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California Professors Are Now Claiming Farmers’ Markets Are Racist

Professors at San Diego State University are reportedly criticizing farmer’s markets for contributing to the oppression of racial minority groups, according to Campus Reform.

In a new anthology titled “Just Green Enough: Urban Development and Environmental Gentrification”, which includes features from several different professors, San Diego State University geography professors Pascale Joassart-Marcelli and Fernando J. Bosco apparently assert that farmers markets may hurt the very communities they were originally intended to aid.

The critique highlights the process of so-called “environmental gentrification”. In other words, the process by which environmental improvements “lead to the displacement of long term residents,” according to Campus Reform.

The anthology’s description on Routledge.com, argues that environmental improvements, like access to the high quality, fresh food available at farmer’s markets, will essentially increase property values. Therefore drawing in a higher income bracket, while pushing out the long-term inhabitants of the community.

“While global urban development increasingly takes on the mantle of sustainability and ‘green urbanism,’ both the ecological and equity impacts of these developments are often overlooked,” the description reads.

“One result is what has been called environmental gentrification, a process in which environmental improvements lead to increased property values and the displacement of long-term residents,” it continues. “The specter of environmental gentrification is now at the forefront of urban debates about how to accomplish environmental improvements without massive displacement.”

Farmer’s markets are often established in “food deserts,” low income, urban communities where the only grocery store may not have affordable fruits and vegetables of good quality.

As reported by Campus Reform, the professors argue that farmers’ markets are “white spaces where the food consumption habits of white people are normalized,” which leads to a “white habitus” that supposedly excludes minorities.

Bosco and Joassart-Marcelli reportedly conducted their research throughout San Diego, apparently claiming that 44 percent of the California city’s farmer’s markets are located in census tracts “with a high rate of gentrification,” according to Campus Reform.

The numbers have apparently lead the professors to discern that such developments are drawing people from a higher socioeconomic class, which is contributing to the gentrification of these areas, forcing minority communities out.

The professors wrote, “The most insidious part of this gentrification process is that alternative food initiatives work against the community activists and residents who first mobilized to fight environmental injustices and provide these amenities but have significantly less political and economic clout than developers and real estate professionals” reports Campus Reform.

According to the book’s description, the anthology was designed to recognize the possible “social justice” problems and look for alternative forms of greening.

“A ‘just green enough’ strategy focuses explicitly on social justice and environmental goals as defined by local communities, those people who have been most negatively affected by environmental disamenities, with the goal of keeping them in place to enjoy any environmental improvements” it reads.

The description continues by stating: “It is not about short-changing communities, but about challenging the veneer of green that accompanies many projects with questionable ecological and social justice impacts, and looking for alternative, sometimes surprising, forms of greening such as creating green spaces and ecological regeneration within protected industrial zones.”

However, Campus Reform reporter Toni Airaksinen states that the professors fail at providing concrete solutions.

“The professors stop short of offering specific remedies, but do conclude that ‘curbing gentrification is a vexing task’ that requires the involvement of both community members and local governments,” Airaksinen writes.

“‘Strong community involvement,’ they say, is necessary in order to ensure that ‘the needs of the poorest … residents are prioritized,’ while local governments can enact ‘equitable zoning policies, rent-control laws, and property tax reforms in favor of long-time homeowners’ to combat the trend toward gentrification.” (For more from the author of “California Professors Are Now Claiming Farmers’ Markets Are Racist” please click HERE)

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California’s Wildfire Now Largest in State History

The blaze known as the Thomas fire in Southern California is now the largest in the state’s recorded history, fire officials said Saturday evening.

The Thomas fire has scorched 273,400 acres, or about 427 square miles of coastal foothills and national forest.

That makes the Thomas fire 154 acres larger than the 2003 Cedar fire in San Diego that killed 15 people, officials said.

Thousands of firefighters and fleets of aircraft have been battling the Thomas blaze since Dec. 4. A firefighter and a woman fleeing the blaze died.

Days of unrelenting hot, gusty winds drive it through Ventura neighborhoods, incinerating entire blocks, and threatened the wealthy enclave of Montecito. (Read more from “California’s Wildfire Now Largest in State History” HERE)

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Manhunt in California for Suspect in Random Shootings

Police in California’s central valley on Friday were searching for at least one suspect after 10 random shootings on vehicles that resulted in one woman injured.

A woman was shot when she was driving earlier this month in Fresno County, near the rural town of Kerman, Reuters reported. Her injuries were not life-threatening. The nine other shootings occurred between Nov. 27 and Dec. 17, authorities said. Cars were struck by gunfire, but no one was wounded, the report said.

The shooting attacks could turn deadly, Fresno County Sheriff Margaret Mims said at a news conference, Reuters reported.

“If this keeps going, it’s going to be a matter of time before we have a murder investigation,” Mims said. “That’s what we’re trying to avoid.”

