Jessica Wood Profile picture
Jan 4 14 tweets 11 min read Read on X
While on the subject of DOJ STOP grants, let’s talk about the PASS survey and reporting required under this grant.

PASS or Pupil Attitudes to Self and School is an assessment tool designed to track students “feelings” or social and emotional well-being. One of the primary domains of the survey is SEL (social and emotional learning). 🧵1/
@kellyske @luce_lexi @5sweetharts_ @HideYourKids0 @ALegalProcessImage
The Pennsylvania Office for Safe Schools under the PA Dept of Ed (PDE) administers this as the PA School Climate Survey. SEL is one of the three domains central to the survey, given not just to students, but staff, parents and community members as well as part of the broader Whole-Child, Whole-School, Whole-Community model. This reflects the shift away from ACADEMIC intelligence to EMOTIONAL intelligence. Schools are, of course, incentivized to participate through grant monies, with results shared between state and federal agencies and third-party orgs. 🧵2/Image
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Another core focus of grant funding is Restorative Practices (RP). RP and SEL work hand-in-hand to create societal change through social consciousness and collectivism—core socialist principles. Children (and adults) are taught that systemic racial disparities exist in classrooms, where one race is disproportionally punished over another. In turn, RP works to eliminate punishment and produce equitable outcomes, instead bringing the offender and the ‘harmed’ together to repair harm through reconciliation. 🧵3/
7 MINDSETS advertises their partnership with PDE, as well as several other state public education agencies.

Numerous Pennsylvania school districts decided to pilot the 7 MINDSETS curriculum, with many going on to keep the digital program in their schools.

7 MINDSETS openly advertises their curriculum alignment with CASEL Core Competencies. 🧵4/
x.com/woodshed2012/s…Image
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7 MINDSETS promotes teachers talking to students about sensitive social issues from biased positions of “violent” mob attacks (1/6), “false claims” of stolen presidential elections (2020), and high profile police killings of black and brown Americans (George Floyd etc).
The article even suggests that colorblind education fuels inequalities and can lead to white students minimizing the role of race in society.
You can imagine then what their platform promotes and the agenda driving them. 🧵5/Image
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7 MINDSETS also provides Tier 2 and Tier 3 Mental Health and multi-tier systems of support (MTSS) through acquired BASE Education, a CASEL-recommended provider. The BASE mental health platform begins with Baseline, a student assessment of needs that assigns modules based on results captured from a 41 question survey. 🧵6/Image
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A demo of BASE shows just how involved “assigned adults” become in a student’s emotional/mental health. Open ended responses are required, with a minimum of 10 characters before a student may move on to the next part of the module. The program also looks for “firewords” that trigger immediate intervention. Teachers, staff, and parents also have modules that can be assigned. Alarmingly, the demo presenter from the video is sure to let the viewers know that parents WILL NOT see what their student is typing—only the assigned adult. 🧵7/
7 MINDSETS provides an entire page, and subsequent packets at your request, on funding streams available to help purchase their products.
BASE offers mental health resources, including a checklist that advocates for increased mental health services in schools. 🧵8/ Image
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On the board of 7 MINDSETS is Scott Shickler and Jeff Waller, founders of Magic Wand Foundation, an organization whose sole purpose is to empower youth for a collective mind-shift on a global scale. 🧵9/ Image
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Magic Wand Foundation’s board includes, in addition to Shickler and Waller, Nicole Armstrong. Nicole comes from Renaissance Learning who, together with GL Assessment, provides the software for the PASS surveys mentioned earlier. 🧵10/ Image
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7 MINDSETS also acquired the Better Together adult SEL program. It’s creator, Jo Salazar, is a contributor to Global Citizenship Foundation, an organization that focuses on achieving the UN’s SDG 4.7 and Education 2030. 🧵11/ Image
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Now, if you thought that all of this socialist SEL indoctrination is reserved just to brick-and-mortar public schools, you’d be sadly mistaken.

7 MINDSETS is partnered with Stride, Inc. (formerly K12, Inc.), an alliance that began in 2014–the same year as founder Ronald Packer’s resignation. Their current CEO hails from Match.com, the CFO was the SVP at BET, and their Senior Advisor is a founding board member of the American Federation for Children.

Stride is the largest education management organization (EMO) in the nation, competing with other major nonprofits like KIPP (covered in a prior thread).

Stride/K12 run the gamut on education, offering homeschooling and cyber charter, career prep, and private school options, including Agora, Insight, and Keystone in Pennsylvania.
They pay large sums to lobbying firms and groups like PA Families for Public Cyber Schools to grow their footprint. 🧵12/Image
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Of course, it helps to have friends in all the right places. Charles Zogby, who once served as PA’s Secretary of Education, went on to work for K12. He left that position to serve as the Commonwealth’s Secretary of the Budget. From there he went to work for a few schools before finally landing at his current position with the PA Treasury.

