Jason McGahan, an investigative reporter for LA Weekly in California, looked into some strange practices in the schools affiliated with the Gulen movement. Fethullah Gulen is an Islamic cleric who lives in seclusion in Pennsylvania. The Erdogan government in Turkey claims that Gulen was responsible for the recent failed coup. Whether he was or was not involved in the coup is unknown. Gulen’s role in the charter movement is also unclear. He has some undefined connection with 160 or so charter schools, which go under a variety of names. Many or most of their teachers are on work visas from Turkey, and typically most or all of their board members are Turkish. It is odd that foreign nationals would take control of running “public” schools in the United States, since the essential role of public schools is to teach citizenship. The organization frequently sponsors trips to Turkey for state legislators and their staff and for Congressional staff. These “free” trips promote good will.
The story that interested McGahan was the movement of cash from the charter schools to the Gulen organization. When “60 Minutes” reported on the Gulen schools a few years ago, one of the people interviewed said that Gulen teachers were expected to remit 40% of their wages to the organization. McGahan reports that the practice seems to be customary.
His informant was a Turkish man named Yunus Avcu. He described his monthly trips from Aurora, Colorado, to Santa Ana, California, to bring a briefcase full of cash to “the organization.” Avcu said the cash was the regular deductions from staff members’ salaries.
Avcu says these payments weren’t voluntary; he says the organization also obligated him to return about 40 percent of his own salary every month. He says Accord executives made an Excel spreadsheet at the start of the school year with the salary of every Turkish employee at every school in one column and the amount of money each would owe in another. Avcu says executives determined the amount each Turkish teacher had to return to the organization, based on the employee’s seniority, education level, marital status and number of children. “The organization was taking the money from the people,” Avcu says. “If you don’t pay this money, they don’t employ you. If you reject or refuse to pay this, you have to go back to Turkey.”
According to Avcu, the cash funded the worldwide organization of Fethullah Gülen, a controversial Turkish preacher living in self-exile in the United States….
The inspector general of the Los Angeles Unified School District alleges that a California charter school group, the Magnolia Educational and Research Foundation, is among the more than 160 U.S. charter school groups with ties to Gülen. Magnolia operates charter schools on 10 campuses in California, including eight in L.A. It also happened to be headquartered in the same office space as the Accord Institute [where Avcu delivered the cash each month]….
The CEO at Magnolia Public Schools, Caprice Young, denies any formal or financial affiliation with Gülen or the Gülen movement; she does, however, acknowledge that certain current and former directors of the foundation are believers in Gülen’s teachings. “Some of our founding principals had ties to Gülen,” Young tells L.A. Weekly, but she says those founders are no longer part of Magnolia….
Since 2011, the FBI has raided charter schools with ties to Gülen in Louisiana, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. A Georgia audit found three schools engaged in bid-rigging to vendors with ties to Gülen. A New York audit found one charter school had leased its building in a way that netted millions of dollars for a New Jersey company with ties to Turkey. In Utah, authorities revoked the charter of a school tied to Gülen after an audit uncovered financial mismanagement. In Illinois, a charter group tied to Gülen is under federal investigation for funneling more than $5 million in federal grant money to insiders and away from the charter schools’ fund intended to extend Internet access to schools with low-income students….
Caprice Young is the somewhat unlikely face of the Magnolia Educational and Research Foundation. She assumed the helm as CEO in January 2015, and her hiring was widely interpreted as a move to both reform Magnolia’s management practices and rehabilitate its image. Young is the first American and first woman to serve as CEO at the charter organization, whose four previous CEOs were Turkish men.
Magnolia pays Young a salary of $236,000, and it has provided her the full-time services of a public relations specialist from Larson Communications, an L.A. firm that includes crisis management among its specialties. Magnolia pays the firm $12,000 a month.
Young is a former president of the LAUSD board; she served for four years before losing her re-election bid in 2003. From there, she went on to found the California Charter Schools Association, building it into a formidable statewide organization in her five years as president. By Young’s account, her specialty since stepping down from CCSA eight years ago has been turning around charter schools from the brink of financial collapse.
Young says she began working at Magnolia as a consultant in late 2014. Her personal connection to Magnolia dates back to 2001, when, as school board president, she voted to approve Magnolia’s first charter school, Magnolia Science Academy 1 in Reseda. She says she has fond memories of the eight Turkish scientists, businessmen and educators who founded the school; the news clipping that commemorates the school’s founding is framed and displayed on the wall of Magnolia’s conference room.
The eight charter schools operated by the Magnolia foundation in L.A. — in Van Nuys, Carson, Venice, Palms, Northridge, Bell and Reseda — received a collective $26 million in local, state and federal funds in fiscal year 2014, according to audited financial statements. The schools enroll a collective 2,600 students, the vast majority of them from disadvantaged families, school officials say. Eighty percent of Magnolia students are eligible for the school lunch program, and a similar proportion of them are low-income and students of color. Generally the Magnolia charters outperform their public school peers, but not across the board.
The article describes the multiple investigations of the Magnolia charter schools and recent decisions to deny their requests to open more charter schools.
