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Alexander Dolitsky: ‘White privilege’ is a troubling perspective undermined by facts

By ALEXANDER DOLITSKY

What is WPT or “white privilege” theory? 

Progressive activists claim it is a social construct and social movement for justice, equal rights and opportunities for people of color who historically were deprived those rights or who have been systemically discriminated against in the United States. 

Conservatives describe this rhetoric as a radical neo-Marxist ideology, cancel culture, utopian socialism, race warfare, and reverse racism; and that in today’s America opportunities are available to nearly everyone.

Historically, the doctrine of “white privilege” is credited to the African-American writer W.E.B. Du Bois, but the phrase has entered the lexicon in feminist Peggy McIntosh’s paper titled “White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack” published in the journal “Peace and Freedom” in July/August issue of 1989.

In her subsequent publications on this subject, McIntosh identified 50 race-related occurrences, or in her own words “Daily effects of white privilege,” that do happen to black Americans in our society, and she pointed to the reasons that keep them in the “out-group.” 

However, McIntosh assertions and findings have been criticized and objected to by many prominent scholars and academics for a lack of factual data.

Here are several excerpts of factual data on this subject from Toby Young’s article titled “No need to plead guilty: The fashionable doctrine of ‘white privilege’ is fatally undermined by the facts,” published in the The Critic in December of 2019.

—A survey of white adults born after World War II showed that between 1980 and 2000, just 18.4 per cent of white Baptists and 21.8 per cent of Irish Protestants—the main white ethnic groups to settle in the South—managed to get college degrees, compared to a national average of 30.1 percent. Among those Americans of Chinese and Indian descent, the average was 61.9 percent.

—When it comes to income, whites are also lagging behind some other ethnic groups. In 2016, white Americans had a median household income of $67,865, lower than Indonesian Americans ($71,616), Pakistani Americans ($72,389), Malaysian Americans ($72,443), Sri Lankan Americans ($73,856), Filipino Americans ($84,620), Taiwanese Americans ($90,1221) and Indian Americans ($110,026).

—According to a recent report by the American Enterprise Institute, 57 percent of black Americans now belong to the upper or middle class, compared to 38 percent in 1960, and the share of black men in poverty fell from 41 percent in 1960 to 18 percent in 2016. But if we look at education, African-Americans are beginning to outperform whites. Black women, for instance, have higher college-attendance rates than white men and, according to the New York Times, out-earn their white counterparts when they graduate.

—Black Lives Matter activists point to the recent spate of shootings of unarmed black men as evidence of “white privilege,” such as the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin in 2012 (although the shooter was a dual heritage Hispanic man). But according to the African-American Harvard Economist Roland Fryer, blacks and Hispanics are no more likely to be shot by police officers than whites (although they are more likely to experience the non-lethal use of force, even taking contextual factors into account). In fact, the odds of an unarmed black man being shot dead by a police officer are about the same as being struck by lightning.

—The idea that whites as a race participated in the slave trade or benefitted from slavery is ridiculous. In 1860, less than five percent of whites in the American South owned slaves and, according to the black historian John Hope Franklin, three-quarters of white Southerners had no economic interest in the maintenance of slavery.

—Between the 16th Century and the middle of the 18th Century, over a million Europeans were bought and sold in the slave markets of the Barbary Coast of North Africa, encompassing Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco. According to the African-American economist Thomas Sowell: “More whites were brought as slaves to North Africa than blacks brought as slaves to the United States or the 13 colonies from which it was formed [between 1525 to 1866, 388,000 slaves were brought to North America, including Canada, from Africa].”

Georgi Boorman, a Senior Contributor at The Federalist published a June 26, 2018 article titled, “How the Theory of White Privilege Leads to Socialism.” She stated, “White privilege theory seeks equality of outcome, not merely the equal dispensation of individual justice. That goal can only be reached by redistribution policies that violate the principle of local governance, treat people as ethnic “units,” limit individuals’ opportunities based on race, suppress freedom of speech, and restrict the freedom to keep and control one’s own money.”