Sometimes choices are only the perception of choices.

Do you know if 7 MINDSETS is in your school? With many of these institutions now captured by radical socialist progressives, you better find out.

And if your electeds decry DEI/SEL but are not introducing legislation to rid your state of it or the funding that perpetuates its existence, they’re not serious. 🧵13/Image
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More from @Woodshed2012

Apr 19
Did you know that, housed within the Department of Pathology at the University of Pittsburgh, is a Health Sciences Tissue Bank (HSTB)?

The HSTB collects fetal tissue, including fresh tissue samples from abortions performed at UPMC hospitals like Magee-Womens Hospital. The tissue obtained by HSTB from abortions ranges from 6 to 42 weeks (full-term) gestation. 🧵/
In 2021, in collaboration with the Center for Medical Progress, @JudicialWatch released an article detailing the nearly $3 million in federal funds spent on the University of Pittsburgh’s quest to become a “Tissue Hub." 🧵/
judicialwatch.org/hhs-documents-…Image
This followed a scientific study released in 2020 describing experiments conducted by the University of Pittsburgh to study human immune responses and skin infections. These experiments used full-thickness human fetal skin from aborted fetuses, grafted onto rodents to create "humanized" models. Pictures from the study show baby hair from the aborted fetuses, ranging from 18 to 20 weeks gestation, growing on the backs of rats. 🧵/
nature.com/articles/s4159…
Read 9 tweets
Mar 27
I think I’ve heard about every excuse imaginable today as to why @Josh__Parsons lost the PA senate race. My favorites are “Republicans didn’t show up” and “Democrats beat ‘us’ at mail ballots, again.”

I’m a data gal, so let’s look at the actual data 📈

Total mail ballots returned: 12,589

Breakdown as follows:
🔴 R - 3,547
🔵 D - 8,869
⚫️ Other - 173

Amazingly, no provisionals or write-ins.

Yet, the breakdown by party registration for each of those returned ballots is as follows:
🔴 R - 4,290
🔵 D - 7,033
⚫️ Other - 1,270

What does this mean? 17% of all Republicans that returned a mail ballot had to vote for the Democrat.

When you factor in third party registrations, that number jumps to a whopping 33%.

In other words, A THIRD of all 🔴 & ⚫️ jumped ship from their party for the Democrat candidate.

Of course Shapiro would have you believe that is entirely logical. The Republican candidate is too ‘extreme’, he says. That narrative is becoming all too tired & repetitive.

The list of cancelled mail ballots tells an even more interesting tale for me.

Bottom line:

NO—Republicans did, in fact, sufficiently turn out in line with historic trends.

NO—Republicans did not lose to Democrat mail ballots. Republicans flipped. Third party voters flipped. The margin of votes by Republican voters was MORE than enough for Parsons to win handedly.

Now ask yourself why that is. Was the Democrat candidate just that appealing in a ruby red, ultra conservative district that hasn’t had a Democrat senator for well over 100 years? The same district that Trump took mere months ago by 15 points? With Rasmussen reporting a 26% approval rating for the Democrat Party nationwide?

Be careful who you listen to.Image
🔔 UPDATE 🔔

PA Senate District 36 “Historic Upset”, Part 2:

Another popular excuse I hear for this loss that has really taken off within party circles is that Parsons “was just not a good candidate” or he was too dull/unexciting/unliked” that people just didn’t show up for him.

For those that may not be familiar with Lancaster County or its electeds, Parsons was not some largely unknown candidate like his counterpart. Now serving in his third term as Lancaster County Commissioner, he was the county’s Clerk of Courts and also the Assistant DA prior.

So naturally, to quench my curiosity, I had to run a trend analysis comparing the 120 precincts in the 36th senate district to prior elections to see if there was any truth to this new narrative making its rounds.

Parsons was first elected in 2015. In PA, many counties have 3 county commissioners—2 from the majority party and 1 from the minority party to maintain balance in local governance. Parsons outperformed the Dem candidate by nearly 20 points in 2015, but, being a new candidate for this office, did not do as well as the returning Republican candidate Dennis Stuckey. Each election thereafter, his vote count in the district grew, as the highest vote-getter receiving more votes than both the Democrat candidate(s) as well as his Republican running mate:

🔴 2015 - 21,054
🔴 2019 - 28,763
🔴 2023 - 37,075

Does this data trend correlate with someone who is unpopular, unknown, or disliked?

And, as I pointed out in the earlier post, it is not true that the candidate was so dull that voters didn’t turn out for him. A 29% turnout is on trend with prior “off year” elections, even performing better than expected for a special election with a higher turnout rate in this district than his 2019 election, or even the 2021 Supreme Court race that saw substantially large sums of money dumped into the race to get Kevin Brobson elected.

