Here Come The #HB2Liars Twitter Sock Puppet Accounts

Alongside the Hollywood useful idiots and astroturfed outrage over a bill that protects everyone in North Carolina, comes the lovely Twitter sock puppet accounts.

Here are just two I’ve come across in the last 24 hours.

 

 

Neither one could tell me what specifically was wrong with the law.
Neither one could tell me what specifically was wrong with the Charlotte ordinance.

Show Me Where HB2 Hurt YouI suspect neither one of these Outrage Industry sock puppet accounts has read either document.

If they did, they either don’t understand either document or they are willfully lying.

Do your own experiment out there people. When someone screams ‘bigot’ at you or that the bill is “hateful” at you over HB 2, ask them specifically what’s wrong with the law.

When I say specific, ask them to cite the section of the law that has their panties in a wad. See what happens.

After their panties are in a wad, follow-up with asking them about the registered sex offender who was leading the fight for this ordinance.  Watch their head explode.

I’m gonna bet you a dollar at that point they turn around and fling the social media equivalent of poo at you instead of answering you.  They might even suggest you’re a whore or something:

 

SHUT UP and SIT DOWN, They explained…

This is the same type of coordinated bullying we saw go on in Indiana.  It is the same collection of useful idiots following the directions of the Human Rights Campaign.

They don’t want equality or freedom, this is about power and politics. They want to hammer any Republican within a 1,000 square mile radius who dares reject the social justice warrior agenda.

This isn’t about a law, which protects all NC citizens, allows private business to function as it wishes and protects school kids from the impending FedEd lawsuits.

No, this is about SHUT UP and SIT DOWN. Do it our way, or else.

This is about Shutuppery. It’s that simple.

Just like Hollywood Director, Rob Reiner, hasn’t read them either according to an editor’s note at the end of an  interview with Lt. Governor Forest in the Hollywood Reporter:

Editor’s note: THR asked Rob Reiner to respond to Forest’s assertion that he does not understand the law that he objects to and the filmmaker responded with the following statement: “This law is so discriminatory that Dow Chemical and I are on the same side. That ought to tell you something about how unjust it is.”

Poor Meat head. Can’t answer a simple question?

Mr. Reiner, here are the FACTS. Go read them, share them with your knee-jerk astroturf pals and then apologize to an entire state for being liars.

Liberal Hollywood at it’s finest. Speaking of Hollywood, there have been around 800 films or TV shows shot in North Carolina.

So out of curiosity, what was the last movie you shot in North Carolina Mr. Reiner?

Because I went through your directorial film list that goes back to 1974 and not a single one was shot in our state.


Related Reading

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), LGBTQ Issues, NCGA, Pat McCrory, POLITICS NC, YWBMTC | Tagged , | Comments Off on Here Come The #HB2Liars Twitter Sock Puppet Accounts

The Rise of the #HB2Liars [Updated]

I noted yesterday the media was already on the ground laying the narrative that HB 2 was ‘rolling back civil rights’ and ‘removing LGBT protections’.

Narrative keanuThe NC campaign to paint HB 2 as discriminating against veterans, disabled persons, LGBT individuals and even pregnant women, has begun.

None of these claims are even remotely true.  But that doesn’t matter. This is the narrative.

What matters is that the NC Democrats and all their Blueprint NC left leaning buddies are shouting it on every platform available to them.

They are counting on no one reading the legislation, much less understanding it.  They are counting on the fact no one understands how municipality rule making authority works.

To be blunt, they are counting on people being either dumb or too lazy to do research. It’s a good bet, sadly.

At any rate, the NCGOP messaging machine is… well, it doesn’t exist.

We need to shout louder.

We = YOU, by the way.  Are you not sick to death of having this social justice crap rammed down your throats? Aren’t you tired of being ‘made to care’ about ‘civil rights’ that are often frankly, not ‘civil’ and not ‘rights’?

For crying out loud, stop worrying about upsetting the apple cart, stand up for yourself and your kids.  If anyone can ‘self identify’ their gender at any given moment, despite their physical situation, what’s next? Sky’s the limit people. Not to sound flippant, but we’re headed for the Venkman speech — Cats, dogs.. living together. Mass hysteria!  

