On July 14, the California legislature will recess until 8/14

The legislature is ignoring conservative and traditional parents to pass the most progressive bills in both Assembly and Senate.   They start recess on July 14 hoping in a few weeks that we will forget what they are doing (or have done).  The next step for many of these terrible bills is the Governor’s desk.

 Check out the Legislative Watch web page.  The words “Passed”, “Appropriations”, and “Third reading” signals a bill of the greatest concern.   When the legislators return to work (in unknown weeks), you will have very little time to protest these bills running roughshod over families and traditional values.

 To view the TVR Legislative Watch web page click HERE or type this link into your web browser: https://trivalleyrepublicans.org/legislative

Harry Briley -TVR and ACGOP member: brileyh.weebly.com

A pros and con discussion: 15 Minute Cities and Smart cities

Although long it is a worthy 15 minute read and it is one of which everyone should self-educate.  Those against these concepts are labeled on some-I-net sites as conspiracy theorists.  It is difficult to find a rational discussion of both sides of the issue as one can find in the following article.  What I found missing was reference to how the infrastructure of these cities would be handled such as water distribution and trash pickup services.  Will there be a city transfer station every fifteen minutes apart?  What about hospitals?  One every 15 minutes apart?  And who/what monitors all this?  Would everyone be controlled by the “smart city leaders”?  A lot of questions.  Most scarry is the number of local governments in the US and other countries seriously looking at this concept.  I fear they will paint the eyelashes on the “portrait” before having drawn the face.

Phyllis Couper, Tri-Valley Republicans

From G. Edward Griffin Need to Know News

Climate Lockdowns: The ’15 Minute City’ Is a Quarantine Program for Neighborhoods Youtubevideo.

From: California Political News And Views, June 27, 2023

Are 15 Minute Cities Smart? Or Isolation Camps?

By Thomas Buckley, California Globe,  6/24/23     https://californiaglobe.com/articles/are-15-minute-cities-smart/

The 15-minute city (FMC) – a neat idea, a new way to control the populace, a trendy blip in the public planning industry, a long-term insidious scheme – all, some, or none of these?

One thing is true, a thing that makes millions of people very nervous – you cannot criticize the idea without being called a conspiracy theorist, a misinformation spreader, or – that most dastardly of person – a denier.

If you have questions about the concept, here is what you are already  being called:  https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/28/technology/carlos-moreno-15-minute-cities-conspiracy-theories.html  and https://www.vice.com/en/article/m7g898/walkable-15-minute-cities-con.

As with the gas stove “debate,” any questioning of the latest coolest way to re-organize society is a sign of madness.  This haughty reality-shifting attitude somehow pervades the elites despite the deserved devastation of the public’s trust in its institutions in the wake of the pandemic, the response to which involved lies, half-truths, spin, lies, mistakes, lies, the threat of force, lies, the threat of unemployment, the ordered home confinement, the mass destruction of small businesses, and lies.

All of that should be a bit of a tip-off as to the true intentions of the supporters of the idea, but, that being said, let’s discuss the basics.

The idea essentially is to re-invent the neighborhood idea by trying to ensure that pretty much all of the goods and services a person could ever want are readily available nearby. Jobs, schools,  doctors, and cultural activities are also meant to be easily accessible.  To get to the “15 minute” part, the area would be (based on typical walking speeds) about a square mile or so.

At its heart, the idea harkens back to the village of yore – a place of belonging, simplicity, of knowing your neighbors, of creating a community you can count on in a pinch.

While this may be a key selling point, it cannot be forgotten that for literally hundreds of years people have been purposefully leaving villages to try their hand in the city with its chaos and opportunity, its risks and rewards, and, most importantly, its broadening experiences.  

Cities of course already have neighborhoods that are somewhat similar to FMCs, but they tend to be organized around an activity – a meat packing district, the financial hub, etc. – an ethnicity – Little Italy, Chinatown (sorry, Seattle, I mean the International District,) a socio-economic cluster – the west side of Los Angeles versus the east side of Los Angeles, or even an entertainment activity – Broadway in New York or edgy, anything goes red-light districts like the Tenderloin in San Francisco (NOTE – defining what is happening in the Tenderloin now as entertaining is admittedly a stretch, but before the current stumbling nightmare it was for decades a “rough trade” pleasure zone and one supposes that’s a form of entertainment.)

