KOMMONSENTSJANE – Musk/Tesla calls last-minute public meeting with staffers.

03/21/2025

Following remark about the Tesla stock by the man who helped lose the 2024 election which was a good thing for us.

The remark is one of those; CUTTING YOUR NOSE OFF TO SPITE YOUR FACE remarks.

Following is a good example of the left glooting over the Tesla stock

Tim Walz Gloats About Tesla Stock Dip While Ignoring His State’s 1.6 Million Shares In Its Retirement Fund

What is wrong with these people – Mr. Musk is a contractor working for the government under a contract just like hundreds of other contractors in the government and has been asked to audit our corrupt government run by the |Democrats for 12 years and were ousted by the citizens of this country. The audit is finding and adjusting those findings to help our country.

Sure, the left doesn’t like what is being revealed and the adjustments being made – because it broke up their PLAY HOUSE and took away their CANDY STORE. Whether they like it or not – we must stop all of the badgering and finish the job.

Look how many years they rode President Trump’s back and now they are picking on Mr. Musk. We should all be happy that we have someone smarter than the crooks.

It reminds of the old fable:

Aesop’s fables in which a farmer and his wife had a goose that laid one golden egg every day. The couple decided to butcher the goose as they thought its insides must be made of gold as well and then they can have all the golden eggs it held within.

That is exactly what the lefties are trying to do and really show us how ignorant they are.

****

Tesla Springs Last-Minute Public All Hands on Staffers – Business Insider

Elon Musk tweeted a link to the event at 9:45 p.m. ET.

The event began streaming at 9:58 p.m. and ended at 11:00 p.m. ET. Musk’s private jet arrived in Austin just two hours before he addressed workers in the Texas Gigafactory.

Musk spent the first half of the hour-long call providing updates on Tesla, touching on the company’s safety record, delivery figures, and its progress in autonomous driving and robotics.

He then spent the rest of the session taking questions from his employees.

Tesla has been facing headwinds in recent months. The carmaker’s stock is down more than 37% year-to-date and a series of protests have erupted across Tesla sales and service centers over the past few weeks.

“If you read the news, it feels like armageddon. I can’t walk past the TV without seeing a Tesla on fire. What’s going on?” Musk said on Thursday night.

“Listen, I understand if you don’t want to buy our product, but you don’t have to burn it down. That’s a bit unreasonable,” he continued.

Musk also talked about Tesla’s autonomous driving ambitions during the meeting, saying that self-driving will unlock the company’s true value.

“It’s very difficult for people in the stock market — especially those that look in the rear-view mirror, which is most people — to imagine a future where suddenly a 10 million vehicle fleet has five to 10 times the usefulness,” Musk told his workers.

“So what I am saying is, ‘Hang on to your stock,'” Musk added.

A spokesperson for Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.

Do you work at Tesla or have a tip? Reach out to the reporter via a non-work email and device at gkay@businessinsider.com or via Signal at 248-894-6012

kommonsentsjane

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – Trump Issues Firm Directive to Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.

03/21/2025

Trump Issues Firm Directive to Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts

ttps://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trump-issues-firm-directive-to-supreme-court-chief-justice-john-roberts/ar-AA1BletY?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=8ad2c608ebea42aca741aae948f229ba&ei=1

Newsweek

Pam Bondi Reacts To Elon Musk Calling For ‘Wave Of Judicial Impeachments’

President Donald Trump issued a firm directive to the Supreme Court and Chief Justice John Roberts on Thursday over what he described as “unlawful nationwide injunctions by radical left judges.”

Why It Matters

As Trump has swept into office with a flurry of executive orders and policy initiatives he has been met with a number of legal challenges to his actions and is currently contending with several setbacks.

The president has continued to lash out at judges and courts that rule against his administration and his actions, often saying questioning the judiciary’s power to impede his desired policy moves.U.S. President Donald Trump (L) greets Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts, Jr as he arrives to deliver an address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on March 04, 2025, in Washington, DC. AFP/Getty Images

U.S. President Donald Trump (L) greets Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts, Jr as he arrives to deliver an address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on March 04, 2025, in Washington, DC. AFP/Getty Images© AFP/Getty Images

What To Know

One of the most high-profile cases involves the recent deportation of more than 200 Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador. The White House and Department of Justice have alleged that all the men have ties to the violent Tren de Aragua gang.

