of school choice options like charter schools, deep and serious conversations about how to measure teacher performance, and major advancements in the collection of student data. Today, there are 5.8% of kids in charter schools (compared to less than 1% in 1999), 1 in 5 teachers complete their training through alternative certification programs like Teach For America, and 23 states now take teacher performance into account before awarding tenure — a number that was zero prior to President Obama taking office.

Yet despite living in what should be seen as a new era of K-12 education, many of the loudest voices in education policy — including from the ranks of both teachers’ unions and education reformers — continue to rehash the same ideological battles of the last 20 years, making it feel as though our education debates have been frozen in time. I mean, are we seriously still fighting about whether charter schools should exist, when 3 million students attend them across 42 states?

Or whether or not Teach for America (TFA) is good or bad when over 42,000 alumni of the program have taught in our classrooms?

Is it really still possible that we’re talking about whether promotion policies that are based entirely on seniority are best if we want to recruit a new generation of highly-qualified teachers?

Failing to acknowledge the “new normal” in education stymies the ability of policymakers — especially Democrats who are often caught squarely between traditional union advocates and ardent reformers — to advance a set of more relevant questions that can move our policies into 2016 and beyond. And with the recent passage of the Every Student Succeeds Act and the imminent departure of the Obama administration, the time is ripe for such a paradigm shift to occur.

A modest proposal, for what this new education debate should look like:

  • Moving away from fights about the existence of charter schools to instead focus on promoting non-profit charters over for-profits, and using charters to better integrate our school districts — both racially and socioeconomically.
  • Giving teachers more agency in the evaluation process, or making evaluations more fair and inclusive across subject areas and grades instead of trying to revert to a time when a student’s success had no bearing on the rating of his or her teacher (especially given that 42 states and DC already use student achievement data in their evaluation systems).
  • Acknowledging that alternative certification is here to stay — TFA did just celebrate its 25th anniversary, after all — and abandoning anti-TFA activism to concentrate instead on making sure teacher preparation programs in all forms produce teachers who are classroom-ready from day one.

It’s these sorts of conversations, among others we lay out in our report on education’s New Normal, that provide Democrats with the opportunity to more effectively steer our progress over the next decade.

The time has come for policymakers, pundits, and education advocates to finally put those Spice Girls CD’s away, lay down their 1990s-era education talking points, and instead advance new policy conversations that actually reflect the reality of today’s classrooms.

Source: Hiler: It’s 2016, So Why Are We Still Thinking (and Arguing) About Education Like It’s 1999? | The 74

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Teacher on leave after Black Lives Matter complains about his school discipline comments

Mar 12, 2016 by

Dave Huber –

A St. Paul, Minnesota high school has been placed on “paid administrative leave” after the local Black Lives Matter organization threatened a “shutdown action” over a Facebook comment he had made.

Theo Olson of Como Park High School had complained about the lack of support teachers were getting in matters of student discipline.

On local BLM organizer Rashad Turner’s Facebook page, Olson “expressed frustration over the district not providing enough support to deal with ‘kids who won’t quit gaming, setting up fights, selling drugs, whoring trains or cyber bullying.’ The term ‘whore train’ is a reference to ‘inappropriate sexual activity.’”

Although Olson never mentioned race in his comments, Turner subsequently referred to him as a “white supremacist teacher.”

Turner and other members of BLM met with the district superintendent, Valeria Silva, this past Monday. Olson’s leave began on Wednesday.

The Star Tribune reports:

Turner said Wednesday that the move was a “great first step” and that “we need to rid the district of all employees who share the belief in the racial bias and disdain that Mr. Olson shared so comfortably.”

Olson, who teaches special education and made no mention of race in his posts, could not be reached to comment.

Reports of a possible teacher sickout at Como in support of Olson circulated on social media late Wednesday.

RELATED: The real ‘elephant in the room’ always seems to avoid the so-called ‘experts’

A veteran teacher who asked not to be identified said that teachers discussed the idea but rejected it because they want to be there for their students, and also have parent-teacher conferences Thursday.

At Como Park, Roy Magnuson, a fellow teacher who has voiced concerns about the need for greater expectations of students and consequences for those who misbehave, said: “I support Theo Olson.”

If Olson is a white supremacist, he has a funny way of showing it. For, in addition to his comments about discipline, Olson had written on Turner’s Facebook page that he follows BLM on social media, “and that he had marched with Turner at a protest on University Avenue.”

But even if Olson had mentioned race in his observations on discipline, they are constitutionally protected.

Olson is hardly unique; 14-year St. Paul teacher Aaron Benner (who’s black) quit teaching in the district over issues of student discipline. He had decided to run for the school board there — mainly to challenge the district’s policies — but dropped out after landing another teaching gig at a charter school.

