Friday, August 13, 2021

Koch Network Infiltration of Public Schools 'Harms Students, Teachers, and Our Democracy': Report





https://www.commondreams.org/news/2021/08/11/koch-network-infiltration-public-schools-harms-students-teachers-and-our-democracy



"In their assault on public education, the network has taken actions to increasingly privatize and corporatize K-12 institutions."



BRETT WILKINS
August 11, 2021


A new report published Wednesday reveals how the Koch network—a shadowy group of wealthy capitalists acting to push the U.S. in a more conservative direction—is methodically working to undermine and privatize public education for financial gain.


"In order to influence K-12 public education, the Koch network has financed local, state, and national mechanisms to create multiple crises, only to turn around and cite these same crises as reasons to adopt their free market solutions," according to UnKoch My Campus.The report (pdf), entitled The Koch Network and the Capture of K-12 Education, was compiled by the advocacy groups UnKoch My Campus and Save Our Schools Arizona (SOSAZ) and examines tactics employed by the plutocrats' cabal—which is led by billionaire Charles Koch, and whose members pay at least $100,000 per year—"to destabilize and abolish public education."

"The Koch network has made no secret about the critical role that public education plays as an ideal arena for influencing U.S. policy and culture," the group says in an introduction to the report. "Through a variety of tactics—charter schools, vouchers, curriculum, textbooks, trainings, using state politicians to engage in culture war against progressive ideas, and more—the Koch network is able to ensure the spread of their ideas, including climate disinformation and free market-favoring economics philosophy."

According to the report, the Koch network's tactics include:
Supporting the seating of state legislators who intentionally defund public education;
Destabilizing state funding in schools to promote policies that divert funds away from traditional public schools to charter schools, private schools, and online education under the guise of "school choice";
Funding higher education centers that create the curriculum and textbooks being used in some K-12 programs; and
Astroturfing moral panic about ideologies that critique their idea production and theory of change as regressive and racist (Critical Race Theory, or CRT).

"At the moment, there is a coordinated effort in states across the country to pass bills attempting to ban the teaching of CRT in public schools," the report notes. "The Koch-funded Heritage Foundation is leading the push... Both the Heritage Foundation and another Koch-funded organization, the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), have held webinars in opposition to the teaching of CRT. ALEC has frequently produced model bills for various right-wing causes, causing concern over their involvement when it comes to anti-CRT state bills."

The report examines Arizona as a case study that "shows exactly what happens when all of these factors fall into place" in a state where "the Koch network's efforts to dismantle public schools have made a significant impact."

Arizona, the report says, "has nearly the lowest per-pupil spending, one of the lowest averages for teacher's pay, and some of the largest class sizes" in the U.S., on average. More than one in six Arizona students are enrolled in charter schools, the Koch-funded Freedom Center "has played a large role in influencing public education in the state," and under a budget signed into law last month by Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, schools face fines up to $5,000 and teachers can lose their licenses for "teaching that students' race, ethnicity, or sex determines their character."

"All public institutions are a threat to the Koch network's free market economic agenda," the report states. "In their assault on public education, the network has taken actions to increasingly privatize and corporatize K-12 institutions."

"In doing so, they've created a lot of waste, pushed to close 'failing' schools, favored CEO-like superintendents, aggressively cut costs, and more," the report continues. "Lack of public accountability and transparency surrounding private and charter schools, as well as privately created curriculum and textbooks, leaves little room for parents and educators to take action against undesired and harmful agendas."


The report states that while she was education secretary, DeVos "allocated $399 million in federal grant money toward the expansion of charter schools nationwide," adding that most of her efforts, "such as her attempt to allocate $400 million of the national budget toward charter schools in 2018 or her proposed $5 billion voucher program, were unsuccessful."The report notes that one Koch network affiliate, former Trump-era Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, "has contributed at least $200 million to conservative organizations, including many within the Koch network, since the 1970s."

"According to a study by Urban Institute, growth in charter school enrollment increases the segregation of Black, Hispanic, and white students," the report adds. "One analysis found that 70% of Black charter school students attended a heavily segregated minority charter school, double the percentage of Black students attending schools in the public sector. The UCLA Civil Rights Project found similarly egregious statistics surrounding charter school treatment of students with disabilities."