Today, “white privilege” and “critical race” doctrines in America divide our society between oppressor and oppressed. It identifies the systems by which the oppression takes place. It outlines the methods or tactics (i.e., Black Lives Matter, today’s Antifa, “systemic racism,” “structural racism,” “mental racism,” and “institutional racism”) for how “white privilege” and “critical race” doctrines will change our socio-economic system, moral values, and traditional beliefs.

For “white privilege” and “critical race” activists, a complete destruction of capitalism, in order to establish a socialist authoritarian regime, is the only way to end so-called racial oppression and social injustice. 

The “white privilege” and “critical race” mission is a very troubling, divisive, racist and alarming perspective for our country. This mission is based on the Marxist–Leninist ideology, mainly, “…from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs,” in order to advocate for the radical socialist agenda.

There are two the most important missions in life—where to go and with whom. And here is the ideology that should guide these missions: Believe in the Judeo-Christian moral values, advocate good vs. evil, and stand for freedom, liberty, and factual truth.

Alexander B. Dolitsky was born and raised in Kiev in the former Soviet Union. He received an M.A. in history from Kiev Pedagogical Institute, Ukraine, in 1976; an M.A. in anthropology and archaeology from Brown University in 1983; and was enroled in the Ph.D. program in Anthropology at Bryn Mawr College from 1983 to 1985, where he was also a lecturer in the Russian Center. In the U.S.S.R., he was a social studies teacher for three years, and an archaeologist for five years for the Ukranian Academy of Sciences. In 1978, he settled in the United States. Dolitsky visited Alaska for the first time in 1981, while conducting field research for graduate school at Brown. He lived first in Sitka in 1985 and then settled in Juneau in 1986. From 1985 to 1987, he was a U.S. Forest Service archaeologist and social scientist. He was an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Russian Studies at the University of Alaska Southeast from 1985 to 1999; Social Studies Instructor at the Alyeska Central School, Alaska Department of Education from 1988 to 2006; and has been the Director of the Alaska-Siberia Research Center (see www.aksrc.homestead.com) from 1990 to present. He has conducted about 30 field studies in various areas of the former Soviet Union (including Siberia), Central Asia, South America, Eastern Europe and the United States (including Alaska). Dolitsky has been a lecturer on the World Discoverer, Spirit of Oceanus, andClipper Odyssey vessels in the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions. He was the Project Manager for the WWII Alaska-Siberia Lend Lease Memorial, which was erected in Fairbanks in 2006. He has published extensively in the fields of anthropology, history, archaeology, and ethnography. His more recent publications include Fairy Tales and Myths of the Bering Strait Chukchi, Ancient Tales of Kamchatka; Tales and Legends of the Yupik Eskimos of Siberia; Old Russia in Modern America: Russian Old Believers in Alaska; Allies in Wartime: The Alaska-Siberia Airway During WWII; Spirit of the Siberian Tiger: Folktales of the Russian Far East; Living Wisdom of the Far North: Tales and Legends from Chukotka and Alaska; Pipeline to Russia; The Alaska-Siberia Air Route in WWII; and Old Russia in Modern America: Living Traditions of the Russian Old Believers; Ancient Tales of Chukotka, and Ancient Tales of Kamchatka.

Read: Neo-Marxism and utopian Socialism in America

Read: Old believers preserving faith in the New World

Read: Duke Ellington and the effects of Cold War in Soviet Union on intellectual curiosity

Read: United we stand, divided we fall with race, ethnicity in America

Read: For American schools to succeed, they need this ingredient

Read: Nationalism in America, Alaska, around the world

Read: The case of the ‘delicious salad’

Letter: Alaska businesses cannot afford the PRO Act

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After the past year and a half, Congress should be working overtime to support and strengthen local businesses like mine (Roundtable Pizza). Instead, some Washington politicians are more focused on passing policies that will give an unfair advantage to Big Labor bosses. 

