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APRApos

@witchdoc007

3 chords and the truth. Also can hurt you in other ways.

Alaska Se unió Ocak 2013
169 Siguiendo912 Seguidores
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Victor Davis Hanson
Victor Davis Hanson@VDHanson·
Suddenly after three years, a number of angry former Trump appointees—some on the prompt of potential or real book promotions, or in anger about firings, or their own legal exposure—are replaying all the supposedly atrocious things Trump said in private to them between 2017-21. If, in fact, they are accurate, then by all means they were certainly atrocious things to have said even in private—and should never have been spoken by a president. But what is mysterious about their outrage are three other considerations that we hear nothing about from such now quite public critics: 1) Is there not a difference between atrocious bluster in private and public, methodical weaponization and destruction of our institutions? Can such critics at least say they deplore the weaponization of the FBI (e.g., the contracting of old Twitter to suppress the news, the admitted lying under oath of its interim director Andrew McCabe, the convenient “amnesia” on 245 occasions of James Comey while under oath, and the bureau’s current fixation with parents at school board meetings, traditional Catholics and pro-life activists)? Or the corruption of our intelligence officials who were knee-deep in the fraud of “51 former intelligence authorities" who willingly lied, on the prompt of the current secretary of state, about a laptop—deliberately so to influence a presidential debate and election? Or the entire collusion hoax that was hatched by the Clinton campaign, with help from the FBI, DOJ, and CIA? Or consider two of our top intelligence officials who lied admittedly under oath, such as Brennan and Clapper? Does not all that pose a danger to democracy? Or the politicalization of the DOJ that was ready to exempt, save a brave dissenting judge, Hunter Biden and by extension the Biden clan from real legal jeopardy. Was it not wrong in 2020 for retired 4-stars officers to attack in venomous terms and publicly their commander-in-chief? If not so, why then is there a statute at all in the uniform code of military justice prohibiting just that? 2) As far as “dangers to the democracy”, cannot some at least cite the radical changes in voting laws done in key states in 2020 under the guise of Covid, or the infusion of $419 million by Mark Zuckerberg to appropriate the work of registrars and voting officials in key states? Or the “cabal” and “conspiracy” to ensure the Biden 2020 victory as boasted about in stunning detail by liberal Time writer Molly Ball? Who tried to cancel student loans without a vote of congress, or drained a great deal of the strategic petroleum reserve solely to boost approval before the midterms? Or the 2016 leftwing effort to pressure the electors not to vote according to their constitutional responsibilities and instead throw the election to Clinton? Can't they at least cite the 120-days of looting, riot, arson, attacks on law enforcement, and deaths that were largely exempt from punishment—violence that included an attempt to storm the White House grounds to get at a president, and the torching of a police precinct, federal courthouse, and iconic DC church? Or cannot they deplore the 2015-17 macabre threats to Trump’s person by celebrities (beheading, shooting, stabbing, incineration, blowing up, etc.)? What actually had Trump done in his first moments in office when DC rioters went berserk during the inauguration and Madonna screamed about blowing up the White House? What had he done in his first few days that prompted ex-Pentagon lawyer Rosa Brooks to write in Foreign Policy (“3 Ways to Get Rid of President Trump Before 2020”) an outline of how to destroy his presidency before it started by either the 25th Amendment, impeachment—or a military coup (cf. also the later August 2020 pre-election letter of retired officers Nagl and Yingling, calling on Gen. Milley to intervene following the election with the 82nd Airborne to remove Trump from office). What had he done in his first few months in office in earn 58 House members voting to impeach him? 3) Who injured the country and the lives of its people more, the 4-years of Donald Trump or the 2.5 years of Joe Biden? Who engineered the exempt crossing of 8-million illegal entrants that will have repercussions for decades? Who has been largely silent about nearly 100,000 annual fentanyl deaths and the direct role of an open border in them? Who engineered the disastrous and deadly flight from Kabul, timed for the narcissistic public stunt of a cheap 20th-anniversary triumph celebration of 9/11—according to The Washington Post? Who called the accidental killing of 10 civilians during the Kabul mess a “righteous strike”, or phoned his PLA counterpart to warn about his own commander in chief, or unlawfully hijacked the chain of command? Who spiked fuel prices, interest rates, and inflation that have caused untold misery to millions of Americans? Who is silent about the destruction of the criminal code in our major cities that has helped unleash an unprecedented crime wave? That list of current catastrophes that go unnoticed could be expanded. So yes, if these recent accusations about crude and cruel Trump private conversations are true, then let us all deplore what Donald Trump said in private to his closest aides and appointees. But let us also consider that those who voice these expressions of outrage seem to stay silent about the concrete damage to our institutions and country that was neither rhetorical nor spontaneous—but all too real and planned. cnn.com/2023/10/02/pol…
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
@spurnagain And here is a belated, but great example. Radio silence from the "Team Anchorage" assembly members when Chair Constant predictably blames the executive branch for enabling the fraud that was in fact a direct result of the legislative branch's dereliction of duty. Tsk tsk.
