Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝

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Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝

Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝

@asandstrom451

Energy, lands, and environment. Executive Director of @UnleashUtah. Host of the Public Lands Policy Podcast. Member @ch_JesusChrist

The Rocky Mountains Katılım Eylül 2016
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Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝
Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝@asandstrom451·
I am thrilled to announce the launch of Unleash Utah, a new coalition of business leaders, elected officials, and emerging conservative voices committed to Utah's energy future. 🇺🇸⚡️
Unleash Utah ⚡@UnleashUtah

Today we launch Unleash Utah, a coalition aiming to make Utah the nation’s leader in energy abundance, innovation, and environmental stewardship—fueling the industries of the future while protecting what makes this state special. unleashutah.org

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Westinghouse Nuclear
Westinghouse Nuclear@WECNuclear·
Not everyone gets to visit the two new advanced AP1000 modular reactors at Plant Vogtle in the United States. This is your chance to see one up close, bricks size.​ Real AP1000 units are now faster and more cost effective to build because of our modular design and mature supply chain.​ Want to try building a bricks-size AP1000 reactor yourself? We're giving away another five Westinghouse bricks sets to people who reshare this post. We'll draw names on Monday from everyone who reposted! Can't wait to share the fun!
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Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝
Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝@asandstrom451·
@sambbenson @YalePolling I've unfortunately seen this on the ground. It is notable that this changes when you look at young voters compared to voters as a whole. Young people listen to very different media than their parents and I think economic pressure has a lot to do with it.
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Tyler Clancy
Tyler Clancy@Clancy4Utah·
Come by this Saturday!! We will also be playing the BYU game 💙🤙
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Hank Smith
Hank Smith@hankrsmith·
Santa: What do you want for Christmas? Me: How about a Ferrari Daytona SP3? Santa: Come on, be serious. Me: Okay… how about the committee using the actual facts to put 11–1 BYU, whose only loss was to #5 Texas Tech, into the playoffs? Santa: … What color Ferrari?
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Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝
Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝@asandstrom451·
People have said the chant was "against their Church"—it wasn't. It was against *them.* That's the problem, and that's why this can't be tolerated against Latter-day Saints or any religious group.
Heidi Hatch KUTV@tvheidihatch