In the same way, we reject Comrade Shapiro’s assertion that Parsons was too radical/extreme. He used this same narrative with Mastriano and later, Trump. Following Mastriano’s loss in 2022, of which Shapiro credited to his extremism, Parsons went on to secure a 2023 re-election win with more votes than any other candidate and the most votes he had received ever. Of course, Trump then easily won Lancaster in 2024. Doesn’t exactly align with the story he’s trying to sell, does it?

We can consider these claims debunked.

Now, looking at anomalous trends, I’d pay particular attention to these areas:

While relatively small, the wards of Columbia Boro, which had been making Republican gains for Parsons each election, made a hard pivot to Democrat this year.

Other precincts in need of special attention are parts of Elizabethtown Boro, parts of Rapho Twp, parts of Mount Joy Twp, Lititz Boro (particularly 1st ward 2nd precinct), Marietta Boro 2nd district, New Holland Boro 3rd district, and Conoy Twp.

Given the turnout-to-bed ratio and the batch of related cancelled mail ballots, it would be worth looking into who was conducting mail ballot assistance at the Mt Hope Nazarene Retirement Community. I have my guesses.

Finally, @LancasterCounty really needs an update to their arcane election reporting system. The 2024 elections have not yet been uploaded, data fields are cut when archived, download options are nonexistent. I feel for those who do not regularly download election data because what you are offered by the county is lacking to say the least. Keep this in mind when conversations about ‘vexatious requesters’ come up. The solution to this almost always comes back to more needed government transparency, not more restrictions to public access.Image
Here’s a fun little chart showing the number of mail ballots returned to the county by voters that were registered as Democrat vs. the actual number of mail ballots that voted Democrat.

How about them gains? Amazing that nearly every single precinct in the district had Republican or third party voters vote for the Democrat candidate regardless of the widely variable demographic makeup of each precinct.

It’s a Christmas miracle come early for the Democrat senate candidate!Image
Read 5 tweets
Jan 20
Frank McCourt wants to buy TikTok.

Who is Frank McCourt? Buyer beware. You’re going to want to keep reading to find out. 🧵1
@Breeauna9 @Andreafreedom76 @iamlisalogan @CourtenayTurner @LBelle355 @luce_lexi Image
Frank McCourt founded McCourt Global. The organization has a philanthropic current, with social impact mindfulness at their core. Common themes throughout this thread include a “common purpose/good” and “building a better…/a new way forward” with plenty of progressive keywords like “equity,” “safety,” “resilience,” and “democracy.” 🧵2Image
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Frank McCourt recently wrote a book called “Our Biggest Fight” addressing what McCourt sees as the need for a new, better, healthier, more equitable internet due to its threat to democracy and youth mental health.
His book site displays shining recommendations from several well-known figureheads in the leftist world, including singer Bruce Springsteen and Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation.🧵3Image
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Read 25 tweets
Dec 28, 2024
One of the more shocking revelations I’ve had over the last few years is how inextricably linked our elections are to our education system via NGOs operating as the 4th branch of government.

We continue to peel back the layers here with a closer look at Tim Shriver’s organizations which directly link social and emotional learning and critical theory efforts in education to the push for ranked-choice voting and National Popular Vote in elections. 🧵1Image
Tim Shriver is the co-founder of three organizations responsible for major policy decisions in education, health, and elections. CASEL (Fetzer Institute) is arguably one of the largest organizations to help usher in social and emotional learning & CRT into both K-12 and higher Ed school systems. COVID Collaborative directed many Covid protocols implemented in the US. UNITE’s focus is to transform democracy.

Watch this video from fellow parent advocate @iamlisalogan for a foundational understanding of linkages. 🧵2
youtu.be/aDO4iSAibpk?si…
CASEL’s board not only includes Shriver, but several prominent members, some of which have been deeply involved in ushering in “evidence-based” mental health into schools since the 1980’s. While an entire thread could be done on their team members alone, the focus here is CASEL’s creation of their Collaborative States Initiative (Agreement).

The goal of CSI was to get SEL into all 50 states. 🧵3Image
Read 25 tweets
Dec 20, 2024
A historic look at the Speaker of the House Role and who may serve: 🧵

Have you ever wondered why the word “choose” appears misspelled in our US Constitution?  

The archaic spelling “chuse”, contained within our nation’s founding document, is derived from William Penn’s 1701 Frame of Government, otherwise known as the “Charter of Privileges” or “Charter of Liberties” for the Province of Pennsylvania.  Penn built that framework for Pennsylvania’s government from English Parliamentary Rule going back hundreds of years, of which he, and later our Founding Fathers, was very familiar.

