Richmond elementary schools targeted by vandals

Richmond elementary schools targeted by vandals

RICHMOND, Calif. (KRON) — Richmond is working with a vandalism difficulty at its elementary schools.

Three schools ended up damaged into and broken more than the weekend, and a fourth school was vandalized past weekend. Lincoln Elementary School is where by the vandals did the most destruction.

“Every hallway in Lincoln Elementary School appears like this. Supplies pushed over, but when you wander as a result of the door of a classroom, you definitely recognize the extent of the hurt,” claimed Lt. Matt Stonebreaker, Richmond Police Section.

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Lt. Stonebreaker explained he was most stunned to see that every single solitary classroom on two floors was rummaged by means of and ruined. “The upstairs they experienced the computer screens that ended up on a force dolly that was pushed down the stairway,” reported Stonebreaker.

According to the Richmond Law enforcement Office, Lincoln Elementary, Richmond Constitution Academy, and Nystrom Elementary were being all damaged into above the weekend. This will come just just one week following Greenwood Academy was vandalized.

“Very lower blow. It’s unlucky for the full local community to have to have all of their educational facilities vandalized like this,” explained Stonebreaker.

Lt. Stonebreaker mentioned the alarms in the building did not go off, but that protection cameras were rolling at the time of the crack-ins. “We feel they are in their teenagers, and we believe that they are nearby, but we aren’t particularly sure who they are just yet,” mentioned Stonebreaker.

Crews have been chaotic Monday cleansing up and restoring the damages. “It’s entirely heartbreaking to see the extent of the damages,” mentioned Ryan Phillips, West Contra Costa Unified Faculty District.

Phillips said he is not guaranteed how a great deal it will value but the district’s aim is to have all structures ready by the first working day of college on August 16. “We’re currently facing excessive spending plan constraints and to have to direct sources to one thing like this is quite unlucky,” reported Phillips.

Though college students are still off for summer months holiday, investigators and faculty officers are making an attempt to examine the extent of the damages that happened someday involving Friday and Sunday night. “It’s tough to understand what would motivate anyone to occur in and demolish a faculty like this,” said Phillips.

Any individual who witnessed the vandalisms take location, are requested to arrive at out to the Richmond Police Division to enable with their investigation.

Labor-Focused Academics Targeted for Their Research

Labor-Focused Academics Targeted for Their Research

Throttled by both strong-arm tactics from anti-union interests and a chronic lack of support from universities, the field of labor studies has dwindled in the U.S. in recent years.

Researchers in the field have been the target of legal threats and lawsuits, onerous public records requests and misinformation campaigns from union avoidance consultants, business executives, corporate lawyers and conservative think tanks. It’s one aspect of the business lobby’s relentless war against unions in recent decades, which has seen companies spend more than $340 million a year on consultants to defeat organizing efforts by their employees and helped sink union membership.

Labor studies, an interdisciplinary field in academia that examines workplace issues and worker organizations, reveals working conditions that motivate people to want to join a union. Much of the scholarship has illuminated the central role that labor’s decline has played in exacerbating income inequality. In doing so, the field has aroused the ire of anti-union companies and their allies. The field has never been a major force in academia and many centers have been gradually shuttered due to lack of funding or merged with other departments. Only a handful of universities currently offer a major or minor in labor studies. Faculty are often untenured, vulnerable to layoffs and budget cuts, and they are often not replaced when they retire.

“A fairly robust network of university-based labor studies and labor education programs have been under attack,” says Jennifer Sherer, former director of the University of Iowa Labor Center, which was almost eliminated in 2020 amid a firestorm of politically motivated attacks on unions in the state Legislature. The center, which dates back to 1950, is known for education on worker rights when it comes to sexual harassment, health and safety violations, and wage recovery — and, according to Sherer, closing it would have saved “less than one-thousandth of one percent” of the university’s general education budget.

In California, the influential UCLA Labor Center — which conducted research on low-wage employment and led leadership development workshops — was targeted for elimination for years by Republican lawmakers and corporate power brokers. But allies successfully fought back and Gov. Newsom allocated $15 million last July to renovate the center’s historic building.
 