There is so much mystery surrounding the Gulen schools that some investigative agency–the FBI?–should look into their origins, their ties (if any) to Fethullah Gulen, and their finances. Why in the world should we outsource public schools?

Schools nowadays spend precious little time teaching citizenship as is evident in the precariously low level of national discourse.
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“60 Minutes” had an interview with Erdogan a couple of weeks ago. He is very ticked off at our harboring Gulen, who he feels, was behind the recent coup attempt. Turkey is a strategic ally in the Middle East. We are helping to fight ISIS from our air bases in Turkey. Erdogan can boot us out if he so chooses. If we lose access to Turkey, any military intervention in the Middle East would be compromised. Trump has stated he has no problem turning Gluen over to Erdogan, but who knows what the “air head” elect will remember, or not.
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Gulen is used as a bargaining chip by the USA, Erdogan has every right to be disappointed by the USA’s refusal to turn over Gulen. America is an accident waiting to happen with these schools.
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One of the most concerning features about this situation is how hardly any public officials have ever talked about it publicly — although many of them have been perfectly happy to accept the Gulen Movement’s trips, gifts, awards, food, campaign contributions, and flattery over the years. All of them should be cornered with a camera running.
Also, I recently added up the number of active Gulen-linked charter schools for this school year (2016-2017) and came to a total of 167 in 26 states plus DC.
And based on 2014-2015 enrollment figures and the growth since that year (in both new schools + additional grade levels), I estimate the total current enrollment to be about 80,000 students. I also estimate that their total revenue for 2016-2017 will be close to $720 million.
Details @ http://charterschoolscandals.blogspot.com/p/list-of-us-gulen-schools.html
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Your estimate of $720 million is low. there is no way to add up all the grants, bonds and real estate scams they will be getting. It could easily be another $500 million, that is if they are not pulled from their roots and weeded out.
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If there are 80,000 students, then there may be 3200 teachers sending 40% of their salaries to Turkey. Conservatively, that’s $40,000,000 per year. Even if it were half that, if he’s using it to fund the rebels, it’s no wonder that Erdogen wants him sent home!
Maybe we citizen teachers should fund a revolution of our own!
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Erdogan’s leadership of Turkey is increasingly authoritarian. He has closed many newspapers for voicing opposition to government policies. He has imprisoned journalists and teachers. He is hardly a democratic role model.
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One need not favor Erdogan to be appalled by Gulen schools collecting taxpayer dollars here
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Refreshing to see that nuance. Just like one need not favor Trump to be appalled by Hillary Clinton’s record.
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. . . . or the unceasing smear campaign that has followed her for circa a quarter of a century.
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It is my understanding that the Obama administration is reluctant to extradite Gulen to Turkey due to concerns that he might not be granted a fair trial. It has requested that Turkey produce credible evidence of Gulen’s involvement in the attempted coup.
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Abigail ; you must be unaware of the hundreds of jailed journalists when the Gulen Movement controlled the police, judiciary system and the media. Also many were tortured and killed. I direct your attention to the news video on this page regarding the abuse of journalists by Ivan Watson of CNN, anyone that has followed Gulen as long as I have are well aware of their human rights abuses while hiding behind their fake “dialogue” The video is here, I suggest you read it about Ahmet Sik,Nadem Sener, . Lets not forget the jailing of nobel prize winner Orhan Pamuk and slaughter of Turkish Armenian Journalist Hrant Dink. Erdogan is no saint but most of his purging and cleaning house is of the Gulen Movement.
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MaryBeth,
And you perhaps have proof that all of those currently imprisoned by Erdogan were involved in the coup attempt? Are you also following the rumors of possible American involvement? Or do you only attempt to publicize perspectives that align with your political binoculars? Moreover, I would respectfully request that you refrain from insinuating that I am lacking in knowledge about Turkey.
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So whose US Senator will probe Betsy DeVos on Gulen school situation? She should be an opponent of this based on her religious “right” beliefs. This new article posted by Diane has lots of factoids to be packaged for the right Senator, likely in a state with Gulen schools. I will notify CT’s 2 Senators, but we have none in CT. NPEA President should send a formal letter and so should AFT and NEA. ACTION is called for. Let’s not miss this opportunity. And get some PR out of our stand.
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I will contact my two UT senators, but both of them are all in for the giant orange idiot. But I will contact them.
Contrary to the article, the Utah Gulen school was reprieved at the last minute and kept its charter, even with incredibly low enrollment and problematic practices.
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Threatened out West; what happens when the Gulen movement walks in with an attorney some people fold like a cheap lawn chair. Their 1 year probation turned into what? 4-5 years now? They moved crazy Frank Erdogan out (he is in Australia now) he was a real gem the way he denied the Holocaust and he thought 9/11 was debatable. But what do you expect these are people that still deny the Armenian, Greek and Assyrian Ottoman era Genocide. In fact, Gulen speaks of honoring the Golden Generation as a new establishment of a Golden era where only his students rule in a Neo Ottomanish fashion. American tax payers are so generous.