A couple who survived being shot at their Grand Blanc @Ch_JesusChrist meetinghouse in September tried to enjoy a @BYUfootball game this weekend, just a few hours from home, when their sense of security slipped away again as parts of the crowd chanted, “F- the Mormons.” On Facebook, Brandi Hicken wrote that she and her husband, Jared, “got to sneak away this weekend for a much-needed date night” at the BYU–Cincinnati game. She said they hoped for a night where “the attack is not at the forefront of our minds for once.” Instead, the trip became an emotional reminder of the hate that took the lives of four members of their congregation two months ago. Last month, the FBI said the attack on the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints meetinghouse in Grand Blanc was motivated by “anti-religious beliefs” toward the faith. The gunman, Thomas Jacob Sanford, 40, rammed his truck into the building during Sunday services, opened fire and set parts of the church on fire. He was killed by responding law enforcement. Jared and Brandi Hicken were among the survivors. Jared, a native of Roosevelt, Utah, and a fourth-year chief emergency medicine resident and BYU grad, helped other victims after being shot in the leg. Their 5-year-old daughter, Piper, was also hit, and Brandi suffered shrapnel wounds as she carried their two youngest children to safety. “Jared took a bullet to the leg. My 5-year-old took one right in the middle of her back,” she wrote shortly after the shooting. Doctors later determined Piper’s wound was more superficial than they first feared, likely caused when a bullet ricocheted before hitting her. Brandi said she didn’t realize she had been hurt until the adrenaline wore off and she saw blood on her dress. Now physically recovered, the couple drove to the BYU–Cincinnati game hoping for a break from the anxiety that has followed them for two months. Brandi said the chants from portions of the Cincinnati crowd left her shaken. On Monday, Cincinnati athletic director John Cunningham issued a public apology to BYU and to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. “The use of offensive or religiously derogatory language by a group of fans during Saturday’s game was unacceptable and does not reflect our values,” Cunningham posted to X. “We remain committed to creating an environment at Nippert Stadium where every visiting team and its supporters are treated with dignity and respect.” Brandi shared the letter she sent to Cunningham describing how the chant affected her as a survivor of a religiously motivated attack. The full letter: “Dear Mr. Cunningham, I am writing to you from my heart as a disheartened college football fan. More specifically, as a BYU football fan and member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints commonly know as “the Mormons.” As a BYU alumni and huge fans of college football, my husband and I took the opportunity to travel 4.5 hours from our little city in Grand Blanc, Michigan to come spectate and enjoy our favorite pass time at the BYU vs. Cincinnati football game at Nippert Stadium last night. I want to provide a little bit of background for you in order to portray the strength and courage it took for us to travel to this event and really try to enjoy ourselves. You see, just eight short weeks ago, while attending church, we were attacked at our place of worship simply for being “Mormon.” Someone with hatred in their heart rammed their truck into the front of our church building, entered the chapel, and began shooting us and setting our church on fire while many people were still hiding inside. As my family (me, my husband, and our three young children), ran for our lives, my husband and my 5-year-old daughter were both shot. I was also running with my 15 month old baby and my 3 year old in my arms as I was struck in my back with shrapnel. I will spare you any further details about the nightmare we lived through that day and the recovery that has followed, but miraculously, me and my family all made it out alive. The anxiety and fear we have felt since that day has been debilitating. We have put in a lot of work in that short 8 weeks so we can try to feel some sort of safety and normalcy again and enjoy the things we used to, including football games. We had been planning to come see this game for months as we don’t get the opportunity to see many BYU games in person since we moved across the country for my husband’s medical training. We almost didn’t come because it felt scary and overwhelming since the attack on our church. However, we know we cannot live in fear and we need to enjoy the things that used to make us happy. We decided to come and that took a lot for us both mentally and physically. I was nervous putting on my BYU fan gear that day because I knew it would identify me as one of ”the Mormons.” I did it anyway. I was apprehensive when I walked down to my seat and saw that the nearest exit was pretty far from me. I continued to my seat anyway. We came. We smiled. We cheered. We enjoyed ourselves….Until the University of Cincinnati fans began to chant “F** the Mormons.”* This is not a new chant. This is not a chant that is specific to your university. This is a chant I’ve heard before while enjoying a football game whether in-person or on tv. It’s always disheartening to hear. However, now that we Mormons have been quite literally targeted, attacked, chased, shot at, and some of us have been killed simply for being “Mormon,” this chant is no longer just disheartening. It’s crippling. It’s personal. It’s unacceptable. Period. While I did hear the announcer give a warning over the speakers at the game that such chants will not be tolerated, it was simply just that- a warning. It was not just a few fans, it was tens, possibly hundreds of the university’s student fans chanting “F** the Mormons.”* Please, Mr. Cunningham, do not tolerate it. Remove them from the game. Don’t let them come back. Educate them on the seriousness of their actions. Set that standard and expectation moving forward and enforce it. We are hurting. Badly. We just want to enjoy the things that make us happy again without the fear of being targeted and attacked for our religious beliefs. I know you have no control over the Cincy fans on the shuttle after the game ranting about Mormons and how awful we are and how we must have just paid off the refs because we’re corrupt and evil. I don’t get it, but I am used to it. It’s not new to me to hear this stuff and these huge misconceptions about my faith. But now it is personal. Now it is me fearing for my life everywhere I go because someone decided to take it there. Someone tried to kill me, my kids, and my husband. Someone killed 4 of my friends. Now the chanting means something more than it used to. I know you can’t control the actions and words of the fans on the bus. However, I do believe you have the ability to get control of the students’ hurtful and hateful chanting. If you made it this far, thank you for listening. If I am mistaken about any actions that were or were not taken as a result of the chanting, please feel free to correct me. I would welcome the reassurance. Sincerely, Brandi Hicken A fellow college football fan A Mormon A Christian A mass casualty hate crime survivor A human deserving of respect”

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Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝
Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝@asandstrom451·
@ThomasHochman This is true in politics generally. I've been impressed with how human the political class is. People don't like believing me when I say it.
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Thomas Hochman
Thomas Hochman@ThomasHochman·
A lot of powerful people in DC are un-transactionally generous with their time and support, and short-sighted transactional people don’t survive being out of power.
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Will Manidis@WillManidis

the cultures of tech and washington are fundamentally incompatible. in tech the foundation of a good career are reckless sharing of favors, expecting nothing in return, endorsing young ideas and people, and public networks of influence in washington, any of these will end you