Another case involves Trump’s effort to ban transgender people from serving in the military. A federal judge recently issued an 80-page preliminary injunction blocking the proposal after deeming it to be factually incorrect, discriminatory and demeaning.

Trump took to Truth Social to vent about “radical left judges,” saying their injunctions “could very well lead to the destruction of our Country!”

The president went on to call judges who block his initiatives “lunatics, who do not care, even a little bit, about the repercussions from their very dangerous and incorrect Decisions and Rulings.”

It’s “the obligation of Law abiding Agencies of Government to have these ‘Orders’ overturned,” Trump said, without specifying any ruling or case. “The danger is unparalleled! These Judges want to assume the Powers of the Presidency, without having to attain 80 Million Votes. They want all of the advantages with none of the risks.”

Trump then singled out the case involving the deportation of Venezuelans. The administration went ahead with the deportations despite the fact that U.S. District Judge James Boasberg had issued a verbal order telling the government to turn the planes carrying the migrants around and come back to the U.S pending further legal proceedings.

“Again, a President has to be allowed to act quickly and decisively about such matters as returning murderers, drug lords, rapists, and other such type criminals back to their Homeland, or to other locations that will allow our Country to be SAFE,” Trump wrote. “It is our goal to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, and such a high aspiration can never be done if Radical and Highly Partisan Judges are allowed to stand in the way of JUSTICE.”

The president then addressed Roberts, who was appointed to the bench by President George W. Bush, and the Supreme Court: “STOP NATIONWIDE INJUNCTIONS NOW, BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. If Justice Roberts and the United States Supreme Court do not fix this toxic and unprecedented situation IMMEDIATELY, our Country is in very serious trouble!”

Roberts, meanwhile, issued a rare public statement this week rebuking calls from Trump and his allies to impeach judges who rule against the administration.

“For more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision,” the chief justice said. “The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose.”

What People Are Saying

Trump blasted Boasberg, who has been appointed by Republican and Democrat presidents, in a follow-up Truth Social post: “Judge James Boasberg is doing everything in his power to usurp the Power of the Presidency. He is a local, unknown Judge, a Grandstander, looking for publicity, and it cannot be for any other reason, because his “Rulings” are so ridiculous, and inept. SAVE AMERICA!”

What Happens Next

Boasberg is demanding more information from the government about the timing and other details related to the deportation flights.

The DOJ pushed back on the judge and said in a recent court filing that it’s considering whether to invoke state-secrets privilege, which allows for the exclusion of evidence the government thinks could hurt national security.

In response, Boasberg said Thursday that the Trump administration must submit a sworn declaration from someone involved in those talks by Friday morning. He gave the government until Tuesday to submit another declaration indicating if the government will invoke the privilege.

The judge also said the DOJ must file a brief “showing cause” for why it did not violate his earlier order that the deportation flights turn around and return to the U.S.

This is a developing news story and will be updated as more information is available.

****

A good example follows:

ttps://headlinesforever.com/unmasking-the-judge-donations-ideology-that-halted-trumps-plans/

The country cannot continue to allow these rogue judges committing all of this baseless lawfare. It is stopping progress in cleaning up the fraud/corruption because they are involved with it.

Lawfare is the use of legal systems and institutions to damage or delegitimize an opponent, or to deter an individual’s usage of their legal rights. The term may refer to the use of legal systems and principles against an enemy, such as by damaging or delegitimizing them, wasting their time and money

This has been going on for 12 years; but, yet during Biden’s time in office they did not interfere with all of the corruption/fraud this admin committed.

kommonsentsjane .

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – Is There a Better Solution to Our Public Schools’ Math Problem?

03/21/2025

Prior to the pandemic, Texas student performance had stalled. Now it’s worse. 

By Karen Olsson

February 2025

This story originally appeared in the February 2025 issue of Texas Monthly as part of our public-education feature, “What Our Schools Actually Need.”

illustration of math symbols
Illustration by Nash Weerasekera

News & Politics

Is There a Better Solution to Our Public Schools’ Math Problem?

