Idahoans Target Big Labor Collection Racket
“Idaho prospects are better this year than in 2021, thanks to significant turnover in the Republican primaries last year in both chambers of the Idaho Legislature,” said Mr. Kalb.
President Obama continues to push a bailout for teacher’s union but it seems clear that in Oakland, there are at least 15% too many teacher’s. How else could 300 teachers, about 15% of all teacher’s, take a day off and join a general strike organized by the radical Occupy Oakland crowd?
Gretchen Bailey, a kindergarten teacher at Global Family School in Oakland for 15 years, said she took the day off without pay to protest both local budget cuts and the national goals of the Occupy Wall Street movement. “I think we need new tax laws,” she said. “We all need to share more of the burden.”
Eric Robertson, a first-grade teacher who gave the district notice he was planning to join the protest, said he was frustrated with governmental divestment in local government and schools. “I’d like to see responsible capitalism,” he said. “I think it is a good model but you have to have restrictions on it.” It is time people started paying government for what they expect of government, he said. “I am tired of smelling piss on the street,” he said. “We want responsibility.”
Later that day, masked Occupiers shattered windows, set fires and caused destruction throughout the city. We can’t help but wonder if this is the responsibility these teachers are demanding? If these are the people teaching our children, the future is indeed bleak
“Idaho prospects are better this year than in 2021, thanks to significant turnover in the Republican primaries last year in both chambers of the Idaho Legislature,” said Mr. Kalb.
Even when government schools perform so abysmally that the vast majority of local parents disenroll their children, Chicago Teachers Union-owned Mayor Brandon Johnson insists more unionized staff and taxpayer funding are the answer!
One often overlooked, but critical, provision in this package of reforms, known as Act 10, revoked Big Labor’s legal power to prevent K-12 school districts and many other public employers from rewarding civil servants according to their individual talents, efforts and achievements.