Only a handful of universities currently offer a major or minor in labor studies. Faculty are often untenured, vulnerable to budget cuts, and they are often not replaced when they retire.


 
Last year, Veena Dubal, a professor at UC Hastings College of the Law who researches gig work companies, became a target of an endless barrage of social media harassment, misinformation articles and doxxing. The onslaught occurred while the state was debating Proposition 22, a controversial ballot initiative that allowed app-based ride-hailing and delivery companies like Uber and DoorDash to classify their workers as independent contractors.

“It was very frightening,” she said. “The articles were awful, the targeted social media hate like every day, and it hasn’t totally stopped.”

It was a tense time, during which a coalition of gig work companies including Uber, Lyft, DoorDash and Instacart amped up their payments to the Yes on 22 campaign to hire public relations and political opposition research firms. The $200 million campaign mounted an aggressive advertising push — through email, mailings and the apps themselves — to convince voters that drivers are well paid and prefer to be independent contractors and that the quality of service would decline if the measure were passed, though there is no evidence that the campaign included the harassment of Dubal.

“It used to be that in the early 20th century, industrialists hired Pinkertons — private security agencies — to spy on workers and advocates and organizers to undermine effective advocacy on behalf of working people,” said Dubal. “Then we moved into a stage where if you were advocating on behalf of working people, then you’re a communist. Today, in addition to red-baiting, which continues, there’s outright intimidation and harassment — it’s just an evolved form.”

Dubal was also subject to a complaint of illegal lobbying though she doesn’t accept any money for her advocacy work. Mark Bogetich of MB Public Affairs, a public relations firm hired by the campaign, filed a public records act request for months of Dubal’s emails and text messages, which the university handed over. Bogetich is an opposition research consultant who has done work for the tobacco industry and a number of Republican politicians.

This tactic has been used by right-wing organizations like the Freedom Foundation in Washington state. The foundation has filed Freedom of Information Act requests to target labor studies academics at public universities on the West Coast to try to find evidence that public money is being misused to promote unions.

Dubal said she was shocked to receive the request. “The nature of the request, including emails from me to myself, felt overbroad and intrusive — I felt targeted,” she said.

As for UC Hastings, Dubal said, “I have been lucky to have a very supportive dean, and my university did not in any way ask me to tone down my activism. That said, they are compelled by law to comply with the public records act request and did so.”
 


“In the regulation of gig work, independent academic research has been integral to providing information to regulators to understand what is going on in a way that’s not shaped by the company’s own research and own narrative.”

~ Veena Dubal, professor, UC Hastings College of the Law

 
Academics like Dubal argue that maintaining independent research in the field of labor studies is crucial for the public good. Often unions and other labor organizations do not have the resources necessary to fund such research.

“These companies have hired tons of economists and social scientists to create research that they can then use to justify the regulations that they seek. Those regulations are good for their bottom line, but they are not good for workers and they are not good for the general public,” Dubal said. “In the regulation of gig work, independent academic research has been integral to providing information to regulators to understand what is going on in a way that’s not shaped by the company’s own research and own narrative.”

While the onslaught has been overwhelming, Dubal said it has not had the intended effect. “If you try and prevent me from doing something, I’m likely going to be more determined to do it,” she said. As a tenured professor, her position is secure.

But she said she knows many researchers who don’t write about or research labor studies and other fields because they’re worried about such harassment by corporate interests. “It absolutely has a huge effect on what people study, what they say,” she said. “It has a huge impact. In many ways, I think that these companies, they’re not just looking to intimidate and harass me, they’re looking to make an example of me.”

While most have migrated online, such acts of intimidation used to be more in your face.

For Kate Bronfenbrenner, a professor of labor studies at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, the first sign that something was not normal at a research conference she attended in the fall of 1992 came as soon as she arrived at the airport. As she opened the door to the car that was sent to pick her up, she was surprised to find the CEO of a management consulting firm waiting for her in the back seat.