Prior to the pandemic, Texas student performance had stalled. Now it’s worse. 

By Karen Olsson

February 2025

This story originally appeared in the February 2025 issue of Texas Monthly as part of our public-education feature, “What Our Schools Actually Need.”

Humans have been learning math for thousands of years. As long ago as the third millennium BC, Mesopotamian scribes-in-training practiced calculation and geometry by etching numbers into clay tablets. Measuring, accounting, computing totals, divvying up resources: One generation has taught these techniques to the next—and the next and the next—for a dizzyingly long time, a lineage that indirectly connects the scribes of old Babylon to the kids in room 413 at Kealing Middle School, in Austin, where I volunteer in a class on Wednesdays. 

Some 1,200 kids fill Kealing’s campus during school hours. Between periods a river of bodies churns through the halls, and shortly after 11:00 a.m., it disgorges around ten kids into Ms. Wally’s room. A mix of sixth, seventh, and eighth graders, they arrive bubbly or dragging or brimming with news, drop their bags, and maybe ask Ms. Wally if she has any snacks. All of them scored low on the state’s STAAR math test last spring and this school year were enrolled in an intervention course—“math lab”—that meets Mondays, Wednesdays, and some Fridays to supplement their regular math class.

Across the U.S., student achievement in math had stalled before the pandemic, then declined after schools shut down. While standardized tests may not give a satisfying picture of any one learner, averages and trends show progress across groups, and those indicators were not good. Scores on national math assessments, which had climbed in the aughts and stagnated in the 2010s, dropped to what they were twenty years earlier. There were much bigger drops among kids from lower-income families, who started further behind and then slid more steeply.

The wealth gap is a mile wide at Kealing, which has a magnet program that enrolls richer-skewing kids from all over the city while also serving those from varied backgrounds who live in the attendance zone. (My son was a magnet student here.) Last year just 41 percent of the lower-income students in eighth grade at Kealing passed the STAAR math test, compared with 91 percent of the non–economically disadvantaged. Five years earlier, in April 2019, those numbers were 75 percent of the kids from lower-income households and 92 percent for the others. The gulf between groups, already large before the pandemic, has ballooned.

The kids in Ms. Wally’s room spend around half of the class working on Chromebooks, logged in to an online learning program called MyPath. Early on, many of them didn’t exactly embrace its long march of problems and videos. “I f—ing hate this s—!” I remember one girl yelling as she slammed her backpack on the desk. There are many, many things a kid (or really anybody) might find more appealing than an unending digital math worksheet, and so on a given day I would look on as a girl ate hot sunflower seeds and, licking the spicy salt off her fingers, teased a boy sitting nearby. Another day I asked a student whether he knew what the total length of the boundary of a closed shape was called, and he responded: “It’s called these nuts, Miss.”

Last school year, I tutored Kealing students in math, and I kept hitting the same wall: Someone would grasp a concept but then couldn’t solve the assigned problems because they were missing foundational skills, such as division. So I was heartened to learn that this year the school would devote a class to filling those holes. And then I found myself in a room with an underpaid new teacher trying to implement an unsatisfying tech fix in response to an underfunded mandate from the state legislature—all so as to teach material that humans have been imparting to other humans for actual millennia—and I wondered, were we giving these kids the help they needed?


Back when she was in high school, outside Houston, Andrea Wallingsford was two kinds of nerd—band and math—and friends with pretty much everyone. Now she’s a thirtysomething mom of a ninth-grade baseball player and two much younger girls, married to a pastor, trying to stick with keto. What she lacks in experience she makes up for with a warm and steady presence. If a kid is, for mysterious kid reasons, blowing into a balloon they found someplace or sticking a paper clip into a desk fan, she’ll cock her head and call their name fondly, almost wistfully, before asking them to stop.

