8th Grade Teacher Recorded in QAnon Rant to Class
A California middle school teacher was recorded telling students that Hunter Biden had sex with his niece and that hospitals are stealing babies from unvaccinated parents.
In the seven-minute recording taken on October 18th, the unidentified female history teacher at Anacapa Middle School in Ventura can be heard ranting at her eighth grade class on subjects ranging from vaccines and government, child pornography, and the presidency.
The teacher, whose wild theories are closely aligned with those of far-right group QAnon, also heavily implied to her students that Donald Trump is still president, according to mom Sarah Silikula, whose son recorded her outburst.
Rightist are always all about how $$$ = Quality, now you don't care. Funny how that works
Part of the homeless problem is that the homeless come here because they won't freeze to death in winter like they would in say Nevada. There's also an issue of other states, namely Red states "bussing" their homeless over to California.
California has the nations 5th best healthcare.
Income inequality is where California fails hard, we have a lot of very poor and very rich. The highest amount of billionaires reside in California. That furthers the income inequality factor. eg A doctor making $350k a year looks poor compared to someone making 275million.
Originally posted by snowdragon
California does have the largest economy of any state and leads the usa in poverty, weird dichotomy.
Originally posted by RobtardAll the top ten lowest poverty rates (with the exception of Utah) are heavily democratic states.
Um... California is #26 in poverty rate
QTard Gets 14 Months for Attacking Troops
Acting United States Attorney Richard G. Frohling of the Eastern District of Wisconsin announced that on November 18, 2021, Ian Alan Olson of Nashotah, Wisconsin was sentenced to 14 months in prison, to be followed by one year of supervised release, for attacking United States Servicemen on account of their status as servicemen.
According to court records, on March 15, 2021, Olson drove his vehicle to the U.S. Army Reserve station in Pewaukee, Wisconsin. Olson's vehicle was spray painted on all sides with words and symbols associated with the QAnon conspiracy theory.
Olson then got out of his vehicle, produced what appeared to be a rifle, pointed it at two uniformed U.S. Army servicemen who were in the station's parking lot, and exclaimed, "This is for America." Olson then fired the weapon, which turned out to be a paintball gun, directly at the two servicemen.
After Olson's paintball gun jammed, the servicemen tackled him to the ground. Both servicemen initially believed Olson was holding a real firearm, and they feared that Olson intended to shoot and kill them.
In announcing sentence, U.S. District Judge Brett Ludwig noted the seriousness of Olson's conduct, saying that it showed disrespect for the country, for the rule of law, and for U.S. military service personnel.
According to federal court documents, Olson told intake staff at the Waukesha County Jail that he had just returned from Washington, where he failed to deliver his message. He allegedly said he would cause a "mass casualty" event and that people would remember his name.
"I am ready for this. How many people need to die for a message to get across," he said, according to the complaint. Prosecutors said Olson owns armor-piercing bullets and several guns.
Ian Alan Olson was in DC ahead of March 4th—a highly anticipated date for QAnon followers. Some believers of the discredited conspiracy thought that the day would result in Donald Trump being reinstated as president and the beginning of "The Storm."
The day before this failed fantasy date, Olson told a member of the National Guard that he was "maybe going to do something crazy stupid tomorrow." Shortly after, Olson was approached by Capitol police.
He told the police officer that he wanted to "test the National Guard tomorrow to see if they were loyal to the people or to the President," according to the complaint. Not being shot would demonstrate the National Guard's loyalty to "the people," Olson explained to the cop.