MO Woman Runs Onto Tarmac To Stop Missed Flight

@anthonyk892

Karen missed her flight, decided to walk out emergency exit onto tarmac. Gets felony trespassing.

♬ KAREN – prettyugly
@anthonyk892

Raw arrest video with original sound.

♬ original sound – Anthony K892

Two Cultist Reps Now Have $100K In Mask Fines Each

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Tucker Carlson’s Fox News show undermined vaccines 99% of the days it covered them since Biden became president

https://www.mediamatters.org/tucker-carlson/tucker-carlsons-fox-news-show-undermined-vaccines-99-days-it-covered-them-biden

From the inauguration through November 30, Tucker Carlson Tonight aired at least one claim undermining vaccines nearly every day it covered them

  • As the Biden administration kicked its COVID-19 vaccination campaign into full gear early this year, Fox News’ Tucker Carlson Tonight ramped up its own countercampaign to undermine efforts to get people vaccinated. In the first 10 months of the Biden presidency, host Tucker Carlson and his guests pushed a claim that undermined vaccines in 113 of 114 episodes with vaccine segments on his show — 99% — despite mounting evidence repeatedly supporting the efficacy of the vaccine. 

    According to Media Matters’ analysis, Tucker Carlson Tonight discussed vaccines in roughly 50% of all original episodes since Biden was inaugurated — and all but one of those episodes featured a claim that undermined vaccines or vaccination efforts. 

    • Fox News’ overall coverage of vaccination efforts during this time was atrocious, but Carlson and his guests were among the worst culprits, constantly undermining the vaccines’ efficacy and safety. Examples include: 

      Throughout the Biden presidency, Tucker Carlson Tonight and Fox News have consistently undermined public health efforts to protect people from COVID-19. This constant anti-vaccine campaign has resulted in real-life consequences, as Fox News viewers are shown to be less likely to get vaccinated than other networks’ audiences. 

      As the country is still trying to overcome this virus, Carlson and Fox News continue to be big impediments toward reaching that goal.

    • Methodology

    • Media Matters searched transcripts in the SnapStream and Kinetiq video database for all original programming on Fox News Channel for any of the terms “coronavirus,” “virus,” “COVID,” “COVID-19,” “COVID 19,” “corona,” “pandemic,” or “outbreak” within close proximity of any variation of any of the terms “vaccine,” “immunization,” or “incoculate” or either term “vaxx” or “vax” from January 20 through November 30, 2021.

      We included segments when coronavirus vaccines were the stated topic of discussion or when we found “significant discussion” of coronavirus vaccines in multitopic segments. We defined significant discussion as two or more speakers discussing coronavirus vaccines with one another. We did not include passing mentions, which we defined as instances when a single speaker discussed coronavirus vaccines without another speaker engaging with the comment. We also did not include teasers for coronavirus vaccine segments scheduled to air later in the broadcast.

      Within coronavirus vaccine segments, we analyzed claims from all speakers. We defined a claim as an uninterrupted block of speech from a single speaker. For host monologues, we defined a claim as an uninterrupted block of speech between quotes that were read or clips that were aired. We did not analyze claims within read quotes or aired clips unless a speaker in the segment positively affirmed any speech within either directly before or after reading the quote or playing the clip.

      We deemed claims to be undermining vaccines if they described the vaccines as: unnecessary or dangerous; coercive, representing government overreach, or violating personal freedom or choice; or cynical ploys for political or financial gain. We also considered claims that dismissed the efficacy of vaccines; highlighted individual experiences with vaccine hesitancy; politicized vaccine distribution or deployment speed; criticized continued adherence to health measures; or suggested that vaccination efforts are a violation of civil rights, liberties, and freedoms or are a form of control.

      Detailed methodologies for the data compiled in this report can be found here and here.

‘People fear what they don’t understand’: Rachel Levine, pioneering trans official, on protecting Americans’ health

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/dec/28/rachel-levine-us-trans-health-official-profile

Dr Levine discusses why debates over trans rights are so toxic, and how the climate crisis will widen health disparities

Rachel Levine: ‘The health equity lens is critical as we  fight for environmental justice.’
Rachel Levine: ‘The health equity lens is critical as we fight for environmental justice.’ Photograph: Dominika Zarzycka/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock
 

This year has been excruciating for many Americans who have been battered by Covidextreme weather disasters and political discord, but for one individual 2021 will be remembered for having propelled her into national prominence.