Benner pins St. Paul’s issues squarely on the shoulders of the Pacific Educational Group, which blames (white) teacher racism for the academic achievement gap and disparities in discipline rates.

He writes:

PEG was hired by SPPS in 2010 to help close the achievement gap. PEG makes no secret of the fact that its prescription for closing the gap is based on the Critical Race Theory. This theory argues that racism is so ingrained in the American way of life — its economy, schools, and government — that things must be made unequal in order to compensate for that racism. PEG pushes the idea that black students are victims of white school policies that make it difficult or impossible for them to learn. So, when a black student is disruptive, PEG, as I see it, stresses that it’s not their fault, and the student should just take a break, and then return to class shortly thereafter.

Racism and white privilege definitely exist, and there is not enough space in this paper for me to share all of the humiliating encounters I’ve experienced that are a product of racism. But to blame poor behavior and low test scores solely on white teachers is simply wrong. However, it’s the new narrative in our district, pushed by PEG.

(For more on Critical Race Theory, see here.)

St. Paul’s schools would do well to listen to the concerns of people like Mr. Olson, Mr. Benner, and those noted here. Intimidating those who speak out by placing them on “leave,” or trying to catch them in any sort of infraction, will in no way eliminate the issues surrounding student discipline.

Source: Teacher on leave after Black Lives Matter complains about his school discipline comments – The College Fix

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As Usual Ted Cruz Gets Blamed for Nothing

Mar 12, 2016 by

tedcruz

“As Usual Ted Cruz Gets Blamed for Nothing”

By Donna Garner

3.12.16

 

By my doing a simple Internet search under “low-information voters,” I found many articles in which authors of various ilks have used this term in reference to Donald Trump.  However, as usual it is Ted Cruz who is getting vilified because he said in an interview recently, “Donald does well with voters who have relatively low information, who are not that engaged and who are angry and they see him as an angry voice. Where we are beating him is when voters get more engaged and they get more informed.” 

 

To be honest, I also have found that people who get more engaged and take the time to find out more about Donald Trump — his lascivious and immoral background, his desire for fame and fortune at all costs, his business misadventures, and his long-time leftist relationships —  have instead turned to Ted Cruz as their Presidential choice.

 

Be that as it may, I certainly do not believe Cruz should bear the public’s wrath for saying something that many other writers, pundits, and political analysts have been saying rather routinely throughout this campaign.  

 

Whether these people are right or wrong about the low-information voters is not the question. The problem is blaming Ted Cruz for nothing.

 

Here is just a small sampling of many others who have referred to the Trump and low-information voter phenomenon:

 

9.4.15 – “Turns out Trump’s Support Isn’t Just from Low-Information Voters After All” – by Ben Bullard – PersonalLiberty.comhttp://personalliberty.com/turns-out-trumps-support-isnt-just-from-low-information-voters-after-all/

 

 

12.29.15 – “Low-Info Voters Vs. High 2016 Expectations” – by Craig Andresen – The National Patriothttp://www.thenationalpatriot.com/2015/12/29/low-info-voters-vs-high-2016-expectations-part-1/

 

9.7.15 – “The Revenge of the Low-Information Voters” – by M. Catharine Evans – American Thinkerhttp://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/09/donald_trump_and_the_revenge_of_the_lowinformation_voters.html

 

1.8.16 – “Yes, Donald Trump Will Implode. Here’s Why” – by David Roberts – Vox Policy & Politics http://www.vox.com/2016/1/8/10732496/donald-trump-implode

 

9.3.15 – “Donald Trump’s Hardcore Hater” – by Chris Moody, Alex Lee – CNN Politics

http://www.cnn.com/2015/09/03/politics/donald-trump-gop-rick-wilson/

 

2.19.16 – “Nevada GOP Caucus Polls 2016: Donald Trump Has Large Lead” – by Jonathan Adams – Heavy.comhttp://heavy.com/news/2016/02/nevada-republican-polls-gop-caucus-primary-polling-trump-rubio-cruz-bush-latest-numbers-favorite/

 

2.29.16 – “Low-Information Voters” – by Delphine – Daily Koshttp://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/2/29/1493278/–Low-Information-Voters

 

8.17.15 – “Conservative Think Tank Says Trump Supporters Are Low Information Voters” – by John H. Roberts — Young Conservatives — http://www.youngcons.com/conservative-think-tank-says-trump-supporters-are-low-information-voters/

 

3.3.16 – “The Democratic Party, Donald Trump, & the 2016 Turnout Problem” – by Gaius Publius – Down with Tyrannyhttp://downwithtyranny.blogspot.com/2016/03/the-democratic-party-donald-trump-2016.html

 

 

Donna Garner

Wgarner1@hot.rr.com

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More Foreign Graduates to Compete for STEM Jobs Under Newly Unveiled Obama Rule

Mar 12, 2016 by

The Obama administration has unveiled a new rule that will allow foreign graduates of American universities to work in white-collar jobs for an extended number of years.