He demanded to know what she was presenting and to see her data, she says. She deflected, saying that she hadn’t brought her data and didn’t have a presentation prepared. She held her bag closely, fearing he might try to take it.

“I was a woman alone. It was very frightening,” she said. “He was furious.”
 


Over the years, hundreds of Cornell business school grads have written to the university saying Kate Bronfenbrenner, an untenured professor of labor studies, should be fired, according to her.


 
When Bronfenbrenner began research for her Ph.D. dissertation in the mid-’80s, she was surprised to discover that not much had been written about how businesses fight unionizing efforts.

When she published her work, Bronfenbrenner immediately started to get calls from management consultants asking for her raw data. She declined, citing the need to protect her sources. Then the callers would get aggressive, threatening to complain to the president of her university.

The pressure reached a boiling point a few years after the incident at the conference when a company that was one of the nation’s top violators of labor law, according to Bronfenbrenner’s research, sued her for libel. While the case was ultimately dropped — the suit took issue with testimony Bronfenbrenner had given before a congressional town hall meeting, which is considered protected speech — she said the company’s intent was, in part, to obtain the raw data through the discovery process.

Bronfenbrenner said her experiences were symptomatic of a broader hostility from corporations at that time toward researchers who published unflattering research. “Tobacco research was intensifying. There was research on the oil industry and environmental research,” said Bronfenbrenner. “Corporations were hitting back pretty hard.”

Even though it was unsuccessful, the lawsuit served as an example for other researchers. “The purpose was to intimidate other scholars from doing similar research. And I think that was effective,” said Bronfenbrenner. “If you look in the field, you have seen people not be willing to follow in my footsteps. Because they say: ‘Well, look what happened.’”

Over the years, hundreds of Cornell business school grads have written to the university saying Bronfenbrenner, who is untenured, should be fired, according to her. “I’m not very popular among corporate alumni,” she said, as her research is often the primary data used to support labor law reform. Her findings were cited several times in President Biden’s pro-labor campaign plan.

When asked for comment, Cornell affirmed its support for academic freedom.

“Cornell is committed to the fundamental principles of academic freedom. We support academic research and faculty’s freedom to engage in scholarship unrestrained from external interference,” said Joel M. Malina, vice president for university relations at Cornell University. “Such freedoms are essential to the functions of our university as an educational institution.”
 


The field of labor studies has often been lambasted by conservative lawmakers who consider it union advocacy education that indoctrinates students.


 
Anti-union consultants in particular, the subject of much of Bronfenbrenner’s research, see that research as a threat to their livelihood. “Part of their business depends on anonymity — or at least, they’re most effective when they’re working in the background,” said John Logan, a professor at San Francisco State University who studies the anti-union consulting industry. “They don’t like being put in the spotlight, their activities examined — they view it as a threat to their business. They’re likely to retaliate.”

Logan, another academic unpopular with the corporate crowd, said one former university president used to joke that he had a special folder on his computer where he kept all the messages he received demanding that he fire the director of labor studies. He’s been threatened with lawsuits, which he said was a common intimidation tactic.

Several consultants contacted by Capital & Main declined to discuss their tactics. But one longtime consultant, who preferred not to be named, defended efforts to obtain university records about labor studies programs, claiming that many of them serve as the “propaganda arm of unions.”

The field of labor studies has often been lambasted by conservative lawmakers who consider it union advocacy education that indoctrinates students. When legislators in Connecticut proposed a bill in 2015 encouraging schools to teach labor union history, Republican state Representative Charles J. Ferraro lashed out: “Capitalism has been under attack and quite frankly I don’t see how this particular bill is going to give a fair, balanced approach in teaching our children.”

Labor studies academics contend that the field can inform how we view everything from law, economics and history to music and literature by focusing on the perspective of the working class, which is often neglected in other disciplines.

”If you compare talking about supply chains from the point of view of the management class with the point of view of the working class, you can just see that those two images are going to look really different,” said Helena Worthen, who has taught labor studies at the University of Illinois and conducted research for the United Association for Labor Education. “And a union doesn’t really have time to do that.”


 
Copyright 2021 Capital & Main.