Rachel Levine has shattered not one but two major glass ceilings this year. In March, she became the first openly transgender person to win confirmation in the US Senate after Joe Biden nominated her as assistant secretary of health.

 

Then in October she was sworn in as the first openly transgender four-star officer as an admiral and head of the US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps. At that exalted rank she gets to wear the blue uniform of the corps, which though non-military is one of eight uniformed services.

It’s been a heady 12 months, having been plucked from relative obscurity as health secretary for Pennsylvania on to the national stage. Levine’s meteoric rise is all the more impressive given how few openly trans federal officials there are in American public life.

In an interview, Levine told the Guardian that she was touched not only by the honour and privilege of her new roles, but also by the “profound responsibility that I take very seriously”.

She added that she would be looking to make an impact “both in terms of my advocacy through the LGBTQ+ community and also through the policy changes we can make across health and human services and the administration”.

As the new head of the 6,000-strong commissioned corps, tasked with leading the federal government’s response to a multitude of health crises, Levine now finds herself in the thick of several raging disputes. Most poignantly for her, as the highest-profile trans official in the country, she is at the centre of the debate around appropriate treatments for individuals considering gender transition, especially adolescents.

A graduate of Harvard and Tulane Medical School, she was trained as a pediatrician and specialized in adolescent medicine at Penn State. As such she has both personal and professional skin in the game.

Levine said her starting point when thinking about trans youth was how at risk they are. “Transgender youth are very vulnerable,” she said. “They are vulnerable to being bullied, to discrimination and harassment.”

Sensitive and supportive medical care has overwhelmingly positive outcomes, she said. “There is so much evidence that trans youth, when they are supported by their family and community and receive the standards of care treatment, they have excellent physical and mental health outcomes.”

By contrast, “trans youth who are not accepted, do not have support from family or community, do not have access to the standard of care treatment, have big mental health issues. So we need to empower transgender youth, we need to nurture them, not discriminate against them.”

In May, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced through its civil rights office that section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act, which bans discrimination on grounds of sex, would henceforth include sexual orientation and gender identity. The decision, which is being challenged by religious groups, requires health providers in receipt of federal funds to offer gender transition treatment.

Levine said a priority for next year would be to roll out that rule change across the nation. “We are going to work to promulgate and distribute that for health insurance throughout the US,” she said.

Much of the toxicity around the trans debate, Levine believes, is whipped up by partisan posturing. “A lot of this is political. There are those who are using these issues as wedge issues in the upcoming election.”

She has personal experience of being targeted by such hostility. Rand Paul, the Republican senator from Kentucky, was rebuked during Levine’s confirmation hearing for his “harmful misrepresentation” of transgender surgery as a form of genital mutilation.

Jim Banks, a Republican congress member from Indiana, was temporarily suspended from Twitter in October for willfully misgendering Levine. In a tweet, he said: “The title of first female four-star officer gets taken by a man”.

In addition to such politically laden hatred, Levine thinks that fear plays a large role in driving much of the transphobic agenda. “People fear what they don’t understand and have experience of. I’m hoping that my appointment, and my being open and out and working for the nation’s public health, will lead to less fear and more acceptance. That’s my goal.”

How does she cope with the virulent personal attacks? She said that as a pediatrician, treating sick children, she learned how to compartmentalize.

“I sublimate that. I take those challenges and I throw them into my work, and it motivates me even more.”

The transgender debate is just a small part of Levine’s daily workload. There is no shortage of health crises piling up on her desk, not least the gathering storm of Omicron and the resultant battle to get millions of Americans boosted.

Within the fight against Covid, Levine said she was especially ardent about addressing the health inequities that have been exposed by the pandemic. “Covid-19 like nothing else has shown the depth and breadth of health disparities in the United States, particularly among individuals of color,” she said.

She is also passionate about directing the resources of the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps towards dealing with the health consequences of the climate crisis. As the crisis deepens, she said, the US is likely to be affected by the spread of vector-borne diseases such as those carried by mosquitoes.

Already vulnerable communities are being assailed by extreme weather conditions. Life-threatening heatwaves have been found to disproportionately affect communities of colour.

Levine highlighted the plight of many agricultural workers. “Farmworkers shouldn’t have to risk their health, even risk dying, due to extreme heat just to put food on their family’s table,” she said.