So, call out this lie to their faces. Seriously.  Use #HB2Liars on Twitter. Use #KeepNCSafe.

Need an example? The email in the tweet below was in my inbox last night. I took a screenshot, got on Twitter and pretty much called her a liar.

Note the lie line in the email:

“In an unnecessary, one-day special session that cost our state more than $40,000, lawmakers rushed through House Bill 2 (HB2), which rolls back individual civil rights of North Carolinians.”

HB 2 does not “roll back individual civil rights”.  That’s a lie. Period.

We had to call a special session due to Charlotte’s Mayor and City Council deciding to supersede their rule making authority with a dangerous ordinance that had statewide implications.   Charlotte should pay the cost. They caused it.

Towns, cities and municipalities derive their authority and rule making from the state, folks. Not the other way around.

The Charlotte Ordinance did the following:

  • Made single sex bathrooms illegal.
  • Granted legal access to any facility, at any time, by anyone which opened the door for sexual predators to have legal access to areas they did not have before.
  • Violated the NC Constitution.
  • Violated multiple state privacy statutes (indecent exposure).
  • Violated existing state criminal trespass law.
  • Violated building codes.

HB 2 does the following:

  • Rolls back Charlotte’s ordinance as it superseded their authority and state law.
  • Puts into place a uniform statewide anti-discrimination policy on the basis of race, religion, color, national origin, age or sex.  (This is a real anti-discrimination policy. Ask the #HB2Liars why the Democrats had not done this themselves in the hundred years they ruled the state.)
  • Establishes a single, statewide standard for K-12 public schools, public buildings, and other public areas throughout North Carolina.
  • Schools  and other facilities are NOT prohibited from providing reasonable accommodations such as single occupancy/unisex bathroom.
  • The bill makes it easier to do business in North Carolina; it prevents businesses from being forced to comply with different rules in different cities/municipalities across the state.
  • Ensures attempts that future ordinances will not have to go through this same fight

Related Reading:  Man in women’s locker room cites gender rule

UPDATE:
Be on the look out for sock puppet accounts promoting the #HB2Liars narrative, like this one:

 

 

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), BlueprintNC, LGBTQ Issues, Media Bias, NC Dems, NCGA, Social Justice | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments

Here Comes The Knee Jerk Astroturf Over #HB2

The North Carolina legislature and Governor rolled back the radical and dangerous Charlotte bathroom ordinance on Wednesday via HB 2.  Now the drive by media and related business bullies are out in force.

Look at the pile of knee jerk dumb from the NBA:

As expected our media is calling HB 2 an anti-gay law, gay bias law or a gay discrimination law. It’s none of these things whatsoever, as I made abundantly clear yesterday.

What is made clear from the media coverage like this NY Times “education” reporter named Mokoto Rich, is that not a single one of the entities crying foul likely has actually read either the Charlotte ordinance or the law rolling it back.

Dear Ms. Mokoto – The Charlotte ordinance was illegal and violated the State Constitution. That’s kind of important. HB 2 is not a biased against any orientation. Your lying headline is click bait to an even worse article.

This is how Mokoto describes what happened:

The immediate trigger for the legislature’s action was the passage of an anti-discrimination ordinance in Charlotte last month that would permit transgender people to use public bathrooms that correspond with their gender identity, rather than their gender at birth. But the law passed by the legislature on Wednesday night, which prohibits municipalities from passing their own ordinances allowing such bathroom use, also prevents cities from protecting gays and bisexual people against discrimination generally.

Did you note the lack of description of how far the Charlotte ordinance went?

Media ActivismDid you note how Mokoto completely misrepresents HB 2?

This is NY Times “journalism”.

And by journalism, I mean full on biased activism peppered with a statements that have no basis in fact, yet sound horrifying enough no one questions them.

Mokoto also took the time to cite Mayor Jennifer Rodgers…
Err, umm.. Roberts. Err.. typo in a major news outlet or whatever.

By the way, not once does Mokoto mention the LGBT group who pushed this Charlotte ordinance was led by a registered sex offender. Doesn’t fit the narrative.

