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Suzanne Downing: The girls of Afghanistan await the pussy-hatted feminists to rescue them

By SUZANNE DOWNING

Who will save the girls of Afghanistan? Will it be the radical feminists who elected President Joe Biden because they hated with every bone in their bodies the sometimes-odd, always-alpha male presidency of Donald Trump?

Zarifa Ghafari, the 27-year-old mayor of the small Afghani town of Maidan Shar, fled her country on Sunday. She saved herself from certain death. 

There were no protests in Washington to demand her safe passage. The radical feminists of America have gone back to their Pilates and Peloton classes. They cannot be bothered. “Biden’s got this, right? He’s one of us.”

Ghafari, an intelligent woman who looks as though she could be a doctor or scholar, was one of Afghanistan’s first women mayors. She was raised by her parents during the time when the Taliban had been driven back into the mountains by U.S. forces and Afghan Armed Forces. While the terrorists attacked and regrouped to attack again, she grew up during the brief window of time when girls in Afghanistan could finally go to school, even in her very conservative town.

Ghafari was born under the Taliban rule, but lived most of her life in a somewhat more modern social setting. She could show her face, for example, rather than be cloaked in a burka. Like so many women of her age, she’s known a world where girls can get educated, although her region is famously illiterate – the literacy rate is just 25 percent.

She attended Halima Khazan High School in Paktia Province, and went on to Panjab University in India.

Girls born just a few years before Ghafari’s birth were not so lucky. In areas under firm Taliban control, girls are limited to just a few years of schooling, or they are banned from education completely. Baby girls born today in Afghanistan will be locked into a life of Taliban subjugation.

Ghafari told a British newspaper in early August that she was waiting for the Taliban to come and kill her. She wouldn’t leave her family.

Zarifa Ghafari

“I’m sitting here waiting for them to come. There is no one to help me or my family. I’m just sitting with them and my husband. And they will come for people like me and kill me. I can’t leave my family. And anyway, where would I go?” she asked the reporter.

We can presume that Ghafari knows of what she speaks which is why she made the decision to evacuate while she could. Her life had been threatened many times, and her own father, Abdul Wasi Ghafari, an Afghan Army colonel,

was gunned down by Taliban in November of 2020, just days after an assassination attempt on her life failed, the reporter wrote. Ghafari believes her father was killed because of her.

Known for her work on women’s rights in Afghanistan, Ghafari was named an International Woman of Courage in 2020 by then U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. That puts a bigger target on her forehead.

Maidan Shar, her hometown, is the capital of the Maidan Wardak province in central Afghanistan. 

This month the province was finally retaken by the Taliban, the fundamentalist sect of warrior men who are particularly savage toward women, especially women who do not know their place in the patriarchy. 

Women like Ghafari and women in her extended family are going to be marked by the Taliban. She had been hunkered down in Kabul for her own safety, for Maidan Wardak has long been a high-risk province and her town, adjacent to Kabul, is a major travel route for the Taliban.

Wind the clock back to January 19, 2019, when a suicide bomber drove a vehicle into the regional military base and police training center in Maidan Shar, killing a dozen and injuring 30. 

Cosplay Handmaid Tale protestors pretending to be oppressed in Washington, D.C.

Perhaps we can ask the Handmaid’s Tale costuming “cosplay” women who donned red capes and white wimples to protest of Donald Trump on Jan. 19, 2019 to take a passing interest in what real oppression looks like, and to use their abundant sense of righteousness to save 18 million deeply endangered women.

Perhaps the pussy-hatted women with their Dump Trump signs will rescue their sisters in Afghanistan.

Or perhaps the American women pretending they were oppressed and engaging in the worst sort of political theater have now been exposed as simply partisan actors working to remove a president they found offensive. 

These pussy-hatted Women’s March feminists own the Biden presidency, and by extension, they own the rape, torture, and debasement of the women of Afghanistan, who are living in a true dystopia, one that even the novelist Margaret Atwood could not imagine.