The “PRO Act”—short for Protecting the Right to Organize—would give unions more power to force unionization on Alaska workers and businesses by overturning or rewriting decades of existing labor laws.

As a result, local businesses like mine could face an increased threat of picketing and boycotting while also being saddled with massive new costs and liabilities as well as the constant threat of excessively punitive penalties for even the smallest violations that have nothing to do with labor or working conditions.

Alaska businesses cannot afford policies like the PRO Act, plain and simple. I am confident that Senator Murkowski will help ensure it does not pass in any form, including through the budget reconciliation process in the U.S. Senate.

— Liz Ashlock, Anchorage

Flight taking legislators to Juneau for Special Session turns back due to malfunction

It could be just a malfunction or it could be foreshadowing of more legislative delays: An Alaska Airlines flight carrying several legislators to Juneau for the fourth special session of this calendar year turned back on Monday morning and landed at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport. It was surrounded by fire trucks and police cars briefly and was not parked by the terminal, while inspections were made.

At least five legislators are known to be on board. Reports are that there was excessive fuel being used from one wing tank.

About 15 minutes into the flight that left Anchorage at 8:15 am on a clear day, the pilot of the Boeing 737 advised passengers the jet would return due to a fuel problem.

At this writing, it appears there will be a change of planes for those heading to Juneau for the next 30-day session. The House and Senate both gavel in at 2 pm.

Providence has full slate of elective surgeries on the calendar for today

A medical doctor in Anchorage has provided Must Read Alaska with the list of surgeries scheduled for today at Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage. They include:

Spine x 3
Gyn x 1 hyst
Endo x 12
Dx lap
Bil Mastectomy
Port placement x2
VATS
Bronch
Cysto with Turp
Cysto/pyelogram
Full mouth dental
AV shunts x 3
ASD/PFO
CV stents Cor Angio x 3
Multiple Loop recorders
Gastric sleeve
Gastric bypass
Tympanoplasty
Cochlear device
Emerg sternotomy
CABG
TEVAR x 2
EP Ablation x 3
CSection

Providence was featured in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal this weekend saying the hospital is in the position of having to decide which patients live and which die, because it doesn’t have have enough ICU beds or staff.

Others have disputed that characterization, saying that Providence is firing all of its unvaccinated workers and replacing them with hundreds of workers whose salaries will be paid by taxpayers through FEMA, creating an extraordinary profit motive for the company, whose CEO Rod Hochman makes over $10 million a year for what is said to be a nonprofit organization.

Who will be running Alaska’s cities and boroughs? Voters decide Tuesday

Organized communities around Alaska hold local elections on Tuesday, Oct. 5. The exceptions are Anchorage and the Mat-Su Borough — Anchorage votes in April, and Mat-Su has moved to align with the November General Election.

People from all walks of life have stepped up to serve their communities. Here’s a sampling of some of the people on the ballots the top seats (mayoral and assembly/council) that are open in their communities:

Aleutians East Borough

Assembly Seat C: Chris Babcock, Glen Gardner Jr.

Assembly Seat D: Dailey J.N. Schaack, Brenda Lee Wilson

Bristol Bay Borough

Assembly: Clyde E. Clark, Mary Swain

Bristol Bay Borough sample ballot at this link

Delta Junction

Seat A:

Seat B: Erin Catterson

Seat D:

Seat E:

Delta Junction election information here

Fairbanks North Star Borough

Mayor: Chris Ludtke, Robert J. Shields, Bryce J. Ward

Assembly Seat A: David Guttenberg, Kevin M. McKinley

Assembly Seat F: Savannah Fletcher, Patricia Silva

Assembly Seat G: Lance Roberts, Kristan Kelly

Fairbanks Borough complete list of candidates at this link

Fairbanks City

City Council: Jerry Cleworth, Jonathan Bagwil

Fairbanks Conservatives have recommended this slate:

