Every day, in every way, our partisan hack attorney General Mark Brnovich demonstrates that he is unfit to serve in the office he currently holds, and he should never hold an elected office ever again.
This kind of batshit crazy should earn him a bar complaint.
Huffington Post reports, Fox News Fearmongers With Wild Claim About Protesting Parents And Guantanamo Bay:
Conservative fearmongering over the Justice Department’s bid to monitor threats to teachers and school officials got kicked up another level on Fox News Monday.
Host Harris Faulkner did nothing to dampen Brnovich’s hyperbolic prediction, instead just agreeing it was “outrageous.”
“Could that really happen?” Faulkner asked Brnovich.
No, you dumbfuck. It can’t.
“We are living in a time where we need to make sure that we are protecting our constitutional rights on every single level,” Brnovich responded.
Says the man who has failed to investigate and to prosecute the right-wing organizations instigating the intimidation and threats to school boards across the country. See below.
Faulkner “said it was “interesting because you say one leads to the other. That sounds like a slippery slope, which is how you got there.”
Aw, the old “slippery slope” of a fearmongering argument.
Watch the video.
Fox News fear-mongering: Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich tells Harris Faulkner the Biden administration is going to send "mom and pop at Gitmo" over school board threats.
Faulkner's response: "That is outrageous — could that really happen?" pic.twitter.com/XkJzjLnndw
— The Recount (@therecount) November 1, 2021
NPR reported, A look at the groups supporting school board protesters nationwide (excerpt):
In several states and districts around the country, protestors have been disrupting school board meetings. They’re opposed to mask policies. Vaccine mandates. LGBTQ rights. Sex education. Removing police from schools. Teaching about race and American history, or sometimes, anything called “diversity, equity and inclusion” or even “social-emotional learning.”
The protests aren’t ubiquitous, but they’re widespread and intense enough that the National School Boards Association asked President Biden to step in, and Attorney General Merrick Garland then directed the FBI to help.
What happened — what is happening — in Poway is not an isolated incident, but it may take the cake for being “surreal,” as Patel puts it.
At the board’s Sept. 9 meeting, some protesters followed behind a visitor and got inside the building. Patel and her fellow board members decided that the best way to de-escalate the situation was to immediately adjourn the meeting.
What happened next is documented in an elaborately shot and edited video posted to YouTube:
“So we are the people,” says a man in a black baseball cap and black T-shirt. “So we can go ahead and replace the board. Let’s take a vote. Who’s willing to become the president?”
Another man steps up, wearing a T-shirt that says “Let Them Breathe,” with a yellow smiley face on it.
He gives his name as Derek Greco. The protestors vote, “Aye!” to make him the new “school board president.”
Later that night, Greco, who could not be reached for comment, posted a video to Instagram. In it, he’s breathless and sweaty. “The board vacated their seats tonight. So we then brought in a constitutionalist and we held a quorum and we voted in a new board,” he says. “You are looking at the new president of the Poway Unified School District, apparently.”
“Constitutionalism” is a far-right ideology that means, in essence, that people don’t have to recognize any laws or authorities that they don’t like beyond the Constitution itself. [“Sovereign Citizens” who don’t know what the hell they are talking about.] The video continues at a local restaurant, where Greco and some of the others who had just declared themselves the new school board explain that they then “voted” to remove Critical Race Theory from the school — though it is not being taught — and to stop requiring masks. Later, Greco and four others filed notarized oaths of office with the San Diego County Clerk.
Tools and tactics for disrupting school boards
The “election” by those protestors on Sept. 9 was in no way legitimate, county officials say, and the properly elected school board continues to run the district.
Melissa Ryan founded the consulting firm CARD Strategies, which tracks right-wing extremism. She says this kind of activity usually begins with real anger — in this case, on the part of parents, at COVID school shutdowns and restrictions like masks. But it’s not entirely grassroots and spontaneous. “The flames are being fanned by national money and resources,” she says. “It’s basically the same groups and funders that were funding the Tea Party and frankly, it’s the same tactics.”
Here are some of the groups providing resources and support to school board protesters around the country. None have endorsed violence, threats or incitement. Nor are they all formally connected. What they do is offer help to parents who have questions or objections about what their children are learning in school or how schools are run. They issue press releases, sell T-shirts and lawn signs, produce flyers and publicize events on social media, supply information and legal advice, offer template letters, scripts for public testimony, and model legislation. They put out webinars and trainings to give practical assistance to those who want to target or disrupt school boards.
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- The Manhattan Institute, one of the most established conservative think tanks, published “Woke Schooling: A Toolkit For Concerned Parents” in June.
- Citizens Renewing America, founded by President Trump’s former budget director Russell Vought, published a 34-page guide for activists also in June, dedicated to “combating critical race theory in your community.” The toolkit states the following: “CRT holds that racism is not just a belief held by individuals; rather, it is a system of oppression that has been built into the very structure of our society.”
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The term “critical race theory” specifically refers to an academic theory developed in law schools and usually taught at the undergraduate level. But since the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement, mainstream K-12 education groups and individual districts have indeed started to acknowledge the existence of systemic and structural racism in American society, both through educator professional development and curriculum.
