Should public schools be investigated (for political bias) ?

Ask them.
This moron isn't worth anybody's time. Everybody knows what happened when the classrooms went into the bedrooms. Only a total idiot disregards that.

So if the Trumpers decide to take on the lefty classroom machine, they won't be going to him for an opinion. Take care of it Trump. Ho hum. yawn**** :bigbed:
 
FALSE! I don't "wonder" anything. I KNOW they need a quick, decisive, investigation/report/corrective-action.

Maybe you're another lazy bones, who comes tumbling in here without reading the early pages/posts. Read the thread - there's YOUR coaching.

Or, you can continue to be defensive, while failing to understand your shortcomings, and make the additional mistake of thinking that if I was only talking to you, I would not have sent you a private message. :auiqs.jpg:
 
There it is again. "Everybody knows." :rolleyes:
This fool is still here ? That's the trouble with being a fool. When you're a fool, you don't know you're a fool.

Yes, "everybody". Because we all see it on the TV news for a year. Even the leftist media couldn't dodge away from it. Too big a story....Duh!
 
Or, you can continue to be defensive, while failing to understand your shortcomings, and make the additional mistake of thinking that if I was only talking to you, I would not have sent you a private message. :auiqs.jpg:
Have no idea what your're babbling about, but quite sure you're not worth my time either. :slap: :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:
 
Have no idea what your're babbling about, but quite sure you're not worth my time either. :slap: :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

Well, at what time did I ever suggest you did have a clue about much of anything, and you most certainly don't need to waste any more time, because you should get to work figuring out something more productive than what you have already suggested, and you don't even want any help with that. :auiqs.jpg:
 
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Well, at what time did I ever suggest you did have a clue about much of anything, and you most certainly don't need to waste any more time, because you should get to work figuring out something more productive than what you have already suggested, and you even don't want any help with that. :auiqs.jpg:
Shoo fly! I have REAL posters to talk to. :whip::biggrin:
 
Shoo fly! I have REAL posters to talk to. :whip::biggrin:

You go away, because I am a poster and I am not going anywhere you might suggest, whether or not you like it. :auiqs.jpg:
That's the only choice you have but let me know if you are ever ready to discuss something, because you see, that would be an example of something more productive than your current efforts.
 
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Amy Carney speaks on behalf of parents during a protest against critical race theory being taught at Scottsdale Unified School District before a digital school board meeting at Coronado High School in Scottsdale May 24, 2021. (Reuters)
 
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Here's an example of how bad school loons got after parents discovered the trash they were dumping on kids in classrooms. Even free speech wasn't left alone.

In 2023, CALIFORNIA LEGISLATORS tried to create new criminal penalties for parents who “harass” school board officials or disrupt school board meetings. The legislators drafted a vague bill that defined harassment as two or more acts directed at an education official. Potentially, if you sent two emails that caused a school board member to suffer “substantial emotional distress,” you’d fall under the bill’s definition.

Even ultra-leftist Gavin Newsome didn't go along with this lunacy, and he vetoed the bill.

 

Time and again over the last two years, parents and protesters have derailed school board meetings across the country. Once considered tame, even boring, the meetings have become polarized battlegrounds over COVID-19 safety measures, LGBTQ+ student rights, “obscene” library books and attempts to teach children about systemic racism in America.

On dozens of occasions, the tensions at the meetings have escalated into not just shouting matches and threats but also arrests and criminal charges.

ProPublica identified nearly 90 incidents in 30 states going back to the spring of 2021. (That’s when the majority of boards resumed gathering in-person after predominantly holding meetings virtually.) Our examination — the first wide-ranging analysis of school board unrest — found that at least 59 people were arrested or charged over an 18-month period, from May 2021 to November 2022. Prosecutors dismissed the vast majority of the cases, most of them involving charges of trespassing, resisting an officer or disrupting a public meeting. Almost all of the incidents were in suburban districts, and nearly every participant was white.

In the course of our analysis, we examined hundreds of hours of footage — school board meeting feeds, social media posts and police bodycam videos — that revealed how the meetings became a forum for simmering anger over pandemic restrictions and, soon after, widespread fury over the belief that school boards are infringing on parental rights. In many cases, the heated discourse that started in the meetings spawned sweeping debates that ultimately restricted what could be taught in classrooms and reshaped the school boards themselves.
 
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