Haines Borough

Assembly: Richard Clement, Tyler Huling, Brenda Josephson, Debra Schnabel

Houston

City Council Seat C: Ron Bass, Carter Cole, Shanie Heger

City Council Seat D: Tony Kuse, Lance Wilson

City Council Seat G: Mike Adams, David Johnson, Gina Jorgensen

Juneau City and Borough

Mayor: Beth Weldon

Assembly Seat 1: Barbara Blake, Paul Kelly, Troy Wuyts-Smith

Assembly Seat 2: Michelle Bonnet Hale, Kelly Fishler

Juneau sample ballot at this link

Kenai Borough

Assembly Seat 1: Brent Hibbert

Assembly Seat 2: Kenn Carpenter, Cindy L. Eckland

Assembly Seat 9: Ashton Callahan, Dawson Slaughter, Mike Tupper

Kenai Borough candidate information at this link

Kenai City

City Council: Jim Duffield, Alexander Douthit, James Baisden, Deborah Sounart, Victoria Askin

Kenai sample ballot at this link

Ketchikan Gateway Borough Assembly

Assembly: Jason Button, Darlene d-Svenson, Grant EchoHawk

Ketchikan voter information pamphlet at this link

Ketchikan City

Mayor: Dave Kiffer

City Council: Jai Mahtani, Janalee Gage, Lallette Kistler

Ketchikan City candidate list at this link

Kodiak Borough

Assembly: Scott Smiley, Sarah Sundsten, Eric Sundsten, Dennis Symmons, James Turner

Kodiak Borough sample ballot at this link

Kodiak City

Mayor: Pat Branson

City Council: Rich Walker, Tracy Craig, Terry Haines

Lake and Peninsula Borough

Mayor: Glen R. Alsworth Sr.

Mat-Su Borough

Mayor: Edna DeVries, Matt Beck (Cottle has withdrawn)

Assembly District 7: Ron Bernier, Tamara Boeve

Mat-Su sample ballot at this link

Northwest Arctic Borough

Mayor: Dicki Moto Sr., Lucy S. Nelson, Clement Richards Sr. 

Assembly Seat A: Elmer Armstrong Jr. 

Assembly Seat B: Austin Swan Sr. 

Assembly Seat J: Gia Hanna, Derek B. Haviland, Reid Paaluk Magdanz

Assembly Seat K: Johnson Greene, Walter Sampson

Palmer

City Council: Julie Berberich, Steve Carrington, Lee Henrickson, Pam Melin

Palmer sample ballot at this link

Petersburg Borough

Assembly (2 seats): Paul Anderson, Lars Christensen, Thomas Fine-Walsh, Bob Lynn, Marc Martinson, Brandi Thynes, Dana Thynes, Jim Vick 

Petersburg sample ballot at this link

Rural Alaska districts – run by State

Very small communities have assistance from the State to run elections. They are known as REAAs — Regional Educational Attendance Areas.

Information on elections in rural areas at this State of Alaska link

Sample ballots here

Sitka City and Borough

Assembly: David E. Miller, Rachel Moreno, Kevin Mosher

Sitka sample ballot at this link

Skagway

Mayor: Andrew Cremata, Christy Murphy

Assembly: Jay L. Burnham, William F. Lockette II, Deb Potter

Skagway sample ballot at this link

Wasilla

City Council Seat A: Jordan Rausa, Colleen Sullivan-Leonard

City Council Seat B: Stuart Graham, DaJonee Hale

Wrangell City and Borough

Assembly 3-year: Jim DeBord, Bob Dalrymple, David Powell

Assembly 1-year: Donald McConachie Sr, David Powell

Wrangell sample ballot at this link

Former supporter of eco-terrorism, Tracy Stone-Manning, confirmed to run BLM

Elections have consequences. On Thursday, the Biden Administration got its pick of Tracy Stone-Manning for the director of the Bureau of Land Management at the Department of Interior. She was confirmed 50-45, along party lines. Republicans had argued against her due to her work as an environmentalist who supported the driving of spikes into trees in order to discourage logging, with the idea that the spikes would do deadly harm to loggers working in the forest.

Tracking Biden’s picks to fill the top roles in his administration

Alaska’s senators voted against her.