Mokoto’s article gives a list of what businesses are having a knee-jerk reaction:

American Airlines, which employs 14,000 people in the state and has its second largest hub in Charlotte, along with other companies with operations in the state, including Apple, Dow Chemical, PayPal, Red Hat and Biogen, all issued statements critical of the new law.

Good to know who not to patronize anymore.  Also, why is it businesses get to decide for the tax paying citizens where we can pee and can’t?

Most of these companies are pets of the Human Rights Campaign, which has been orchestrating these ordinances in various cities nationwide and who is pursuing increased LGBT ‘education’ in our schools.

Here’s a question for these businesses, what are their OWN company policies on bathrooms and related facilities?

Do they have just one bathroom for both sexes? That’s in essence what the Charlotte ordinance did, you know. It also barred businesses from having single sex facilities.

Show us your transgender bathrooms, Apple, Dow Chemical, PayPal, Red Hat and Biogen.

Seriously. Video can be done with a phone. Go into your offices and show us where your employees pee.

Apple?
Apparently your MEN’S ROOM sign is cool.

Dow?
How do your shareholders feel about you supporting an ordinance that banned single sex bathrooms in business while coming out against a bill that protects women and children?  This shareholder put in an order to dump your stock this morning. Congrats.

PayPal?
Oh that’s right, you’re mostly online.  I don’t see anything about your facilities policies at all in your manual.  I will definitely be shopping for a new tip jar. If you’re not smart enough to read the ordinance and the bill rolling it back, you’re not smart enough to handle my money.

How about Red Hat?
Too cool for a transgender bathroom policy? It’s mentioned nowhere on your company website.

Biogen?
They tweeted this:

Expanded eh? How? Do those expanded benefits include banning single sex bathrooms from your workplace like Charlotte’s ordinance tried to?

These are the some of the very same collection of useful corporate idiots who have backed things like Common Core in North Carolina, folks.

So why are is anyone listening to them? Why do these businesses get to dictate to North Carolina families what is acceptable privacy, safety and comfort? Or what is acceptable for education?

Simple — Money and power.  You will be made to care.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), LGBTQ Issues, Media Bias, NCGA | Tagged , | 3 Comments

#NCGA Bill Reverses Radical Transgender Bathroom Ordinance, Governor Signs It

TransBathroomYesterday, the North Carolina General Assembly held a special session to address the illegal and radical Charlotte bathroom ordinance.

What did this radical ordinance do?

  • As written, the ordinance permitted anyone to use any public bathroom, shower or changing room anywhere – including private businesses.  This gives sexual predators of all types a legal means to gain entry to areas they might not have had before. It did not help Charlotte’s ordinance that the man leading the charge was a registered Sex offender.
  • The ordinance, as written, outlawed single-sex facilities like bathrooms and changing rooms.
  • It also violated the state Constitution and was beyond the licensing and policing authority for cities in North Carolina.  Read Rep. Bishop’s letter to Mayor Roberts outlining the problems with their ordinance.

The legislature took very swift action. House Bill 2, the Public Facilities Privacy & Security Act, passed through the House mainly on party lines with 10 Democrats voting with the Republicans.

Rep. Grier Martin tried to monkey with portions of the language and insert gender identity back in. His amendment was tabled and then voted down 72-35.

Rep. Tricia Cotham did some ‘look at me, I’m running for congress’ grandstanding insisting that specific language about assisting children to be put into the bill. The bill already had language allowing for such assistance, but Cotham wanted to make a federal case out of it, likely for the media attention.  She got her wish and now kids under 7 are specified in the bill.

She and Rep. Grier tag-teamed lied on Twitter and I called them both out, noting Section D clearly refers to ‘that needing assistance’.

The bill moved on to the Senate, where the Democrats decided they weren’t going to do their jobs nor defend the vast majority of North Carolina families.

Yes, the Democrats walked out on the vote.

The bill then passed through the Senate quite quickly.

The bill was then signed by Governor McCrory last night.

If you want to read how tolerant the Left and the LGBT community are, read the replies to that tweet from the governor.

The Lt. Governor issued a video statement, that included what the ordinance did, why it was dangerous and why HB2 was needed.

We Will Be Made To Care – Through Appeals

ABC 11 reported the ACLU is looking at legal challenges:

“Instead of solving any real problems, the law would create new ones and could lead to intolerable and unfair conditions for transgender students who are entitled, by federal law, to a safe and equitable education,” said Tara Borello, a senior attorney with Lambda Legal.