Christopher Leonard, author of the book Kochland: The Secret History of Koch Industries and Corporate Power in America, discussed what he said is Koch's education reform policy in a 2019 episode of Jennifer Berkshire and Jack Schneider's "Have You Heard" podcast:


Here's the actual political philosophy: Government is bad. Public education must be destroyed for the good of all American citizens, in this view. So the ultimate goal is to dismantle the public education system entirely and replace it with a privately run education system, which the operatives in this group believe in a sincere way is better for everybody.

Now, whether you agree with that or not is the big question, but we cannot have any doubt, there's going to be a lot of glossy marketing materials about opportunity, innovation, efficiency. At its core, though, the network seeks to dismantle the public education system because they see it as destructive. So that is what's the actual aim of this group. And don't let them tell you anything different.

"The Kochs' infiltration of K-12 education harms students, teachers, and our democracy," the new report asserts. "Students are losing access to quality public school education. Teachers are losing access to resources and the support needed to create a healthy, generative public-school ecosystem."

"Finally," the report concludes, "our democracy is harmed as students are taught with Koch-funded curriculum that promotes regressive and ahistorical ideologies that contribute to myths of meritocracy, normalizes extractive economic practices which disregard our climate, and justify historical structural violence."




Tennessee Compiled Secret Dossiers on Civil Rights Protesters





https://www.commondreams.org/news/2021/08/11/tennessee-compiled-secret-dossiers-civil-rights-protesters



"You can't even keep these files because there's potential for abuse," said the ACLU of Tennessee.



JULIA CONLEY
August 11, 2021

In the latest reported attempt by Tennessee officials to chill First Amendment rights in the state following last year's racial justice uprising, the state Department of Safety and Homeland Security collected personal data of dozens of civil rights protesters and held the information in a secret database.

News Channel 5 in Nashville reported Monday that a demonstrator named Justin Jones discovered a document called "People's Plaza TN Significant Personnel (more than 2 arrests)" when he filed a records request with the department.

The document included dossiers on more than 50 activists who attended protests at the People's Plaza in Nashville last summer, where civil rights advocates spent weeks camped out to demand Gov. Bill Lee speak with them about racial injustice in Tennessee.

The dossiers include names, social security numbers, addresses, social media photos, and in some cases, information about the demonstrators' personal relationships.

In several cases the demonstrators had never been arrested, but they were listed as "persons of interest" according to Channel 5.

Jones found out about the dossiers when he filed the records request in an attempt to determine whether state authorities had treated the People's Plaza demonstration differently than the so-called "Stop the Steal" protests that were attended by former President Doinald Trump's supporters after the 2020 election, where attendees repeated false claims that Trump had won a second term.

Jones wrote on social media Monday that it was "telling" that law enforcement saw racial justice advocates, but not protests that culminated in the violent attempted insurrection at the U.S. Capitol in January, as a threat.


Allegra Harpootlian, a communications strategist for the ACLU, called the report of Jones' discovery "concerning anti-protest news" in a state where, earlier this year, Republicans proposed legislation to make obstructing a highway during a demonstration a felony and giving legal immunity to people who unintentionally injure or kill demonstrators.

Channel 5 reported that the Department of Safety and Homeland Security did not respond to a question about whether authorities collected personal information of activists at other kinds of protests.

According to the ACLU of Tennessee, law enforcement agencies typically need to provide a compelling reason to collect and store data about members of the community. The organization worked to revise a consent decree dating back to the 1970s regarding police surveillance.

"We had an order from the court saying you can't even keep these files because there's potential for abuse," Thomas Castelli, legal director for the group, told Channel 5.




Poll: Majority of US Voters Want Biden to 'Fight' for Key Voting Rights Bill





https://www.commondreams.org/news/2021/08/11/poll-majority-us-voters-want-biden-fight-key-voting-rights-bill



Nearly 75% of Democrats—and almost a third of Republicans—would be more likely to support Biden if he achieves passage of the For the People Act.



JAKE JOHNSON
August 11, 2021


Hours after the Senate GOP once again blocked debate on the For the People Act, progressive organizations on Wednesday released the results of a survey showing that a majority of U.S. voters—including nearly three-quarters of Democrats—want President Joe Biden to "take a more active role in the fight" to pass the sweeping voting rights legislation.