Millions of Zarifa Ghafaris did not get out in time. Every one of them heading for a life of servitude and sexual slavery matters.

Suzanne Downing is the publisher of Must Read Alaska and Must Read America.

Study: Pandemic babies show markedly lower IQs, as stress is high, stimulation is low

A university study is showing a disturbing trend: Babies born during the Covid-19 pandemic and children in general are showing significantly lower cognitive levels when compared with children born before 2020.

Rather than IQs of over 100, children are clocking in closer to 78, a dramatic drop in cognitive functions.

With Covid-19 triggering the closure of businesses, nurseries, schools and playgrounds, parents have been stressed out, their children lacked adequate stimulation, and researchers measured a noticeable difference in youngsters compared to the decade studied just prior to the pandemic policies.

“With limited stimulation at home and less interaction with the world outside, pandemic-era children appear to have scored shockingly low on tests designed to assess cognitive development,” wrote the study’s author Sean Deoni, associate professor of pediatrics at Brown University.

“We find that children born during the pandemic have significantly reduced verbal, motor, and overall cognitive performance compared to children born pre-pandemic. Moreover, we find that males and children in lower socioeconomic families have been most affected. Results highlight that even in the absence of direct SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 illness, the environmental changes associated COVID-19 pandemic is significantly and negatively affecting infant and child development,” the study reports.

Since the beginning in March of 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic economic shutdowns “brought about significant upheavals to the social, economic, and public health environments in which children live, grow and play. While children, and those under age 5, have largely been spared from the severe health and mortality complications associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection, they have not been immune to the impact of the stay-at-home, masking, and social distancing policies,” the study says.

“These policies, meant to limit spread of the SARS- CoV-2 virus, have closed daycares, schools, parks, and playgrounds [3, 4], and have disrupted children’s educational opportunities, limited explorative play and interaction with other children, and reduced physical activity levels. From the beginning of the pandemic, there has been concern that these public-health policies would adversely impact infant and early child development and mental health. While there is no past analogue or example of non-conflict related wide-spread and prolonged lock-downs from which to draw information from, concern for child development stemmed principally from the known impact that family and home stress, parent and child anxiety, lack of stimulating environments, and other economic and environmental adversities can have on the developing infant and child brain.”

The study looked at children in Rhode Island, with 672 children from the pandemic era included in the study. Of these, 188 were born after July 2020 and 308 were born prior to January 2019, while 176 were born between January 2019 and March 2020. The children included in the study were born full-term, had no developmental disabilities, and were primarily white.

Rhode Island schools were closed from March 16, 2020 through the beginning of the 2021 school year. But most schools continued to have a hybrid in-person/online learning until January 2021.

Daycare centers were closed for three months, and reopened with reduced capacity. Stay-home orders were in effect from March until May, 2020. Indoor and outdoor mask policies were also in place throughout 2020 and much of 2021, following CDC guidance.

From 2009, Brown University and the Warren Alpert Medical School at Brown University has been home to a longitudinal study of child health and neurodevelopment, called the RESONANCE study. This gave researchers a good baseline of information about children’s cognitive abilities.

The infant brain is born with immense capacity to learn, remodel, and adapt, but is sensitive and vulnerable to neglect and environmental exposures that begin even before birth, the researchers note.

Maternal health, including depression, stress, and anxiety during pregnancy, can impact the developing fetal and infant brain structure and connectivity, leading to potential delays in motor, cognitive, and behavioral development, the researchers said.

“Given these changes in children’s home, education, and social environments, it is not surprising that cross-sectional and longitudinal studies of child and adolescent mental health throughout the current pandemic have revealed increased stress, anxiety, and depression. Studies of child learning further show reduced academic growth in math and language arts in elementary and high school children,” the researchers noted.

Read the study at this link.