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Abigail; as most Americans are lacking in their knowledge of Turkey or Turkic history. Yes there is ample proof of the Gulen Movement being involved in the coup of 7/15 it’s not their first time they have tried it. The military involved have direct ties and correspondence linking them to Hizmet, which is the communication on their texting back and forth during, before the coup attacks. The software they used was NATO rapid deployment system. As you may have guessed they are part of the Gladio armies. They didn’t open 167 publicly funded charter schools, migrate over 5,000 h1-b visa “teachers”, open over 200 dialogue and cultural centers in the USA under 16 years without help from some at the US state department. They have taken billions from the USA via educational bonds, grants, real estate scams while most Americans continue to be be dazzled by their “dialogue” and “free trips” there are no accidents with this group it;s well thought out. The center to their goals is GREED they don’t care about Turkey or America only growing the power and share of their cult. They have left a huge paper trail worldwide, the US Attorney General has this all. http://www.gulenpoliticians.blogspot.com
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What’s great about this article is what’s new here.
What’s new is that, for the first time ever, whistle-blowers — speaking on the record, using their own names — are coming forward with detailed, first-hand testimony about the Gulenists’ money laundering, coerced kicking back of salaries (cough up your salary or we’re sending you back to Turkey), and on and on.
This kind of testimony about the Gulenists’ illegal shenanigans will be hard to refute.
I can’t wait to hear Caprice claim: 1) if true, they are “anomalies” carried out by rogue Gulenists, against the wishes of those in charge, those upright folks who operate an otherwise legal enterprise; 2) if true, these practices have been totally stopped by those in charge, etc.
You know … nothin’ to see here, just keep movin’…
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At the least of it, this sounds like money-laundering to me–though I have to say not only is it a “mystery” by the writer’s account, but also I haven’t followed the story in depth, so: IF TRUE,
In any case, (a) if a charter’s funding comes from our tax money, and then (b) the company claims teachers’ salaries as a legitimate expense on their tax filings (whatever those are); then (c) requires teachers to pay a good amount of their salary back to the company (or anyone) as a part of their condition for employment; and especially if that money is delivered back to the company in cash; then (d) that cash disappears, then it’s fraudulent–a kind of money-laundering. It’s twisted, however, because usually in money-laundering schemes money is received from doing crime; then “washed” through legitimate systems to cover the money-tracks back to the original crime. Here, our tax money is received for a legitimate purpose (to educate our children), THEN finds its way to the criminals by covering its tracks. Ultimately, it’s being siphoned off not only from the teachers, but from what is supposed to be for the students.
In other countries and cultures, this may be a common way of “doing business.” Here, it’s extortion not only on tax payers, but on the employees–and I wonder if the employees report such payments on THEIR long-form taxes in this country as an expense to reduce the bottom line of THEIR taxes; or if they just have to suck it up, saving on legitimate deductions, but then paying taxes on what’s left of the whole 100 percent salary that they receive for teaching, (That’s one question that needs to be asked.) At best, these teachers have a kind of double tax base–paying taxes to two countries where one is still operating on quasi-tribal principles (they think this is the way to do things) But cash deliveries defy such an innocuous interpretation of what’s going on in this situation.
Diane is right here also: why would we want to outsource education that is fundamentally about developing good citizens? It’s fraught with problems. Only one problem of many is that corporations and businesses often have little or no allegiance to specific countries and cultures, on principle. If they had it their way, they would even pay NO TAXES to ANY nation/country. Like with charter schools themselves, businesses’ allegiances are not 100% to the development of their students (or citizens as with public education) but to their corporation and its financial success, regardless of what country or culture specific people live in or where corporations have their brick and mortar.
And again, we see this inherent “conflict of interest” playing out on our political scene NOW and in the minds of the “world players” that are on “stage.” Who cares about citizens? It seems they don’t know how to think in any other way. Citizens are the enemy. And these people are all Corp-Heads–kind of like programmed robots. They have, indeed, fooled some of the people some of the time?
Here’s what writer says that refers to the above: “Avcu says executives determined the amount each Turkish teacher had to return to the organization, based on the employee’s seniority, education level, marital status and number of children. ‘The organization was taking the money from the people,’ Avcu says. ‘If you don’t pay this money, they don’t employ you. If you reject or refuse to pay this, you have to go back to Turkey.'”
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Well stated Catherine!
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Duane and Catherine – Gulen is involved with dirty crime in the USA it’s called the real estate scam game. Here are just a few examples: in Georgia they got a loan for $19 million from Wells Fargo to purchase the land next door to build a nice new building. But in the Gulen fashion in the loan application they did whats called a “failure to disclose” they didn’t think it was important to mention about the school district recommending not to approve their schools. It happened, they were denied and went into default on the loan which was going into foreclosure. The Gulenists brilliantly formed another finance group called TruGlobe, and bid on the property back on the courthouse steps for $3.2 million. They won the property (under another entity) pocketed the difference of $16 million and built a beautiful school., they are now private schools were they charge $10,000 a year. They still boast high test scores, but hey it’s ok all the Gulen Schools claim to be high performing. Another scam was the purchase of an old Catholic school building in NY for $250,000, they then leased it back to the CMO for an inflated amount of over $20,000 a a month thereby paying off the school loan and pocketing more cash. It’s all so obvious with them,
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Diane, to your point about outsourcing education to other countries, don’t forget there’s a Swedish charter in Manhatten, called Kunskapsskolan. We’ve opened the door to any Tom, Dick or foreign investor. I wouldn’t be surprised if cults don’t start going after charter schools’ generous profit margins.
