The racists and Anti-religion Ash Kalra is still in the Assembly. H want to eliminate Christians and Republicans from law enforcement. His first try was so bad, he was forced to with draw it. This is not the need—he will create another bill to do the same, but will try harder to be within the Constitution. Kalra does not believe in the 1stoir 2nd Amendment and does think that he, since he is a member of the legislature, is smarter than ordinary citizens.
“Assemblyman Ash Kalra’s stated goal of AB 655 was to eliminate police officers belonging to “hate groups” or those who have used hate speech in the past.
But the bill’s definition of “hate group” was so broad it included police officers expressing religious or political views on abortion, marriage, and gender, or even those who belonged to a conservative church, synagogue, mosque or political party.
“We thank Assemblyman Kalra for listening to our concerns and revising AB 655 to respect the constitutional rights of peace officers,” Jonathan Keller, president of the California Family Council said Friday.
Kalra is a hater—his hate will not go away. Oh, he would like to be Attorney General—but a fellow hater, Rob Bonta got the appointment.
Lawmaker drops ban on Christians and Republicans as cops
By Greg Burt, PressCalifornia, 3/26/21
SACRAMENTO – A Bay Area assemblyman reversed course and eliminated bill language blacklisting Christians, Jews, and Muslims from being police officers.
Assemblyman Ash Kalra’s stated goal of AB 655 was to eliminate police officers belonging to “hate groups” or those who have used hate speech in the past.
But the bill’s definition of “hate group” was so broad it included police officers expressing religious or political views on abortion, marriage, and gender, or even those who belonged to a conservative church, synagogue, mosque or political party.
“We thank Assemblyman Kalra for listening to our concerns and revising AB 655 to respect the constitutional rights of peace officers,” Jonathan Keller, president of the California Family Council said Friday.
“Jesus said ‘there is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.’ California Christians serving as police strive to sacrificially love their communities and treat every person with honesty and fairness. California should want more people of faith in law enforcement, not fewer.”
Kalra initially doubled-down on the problematic language in an interview with KCRA NBC News, even smearing those who disagreed.
“You have a constitutional right to have racist and bigoted views,” Karla said. “You don’t have a constitutional right to be a police officer.”
Karla also said the community needs police officers with approved personal viewpoints.
“The role and responsibility of peace officers is so important for a community healing — for a community’s safety — and the people in the community don’t feel that those that are entrusted with that responsibility look at them in a way that’s unbiased. That undermines our entire public safety system,” Kalra told KCRA News.
But after push back from the California Family Council and Pacific Justice Institute, the bill gained national attention.
Over the last week the California Peace Officers’ Association, the Sacramento Bee, and other national organizations also expressed concerns.
In response, Kalra finally acknowledged controversy and amended the bill Thursday.
“We have put in amendments to remove the specificity regarding denial of constitutional rights. Because, you do have the First Amendment right to be part of groups that may differ in opinion,” Kalra told KPIX CBS News.
The First Amendment problems with AB 655 related to how the bill defined a hate group or hate speech.
Originally the bill said a hate group means “an organization that, based upon its official statements or principles, the statements of its leaders, or its activities, supports, advocates for, or practices the denial of constitution constitutional rights of, the genocide of, or violence towards, any group of persons based upon race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, or disability.”
No one was against defining a hate group as one that supports or advocates for violence or genocide.
But saying that a hate group included an organization that “practices the denial of constitutional rights,” broadens the bill to include any organization that happens to hold religious or political views that conflict with controversial Supreme Court decisions on marriage and abortion.
That means the Catholic Church would be considered a hate group under AB 655’s definition, especially after Pope Francis affirmed last week that the church could not bless same-sex marriages.
The amendments added yesterday eliminate the phrase “the denial of constitutional rights of,” satisfying the opposition complaints for the most part.
Greg Burt is Director of Capitol Engagement with the California Family Council