The idea of the FMC, however, is to eventually smooth these differences and create zone after zone of similarly homogenous neighborhoods throughout a city.  As equity is one of the hallmarks of the concept, it might not be terribly fair to have one FMC be notably richer than another, notable different from any of the others.

How to implement an FMC – short of the bulldozer, anyway – is rather complicated because people tend to already be in places targeted for such modification. Zoning, government incentives, planning regulations, public enticements, or simply declarations by fiat have all been proposed to mold existing neighborhoods into FMCs.

In other words, even proponents know that they will not occur organically and need significant government intervention to even get off the ground (another tip-off as to the true intent behind the push.)

One of the most important aspects is the elimination of the necessity of a personal vehicle. If practically everything a person needs is so close – literally within walking distance – and if everything else that doesn’t fit – stadium, airport, university, massive hospital and/or museum, etc. – can be easily traveled to by public transit, then you do not need and evil, polluting, selfish mobility device?  When FMC ideas are rolled out, they do tend to have rather limited parking options – on purpose – as another “benefit” of them is that they are supposed to better for the environment, more sustainable, more equitable, more whatever woke/equitarian buzzword of the moment you want to use.

Now on to smart cities.

This is a bit simpler because pretty much everything above about FMCs applies except with the added bonus that your neighborhood is watching you at all times.  Using cell phone tracking, defined shopping habits, health information from your smart watch, your social media presence, your credit report, you familial status, your hobbies, your habits, and your opinions, a smart city will figure out everything you need even before you know you need it and encourage you to be an overall better person as it defines better people.

In other words, the definition of a needs-taken-care-of, stay-in-your-house-and-shut-up-or-we-will-take-that-away-from-you Nerfified mere existence.  You know, hell with ice water.

Not every FMC is a smart city, but most smart cities must be (or at least start out as) an FMC.

Smart cities are currently so controversial that even Toronto – central driver of the Great Woke North – abandoned the idea.

But the smart city has its supporters and projects are underway building them from the ground up, bypassing the need to shoehorn the debilitatingly intrusive, soul-crushing tech into places that already exist.

Here’s a somewhat jaundiced look at the giant mirrored line city Neom – 

– a bit more, um, hopeful look at other smart city projects underway.

(NOTE – I chose videos for these links because they really have to be seen to be believed.)

And one of the advantages – or hallucinatorily disturbing problem – of the FMC is that is extremely convertible – once established – into a smart city.

It should be noted that Vehicle Miles Traveled taxes, low-emission zones, and other anti-individual freedom measures can also be used to set the stage for an incremental move to FMC and/or smart cities. 

That could be why protests broke out and why foundations and governments and much of the media is calling the protesters right wing conspiracy theorists and just plain wrong and that such schemes are not at all part of any attempt to modify personal behavior though oppressive regulation (another tip-off.)

In Oxford, England, protestors were told neighborhood travel cordons had nothing to do with the completely separate, no way at all tied together, FMC studies proposed at the same time; especially post-pandemic, with the lies and cudgels and censorship and confinements and lies – people are rightfully calling “bullshit” on such facile pronouncements, hence the tension.

But how would a city like Los Angeles, for example, be FMCed?

Going a step further than Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) – an existing government-funded trend to get people to live near bus lines and train stations – LA activists are pushing things like the VMT pilot program, dropping parking requirements, and incentivizing smaller, presumably rental (you will own nothing and like it) dwelling units to shoehorn the idea into existing neighborhoods.

Here are just a few of the benefits of FMC (lite?) being touted by the Livable Communities Initiative, a near-parody of an LA do-goodery factory:

  • Benefit nearby homeowners and residents with a beautiful walkable street, shops and cafes, and access to transit and bike lanes

  • Give every Angeleno the option of an affordable home without the $8000/year cost and burden of a car

  • Create attainable homeownership opportunities that can help close the racial wealth gap

  • Reverse-engineer displacement by building in high-opportunity neighborhoods that have not built enough housing

  • Address climate change by building car-light infill homes, 48 miles of transit-connected bike lanes, new bus lanes, and 48 miles of new tree canopy

“Building equitably and building near job centers reduces traffic,” LCI chief Jenny Hontz told the LAist. “So it makes life better for everyone and it helps the climate, too.” (Here’s the entire story – the comparison pics are worth the click)

In case you were wondering, the LCI partners with a bevy of the progressive foundational/movement suspects, from Extinction Rebellion to Young Entertainment Activists (again, another tip-off.)

