Speaking of idiots, where has all the money gone, Paso Robles Joint Unified School District? In 2016, Measure M dropped a cool $95 mil on the district to refurbish its two oldest schools, Georgia Brown Elementary and Glen Speck Middle School. Do they think Democrats are stupid? Yes, they do, because they are. "We're not allowed to know that info," the conservatives said, as if they didn't already know Democrats would be losing out.
Democracy shmockracy, eh?Īfter the unfairness of the vote acceleration/deferral point was brought up at the last meeting, the conservative majority pooh-poohed the idea of having staff gather the breakdown of which party would be most negatively affected. In case you didn't know, about 51 percent of the county is registered Democrat versus 45 percent Republican, but with this new redistricting, that majority will be rendered meaningless. Plus, libtards suck and are destroying the American way of life. That's cute (and inaccurate), but why not simply state why you really want the Patten map: "We can't win on our ideas or fair representation, and slicing up the districts will ensure my conservative minority views supersede the liberal will of the county majority. SLO city is not divided among three different supervisors. District 5 no longer reaches into SLO city and grabs Cal Poly. 16 "Redistricting Training" meeting that read, "Learn What to Write What to Say." It instructed its little storm troopers to recite, "I like the citizen Richard Patten's map for these reasons: Templeton is not split.
The Republican Party of SLO County sent out info for their Nov. To get the Patten map voted in, Republicans had already organized their troops with talking points. That's according a voter data analysis commissioned by a group of citizens because, well, the board majority can't "see" that! Power grabs are way more fun done "blind," you know? Any potential "swing" districts are gone, meaning the chance of a liberal majority coming to power between now and the next redistricting has practically vanished.
Of the nearly 50,000 who have their vote accelerated, 41 percent are registered Republicans compared to 32 percent Democrats as for those whose next vote will be deferred, 47 percent are Democrats and only 25 percent are Republicans. Can you guess which political party is on the short end of this stick? Yep, it's the Dems. When you shuffle voters from one district to another, some will have their next election vote accelerated from, say 2024 to 2022, while others will have theirs deferred from 2022 to 2024. And in a sweet twist of fate, rancher and conservative 5th District Supervisor Debbie Arnold's district will move to a liberal coastal 5th District that used to be in the North County. Now we'll have mostly one district in SLO (District 3) with a reliable Democratic base, a second reliably liberal district along the coast (District 5), and three districts with reliably conservative bases, solidifying the 3-2 conservative board majority for years to come. Let's break it down: Mostly liberal SLO Town will no longer have its voters represented in three districts, which helped balance conservative and liberal votes in those three districts and throughout the county. Also, do you smell that, SLO County Democrats and progressives? That's the stench of you "libtards" getting "owned."