Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Home Blog Page 1225

A new low in campaign ads: Pulling the ‘Hitler’ card

15

Candidate Paul Dale pulled the “Hitler” and “white supremacist” cards out of the deck in trying to flip House District 29 — Kenai — to the Democrats.

In what critics are calling the dirtiest gutter politics seen on the Peninsula this election cycle, Dale said Rep. Ben Carpenter believes Hilter was not a white supremacist.

That is not what Carpenter said, but the lawmaker learned a good lesson the day he gave an interview to the Anchorage Daily News. The story rolled out with the Hitler narrative and went around the mainstream media far and wide.

What Carpenter actually said was that fear drives bad decisions, and the Legislature was being driven into bad decisions over COVID-19 by their fear, in the same way that Hitler was driven by his fear of “others” who were not Germans. Carpenter could have said it more eloquently, he later admitted.

In fact, most of the people Hitler killed were some version of caucasian — many of them were gypsies, homosexuals and disabled people. The racial makeup of Jews is a complicated and fascinating story of the history of humanity.

But Dale didn’t want to discuss facts; he was busy smearing Carpenter as a racist.

Dale is running as a pretend independent for the House seat, but all of his supporters are Democrats and he is paying thousands of dollars to the Alaska Democratic Party for campaign support.

His “Hilter” accusations about Carpenter are such personal and vicious attacks that former Alaska Republican Party Chairman Tuckerman Babcock raised the question about why Dale has allowed himself to be used by the Democrats this way.

“Why are the Democrats not running on issues? Why is every Democrat campaign a personal attack on their opponents. It’s because the Democrat platform is deeply unpopular,” Babcock said.

It’s possible that the viciousness is matched by the odds of Dale winning: Only two districts in the state have fewer Democrats than District 29 — District 30 and District 8. It’s a safe seat for a Republican, which is why Dale may be reaching deep into the bag of dirty tricks to deceive voters.

Linking Carpenter to white supremacy because he understands history with more nuance than most is akin to calling Dale a supporter of child sacrifice because he supports state-funded abortion, Babcock said.

Wasilla mayor’s race goes to Oct. 27 runoff

0

Neither candidates Glenda Ledford nor Doug Holler received over 40 percent of the vote during the Oct. 6 Wasilla municipal election, and now there will be a runoff on Oct. 27.

The original candidate list included Stuart Graham, who has been eliminated for the runoff. Holler received 238 votes, with Ledford getting 210, and Graham receiving 166.

That put Holler in the lead with 38.6 percent of the vote, and Ledford second at 34 percent.

The Wasilla City Council is scheduled to certify the rest of the election results at the Oct. 12 regular meeting. 

The winners for City Council are Timothy Johnson, who ran unopposed for Seat C, and Simon Brown for Seat D.

The bold, the brave, the Trump truck rolls along

16

Retired airline pilot Mike Koskovich is on a one-man mission to get Donald Trump and Dan Sullivan reelected. He does what he can, when he can between flying to his cabin at Trapper Lake and maintaining his expansive Flysafe Bed-and-Breakfast that he runs with his wife Jayne.

With his bright red 1986 GMC three-quarter-ton pickup loaded with Trump and Sullivan signs, Koskovich rolls through Wasilla on a circuit that he calls his “trap line.”

Through the parking lots of major commercial centers in Wasilla such as AIH, Walmart, and Fred Meyer, and ending up at Wasilla Lake near the Parks Highway, Koskovich ends his route positioning his truck during rush-hour traffic and waves at people driving home.

“I’ve done this for a number of years,” Koskovich told Must Read Alaska, while he was on his route. He rolled with signage for Dunleavy for State Senate, and he rolled with signs for Sen. Dan Sullivan during the 2014 election. Now it’s all about Trump on one side of the truck and Sullivan on the other.

According to Koskovich, the reaction he is getting this year is more positive than ever. He gets plenty of honks and waves and only occasionally a middle-finger salute.

“I blow kisses at them,” he said. Generally, people are more excited this year than they have been ever before.

In Anchorage, it’s a different story for Trump supporters. They don’t put bumper stickers on their cars. They don’t put Trump signs in their yards. They don’t want their cars vandalized or their homes burned down.

The Trump support in Alaska’s largest city comes out in the manner of flags hoisted on trucks during rallies for the president — flags that can be rolled up and put away.

Joy Latham-Hahn was one of the brave ones. She and her husband are “undeclared” voters — they don’t belong to a party, but they’re strong constitutionalists who care about the country and do their homework before every election before voting.

Two weeks ago, Hahn’s husband was chased by a “very aggressive, angry, out of control angry man,” in Anchorage. “At a stop light, the driver (in a U-Haul van) blocked by husband … and went crazy because of the Trump/Pence sticker on his window.”

Then, at their College Village home, they discovered their Trump/Pence signs had been stomped on and stolen. After they repaired one sign and replaced it, it was shredded and the other Trump/Pence sign was gone.

“I will not let him replace it because I know the next step will be property damage,” she said.