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
Seeking accountability is political when the Assembly, who makes much ado about holding the purse strings, conveniently ignores the ARPA and CARES act funding graft that it engaged in at the same time blaming the Bronson administration for those problems and gaslighting the public that it was somehow legal. Dave Bronson got elected as a direct result of the Berkowitz administration bypassing the safeguards that were meant to prevent beaurocrats from running roughshod over the electorate.
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Anna 🐝 Brawley
Anna 🐝 Brawley@spurnagain·
Respectfully, this op-ed attributes political motives to a process that an outraged public keeps asking for, and keeps alive a narrative of "it's always 2 sides fighting" that has done real harm to our city's understanding of what's going on in gov't. adn.com/opinions/edito…
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
@alaskascott Like not allowing people dually registered to vote in other states to be sent a mail in ballot? Or to actually require a signature match on a mail in ballot? Or to purge the thousands of people getting ballots mailed out of state who no longer qualify as Alaska residents? #akleg
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
@AKLibraryChick @AndrewIntellBot @UrbaniteAlaska You're either silly or hopelessly unaware of the history of drugs in Alaska if you think this isn't happening. There was a major scandal not that long ago within the National Guard that in no small part resulted in many people losing their jobs and others going to jail.
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
@kylehopkinsAK Dave Bronson assumed office on July 1st 2021, but the Assembly gave the fraudsters 1.6 million on May 1st, 2021 - but somehow this is the mayor's fault? Nice try, Kyle. BTW, the Assembly is about to write a 4th settlement check for not providing public records. Where's the ADN?
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Shoshanah in AK @ shanahstone.bsky.social
@AKpublicnews Republicans can’t be trusted to run free and fair elections. This has been shown over and over from local elections like this to state and federal elections. Republicans are racking up quite the record of tampering and cheating. #ancgov #akgov
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Alaska Public Media News
Alaska Public Media News@AKpublicnews·
The head of Anchorage’s IT department has resigned, more than a month after an investigation found he used his position to inappropriately collude with political campaign operatives to challenge the results of the last city election. alaskapublic.org/2023/09/20/anc…
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
The real story is that SALA medical, which got millions in pandemic funds for COVID screening and EMT presence for the muni homeless response, is now getting double the amount of money the transporter company for the sleep off center contractor was being paid. Because this has previously been the responsibility of the fire department and was billed as a cheaper way to handle resources and funds, one has to ask - why are we paying millions for this service? alaskasnewssource.com/2023/09/26/anc…
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
@adndotcom Yet the school board just voted to build a new $30 million Inlet View School. How interesting. #ancgov
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Anchorage Daily News
Anchorage Daily News@adndotcom·
The Anchorage School District has assigned a new dollar amount — $48 million — to the budget deficit it’s facing next year, and throughout the week, school board members and the district have inched closer to potentially filling in that gap. adn.com/alaska-news/ed…
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
Want more proof the ADN is a biased propaganda outlet? The Assembly just authorized $250K to outsource the Demboski lawsuit and it made the front page. But just last week the Assembly also outsourced tens of thousands of dollars in legal defense for Zaletel, Constant, and Dunbar's destruction of public records that were evidence of their violation of the Open Meetings Act -evidence that showed they were colluding through texts messages during the assembly meetings to swing the vote....and not a peep from Alaska's only newspaper. Literally no reporting, mention, or acknowledgement from the "journalists" or editors there. It's really remarkable. @adndotcom #ancgov #anchgov @kylehopkinsAK @tomhewittnews
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
Because Chris Constant, Forrest Dunbar, and Meg Zaletel have been caught deleting public records and using secret messaging apps to cordinate the vote during assembly meetings, you and I (the tax paying public) are going to be on the hook for their legal fees - paid to a private legal firm - a firm they hired in order draw out this court case even longer, even though we already pay for municipal attornies that are quite capable of representing them. They are going to lose this case, and you can be sure the ADN will try to spin that loss as "tightening up Municipal Code", not "a massive violation of the Open Meetings Act." #ancgov #anchorageassembly