Read: Anchorage parents set to sue schools over mask mandate

Read: Suzanne Downing: The masking of America, September, 2020

Masked in the Alaska Capitol again

Legislative Council, which creates rules for the Legislature, has decreed that all who enter the Alaska Capitol, starting Monday, must wear masks.

At the meeting, Sen. President Peter Micciche tried to amend the rule to say that masks would be recommended but not required. That motion failed 7-7.

Voting in favor of the “recommended” option were Reps. Cathy Tilton and Chris Tuck, along with Sens. Shelley Hughes, Mike Shower, Lora Reinbold, and Click Bishop.

Those favoring mandates were Democrats Rep. Neal Foster, Sara Hannan, Matt Claman, House Speaker Louise Stutes, and Republican Sens. Gary Stevens and Bert Stedman.

The third special session of the year begins on Tuesday to hammer out a fiscal path forward for the state and to determine the amount of the 2021 Permanent Fund dividend.

Read: Micciche says no masks needed in Senate

Biden blames Trump and takes no questions

President Joe Biden stood “squarely” behind his achievements in Afghanistan during the nearly eight months he has been president.

During a 10-minute prepared statement he read at the White House on Monday, he said, “I am president of the United States of America and the buck stops with me.”

Biden, who ran on his strong foreign policy background, only read a teleprompter for 10 minutes and then walked away without taking questions from the media. He returned to Camp David, where he was originally planning to stay until Wednesday. Vice President Kamala Harris was nowhere in sight.

“I stand squarely behind my decision. After 20 years, I’ve learned the hard way that there was never a good time to withdraw US forces. That’s why we’re still there. We were clear-eyed about the risk. We planned for every constituency, er, contingency… The truth is, this did unfold more quickly than we anticipated,” Biden said.

The original mission was to stop terrorists after 9-11, he said.

“Our only interest in Afghanistan remains today what it has always been, preventing a terrorist attack on America’s homeland. I have argued for many years that our mission should be narrowly focused on counterterrorism, not counterinsurgency or nationbuilding. That’s why I opposed the surge when it was proposed in 2009 when I was vice president,” Biden said.

“That’s why as president, I am adamant that we focus on the threats we face today in 2021, not yesterday’s threats. Today, the terrorist threat has metastasized well beyond Afghanistan,” he said.

He said the mission in Afghanistan was never supposed to have been nation building. “It was never supposed to be creating a unified centralized democracy.”

Biden said he had no alternative but to follow an agreement set forth by former President Donald Trump, which was originally to have troops out of Afghanistan by May 1.

“The choice I had to make as your president, was either to follow through on that agreement, or be prepared to go back to fighting the Taliban in the middle of the spring fighting season,” Biden said.

He did not addressed the botched pull-out of Kabul that has left hundreds of civilians dead in its wake, many being pulled from their homes and executed by Taliban fighters.

As he gave his remarks, Americans were also watching on social media various video footage of chaos and desperation at the Kabul airport, where people have been seen clinging to a U.S. military transporter and falling to their deaths once the aircraft became airborne. Also at the airport, U.S. troops shot and killed two reportedly armed men. Bodies littered the area, some possibly trampled.

In July, Biden predicted a different outcome, including a country ruled split into two and ruled separately.

“There’s going to be no circumstance where you see people being lifted off the roof of a embassy in the — of the United States from Afghanistan,” he said. “The likelihood there’s going to be one unified government in Afghanistan controlling the whole country is highly unlikely.”

Petitioners file signatures with clerk to recall Meg Zaletel from Assembly

Anchorage voters submitted 4,500 signatures on a petition to the Anchorage Municipal Clerk’s Office for the Meg Zaletel Recall on Monday morning, as part of their effort to remove her from office prior to her possible re-election next spring. Zaletel represents District 4, which is midtown Anchorage.

