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California's own forecasters predicted
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schools would lose 10,000 students this
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year. The real number was 75,000. So,
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they were only off by seven and a half
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times. And the budget for California
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schools, it's only going up. And in this
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video, I'm going to show you the data,
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explain the funding mechanism that turns
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this into a financial catastrophe for
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local districts, and tell you why the
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fix is simpler than Sacramento wants you
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to think. Welcome to California
0:23
Underground News. Let's get into that
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first story right now.
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So, this is EdSource, the nonprofit
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outlet that broke down California
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Department of Education enrollment
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numbers released April 17th. And the
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headline is that California schools face
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budget cuts as enrollment drops by
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students. That's the largest single-year
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decline since the pandemic. That's more
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than double the drop from the year
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before. And the state is now at 5.7
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million students in public K-12 schools.
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Every outlet that has covered this story
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has framed it as an immigration story.
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And sure, immigration is one factor, and
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birth rates are also a factor, and of
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course, people leaving California, which
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is not a surprise, is also a factor. But
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here's the question nobody has asked.
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How did the state's own forecasters miss
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In October 2025, the California
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Department of Finance, the state's own
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number shop, projected enrollment would
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fall by 10,000 students. And again, the
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actual number was 74,961.
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I mean, that's not a rounding error,
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that's a structural failure in how
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California plans for its future. And
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here's why that failure has immediate
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consequences for every school district
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in the state. See, California funds its
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schools based on average daily
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attendance. Fewer students in the
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building means fewer dollars flowing to
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the district. But the buildings still
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cost the same, and the teachers'
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contracts still cost the same, the
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utilities, the administration, the
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buses, and none of that shrinks because
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75,000 kids didn't show up. So,
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districts are caught between a revenue
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formula tied to bodies in seats and a
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cost structure that does not move.
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Kenneth Kappon, principal fiscal
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analysis for nonpartisan Legislative
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Analyst's Office, told EdSource that
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smaller districts are going to have to
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completely redo their revenue
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projections. And Kendra Britt,
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communications director for California
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County Superintendents, was direct about
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what comes next. And she said the impact
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is real and immediate. And that means
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budget deficits, staff layoffs, program
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cuts, and in some cases, school
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closures. That's not a partisan read,
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that's the state's own analysis in
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county officials describing the next 12
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months. And here's the contradiction
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that makes this genuinely hard to
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explain out loud. See, the state spends
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roughly 40% of its entire general fund
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on K-12 education. And that's locked in
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by Proposition 98. Newsom's proposed
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2026-2027 budget is 88.7 billion for
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K-12. And the state school enrollment is
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falling every single year, which means
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more money, but there's fewer students.
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So, where's the money going? And why do
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we keep spending it? In other words,
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based on this model, we're doing great,
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I guess. But here's the part that really
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got me. There's a provision in
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California law that cushions the impact
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of declining enrollment. Districts can
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claim attendance based on three-year
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average, not the current year. So, when
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your attendance falls, you can
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essentially pretend it didn't fall as
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hard because of this average. One
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district administrator quoted in
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EdSource said, "Without that provision,
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quote, we would be toast, end quote."
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That is the system. And the state built
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a mechanism that allows districts to
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delay reckoning with a demographic
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reality that has been visible for years.
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And then the Department of Finance
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projected a 10,000 student drop using
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the same data everyone else could see,
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and they only missed by 65,000 students.
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You know, just a small rounding error.
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And that's not bad luck, that's
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forecasting infrastructure that is
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either not working or is being used to
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protect a spending narrative that can't
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survive honest numbers. And real quick,
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if you're finding this useful, make sure
3:57
you hit the subscribe and tap the bell
3:59
so you don't next one. If the story made
4:01
you feel something, a like goes a long
4:02
way. Also, there's this new thing that
4:04
YouTube is doing called the hype option.
4:06
So, if you like it and see the hype,
4:08
make sure you hit that as well, helps
4:09
small creators get found. All right,
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let's get back into the story right now.
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See, the consequence is already here.
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CalMatters reported in February that San
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Francisco Unified just settled a teacher
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strike with an agreement that adds an
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estimated 180 million in new costs. And
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where that money comes from, there's
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actually no clean answer. Sacramento
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City Schools have been teetering on
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insolvency for years. Costs consistently
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greater than income. And EdSource's
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structural analysis makes the math
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plain. A 3% decline in attendance can
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exceed the annual cost of living
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adjustment districts actually receive
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from the state. The COLA, or the cost of
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living adjustment, this year is 2.30%.
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A 3% attendance drop, and you're already
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underwater. One superintendent put it
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directly, quote, "We cannot adjust costs
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as quickly as we will lose revenue, end
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quote." That's a description of a system
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built for growth. Being run through
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contraction with no redesign. And let me
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know in the comments, if you have kids
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in California public schools right now,
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are you feeling this? Are you feeling
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fewer programs, closed classrooms,
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layoff notices? Because the data says
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this is happening statewide, and I want
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you to let me know in the comments what
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it looks like in your district. And
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here's the bottom line. California built
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a school funding system around growth.
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More students, more money, more
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programs, more administrators. And I
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guess that worked for a while, but the
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problem is now it's running in reverse.
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Students are leaving, birth rate
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dropped, families moved, and the system
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cannot adjust fast enough because every
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cost is locked in by contracts, by union
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agreements, by a funding formula that
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was never designed for contraction, only
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for growth. The Department of Finance
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projected 10,000 students lost, and they
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were only off by 65,000. And nobody got
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fired, nobody got called before a
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committee, and nobody redesigned the
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entire forecast. So, nobody literally
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did anything. Sacramento just increased
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the budget. I generally don't know what
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to tell you anymore because it seems
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like no matter how much California fails
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and fails upwards, they still do the
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same thing and keep taxing us more. So,
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that's what's broken, and here's what
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would actually fix it. Begin to fund
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schools by enrollment, not attendance.
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Right now, California ties school
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revenue to average daily attendance with
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a three-year cushion that lets districts
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delay reckoning with a demographic
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reality they're actually in. That
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cushion protects short-term budgets and
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removes every incentive to adapt before
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the fiscal cliff arrives. Now, shift
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that to enrollment-based funding, and
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districts know their revenue picture a
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full year in advance. Meaning they can
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make staffing decisions and
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consolidation decisions proactively.
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They can make planned transitions
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instead of emergency layoffs. See,
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Michigan moved to an enrollment-based
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model, and it forced faster, honest
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district restructuring. Fewer
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communities blindsided by sudden school
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closures. More managed, transparent
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decision-making about which schools to
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consolidate and when. California
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students deserve a system that plans for
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them honestly. And right now, the system
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is planning for its own budget. But I
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want to know what you think. Drop your
7:03
thoughts in the comments below. And if
7:05
you're tired of media that picks a team
7:07
before it picks the facts, make sure
7:08
you're subscribed to California
7:09
Underground News so you never miss
7:11
another story. And we'll see you on the