☆ Insight: Silicon Valley's outmigration, cultural pressures make youth engagement tricky

Isai Lopez, the Silicon Valley Young Republicans' president in 2022, shares key challenges youth-serving orgs face in the heart of the Tech Capital. Part of an Opp Now exclusive series on engaging conservative youth—in a poignantly progressive pocket of the U.S.

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☆ Past MV mayor: SJ's gutting of Prop 13 an “overt” push for Big Government

Local Libertarian John Inks—formerly Mountain View mayor and two-term councilmember—breaks down San Jose's brash support of ACA 1. Inks predicts a wave of costly housing-related taxes moving forward, and wonders why SJ gov't isn't stepping up better to protect residents' voices. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ Opinion: “Justice for Renters” would obliterate reasonably priced local housing

CA'ns will vote next year whether to pass the Justice for Renters Act, which would reallow rent control ordinances statewide (they've done so well in SJ, right?). Here, Daniel Yukelson—executive director of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles (AAGLA)—pinpoints why “stabilizing” landlords' rents would drive up housing scarcity, making home offerings lower quality and rent much costlier for already-struggling tenants. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ Local GOP head rips SJ City Council's assault on Prop 13

Doubling down on a failed housing strategy. Higher rents. Higher cost of living. These are the results county GOP chief Shane Patrick Connolly sees emanating from SJ City Council's and state legislators' moves to subvert the popular tax safeguards in Prop 13. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Oakland's lax drug and encampment laws propagated dystopian “land of milk and fentanyl”?

Neighbors Together Oakland founder Seneca Scott analyzes how when cities are gentle on policing public intoxication, drug possession, and unsafe homeless encampments, they become magnets for “drug tourists” who seek consequence-free lifestyles. And some—including Mayor Mahan—fear San Jose is headed there, too. A Washington Examiner excerpt below.

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Jax OliverComment
Good ESG scores don't correlate to low carbon intensity, research finds

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) criteria have engulfed the investment world in a matter of years. Local companies like Hewlett-Packard and Adobe scramble to regularly publicize “social responsibility” data that—according to the Financial Times' Scientific Beta research breakdown—doesn't actually translate to less carbon emissions per revenue unit (go figure).

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Leaders oppose SJ City Council's tax-raising schemes

Community political watcher Tobin Gilman recently broke the story of how SJ's City Council has overwhelmingly approved recommendations about State legislation that would, in Gilman's terms, constitute a "Stealth Tax Hike Agenda" for San Joseans. Pat Waite, head of Citizens for Fiscal Responsibility, comments and finds the council's decision-making misguided and counterproductive—and the latest in a history of efforts to circumvent Prop 13. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Data says: Don't ignore how public unions slyly boost benefits

In a 2015 Journal of Politics article, UC Berkeley's Sarah Anzia and Stanford's Terry Moe find that increasing gov't workers' wages snags public attention (case in point: SJ's still-ongoing kerfuffle), as many residents are unwilling to shell out more taxes or see services cut. But an overlooked target of public unions is “fringe benefits.” They appease Labor while quietly ruining City budgets for future pols.

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Jax OliverComment
Opinion: Gov't subsidies much costlier than loosening repressive housing laws

The American Enterprise Institute's Edward Pinto isn't a fan of “ill-conceived” housing assistance policies that are mere Band-Aid fixes for surging construction costs. Instead of having taxpayers fund more subsidies, local gov'ts like San Jose's should take the more affordable option: Remove regulatory burdens to housing supply, like density/parking, building code, and zoning requirements.

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Stanford researcher faced gov't censorship during Covid—and just won his legal challenge

Jay Bhattacharya, Stanford University prof and Opp Now contributor, was a leading voice during Covid against unscientific lockdowns. But the gov't pressured social media sites to censor mentions of his co-authored “Great Barrington Declaration,” as well as other Covid info they disagreed with. Bhattacharya reflects in the Free Press on recently winning Missouri v. Biden along with the New Civil Liberties Alliance—and what it means for free speech.

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☆ Silicon Valley Taxpayers Association prez: In endorsing ACA 1, SJ Council starkly “going against” residents' wishes

California ACA 1, given an official thumbs-up by some city councils like San Jose's, would make it easier to advance bonds and special taxes for affordable housing projects by changing the required two-thirds supermajority to a 55% majority. Here, Mark Hinkle—local Libertarian officeholder and SVTA's president—argues that ACA 1 doesn't represent what SJ voters want, given overwhelming Prop 13 support, and would diminish living standards. An Opp Now exclusive.

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SF analysis: PSH launches aggressive spiral of more homelessness, more gov't spending

Sanjana Friedman pokes a hole in Housing First's idea that subsidizing Permanent Supportive Housing reduces homelessness. Instead, since there's no behavioral requirements (including getting sober) or stay limits (yep, they really do mean “permanent”), unhoused people fighting addictions and mental illness stay in, and even flock to, SF to pursue dangerous lifestyles. From Pirate Wires.

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Jax OliverComment