☆ Can't see the forest for the trees

Local election "experts" recently framed their analysis of the upcoming election around a whopping piece of misinformation, falsely asserting: "Let's first talk about the Bay Area—of course, overwhelmingly Democratic." The truth: in Santa Clara County, there is no majority party. Allow us to hit "repeat" on our Opp Now exclusive article examining the same, from 3/24.

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Jax OliverComment
State o' CA attack on satirical Free Speech goes down

A recent California law that targeted satirical “misinformation” around the election has recently been struck down as being unconstitutional. This bill would have resulted in any satirical messaging deemed deceptive (relating to the election) being banned. The court found that this was an infringement on the First Amendment. Nat'l Review reports.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Opinion: Prop 5 empowers local gov't to over-buy, over-tax, and over-borrow

In an exclusive Opp Now comment, SJ Housing Commissioner Roberta Moore joins the resounding local chorus of Proposition 5 criticism. Moore argues that—by lowering California's “infrastructure” bond approval requirement from two-thirds to 55%—Prop 5 makes it easier for gov't to spend more of our money on less essential projects.

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Jax OliverComment
“Do you cross the bridge / or do you fade away?”

So asked Elton John almost 20 years ago—and today, his question's being echoed by Bay Areans concerned about BATA's proposed toll hike to $10.50 (or $11.50 for folks not pre-registered or using FasTrak) by 2030. {BATA's rationale? Bridge maintenance.} If this all sounds familiar, says Contra Costa News, it should: via 2018's RM 3, we've already recently increased Bay Area tolls by a whopping 60%.

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Jax OliverComment
Proposition Doubleplusgood

Many voters are confused about initiatives that empower gov't tax-raising schemes (Prop 5) or gift $1 billion to a failing, shrinking SJ school district (Measure R)—and for good reason: in a decisive report, SCC's Civil Grand Jury observed (in 2022) that local ballot measures are regularly designed to “deceive” voters through feel-good, misleading, or straight manipulative language.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Bay Area profs on refining our understanding of history via literature (part 2)

Perhaps a well-told story (or mural, like SF Post Office's “Indians by the Golden Gate,” above) is the best way to learn not just history's facts—but its struggles, nuances, and questions. In this Opp Now exclusive, history profs recommend books for better knowing and navigating life's currents: spanning from CA's indigenous peoples, to colonial Indian ethics, to a Nazi German town that still “puzzles” historians.

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Could common sense be the answer to solving California’s housing crisis? (The answer may shock you)

The LA Times’ Michael Lens discusses that CA’s biggest cities aren’t building housing fast enough to keep up with population increases. He suggests the solution lies in reforming local zoning laws (already commonly sidestepped by SJ developers) and building planning practices—starting with prioritizing more multifamily apartments.

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Jax OliverComment
Opinion: Local politics needs more "polymaths" (or, why we quote Plato & Orwell when analyzing bills)

In the excellent Free Press, Victor Davis Hansen explains why innovative communities like Silicon Valley's need more “Renaissance People.” The Renaissance person (or “polymath”) engages thoughtfully with a variety of disciplines, and is better equipped than narrow specialists to lead and combat gov't overreach. Hansen's comments, below, echo Bay Area school leaders' rising criticisms of today's "compartmentalized" education system.

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Jax OliverComment
How SF taxpayers ended up funding Sheryl Davis' $11k passion project—a podcast

San Francisco's now-infamous Dream Keeper Initiative looked the other way when contracted nonprofits bought first-class flights, luxury meals, and (yep) concert tickets on the City's dime. Today, SF Chron dives into the initiative's former leader Sheryl Davis—who paid herself $11,000 to produce an interview podcast linking to her personal website (which advertised her children's book).

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Local experts dispute Ellenberg's confused Proposition 36 invective

Supe Ellenberg recently slapped Prop 36 (reinstating felony charges for repeat theft/drug crimes and mandating drug treatment for certain offenders) with labels “draconian, expensive, and misleading.” Below, Tom Wolf—founder of Recovery Education Coalition—and Greg Totten—CEO of CA District Attorneys Ass'n—daylight the misinformation in her strange accusations, and why they believe Prop 36 will restore safety to the Bay. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Jax OliverComment
Crisis? What crisis?

Cato Institute's Marc Joffe discovers that Parkmerced, a 3211-unit housing complex near San Francisco State University, has seen its occupancy fall from 94% in 2019 to 79% today. New tenants are being offered up to $2,400 in lease incentives. "Do we really have a housing crisis in SF?" Joffe wonders, on X.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ HJTA’s Susan Shelley: Look out for more RM4’s—Prop 5 to jumpstart a frenzy of bonds that tax people out of their homes (part 3)

Upending norms that date back to 1849, Prop 5 strips taxpayer protections that are enshrined in the State Constitution and reinforced by Prop 13—says Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association’s Susan Shelley in this Opp Now exclusive Q&A. While the Bay Area’s RM4 may have been a uniquely spectacular ask, she warns it’s just the beginning: property owners should get ready for a relentless series of abusive bond measures every election, now and forever.

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