In a blog post, Adam Eichen and Kevin Rissmiller of Equal Citizens stress that "the window in which the For The People Act can make the greatest impact is closing."Conducted by Data For Progress, Equal Citizens, End Citizens United, and other progressive groups, the poll found that 51% of U.S. voters—including 74% of Democrats, 42% of independents, and 30% of Republicans—would be more likely to support Biden if he is able to convince the Senate to pass the For the People Act, which the survey describes as "a bill to reduce the role of big money in politics, end dark money, strengthen the freedom to vote for all eligible citizens, and ban partisan gerrymandering."

"The Census Bureau will release precinct level data tomorrow (August 12)," Eichen and Rissmiller note. "This will allow states to begin the redistricting process to draw the U.S. House district maps for the 2022-2030 election cycles. After this point, it will become increasingly difficult—though not impossible—to stop state legislatures from engaging in the worst practices to manipulate district lines for partisan advantage."

The new survey shows broad support for provisions of the For the People Act aimed at ending partisan gerrymandering, which Republicans have used for years to distort congressional districts for their own political gain. An Associated Press analysis published Tuesday found that in the wake of electoral victories a decade ago, "Republican politicians used census data to draw voting districts that gave them a greater political advantage in more states than either party had in the past 50 years."

The poll, based on a survey of 1,254 likely voters, finds that 74% of Democrats, 53% of independents, and 50% of Republicans support a ban on partisan gerrymandering and the establishment of "independent redistricting commissions" tasked with drawing district lines.

"Now, more than ever, Americans need—and want—a president who will do whatever it takes to protect the freedom to vote, end partisan gerrymandering, and reduce the role of big money in politics," Eichen and Rissmiller wrote Wednesday.


In June, before Senate Republicans deployed the 60-vote legislative filibuster to block debate on the For the People Act, Biden faced criticism from progressives for not doing enough to advocate for passage of the bill, which is co-sponsored by every member of the Senate Democratic caucus except Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.).


But civil rights groups have voiced grave concerns about the White House's reported belief that it's possible to "out-organize" the GOP's relentless voter suppression efforts by focusing heavily on driving voter turnout.After the GOP blocked the measure, Biden delivered a speech decrying Republican-authored voter suppression laws in states across the nation as a "21st century Jim Crow assault" on the franchise and promised to fight back.

Echoing the sentiments of voting rights advocates, Eichen and Rissmiller argued Wednesday that "instead of asking activists to 'out-organize' assaults on our elections, it's time for the White House to leverage the full force of the bully pulpit to save American democracy."

"Over the last handful of months, hundreds of thousands of Americans have taken action to advocate for the For The People Act," the pair added. "Countless organizations, political scientists, and scholars of democracy have made the case that our democracy is in deep trouble and that everything—including filibuster reform—must be on the table to ensure the For The People Act's passage."

Following the Senate GOP's second successful blockade of the For the People Act early Wednesday morning, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) vowed that voting rights "will be the first matter of legislative business when the Senate returns to session in September."

But with the legislative filibuster in place and Republicans unanimously opposed to the House-passed For the People Act—including a scaled-back version offered by Manchin—it's unclear whether Senate Democrats will be able to make any progress on the bill a month from now.

"Voters across the country will be outraged by this latest perversion of our democracy," Charly Carter, executive director of the Democracy Initiative, said in response to the GOP's obstruction on Wednesday. "It's time to fix or nix the Jim Crow filibuster, which has paralyzed our government at the worse possible moment."




'A Five-Alarm Voting Rights Fire': Senate Urged to Fight Back After GOP Blocks For the People Act Again





https://www.commondreams.org/news/2021/08/11/five-alarm-voting-rights-fire-senate-urged-fight-back-after-gop-blocks-people-act



"Biden and Senate Democrats need to tell us what their plan to pass S. 1 is—before it's too late."



JESSICA CORBETT
August 11, 2021


After GOP Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas blocked a trio of bills on voting rights, gerrymandering, and campaign finance disclosure early Wednesday, progressives called on congressional Democrats and President Joe Biden to share their plans to protect U.S. democracy.


The three measures are the revised For the People Act (S. 2093)—a sweeping pro-democracy bill initially introduced as S. 1—as well as the Redistricting Reform Act (S. 2670) and the DISCLOSE Act (S. 2671). Senate Republicans filibustered the House-approved For the People Act in June, increasing pressure on Democrats to abolish the filibuster in order to pass it."We're in a five-alarm voting rights fire," declared Nita Chaudhary, chief of programs at the advocacy group MoveOn, after Cruz blocked an attempt by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) to bring up the three bills by unanimous consent.