Neighborhood and even city-specific plans are going to be rolled out by the LCI soon, though they already have “standard plans” that include such statements as “…human-scale, beautiful architecture above neighborhood serving retail. Imagine any of our historic main streets and villages – Westwood Village, Main Street and Abbot Kinney, Market St in Inglewood, NoHo Arts District, San Fernando Blvd in Burbank – with housing above the stores – creating small, affordable apartments for seniors, Gen Zers, people who don’t drive, and workers who are forced to spend 30% of their income on a car.”

LCI – as do basic FMC and smart city ideas – emphasize an imposed aesthetic as well – “But what if instead we could create streets with beautiful architecture – nourishing to the residents and the surrounding area? What if we intentionally designed our city? Cities all over the world pre-determine their architecture – it makes cities beautiful (Paris, Boston, Santa Barbara)”

LCI concepts, smart cities, and FMCs are oppressively top-down systems that shift power of ones’ community to the bureaucrat class and intentionally and egregiously ignore same basic facts about how humans act and how a beautiful city like Boston – very very very much not be design – got to be that way.

Another anathema of both smart cities and FMCs is that they need the resident to be the resource that drives them, that their consumer habits to be mined and processed in order to make their existence feasible.  They do not account for variety of thought or even the possibility of taking advantage of a unique local geographical or industrial or cultural benefit – they are mere consumption machines in which the human is the cog.

While natural neighborhoods can be wonderful supportive safe places, unnatural neighborhoods will exacerbate the problems that do occur in more tightly knit communities.  Self-surveillance (if not actual real surveillance) and a sense of trepidation about leaving the comfortable confines can lead to a feeling of isolation from the larger world.  In an FMC, that isolation could be seen as being not organic but ordered from on high, creating a mental box that can dwarf intellectual and emotional growth – in other words, a captive personality.

As we have seen from the Twitter Files and so many other recent (and not so recent) revelations about the Censorship-Industrial complex, the real danger of smart cities and FMCs is the potential for the elimination of freedoms, of options, of differences.

That’s not just censorship of thought, it’s censorship of life.

ACRP Joins National Republican Party in Resolution Against Ranked Choice Voting.

At the May ACRP Meeting our brave delegates joined the National Republicans in a Resolution against Ranked Choice Voting. This is after we have seen first hand the destruction of our freedom of choice with all the voter and election fraud it brings on any county or state that implements it.

TVR is proud to support the ACRP’s resolution as follows:

RESOLVE TO ELIMINATE THE INFERIOR VOTING PROCESS KNOWN AS RANKED-CHOICE VOTING

IN ALAMEDA COUNTY OF CALIFORNIA

WHEREAS, the Republican National Committee (RNC) meeting in Dana Point, California on January 27, 2023 unanimously passed a Resolution: "Officially Oppose Ranked-Choice Voting Across the Country and called on Congress, state legislators, and voters to oppose Ranked-Choice Voting in every locality and level of government and return elections to easier systems that worked for centuries for fair and transparent elections”; and

WHEREAS, the California Republican Party (CAGOP) meeting in Sacramento, California on March 12, 2023 unanimously passed a Resolution, which was authored and submitted to the CAGOP by Mark Zulim, Alameda County Republican Party: “The CAGOP opposes the use of Ranked-Choice Voting in California elections and is committed to increasing voter's confidence in California's election process through easier and transparent systems that worked since California was founded”; and

WHEREAS, Ranked-Choice Voting is now being rejected because it increases election distrust, voter suppression, and disenfranchisement, eliminates the historic political party system, and put elections in the hands of expensive election schemes that increase costs for taxpayers, and depend exclusively on confusing technology and unelected bureaucrats to manage it; and

