Yep. When I bought my Subaru Impreza hatchback in 2018, dealers kept trying to upsell me to a Crosstrek. It was $7k more but is literally just an Impreza body a few inches higher (with worse mileage & less ground feel—that floaty SUV feeling makes me carsick). Yet I see far more of them on the road.
Posts by Sam Schulz
This may underline your point, but the paper’s small editorial board (which is totally separate from the newsroom, of course) reports not to U-T editorial leadership but to opinion editors at SCNG (which may explain why there’s a photo of the LA Metro on a U-T editorial, but that’s just my guess).
Who should own Liberty Station?
San Diego is escalating its war to hang onto the sprawling complex of artist studios, parks, food & retail — even as a developer tries to force it to sell.
As for why this is happening? Blame the aftermath of CA's dissolution of redevelopment agencies 14 years ago:
Interestingly, UCSD says it has no record of any such research going before its IRB.
But two mothers of kids who were subjects of the research — which Epstein gave $$ to, but not via the university — told us the neuroscientist conducting it tested their kids on campus.
He did not respond to us.
"I don’t have a problem with my lab being funded by Epstein," one neuroscientist told a colleague.
"Thank you for your interest & support," a neurologist wrote Epstein.
Epstein's UCSD ties go much deeper than previously reported — & involve funding fringe research with autistic kids, emails show.
Is Darrell Issa's career in Congress over? His seat was redrawn in Dems' favor, his $$ has lagged, he hasn't yet filed, today's the deadline & yesterday, Jim Desmond, the GOP supervisor running in a nearby seat, pulled papers to switch to Issa's. Issa's response: "Don’t owe you anything nothing no."
This lawsuit concerns not that law — which wasn't even on the books when the Escondido teachers first sued — but rather a district-level policy that barred teachers from telling parents.
The district policy, since changed, was based on state guidance. That state guidance is also no longer.
First: California law does not bar teachers from telling parents when they think that a kid is trans or gender-nonconforming or that their gender presentation has changed.
The only state law on this is one by @chriswardca.bsky.social that only bars districts from REQUIRING schools to tell parents.
So many other outlets get this story wrong.
Long before the Supreme Court weighed in on Mirabelli v. Olson on its shadow docket, Kristen Taketa's been covering it with care for @sandiegouniontribune.com & getting it right from the beginning.
Here's our story. And here's what's gotten missed... 🧵
This is exciting. The 2 years I lived by the future D extension (when they were tunneling between La Brea & Fairfax), this stretch of Wilshire sorely needed human-scale, integrated transit & public spaces to revive those desolate, highway-like blocks of barely-punctuated facades. So much potential!
"These are boutique issues. If you're basing your vote solely on who treats trans people more poorly, you don't really suffer from any real problem ... What the fuck do you mean you're voting for whoever prevents whether some trans 6th grader from playing soccer with her friends?" @katelynburns.com
I’ve worn only wool socks for years, & somehow the 4-packs of women’s wool socks from Costco are easily the best everyday (not hiking) socks I’ve ever worn.
“The U.S. no longer has emission standards of any meaning,” said Margo T. Oge, who served as the E.P.A.’s top vehicle emissions regulator under three presidents and has since advised both automakers and environmental groups…
“Nothing. Zero,” she added. “Not many countries have zero.”
Five years! Forbes was extraordinarily lucky to have you for so long. Can’t wait to hear what’s next.
Under RFK, Jr., the CDC's authority has crumbled: it is no longer updating dozens of health databases, and has abandoned vaccine guidelines. But states and governors are trying to fill the void, @laurenjyoung.bsky.social writes @scifri.bsky.social: www.scientificamerican.com/article/stat...
This makes me miss Pete’s.
It’s fairly new. It jumped out to me because where I’m from, the Office of the Public Advocate is a real citywide elected office.
News is not a “daily conversation.”
News is news.
If you want a daily conversation, go to your local coffee shop.
“I can’t think of any other way to describe it but an attack on the independence of the judiciary and the International Criminal Court’s independence as an institution.”
Prost was sanctioned because she’d ruled to OK an investigation into alleged U.S. war crimes.
www.irishtimes.com/world/us/202...
Speaking of people adjacent to Mae West, how well-established was the current meaning when Cary Grant, clad in a marabou bathrobe, exclaimed “I just went gay all of a sudden” in Bringing Up Baby (1938)?
“Cuomo began renting the Sunnyside apartment in 1982 while working as a campaign manager for his father’s run for governor… After his father became governor in 1983, he worked as one of his aides, taking a salary of $1 a year.”
How did the son of the then-governor pay his stabilized rent on that?
Cucina Urbana in Bankers Hill lets kids make their own pizzas. I haven’t been there myself, but I’ve heard good things about the food & liked what the chef’s done elsewhere.
Trans rights and the internet itself are in a moment of crisis. What happens next?
Our special series, The Future of Being Trans on the Internet, is now live in its entirety. You can check out each piece in our beautiful hub, or join us on a quick scroll 🧵
Many issues L4L highlights — related-party transactions, lax oversight by small rural authorizers, entities that run schools avoiding transparency — are familiar for CA charters.
But oversight efforts keep failing. Reforms the moratorium aimed to buy time for haven't materialized.
It lifts Jan. 1.
One teacher specifically took issue with the expansion, given these results: “Their model doesn’t work, & it shouldn’t be used elsewhere until it works.”
For now, the expansion is only in other states: For 5+ years, CA has banned opening new non-classroom-based charters to buy time to make reforms.
And as in CA, Learn4Life schools elsewhere graduate fewer kids than other schools with similar populations.
L4L schools in CA graduated 29% of students within 5 years, compared to 54% for all alternative high schools. For out-of-state L4L schools, it's 9% to 35%. (L4L takes issue with this metric.)
That adds up: Lifelong Learning’s assets doubled from $18M to $36M in 3 years.
It's using them to expand in other states.
As in CA, the out-of-state schools' boards are controlled by one entity tied to Lifelong Learning — this one Educational *Improvement* Corp, not Educational Advancement Corp.
As for the financial benefits, Lifelong Learning takes a cut of each school's revenue — so the more ADA funding schools can get out of students & teachers, the more Lifelong Learning collects.
School admins wouldn't say how much they pay Lifelong Learning. But documents suggest 14-15% of revenue.
Watchdogs have warned about such arrangements — in which the client is controlled by a party related to one that financially benefits.
(It's a regular issue in CA charter world.)
They raise questions of whether school boards are doing what's best for students or for the entity that controls them.
Nearly all the schools' boards are controlled by one obscure entity called Educational Advancement Corporation w/ close ties to Lifelong Learning.
And each school is governed by one of a constellation of entities with one thing in common: They pay & are largely managed by Lifelong Learning.