“Minimum-wage workers shouldn’t have to decide between cooling their homes with electricity or paying for medication. Families across the country shouldn’t have to worry about safe drinking water.”

Levine said that as the dangers of the climate crisis gather pace, the role of federal government was to help vulnerable communities build resilience. “The health equity lens is critical,” she said, “as we look at climate change and fight for environmental justice.”

I want to thank Ali for sending me the link to this article.    Scottie

 

 

Daily cartoon / meme roundup: getting time to ride the tiger … again

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Scottie’s world today

That can not be right

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hit the tiggers balls

Lisa Benson Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

Joel Pett Comic Strip for December 28, 2021

toon

go back to poverty

Rob Rogers Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

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God forbid we give 3% less to the military and save humankind.

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Capitalism is a greedy death spiral.

thenib:
“Mattie Lubchansky.
”
Capitalism kills.

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We need to remove capitalism and capitalist goals from government and government policy.

The Duplex Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

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FOX is not news, they are not journalists. They are propagandists for predetermined narratives.

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Instead of admitting they backed a loser, conservatives make losers the hill they die on.

right wing extremeism

jilli1205:
“And it would be if our “media” wasn’t as corrupt as the GOP they protect.
”

Drew Sheneman Comic Strip for December 28, 2021

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Patriarchy wants submission.

Andy Marlette for Dec 29, 2021

Joe Heller Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

Chris Britt Comic Strip for December 28, 2021

John Deering Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

maybe take off mask

protect your self from

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Capitalism is going to kill us all.

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Far too many people / groups are desperate to get another military action going.   How can they justify ever increasing defense budget and killing anything that helps the public if there is no fighting?  Scottie

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Misleading right wing media cartoons / memes

I wish this was true, the public might get its needs met.   No the ones that control the media, all the media, is corporations.   Very large companies that have merged and leveraged all the media in the US.  That is why main stream media always sides with ideas that promote wealth going to the upper income class and keeps the government from serving the public.   Scottie

It is normal to work on bring back up bills that fail if the party in charge wants them.  What the right can not seem to accept is that other people have their ideas and wants also, and those people, who out number the negative right, want the items in the bill.   The big money doesn’t want the people to have what is in the bill, and so the corporate media pays right wing cartoonist to make cartoons that insult and belittle the BBB bill.   Scottie

Doesn’t work that way when they run out of hurricane names.    The just start a new list.   Scottie

Michael Ramirez Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

Another in a series of throwing out any RW trope, hoping it would stick.   Say no to masks and vaccines and then blame Joe for the ongoing pandemic. What an insightful plan… for those who chose to be blind.   Scottie

The right wing media keeps repeating a lie knowing their viewers will never check to see it is a lie.   Nothing has changed at the border, the US has not been invaded, the hoards of brown people have not taken over the Southern US locking up all the white people.  Scottie

Ted Rall Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

For the last eighty years Republican administrations have been behind most American sponsored regime changes across the globe with disastrous consequences. It figures they are finally turning their attention to the United States.   US armed services are so well funded that they have to HUNT AROUND for things to do with all that largess.   Scottie

For something that is like a cold it sure is putting a hell of a lot of people in hospitals who are very ill and dying.    I know the maga refuse to look around the US and in their minds the US is the best  country but someone should clue them in the rest of the world is dealing with this also.  Is their Covid actions Biden’s fault also?    Scottie

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And now some for fun

no time to read silly

Non Sequitur Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

Free Range Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

Dog Eat Doug Comic Strip for December 29, 2021

‘The preservation of liberty and freedom’: Park honoring Confederate veterans opens in Jacksonville

https://www.firstcoastnews.com/article/news/local/park-honoring-confederate-veterans-opens-in-northwest-jacksonville/77-8c5c06c6-75f6-422d-9f18-7dc12faedbe2

The operators of the park see it as their duty to make sure “that the true history of the South is presented to future generations,” according to the website.

A new park honoring the over 15,000 soldiers involved in the Confederate war effort is now open in North Florida.

Kirby-Smith Confederate Park is located in Lincoln Villas in the Northeast Jacksonville area. The park is visible from the I-295 west beltway, and features Confederate flags, statuary and placards. 

 

The park’s website claims that the Confederate flag in Kirby-Smith Confederate Park flies in honor of all Confederate soldiers. The owners of the park see it as their duty to “see that the true history of the South is presented to future generations,” according to the website.

