Thursday, May 08, 2025

Trump’s Utopia

Trump’s Utopia: Today on TAP: He’s borne back ceaselessly into a fictitious past reshaped for his immediate needs.

Tuesday, May 06, 2025

Vouchers: A Republican Scam : Kevin Kiley

Call. Kevin Kiley.  Congressperson. MAGA,


The evidence is clear: Private school vouchers divert needed funding away from public schools, are a boon to the wealthy and don’t help student achievement. Yet even as President Donald Trump tries to end the federal role in education, he and his allies in Congress want to create a new federal role in education—not for public schools but for a national voucher program.

In Congress, Trump’s allies are trying to sneak a new voucher program into a bill about taxes. But this “tuition tax credit” is nothing more than a national voucher program that also allows people like Elon Musk and Betsy DeVos to turn a profit, personally earning millions of dollars from the scheme, while our public schools, which 90 percent of all students attend, are underfunded and undermined.

Send your letter to Congress telling lawmakers to stop plans to implement a national school voucher program.

We can’t let Republicans representing billionaires insert a national voucher program into a bill with so many cuts to essential services that they hope we won’t notice. Adding a so-called tuition tax credit to their tax bill would:

• Divert billions of dollars in public funds to private schools—even though public schools serve 90 percent of our students.
• Let wealthy taxpayers profit from this voucher scheme even as it channels more taxpayer money to wealthy families already using private schools.
• Harm students with special needs who rely on public school infrastructure and are often not welcome in private schools.
• Allow discrimination with public funds, even as our public schools, which are nondiscriminatory and open to all, do not receive the funding they need.
• Harm food banks, houses of worship, veterans’ organizations and all nonprofits that rely on donations, by creating a financial incentive for donors to direct their money to vouchers instead.

We know vouchers are bad news for our students, schools and communities. The evidence is clear that vouchers don’t help achievement; they have been used mainly by the wealthy who already send their children to private schools, and most important, they deplete essential funding from public schools. We can stop this attack on our schools.

In the same way parents, educators and community members came together across the country last November to defeat vouchers, no matter their political persuasion, we can stand with parents and education advocacy groups now to send a clear message to members of Congress trying to defund public schools through this federal voucher scheme.

Click to send a letter to your members of Congress opposing a tuition tax credit for private schools and a nationalized school voucher program.

In Unity,
Randi Weingarten
AFT President


The evidence is clear: Private school vouchers divert needed funding away from public schools, are a boon to the wealthy and don’t help student achievement. Yet even as President Donald Trump tries to end the federal role in education, he and his allies in Congress want to create a new federal role in education—not for public schools but for a national voucher program.

In Congress, Trump’s allies are trying to sneak a new voucher program into a bill about taxes. But this “tuition tax credit” is nothing more than a national voucher program that also allows people like Elon Musk and Betsy DeVos to turn a profit, personally earning millions of dollars from the scheme, while our public schools, which 90 percent of all students attend, are underfunded and undermined.

Send your letter to Congress telling lawmakers to stop plans to implement a national school voucher program.

We can’t let Republicans representing billionaires insert a national voucher program into a bill with so many cuts to essential services that they hope we won’t notice. Adding a so-called tuition tax credit to their tax bill would:

• Divert billions of dollars in public funds to private schools—even though public schools serve 90 percent of our students.
• Let wealthy taxpayers profit from this voucher scheme even as it channels more taxpayer money to wealthy families already using private schools.
• Harm students with special needs who rely on public school infrastructure and are often not welcome in private schools.
• Allow discrimination with public funds, even as our public schools, which are nondiscriminatory and open to all, do not receive the funding they need.
• Harm food banks, houses of worship, veterans’ organizations and all nonprofits that rely on donations, by creating a financial incentive for donors to direct their money to vouchers instead.

We know vouchers are bad news for our students, schools and communities. The evidence is clear that vouchers don’t help achievement; they have been used mainly by the wealthy who already send their children to private schools, and most important, they deplete essential funding from public schools. We can stop this attack on our schools.

In the same way parents, educators and community members came together across the country last November to defeat vouchers, no matter their political persuasion, we can stand with parents and education advocacy groups now to send a clear message to members of Congress trying to defund public schools through this federal voucher scheme.