“Senate Democrats are on the verge of confirming several truly unprecedented nominees—including Tracy Stone-Manning, a former member of the ecoterrorist group Earth First, who President Biden chose to lead the Bureau of Land Management. I’m speaking live on the Senate floor, calling on my Democratic colleagues to reject the radical nominees this president has put forward for some of the most powerful and important posts in the federal government,” Sullivan wrote.

What’s the fuss about Stone-Manning? In 1989, she sent an anonymous letter to the U.S. Forest serve about the spikes she said were nailed into trees in a tract of timber set for harvest.

Her letter resulted in a federal law enforcement investigation at student housing at the University of Montana, where she attended school. Two people were arrested and, in part based on her testimony, were found guilty and went to federal prison.

She now leads the agency that has the power to shut down much land in the West for resource development or grazing.

In July, Sen. Lisa Murkowski signed a letter sent by Republican members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee to President Joe Biden objecting to the nomination, to no avail.

Rick Whitbeck: Governor Dunleavy is a champion for Alaska’s energy

By RICK WHITBECK

Serving as a state’s governor is never a walk in the park under the best of circumstances, let alone recent years. 

Economic unease, caused by both a change in federal leadership and a worldwide pandemic, has tested the fortitude of state executives across our nation.

An ever-widening gap between those who embrace tenants of individual freedom and those who promote a government-dependent state with their ideology has made dealing with state legislative bodies more difficult for governors, especially when they don’t have alignment with their respective states’ lawmakers’ beliefs or priorities.

There are many states who struggle with rising crime. Increasing costs of living, homelessness, with Antifa-type uprisings, with unchecked immigration challenges, and with energy grids and solutions driven by ‘green’ ideologues, that have failed at the most inopportune times.

Although Alaska has certainly seen its share of tests and trials since Gov. Mike Dunleavy took office in January 2019, we sit in much better shape across the board when compared to other states across our great nation. 

While our long-term economic plan remains murky, we are in much better shape fiscally than New Jersey or Illinois, which haven’t had balanced budgets for over 15 years.  Our revenues during the same time are the highest against expenses – nearly 137% – in the nation.

We have the second-highest energy costs in the nation, but given our state’s size, that’s understandable. What is surprising is the small per-kilowatt-hour cost differences between our state ($.2361) and the next-highest ones – all run by Democrats and all who embrace a ‘green energy’ standard ahead of fossil fuels – California ($.2311), Massachusetts ($.2223), Connecticut ($.2075), Rhode Island ($.1975) and New York ($.1953). 

When it comes to jobs, we have not been immune to hardship.  Some of that was a result of COVID-19, and some of that was due to the attack by eco-ideologues, who have driven a narrative of fear of an ‘existential threat’ of climate change to willing and scared Americans for decades, and demanded an end to oil and gas development in an effort to stave off the worst of the ‘threat’.  

Despite these well-funded and well-organized attacks, Alaskans should be shouting “thank you!” to Governor Dunleavy and his administration for the way they’ve continued to drive responsible development of our abundant natural resources throughout his time in office.

The first two years of the Dunleavy Administration saw a willing and eager partner in the White House, as President Trump prioritized growing domestic jobs and building American energy independence as a foundational plank in his plan to Make America Great Again.  

Whether working with the Trump team and our Congressional Delegation to open the Coastal Plain of ANWR to its long-overdue development opportunities, to embracing and championing the Willow project in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A), the Trump/Dunleavy tandem was great for Alaska’s oil and gas future, and it was clear the relationship was built on mutual respect and shared visions.

The year 2020 brought a drastic shift in our petroleum economy, as the pandemic decimated Alaska’s oil and gas exploration season and threatened ongoing operations.  Still, the Dunleavy administration continued to hold oil and gas leases, providing future exploration prospects.  They also worked with the federal government to move projects forward, including the Pikka field, which finalized its federal permit for development on state land during the year.  