As to one reader’s allusion to letting Gulen harvest enough cash to overthrow Erdogan, look what US interference has done to the Middle East: destabilization, the rise of ISIS, endless wars, a flood of refugees, and terrible loss of lives.
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Rbeckley,
Gulen Schools now have more students than any other charter chain, in contrast to a single Swedish charter in New York. On principle, I oppose the concept of outsourcing community schools to other nation.
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Exactly. Meanwhile, profit margins of around 20% attract investors instead of educators.
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The Gulen school potential scandal is merely the tip of the ice berg. Let’s see if the Republican Congress finally develops some oversight into public monies going to private schools who then shield their financial books from oversight by using the excuse of proprietary secrecy. No good Republican should remain uninterested in conflicts of interest over public money, should they?
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Way more damaging to the charter school industry — and to California’s Magnolia chain of charter schools in particular — is the Twitter account and activity of Caprice Young, the CEO of the Magnolia chain of charter schools.
For those who are not aware, Magnolia is the chain of charter schools here in California that has been accused of being under the control of the Islamic Imam Fetullah Gulen and his Gulenist forces, an accusation that Magnolia’s current CEO Caprice Young has denied “categorically” on numerous occasions.
Time and again, Ms. Young has vehemently denied that there was any such Magnolia connection to Gulen or to any part of the Gulenist Islamic cult in Turkey, the group which executed a failed coup to overthrow Turkey’s democratically elected government this past July 15 – 16.
However, you can see (BELOW) that something interesting was going on when the news of the Gulenist coup broke, (again, the goal of this coup being the overthrow of the sitting Prime Minister Erdogan, and replace it with a Gulenist military junta).
At first, it appeared to be a successful coup.
Then, at THAT moment in time — Friday night, July 15 — Caprice Young re-tweeted Gulen ally & U.S. Congressman Brad Sherman’s tweets where Sherman was hoping for the Gulenist coup’s success … AGAIN, ON THE VERY FRIDAY NIGHT (July 15, 2016) THE COUP BEGAN. She had to have been monitoring the coup as it unfolded.
Again, Sherman tweeted that was his hoping that the Gulenist coup would be successful, and the the anti-Gulen prime minister Erdogan was deposed, in favor of Gulen forces embedded in the Turkish military.
Go to Ms. Young’s Twitter page here …
… then scroll back back to “July 15” to see the following re-tweets Young made of Congressman Brad Sherman’s cheering on of the coup:
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x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
… and then, the next morning of July 16, after the coup fell apart, and Erdogan re-assumed control of the country, sore loser Sherman whined in this tweet (which Young also re-tweeted) about the coup falling apart, and wished shame upon Erdogan and anyone else who would proceed to use the now-failed coup “to white wash Ergodan”:
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
The first one of Sherman’s tweets got an avalanche of outraged and snarky responses: (read them in context by CLICKING on the first tweet from Sherman ABOVE)
Here’s the first one.
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
V @vpandey16 Jul 15
@BradSherman @zaidbenjamin
because real democracy starts by kicking out democratically elected leaders????
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
So here you have Ms. Young apparently monitoring and cheering on the Gulenist coup ON THE VERY FRIDAY NIGHT (July 15, 2016) WHEN IT WAS HAPPENING, and at the very moment when it looked like the coup engineered by the Gulenists looked like it might succeed.
Here’s a couple questions that people can ask Ms. Young (or ask anyone) at next Tuesday’s LAUSD Board meeting when the future of the Los Angeles Gulen schools will be discussed?
What the-hell is Caprice Young, the former California Charter Schools Association (CCSA) President and current Magnolia Charter Schools CEO doing keeping track of an ongoing coup in the Middle East country of Turkey as that coup is unfolding … when, at the same time, she, Magnolia, and the CCSA all deny any connection to or interest in the fate or politics of that same country, or any connection or interest in the Gulen movement of the Islamic Imam Fethullah Gulen, the architect of the failed coup?
Could California Charter School Association (CCSA) President Jed Wallace, Caprice young, or anyone else at the CCSA please explain or defend this Twitter activity of Ms. Young’s?
(NOTE: Magnolia Charter Schools CEO Caprice Young was the first President of the CCSA when she and others first formed it. Jed Wallace is her successor, so he’d be a good person to whom one can pose this question. As with Donald Trump’s recent troubles, it’s going to be hard for either Caprice or Jed to talk their way out of this one!)
Back to Caprice.
Hmmm … for someone who vehemently claims to have no dog in this Gulen fight, it seems kind of odd of Ms. Young to be apparently spending her Friday night (when the coup began) monitoring this coup in a Middle Eastern country — with the outcome determining the future status or survival of the Gulen movement — and re-tweeting U.S. Congressman Brad Sherman’s tweets cheering on the coup. You know… the same Gulen movement that her charter school chain has no connection whatsoever, as she “categorically, absolutely” claimed in a newspaper article.