Such is the response of many who spoke with Must Read Alaska about their qualms about putting up a Trump yard sign.

“We don’t want our house burned down,” said one Trump voter, a sentiment expressed by others.

Their fears are not unfounded. Longtime radial political pundit Keith Olbermann said this week on YouTube that Trump supporters were “maggots” that, along with the president, must be prosecuted and removed fro society.

“So, let us brace ourselves,” Olbermann continued. “The task is two-fold: the terrorist Trump must be defeated, must be destroyed, must be devoured at the ballot box, and then he, and his enablers, and his supporters, and his collaborators, and the Mike Lees and the William Barrs, and Sean Hannitys, and the Mike Pences, and the Rudy Gullianis and the Kyle Rittenhouses and the Amy Coney Barretts must be prosecuted and convicted and removed from our society while we try to rebuild it and to rebuild the world Trump has destroyed by turning it over to a virus.”

“Remember it, even as we dream for a return to reality and safety and the country for which our forefathers died, that the fight is not just to win the election, but to win it by enough to chase — at least for a moment — Trump and the maggots off the stage and then try to clean up what they left,” Olbermann said.

Koskovich has seen such hatred and has responded by wearing his MAGA hat everywhere he goes. It all started with the media witch-hunt against teenager Nicholas Sandmann, who went to Washington, D.C. with classmates to participate in a pro-life rally, only to find himself the object of a vitriolic media campaign led by the New York Times, Washington Post and CNN because of his MAGA hat.

After seeing what the media did to a teenager, Koskovich went online and ordered dozens of MAGA hats, and he gives them away wherever he goes. Most of the time, he receives a positive response for his hat, but at an airshow in San Bernardino, California, he was hassled by a Trump-hater. That was the only incident he could think of where someone was actually rude to him. Most folks compliment him by saying, “Nice hat!”

Koskovich, who is a Vietnam veteran, said that his family is spread far and wide across the United States, and is comprised of artists, oil workers, and people who work in agriculture from Florida to Oklahoma, and from Minnesota to Alaska. Between his siblings and his wife’s siblings, they all are supporters of the conservative movement — all 18 of them.

“I consider that a bellwether,” he said. “But we have numerous relatives in the Minneapolis area, and when we sent them photos of the truck, they told us ‘We don’t dare put up a yard sign.'”

For Koskovich, it’s a matter of taking a stand for his right to free speech.

“I believe so strongly in this constitutional republic, and you have to be proactive to ensure that we are able to retain it,” he said.

Reporter arrested, booked after accusations fly over Mayor Berkowitz

63

Maria Athens, a reporter for the Fox New Channel 4 in Anchorage, has been arrested and booked at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center.

(Update, Sunday night: Athens has been released from Hiland, whereabouts unknown).

The drama unfolded Friday. Athens came out on Facebook with a devastating announcement that she had evidence that Mayor Ethan Berkowitz had posted nude photos of himself on a minor’s website.

She encouraged Facebook followers to share her post, which hundreds of them did. As of Saturday morning, tens of thousands had seen her stunning revelation, which carried on across Facebook.

All of this began at 12:08 pm Friday, at the same time the mayor was beginning his regular Friday Facebook press update on COVID-19. He seemed completely unaware of what was unfolding on Athens’ page, and none of the reporters in his press conference asked him about the allegations.

Later, Athens posted a couple of nude photos of the back of a man’s body, which may or may not be Mayor Berkowitz, and may or may not be the floor of his private bathroom in City Hall.

https://www.facebook.com/athensmaria

Berkowitz’ press office issued a denial, and Channel Four news reports last night made no mention of any of the events that had taken place with their reporter.

The State has charges against Athens but the details are not specified.

None of the mainstream media outlets have reported about the case at this point, and Must Read Alaska learned that the mayor had requested police protection at his home overnight.

As of Saturday morning, Athens’ allegations and photos are still posted on her page.

This story will be updated.

Reporter to remain jailed on assault, disorderly conduct

66

Maria Athens was arraigned Saturday and remains in custody at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center this weekend. The charges against the television anchor are Criminal Mischief, Assault 4, and disorderly conduct.

Police took Athens, 41, into custody in the parking lot of Coastal Television Broadcasting in Anchorage after an altercation with a man in the station’s parking lot on Tudor Road.

She had been preparing to broadcast an explosive story about Mayor Ethan Berkowitz, but the station manager, who is said to be her fiancé, was preventing her from going forward with the story.

In a hastily done Facebook broadcast at 12:08 pm on Friday, Athens told the social media world she would have details on the 9 pm news that involved a story about Berkowitz, supposedly photos of his genitals, and an underage Alaskan’s web page. That never happened.

Later, she posted a couple of nude pictures of the back of a man, which she implied was the mayor. By 9 pm, she was in custody and the station made no mention of the incident on their evening broadcasts.

Within hours, the Anchorage Police said an investigation had been done and the allegations were baseless.