President Trump also saw how Communist China had a stranglehold on rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.  Working with Congress, and championed by Alaska’s Senator Lisa Murkowski, a new priority to improve domestic mining was launched.  That should have been amazing news for many of Alaska’s mines – Pebble, the Ambler project, Donlin, UCore and others – and the Dunleavy team spent 2020 helping to advance each of them through necessary permitting and regulatory efforts.  

Even with the politically motivated hijacking of the Pebble project’s permit process in late 2020 – and its permit denied, in spite of a clean Final Environmental Impact Statement from the US Army Corps of Engineers – the Governor and his team have continued to champion a fair and transparent process for Pebble, in spite of the eco-Left’s best efforts to silence his administration’s influence.

Last year, America changed course and elected Joe Biden as President.  Gone was the “America First, America Best” vision of President Trump, replaced by a energy transition, away from oil, gas and coal, and onto a ‘green’-led “just transition”.  Gone was American energy independence as a primary goal, and in was a “leave-it-in-the-ground” goal of extremist environmentalists.

Still, Governor Dunleavy and his team have pressed forward to protect Alaska’s still-bright energy future. 

In 2021, his team has continued to hold oil and gas leases in Cook Inlet and North Slope/Beaufort Sea areas, supported Oil Search’s Pikka efforts by approving a seawater treatment plant, and approved the permits that will one day bring natural gas to Donlin’s minesite.

The administration has also resolved Native allotment claims cases, after the Biden Administration slammed the approval process shut in its first month in office.  

Those land allotments were due to Vietnam-era Native military members, and some could one day be used for responsible development and economic opportunity.  In addition to the Native Allotment program, sales put 209 plots of state land into private hands.  These will be available for both recreation and personal economic use.

Dunleavy and his team have constantly and consistently advocated for Alaskan jobs, Alaskan opportunities and Alaska’s future.  When you look at the resource development record of his predecessor, who zealously tried – and thankfully failed – to hand an Alaskan natural gas line to Communist China to control and prosper from, and compare it to the efforts of this administration, there is a clear difference in both the success and ethical, open and honest responsibility to benefit all Alaskans.

We don’t know what the rest of 2021 and 2022 will bring, but I sleep better at night knowing our state – and its energy future – is led, championed and defended by Governor Dunleavy and his team.

Rick Whitbeck is the Alaska State Director of Power The Future, a national nonprofit organization that advocates for American energy jobs. Contact him at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter @PTFAlaska.

Rep. Zack Fields demands Mark Zuckerberg shadow ban Must Read Alaska from Facebook

Rep. Zack Fields, a Democrat legislator who represents downtown Anchorage, has written to the CEO of Facebook and blamed him for the increase of Covid-19 cases in Alaska because of blogs like Must Read Alaska’s Facebook account.

Must Read Alaska enjoys using Facebook and Twitter, and welcomes a robust community discussion from all points of view on many topics about Alaska.

Fields is the former communication director for the Alaska Democratic Party and works for the Alaska Laborers union as a field organizer at the same time he holds down a job as a legislator.

On Twitter, Fields summarized his letter, saying Facebook is the “primary vector of misinformation on COVID-19, and it’s killing Alaskans.” He linked stories from Must Read Alaska and the Alaska Watchman, with a strong implication that they should be censored from the platform. Lawmakers demanding that news organizations be censored are in violation of the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment. Fields threaded that needle of government censorship, but not as carefully as he thinks and has left himself open for legal action.

Must Read Alaska earlier this year reported on Fields, unmasked, having a beer pong and leg wrestling contest on the Alaska Capitol campus in Juneau with a liberal blogger and some married women legislators, while everyday Alaskans were prohibited from entering the Capitol due to Covid.

Read: Two of three leg-wrestling legislators apologize for partying on Capitol campus

Some of his other proclivities in Juneau have gone unreported as of yet, but Fields has every reason to want Must Read Alaska to fail, based on what it has already reported about him and his extra curricular activities.