The park is run by the Sons of Confederate Veterans, specifically, Kirby-Smith Camp #1209, the self-proclaimed most active camp in the Sons of Confederate Veterans organizations. The property was donated by the family that owned the land to the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

On its website, the camp describes itself as a strictly a patriotic, historical, educational, benevolent, non-political, and non-sectarian entity bound by its by-laws and governed by the Sons of Confederate Veterans Constitution.

According to the Kirby-Smith Camp #1209’s website, the organization believes that school books, movies, television programs and press falsely portray Southerners as rebels and traitors who fought to preserve slavery, misleading our children and millions of Americans ignorant of history. 

However, the Civil War, fought by between the Union in the North and Confederates in the South, did arise out of disputes over slavery and states’ rights. 

“Since my family fought for the Confederacy, they thereby falsely malign my family and me,” Kirby-Smith Camp #1209’s website says.

The opening of the park comes amid a national cry for the removal of statues and symbols that celebrate the Confederacy, with many people saying that it promotes and honors a movement that revolved around slavery. 

Others say the removal of such statues and artifacts is erasing history.

 

Last month, the bill that would have led to the removal of the Women of the Confederacy monument in Springfield Park was withdrawn.

 

The motion passed by a 12-6 vote at a Jacksonville City Council meeting.

Two proposals to postpone the city council’s vote to a later date also failed. The first vote to table the bill until March 2022 failed by a 3-15 margin. A second proposal to postpone the vote until May 2022 failed by a 6-12 margin.

The bill was expected to fail after several city council members publicly voted against it in committee meetings.

In response, City Councilman Matt Carlucci and the Northside Coalition of Jacksonville called for the vote to be postponed until a later day.

The removal of the statue was estimated to be $1.3 million, according to the bill. However, Councilman Garrett Dennis proposed an amendment that would reduce the cost of removing it to $99,000. That amendment also failed.

Kirby-Smith Confederate Park is located at C63W+72 Lincoln Villas, Jacksonville, Florida. Click here for details. First Coast News has reached out to the Sons of the Confederates for a statement.

RELATED: Why Councilman Carlucci says its time to remove the Confederate monument in Springfield park

RELATED: First Coast News obtains emails, documents of proposed $1.3 million Confederate monument removal

https://www.firstcoastnews.com/video/news/local/park-honoring-confederate-veterans-opens-in-jacksonville/77-dc64029f-4601-4199-9765-ed95115b642a?jwsource=cl

 

Texas runs out of monoclonal antibody treatment effective against omicron

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/587466-texas-runs-out-of-monoclonal-antibody-treatment-effective-against

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/587466-texas-runs-out-of-monoclonal-antibody-treatment-effective-against?jwsource=cl

Texas has run out of its supply of monoclonal antibodies, and infusion centers in the state will be unable to offer the treatment until more shipments are sent out in January.

Infusion centers in Austin, El Paso, Fort Worth, San Antonio and The Woodlands have all gone through their supply of sotrovimab, the only antibody treatment believed to be effective against the omicron variant, the Texas Health and Human Services Commission said on Monday.

The agency said infusion centers in Texas will be unable to offer the treatment until “federal authorities ship additional courses of sotrovimab to Texas in January.”

“Other monoclonal antibodies have not shown to be effective against the Omicron variant, which now accounts for more than 90 percent of new cases. The infusion centers will continue to offer those antibodies as prescribed by health care providers for people diagnosed with a non-Omicron case of COVID-19,” the Texas commission said.

A “limited supply” of the recently approved oral antiviral drugs — one from Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics and the other from Pfizer — will soon be available in Texas, the agency added, noting that the supply of these drugs is also regulated by the federal government.

Health officials began stockpiling doses of sotrovimab this month after studies showed that it was effective against the highly transmissible omicron variant.

On Dec. 17, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released distribution determinations for sotrovimab, allocating 2,694 doses for Texas. The department said at the time that the government’s supply of the antibody treatment was “extremely limited” and additional units would not be available until the week of Jan. 3.

HHS recommended reserving sotrovimab for use in the highest risk outpatients, including patients over the age of 65 and those who are immunocompromised.

But vaccines and boosters are in full supply and are ready.  Scottie

Georgia Debunks Trump’s Lies About “Dead Voters”

Douche Who Trolled Biden Might Run For Office

Schmeck is also hoping for an invite to Mar-A-Lago. The money beg launched for him yesterday on a Christian crowdfunding site has so far raised $6125. Twitter wags have been pressuring Oregon outlets to find out why he left the police force.