Intolerable and unfair conditions? How about the intolerable and unfair condition of forcing any given person to use facilities with the opposite sex?

I look forward to the ACLU explaining how a ridiculously small number of the population supersedes the needs, safety, comfort, and privacy of the vast majority of people.

Remember, the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) reported in 2014 that 2.3% of the U.S. population identified as gay, lesbian or bisexual. Of that 2.3%, only about .7% “self-identified” as transgender. That .7% subset translates to about 51,359 people nationwide or roughly around 1,027 people per state if divided equally (which is unlikely).

North Carolina has a population that is just passing 10 million people.

Why is HB 2 Important?

HB 2, in addressing Charlotte’s egregious overreach, ensures that municipalities and counties can’t pass anti-discrimination rules beyond what is set out by the state.

What’s crucial about this is that it covers public schools and college campuses.
This is essential in stopping the U.S. Department of Education’s abusive use of Title IX lawsuits wherein they have attempted to force schools and districts to allow what is basically an open facilities policy.

Since Attorney General Cooper wouldn’t do his job, the Governor has stepped up in that fight and joined a multi-state Amicus Brief against the US Dept. of Education’s lawsuits.

Chapel Hill Carrboro is already attempting to make stalls ‘gender neutral‘ and Wake County Schools have sent mixed messages on what is being allowed or not allowed there.

HB 2 says schools and school boards must require bathrooms or locker rooms be designated for use only by people based on their biological sex. HB2  does not prohibit schools from creating a unisex facility to accommodate ‘self-identifying’ transgender students.

Frankly, if the Charlotte ordinance had called for the creation of unisex facilities to be present in government/city-held locations, I doubt anyone would have objected.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), LGBTQ Issues, NCGA, Pat McCrory, Social Justice, YWBMTC | Tagged , , | 10 Comments

More About MTSS – Multi-Tiered System of Supports

isnt-common-core greatCommon Core Standards are so great, it needs a hefty “Multi-Tiered System of Supports”  to ensure success.

Earlier in March, I wrote about the Wake County School Board basically dismissing teacher concerns captured by a recent survey.

That survey included the nugget that, “only 50% believe that all students can meet grade level benchmarks given sufficient supports”.

In that earlier article, it was noted that the Wake Board ignored Common Core as a factor yet again and instead, called for ‘more support’. That support comes in the form of MTSS, which stands for Multi-Tiered System of Supports.

MTSS has a predecessor, which was called RTI (Response To Intervention). Unlike RTI, MTSS seems to be specifically tied to supporting Common Core.

I promised  I would have more on MTSS and I keep my promises.  What follows is basically a dossier on MTSS.  Readers can browse through what I’ve found and make what they will of it.

North Carolina Websites Related to MTSS 

MTSS appears to have gained popularity in 2012, when many states were a year or two into Common Core implementation.

When  Googling MTSS,  the first results that pop are in Florida. In the list below, note that California’s documentation specifies that Common Core is the prime purpose for using the MTSS framework.

FL: http://florida-rti.org/floridaMTSS/index.htm
MI: http://www.michigan.gov/mde/0,4615,7-140-28753_65803-322534–,00.html
SD: http://doe.sd.gov/oess/mtss.aspx
VT: http://www.uvm.edu/~cdci/best/pbswebsite/Resources/MTSSRTIIFieldGuide.pdf
UT: http://www.schools.utah.gov/umtss/UMTSS-Model/UtahMTSS.aspx
KS: http://www.kansasmtss.org/pdf/Structuring-Guides/Structuring-Module-1-Guide.pdf
OR: http://www.ode.state.or.us/initiatives/elearning/nasdse/mtssrtimarch2012.pdf
CA: http://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/cr/ri/mtsscomprti2.asp

CA specifically moved to MTSS because of CCSS:

“In California, MTSS is an integrated, comprehensive framework that focuses on CCSS, core instruction, differentiated learning, student-centered learning, individualized student needs, and the alignment of systems necessary for all students’ academic, behavioral, and social success. “

Two other reports that detail the connection between Common Core and the use of MTSS come from Scholastic and the Council of Great City Schools.  It is worth noting both rely heavily on data and both have emphasis on ‘behavioral’, ‘social’ and ‘parent engagement’ factors.