"How is it possible that one person, representing one state, can effectively disenfranchise millions of voters? That's what we saw overnight when undemocratic Senate rules allowed a single senator, Ted Cruz, to block key provisions to protect voting rights of millions of Americans across the country," said Charly Carter, executive director of the Democracy Initiative.

"Voters across the country will be outraged by this latest perversion of our democracy," Carter added. "It's time to fix or nix the Jim Crow filibuster, which has paralyzed our government at the worst possible moment. We need rapid, forceful responses to intersecting crises of public health, racial injustice, economic inequality, and climate catastrophe. Instead, our lives are at risk from endless obstruction and partisan gridlock."


Common Cause president Karen Hobert Flynn said that by continuing to block floor debate on the voting rights bill, Republicans "show more respect for an obstructionist strategy than they do for voters, elections, or the election administrators, poll workers, and volunteers who faithfully stand watch over our democracy in each election, ensuring fairness and accuracy in the ballot counts."

"To the millions of Americans around the country who prove we can modernize our elections by winning the solutions locally that Congress has included in the For the People Act, and to everyone who has made a call, written a letter, worked a phone bank, or attended a rally—this fight is not over," she added.

Although Schumer did not delay recess until the For the People Act was passed—which some progressives demanded, citing the necessity of urgent action—he did indicate that voting rights legislation will be the top focus when the Senate returns next month.

Noting the majority leader's comments, Hobert Flynn said that "if Americans stay engaged, contact their senators, keep the pressure on, and keep organizing on this as they have on important issues in the past, I'm confident we, the people will prevail."


Chaudhary, meanwhile, warned that "we know" Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) "is not going to change his behavior," so Biden and Senate Democrats must "stop doing business as usual or they will simply keep allowing Republican senators to block popular and bipartisan proposals—including the For the People Act."

Cruz's moves to block consideration of the bills in the early hours of Wednesday came after an overnight vote-a-rama for a $3.5 trillion budget resolution for a package that Democrats intend to pass with just 50 votes thanks to the budget reconciliation process, which allows them to avoid a GOP filibuster.

However, many measures can't advance via that process, and as Republicans in the evenly split Senate have worked throughout the year to block progressive priorities, GOP state lawmakers nationwide have attempted to enact a wave of anti-voter measures, sometimes succeeding.

"As Republicans in state after state, across the country, continue to rig the rules in their favor, Democrats need to use every power they have to fight back, including eliminating the filibuster, to overcome this obstruction and deliver for the American people," said Chaudhary. "MoveOn members are not backing down and Biden and Senate Democrats need to tell us what their plan to pass S. 1 is—before it's too late."

That message was echoed by Wade Henderson, interim president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, who also blasted Republicans because they "have unconscionably continued to unjustly and irresponsibly block this crucially important legislation that would ensure no voter is denied the right to cast their ballot freely, safely, and equally."

"It is vital that Senate Democrats and the Biden administration make the For the People Act a priority," Henderson said. "They must outline a path forward to ensuring our freedom to vote, and not let an arcane Senate rule impede progress. Our voices and demands for federal legislation that will help realize the promise of our democracy will not be silenced."


In a statement after the overnight session, Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), lead sponsor of the For the People Act, highlighted Republicans' voter suppression measures in Florida, Georgia, Texas, "and so many other states across the country," and warned that such efforts are "threatening the constitutional right of American citizens to shape the decisions that affect us all."

Although Senate Democrats could change the chamber's rules and abolish the filibuster if they convinced every caucus member—particularly holdouts like Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) to get onboard—Merkley laid the blame on the GOP:


Tonight, once again, Republican senators filibustered to ensure the continuing corruption of our election systems. Hundreds of voter suppression bills—each of which are riding the coattails of the 'Big Lie' conspiracy—are piling up in state legislatures aimed at preventing targeted groups of American citizens from voting. Billionaires continue to buy elections with dark money. And Republican state officials are already planning how to rig the new round of legislative districts to seize power by denying Americans' equal representation. This legislation would end all of these tactics so the people—whatever their political affiliation, geography, skin color, or income—get to shape our government. That is an American value, not a partisan one.

"Unfortunately, this filibuster was expected, and makes clear that we must look at other options to pass this bill," he added, without detailing any specific plans for September. "Failure is not an option when it comes to preserving Americans' freedom to vote."