C’mon Caprice! Don’t you got something better to do on a Friday night?
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Excellent Jack…you said it all. Will try to get Joining Forces retired teachers into the BoE room at the next meeting.
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The Strange Case of Caprice Young & the Imam Fetullah Gulen
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Caprice Young is the CEO of the Magnolia Schools charter chain here in California, which are allegedly under the control of an Islamic cleric in exile in Pennsylvania, the Imam Fetulleh Gulen.
In that position, Young has always steadfastly denied any connection of the Magnolia Charter schools, or of herself to the either the Islamic political-religious Gulen Movement operating in Turkey and in the United States, or any ties to to its Islamic cleric leader, the Imam Fetullah Gulen living in the U.S. in exile, or to any internal matters in the country of Turkey.
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
“I haven’t seen a connection (between the Magnolia schools and Gulen / Turkey),” she (Caprice Young) said.
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
For that quote, go here:
http://laschoolreport.com/new-chief-of-troubled-magnolia-ive-done-this-work-before/
… or for another Gulen-connection-denying quote form Ms. Young:
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
“Absolutely, categorically, Magnolia has nothing to do with the Gulen movement as an institution,” said Caprice Young, Magnolia’s CEO and superintendent.
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
For that quote, go here:
http://www.ocregister.com/articles/schools-707539-magnolia-school.html
However, as a non-Turkish American, Caprice Young sure does tweet a lot — and make a lot of public comments to the press — about about the minutiae of internal Turkish politics, even to the point of drawing a contrast between Magnolia Charter “staff” and those Turkish politicians currently in power whom Young views as not “value(ing) human rights.”
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
“The president of Turkey is busy shooting down Russian planes
and smuggling arms to Syria. Doesn’t he have better things to do?” Young asked rhetorically. “The members of my staff are folks who value human rights.”
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For that quote, go here:
http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2016/mar/04/magnolia-charter-schools-caprice-young/
Hmmm … a Khomeini-like Imam-in-exile (who controls over 100 U.S. charter schools, including the Magnolia schools managed by Ms. Young) , the Imam Fetullah Gulen, is attempting a coup in the country of Turkey, with the Imam Gulen’s ultimate goal to impose a brutal Islamic theocracy and dictatorship like the one imposed on neighboring Iran in 1979 … yet Ms. Young prattles on about her and her Magnolia Charter Schools’ staff’s commitment to “human rights,” in a condemnation of human rights violations of those serving in the democratically-elected government that the Imam Gulen — again, Caprice Young’s alleged boss — is now on the verge of overthrowing.
What-ever.
From the comments section on the above article:
http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2016/mar/04/magnolia-charter-schools-caprice-young/
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Tina Andres ·
CSUF, National University, UCI
“For someone who vehemently denies that her schools are even associated at all with Gulen, Young sure has quite a lot to say about Turkey.
“I suppose it is just a coincidence that the Magnolia schools hire Turkish teachers on VISAs. She literally denied any connected to Gulen charter schools in a school board meeting in CA, saying that she doesn’t know anything about it.
“The jig is up, Caprice. These schools have also charged for more for their building rents to the state of Oklahoma than they have paid.
“This (proliferation of Gulen-controlled charter schools) is a scam and it is being perpetrated in many, many states under multiple names but the connection to Gulen is very clear and easy to find.”
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I agree with Ms. Andres.
… as well as with this other commenter:
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Thaker Bil ·
Tucson, Arizona
“(Ms. Young stated): ‘The members of my staff are folks who value human rights.’
“Obviously Caprice Young does not keep up on current events. She is a sock puppet for the Gulen-controlled schools and repeats back like a parrot what the Imam Gulen tells her what to say. This is hardly something people that value human rights do when Gulenites ran the parallel state in Turkey. Officials under the control of the Gulen Movement regularly arrest journalists and suppresses freedom of speech
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
Also, as a non-Muslim, Young also sure does tweet and write a lot about “Islamophobia” towards certain Turkish people currently living in the United States. (Tweets BELOW)
Given Ms. Young’s repeated and steadfast denials of any connection between the Magnolia schools and the Islamic Imam Fetullah Gulen, or with Islam, or with the country of Turkey, this tweeting of hers — and the subjects of these tweets — seems a very odd avocation on her part.
Once again, Ms. Young claims no ties or interest in the Gulen movement that originates in Turkey, but out of the 200 or so countries on Earth, she spends so much time tweeting and talking about Turkey, and Islam … more perhaps than she does about her own country of origin, or her own religious persuasion, whatever that may be …
Weird.
Here are some examples: (NOTE the picture of two Turkish politicians in this first tweet of Ms. Young’s:
https://twitter.com/capriceyoung/status/730831337804857344?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
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Caprice Young:
“Freedom of religion is a core value in the US https://t.co/8y7BGp2qwL @magnoliascience @laschoolreport @edsourc…
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Here’s more of Caprice tweeting away about Turkey and Islam:
https://twitter.com/capriceyoung/status/730822933325570048?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
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CAPRICE YOUNG:
“Please oppose Islamophobia in all its forms.”
https://t.co/NElGJ4gKEO via @ocweekly”
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Oh, and here’s Ms. Young tweeting just yesterday, tweeting about internal Turkish politics, and its effects on Turkish people in the United States. (She’s referencing and condemning a U.S. Congressman from Texas who is calling for an investigation of the Gulen charter school conspiracy.)
https://twitter.com/capriceyoung/status/753593138762035200?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
——————–
CAPRICE YOUNG:
“Texas rep does bidding of Turkish Pres = US students suffer.”