Scholastic report – 2012:
http://research.scholastic.com/sites/default/files/publications/READ180_ProfessionalPaper_MTSS_2012.pdf

Page 4 of the Scholastic report notes that 40 states are using MTSS due to Common Core:

“More recently, the adoption of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS), where all students are expected to demonstrate mastery of a new, more rigorous set of educational standards, provides an additional justification for a model that encompasses the needs of all learners, regardless of whether they are struggling or have advanced learning needs, and provides a clear, systematic approach for intervention when students are not on track to mastering these standards (Common Core State Standards Initiative, 2010).

To date, more than 40 states have already implemented their version of MTSS, and students are benefiting from the early intervention and learning support MTSS models provide (National Center on Learning Disabilities, 2011). Program evaluation efforts are currently underway in states such as Kansas (MTSS, 2011) to systematically measure the progress of MTSS toward meeting its main goal of creating a statewide system of support to local schools and districts in order to increase schools’ capacity to use resources in ways that enable every child to be successful. This report focuses on describing how READ 180 Next Generation helps schools meet students’ academic and behavioral needs through the lens of the MTSS model.”

2012 – Council of Great City Schools:
http://www.cgcs.org/cms/lib/DC00001581/Centricity/Domain/87/77–Achievement%20Task%20Force–RTI%20White%20Paper-Final.pdf

Page 10 of the Council of Great City Schools Report details the relationship between MTSS and CCSS :

The Common Core State Standards are designed to help students prepare for meeting rigorous college and career expectations. The standards require individuals to have a deep understanding of academic content and the ability to apply that academic knowledge and skills.

To get students ready to meet these standards, school districts and schools will need to provide not only higher quality instruction, but also instruction that is more integrated across subject areas than ever before.

A Multi-Tiered System of Supports is completely consistent with the Common Core State Standards. However, MTSS builds on these standards to provide a framework and a set of critical tools and additional time to support teaching and learning at differing levels of intensity, depending on the academic needs of the students.

In other words, the CCSS articulates the “what” in teaching; and MTSS provides a framework for “how and when” to provide it.

In short, MTSS employs a problem-solving process that helps match instructional resources and focus to educational needs; makes the instructional adjustments necessary for continued improvement in both student academic performance and students’ rates of progress; and assesses the effectiveness of instruction/interventions on student outcomes.

MTSS is also designed to be preventive in nature because it uses a variety of early warning signs to ensure that educators can work to accelerate student progress before it is too late. Furthermore, MTSS provides an earlier and more appropriate identification of students who are not on track academically, and allows differentiated instruction and intervention as soon as a need is identified.

So, students do not have to exhibit significant academic failure or behavioral difficulties before they receive support. In addition, using a tiered, systematic, and schoolwide approach—which links socially appropriate behaviors and student engagement in academic work into a seamless system— has the great potential to increase student engagement in learning and reduce behavioral and disciplinary distractions. In this way, academically engaged time and behavior are connected strongly to student achievement.

Best practices in MTSS thereby support appropriate and acceptable behavior and bolster student achievement, and can result in less reactive interventions and a greater concentration of scarce personnel and program resources onto students in greatest need.

In sum, MTSS leverages the full array of instructional resources strategically and purposefully in a systemic and cooperative fashion for the sole purpose of improving student achievement and behavior.
When implemented with fidelity and used as a robust and data-driven decision making process, MTSS results in significantly greater percentages of students achieving on grade level and likely meeting the Common Core State Standards.

Moreover, the system leads to greater student engagement and decreased discipline referrals, as well as fewer students requiring special education services. MTSS can also help reduce the disproportionate representation of students from various racial/ethnic groups and those with developing levels of English proficiency in the ranks of those requiring special education services.

The reason for this potential outcome is that with MTSS, the needs of such students can be met at the outset of the instructional process rather than after they begin to slip behind. Finally, this system of tiered instruction is particularly important because the new, higher academic standards will undoubtedly reveal deficits in current instructional practices, as well as weaknesses in academic achievement.