Witnesses described the suspect’s vehicle as a dark colored pick-up truck with oversized tires, she said. (Read more from “Manhunt in California for Suspect in Random Shootings” HERE)

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New Evacuations as Huge Southern California Fire Flares Up

Southern California’s largest and most destructive wildfire exploded in size Sunday, forcing more people in the path of the unpredictable flames to get out with their lives.

The so-called Thomas fire has burned about 200,000 acres and is only 15 percent contained, Fox 11 reported. The fire grew by more than 25,000 acres during the day, the Los Angeles Times added. Officials ordered new evacuations for people living east of Mission Canyon and north of Highway 192.

“Some places the smoke is going straight up in the air, and others it’s blowing sideways. Depends on what canyon we’re in,” Santa Barbara County fire spokesman Mike Eliason said. “The winds are kind of squirrely right now.”

Thousands of homes and businesses in the county were without power.

The air thick with acrid smoke, even residents of areas not under evacuation orders took the opportunity to leave, fearing another shutdown of U.S. 101, a key coastal highway that was closed intermittently last week. Officials handed out masks to residents who stayed behind in Montecito, the wealthy hillside enclave that’s home to celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey, Jeff Bridges and Rob Lowe. (Read more from “New Evacuations as Huge Southern California Fire Flares Up” HERE)

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Earthquake WARNING: US Struck by 134 Tremors in ONE WEEK on Most DANGEROUS Fault

Last week a series of 10 mini-earthquakes struck Monterey County in the US state, raising fears a monster tremor could devastate the region.

A powerful, 4.6 magnitude quake 13 miles northeast of Gonzales, along the San Andreas Fault, was the largest to strike the region.

The San Andreas Fault – a 750-mile fissure that runs the length of California – is thought to be long overdue a “Big One” earthquake measuring magnitude 7 or greater.

Since last week, a whopping 134 earthquakes within three miles of that 4.6 tremor were recorded, USGS said.

Of those earthquakes, only 17 were stronger than a 2.5 magnitude and six greater than 3.0, USGS said. (Read more from “Earthquake WARNING: US Struck by 134 Tremors in ONE WEEK on Most DANGEROUS Fault” HERE)

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California Mass Shooter Built His Own Legal Guns

The deranged Northern California gunman built two of the four weapons he used in his bloody rampage himself, authorities said.

Kevin Janson Neal — who killed five people Tuesday before being gunned down by police — fashioned a pair of AR-15 semi-automatic rifles from parts he purchased, the Record Searchlight reported.

“These firearms were manufactured illegally, we believe, by him at his home,” Tehama County Assistant Sheriff Phil Johnston said Wednesday. “So they [the guns] were obtained in an illegal manner, not through a legal process. They are not registered.”

Cops said the crazed gunman had also used two handguns that were registered to someone else. (Read more from “California Mass Shooter Built His Own Legal Guns” HERE)

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Jackass Democratic Congressman Walks out on Moment of Silence

In a highly offensive political stunt, Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., announced Monday night in a Facebook live video that he had walked out of a moment of silence on the House floor for the victims of Sunday’s church massacre in Texas. Congressman Lieu declared that he “will not be silent” and demanded immediate action on gun control.

“My colleagues right now are doing a moment of silence in the House of Representatives chambers,” Lieu said. “I respect their right to do that and I myself have participated in many of them.”

“But I can’t do this again; I’ve been to too many moments of silences. In just my short period in Congress three of the worst mass shootings in U.S. history have occurred. I will not be silent.”

By skipping the moment of silence and declaring what he did to the whole world, Lieu instantly drew attention to himself. He took advantage of the situation to make a series of gun control demands.

“I urge us to pass reasonable gun safety legislation, including a universal background check law supported by 80 percent of Americans, a ban on assault rifles, and a ban on bump stocks,” he said.

“We need to do that. We cannot be silent. We need to act now.”

Let’s go through these one at a time, because each of these ideas is an exercise in futility.

First, there is already a background check in place that was supposed to stop the Texas church shooter. It failed. It failed because of a lack of proper law enforcement and a bloated federal bureaucracy. The shooter, Devin Patrick Kelley, was previously convicted of domestic violence. In 2012, while he was serving in the Air Force, he fractured his infant stepson’s skull and assaulted his wife.

His conviction for these terrible crimes disqualified him from legal gun ownership. But the Air Force failed to submit his records to a federal database used in background checks. So when a background check was run on Kelley, nothing came up to prevent him from buying a firearm.

A new universal background check law would not have stopped this oversight. If the federal government cannot properly enforce laws already on the books, how can anyone possibly expect the addition of new laws and a new federal database to work properly?

Second, a ban on media-named “assault rifles” like the AR-15 wouldn’t have disarmed Kelley. But it would have disarmed Stephen Willeford, the good guy with a gun who stopped Kelley, and potentially endangered more people.