“This represents approximately one-third of the number of Midtown voters who voted in Zaletel’s election,” said Russell Biggs, one of the petition leaders.  “

The Alaska Superior Court approved this recall petition after the Municipality improperly blocked it nearly a year ago, and the Municipality and Zaletel, who joined the suit, have now appealed to the Supreme Court to block it again. The case will to be heard this Thursday, and if the lower-court decision stands, Zaletel will face a recall election in October. 

“Our petitoners have worked diligently to see this effort through and we feel strongly that the Anchorage Municipality’s obstruction of this effort for over a year was a calculated effort to block a valid citizen initative via the beaurocratic process and courts. Citizens deserve a transparent and fair method to hold their legislators accountable and we look forward to hearing the Muni argue why the governor of Alaska can face recall for failing to appoint a judge, but an Assembly member who violated the emergency mandate needed to save lives should not,” said Russell Biggs, one of the petition leaders.

Kathy Henslee, a conservative, has filed to oppose Zaletel, a liberal, in the April election.

Read: Zaletel recall moving forward

Murkowski issues statement on situation in Afghanistan

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who is in Alaska this week, issued the following statement on the situation in Afghanistan:

“I have been closely watching the rapidly deteriorating situation unfolding in Afghanistan. It is clear that conditions have quickly turned from a controlled withdrawal to a full-on emergency. I am gravely concerned for the Americans that remain on the ground, embassy staff, Afghans that have helped the U.S. Government, and the millions of innocent Afghans—particularly Afghan women and girls who are experiencing unimaginable violence at the hands of the Taliban.

“I have never supported an endless war in Afghanistan and have called for our troops to eventually return home, but this was not the responsible way to leave the country nor was it even the manner the President’s own advisors recommended. Recently, Congress passed supplemental appropriations to support increased demands on the Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) program with the belief this Administration had a viable plan in place in Afghanistan. This was clearly not the case. We have now reached an outcome that no one wanted or hoped for. As Leader McConnell recently stated, ‘this debacle was not only foreseeable, but foreseen.'”

“My message to President Biden is this: When you address the nation today, we need to hear not only an update on the situation, but your plan to keep Americans safe, both at home and abroad. Three previous American presidents have borne the burden of commanding this war. This is undoubtedly not an easy task, but it is an incredible responsibility endowed to the President of the United States and the leader of the free world. Right now, thousands of American veterans and their families are wondering if their service and sacrifice was in vain. American citizens are wondering what your plan is to ensure Afghanistan will not again become be a safe haven for terrorists. And, millions of Afghans, now without a president of their own or a viable army to defend them, are wondering what will come of their country and the rights of women and children under Taliban rule. Simply put, your words matter.”

The president will be addressing the situation at 11:45 am Alaska time.

Read: Sullivan has message for military men and women and Alaskans

Foo Fighters will only perform for the vaccinated and Covid-tested in Anchorage

The popular band Foo Fighters are mandating Covid-19 vaccines and tests for all concert-goers in Anchorage and Fairbanks this week.


“In attending the event you certify and attest that you and all individuals in your party attending the event will follow the below regulations:

“All fans must have received a negative COVID-19 diagnostic test within 48-hours before the event and provide proof of negative result prior to entering the venue. Or, must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 (at last two weeks after final dose) and provide proof of vaccination — either the original vaccination card or a printed copy of the vaccination card with an appropriate ID matching the name on your documentation,” ticket holders were advised via email. Children under 12 years of age or those who have medical exemptions will need to show proof of a negative test.”

The band says that “Mask wearing will be encouraged.”

The band has three stops in Alaska: They’ll be in Anchorage on Aug. 17 and 19 at the Dena’ina Center, and in Fairbanks on Aug. 21 at the Carlson Center.

The Seattle rock band was formed by the drummer for Nirvana after that band broke up subsequent to the suicide of Kurt Cobain. They are one of the first bands to book concerts during the pandemic, and some of the band’s shows have been picketed by anti-vaccination protesters this summer.