WHEREAS, after more than a decade the Ranked-Choice Voting experiment has failed nationally causing much voter frustration and disenfranchisement and cannot be ignored any longer and even egregious is the fact it has not fully met the fundamental right of “one-person one-vote” in that a very high rate of what is called “exhausted ballots” and “suspended ballots” are always present, which means many votes are not counted within the final tabulation in determining the winner; and

WHEREAS, hundreds of municipalities and counties nationally, including in California, have wasted millions of dollars to educate the public in how Ranked-Choice Voting works, yet they continue to experience an unacceptable and very high rate of ballot errors again and again, and the full negative effects of voter disenfranchisement caused by the use of Ranked-Choice Voting is immeasurable nationally, including within Alameda County; and

WHEREAS, in California with the most recent fiasco found in the Oakland, Alameda County for the November 8, 2022 races where numerous errors were noted causing several elections after their certification to undergo costly corrections, which included the overturning of the results for the City of Oakland, Oakland Unified School District, District #4 and now costly legal suits are pending; and now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the Alameda County Republican Party of California opposes the use of Ranked-Choice Voting in its Districts and is committed to increasing voter’s confidence in the election process and is committed to work with each municipality, all levels of government, various groups of all parties, and all citizens to: educate, train, and directly oppose inferior voting schemes such as Ranked-Choice Voting.

Submitted by: Mark Zulim, Alternate to Alameda County Republican Party and CAGOP Delegate, on April 24, 2023 (v1)

Judge abused at Stanford say people hoped his daughters would be RAPED

A conservative judge who was heckled at Stanford Law School has claimed student protestors screamed that they hoped his daughters would be raped before the equity dean ambushed him in ‘a staged public shaming’.

Daily Mail

Fifth Circuit Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan, 51, was asked to give a speech at the famous law school last week to speak about the circuit’s Court of Appeals by the student chapter of the Federalist Society.

 March 20, 2021

 President Marc Tessier-Lavigne, Ph.D.

Jenny Martinez, Dean, Stanford Law School

 Dear President and Dean,

 I was terribly upset to read about the indecent actions of some of your students when Judge Stewart Duncan was to speak at your Law School.  I would like to state a few ideas that perhaps will help:

 Students who cross the line of rightful protest should be suspended from school for a determined amount of time, and their parents should be notified as to their child’s behavior and the reason.  Parents may not be aware, or not interested, and have no idea their student is participating in inappropriate activities.  It is the responsibility of the University to inform the parents.  If students want to act like children who need supervision, then they should receive such.  They must earn their respect from adults.

 It is time to stand up to pushy parents who flout their wealth as a reason their student should never be suspended for any reason.  It’s time to stand up to the “law suit” crowd who sue over every little thing.

 It is time to stand up to the Regents who, in my opinion, hide behind the hallowed halls when inappropriate gatherings happen.  They should be front and center speaking to assemblies of students that this type of behavior will result in expulsion from the University.

Students are just older children looking for rules and boundaries.  When there are none from home or school, they become unruly “gangs” feeding off one another’s excitement, and the results are situations like that which happened to Judge Duncan.

 It is easy to throw all one’s anger at the students involved, but the problem stems not from the actual event, but from the leadership of the University, which can support free speech, but should be very clear to the students in word and action, just exactly what is not included in free speech: foul language, insults and threats, throwing things or spray painting on buildings or other objects.  It is my opinion that the University fails in this, and if implemented, more respect would be gained from the students on all levels.

 If we want America to be a country where all our children and their grandchildren can live in peace and prosperity, we must turn the tide of young people running amuck due to lack of caring direction.  These young people are not bad, they are just lost due to lack of direction.

 Most Respectfully,

Mrs. Phyllis Couper

First Week November - Time to Vote

REMINDER - Some of us retained our mail-in ballot for the first week of November. If you have not yet voted, it is time to go find your ballot and fill it out. Schedule sometime during the first week of November to take your ballot to the Alameda County drop box at your City Hall. … or … schedule to vote in-person on November 8 (taking your mail-in ballot with you). ANY voting center in Alameda County can print a blank ballot specifically for your home residence precinct.

  • Harry Briley, TVR member and elected GOP Central Committee member.