In August she had a chance to prepare her classroom ahead of time—repainting, organizing materials, getting the projector to work—but it wasn’t until after the start of classes that she was prepped for the course itself, at a half-day training for MyPath. There, someone from the district referred to additional curriculum materials online, but they weren’t designed for a mixed-grade classroom, and so in her first year of full-time teaching, Ms. Wally was left with just MyPath—and her deep affection for kids—to figure things out mostly on her own. 

Adaptive computer programs like MyPath ought to be useful tools, because they can continually assess a student and adjust material accordingly. In practice, though, the adjustments don’t always suit the kid. One girl, an even-keeled seventh grader, would attempt MyPath and then announce, softly, “This is boring.” More than once she struggled with an animated baseball-themed game that required her to enter a multiplication fact before a ball made it from pitcher to a batter. Because she’d never before committed to memory, say, the multiples of six, she couldn’t answer quickly enough and would fail the game. 

Wallingsford had her own frustrations. “They need to learn their fast facts,” she would muse while the kids were at lunch. (In the years since she and I were students, grade school math curricula have deemphasized memorizing times tables and the like.) She wanted to track down the students’ regular math teachers so that she could align her warm-up problems to what they were teaching, but getting time with those teachers was easier said than done.

The special education math teacher quit, and for weeks no one with the right credentials even applied for the job. That left some of Ms. Wally’s intervention kids with a substitute in charge of their regular math class. (Elsewhere in the building, magnet students were learning algebra and geometry from an award-winning longtime teacher.)

While the recent lean years for Texas public schools have made it hard to keep enough teachers on campus, it’s been a better time for so-called ed tech companies, which may, perversely enough, benefit from all the belt-tightening. In 2021, as schools were resuming in-person classes, the Legislature required that students who didn’t pass the STAAR be tutored in small groups or placed with an expert teacher. It didn’t allocate extra funds to pay the tutors, though, so this was a tall order, especially for larger districts. 

Enter MyPath, which Austin Independent School District licensed for $321,830 this school year. The program includes access to virtual tutors, in theory. But the tutors were only available once the students had performed poorly on multiple lessons, Ms. Wally told me, and mostly relied on cumbersome text chats rather than audio. So the class gave up on them. Without the tutors, MyPath doesn’t strike me as significantly better than the free-to-use Khan Academy website, except in one way: Its interface more closely resembles the STAAR test. 

According to its mission statement, Imagine Learning, the company that owns MyPath, “empowers educators to inspire breakthroughs in every student’s unique learning journey.” In a 2023 interview with a business podcast, CEO Jonathan Grayer pitched its products in a different light, seemingly as a way for districts to balance the books. “We are disintermediating, if you will, the teacher-textbook classroom model,” he said. “That allows educators and planners . . . to think about their budgets differently and to think about the relationship of teacher-student ratios differently.”

This gave me pause: Were teachers, then, just the expensive middlemen of the learning economy? I contacted the company and received a response from chief strategy officer Sari Factor, who explained in an email that it was not teachers but the “one-size-fits-all textbook model” that technology would replace. Imagine Learning’s products “free educators from standardized, linear approaches,” she wrote.

It’s hard for me to reconcile this vision of liberated teachers and enhanced learning with Ms. Wally’s room at Kealing. Granted, digital tools like MyPath are still relatively new additions to the classroom. Yet even if Imagine Learning didn’t intend to replace humans, the program was purchased by a district too strapped to hire enough actual tutors to comply with state law. In other words, MyPath’s virtual tutors were probably supposed to substitute for actual ones, although that didn’t pan out.


When it comes to helping students gain ground, a few basic rules apply, according to the education nonprofit TNTP (formerly known as the New Teachers Project). Last year the group published an analysis of 28,000 schools, identifying 5 percent of them as “trajectory-changing schools,” ones where students who tested poorly at the outset were advancing by significantly more than a grade level within a year. The report found common practices: a strong focus on student growth, an emphasis on belonging, and a consistent, coherent approach to curriculum. It sounds simple, but it’s not the norm, says Michael Franco, the vice president for national consulting at TNTP. “So many students who are behind just experience a random set of instructional events,” he told me.