Two California teachers were secretly recorded speaking about LGBTQ student outreach. Now they’re fighting for their jobs

https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Two-California-teachers-were-secretly-recorded-16732562.php

Lori Caldeira at her home in Salinas. Caldeira and another teacher organized the UBU club.1of3

Lori Caldeira at her home in Salinas. Caldeira and another teacher organized the UBU club.

Nic Coury/Special to The Chronicle

This fall, a pair of middle school teachers from the Salinas Valley traveled to Palm Springs for the California Teachers Association’s annual LGBTQ+ Issues Conference. There, on a Saturday afternoon, Lori Caldeira and Kelly Baraki spoke to a few dozen people about a subject they knew well: the difficulty of running a GSA, or gay-straight alliance, in a socially conservative community.

Speaking about recruiting students, Baraki said, “When we were doing our virtual learning — we totally stalked what they were doing on Google, when they weren’t doing schoolwork. One of them was Googling ‘Trans Day of Visibility.’ And we’re like, ‘Check.’ We’re going to invite that kid when we get back on campus.”

Shortly after the October conference, a surreptitious recording of the presentation was handed to a conservative writer known for asserting that transgender adolescents are part of a dangerous “craze.” She published a story Nov. 18 headlined “How Activist Teachers Recruit Kids,” criticizing Caldeira and Baraki for actions they had seen as proper: keeping club members’ identities confidential from parents and finding a couple of potential members by viewing their online activity in class.

One day after the article came out, Caldeira and Baraki’s presentation on the difficulties of running their GSA would prove prophetic: Leaders of the Spreckels Union School District suspended the club. Four days later, the district opened an investigation and placed the teachers on administrative leave.

The controversy has roiled the small district south of Salinas and east of Monterey, alarming advocates for LGBTQ youth and marking one of a number of recent incidents in which influential conservative voices have forced the hands of local officials.

The episode raises broader questions about educators’ growing ability to monitor what students do online, which accelerated during the pandemic, and about what responsibility schools have to provide safe spaces such as gay-straight alliances for LGBTQ students who may not have support from peers and parents.

Caldeira and Baraki, who said they have received violent threats since the story went viral in some circles, said they are worried about their students. Both teach at Buena Vista Middle School, which has an enrollment of around 360.

“Can you imagine? Seriously, we have kids in our club right now who are out at school, (but) they’re not out at home. The only two teachers that they have ever spoken to have been taken away,” said Caldeira, her voice and hands shaking as she spoke at a Monterey coffee shop in her first interview since the district suspended the GSA. “I’m sure they’re terrified, because where are they going to go, and who are they going to talk to, you know?”

Caldeira said the club — called UBU (You Be You) — had for more than six years allowed students to ask questions they might not be ready to bring up with their families.

“Our conversations were always student-led, which is why they frequently surrounded LGBTQ topics. Because the kids have questions,” she said. “Their parents think we start that conversation, but we don’t. TikTok starts it, Snapchat starts it, Instagram starts it or their classmates start it, and then we just try to answer the questions as honestly and fairly as we can.”

The district has launched a third-party investigation into the actions of the teachers. Officials declined to be interviewed by The Chronicle, but Superintendent Eric Tarallo, school board President Steve McDougall and Buena Vista Principal Kate Pagaran released a statement Nov. 19 apologizing to parents, while promising that the district would exert tighter control over student clubs and bar teachers from “monitoring students’ online activity for any non-academic purposes.”

At the school board’s Dec. 15 meeting, member Michael Scott said, “I am hopeful a third-party investigation will provide a clearer picture of the circumstances surrounding the UBU club and how it was run, that any subsequent action should be responsive to the values, beliefs and priorities of the Spreckels community.”

 


The Palm Springs presentation by Caldeira and Baraki was similar in many ways to talks they’ve given for four or five years, they said. For an hour and 15 minutes, they spoke informally to about 40 people.

Caldeira, who in 2017 won an award for her work with special-needs students, said she requested the presentation not be recorded. “We do deal with middle schoolers,” she said, “and it can be sensitive content at times.”