Click to send a letter to your members of Congress opposing a tuition tax credit for private schools and a nationalized school voucher program.

In Unity,
Randi Weingarten
AFT President


Sunday, May 04, 2025

Crypto Is a Scam , Corrupt, and Funds Donald Trump and Elon Musk.

 Donald Trump and Elon Musk are moving full speed ahead on a corrupt and dangerous bill to let them issue their OWN private money - which could bring down our entire financial system.

The Senate could vote THIS WEEK so please write  or call your Senators today.

In March, the historically corrupt and dangerous GENIUS Act passed the Senate Banking Committee with five Democratic votesAngela Alsobrooks (MD), Ruben Gallego (AZ), Mark Warner (VA), Lisa Blunt Rochester (DE) and Andy Kim (NJ).

Kirsten Gillibrand (NY) is the Democratic co-author of the bill, and she was rewarded with a “Crypto Champion” award from the crypto industry, along with Angela Alsobrooks (MD).

Trump is no GENIUS, but he is corrupt. This year, Trump has made nearly $3 BILLION on his corrupt crypto deals. Right after The Banking Committee voted on the bill, Trump launched his own stablecoin (USD1) and it’s already being used to finance corrupt business deals in the Middle East.

Musk is no GENIUS either. DOGE has proven he's a cruel, vicious idiot who slashes essential workers and services and then lies about it. And Tesla's stock crash proves he's no GENIUS at business either.

The GENIUS Act establishes useless financial "safeguards" for the new wild west of Big Tech private currencies (so called “stablecoins”).

It begs for more big financial bailouts when the companies get shaky, and people run to redeem the private currencies for actual cash - the exact kind of run on the banks that caused the Great Depression.

The bill also ignores core consumer protections that apply to the payments we make every day through our debit card or Venmo account. If you get scammed or charged junk fees when using these new private currencies, you may be on your own. (And don't bother calling Kash Patel's FBI.)

It also lacks privacy safeguards to prevent Elon Musk and other Big Tech billionaires from surveilling your transactions. Doesn't that give you the chills?

The bill actually turbocharges a payment system that is already GENIUS for terrorists, cartels, and sanctions targets like Iran and Russia.

It does not close money laundering and terrorist financing vulnerabilities that bad actors can exploit. Recent analyses concluded that stablecoins have become the “new epicentre of crypto fraud” and the “new kingpin of illicit crypto activity.”

For all these reasons, Democrats must stop Trump, Musk and their techbro cronies from issuing their own stablecoins, without any guardrails to protect consumers, to protect national security, or to protect the financial stability of our economy. 

Tell Chuck Schumer and ALL Senate Democrats to filibuster the GENIUS Act.

Friday, May 02, 2025

California Teachers Coordinate Bargaining Power

 

After years of grinding for wage gains that were quickly wiped out by California’s soaring cost of living, unionized educators are about to make a power move. 

In the midst of President Donald Trump’s attack on the federal Department of Education and the state’s own struggle with the myriad issues facing its public school system, the teachers’ unions say they’ll coordinate strategies across multiple California districts that together serve more than 1 million students.

Whether they will win better contracts in their individual districts, many of which are fighting ongoing budget issues, is an open question. But some of those who’ve been on the front lines of the education battle in the state feel they have little to lose.

“We have a staffing crisis, and it’s worst in areas where teachers are needed the most. If we want to fully staff our schools, we need a living wage,” said Kyle Weinberg, a special education teacher and president of the 7,000-member San Diego Education Association. “This is why this statewide effort is so critical, and why we in San Diego are all in.”

Under the plan, announced this week by the California Teachers Association, roughly 77,000 educators in 32 districts – about a quarter of the union’s full membership – will bargain for contracts around a shared set of core issues: improved wages, smaller class sizes, fully-staffed schools and more resources for students. (The California Teachers Association is a donor to Capital & Main). 

The union can’t negotiate for such improvements on a large-scale basis; the individual districts have to do that for themselves. But through a carefully orchestrated series of moves over the past several years, many of the state’s largest districts have aligned their contracts to expire on the same day, June 30.

