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Rocket launch was success, until it wasn’t

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On Friday evening a rocket designed and built in less than a week left the Pacific Spaceport Complex on Kodiak Island and soared as expected — until it didn’t, and ended in a spectacular crash.

Astra’s launch went perfectly at first. Photo: Astra blog

About 20 seconds into the flight, the rocket started oscillating and the mission was scrubbed, leading to the vehicle returning to earth where it met its fate in a fiery explosion, which was quickly contained.

Video of the impact was taken by Eric Van Dongen, who had been deer hunting nearby with his father Marc Van Dongen.

“Rocket launch in Kodiak, Alaska. Pretty cool,” Eric narrated. As the rocket fell back to earth, Marc can be heard saying it was heading to the place where the two had been hunting. After impact, a powerful shock wave boomed across them and the others who were gathered to watch.

“Holy mackerel, that’s unbelievable,” Marc can be heard exclaiming.

Eric Van Dongen Facebook video

The company that built the rocket says the launch was a success nonetheless. On its blog, Astra co-founders Chris Kemp and Adam London wrote:

“We’re excited to have our first orbital attempt under our belt! As we’ve always said, we expect it to take three flights to make it to orbit. Tonight, we saw a beautiful launch! Preliminary data review indicates the rocket performed very well. Early in the flight, our guidance system appears to have introduced some slight oscillation into the flight, causing the vehicle to drift from its planned trajectory leading to a commanded shutdown of the engines by the flight safety system. We didn’t meet all of our objectives, but we did gain valuable experience, plus even more valuable flight data. This launch sets us well on our way to reaching orbit within two additional flights, so we’re happy with the result.

“We are incredibly proud of what the team accomplished today. This was our first orbital launch attempt, and the first flight of a rocket designed from the ground-up for low cost mass production and highly-automated launch operations. The entire launch system was deployed by six people in less than a week – completely unprecedented.”

The company will be poring through launch data and making adjustments for the next launch. Astra began business in 2016 and by 2020 had built the Astra Space Port on Kodiak at the Pacific Spaceport Complex.

“We’ll be back to the pad before you know it,” they wrote.

Snyder posts campaign sign on ‘Loser Hill’ in Muldoon

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Loser Hill is at Northern Lights and Muldoon. Across from a Carrs store, it’s known in political circles as Loser Hill because candidates who put their campaign signs there inevitably lose.

It’s also on Department of Transportation right of way and is not a legal location for political signage. But that doesn’t stop some candidates.

Last Sunday, Dr. Liz Snyder, her husband Sam Snyder, and their children were photographed putting Liz Snyder’s sign back up, after they had taken it down after a complaint had been filed with DOT before the primary.

Snyder is running for House District 27 against Rep. Lance Pruitt in a district that leans conservative.

The other sign posted illegally on Loser Hill is for “Yes on One.” Ballot Measure One is the Democrat-led initiative to raise oil taxes on Prudhoe Bay production.

Rivera plays partisan politics

If you are among those deluded souls who persist in believing Anchorage city politics are nonpartisan, you may want to think again.

Assembly Chairman Felix Rivera posted a notice for six jobs for Assembly aides only on the Young Democrats Facebook group, and told the group to not share the information with anybody. The temporary contract positions, which will pay $11,200, are to be funded with federal CARES Act money.

The jobs are to focus on COVID-19 work and include constituent work, policy research and writing, drafting Assembly documents, working with affected community members and the public.

After the flap, which sprang from a complaint by the Sand Lake Community Council, the number of available jobs fell from six to two for the time being, and the hiring chore was given to Assembly Vice Chairman Austin-Quinn Davidson, and members Crystal Kennedy and John Weddleton, the Anchorage Daily News reported.

We are left to wonder: If Rivera is willing to play politics in hiring only Democrats for aides, what else is he willing to play politics with? His actions again show that politics in Anchorage are far from nonpartisan.

Father denied entry to hospital to see daughter, sleeps on hospital grounds

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PROTESTERS TO JOIN HIM SATURDAY AFTERNOON

Marvin Abbott is sleeping on the grounds of Providence Alaska Medical Center, while his daughter, 26-year-old  Rachelle, is in critical condition inside, suffering from an asthma attack. He believes if he was with her, she would respond and improve.

The Kodiak resident says he won’t leave without his daughter, and is going to camp there until the hospital lets him in to be with her.