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
Because Chris Constant, Forrest Dunbar, and Meg Zaletel have been caught deleting public records and using secret messaging apps to cordinate the vote during assembly meetings, you and I (the tax paying public) are going to be on the hook for their legal fees - paid to a private legal firm - a firm they hired in order draw out this court case even longer, even though we already pay for municipal attornies that are quite capable of representing them. They are going to lose this case, and you can be sure the ADN will try to spin that loss as "tightening up Municipal Code", not "a massive violation of the Open Meetings Act." #ancgov #anchorageassembly
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
@spurnagain @RevMattSchultz How about sheltering them in the Alaska Black Caucus building that the Assembly gave a million dollars of federal aid money to buy and refurbish? Or maybe in the Aviator Hotel now that you've given that ex-Senator's hotel a 10 year, 100% tax exemption?
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Anna 🐝 Brawley
Anna 🐝 Brawley@spurnagain·
@RevMattSchultz On the plus side: the Health Dept. has been working on options for emergency cold weather shelter. Assembly members (including me) are hustling to figure out funding ASAP. And still working on the long term. A real plan is in the works.
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APRApos@witchdoc007·
The Assembly voted down the Nav Center last night and I get to recycle this headline for the 5th time. This is the monthly yet example of partisan politics meant to expand the homeless industrial complex with more millions of tax dollars we can't afford. #ancgov @anchgov
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APRApos@witchdoc007

oh heeeeey, I get to recycle another headline. "Anchorage city officials suggest hotel rooms, small warming areas and volunteer efforts for winter homeless sheltering By Emily Goodykoontz Buildings of Midtown Anchorage and E Street are seen from downtown on Jan. 5, 2023. (Marc Lester / ADN) For the first time in several years, Anchorage isn’t planning to shelter its hundreds of homeless residents in a singular mass facility over the winter. City officials on Wednesday revealed an emergency cold weather shelter plan with an assortment of ideas, which include opening non-congregate shelter in hotel rooms and relying largely on volunteers to staff several small warming areas in public or privately owned buildings. The city would need to get creative, like relying on donations and volunteers, and find workarounds to some of its rules and regulations. But the biggest wrinkle to the plan is the most important — finding the money to pay for it all, according to Alexis Johnson, the city’s homeless coordinator. Johnson presented the plan to the Assembly’s Housing and Homelessness Committee on Wednesday. “We are now approaching a fiscal cliff,” Johnson said. “And I know that’s scary verbiage, but we no longer have our reserves of alcohol tax. All the funding that we have identified for this year is one-time. It will not come back next year.” And that money, if the Assembly chooses to re-allocate it toward shelter, would only be enough for the first few months, she said. “We are out of money. And our plans, although they may be decent, are not going to sustain” beyond Jan. 1, she said. Over the last two years, the city spent about $25.5 million on homelessness efforts. That includes direct spending on its former winter shelter in Sullivan Arena and in hotels, and funding given to outside organizations providing services such as outreach, Johnson said. That level of funding isn’t sustainable, she said, and the portion of the city’s alcohol tax revenue that goes toward homelessness has already been allocated for the year. Still, Assembly members on the committee expressed some confidence that the money could be found, suggesting possible funding streams, such as unspent money from the 2022 fiscal year. “The big takeaway is that we just need to find a way to fund it all, right? So that’s going to be a big part of the work going forward,” said Assembly member Felix Rivera, who chairs the committee. “... We still have time to do this work. I think we are at a good point right now.” The city is months behind on closing out accounting for its spending in 2022. Assembly Chair Chris Constant said he believes there will be leftover funds that could be used, in part, to address the coming “cliff.” And, projections for the city’s bed tax are 30% higher this year, “to the tune of millions,” he said. ADVERTISEMENT The city should also look for ways to use tax credits to incentivize hotel owners to open rooms for shelter, Constant said. In the first two years of Mayor Dave Bronson’s term, the Assembly’s majority and administration officials fought bitterly over how best to address the city’s homelessness crisis. The mayor favored building a shelter large enough for several hundred people, while Assembly members and many social service providers favored a housing-first approach, advocating