Mortgage records are public, not weaponization. Reporters refused to cover it, and the House Ethics Committee ignored the file on Adam Schiff I submitted in 2023 and again on October 16, 2024. They didn’t do their job, so I did it for them. Now @AGPamBondi and @pulte are following up because a citizen like me did what Congress and the press wouldn’t.”
BREAKING NOW!!
TSA has been running the largest domestic surveillance program in U.S. history. Quiet Skies was just the beginning. WE WILL BE EXPOSING Operation “Paul Revere” in the next couple of days. TSA hired outside contractors to circumvent federal law to spy on innocent Americans. Conservatives.
#privatizeTSA @LaboscoSonya@KristiNoem @Sec_Noem @DNIGabbard@realDonaldTrump@SenRandPaul@RogerJStoneJr@SebGorka
Jerome Powell is a main reason for the Housing Supply Crisis in this Country. By improperly keeping interest rates high, Jerome Powell is trapping homeowners in low-rate mortgages and choking off existing home sales—directly fueling the housing supply crisis. He must lower rates.
We agree that there should be no kings.
And here in California, we’ve seen authoritarianism. The leftists flooding the streets today are protesting the wrong man.
Oh look whose topping the charts at Substack. … Terry Moran who was just fired from ABC is now appearing in every corner of the internet.
More proof EVERYTHING that happens in the ‘news’ is a PSYOP.
Terry wasn’t fired like you and me get fired, the swamp just moved this useful spokes-mouth to a different medium, from TV to print propaganda.
OFFICIAL STATEMENT FROM CHRISTINE BISH
Candidate for U.S. Congress – CA-6
Let’s get one thing straight: no one is above the law—not even a sitting U.S. Senator.
Video footage of Senator Alex Padilla being detained is making headlines, but what’s being left out is the critical fact that he was given a lawful directive to cease and desist—and he chose to ignore it.
Law enforcement officers do not have the luxury of selective enforcement. When individuals, regardless of title or political power, interfere with operations or violate security protocol, they are subject to the law just like every other American. That’s not authoritarianism. That’s accountability.
Democrats are quick to cry “abuse of power” when they’re the ones facing consequences. But these same voices stayed silent as everyday Americans were censored, raided, and demonized for simply exercising their First Amendment rights.
Let me be clear: U.S. Senators are not above the law, and if we’re serious about defending democracy, we should be defending the equal application of the law, not special treatment for elites.
Christine Bish
Republican for Congress
https://t.co/yjFI9j1Ja5
Local LE, if you want to 100X your relationships positively with every law abiding member of the communities you serve, please explain to us the politics of what’s happening in Los Angeles right now…
How can local leaders down there be calling for the police to resist federal agents?
Law abiding citizens need to hear from their local LEOs regarding why these leaders are not being arrested immediately?
@sacsheriff@SacPolice
Ask Grok:
What California politicians voted yes on this bill?
Assembly Bill 84 (AB 84), which focuses on school accountability and charter school oversight, has been a contentious piece of legislation in California. It proposes measures like increased audits, the creation of an Office of the Education Inspector General, and changes to funding for non-classroom-based (NCB) charter schools, potentially reducing funding by up to 30% for schools with less in-person instruction. Critics argue this disproportionately affects students with special needs or those who thrive in flexible learning environments, while supporters claim it addresses fraud and ensures accountability. The bill has not yet been fully passed into law, as it remains in the legislative process, having advanced through the Assembly Education Committee and Appropriations Committee as of June 2025.
Based on available information, the Assembly Education Committee voted 7-2 to advance AB 84 on April 30, 2025. The committee’s Democratic members who likely voted in favor (based on the vote tally and party affiliations) include:
- **Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance)** – Chair of the Assembly Education Committee and the bill’s primary author.
- **David Alvarez (D-San Diego)** – Committee member.
- **Dr. Darshana Patel (D-San Diego)** – Committee member, who emphasized the need for taxpayer confidence in education funding during the hearing.
- **Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento)** – Committee member, noted for supporting accountability measures to prevent charter school fraud.
- **Juan Carrillo (D-Palmdale)** – Committee member, assumed to have voted in favor based on the Democratic majority.
The two “no” votes came from the committee’s only Republican members, Kevin Kiley (R-Rocklin) and Megan Dahle (R-Nevada City). The exact votes of individual Democrats are not explicitly detailed in the sources, but the 7-2 vote suggests the Democratic members listed above supported advancing the bill.
On May 23, 2025, the Assembly Appropriations Committee passed AB 84 with a 10-3 vote. The sources do not provide a detailed breakdown of individual votes, but the committee’s Democratic majority (chaired by Buffy Wicks, D-Oakland) likely drove the approval. Since Assemblywoman Pilar Schiavo (D-Chatsworth) was not on either committee and had not yet voted on the bill as of May 30, 2025, she is not confirmed as having supported it at that stage, though she noted discussions with the author about addressing concerns.
The claim that AB 84 was “pushed through” with massive budget cuts is partially accurate but requires nuance. The bill has not been finalized or signed into law, and amendments are still being considered to address concerns about funding cuts and oversight fees. The proposed cuts target NCB charter schools, which serve around 64,000 students, including those with special needs, by reducing funding based on the percentage of in-person instruction (e.g., schools with 0-19% in-person instruction could face a 30% cut). Critics, including charter school advocates, argue this unfairly penalizes students who rely on flexible learning models, while supporters, including the California Teachers Association, argue it closes loopholes exploited in past fraud cases like the A3 scandal.
If you want to track specific votes as the bill progresses to the Assembly floor or Senate, you can check the California Legislature’s official bill-tracking website (https://t.co/5TZPHkb5L9) for real-time updates. For now, the named Democrats above are the most directly associated with advancing AB 84. If you’d like me to dig deeper into specific legislators’ stances or analyze related posts on X, let me know[](https://t.co/6MXDy3xMbt)[](https://t.co/mr8lUh05na)