But hospital rules in place are such that due to COVID-19, no family members can come in, unless their loved ones are on death’s doorstep. People are allowed in just to say their final goodbyes.

Rachelle was medevaced on Sunday night from Kodiak, and Abbott came, too, even though he knew of the hospital policies. He said he would take a test for COVID-19. But the hospital has refused.

On Saturday, protesters will join Abbott to show solidarity with him. They plan to gather at Providence from 2 pm to 4 pm.

People in Alaska found out about the father’s plight after he posted a Facebook video of himself lying on the lawn near the hospital, with a sign behind him that reads, “Let me see her!” Abbott’s post had been shared 600 times by late Friday night and had received over 200 comments on Facebook.

Anchorage Daily News just hit a new low

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By DAN FAGAN

It’s no secret the Anchorage Daily News is run by men and women of the Left. The paper’s bias against conservative ideas and values is glaring, blunt, and obvious. And like most Left-leaning media members, they don’t care much for our president. 

The ADN recently ran a political cartoon promoting the debunked story claiming President Donald Trump cancelled a trip to visit the Aisne-Marine American Cemetery near Paris in 2018 because he doesn’t respect our fallen soldiers.

The publication, The Atlantic, alleged Trump didn’t want to visit the cemetery where fallen American soldiers were buried because he believed the cemetery was “filled with losers.” 

The story was based on anonymous sources. Of course, it was.  

Trump denied ever saying it and at least 15 administration officials who were with the president on that trip and in the meeting when the comments apparently happened dispute the president ever said such a thing.

Even former National Security Advisor John Bolton, often a harsh critic of the president, said Trump never said what the Atlantic said he did. 

And recent public record requests show the trip to the cemetery was cancelled because of weather. Not because the president considers our fallen soldiers “losers.” 

And now even the Atlantic editor, Jeffrey Goldberg, admits key details of the story could be untrue. When CNN asked Goldberg about the mounting evidence disproving his story he responded: “I’m sure those things are true.” 

The Atlantic story based on “anonymous sources” is one of what has become almost daily so-called bombshell stories paraded out by the Trump loathing media designed to make the president look like the most despicable human ever to live.

Expect more and expect them to intensify in ugliness, implausibility, and absurdity. And expect the ADN to play right along in the charade and further propagate the smear campaign. 

Why would a local paper in a state where Trump won by almost 15 points join a campaign to do anything and everything to destroy him. Because like most Leftists, they hate the president so much, they can’t help themselves. They run with any story no matter how preposterous desperately hoping it’s true. 

The cartoon the ADN ran promoting the Atlantic hit piece on the president is truly disgusting. It shows Trump, looking like he weighs 400 pounds, standing in front of the U.S. Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington, Virginia.

It’s based on the iconic image of the second flag-raising on the Japanese island of Iwo Jima during World War Two. The memorial is dedicated to the Marine dead of all wars and their comrades of other services who fell beside them. 

The cartoon shows the memorial with the words: “losers, dopes, and suckers” spray-painted on it. It also shows Trump standing in front of the memorial with a can of spray paint in his hand with the caption: “I’m more into honoring Confederate heroes.” 

Someone I trust told me they once confronted ADN owner Ryan Binkley about why the paper is still so liberal considering his family has been for years active in promoting and advancing the conservative agenda in the state.

Binkley said it was a business decision only. He believed most of the paper’s subscribers were liberal and if the ADN were more balanced, they’d lose their subscription base which is the main source of their revenue.

It is true Leftists don’t like to be exposed to anything that challenges their beliefs. The Left, much more than the Right, tend to base their beliefs on how they make them feel. Leftists are typically emotionally tied to their beliefs while the right is more logical.  When you challenge a Leftist for what they believe, you are threatening their very identity. It’s why they typically get so angry when confronted with their insanity.

The question for non-Leftist Alaskans is: why support or subscribe to a paper, that for business purposes is advancing an ideology that brings destruction, poverty, and misery everywhere it’s practiced? 

Dan Fagan hosts the number one rated morning drive radio show, weekdays between 5:30 and 8 am on Newsradio 650 KENI. He splits his time between Anchorage and New Orleans.   

Must Read Alaska Show launches Tuesday

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Must Read Alaska launches a weekly show on Tuesday morning, Sept. 15, which will be available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, TuneIn Podcasts, and other streaming platforms that can be reached via computers or smart devices. The show is not aligned with any radio station at this time.