The toolkit further says activists don’t need any evidence that “critical race theory” is currently being taught in their local schools in order to mount a campaign against it: “It’s important to note that whether CRT is currently in your school system is mostly irrelevant to the purpose of this document.”
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- Parents Defending Education, founded earlier this year, provides resources to activists, pursues litigation, and publishes “incident reports” on districts around the country. President Nicole Neily previously worked at the libertarian Cato Institute and the Independent Women’s Forum, another conservative group that has produced a template letter for activists challenging school mask mandates.
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- Turning Point USA, a group closely allied with Trump through its leader, Charlie Kirk, started School Board Watchlist, a website with the names and photographs of school board members around the country. They say they are “America’s only national grassroots initiative dedicated to protecting our children by exposing radical and false ideologies endorsed by school boards and pushed in the classroom.” School districts are called out for requiring masks and promoting “cultural literacy and sensitivity.”
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- The Proud Boys, which the Southern Poverty Law Center calls an extremist hate group, has taken part in school board protests in several states.
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- The 1776 Project is a political action committee backing school board candidates nationwide who oppose antiracist curricula. They raised nearly $300,000 in the quarter ending Sept. 30, according to FEC filings.
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- PragerU is a nonprofit media company founded by the conservative radio host Dennis Prager. Last year they started an online community aimed at parents and teachers that claims 20,000 members. There are videos and books for children promoting a patriotic vision of American history and conservative heroes like Condoleezza Rice [seriously?], alongside a “Parent Action Guide” for parents who want certain materials removed from classrooms, and a video documentary for parents about “the battle happening right now for the minds of our children.”
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Jill Simonian, the director of outreach for PragerU Kids, says she herself has spoken out at school board meetings, and ultimately pulled her kids out of public school this fall because of what she overheard during Zoom teaching. “They were offering opinions that were very politicized … my previous school was trying to create activists out of my kids. My kids are in elementary school.”
She says the attorney general’s directives to federal law enforcement are “unfairly silencing parents.”
“I think it’s a threat to civil discourse. I think it feels like an intimidation tactic to suppress free speech of parents,” she said. “I think one thing that we can all agree with is that free speech is a fundamental right for everyone to have as long as it’s not violent in any way, and it’s not inciting immediate violence in any way.”
Lawsuits and ‘Let Them Breathe’
In Poway, the protesters held the signs of yet another group. That yellow smiley face on Greco’s T-shirt? It bore the logo of Let Them Breathe, an anti-mask, anti-vaccine-mandate group whose founder is Sharon McKeeman, a mother of four.
McKeeman told NPR, “I had been part of the school reopening movement, and once my kiddos were back in school, I could see they still weren’t back to effective in-person education because of the forced masking.”
Let Them Breathe is fairly new, but it has grown fast. They’ve raised nearly $160,000 in the past three months on GoFundMe. They are suing the state of California alongside a group called Reopen California Schools over the student mask mandate, and the San Diego Unified School District over its student vaccine mandate. They have a podcast that’s also broadcast on a San Diego conservative radio station, and a professional videographer to record their events.
McKeeman says the group is dedicated to peaceful, positive advocacy only. “We had a Smile Fest. We had a couple of marches that were really positive, full of kids, and just to help the community come together and dialogue with each other.”
On its Instagram page, Let Them Breathe has promoted dozens of “Mask Choice Rallies” at school board meetings all over California, including the September one in Poway.
But McKeeman says the organization does not condone what happened that day. She adds that she reached out afterwards to the protesters who were there to “clarify that their viewpoints and actions do not align with Let Them Breathe and to please never attend any of our events or represent that they are affiliated with us in any way.”
‘A knock at the door’
After September’s board meeting, Darshana Patel and a board colleague met with the San Diego City Attorney, who assigned a prosecutor to investigate. Some protestors were escorted out by police in handcuffs at the Oct. 14 board meeting. One of them, in a video posted to Facebook, tells an officer, “You do not have any authority over me. You have no jurisdiction over me.” [A “Sovereign Citizen” head case.]
Then, on Oct. 19, “all five board members and the superintendent got a knock at the door,” at their homes, says Patel. “And we received a packet of papers from someone impersonating a process server. And it had 16 copies of the same document from 16 different individuals saying that we were abusing children.”
The letters were complaining about the district’s mask and vaccine policies. The letter Patel received begins: “Greetings to the woman Darshana Patel who at times acts as a school board member. This notice serves to address the damage done and still occurring to my young one and others from your acts supporting the issue of the emergency measures of which have been and are being considered … “
Patel, who has a Ph.D. in biophysics, moved with her family to San Diego from the Bay Area when they were expecting their third child, so she could take a step back from her career and spend more time with her family. But instead, she found herself drawn into public service. And now she’s coping with a situation that seems not so much scary or threatening, as completely irrational.
