Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

SPECIAL STRIKE COVERAGE: WHEN THE GOLDEN CITY CAN'T AFFORD GOLDEN TEACHERS #SupportSFTeachers #UESFStrong #FundOurSchools #IronyIsn'tDead

 

SPECIAL STRIKE COVERAGE: WHEN THE GOLDEN CITY CAN'T AFFORD GOLDEN TEACHERS

San Francisco's First Strike in 47 Years Proves That Even in Paradise, You Can't Pay Rent with "Exposure"

SAN FRANCISCO — In a plot twist that surprised absolutely no one who's ever tried to rent a studio apartment here for less than $3,000 a month, the San Francisco Unified School District is claiming poverty. Yes, you read that right. In a city where tech bros casually drop $18 on artisanal toast and parking spots cost more than most people's car payments, the school district is crying broke.

Welcome to the United Educators of San Francisco (UESF) strike—the first teachers' walkout in 47 years, and honestly, we're surprised it took this long.

The Irony Is Chef's Kiss

Let's set the scene: San Francisco, nestled in California—the state with an economy larger than most countries—is home to more billionaires per capita than you can shake a stock option at. Yet somehow, somehow, the school district is staring down a $100 million deficit and telling teachers that fully funded healthcare and livable wages are just too much to ask.

It's like showing up to a Michelin-starred restaurant and being told they can only afford to serve you ramen. The cheap kind. Without the flavor packet.

What Do These Greedy Teachers Want, Anyway?

Oh, just the audacity of asking for:

  • Fully funded family healthcare (because apparently, keeping educators and their families healthy is a radical concept)
  • Higher wages (wild idea: paying people enough to live in the city where they work)
  • Better special education support (because students with special needs deserve more than thoughts and prayers)
  • Protections for housing-insecure and immigrant families (you know, basic human dignity stuff)

The nerve! Next thing you know, they'll be demanding things like "affordable housing" and "not having to work three jobs to afford groceries."

The Numbers Game

Over 5,200 educators voted overwhelmingly for strike authorization. That's not just a majority—that's a "we're-done-with-your-nonsense" landslide. After more than 10 months of negotiations that went nowhere faster than a Muni bus during rush hour, teachers finally said enough.

The district's latest offer? A 6% wage increase over three years. The union's demand? A 9% raise over two years. In a city where rent increases by that much annually, the district's offer is essentially a pay cut with a bow on it.

Meanwhile, SFUSD is hemorrhaging $7-10 million daily in lost state reimbursements due to school closures. That's right—the strike is costing more than just meeting the teachers' demands would. But sure, let's talk about fiscal responsibility.

The "We Have No Money" Defense

SFUSD claims they're facing a $100 million deficit next year. Fair enough—budget constraints are real. But here's where it gets spicy: the union points out that the district has been sitting on a surplus that could be used to, oh, I don't know, fund schools?

It's the educational equivalent of your roommate claiming they can't pay rent while unboxing their third limited-edition sneaker drop of the month.

The Human Cost

Let's talk about what's really happening here. San Francisco has:

Teachers aren't striking because it's fun. They're striking because the system is broken, and someone finally said the quiet part out loud.

The Supporting Cast

In a rare moment of solidarity, California State Superintendent Tony Thurmond showed up to the bargaining table. City officials joined in. Even museums opened their doors free to SFUSD students during the strike (because nothing says "we support education" like offering field trips when there's no school).

Meanwhile, SFUSD Superintendent Maria Su faced criticism but urged teachers to return to negotiations "for the sake of students"—a classic move that translates to "please stop making us look bad."

The Bigger Picture

This isn't just a San Francisco problem. Oakland teachers are voting on their own strike authorization. Teachers in San Diego and Los Angeles are watching closely. This is a California education crisis, and it's spreading faster than sourdough starter recipes during the pandemic.

The pattern is clear: educators are underpaid, overworked, and undervalued. In cities where tech workers get six-figure salaries and unlimited kombucha, teachers are choosing between paying rent and buying classroom supplies.

The Bottom Line

Here's the thing about strikes: they're not about greed. They're about survival. When teachers in one of the wealthiest cities in the world can't afford to live there, something is fundamentally broken.