But the secret audio made its way to Abigail Shrier, author of “Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters,” which has been criticized as unscientific and inflammatory. On Nov. 18, she published the first of four stories about the Spreckels teachers on her Substack newsletter, The Truth Fairy, where she has argued that transgender women “are not women” and that gender-affirming school policies abuse parents’ rights.

Shrier focused heavily on Baraki’s comment about seeing a student’s Google search for “Trans Day of Visibility,” characterizing this as “surveillance” of potential recruits into the GSA.

The Chronicle could not obtain audio of the presentation, but Caldeira confirmed she and Baraki had been accurately quoted by Shrier. However, she said many of the comments were misconstrued and taken out of context.

According to the newsletter, the two teachers said in the presentation that they do not keep roll of who comes to the club and do not tell parents if their child attends a meeting, actions that were not required by the school. California law protects students’ right to privacy in gender identity and any activities they participate in based on that.

“For those paying attention,” Shrier wrote, “the educators who guide California teachers in the creation of middle school LGBTQ clubs asserted the following: they struggle to maintain student participation in the clubs; many parents oppose the clubs; teachers surveil students electronically to ferret out students who might be interested, after which the identified student is recruited to the club via a personal invitation.”

Reaction to Shrier’s post was immediate: Several conservative outlets picked up the story, and parents inside and outside the community inundated the school district with complaints. The district’s statement called the teachers’ comments as quoted by Shrier “alarming, concerning, disappointing.”

 


Caldeira said she and Baraki were blindsided. While the district stressed in its statement that it didn’t know in advance what Caldeira and Baraki would talk about in their presentation, school officials were well aware of what the club was all about, Caldeira said.

“Our superintendent has attended our meetings. He’s attended our events,” she said. “Our club has been used as part of our suicide-prevention plan, saying that we have these spaces available for students in crisis.”

Lisa Gardiner, a spokesperson for the California Teachers Association, declined to comment specifically about the case, citing the ongoing personnel investigation, but said, “We are concerned about a political climate right now in which outside political forces fuel chaos and misinformation and seek to divide parents, educators and school communities for their own political gain.”

Caldeira said she did not monitor student activities on her own initiative. With the onset of virtual learning, Buena Vista Middle School began using GoGuardian, a software that is usually installed on school-provided devices and allows teachers to see what students are doing on their computers while they are in class. The software is designed to flag words or behaviors identifying children at risk of harming themselves or others.

According to its website, GoGuardian is used in 30,000 schools with over 22 million K-12 students, helping teachers communicate with students and keep them on task. Caldeira said her school uses the software for suicide and violence prevention as well, but that individual teachers do not have access to that information. The district declined to answer questions about its use of GoGuardian.

Caldeira said she didn’t intend to track her students’ activities online — “My theory is: If you were off task, the consequence is a poor grade,” she said — but that one day, as she used the software to chat with students, she noticed one student on a website about Transgender Day of Visibility.

“I see a site that’s emblazoned with rainbows,” she said. “How am I not going to notice that?” After class, she said, she made a mental note to invite the student to the UBU club.

Baraki had a similar experience, Caldeira said, once noticing a student on an LGBTQ website. She said the two shared these anecdotes at the conference, “But that was it.”

As for the “we totally stalked what they were doing on Google” comment, Caldeira said, “It was tongue in cheek.” She said teachers do not have access to students’ private social posts, messages and emails.

If the school’s investigation finds that Caldeira and Baraki had taken action based on students’ online activity during class through GoGuardian, there is likely no law preventing what they did, privacy experts said.

Amelia Vance, vice president of youth and education at the Future of Privacy Forum, explained that, legally speaking, an educator seeing something a student is doing through GoGuardian is not any different than a teacher walking around a classroom and noticing students’ behavior or what they had visible on their screens.

Vance said there are no laws barring teachers from approaching students about a GSA. And under California law, teachers cannot tell parents anything about their child’s sexual orientation or gender identity without the child’s permission, “with rare exceptions,” according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

Still, Vance said, she’s not sure she would have done what the two teachers did. Perhaps, she said, she might have made a general announcement to the class about the GSA and hoped that the student would come. “Kids don’t necessarily remember they’re being monitored, and in a way, this sort of becomes a forced outing, no matter how good the teacher’s intentions were,” she said.

California bars educators from monitoring the social media of students, which Caldeira said she never did. “I do not know if part of the investigation will include checking to see if we have in fact gone into a student’s emails, Google Drive accounts or monitored their social media,” she said, “but it will come up with nothing.”

