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Transcript

Why restorative justice doesn't work plus the 10 commandments gain momentum

CRT 11 - Restorative justice flawed case study; NPR and PBS executives get grilled on Capitol Hill

(Note: This episode of CRT was censored from YouTube. It was labeled misinformation. YouTube never provides an answer for why it deems something not true. It may be the case that I call out the teachers union for spending on 7.5% of its dues on helping teachers and the rest on political donations and administrative overhead. Or it may be that I call out the restorative justice case study as flawed. It’s hard to know.)

Here’s what’s on CRT 11.

— The teachers unions sued Donald Trump’s administration for starting to dismantle the Department of Education.

— Restorative Justice is all the rage in schools. But it’s based on a case study of a West Oakland school from 2006-2008. Pro-restorative justice activists say that restorative justice programs helped to reduce the number of suspensions by nearly 90%. BUT the activists fail to point out that student enrollment declined by nearly 70%. I talk about why restorative justice doesn’t work.

— Dems embrace the Signal debacle like it’s their latest J-6 moment.

— Katherine Maher, Head of NPR and the archetypal elite female liberal, went to Capitol Hill to defend why her organization is not bias and should get taxpayer funds. All I can say is: Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha. She apologized for making mistakes. The problem is that her mistakes were every day. You can’t keep your job, much less take taxpayer dollars if you’re making every day mistakes.

— Finally, Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear allows a monument of the 10 commandments to be placed on capitol grounds - some faith leaders aren’t happy.  

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