Sen. Sullivan: Veterans, Gold Star families should know we fought terrorists in Afghanistan to protect Americans from terrorism on our soil

Sen. Dan Sullivan, in a Facebook Live interview with Must Read Alaska, said Sunday that veterans who fought the Taliban in Afghanistan and Gold Star families of fallen warriors should know the 20-year war was fought to protect America from attacks like the one on Sept. 11, 2001. And that it was effective in doing so.

Sullivan, who has been to Afghanistan as a Marine, in service as a senior member of the George W. Bush Administration, and as a senator, reminded viewers that the United States got involved in the war on terror after 9-11. Keeping the Taliban, Al Qaeda, Isis, and others in the loose network of terror organizations fighting in Afghanistan, made it so they didn’t have time or resources to export terrorism, as they had on 9-11.

“Very importantly and a huge problem from the United States’ perspective, it wasn’t just the Taliban but Afghanistan became a safe haven for international terrorists, particularly Al Qaeda. So that’s where Al Qaeda did its planning, all its training, and all its operations in preparation for the 9-11 attacks,” Sullivan said.

“So that, from our perspective, put Afghanistan, particularly after that horrific day 20 years ago, almost to the date now, when that happened Afghanistan became the focus of our foreign policy for really the last 20 years,” he said.

“It was the Taliban in control but it was al Qaeda that was the violent extremist organization that had the territory that the Taliban were allies with them, and after 9-11 we decided that we were not going to tolerate that any more,” Sullivan said.

Sullivan, who lost a good friend who was on a mission to rescue Navy SEALS in Afghanistan, said America hasn’t been hit with a major terrorist action since 9-11.

“And if you remember, and I remember very well, right after 911, there was so much intel that we thought we were going to get hit again and again and again. And we didn’t know. In my view there is one major reason why we didn’t get hit again. It’s because we went on offense. We had brave American men and women who volunteered and went over and took the fight to them,” he said.

“The fact that we were over there made it, in my view, that they weren’t over here in our cities,” Sullivan said.

But the way the exit from Afghanistan has been conducted by the Biden Administration has clearly shocked the nation, and Sullivan is concerned for not only Americans in the country, but the thousands of allies who helped keep the Taliban controlled.

“This is a shameful, stunning, horrible day that’s going on right now, and I think President Biden owns this.
When the black flag of the Taliban is going to be raised over the American embassy — I hope that doesn’t happen, but I think its going to happen soon — that image, he’s going to own. Forever.”

Sullivan said he thought the nation needs to hear from the president, who has been holed up at Camp David and has made no statement to Americans about the dire situation in Kabul.

View the entire interview with Sen. Sullivan at this link:

President Biden has nothing on his schedule for Monday, and his Press Secretary Jen Psaki is on vacation Aug. 15-22.

Dan Fagan: What will a Dunleavy reelection campaign look like?

By DAN FAGAN

Republican Gov. Michael J. Dunleavy is not who he used to be. He ran as a budget hawk promising significant reductions in state spending. The governor now says he believes most Alaskans oppose cutting government.  

And the governor has gone from opposing new taxes to proposing his own.   

“It was made clear by a number of groups of Alaskans that they didn’t necessarily care for large reductions. It’s also been made clear to me by Alaskans, that they’re not necessarily sad about taxes,” Dunleavy told the left-leaning Anchorage Daily News this past week.

The governor’s Commissioner of Administration Lucinda Mahoney told Channel 2 News recently Dunleavy is considering “several new revenue ideas” for legislators during the upcoming special session. 

One idea is a 4% state sales tax that could transfer as much as $1.2 billion out of an already anemic private sector into an already bloated state government. Mahoney says the governor has already drafted a sales tax bill, but it is still in it’s “extremely, extremely, rough form.”

Mahoney says Dunleavy is also considering raising taxes on the oil industry and bringing casinos to Alaska to raise more revenue for the state. 