“Ever since the beginning of public education, where there have been school boards, we’ve had passionate parents come in and give us their opinions and defend their children and speak to their rights and their values,” she says. “We expect that, we welcome it. This is a whole different level.”
Patel says her staff is still afraid of holding a meeting that’s fully open to the public because they don’t know what’s going to happen next.
Who should be sent to Guantanomo are the domestic terrorists in the Proud Boys. Proud Boys Are Teaming Up With Anti-Maskers to Threaten School Boards Over COVID Mandates; Proud Boys Crashed School Board Meetings to Protest Critical Race Theory; The Proud Boys Are Coming for Public Schools. Right-wing militants failed to overturn the 2020 election, but now they’re aiming at a new target; Why Are the Proud Boys Showing up at School Board Meetings In America? They didn’t find success at a national level, so now they’re taking things hyper-local.
That’s more investigation than Brno or anyone in his office has done.
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Fox News contributor Juan Williams: “‘Parents’ rights’ is code for white race politics”, https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/579338-juan-williams-parents-rights-is-code-for-white-race-politics
(excerpt)
Virginia Republicans are back with a new and improved “Culture Wars” campaign for 2021. The closing argument is once again full of racial division — but this time it is dressed up as a defense of little children.
The rallying cry is “Parents’ Rights.”
It is a campaign to stop classroom discussion of Black Lives Matter protests or slavery because it could upset some children, especially white children who might feel guilt.
And this time, the Trump-imitating Republicans think they have struck political gold.
Unlike their earlier defense of Confederate monuments, the “Parents’ Rights” campaign message at first glance looks to have zero to do with race.
That puts Democrats on the defensive. They are in the uncomfortable position of calling the attention of suburban white moms to divisive racial politics being used by Republican Glenn Youngkin’s campaign.
Terry McAuliffe, the Democratic candidate, calls the Republican message a “racist dog whistle.”
“Youngkin’s closing message of book banning and silencing esteemed Black authors is a racist dog whistle designed to gin up support from the most extreme elements of his party — mainly his top endorser and surrogate, Donald Trump,” McAuliffe said in a statement.
Recall, it was Trump who famously said there were “very fine people” on both sides of the violence sparked by “Unite the Right,” the 2017 rally of white supremacists in Charlottesville, Va.
Youngkin says he will back Trump if the former president is the GOP nominee for the White House in 2024.
Some of the Charlottesville white extremists are now on trial in a civil case for their violent attacks.
President Biden recently said the violence at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 was also “about white supremacy.”
There is a long history behind the latest racist political appeals.
It is not long ago that racist Southern politicians rallied against integration with an argument for “states’ rights,” a call to be free of federal laws seeking to end segregation.
Now the message is that white parents are being ignored when they complain that their children are uncomfortable learning about racism.
Republican advertising now fails to mention the movement in Virginia was born from opposition to advanced placement high school students reading a prize-winning novel about the horrors of slavery — “Beloved” by Nobel Prize winner Toni Morrison.
One commercial features a white Virginia mother complaining that McAuliffe opposed a law to allow parents to have their children opt out from studying unnamed books.
The mom, Laura Murphy, does not mention that she is talking about “Beloved.” Nor does she mention that she is a conservative activist whose son went on to intern in the Trump White House.
She only offers the anodyne comment that McAuliffe “doesn’t think parents should have a say. … He shut us out.”
Toni Morrison is in the great American tradition of authors exploring racial dilemmas — from Richard Wright’s “Native Son” to Harper Lee’s “To Kill A Mockingbird” and Ralph Ellison’s “Invisible Man.”
I knew Morrison, and she was no racist. I interviewed her at the Hartford Forum and on television. We talked over the years before her death. The attack on “Beloved” is a direct attack on all great writing about race in America — especially from the Black point of view.
It is disgraceful. It should disqualify Youngkin and every other GOP smear merchant trafficking in it.
The obscene attack on great writing is gaining strength by being paired with another GOP racial tactic aimed at scaring parents — that Virginia school children might be exposed to arguments about ongoing, systemic racism from the teaching of “critical race theory.”
Critical race theory — broadly, a focus on racial disparities as a fact of American life — is not explicitly taught in Virginia’s public schools or anywhere in American public schools. But Republicans nationwide have made it a boogeyman to excite racial divisions and get their base to the polls.
The conservative [Confederate] Heritage Foundation and other big right-wing donors have fueled the fire with what they call the “Great Parent Revolt of 2021.” They see this as a conservative response to what Heritage dubs “the radical tide of educators, nonprofits and federal education bureaucrats who are working to rewrite American history.”
In Florida, right-wing parents recently complained that fourth graders had to learn how to spell “isolation” and “quarantine.” The parents said those are “scary words.”
Things have gotten so bad that the National School Boards Association pleaded with the Biden administration in a September letter to use federal law enforcement to protect school board members from threats of violence and other forms of bullying.
Polls show the big money coming from the right has resulted in the “Parents’ Rights” movement gaining traction among white voters.
But this movement is not about parents. It is about exciting the far-right base by stirring up racial division.
If it works, Republicans will have reason to continue down this dark path to winning elections.