Marcus Baram contributed to this story.

Home-schooling will soon be targeted for outlaw

Home-schooling will soon be targeted for outlaw

President Biden’s Department of Justice has just been weaponized versus mothers and fathers in America, and it won’t be very long in advance of residence-schooling, spiritual schooling and personal schooling — specially non-public Christian schooling — grow to be the next targets of this administration.

Following all, if mother and father protesting critical race theory and hypersexualized university curriculum are to turn into the “domestic terrorists” to fight, the saviors of governing administration just can’t enable these unfit types choose how to teach their kids, now can they?

We’re from the govt, and we’re right here to assist.

Or, as Education Secretary Miguel Cardona puts it: Mom and dad should not definitely be the “primary stakeholder” in their children’s education.

“I feel mother and father are vital stakeholders, but I also imagine educators have a purpose in analyzing educational programming,” Cardona reported in September on Capitol Hill, when questioned throughout a Senate Committee on Wellbeing, Training, Labor and Pensions if he believed moms and dads really should be in demand of their children’s training as major stakeholders.

Basic query.

Dodgy response.

The dodge speaks volumes.

Now, in the encounter of Attorney Common Merrick Garland’s directive to FBI brokers and U.S. attorney officers to begin investigating dad and mom who protest college board customers also loudly as possibly responsible of committing acts of “domestic terrorism” — at the bidding of the Countrywide Schools Boards Affiliation — it would seem the Democratic Party has arrive out of hiding and tipped its hand absolutely on leftist plans for America’s youngest and most vulnerable: to steal them from parental command to indoctrinate them in socialist-slash-communist-slash-Marxist ideology.

It is how Cuba does their children.

It’s how all the commie nations do their young ones.

You consider parents in communist nations have an inherent, God-offered proper to manage the teachings of their little ones?

If leftists aren’t fast paced wiping out all point out of God from the public sq., they are dutifully pushing propaganda into the minds of the nation’s youth. The superior to manage them, dontcha know. The improved to elevate them to be joyful small marchers in the Marxist-Democrat army.

There is an quick remedy for faculties boards to deal with extremely obnoxious, daunting, bullying or even violent mom and dad. It is known as — Simply call The Cops.

Sending in the lengthy arms of the nicely-funded federal Office of Justice to deal with modest-town American schools is not just overkill. It’s a purposeful leftist method designed to send a chilling message to those who dare buck the far-leftist agenda. It’s an intentional present of federal force to stifle and silence the thinkers of the nation, the conservatives and coolly rational of the crowds, the dissenters of the bunch, the patriotic mothers and fathers of the community, the individualists — those pesky individualists — of the nation.

It is meant to cease the protests against the collectivist and communist takeover of America’s colleges.

And the conclude sport of this evil takeover is the kids — their minds, their hearts, even their souls, stolen for the applications of the point out. 

The DOJ storm troop is just one tactic to wrest parents’ regulate of their young children and their children’s schooling.

Upcoming up is the attack on personal schooling and home-education. It will not be prolonged right before protesting mom and dad will be labeled by government bureaucrats as unfit mothers and fathers. It will not be considerably lengthier in advance of dad and mom who refuse to vaccinate their little ones are considered dangers to their small children in advance of mothers and fathers who argue that LGBTQ agendas are harming their kids are called out as risky to modern society, and thus potential risks to their little ones.

Hold out for it, hold out for it.

The condition will shortly be making the scenario that only the condition can effectively teach, and that household-schooling, private education, Christian education is a risk to modern society.

Give me just one generation of youth, and I’ll remodel the entire environment — Vladimir Lenin is cited as saying.

That is the dream of the Democrats. That is why moms and dads have turn into Enemy Quantity One.

• Cheryl Chumley can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter, @ckchumley. Pay attention to her podcast “Bold and Blunt” by clicking Right here. And under no circumstances skip her column subscribe to her e-newsletter by clicking Here. Her hottest guide, “Socialists Never Rest: Christians Will have to Increase Or The usa Will Slide,” is out there by clicking HERE.

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