for several small, population-specific shelters and services located in different neighborhoods across the city. Wednesday’s meeting was markedly different from those of the recent past. Members largely discussed the plans from Bronson’s homeless coordinator with tones of alacrity instead of frustration. “I’m blown away, in a very positive way, that for the first time, I believe this administration has put forward a document that demonstrates a proposal for a scattered site model,” Constant said. About 750 people left shelter to live outside this spring when the city closed its winter shelter operations in Sullivan Arena and in the Alex and Aviator Hotels. Right now, officials are planning for only about 400 people who will need shelter this winter, Johnson said. The three-story, 80-unit, supportive housing facility at the former Golden Lion opened on July 27. (Bill Roth / ADN) That’s because over the last year, the city has helped fund conversions of hotels into low-income housing. It recently opened the former Golden Lion Hotel to house people with physical disabilities who might otherwise be homeless. The additional 300-plus housing units are creating movement in the homelessness response system, Johnson said. Spots in private shelters are opening as people move into housing from shelters, while others are moving directly into housing from living unsheltered on the street — so the city can estimate about 300 fewer people will need shelter, she said. Also, about 40 or 50 have plans to continue camping during winter or to stay with friends or family, she said. [Anchorage hotel conversions are adding hundreds of low-income housing and shelter units at a time of dire need] Private shelters in the city are full and all but one are unable to add capacity for the winter, even with more funding, Johnson said. To shelter about 400 people in hotel rooms for six months, November through April, it would cost between $6.3 million and $7.4 million, officials estimate. That comes with other issues besides funding. While many people do better in non-congregate settings and those programs see better outcomes compared to mass shelter, not all fare well in hotel rooms, Johnson said. “One question that we cannot answer is, when people are kicked out of a non-congregate setting, where will they go? Last year, we had some people that were not allowed to go back to non-congregate settings, and we marshaled them to the Sullivan Arena. And so we don’t have a facility of that nature this year,” Johnson said. If the city finds municipality-owned, state-owned or even privately owned buildings, volunteers could run several small warming areas, health department officials said. “People are willing to help. And there potentially is a greater volunteer network out there that we haven’t tapped into yet,” said Michael Hughes, homelessness planning coordinator with the Anchorage Health Department. To reduce costs for food, the city could coordinate a restaurant donation program, solicit other donations from grocery stores or purchase MRE meals. It could cut red tape by waiving health permits, fees or commercial kitchen requirements for volunteer groups like churches, nonprofits and others who want to cook and donate meals, health department officials told members. It may be possible for the city to offer restaurants tax credits or rebates in return for their donations, Constant said. Certain building code requirements are inhibiting church groups from opening winter warming areas in their buildings, and they can only operate warming areas that require sobriety. The city should look into code changes to reduce those barriers, officials said. Johnson also told Assembly members that, because the city is required in code to activate a winter shelter plan, it should have a dedicated funding mechanism for that. But, ultimately, shelter is “the most expensive method to keep people under a roof,” she said. Bronson’s stalled project to build a large shelter and navigation center would cost around $8 million each year to run. (The Assembly is holding a work session on a proposal to revive the project on Friday, and is scheduled to vote next Tuesday.) The city can’t pay for those operations costs, Johnson said, adding that “the state needs to step up. They need to provide funding.” Assembly members said the situation underscores that increasing housing stock and making it affordable to low-income people is the most prudent and effective solution. A homeless camp in a wooded area of Mountain View consists of several tents and makeshift shelters in the snow on Dec. 21, 2022. (Marc Lester / ADN) That the city is planning to shelter 400 rather than 750 people “means we’re making progress,” Constant said. “And that’s what people need to understand. That’s nearly 50% of the people that we’ve identified that would be on the streets, who will be housed.” Johnson largely agreed, and said the city needs to explore using federal funding for housing, rather than sheltering. “I do want to say there’s good work being done. Year over year, we’re bringing on more housing. We’re just not there yet,” Johnson said."

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