Further Blow to Press Freedoms as US Wins Appeal in Effort to Extradite Julian Assange





https://www.commondreams.org/news/2021/08/11/further-blow-press-freedoms-us-wins-appeal-effort-extradite-julian-assange



"This disingenuous appeal should be dismissed by the court and President Biden should take the opportunity to drop these politically motivated charges."



BRETT WILKINS
August 11, 2021


As Britain's High Court on Wednesday handed the United States a win in its bid to extradite Julian Assange, press freedom and other human rights defenders renewed calls for the Biden administration to drop all charges against the WikiLeaks founder.


Clair Dobbin, an attorney representing the U.S. government in the case, had countered that Assange would be able to "resist suicide" in American custody. The United States is now seeking to minimize or dismiss expert medical evidence provided by neuropsychiatrist Michael Kopelman, who last year testified that Assange is autistic, suffers from recurring depression, and was likely to try to kill himself if extradited.Lord Justice Tim Holroyde on Wednesday ruled that the U.S. government may expand its appeal of a lower court's rejection of the Trump administration's attempt to extradite Assange, the BBC reports. On January 4, Judge Vanessa Baraitser of the Westminster Magistrates' Court warned that extradition "would be oppressive by reason of Assange's mental health," and that there was a "substantial" risk the WikiLeaks whistleblower would kill himself in a U.S. prison.

Holroyde said Wednesday that the High Court would hear the full appeal on October 27 and 28. Assange has been imprisoned in London's notorious Belmarsh Prison for over two years.

Speaking outside the Royal Courts of Justice in London Wednesday, former U.K. Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn told demonstrators that "journalism is a very dangerous and risky profession when done properly" and that Assange "walks in that great tradition of great, fearless journalists."

"We're here to support Julian Assange and demand his freedom," said Corbyn.


Stella Moris, Assange's partner, told the protesters that the U.S. government "is exploiting the inherently unfair extradition arrangements with this country in order to arbitrarily prolong his imprisonment."

Amnesty International legal adviser Simon Crowther said outside the court that charges like those against Assange "should never be brought against journalists or publishers."

"What this allows the U.S. to do," said Crowther, "is to challenge journalists and editors when they publish things the U.S. does not want in the public domain, sometimes classified material, which is the lifeblood of investigative journalists when they're investigating things like war crimes and crimes against humanity that are perpetrated by states like the U.S."

"This would have a very significant chilling effect if the U.S. were to win this case," added Crowther. "Journalists would have to look over their shoulder and worry about their legal liability when they accept information from sources provided to them confidentially."


Amnesty International on Wednesday joined Assange Defense, Freedom of the Press Foundation, the International Federation of Journalists, Reporters Without Borders, and other advocacy groups that reiterated earlier calls for U.S. authorities to drop all charges against the jailed whistleblower.

"This attempt by the U.S. government to get the court to reverse its decision not to allow Julian Assange's extradition on the basis of new diplomatic assurances is a blatant legal sleight of hand," Nils Muižnieks, Amnesty's Europe director, said in a statement.

"This disingenuous appeal should be dismissed by the court and President [Joe] Biden should take the opportunity to drop these politically motivated charges which have put media freedom and freedom of expression in the dock," Muižnieks continued.

"President [Barack] Obama opened the investigation into Julian Assange. President [Donald] Trump brought the charges against him. It is now time for President Biden to do the right thing and help end this farcical prosecution which should never have been brought in the first place," he added.


Assange is charged in the United States with violating the 1917 Espionage Act and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act for publishing classified U.S. military documents on WikiLeaks over a decade ago.

Among the materials brought to light by Assange and WikiLeaks are the so-called "Collateral Murder" video, which shows a U.S. Army helicopter crew killing a group of Iraqi civilians; the Afghan War Diary; and the Iraq War Logs, all of which revealed U.S. and allied war crimes. Many of the documents published by WikiLeaks were provided by former U.S. Army whistleblower Chelsea Manning.

Unlike Manning—who spent seven years in prison before her sentence was commuted by Obama in January 2017—none of the soldiers or commanders implicated in war crimes by WikiLeaks were seriously punished. Assange could spend the rest of his life behind bars if he is convicted of all the charges against him.







Bernie Sanders: What Went Wrong? w/ Ari Rabin-Havt Bernie 2020 Deputy Campaign Manager

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=60O13lU93lc&ab_channel=BadFaith




Edward Snowden & Julian Assange's warning about the Security and Surveillance Industrial Complex

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdPyAONVxhk&ab_channel=acTVismMunich