The new rule would lengthen the Optional Practical Training (OPT) program for international students in a broad variety of careers in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields. The rule will have the effect of allowing foreign graduates of American universities to work for U.S.-based companies, initially for up to three years.

The new rule also allows OPT graduates to get a second two-year extension on their OPT work allowance if get another degree from a U.S. university, for a total of five years. Additionally, the rule requires employers to offer a “training program” to the foreign graduates.

According to the White House, the Department of Homeland Security estimates that 34,000 foreigners are currently working via the OPT program, and that the numbers will grow in the ensuing years.

While the administration pins the number at 34,000, last year Breitbart News reported that a private sector group has said the number of foreign graduates working in the U.S. via the OPT program is around 120,000.

According to that Breitbart News report, the Institute of International Education said that the number of OPT participants increased from 76,031 during the 2010-11 school year to 120,287 in the 2014-15 school year.

The Department of Homeland Security’s expansion of the OPT program comes amid outcries from American tech workers who say they are being squeezed out of their jobs and employment prospects by cheaper, foreign workers.

A group of American tech workers, as the New York Times reported, sued over the initial OPT rule forcing Friday’s new rule, which incorporated a requisite comment period.

“It’s an ongoing assault on American workers,” said John Miano, the lawyer for the tech workers and a Center for Immigration Studies expert, told the Times. Miano continues to challenge the program on appeal.

The rule claims to protect against the possible replacement or displacement of American workers by requiring their compensation be proportional to similarly situated U.S. workers, and the student may not replace and American worker. Despite the professed protections, skeptics remain.

“The expansion allows many companies to circumvent the caps on guest worker visas such as the H-1B visa and replace American workers with cheaper foreign student workers,” the limited immigration group NumbersUSA wrote in an analysis of the extension. “The OPT graduates are exempt from payroll taxes and there is no wage requirements or visa caps on the program.”

The new rule will take effect on May 10.

Source: More Foreign Graduates to Compete for STEM Jobs Under Newly Unveiled Obama Rule – Breitbart

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Common Core Sinks GOP Establishment Figures

Mar 12, 2016 by

Establishment Republicans are always mystified when they embrace Democratic Party policies and get hammered for it, particularly, as is frequently the case, when those programs don’t work particularly well.

“It was everyday moms who shamed the Republicans into abandoning Common Core,” syndicated columnist Michelle Malkin averred at the Conservative Political Action Conference. “There are three reasons why Jeb Bush failed: his last name; his support for amnesty; and his cheerleading and cashing in on Common Core.”

The National Governors Association devised Common Core with Clinton era appointees, Malkin explained. In 2009, 25 people in the room devised Common Core including 6 from the College Board, 5 from ACT and 4 from Achieve, Inc., according to Malkin.

Currently other supporters of Common Core aren’t doing particularly well either. Ohio Governor John Kasich has bellowed his enthusiasm for it at the expense of other, arguably more efficacious, school reforms. “This is a man who smeared homeschoolers,” Malkin reminded her audience at CPAC.

Malkin, the senior editor at Conservative Review, is the author of six books, including, most recently, Sold Out: How High-Tech Billionaires & Bipartisan Beltway Crapweasels Are Screwing America’s Best & Brightest Workers , written with John Maino, and Who Built That: Awe-Inspiring Stories of American Tinkerpreneurs.

Source: Common Core Sinks GOP Establishment Figures

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Banned dad awaits response to lawsuit

Mar 12, 2016 by

The battle continues for a Maryland father – a Christian and Marine veteran – who was banned from his daughter’s school property for objecting to the school’s promotion of Islam to students.

In October, Kevin Wood strongly objected to his 11th-grade daughter’s school assignment that stated “There is no God but Allah” and “Allah is the same God that is worshiped in Christianity and Judaism.” Wood contacted the school and asked that she be given an alternate assignment. Thomas More Law Center attorney Kate Oliveri says school officials adamantly refused – and banned Wood from school property.

“Mr. Wood wasn’t asking for the school to change their program [or] … change anything,” the attorney explains. “He just wanted his daughter to have a different assignment so she didn’t have to violate her faith. And the school still asserts that that’s not an option.”

In January, the Law Center filed a lawsuit on behalf of Wood and his wife against the district and school administrators for violating their constitutional rights. Oliveri says Wood is a Marine veteran who fought for American principles and deserves better than this.

“It’s a sad thing,” she tells OneNewsNow. “His daughter is about to graduate from high school and she may have to go through her high school graduation experience without her dad there.”

TMLC reports no date has been set yet for oral arguments in the case.

 

Source: Banned dad awaits response to lawsuit

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