Slade3200
Diamond Member
- Jan 13, 2016
- 66,227
- 16,729
- 2,190
I have one in TexasI see a lot of california license plates in Texas
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I have one in TexasI see a lot of california license plates in Texas
I’m inviting all my friendsHopefully the heat wave sends most of them out of Texas, along with their wetback buddies.
No they won’t. You’re lying againCalifornia will throw you in prison for disagreeing with a school board while freeing mass murderers using prison overcrowding as the excuse.
Cali funds most this country’s federal operations. They aren’t going anywhereCalifornia needs to be demoted to a territory.
I'm sure lots of batshit crazy inbread MAGAs agree with you.No dipshit, there are already laws on the books for those types of things. You are a piece of shit totalitarian that wants anyone who has a problem with how schools are being run to have no recourse. Retard.
Oh shut your cock polishers, you totalitarian faggot.I'm sure lots of batshit crazy inbread MAGAs agree with you.
False.No matter which dictionary you use, that’s pure fascism by Democrats. Straight out of the Stalin handbook. Next will be thought crimes.
California is poised to codify at the state level what the feds were once requested to do — that is, turn inquisitive parents into criminals for daring to question their school board representatives.
Senate Bill 596, introduced by Democratic State Senator Anthony Portantino in February and dubbed the “School Employees: Protection” act, expands an existing law “which makes it a misdemeanor for any ‘person’ to threaten or harass a school employee during the ‘course of [their] duties,'” according to the California Globe.
This expansion adds a penalty for creating a “substantial disorder” at any meeting of a public school board, charter school board, county board of education, and the California State Board of Education.
Although “substantial disorder” is not precisely defined, the bill notes that “course of conduct” is “a pattern of conduct composed of two or more acts over a period of time, however short … evidencing a continuity of purpose.”
Gone from the definition of “harassment” is “unlawful violence” and “credible threat of violence,” and in its place is “torments, or terrorizes.”
It’s not difficult to figure out what’s happening here. A concerned parent at a school board meeting asks a board member a question and reiterates it (thereby establishing a “course of conduct”) … and if the board member feels “tormented” the parent can be arrested and charged with a fine between $500 and $1,000 and face up to a year in jail.
California bill would make questioning school board members a crime | The College Fix
Democrats don’t much like concerned parents.www.thecollegefix.com
There are already thought crimes by the left.No matter which dictionary you use, that’s pure fascism by Democrats. Straight out of the Stalin handbook. Next will be thought crimes.
California is poised to codify at the state level what the feds were once requested to do — that is, turn inquisitive parents into criminals for daring to question their school board representatives.
Senate Bill 596, introduced by Democratic State Senator Anthony Portantino in February and dubbed the “School Employees: Protection” act, expands an existing law “which makes it a misdemeanor for any ‘person’ to threaten or harass a school employee during the ‘course of [their] duties,'” according to the California Globe.
This expansion adds a penalty for creating a “substantial disorder” at any meeting of a public school board, charter school board, county board of education, and the California State Board of Education.
Although “substantial disorder” is not precisely defined, the bill notes that “course of conduct” is “a pattern of conduct composed of two or more acts over a period of time, however short … evidencing a continuity of purpose.”
Gone from the definition of “harassment” is “unlawful violence” and “credible threat of violence,” and in its place is “torments, or terrorizes.”
It’s not difficult to figure out what’s happening here. A concerned parent at a school board meeting asks a board member a question and reiterates it (thereby establishing a “course of conduct”) … and if the board member feels “tormented” the parent can be arrested and charged with a fine between $500 and $1,000 and face up to a year in jail.
California bill would make questioning school board members a crime | The College Fix
Democrats don’t much like concerned parents.www.thecollegefix.com
I’m inviting all my friends
Which wouldn't fill a duplex.I’m inviting all my friends
That's because all of his friends are fentanyl zombies who prefer to live in tents on city sidewalks though...Which wouldn't fill a duplex.
I see a lot of california license plates in Texas
You’re lying again. The law says nothing about questioning. It addresses threats and harassment. Why you gotta lie Willis?
California needs to be demoted to a territory.
Ya think so?Which wouldn't fill a duplex.
You’re lying again. The law says nothing about questioning. It addresses threats and harassment. Why you gotta lie Willis?
How so? Aren’t there legal standards to determine what behavior constitutes a threat or harassment?It's not hard to imagine such a law being stretched to the point of abuse against any criticism.
Maybe the next big earthquake will knock it off the map.
Your thread title is pure gaslighting. Since you wild animals seem to be unable to control yourselves, there have to be laws to keep you animals acting civil.No matter which dictionary you use, that’s pure fascism by Democrats. Straight out of the Stalin handbook. Next will be thought crimes.
California is poised to codify at the state level what the feds were once requested to do — that is, turn inquisitive parents into criminals for daring to question their school board representatives.
Senate Bill 596, introduced by Democratic State Senator Anthony Portantino in February and dubbed the “School Employees: Protection” act, expands an existing law “which makes it a misdemeanor for any ‘person’ to threaten or harass a school employee during the ‘course of [their] duties,'” according to the California Globe.
This expansion adds a penalty for creating a “substantial disorder” at any meeting of a public school board, charter school board, county board of education, and the California State Board of Education.
Although “substantial disorder” is not precisely defined, the bill notes that “course of conduct” is “a pattern of conduct composed of two or more acts over a period of time, however short … evidencing a continuity of purpose.”
Gone from the definition of “harassment” is “unlawful violence” and “credible threat of violence,” and in its place is “torments, or terrorizes.”
It’s not difficult to figure out what’s happening here. A concerned parent at a school board meeting asks a board member a question and reiterates it (thereby establishing a “course of conduct”) … and if the board member feels “tormented” the parent can be arrested and charged with a fine between $500 and $1,000 and face up to a year in jail.
California bill would make questioning school board members a crime | The College Fix
Democrats don’t much like concerned parents.www.thecollegefix.com
People get that all wrong.
What is really going to happen, one day, when the San Andreas finally cuts loose, is that everything east of it will drop off into the ocean, and all that will remain will be this sliver of California.