In an interview with CRTV host Steven Crowder, Willeford revealed that when he confronted Kelley, who had shot up the church with an AR-15 rifle, Kelley was garbed in tactical gear, a SWAT-style helmet with a visor, and a bulletproof Kevlar vest. Willeford said Kelley was also in possession of a handgun at the time he engaged him. Willeford, armed with his own AR-15 rifle, managed to shoot Kelley in an exposed area on his side between the pieces of his Kevlar vest.

In the interview, Willeford stressed to Crowder that if he had not had his AR-15, he would not have been able to stop Kelley, and only God knows what Kelley might have done next.

“If I had run out of the house, and maybe this is a political plug or whatever, but if I had run out of the house with a pistol and faced bulletproof vests and Kevlar helmets, it might’ve been futile,” Willeford said. “I ran out with an AR-15 and that’s what he was shooting the place up with. And I hate to politicize that but that’s reality.”

Third, a ban on bump stocks is largely meaningless, as even the liberal Huffington Post figured out. Bump firing is a technique, not a weapons modification. All a bump stock does is replace the stock on a rifle to make bump firing easier to perform.

Bump stocks are an “insignificant portion of the market,” to quote the HuffPo. Banning their sale will not remove the currently legal gun accessories from the market, and as gun expert Paul Glasco of the TV show “Legally Armed America” explained, bump stocks “are not viable options when it comes to accuracy and trying to be proficient with a firearm,” and “only a jackass would use one.”

So Congressman Lieu, despicably and disrespectfully, walked out on a moment of silence for the victims of the Texas church massacre to push for gun control measures that would be utterly pointless and entirely ineffective at stopping mass shootings or saving those now dead.

All Rep. Lieu’s jackass stunt will accomplish is scoring political points with the ignorant. Shame on him. (For more from the author of “Jackass Democratic Congressman Walks out on Moment of Silence” please click HERE)

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School ‘Violates Student Privacy’ With Sex Survey

A California school is being accused of violating a number of laws regarding student privacy and parental notification for allowing a reporter access to children to quiz them about their sexual activities and then publish the results, including quotes from minors.

The issue in the Fresno Unified School District was outlined in a letter the Pacific Justice Institute sent to district officials just days ago.

The student interrogations, approved by school officials, were conducted by Mackenzie Mays of the Fresno Bee.

A state law mandates medically accurate, unbiased sex education, including lessons on contraception, HIV and sexual consent, the newspaper said.

The questions included age, where students learned the most about sex, whether they were taught about abortion, the LGBTQ agenda, how to get condoms and whether they have had sex. (Read more from “School ‘Violates Student Privacy’ With Sex Survey” HERE)

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Mega-Wildfires Caused by Bad Government?

Have major changes in forest-management practices over the past century had anything to do with the historic, devastating wildfires in Northern California?

Many successful methods of mitigating wildfires employed by U.S. Forest Service in the early 20th century were abandoned largely because of efforts by environmental activists, argued Rep. Tom Clintock on the House floor Oct. 3.

McClintock, the Heritage Foundation’s Daily Signal reported, contends 1970s laws such as the National Environmental Policy Act and the Endangered Species Act in particular have led to poor forest management.

The congressman said the laws “have resulted in endlessly time-consuming and cost-prohibitive restrictions and requirements that have made the scientific management of our forests virtually impossible.”

More than a dozen wildfires in Northern California’s wine country have burned hundreds of thousands of acres, killing dozens of people with hundreds more missing. In addition, thousands of homes and businesses have been destroyed. (Read more from “Mega-Wildfires Caused by Bad Government?” HERE)

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Firefighters Battling Flames, High Winds Near Town of Sonoma

Latest developments in the North Bay fires:

12:35 p.m. Evacuation lift: Officials in Sonoma County will lift the evacuation order for Sutter Santa Rosa Regional Hospital at 3 p.m. The hospital is located just off Highway 101 on Mark West Springs Road. Other areas around the hospital will remain under a mandatory evacuation order.

12:10 p.m. Spot fire explodes in Sonoma: Winds kicked up a small fire at Lovall Valley Road and Wood Valley Road, causing it to explode in 30- to 40-foot flames that marched downhill toward the town of Sonoma. In a matter of minutes the fire had chewed up several acres. A helicopter swooped in to dump water on the blaze, and ground crews rushed to the attack.

12:35 p.m. Evacuation lift: Officials in Sonoma County will lift the evacuation order for Sutter Santa Rosa Regional Hospital at 3 p.m. The hospital is located just off Highway 101 on Mark West Springs Road. Other areas around the hospital will remain under a mandatory evacuation order. (Read more from “Firefighters Battling Flames, High Winds Near Town of Sonoma” HERE)

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