State Rep Investigates Top Charters
https://trib.it/29zlq08 via @TexasTribune
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Wait, Caprice.
I thought those charter schools of yours had no ties to Turkey of Gulen. Why would any such investigation be any bother to you at all or cause your “students” to “suffer” … as the claims of your schools’ connections to Turkey and the Imam Gulen are all a hoax perpetrated against your chain of charter schools? You sure are quite upset about something that you otherwise claim is a total canard.
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Ha ha her one tweet about “Islamophobia” over a photo of Erdogan is laugh out loud funny. I guess Caprious Caprice cannot understand the largest critics of the Gulen Movement come from Erdogan and Turkish people who are largely muslim themselves. Who last I checked never mention the religion of the Gulenists but rather discuss their BEHAVIORS. I for one am not convinced this is anything but a money grabbing cult. I am waiting for Caprice to Tuzuk 40% of her $236,000 salary to the movement. Knowing how cheap the Gulenists are, i would say they are grabbing their nuts having to pay Caprice that kind of money. They keep thinking it’s ok for now, we will lay low than take back over and have our Turkish classes, Turkish cultural nights, teach Turkish dancing and singing. How about it Caprice care to donate your share back to the cult you defend (poorly, i might add). Caprice’s stories are inconsistent and lack merits, she wants us to believe the original founders were tied to Gulen but they are no longer around what a lame attempt to distance Gulen from the schools. They themselves proudly admit t being “inspired” by Gulen, the affiliation is the least of Caprice’s concerns. Their financial mismanagement, lying on academic achievements, and other shenanigans with the h1-b visas is the main concerns. The latest in the Magnolia School Gulen Drama is the dismissal of their CFO Oswaldo Diaz. Getting rid of the Chief Financial Officer is quite odd. I almost enjoy watching her squirm like a little school girl when she speaks before the boards, after bashing LAUSD and public education for years. She on 10/18 told the board I know it’ sounds corny but I want to thank the LAUSD charter school division they made us better in many ways. Ok, Caprice pass the popcorn it’s about to get more dramatic.
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Here’s another pre-coup tweet from Caprice Young. In contrast to her claim that her Magnolia Science Academy Charter Schools have no connection to Turkey or to Islam, or to her alleged master, the Imam Fetulleh Gulen, Young tweets about internal affairs in Turkey — yet this time, she makes the claim that these matters “hurt” Magnolia charter schools.
How can they, if the Magnolia charters are not connected in any way to Turkey?
https://twitter.com/capriceyoung/status/742811703281229824?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
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CAPRICE YOUNG:
“Unceasing Media Crackdown in Turkey; harassment of American public schools too.”
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QUESTIONS: How often does the representative of a foreign government show up to testify at a local school board hearing on a charter school application? In the U.S., how many public school outreach meetings are held at a mosque?
On that score, here’s something else refuting Caprice Young and her claims that the Magnolia Science Academy charter schools that she runs are in no way connected to Islam, to the Gulenist cult, or to anything related to the country of Turkey.
At a recent hearing in Fremont, California, a representative of the government of Turkey showed up in person at a hearing held to possibly approve a proposed Magnolia Science Academy charter in Fremont. He was there to refute Young’s claims in his testimony before the Fremont School Board:
http://www.eastbaytimes.com/breaking-news/ci_29430451/turkey-wants-fremont-school-board-reject-charter-school
“John Martin of Amsterdam & Partners in Washington, D.C., also alleged that Magnolia was not factual in its application.”
Martin, the attorney representing the Republic of Turkey wondered, if the Magnolia charters truly have no connection to the Gulenists Islamic cult, why there was only one outreach meeting for a proposed Magnolia charter in Fremont, and why the-hell did that meeting take place at a mosque, “The Islamic Center of Fremont” ?
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“Martin, the attorney, questioned why Magnolia has only had one local meeting, with parents at the Islamic Center of Fremont. The staff report also noted the single gathering.
” ‘Despite asserting the intent to target Latino students, its single outreach effort did not result in signatures reflecting meaningful interest in enrolling Latino students,’ the report said.”
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I mean, really, was a mosque frequented by the local Turkish Moslem community the only venue available for a charter school community forum?
http://www.icfbayarea.org/
You aren’t going to find many prospective Latino students parents or families — the target community as cited in the charter application — at a place like that.
True to form, Caprice Young doubled down on her denials:
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“In a bizarre twist, an attorney representing the Turkish government spoke against the Magnolia Public Schools charter application at a recent Fremont school board public hearing, saying it has ties to Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen. John Martin of Amsterdam & Partners in Washington, D.C., also alleged that Magnolia was not factual in its application. (in other words, Caprice lied. JACK)
“Magnolia’s chief executive officer (Caprice Young) called the accusations strange and baffling.