The Common Core State Standards should improve educational outcomes over time, but they could also reveal a history of inadequate instruction and may exacerbate achievement gaps. To mitigate this possibility, MTSS can be used to ensure that all students, including those who are excelling and in need of enriched instruction and activities, have full access to effective instruction and supports from the start in order to achieve better outcomes.

Finally, this system of tiered instruction is particularly important because the new, higher academic standards will undoubtedly reveal deficits in current instructional practices, as well as weaknesses in academic achievement. The Common Core State Standards should improve educational outcomes over time, but they could also reveal a history of inadequate instruction and may exacerbate achievement gaps. To mitigate this possibility, MTSS can be used to ensure that all students, including those who are excelling and in need of enriched instruction and activities, have full access to effective instruction and supports from the start in order to achieve better outcomes.

Brief Description of MTSS Components

The components of an effective MTSS framework include:

1. A well-defined district- and school-based leadership and organizational structure;
2. District policies and practices that align with and support a multi-tiered system;
3. Technology sufficient to support instructional decision making (e.g., data) and implementation of instruction (e.g., UDL);
4. Robust and valid core instruction delivered to all students;
5. The use of data-based decision making to match instructional resources to educational needs;
6. Assessment of expected rates of progress;
7. The use of three tiers of increasingly intensive (time and focus of instruction) instructional supports and strategies;
8. Professional development to ensure fidelity of implementation of the MTSS methodology and the Common Core State Standards;
9. An evaluation process that monitors both implementation and outcomes; and
10. The engagement of parents and caregivers.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EDUCATION | 2 Comments

#WCPSS School Board Channels Their Inner Atheist

The Wake County School Board is channeling their inner Atheist.
They are in search of a problem and have not considered the problem might be them.

News and Observer:

The recital of the Pledge of Allegiance in Wake County schools could come with a lesson about the way people have been coerced to recite the pledge during the nation’s history.

All North Carolina public schools are required under a 2006 state law to schedule time each day for students to recite the pledge, although students can’t be compelled to participate. But a proposed Wake County school board policy goes further to say the district’s citizenship curriculum “may encourage teachers to use the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance as an opportunity to teach students about the history concerning coercion and the importance of the First Amendment to the Bill of Rights.”

A school board committee recommended Tuesday sending the policy to the full board for approval. After the meeting, board members and school administrators said they were simply including language suggested by the N.C. School Boards Association.

Ya got that? Reciting the Pledge of Allegiance needs the context of historical ‘coercion’.

This board continues to search for problems that don’t exist.  They continue listening to Leftist outfits intent on infusing social justice and Leftist narratives into the Wake County School District.

Small wonder the charter and homeschool population in Wake is outpacing the rest of the state.

Who is whispering in the Board’s ear this time? Might it be the ACLU, who the article cites?

“Wake County’s citizenship curriculum offers an opportunity to underline for students the history of free speech in our country,” Christopher Brook, legal director of the ACLU of North Carolina, said in a written statement. “The curriculum is a great chance to reiterate the protections afforded us by the First Amendment, including those against the government compelling individuals to engage in speech.”

Free speech, huh?

Like an 11-year old in Maryland who spoke his mind about vegetarianism and was slapped with a 5 day lunchtime suspension by ‘anti-bullying specialists’ and had their case wind up in court?   Where was the ACLU on that one?
Ban all Things - Easily offendedThis looks like a long-time recycled issue to me.

If you have a problem with saying the Pledge of this nation because of the words ‘under God’ being in it, then one has bigger problems that are purely one’s own.

Solution? Don’t say it.

No one in the state of North Carolina is compelled to do so.

The Wake board knows this.

One has to wonder how much more this board can mess with before their terms come to an end this Fall.

Meanwhile, in Charlotte Mecklenburg school district, Supt. Ann Clark proposed an $805 million dollar bond for renovations, new schools and expansions.  This proposal comes a year after it was announced that the district was losing students, their estimate was off by a third and was at a 6 year low for enrollment.

Oh and it was uncovered that 3 teachers were arrested last year for assaulting students in the Charlotte Mecklenburg district last year.

Posted in EDUCATION, Wake County School Board | Tagged , | 2 Comments