Plan to Vote - Consider Jesus Taking Responsibility

If every conservative voted [instead of 33% of them], we could take America [and especially California] out of the socialist’s hands and put her back into the hands of God who created our Republic.  Too many people leave it to God.  But when Jesus discovered the evils in the Temple, he didn’t say, I’ll just leave it to God.  Jesus was so filled with justifiable anger at the desecration of the Temple that he drove the exchangers out and cleansed the Temple of greed and profit.   He did that for his Father’s Temple.  We should be filled with [productive] anger at the desecration of America at the hands of socialists in our government and we must do the same thing with our votes for America.  Vote them all out and return our country to the land of the free as was intended by God through the efforts of our Founding Fathers. 

  • Phyllis Couper, TVR Board Member

Run and Learn Role of School Board

School Board Training - The Heritage Society is offering some training for those who are involved with local school boards.  It is free.  I have signed up.  There are six sessions lasting 75 minutes each.  The link below provides an outline of each session.  Here is the link:

https://www9.heritage.org/THF-2022-04-School-Board-Training.html?utm_campaign=hfcultivation&utm_medium=email&utm_source=housefile&utm_content=andrew_0414&email_ID=84973

- Doug Miller, Lead for Schools Team, Vice-Chair Central Committee

RNC affirms Party Platform (Whew!)

The Republican National Committee (GOP) at its February 2022 meeting in Salt Lake City, made clear that Republicans remain firmly in support of traditional, family values. The committee passed a resolution supporting the strongest party platform to date on religious liberty and moral/social issues. The Resolution to Reaffirm Our Commitment to the Current Republican Party Platform stated:

“The RNC reaffirms its unwavering commitment to the Republican Party Platform and pledges to continue to structure all initiatives in a manner that furthers the policies reflected therein.”

The resolution was in response to significant backlash from grassroots conservatives against GOP Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel's social media post celebrating homosexual "Pride" month and in favor of the GOP election initiative with the Log Cabin Republicans, an LGBTQ group. McDaniel, celebrating LGBTQ "Pride Month" in June 2021, said the Republican party

"…will continue to grow our big tent by supporting measures that promote fairness and balance protections for LGBTQ Americans and those with deeply held religious beliefs."

This tweet was considered veiled support for the Fairness for All Act, which is similar to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's Equality Act against religious liberty (e.g. traditional Christian beliefs). Months later, also under the leadership of Chairwoman McDaniel, it was reported that the Republican party:

"… announced its first ever 'RNC Pride Coalition' …, partnering with the Log Cabin Republicans to invest and mobilize LGBTQ communities ahead of the 2022 midterm elections."

Log Cabin Republicans is against traditional Christian principles and a staunchly pro-LGBTQ group which states that its agenda includes:

  • Fighting for "legal protections ensuring that LGBT (lesbian, gay/homosexual, bisexual, transgender) couples may adopt or provide foster care in any program sponsored by federal, state, and local governments."

  • Advancing "a nationwide ban on conversion therapy for anyone under the age of 18," meaning the GOP is partnering with a group opposing the parental right to secure Christian counseling for a child struggling with same-sex attraction or sexual identity.

  • Supporting the radical Fairness for All Act that would destroy Christian business owners' religious liberty protections because it offers no legal religious liberty protections for business owners.

In response to the GOP LGBTQ "Pride" tweet and Log Cabin partnership, GOP leadership from every state in the nation experienced backlash. The GOP admitted

"… outreach initiative [with Log Cabin Republicans] create the impression that… it was undermining essential aspects of our platform, including our planks on marriage and religious liberty."

It is good that the GOP issued a course correction and solidified its support for religious liberty, traditional family values, and human sexuality rooted in biology.

  • Written by Tim Wildmon, President, American Family Association

  • Shortened by Harry Briley, TVR Webmaster and Alameda Central Committee AD16 Chair

Resistance to Bills to Curb Violence

Many California. Senators and Assembly members of the majority party are resisting any laws to control widespread violence. Please email representatives to press the legislature for severe penalties for any violence involving in a crime. - A. Dwight Burchett, California Association of Evangelicals

Ethnic Studies Curriculum - Summary Chart

Ethnic Studies Curriculum - I researched the California Department of Education web site to create a 3-page comparative chart. Candidates and conservative activists need this chart to know useful talking points and concerns about each point. Learn what is being taught and specific problems with concepts taken from BLM and CRT as used in this State-wide curriculum. So while public schools are “not teaching CRT”, you need this chart to know questionable aspects that the State is promoting K-12 under the topic of “Ethnic Studies”.