” ‘He seems to believe that we are associated with a religious group, which we are not,’ Magnolia CEO Caprice Young said at the Jan. 13 school board meeting.
” ‘We’re not affiliated with anything but educating public school students in California,’ Young said Friday.”
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Oh yeah? Then why was your / your school’s one and only legally required community outreach meeting held at a freakin’ mosque? During the meeting, did the participants have to periodically kneel down and bow to Mecca? WTF???!!!
With all the accusations of Islamic affiliation thrown at your schools during the last ten years, choosing to hold your meeting at a mosque seems a truly tone-deaf, and monumentally stupid move on Young’s part.
Then again, Young needed parent signatures to accompany the Magnolia charter application, and these were probably the folks in Fremont with whom the Islamic Magnolia people had some sort of a prior connection.
Oh, one more thing. The application was rejected in a unanimous vote.
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No Caprice we aren’t “Islamophobic” we are Charterphobic. CCSA and Caprice have more terrorist tactics than any other organization in California. 1) CCSA supplied the largest amount of money into the November elections to insure their pro charter shills in office. 2) they have their own shady lawyers that will defend the Gulen Movement/ Magnolia Schools for a hefty price.Lying is no problem attorney Jerry Simmons not only lies good but when he no argumentation he slips into the the usual “you hate them because they are muslim” and Turkish nonsense. They have had schools for 15 years and were approved knowing where they were from 3) The CCSA terrorist organization also endorsed an unprofessional letter addressed to the the Consulate of Turkey accusing Turkey of disrupting the education of their students 4) CCSA and Caprice went to great expenses to send out threatening cease and desist letters to educational professionals and a labor leader for daring to say “Magnolia is a Gulen School” even though Caprice softens up the language with “we have teachers who are inspired by Gulen”. All of this money to intimidate, bribe, disparage, misrepresent your opposition? Me thinks Caprice just had sour grapes cause she had over 15 school applications submitted to 7 school districts and no one wanted her or her lame schools. A few were denied the others were recommended for denial and then like a smooth operator Caprice withdrew the applications and never resubmitted (appealed) which according to the law she is more than welcome to. Instead Caprice and Co. coiled away like a snake never to resurface except on twitter or her famous performance at the Santa Clara County office of Administration. Asking for a materials revision (again) then the school was later closed. Watch this great tap dancing routine by Ms. Sunshine.Oh and it’s obvious Ms. Sunshine doesn’t know charter school regulations or laws. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yH4CQwdZvZk
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Jersey Jazzman just posted some interesting stuff on Gulen:
http://jerseyjazzman.blogspot.com/2016/07/what-we-dont-know-about-gulen-linked_98.html
While the Gulen-backed Magnolia Science Academy CEO Caprice Young and other well-paid front people for the Gulen schools claim no connection to Gulen — Young “absolutely, categorically” denies any such connection — Gulen himself, when it served his purpose to remain in the United States, eagerly contradicted this.
Indeed, he, through his lawyers, cited his involvement in those same schools — again, the same involvement so vehemently denied by Young and other Gulen front people — as justification for the U.S. government allowing him to stay here.
His lawyers enthusiastically claim to Immigration authorities, “Look at what Gulen’s done for U.S. education. Let him stay!”
(From a 2011 article in the Philadelphia Inquirer (which has, over the years, done some really excellent reporting on charter schools
http://articles.philly.com/2011-03-20/news/29148147_1_gulen-schools-gulen-followers-charter-schools
This excerpt shows the Imam Fetulleh Gulen eagerly claiming credit for all those U.S.-based charter schools, to bolster his efforts to remain in the country:
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“Fethullah Gulen is a major Islamic political figure in Turkey, but he lives in self-imposed exile in a Poconos enclave and GAINED HIS GREEN CARD BY CONVINCING A FEDERAL JUDGE in Philadelphia that HE WAS AN INFLUENTIAL EDUCATION FIGURE IN THE UNITED STATES.
“As evidence, his lawyer pointed to the charter schools, now more than 120 in 25 states, that his followers – Turkish scientists, engineers, and businessmen – have opened, including Truebright Science Academy in North Philadelphia and another charter in State College, Pa.
“The schools are funded with millions of taxpayer dollars. Truebright alone receives more than $3 million from the Philadelphia School District for its 348 pupils. Tansu Cidav, the acting chief executive officer, described it as a regular public school. [emphasis mine]”
“The national Gulen charter school network has been confirmed by Gulen’s own lawyer.”
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Except elsewhere, when it suits Gulen and the operators of the Gulen charter schools, they claim no connection to Gulen whatsoever:
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“Federal officials declined to comment on the nationwide inquiry, which is being coordinated by prosecutors in Pennsylvania’s Middle District in Scranton. A former leader of the parents’ group at the State College school confirmed that federal authorities had interviewed her.
“Bekir Aksoy, who acts as Gulen’s spokesman, said Friday that GULEN KNEW NOTHING ABOUT CHARTER SCHOOLS or an investigation.
“Aksoy, president of the Golden Generation Worship & Retreat Center in Saylorsburg, Pa., where Gulen lives, said Gulen, who is in his early 70s, ‘HAS NO CONNECTION WITH ANY OF THE SCHOOLS,’ although he might have inspired the people who founded them.”