 


It’s not clear how long the investigation of the teachers will take. The district has said only that it selected Sacramento law firm Van Dermyden Makus to conduct the probe.

In the meantime, supporters of the UBU club are concerned about the loss of what they see as a welcoming space for some students to discuss whatever they are going through, and they worry the controversy will create stress and potential stigma for vulnerable youth.

The work that LGBTQ+ student groups, their advisers and allies do to foster community and safety among students takes lifesaving importance,” 38 local elected and community leaders wrote in an open letter to the district. “It is also why so many of us have watched the events unfold in the Spreckels Union School District that have led to the disbanding of the ‘You Be You’ LGBTQ+ student group with alarm.”

Monterey County Supervisor Wendy Root Askew, whose office produced the letter, said the district’s response was “concerning,” especially the club’s suspension, and pledged to “fight for their fundamental human rights.” But she pointed out that she’s also a parent of a young child — who attends another district — and understands how sensitive and complicated the issue can be for families.

“I know that I want my child to be safe at school, and I also know that I have expectations that I’m not going to be left in the dark about what’s happening on campus,” she said. “But the bottom line is the data tells us that our LGBTQ youth are at significantly higher rates of self-harm. If we care about the protection and well-being of our kids, we have to follow the data and ensure that they have safe places and safe people at school, at home and in the community.”

Jacob Agamao, the LGBTQ+ services coordinator at the Epicenter, a Salinas-based youth resource program, called the district’s actions “heartbreaking.”

“I know the value and the importance of these clubs to students who really have nowhere else to go as far as acceptance of who they are, or maybe they’re afraid,” he said. “It’s sort of painful to see people speaking as though they’re speaking in defense of children when really they’re speaking in defense of their personal ethics, their religious beliefs — things that have nothing to do with the safety of the child themselves.”

Like Askew, Agamao said he understood why parents would be worried that they might not know what’s going on in their child’s life at school, but that that doesn’t mean they have a right to it.

“I think our students have a right to certain privacies simply out of self-preservation,” he said. “If your child feels loved and accepted in their home, they’ll have no problem telling you these things.”

 


At the Dec. 15 public meeting, Spreckels school board members said they wanted to focus on community members being kind to one another as the investigation progressed.

“I want this board and the community to know that the author of this article frames issues facing transgender youth in terms of a war,” Scott said, referring to Shrier. “We are not at war. Everyone loses in a war. War is completely contrary to our core values of compassion, kindness and respect.”

Yet amid posters designed by students urging community members to “Color the world with kindness” and “Be a buddy not a bully,” board members had to repeatedly remind those packing the room to heed the slogans. The warnings only went so far, and people yelled at each other and the trustees.

Some speakers talked of the importance of granting space and support to LGBTQ students, and praised Caldeira and Baraki. A former student, Catherine Beck, told the gathering that during her time in the club, “We discussed a wide range of topics, always student-selected, from racism to disabilities to, yes, LGBTQ issues. However, this was never a secret to the school board, nor to the school administration.”

Some parents said it was the district that overstepped when it announced that school clubs in the future would be required to keep sign-in sheets, have parents sign permission slips and share “sensitive” materials with parents before showing them to students.

Others, though, claimed the teachers were “grooming” their students using invasive surveillance tactics, and expressed frustration that the GSA had been secretive. Some people veered into rants about religion, critical race theory and mask mandates.

One parent, Jessica Konen, said Caldeira had kept her in the dark when her daughter wanted to start using different pronouns and a new name. “You took away my ability to parent my child, even before I had any knowledge,” Konen shouted. “I didn’t even get to show support. You asked for support, I didn’t get the chance.”

As she was pulled off the microphone by security enforcing the meeting’s three-minute time limit for speakers, Konen shouted, “I don’t care! Meet me outside!” as some in the crowd cheered her on.

Whatever their viewpoint, those at the meeting seemed united in their anger at the school district — either for taking too much action or not enough.

As they await the outcome of the investigation, Caldeira and Baraki said they now avoid leaving their homes. They are afraid that people in their small community might recognize them and berate or even attack them — a fear that Caldeira sees as ironic, given that their goal in the first place was to protect LGBTQ kids in a conservative community.

“We just try to provide simple, clean, straightforward answers without — shocking — judgment,” she said. “And look where it got me.”