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Taylor W Anderson
Taylor W Anderson@TaylorWAnderson·
Utah politics is dominated by suburban influence. SLC is the cultural and economic powerhouse of the state (relatively few other towns worth even driving through). But the Legislature is so thirsty for recognition outside SLC they do things like this.
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Michael Kofoed
Michael Kofoed@mikekofoed·
I often say I have a face for radio and a voice for print...so going to give live TV news a try in a few minutes.
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Robert P. George
Robert P. George@McCormickProf·
A few days ago, I posted a brief statement of what I, as a conservative, seek to conserve. The first item on the list was what I regard as the foundational principle of all sound morality: the profound, inherent, and equal dignity of each and every member of the human family. Everything else I believe about ethics and politics in one way or another stands upon or presupposes that principle. Any form of “conservatism” (or “liberalism”) that denies it in principle or transgresses it in practice is alien to me. That is why I believe that the conservative movement, though it can and should be a broad tent, simply cannot include or accommodate white supremacists or racists of any type, antisemites, eugenicists, or others whose ideologies are incompatible with belief in the inherent and equal dignity of all. As a conservative, I say that there is no place for such people in our movement. So, while I understand and appreciate that politics is about “adding and multiplying, not subtracting and dividing,” and though I welcome conservatives representing a range of viewpoints on a wide swath of issues, I will not—I cannot—accept the idea that we have “no enemies to the right.” The white supremacists, the antisemites, the eugenicists, the bigots, must not be welcomed into our movement or treated as normal or acceptable. Is this a call for “cancelation”? No. It’s a reminder that we conservatives stand for something—or should stand for something. We have core principles that are not negotiable. I am—notoriously, for some of my fellow conservatives—committed to the principle of free speech for everybody, including people with whom I profoundly disagree even on the most important issues, indeed, including racists and other bigots. But defending their rights does not mean allying with them, welcoming them into our movement, or treating them as representing legitimate forms of conservatism. I am also—again, notoriously, for some of my fellow conservatives—willing to engage people with whom I deeply disagree, so long as they are honest and are willing to do business in the proper currency of intellectual discourse, a currency consisting of reasons, evidence, and arguments. (It is pointless to engage bad faith actors, charlatans, and con men.) But, again, engaging and forcefully arguing against people who deny the inherent and equal dignity of all is one thing, welcoming them into the movement or treating their ideas and ideologies as representing legitimate forms of conservatism is something entirely different. Let me be plain. American conservatism today faces a challenge. That challenge comes from those who reject our commitment to inherent and equal human dignity. They are seeking acceptance in the conservative movement and its institutions, and they do so with the ultimate objective of transforming them by undermining that commitment. They openly preach white supremacy and the hatred of Jews, among other noxious ideas. They no longer feel the need even to try to hide their bigotry. It is incumbent upon those of us who maintain the “ancient faith” (to borrow a phrase from Lincoln) to make clear to friend and foe alike that we will not permit the integrity of our movement and its institutions to be compromised. We will not treat its foundational principle of inherent and equal human dignity as optional. On the contrary, we will insist on it, defending and advancing it with renewed dedication.
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Todd Weiler
Todd Weiler@gopTODD·
So much for communities of interest. Splits include: -Alpine and Highland -Vineyard and Orem -West Jordan and South Jordan -Payson and Genova/Goshen But these are coupled together: -St. George and Blanding (6 hrs) -Morgan and Hurricane (5 hrs) -Cedar City and Vernal (5 hrs)
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Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝
Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝@asandstrom451·
Republican Senator John Curtis has not only survived talking about climate change but has also moved from the House to the Senate with an amazing approval rating and a great reputation in Utah and the beltway. Be like Curtis.
Senator John Curtis@SenJohnCurtis

No one thought a conservative would ever be on this list. I’m proud to bring our values of innovation, stewardship, and common sense to the climate conversation, because affordable, reliable, and clean energy should unite us, not divide us. time.com/collections/ti…

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Governor Cox
Governor Cox@GovCox·
Utah won’t let the Great Salt Lake fail. By 2034, the world should see a healthier lake and proof that when Utahns unite around a hard problem, we deliver.
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Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝
Andrew Sandstrom 🇺🇸🐝@asandstrom451·
@NathanielGivens @cakilpack Nephi is also clear that he thought the culture he came from was evil. I could imagine his new temple and order of priests being like Joseph Smith restoring the New Testament church—he looked to scripture and revelation to build off anything besides the religion he'd been around.
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Nathaniel
Nathaniel@NathanielGivens·
@cakilpack I think the Nephites (especially the non-Christians) **thought** that it was the culture of the Lehi-era Jerusalem, but I think in reality it had drifted to something very distinct. Actually maintaining that language / culture would have been impossible without contact.
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Nathaniel
Nathaniel@NathanielGivens·
Once you start looking for clues in the Book of Mormon that Christianity was not the kind of ubiquitous backdrop to Nephite culture that it has been for European culture, you start to see quite a lot of them. Another one crops up in Alma 36:17.
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