The hope is that the implications of labor strife at the same time in so many major school districts – Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose, Sacramento, San Diego – will ratchet up public pressure and prompt more responsive bargaining in each area.

“I don’t say this lightly: We are facing a crisis in our public schools,” said David Goldberg, president of the California Teachers Association, which represents about 310,000 public education workers. “There are not enough educators on our school campuses.”

During a news conference, Goldberg noted that California ranks in the bottom five in the U.S. for class size ratio and sits at 48th for access to school counselors. A survey of its own members by the union, meanwhile, found that four in 10 are considering leaving the profession – in large measure, they say, because they can’t afford to live near the schools where they work.

The result of such pressures, the union says, is inadequate staffing that can erode the quality of public education. And in a job marketplace in which choosing to become a teacher may mean a struggle to pay for basic needs, California is lagging to keep up. The state has had to figure out ways to fast-track the credentialing process in order to get more teachers into the pipeline, but it still faces a significant shortage.

“The sacrifices that educators are making is significant,” said Lauren Pomrantz, a first-grade teacher and president of the Live Oak Elementary Teachers Association, a 100-member group in Santa Cruz County. “We’re often using our own funds to buy classroom supplies, and the reality is that not one school district in this county pays even the statewide average, even though studies show year after year that Santa Cruz is one of the least affordable places for teachers in the United States.”

This theme of unaffordability is not new; California teachers have been sounding the alarm for years about their incremental wage gains being quickly overwhelmed by runaway housing and living costs. But never before has the statewide union helped coordinate efforts by local districts to both time their contract bargaining and sharpen their message.

The California Teachers Association, which also counts school counselors, psychologists, librarians, support staff and other non-supervisory employees among its members, has often faced battles regarding messaging.

The state’s average salary for public school teachers in 2022-23, for example, was a seemingly robust $95,160, according to the California Department of Education. But that raw number doesn’t account for cost of living, especially housing, in the state’s largest and most expensive metropolitan areas. It also doesn’t reflect the reality that starting salaries for most teachers run in the mid-$50,000s – a tough sell in a place like L.A. or San Jose.

A recent report by the nonpartisan Center for Economic and Policy Research found that California has been falling behind for decades in teacher pay – and that average weekly salaries have remained flat since 2003, once the cost of living is taken into account.

Over the past 45 years, the inflation-adjusted average weekly wage of California teachers has risen 26.3%, while the average pay of nonteaching college graduates in the state is up 70%. Put simply, people are choosing other jobs. “Both the long-term trends and the recent trends have been troubling,” said Sylvia Allegretto, senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

How much school districts have left to give is another question. With declining enrollment a reality, and state funding generally based on average daily attendance, many districts have found themselves strapped for cash and either considering closing schools or actively doing so. Leaders in Oakland have been considering multiple closures to trim a budget deficit estimated at between $75 million and $95 million.

But wi

After years of grinding for wage gains that were quickly wiped out by California’s soaring cost of living, unionized educators are about to make a power move. 

In the midst of President Donald Trump’s attack on the federal Department of Education and the state’s own struggle with the myriad issues facing its public school system, the teachers’ unions say they’ll coordinate strategies across multiple California districts that together serve more than 1 million students.

Whether they will win better contracts in their individual districts, many of which are fighting ongoing budget issues, is an open question. But some of those who’ve been on the front lines of the education battle in the state feel they have little to lose.

“We have a staffing crisis, and it’s worst in areas where teachers are needed the most. If we want to fully staff our schools, we need a living wage,” said Kyle Weinberg, a special education teacher and president of the 7,000-member San Diego Education Association. “This is why this statewide effort is so critical, and why we in San Diego are all in.”

Under the plan, announced this week by the California Teachers Association, roughly 77,000 educators in 32 districts – about a quarter of the union’s full membership – will bargain for contracts around a shared set of core issues: improved wages, smaller class sizes, fully-staffed schools and more resources for students. (The California Teachers Association is a donor to Capital & Main). 

The union can’t negotiate for such improvements on a large-scale basis; the individual districts have to do that for themselves. But through a carefully orchestrated series of moves over the past several years, many of the state’s largest districts have aligned their contracts to expire on the same day, June 30.