“I am writing to demand that you bear witness to the carnage of Covid-19 in Alaska, which is almost entirely the result of anti-vaccination conspiracy theories,” Fields wrote to Zuckerberg. “As the largest ‘media’ outlet in the state, you bear unique responsibility for these deaths.”

Fields continued, “To be sure, there are politicians who have put short-sighted political calculation ahead of public heath — but they only have an anti-public health base In pander to because of your digital network. Certainly, there are local bloggers that have spread misinformation — but their primary reach is through Facebook, not the blogs themselves.”

In fact, Must Read Alaska’s primary reach is through direct access to its website, not through Facebook, with over 56 million impressions through search engines and syndication partners.

“In short, you have provided the infrastructure to spread deadly misinformation with maximum efficiency, and rather than do anything meaningful to fix it your company has maintained algorithms that continue to prioritize inflammatory and false information,” Fields continued.

“As I wrote this letter, approximately 1,000 Alaskans are testing positive for Covid-I9 every day and every day more will die as our hospitals are packed far beyond their capacity to provide reasonable care,” Fields wrote.

“You are aware of this reality on a national level and have chosen to do nothing, because meaningfully changing Facebook’s algorithms would undercut profitability,” Fields continued.

“I want you to see the individual people in Alaska who are dying because they made the fatal mistake to participate in your company‘s network and trust the information they find there,” Fields wrote.

Some Anchorage doctors dispute New York Times story on Alaska’s Covid crisis

The New York Times says doctors in Alaska are now having to make a choice about who lives and who dies.

In a front-page story, Providence Alaska Medical Center Dr. ​​Steven Floerchinger is quoted saying he gathered with his crisis triage colleagues for an agonizing discussion: One patient in the emergency room had a better chance of making it than the other patient, so the other person would have to wait for a bed in the intensive care unit.

“That patient died,” the story says.

“This is gut-wrenching, and I never thought I’d see it,” the newspaper quoted ​​Floerchinger, who lives in Oregon and travels to Alaska to work at Providence Alaska Medical Center. “We are taxed to a point of making decisions of who will and who will not live.”

“Since that night, more grim choices have had to be made as Alaska confronts what is currently the nation’s worst coronavirus outbreak. Nearly two years after the virus began circulating in the United States, some of the scenes here on the country’s northern frontier echo the darkest early days of the pandemic: testing supplies are depleted, patients are being treated in hallways and doctors are rationing oxygen. With emergency rooms overwhelmed, the governor has asked hundreds of medical workers to fly in from around the country to help,” the story says.

Medical workers across America are indeed suffering from burnout, and some are leaving the field. Others are being fired because they will not take the Covid-19 vaccine, but hospitals tell mainstream media reporters that the vaccine requirement is not the cause of the staffing shortages.

Must Read Alaska has reached out to doctors in Anchorage who are disputing that care is being rationed in Alaska.

“Neither I nor any of my close colleagues have seen or heard of a single example,” one doctor said. In fact, the shortage is still not beds, but nursing staff, and it’s not helping that people are being driven from the field by vaccine mandates.

Because of the heavy-handedness of the hospital administration and the intense politicization of care at Providence Alaska Medical Center, the doctors in this story cannot be identified. It’s where they work. It’s where they have to thread the needle with their criticism, trying to preserve their jobs, while advocating for better patient care.

“There is nothing magical about the ICU,” one doctor said. “It’s merely a lower patient-to-nursing ratio, and each room has all of the fixings pre-installed. But do you think we can’t provide ventilation, oxygen, IV drugs and monitoring in any bed? I would like to know why that patient died. My guess is they would have died anyway.”

Another doctor agreed. He, too, cannot be identified because of the risk of being ostracized.

“Medicine has always been triaged here in Alaska — it’s a matter of resources. Does an 80-year-old person need a double heart valve operation when it will only extend his life three years? Probably not, but if you delay that surgery because of Covid ICU bed status and they die in the meantime, it makes a good headline and has a patina of truth,” he said.