Article I Section 2 of the US Constitution says, in part:
“The House of Representatives shall “chuse” their Speaker and other Officers; and shall have the sole Power of Impeachment.”

Pennsylvania, though not the first colony founded in America, had arguably the most important role in the framing of the national government we know today.  Pennsylvania is the KEYSTONE state after all.  

Penn’s Frame of Government is considered Pennsylvania’s first Constitution, of which the federal Constitution was drafted from.  William Penn’s concept of government expressed in the Charter of Liberties shaped democracy in America and all around the world.

Despite the proclamation found on the US House’s governmental page that the Speaker role can be filled even by unelected persons of the House’s choosing, the notion is an inaccurate misrepresentation of our Founders’ intent.  While our federal Constitution does not delineate all the intricacies of the Speaker role, thankfully historical records greatly detail the inception of this role in American politics.  Many preserved records, including Votes and Proceedings of the House of Representatives of the Province of Pennsylvania, meticulously document the introduction of the Speakership here in the US.
English Rule: 🧵

The Speaker of the House role goes back as far almost as the inception of English Parliament.  
Parliament’s own website provides wonderful, succinct historical timelines of their transformation from the time they began to take form in 1236.  

The earliest concepts of a Speaker was the presiding officer selected to oversee the drafting of the “Provisions of Oxford” in 1258.  That role became the Lord Speaker in the Upper House.  As the House of Commons (knights of the shire and burgesses) formed and then later began to meet apart from the Upper House, the need for a speaker that would be the go-between for the Commons and the King developed.

The first unofficial Speaker of the House of Commons was chosen in 1375, followed by the first official Speaker on record in 1376.  

The Speakership was a dangerous role in the beginning and one that was beholden to the Crown.  A number of Speakers were beheaded at the displeasure of the King upon delivering news that he did not like. While the Commons chose their Speaker, they were typically someone that had the King’s approval.  The practice of choosing a Speaker was for a member to stand and nominate another member for office.  If unanimously agreed upon, the Speaker was led to the chair by two other members in what came to be known as “dragging the Speaker” due to the apprehension at the perilousness of the position.  The part of the Speaker being an agent of the Crown is later carried over to a greater degree in America with the appointment of Speakers in the various colonies.  

Over the next few hundred years, the Speaker role in the House of Commons continued to gain authority and gradual distancing from the King.  Eventually, the role saw itself wholly independent from the Crown, owing its allegiance solely to the Commons.

One fact about the Speaker role in English Parliament that is as true today as it was in the 14th century is that the Speaker of the House must be a member of Parliament, that is to say an individual elected to serve in the House of Commons.  That concept is important as we move into the molding of American government.
Early Colonial America: 🧵

It is of no surprise that government in early America was led by the Crown.  Men were granted charters by the King, who, in return for their allegiance to the Crown and their laws, would be given tracts of land and deemed the proprietors or governors over it.  A council, comprised of the areas’ most elite land holders and often of the King’s choosing, was then formed to advise the governor and aid in the creation of new laws.  The council, together with the governor, also served in a judicial capacity as the highest court in the land.
Read 10 tweets
Oct 31, 2024
Who is behind Field+Media Corps, the group involved in the fraudulent voter registration investigations in Pennsylvania?

Let’s examine.

Field+Media Corps consulting firm was formed in 2017 with an emphasis on race-based social activism, highlighting social inequalities and Black, Indigenous, and Persons of Color coalition building. 🧵/
@laralogan @annvandersteel @fox43 @glennbeckImage
Francisco Heredia is the CEO and Partner at Field+Media. @frankieheredia is also currently serving as Vice Mayor on the Mesa City Council. Prior to that, Heredia worked for the US Census Bureau and, interestingly, the Maricopa County Recorder’s Office. His social media feed promotes Kamala Harris.

How lax exactly are AZ laws that would allow for an elected official to also run partisan campaign consulting and GOTV efforts? 🧵/
mesaaz.gov/government/may…Image
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Heredia also spent time as the National Field Director for Mi Familia Vota (MVF), a leftist org whose aim is to increase left-leaning Latino votes and grant citizenship status to illegal immigrants.

Hector Sanchez Barba, the CEO of MFV, sits on the board of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America and started an anti-Trump social media campaign, partnering with groups like UnidosUS Action Fund and the Lincoln Project. Barba claimed Trump “practices the rhetoric of dictators” and is the “biggest threat to our democracy.”

MVF received funding from Everybody Votes, a George Soros funded org who was implicated in the York County voter registration fraud investigation.

Francis Heredia also spent time working for One Arizona, who works with infamous liberal attorney, Marc Elias. 🧵/Image
Read 7 tweets

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