More than 30 hours after the drama unfolded with thousands of Alaskans watching on Facebook, the Anchorage Daily News had made no mention of it. But midday on Saturday, Alaska’s News Source reported it this way:

“The incident took place shortly after Athens took to social media to post unsubstantiated allegations against Anchorage Mayor Ethan Berkowitz. Though Athens posted that she would cover the story during her late night broadcast on Your Alaska Link, the story never aired.”

The mayor is now under a 24-hour protection detail from Anchorage Police, and his office issued a denial of the allegations on Friday midday, but has not made any statements since. The Mayor’s Office has not explained why the mayor has police stationed outside his home.

New Anchorage tax would add body-cams for cops to increase transparency

23

By SCOTT LEVESQUE

The Municipality of Anchorage’s Public Safety Committee and Mayor Ethan Berkowitz are proposing a new $1.84 million special tax ordinance (AO 2020-116) to obtain body-worn cameras, in-car cameras, digital evidence management, and related technologies for the Anchorage Police Department.

The bond, to be presented to voters in April, would provide the Anchorage Police Department with equipment and software upgrades, and body cameras for all patrol officers. While not explicitly stated, the ordinance is another tool by the Assembly and Berkowitz Administration to ensure more accountability within the APD.

In July, Assembly Member Meg Zaletel introduced an ordinance to limit or restrict police use of force. Zaletel framed it as a call for more accountability, but many called it a gross overreach and overreaction, a way to appease a small but loud group of Black Lives Matter protesters.

While the Assembly and Berkowitz Administration continue to work to find ways to hold first responders accountable, the public at large has been more interested in holding its elected officials accountable for mismanagement of CARES Act relief funds and a unpopular plan to house homeless and treat drug addicts near schools and residential neighborhoods.

But now, the public will be asked to decide if body cams will improve life in Anchorage.

According to the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute, 89 percent of Americans support body cams for cops, with a majority of respondents saying that the cameras will protect officers from untrue allegations. Democrats and Independents were, however, more willing to raise taxes to outfit their local police departments with body cams, while Republicans were less likely to support those taxes.

Read the Cato Report here.

As for AO 2020-116, it comes with a projected cost of $2.2 million a year. That’s where the property owners come in: Property taxes would increase by $5.32 per year on $100,000 of assessed valuation.

If passed by the Assembly, the ordinance to borrow funds for police body cams will be on the ballot April 6, 2021. 

The Assembly will take up the ordinance on Oct. 13 at its regularly scheduled meeting. The agenda can be seen at this link.

Maria Athens has a story on Berkowitz, but mayor says it’s slanderous

83

In a breathless teaser for tonight’s newscast, Fox News reporter Maria Athens says that Mayor Ethan Berkowitz exposed his genitalia on an underage girl’s website. She said this information is according to “reliable sources” and will be divulged tonight.

Her Facebook post urged others to #makethisgoviral, and in her responses to several critics who doubted the veracity of the post, she dropped the F bomb on some, and called another commenter a “UAA loser,” and another one “moron.” The post contained a video of her explaining the story to come tonight.

Commenters ranged from believing her to thinking she was high, but nearly 300 people had shared Athens’ post by 2 pm on Friday.

A phone call to the mayor’s office went directly to voice mail. Must Read Alaska has reached out to Athens for comment.

This afternoon, the reporter also posted a photo as proof, the back of a man who is evidently naked and whose hair resemble’s the mayor’s.

Athens is the lead news anchor and executive producer on Fox ABC, Channel 4.

The mayor’s office released a statement this afternoon that called it slanderous.

Hockey tourney attendees urged to quarantine

7

The Anchorage Health Department says that a youth hockey tournament is where a cluster of COVID-19 cases has been identified.

Contact investigations indicate that the 2020 Termination Dust Invitational, held Oct. 2-4 at the Ben Boeke and Dempsey Anderson arenas, was attended by more than 300 players, coaches and fans, the city wrote.

Teams from Anchorage, Eagle River/Chugiak, Wasilla/Palmer, Kenai/Soldotna and Juneau participated in the tournament. Contact investigations indicate significant close contact in indoor spaces, including locker rooms, with inconsistent use of face coverings.

To avoid further spread of COVID-19, the Anchorage Health Department has advised all attendees without symptoms to quarantine at home for 14 days except to get tested. Additionally, AHD urges all attendees with COVID-19 symptoms to isolate from others at home for 10 days, except to get tested.

Join Suzanne Downing in Wasilla on Saturday

6

Will Republicans regain control of the House? Will Don Young win reelection for his 25th term in office? Is Al Gross a threat to Alaska’s economic future? Will voters be fooled by the “independent” label? What does it mean if absentee ballots don’t need a witness signature?

Must Read Alaska Editor Suzanne Downing is the guest speaker at the October meeting of the Association of Mature American Citizens on Saturday at 11 am., and she will dive into these topics and take questions.

The AMAC meeting location is the Wasilla Senior Center, 1301 S Century Circle, Wasilla.