The hope is that the implications of labor strife at the same time in so many major school districts – Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose, Sacramento, San Diego – will ratchet up public pressure and prompt more responsive bargaining in each area.

“I don’t say this lightly: We are facing a crisis in our public schools,” said David Goldberg, president of the California Teachers Association, which represents about 310,000 public education workers. “There are not enough educators on our school campuses.”

During a news conference, Goldberg noted that California ranks in the bottom five in the U.S. for class size ratio and sits at 48th for access to school counselors. A survey of its own members by the union, meanwhile, found that four in 10 are considering leaving the profession – in large measure, they say, because they can’t afford to live near the schools where they work.

The result of such pressures, the union says, is inadequate staffing that can erode the quality of public education. And in a job marketplace in which choosing to become a teacher may mean a struggle to pay for basic needs, California is lagging to keep up. The state has had to figure out ways to fast-track the credentialing process in order to get more teachers into the pipeline, but it still faces a significant shortage.

“The sacrifices that educators are making is significant,” said Lauren Pomrantz, a first-grade teacher and president of the Live Oak Elementary Teachers Association, a 100-member group in Santa Cruz County. “We’re often using our own funds to buy classroom supplies, and the reality is that not one school district in this county pays even the statewide average, even though studies show year after year that Santa Cruz is one of the least affordable places for teachers in the United States.”

This theme of unaffordability is not new; California teachers have been sounding the alarm for years about their incremental wage gains being quickly overwhelmed by runaway housing and living costs. But never before has the statewide union helped coordinate efforts by local districts to both time their contract bargaining and sharpen their message.

The California Teachers Association, which also counts school counselors, psychologists, librarians, support staff and other non-supervisory employees among its members, has often faced battles regarding messaging.

The state’s average salary for public school teachers in 2022-23, for example, was a seemingly robust $95,160, according to the California Department of Education. But that raw number doesn’t account for cost of living, especially housing, in the state’s largest and most expensive metropolitan areas. It also doesn’t reflect the reality that starting salaries for most teachers run in the mid-$50,000s – a tough sell in a place like L.A. or San Jose.

A recent report by the nonpartisan Center for Economic and Policy Research found that California has been falling behind for decades in teacher pay – and that average weekly salaries have remained flat since 2003, once the cost of living is taken into account.

Over the past 45 years, the inflation-adjusted average weekly wage of California teachers has risen 26.3%, while the average pay of nonteaching college graduates in the state is up 70%. Put simply, people are choosing other jobs. “Both the long-term trends and the recent trends have been troubling,” said Sylvia Allegretto, senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

How much school districts have left to give is another question. With declining enrollment a reality, and state funding generally based on average daily attendance, many districts have found themselves strapped for cash and either considering closing schools or actively doing so. Leaders in Oakland have been considering multiple closures to trim a budget deficit estimated at between $75 million and $95 million.

But without adequate teaching staffs, simply keeping schools open won’t solve the issue. And while the California Teachers Association will continue to plead with state legislators to improve funding, Goldberg said, teachers in the local districts will ultimately be fighting many of their own battles.

They’ll now do so as part of a coordinated effort. “They’re able to learn from each other, support each other, and build broader pressure statewide,” Goldberg said. “We have to think of different ways to put students and educators first.”


Copyright 2025 Capital & Main


thout adequate teaching staffs, simply keeping schools open won’t solve the issue. And while the California Teachers Association will continue to plead with state legislators to improve funding, Goldberg said, teachers in the local districts will ultimately be fighting many of their own battles.

They’ll now do so as part of a coordinated effort. “They’re able to learn from each other, support each other, and build broader pressure statewide,” Goldberg said. “We have to think of different ways to put students and educators first.”


Copyright 2025 Capital & Main


Thursday, May 01, 2025

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

A May Day for the Age of Trump and Oligarchy

A May Day for the Age of Trump and Oligarchy: Today on TAP: On Thursday, a diverse set of demonstrators will focus on working-class rights and concerns.

Saturday, April 19, 2025

What Is Happening is Not Normal.

 

What’s Happening Is Not Normal. America Needs an Uprising That Is Not Normal.

 

David Brooks.  Conservative columnist. NYT. 

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/17/opinion/trump-harvard-law-firms.html?

  

 
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