Good planning takes time, itself a scarce resource. I talked to Melanie Pondant, who’d been the principal of Judson STEAM Academy, in Longview, an East Texas middle school TNTP had identified as a trajectory changer. (She has since been promoted.) The practices she described were in line with those in the TNTP report. Crucial to the school’s success, she said, was that roughly every six weeks, each department’s teachers are given a full day to plan instruction together, while aides took over for them in the classroom. But as a charter and as a school that qualifies for Title I federal money, Judson STEAM receives more per-student funding than Kealing, which isn’t allotted enough substitutes to give teachers that kind of extra planning time. 

For all the challenges, and in spite of the ambient distractions and low enthusiasm for MyPath, some of the kids in Ms. Wally’s class would, for at least some of the period, work on math problems. Others devoted more time to Spotify or to sneaking their phones out of their pockets. I’ve been impressed with the girl who howled early on about hating it all. In October she would demand that I just tell her the answer to a problem, but a month later she was more willing to think things through.  

The girl bored by the baseball fact practice, worryingly, has been losing steam. Some days she mostly listens to music. When I ask her why she’s not doing anything, she complains about the fact-fluency game, though it’s been weeks since she was presented with that task. There’s more going on, including health challenges for family members. She also went to an elementary school with below-average test scores and a large population of poor students.

Middle school can be where the differences between one elementary school and another, one family situation or another, one personality and another, solidify into distinct futures, which is why I’m desperate to get this girl back to doing some online math exercises. But, as she says to me one day, I’m not even a teacher at this school—why should she listen to me? 

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – Dem Senator Caught in Soros-Funded Media Scandal—Refuses to Answer.

03/21/2025

ttps://headlinesforever.com/dem-senator-caught-in-soros-funded-media-scandal-refuses-to-answer/

Connecticut Democrat Chris Murphy has remained silent on rumors that he is seeing a former Democratic political strategist who now runs a media network backed by George Soros under the guise of independent news.

Photos surfaced of Murphy enjoying a quiet dinner with Tara McGowan, publisher and founder of Courier Newsroom, a liberal media organization that has taken millions of dollars in support from liberal megadonors like George Soros. McGowan and Murphy recently announced their separation after nearly twenty years of marriage.

News headlines On Capitol Hill, Forever Digital recently questioned Murphy over his ties to McGowan.

“I refuse to discuss that,” Murphy replied.

McGowan has deep Democratic Party roots; he was an aide on Obama’s re-election campaign and later had leadership roles at the Democratic super PAC Priorities Action USA and the Democratic digital advocacy group ACRONYM.

The left-leaning media outlet Courier Newsroom was formed by the strategist with ties to Murphy; it has received millions of dollars from Soros’s lobbying group, the Fund for Policy Reform.

“The Washington correspondent for NewsGuard, a New York-based nonpartisan organization that reviews news sites to combat misinformation,” wrote Gabby Deutch in an op-ed that The Washington Post referred to in 2021. In the piece, Deutch criticized Courier Newsroom as a “political operation” that is “exploiting the widespread loss of local journalism to create and disseminate something we really don’t need: hyperlocal partisan propaganda.”

According to Headlines Forever Digital’s past reporting, the Courier Newsroom received three grants totaling $5 million from the Fund for Policy Reform in 2021 and 2022. The grants were given to “support its non-partisan journalism, which aims to further the common good and general welfare of U.S. communities by providing access to information,” according to the grant database.

By April of 2024, McGowan had also worked closely with the government of former president Joe Biden, visiting the Biden White House around twenty times.

Murphy and McGowan were seen getting close at a bar in Washington, D.C. earlier this month, as reported by the New York Post. An insider told the publication that the two were becoming “cutesy.”

According to the source, Murphy and his wife, Cathy Holahan, a lawyer from Washington, D.C., are still married and have not initiated divorce proceedings in either Connecticut or the nation’s capital. Following Murphy’s re-election in November, the pair did indeed announce their separation.

People are wondering if Murphy is interested in running for president in the future since he has established himself as a leading adversary of President Trump on the Democratic side.

A recent headline in the New York Times said, “Chris Murphy Emerges as a Clear Voice for Democrats Countering Trump,” which was accompanied by an item that was reprinted on Murphy’s website.

kommonsentsjane

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