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So Gulen WAS involved in founding the schools, except he WASN’T.
Errr … except he WAS … again, when it suits Gulen and the leaders, they claim the credit:
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“The (Gulen’s) American charter schools were A CENTRAL PART OF GULEN’S ARGUMENT THAT WON HIM A GREEN CARD card after the Department of Homeland Security ruled that he did not meet the qualifications of an “alien of extraordinary ability” to receive a special visa.
“In a lawsuit Gulen filed in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia in 2007 challenging the denial, his attorneys wrote:
” ‘In his position as the founder and head of the Gulen Movement, MR. GULEN HAS OVERSEEN THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A CONGLOMERATION OF SCHOOLS THROUGHOUT the world, in Europe, Central Asia, AND THE UNITED STATES.’
“His attorneys also referred to a letter of support from a theology professor in Illinois who described Gulen as ‘A LEADER OF AWARD-WINNING SCHOOLS FOR UNDERSERVED CHILDREN around the world, including many schools IN THE MAJOR CITIES OF AMERICA.”
“On July 16, 2008, U.S. District Court Judge Stewart Dalzell ruled that Gulen met the requirements for a green card.”
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Except he WAS. Hmm …
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It is incomprehensible to me that these schools continue to operate in The United States of America!
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If Gulen is returned to Turkey, what will happen to all those schools?
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Don’t worry Chris the schools where the Gulenist CMOs own the title to the property I am sure the IRS is frothing at the mouth as they finish up adding all the Gulen US assets up they are going to swoop in on. Besides the IRS, the DOE, INS, FCC, DHS will be fighting over the scraps. The schools that are governed by the districts will go under their governance and a Relief school district will put in temporary teachers where needed and the rest the schools with low student body will be absorbed by local schools.
I expect some will be a “midnight move” and be vacated the rest will be rounded up for INS violations, others will be deported where the paperwork is out of line (expired visas) while still other gulenists have been squeeling to the authorities and getting promises of immunity for testimony. The rest will fall under RICO racketeering, organized crime and federal abuse of grants, bonds, and those real estate scams. Then the other peons will scatter like cockroaches wherever anyone will take them.
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I am not Islamophobic I am Charterphobic., but I love Ms. Sunshines tap dance routine https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yH4CQwdZvZk
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Are the FBI and the CIA at odds with one another?
Does the CIA or the DOD care who is educating our kids? Start looking into the Contracted Think Tanks.
Gulan is just another strategy for war mongering, big data collection/sharing and land grabs. Everyone involved receives their cuts and immunity.
If Magnolia schools are serving large number of our poor children, they have access to that much more data to connect with services providers where the profit$ are guaranteed. Cha Ching! I’d imagine contracts is the slice of pie Caprice is interested in. There’s loads of money to skim off the top. Heck, the 21st Century Care Act will ensure Big Pharma Reps make the rounds with lots of Off Dose Scripts too. And the DATA! The longitudinal data from cradle to grave is quite the asset for the corporations. Pipeline directly into Corporate Communism and Military Might with cognitive, emotional, behavioral and psychological data points as readily available as candy from a vending machine.
Psychometric Data collected on more than …
“Among the early implementers of this approach in Southern California is the Magnolia Place Community Initiative that operates within the West Adams, Pico Union, and North Figueroa Corridor neighborhoods of Los Angeles. It seeks to galvanize community residents and organizational partners and focus their contributions toward safe and supportive environments for children, It serves as an opportunity to expand upon the critical investments of community members, and public and private organizations and businesses.”
The data collection process works as follows:
City Government is approached by a third party social service provider. They ask the city to partner with them on “ready for school” research. (Psychometric data collected on preschoolers and kindergartners). The City likes the idea because they will gain more knowledge about who the residents are aside. Imagine what a Chamber of Commerce can get from this data, for instance. (What a tool for city planning departments for targeting land for development projects…..) The city is probably already geo-tagging residents so this adds to their tool box. City approaches the school district/preschools to get approval for collecting the information on the kids. School boards approve it under the heading “research” and never ask about the pipeline through which the data travels. They believe it goes directly to UCLA and that is the information shared with parents to get their consent. The teachers, outside the terms of their contract, are trained by the third party and paid by the city to input the data which takes about 20 minutes per child. Questions include: Does the child cry often? Does the child come to school overdressed or under dressed? The answers to these questions become a part of the child’s longitudinal record. UCLA claims the data is disaggregated. Depending upon who’s paying attention, the school district might alert parents to the fact that this data will also be shared with a McMaster’s University in Canada because they originated the study. United Way Worldwide is also a partner.
They receive The vendor compiles the database of aggregated data. They share the disaggregated data with UCLA…who also is now the clearinghouse for all the SBAC testing nationwide.
http://www.rand.org/events/2011/09/24.html
The Moskowitz Moneyball Approach
StriveTogether Network uses the Moneyball approach, collecting the psychometric data on 10+Million children.
http://moneyballforgov.com/strive-partnership-plays-moneyball-cradle-to-career/
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