UESF isn't asking for champagne wishes and caviar dreams. They're asking for healthcare, fair wages, and the resources to do their jobs. You know, the basics that every worker deserves.

So yes, support the teachers. Support the students. Because if we can't properly fund education in San Francisco—a city literally overflowing with wealth—then what are we even doing?

SUPPORT TEACHERS. SUPPORT OUR STUDENTS. SUPPORT COMMON SENSE.

Because the only thing more expensive than paying teachers fairly is the cost of not educating our children.

UPDATE: As of this writing, negotiations continue. Teachers remain on picket lines. Students remain out of classrooms. And San Francisco remains one of the richest cities in the world that somehow can't figure out how to pay the people shaping its future.

Stay tuned for more updates from the city where a parking spot costs more than a teacher's monthly healthcare contribution.

#SupportSFTeachers #UESFStrong #FundOurSchools #IronyIsn'tDead



IMMIGRATION CONTROL OR TERROR CAMPAIGN? ICE IS OUT OF CONTROL #NoKingsProtest #NoKingsMar28 #NoKingsInAmerica #NoKings


IMMIGRATION CONTROL OR TERROR CAMPAIGN? ICE IS OUT OF CONTROL

When the cure becomes deadlier than the disease, it's time to ask: Are we fighting crime or creating criminals with badges?

There's a peculiar irony in watching a government agency tasked with enforcing immigration law operate like they're storming the beaches of Normandy every time they knock on a door in Minneapolis. Immigration and Customs Enforcement—ICE—has transformed from a law enforcement agency into something that looks disturbingly like an occupying force in American cities. And now, with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem at the helm, the question isn't just "Is this effective?" but "Is this even America anymore?"

The Militarization of Immigration Enforcement: Overkill or Just Kill?

Let's talk about the elephant in the room—or rather, the paramilitary force in tactical gear storming through our neighborhoods. Why do ICE agents need long guns, military-style uniforms, and face masks to arrest people suspected of immigration violations? Your local police department manages to arrest actual violent criminals without looking like they're extras in a Call of Duty game.

The contrast is stark and telling. Police officers across the country perform law enforcement duties daily—handling everything from domestic disputes to armed robberies—without terrorizing entire communities in the process. They wear identifiable uniforms. They follow protocols. They're (theoretically) accountable to the communities they serve.

ICE? They roll up like Navy SEALs on a mission, faces obscured, heavily armed, creating an atmosphere of terror that extends far beyond their actual targets. This isn't law enforcement—it's psychological warfare.

Constitutional Rights: Suggestions or Commandments?

Here's a refresher course for those who skipped civics class: The Constitution grants Americans certain inalienable rights. Free speech. Free assembly. Protection from unreasonable searches and seizures. These aren't suggestions. They're not subject to suspension because someone in Washington decides immigration is a "crisis."

Yet we're watching these rights trampled in real-time. Peaceful protesters exercising their First Amendment rights are being met with violence. Communities are being subjected to warrantless searches. The tragic killing of Renee Nicole Good—a 37-year-old American citizen—by an ICE agent during a Minneapolis protest should have been a wake-up call. As well as the murder of Alex Pretti. Instead, the federal government defended the shooting with claims contradicted by video evidence.

When American citizens can be killed by federal agents for exercising their constitutional rights, and the government's response is to lie about it, we've crossed a line from law enforcement into state-sanctioned violence.

Kristi Noem: The Wrong Person at the Wrong Time

Secretary Noem's tenure has coincided with an unprecedented expansion of ICE operations—and an unprecedented body count. Under her watch, 2025 became the deadliest year for people in ICE custody in over two decades. At least nine people were shot by immigration officers in just five months.

The agency has ballooned in size, with reduced training standards and questionable hiring practices. When you prioritize quantity over quality, speed over competence, and aggression over de-escalation, you don't get better law enforcement—you get domestic terrorism with a badge.

Impeachment isn't just warranted; it's necessary. When a cabinet official oversees an agency that operates with impunity, violates constitutional rights, and leaves American citizens dead in the streets, accountability must follow. If not impeachment, then what? A strongly worded letter?