Here is the link to download my summary analysis chart:: Ethnic Studies Curriculum (PDF) - Xaviaer DuRousseau, Alternate Member, Alameda Central Committee

Marks of the Beast

Revelation 13:17 in the Bible says of the mark of the beast, "And that no man might buy or sell save that he had the mark." And what is a vaccine passport but a type of mark that controls what we can and cannot do.

From the very begin­ning, the COVID situation was entrusted to political and medical entities. Instead of this virus being treated like any other annual flu, it became a political vehicle to drive lockdowns, masks, distancing, destruction of jobs and businesses, and increased suicides. Mistrust and suspicion have sprung up toward the political and medical entitles that are dictating the COVID rules. Fear has become a huge factor, creating shame and blame over receiving, or not receiving, the passports.

Transparencies about the negative risk of COVID are not easily found. The FDA announced it would add the warning of developing heart inflammation after the Cen­ters for Disease Control and Prevention report on same. Heart inflammation, either myocarditis or pericarditis, had been found in young adults and children after they received the vaccines, which use mRNA technol­ogy, according to the Epoch Times, June 29, 2021.

Dr. Robert Malone in­vented the mRNA and DNA vaccine core platform tech­nology. In an interview with Dr. Mercola on June 6, 2021, Dr. Malone stated grave concerns about the lack of transparency of side effects, censoring of discussion and the lack of informed consent that these bring. He stated that free SARS-CoV-2 spike protein is biologically active con­trary to initial assumptions, and causes severe problems. It is responsible for the most severe effects seen in COVID, such as bleeding disorders, blood clots and heart problems.

Herbert Spencer on the i State Sanitary Supervision ' (1851), warned about a similar threat to liberty in 1851 in his book "Social Statics" by what he called "sanitary supervision."

Are Americans on a march to Marxist Com­munism via a medically dictatorial mindset? Do we really want to wear a patch or armband like the Jews in Germany or like the children in Russia? Are we willing to accept a "Mark of the beast"? What does this beast look like?

 - Phyllis Couper, TVR Board Member – The Independent Newspaper, 8/19/2021, Page 4

Afghanistan, RIP - Thoughts about Two Wars

This past weekend, 8/15/2021, Afghanistan fell to the Taliban.  Much is being made about the parallels between the fall of South Vietnam on April 30, 1975, and the events in Kabul yesterday.

Here is a personal parallel.  I served for two tours as an Army helicopter pilot in South Vietnam.  More recently, my son served for two tours as an Army helicopter pilot in Afghanistan.  Today, both of us remember our Army friends who never came home or who came home with grievous injuries that have affected them for the rest of their lives.

And it is the same for several thousand Alameda County veterans who served in Afghanistan during the past twenty years.  Their service and sacrifice have been rendered meaningless in a matter of a few days.

And another parallel:  The collapse of South Vietnam began in August 1974 when a Democrat controlled congress voted to stop all assistance to the country.  By the end of the year North Vietnam began a conventional invasion of South Vietnam.  The collapse of Afghanistan began the day President Biden announced all US forces would leave the country by the end of this month.

It gets much worse.  The collapse of Kabul has encouraged our enemies once again.  One day what we faced in Afghanistan and Iraq will seem insignificant in comparison to what we will face.  What will we do?

Doug Miller, ACRP Central Committee

City Councils to fly LGBTQIA+ flag all June

City Councils plan to fly the LGBQTIA+ flag all June (one new Livermore council member asked that it be in perpetuity). The flag decision is likely to be on May 24 Monday 7pm. Here is the Livermore link for finding agenda when it gets posted (also where to sign up to get future agendas). Write out your thoughts to fit within three (3) minutes (write out in advance to help you stay on track). Only in-person and Zoom public comments affect the City Council. Check your own city web site for this agenda item (if not already voted upon) and for the mechanics how to speak your message to your local City Council

https://www.cityoflivermore.net/citygov/clerk/default.htm

They WILL vote for this unless they get a negative public reaction. - Harry Briley, Board Member