“The governor is very focused on the idea of casinos in Alaska particularly as a way to create jobs,” Mahoney told KTUU. 

It’s true casinos will funnel millions of tax dollars into state coffers and create jobs. But at what cost? How many families will be destroyed with easy access to gambling? 

Are state leaders so consumed with keeping special interests benefiting from government largess happy and fat that they’re willing to prey on the weak? 

A 2018 study by the state of Minnesota found one-third of all revenue generated by casinos comes from problem gamblers. 

Abraham Lincoln in the Gettysburg Address called for a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. I doubt Lincoln would consider politicians lacking courage to cut the budget using casino revenue funded by the weak as an example of a government for the people. 

It seems Dunleavy and many Republican legislators have joined with Democrats and the media in pretending there’s no fat in Alaska’s state budget. Cutting is rarely discussed. 

But according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, Alaska spends more on state government per citizen than any other state based on 2019 numbers. 

Alaska’s spent $15,240 per citizen in 2019. The comparably populated South Dakota spent $5,073 per citizen that year. Alaska spends either double or triple the money on state government per capita than 35 other states. 

Compare Alaska’s $15,240 per capita state spending to states like Idaho, $4,713; Arizona $5,316; Missouri $4,302; New Hampshire $4,577; North Carolina $4,687; Tennessee, $4,953; Utah $5,178; Florida $3845; and Texas $4,174.   

To argue Alaska’s state spending is anything but excessive, out of control, and unsustainable is laughable.   

Dunleavy announced this past week he’ll run for a second term. He’ll have to run a very different campaign than last time. 

During his first campaign, he promised to return the Permanent Fund dividend money taken by former Gov. Bill Walker, go back to following the traditional statutory dividend formula, and cut the state budget. Dunleavy struck out on all three. 

He not only didn’t cut the state budget, he grew it more than Walker, his predecessor.  

In his defense, Dunleavy was unable to restore the Walker money and go back to following the statutory formula without help from the legislature. He’s since given up on both causes and has adopted the percent of market value plan proposed during the campaign by his opponent, Mark Begich.

But Dunleavy has no excuse when it comes to his campaign promise to cut the state budget. He’s refused to use his line-item veto pen to any significant degree. If he did, he would need only one-quarter of the legislature to stand with him to avoid an override vote. 

Dunleavy must believe he won’t face a challenger from the right since he has clearly abandoned most causes important to conservatives. If Dunleavy faces no one from the right, conservatives will have no choice but to vote for him. 

His refusal to challenge state funding of abortion under Medicaid has angered many pro-life Alaskans. And Dunleavy’s caving on the issue of the state paying for transgender surgeries has disappointed many social conservatives. His spokesman, Dave Stieren, justified the caving by arguing they could lose the case in court. 

What’s hurt the governor most with his base is his silence on the tyranny and stripping of individual freedoms by local governments in Alaska based on an irrational fear of the COVID virus.

Dunleavy penned a ridiculous editorial to this website last week justifying his silence on tyranny arguing his critics on the issue are tyrannical themselves. 

Other Republican governors like Greg Abbott of Texas and Ron DeSantis of Florida have not helped Dunleavy’s street cred with conservatives. DeSantis and Abbott have been much more aggressive in speaking out and fighting the forces of tyranny in their states. 

Even Anchorage Mayor Dave Bronson showed up Dunleavy by coming out strongly and quickly condemning the Anchorage School District’s recent face mask mandates. The governor, to this day, has yet to speak out against the policy targeting children. 

What will Dunleavy’s reelection campaign look like? Hard to imagine, considering he failed to deliver almost everything he promised during his first run.

Maybe we’ll hear: I’m Mike Dunleavy and I’d appreciate your vote. At least I’m not a Democrat.   

Dan Fagan hosts the number one rated morning drive radio show in Alaska on Newsradio 650 KENI.