The False Choice: Safety vs. Humanity

Here's what the defenders of ICE's tactics want you to believe: that this level of force, this degree of terror, this militarization is necessary to keep Americans safe from "criminal immigrants."

It's a false choice, and a cynical one.

Yes, there are immigrants who commit crimes. There are also native-born Americans who commit crimes—at higher rates, statistically. But we don't send paramilitary forces to terrorize entire neighborhoods of native-born Americans because some of them might be criminals. We use targeted, proportional law enforcement.

The current ICE approach is the equivalent of burning down the house to kill a spider. Sure, you got the spider, but now everyone's homeless and traumatized, and several innocent people died in the fire.

This Is Not the America We Want

America has always been a work in progress, a nation striving (however imperfectly) toward its stated ideals of liberty and justice for all. But the America where masked federal agents can kill citizens with impunity, where constitutional rights are treated as obstacles rather than foundations, where entire communities live in fear of their own government—that's not progress. That's regression into authoritarianism.

This isn't about being "soft on crime" or "open borders." It's about recognizing that the methods we use matter as much as the goals we pursue. A democracy that abandons its principles in the name of security doesn't become safer—it just stops being a democracy.

What We Can Do: From Outrage to Action

Anger without action is just noise. Here's how to turn your outrage into change:

1. Call Your Representatives

Your senators and representatives need to hear from you—loudly and repeatedly. Demand they:

  • Defund ICE's expanded operations
  • Impose strict accountability measures and remove absolute immunity protections
  • Investigate deaths and violence by immigration officers
  • Restore constitutional protections for all people on American soil

2. Organize and Mobilize

The No Kings Coalition has shown that mass mobilization works. Over 7 million people participated in their October 2025 protests. Their next major action—No Kings 3.0 on March 28, 2026—aims to be the largest protest in American history.

Find your local event at nokings.org and show up. Bring friends. Bring family. Bring anyone who believes that America belongs to its people, not to kings—or to unaccountable federal agencies.

3. Document and Expose

Safely and legally document ICE activities in your community. The truth is our most powerful weapon against propaganda. Video evidence contradicted the government's lies about Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good's killing—imagine what other truths are waiting to be revealed.

4. Vote Like Your Rights Depend On It

Because they do. Every election—from local school boards to the presidency—matters. Register. Vote. Help others register and vote. Make sure everyone understands what's at stake.

5. Support Affected Communities

Immigrant communities are bearing the brunt of this terror campaign. Show solidarity. Support local organizations providing legal aid, documentation, and resources. Attend "Know Your Rights" trainings. Build bridges, not walls.

6. Pressure Corporations

Companies like Target, Delta, Hilton, Enterprise, and Home Depot have business relationships that support ICE operations. Let them know that consumers are watching and that supporting state violence is bad for business.

March 28: A Line in the Sand

The No Kings 3.0 mobilization on March 28, 2026, represents more than just another protest. It's a statement that Americans—millions of us—refuse to accept authoritarianism as the new normal. The flagship event in the Twin Cities, where Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti was killed, carries special significance.

This is our moment to demonstrate that the power belongs to the people, not to unaccountable agencies operating above the law. Not to officials who prioritize cruelty over competence. Not to a system that treats constitutional rights as inconvenient suggestions.

The Bottom Line

Immigration enforcement doesn't require terror. It doesn't require militarization. It doesn't require abandoning the Constitution or killing American citizens in the streets.

What it requires is what all law enforcement requires: competence, accountability, proportionality, and respect for human rights. ICE, under its current structure and leadership, has demonstrated none of these qualities.

The choice before us is clear: Do we accept this new normal of domestic terror in the name of immigration control? Or do we demand better—demand an America that lives up to its ideals, where law enforcement serves communities rather than terrorizing them?

The answer should be obvious. Now comes the hard part: making it happen.

No kings. No tyrants. No terror. Just justice.


The No Kings Coalition's next major mobilization is March 28, 2026. Find events near you and learn how to safely participate at nokings.org. Remember: nonviolent action, de-escalation, and constitutional rights are our principles and our power.


 #NoKingsProtest #NoKingsMar28 #NoKingsInAmerica #NoKings

No Kings https://www.nokings.org/ 

Resource Guide & Community Response For No Kings Day — No Kings https://www.nokings.org/kyr