CDE Adopts curriculum founded on CRT

According to the Hoover Institute, Tuesday, March 23, 2021, The California Department of Education (CDE) voted to adopt the fourth version of an ethnic studies curriculum after four years, three previous versions, and more than 100,000 objections. The objections are based on the curriculum which continues to be founded on critical race theory (CRT), which is the view that our legal, economic, and social institutions are inherently racist.  https://www.cde.ca.gov

For Background: Critical Race Theory (CRT) derived from one of the main pillars of communist theory hammered out by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels and published in 1848 in the Communist Manifesto. Marx and Engels believed only two classes of people existed: the oppressors and the oppressed. Pitting the two classes against each other would provoke a communist revolution. In education, teachers who teach CRT will view every subject through the lens of race, keeping in mind that one race is the oppressed and the other race is the oppressor. All existing thoughts on racial justice are to be challenged and altered to explain the struggles of the oppressed.  - via Intercessors for America, 5-11-21

- Phyllis Couper, TVR Board Member

Ruth Weiss of Election Integrity Project Tues 4/27 Zoom

The San Ramon Valley Republican Women Federated (SRVRWF) is having Ruth Weiss, VP and Co-founder of Election Integrity Project (EIPCa), speak at their Tuesday, April 27th Zoom meeting (Zoom starts at 11 AM, Mtg. begins at Noon). FREE to both members and non-members.  Please visit the link below to view the meeting announcement flyer and to sign up for the event. http://www.sanramonvalleyrepublicanwomen.com/

Michael Winther to Speak in May

“Who could have imagined that federal, state and local governments in America would mandate the closure of millions of businesses; that it would be illegal for most of the country to go to work; that churches would be shut down; that those few churches who were allowed to meet would be prohibited from singing; that curfews would make it illegal to leave your home at certain times of the day; and that, when allowed to leave our homes, it would be against the law to go anywhere except those locations deemed “essential” to the state?  America, we have a problem!” …..Michael Winther, The Institute for Principle Studies

Institute for Principle Studies plays a pivotal role in reforming society by restoring the institutions of family government, church government and civil government to their God-ordained roles. Come hear Michael Winther at our May Dinner. - Phyllis Couper- TVR Board Member

California Republican Party - Spring Convention

The Spring 2021 Organizing Convention of the California Republican Party occurs this weekend – February 19 – 21. It meets twice a year. Delegates come from Central Committees and exOfficio members who ran for office in 2020. The web site now lists the CAGOP Candidates, Schedule of Events, and ByLaw Change Proposals - See: https://www.cagop.org/s/convention. Invited Speakers are: Senator Rick Scott - FL, Political Analyst Karl Rove, Congresswoman Elise Stefanik - NY, and Governor Kristi Noem - SD

  • Harry Briley, AD16 Chairman

So Much for the Big Blue Wave!

It is hard to remember but less than two months ago the mainstream media was running numerous stories about “the big blue wave” that would sweep Republicans out to sea.  Instead, Republicans picked up 14 congressional seats including three in California!  And now Nancy Pelosi is fighting to maintain her position as Speaker of the House.

If you are a California Republican, there is reason to be optimistic.  We have just seen that vulnerable California Democrats can be defeated.  After the election, the far-left website Axios published a detailed story about Mr. Swalwell’s ties to a Chinese Communist spy.  In fairness to Swalwell, he was not only Bay Area Democrat who was targeted by this foreign agent.  However, he was the only targeted Democrat who serves on the House Intelligence Committee.

Eric Swalwell was also the first Democrat to drop out of the 2020 Presidential Primary because he attracted so little interest.

Is this Democrat congressman now vulnerable?  The answer is up to us.  In the next few months, we need to keep this issue alive by writing letters to the local press, attending Mr. Swalwell’s public events to ask him questions, search for competitive candidates and register Republicans to vote in 2022. 

And think about this:  Does Congressman Swalwell really represent his voters in the East Bay?  When was the last time Mr. Swalwell talked about local issues like crime, transportation, and the high cost of living is this area?  And does Mr. Swalwell still live in his district?

I suggest that he can and should be replaced in 2022. - By Doug Miller, ACRP Vice Chairman