“A community doctor trying to get an ICU transfer has to jump through a lot of hoops and that often involves a lot of factors like insurance, transport logistics, and current hospital resources. Sometimes patients that are pretty sick don’t make the cut and sometimes patients that probably shouldn’t do [make the cut] but that’s often ultimately decided by the ICU doc on call in conjunction with the administrator. A quasi elective heart surgery can be (and often was) delayed if it looks like there won’t be staff to cover what is likely to be a 2-3 day stint in the ICU recovering. Covid has complicated this because these patients, once intubated and vented, rarely get better and often take a month to die,” he said.

“The community docs, like they always have done, have to figure out who to triage. My nursing friends at Providence are doing 3:1 ICU management and that’s really hard and leads to burnout. Also leading to burnout is seeing the traveling nurses get signing bonuses, but full time staff not getting retention bonus. So a lot of people are leaving,” he said.

Most ICU nurses are vaccinated, but he believes up to 30 percent of floor nurses are not vaccinated and some of those “are getting out to fill positions at local facilities that have signaled they won’t have a mandate, which makes overall staffing harder because the hospital can’t staff the step-down units (which are for almost-sick-enough-to-be-in-ICU patients) and the ICU patients can’t be discharged to one of those beds,” the doctor said.

The Wall Street Journal also has a story on Sunday about the rationing of healthcare in Alaska. It carries the same message as the New York Times and reports no opposing views.

“In recent weeks, a triage team of doctors at Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage have been using a formula to score patients on their potential for dying and consulting with an ethicist on the decisions they make. The patients include those sick with Covid-19 and with other ailments,” the Journal wrote.

“Recently, the team had to choose which of two patients critically ill with Covid-19 should use a single specialized dialysis machine. The team saw little hope for one patient and selected the other to start dialysis. The patient who had to wait died,” the newspaper wrote.

“’We have the most highly sophisticated medicine and advanced training in the world, and we’re having to ration care,” Dr. Javid Kamali, an intensive-care doctor at Providence, told the Wall Street Journal. “We didn’t sign up for this.”

But the five doctors Must Read Alaska spoke to said neither they nor their close colleagues have seen rationing. One doctor pointed out that Alaska Regional Hospital, which has not mandated a vaccine for its employees, is not using the media to tell the story of rationing care, like Providence is doing.

The New York Times went on to describe what happened to Providence medical staff when they waded into the political arena by asking the Anchorage Assembly last week to mandate masks for everyone in the city over the age of 2. They were met with open hostility.

Read: Medical theater as doctors and nurses come to Anchorage Assembly with mask plea

“When the Anchorage Assembly considered a mask mandate last week, some of the doctors who came to speak were jeered at. “Do you use ivermectin?” someone in the crowd shouted, referring to a deworming medicine that has been touted as a Covid-19 treatment on social media even as the Food and Drug Administration has warned people against taking it,” the Times wrote. Ivermectin has been used for decades to treat parasites and is now successfully used in other countries to help open up the airways of those who have become infected with Covid. But the American medical establishment appears to be firmly against the drug, which is relatively cheap and has had millions using it successfully in India.

“As a group of doctors left the meeting, one person followed them outside, heckling. “You guys have sold out and are liars,” he shouted. Others outside holding signs — “Liberty or Tyranny,” one of them said — also mocked the physicians,” the newspaper wrote, illustrating the very difficult position Providence has put itself in by stepping into what is a political battle at the Assembly.

That event was coordinated by one of the local unions in collaboration with Assemblyman Forrest Dunbar, who stepped down from the dais before the meeting to advise the group on testimony.

Read the New York Times story at this link.

Now, it appears the pro-mask advocates are taking their stories to the national media, which is only telling their views, at the exclusion of others.

The Anchorage hospital has had over a year and a half to prepare for a surge in the infectious disease and to develop treatment protocols, but instead, some residents claim, are sending people home with no treatment options until their lips turn blue from lack of oxygen, after which they can be admitted to the hospital to face a very uncertain outcome.

Read Anchorage Assembly hears overwhelming testimony against Meg’s Mask Decree