Co-hosts Suzanne Downing and John Quick will talk about Alaska, politics, and feature Alaska communities each week in a show produced by Must Read Alaska Vice President of Media Scott Levesque.

They’ll have guests who are knowledge experts or interesting Alaskans, and they will keep it to one half hour or so. The link to the show is on the front page of the Must Read Alaska website, and subscribers to the MRAK newsletter will often get a tip or two about what will be featured on the Tuesday broadcast.

“I’m excited about this, and it’s something I’ve pushed Suzanne to do for months, as I know Must Read’s readers are very interested in hearing from her as well,” said John Quick, who joined this year as vice president of business development. “I gave her the challenge of when we reach 10,000 followers on Facebook and 1,000 followers on YouTube, we’d launch the show. We’re now at over 12,000 on Facebook and 1,200 on YouTube, so it’s time.”

The website, thanks to readers, had over 1.3 million viewer impressions last month and 360,000 Facebook post engagements were logged in August.

On Tuesday’s inaugural show, the two will talk about an interview Suzanne just gave to a Washington Post reporter who is working on two big Alaska political stories, and also dive into what’s coming up with the Anchorage Assembly meeting on Tuesday and the mass “Footloose” dance protest that will take place in front of the doors at the Loussac Library, where the Assembly meets.

The MRAK Show is brought to you by supporters of Must Read Alaska.

Send your ideas for show topics to [email protected].

Assembly member tries to walk back partisan hiring

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The Vice Chair of the Anchorage Assembly is in damage-control mode, after Chair Felix Rivera tipped his hand that he was trying to hire only Democrats for six key Assembly aide jobs through the end of December.

In a memo sent out Thursday afternoon, Vice Chair Austin Quinn-Davidson said that she is electing to notify the broadest number of interested applicants for two jobs she plans to fill to work temporarily for the Assembly. The new hires will be made with CARES Act funds the city has received.

“While the Assembly is not obligated to publicly list these positions, Vice Chair Quinn-Davidson has elected to do so to welcome the broadest group of applicants. The Vice Chair will lead the hiring process with two of her assembly colleagues, members Crystal Kennedy and John Weddleton,” she wrote. She did not mention the hiring process for the other four positions that Rivera had mentioned.

Rivera had posted a notice for six jobs for Assembly aides in a private Facebook group, telling the Alaska Young Democrats to not share the information outside the group.

According to Quinn-Davidson, the temporary jobs that will focus on “COVID-19 related work and inclu

de, among other things: constituent work; policy research and writing; drafting Assembly documents; working with affected community members and the public; and other duties as may be required by the members.

Those interested in applying to be an Assembly aide should email applications to [email protected]

Applications should include a one-page (and no longer) resume and a one- page cover letter describing their qualifications. Applications are due by 5 pm on Thursday, Sept. 17. Those received after this date or not in compliance with the two requirements will be disqualified. After the deadline has passed, Vice Chair Quinn-Davidson, Member Kennedy, and Member Weddleton will review applications, conduct interviews, and select individuals for the two positions.

Those with questions may contact Austin Quinn-Davidson, Assembly Vice Chair, [email protected], 907.343.4116

  

Hotels to be forced to rehire workers? Assembly to vote

At Tuesday’s Assembly meeting Chairman Felix Rivera and member Forrest Dunbar plan to push a measure dictating to “large” hotels they must offer to rehire workers laid off because of COVID-19 or retain them after changes in owership.

Their proposed ordinance, AO 2020-84(S), would provide “protection for hotel workers’ employment by amending Anchorage Municipal Code with a new chapter requiring large hotel employers to offer rehire to employees laid off in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic, and to retain eligible workers for a period of time after a change in ownership or control, and thereafter consider offering them continued employment….”

Since when does government get to tell employers large or small what they will and will not do when it comes to employment? Is that not the realm of unions and owners? Where is it written that city officials can require employers to rehire workers or keep them on the books, not just after the COVID-19 pandemic, but after a sale or change of ownership?

Perhaps some of our august Assembly got used to the heady notion of dictating policy during their silly ban on plastic bags that also had private businesses charging 10 cents for a bag – and then ordering them to show that on a receipt.

One of the ban’s sponsors said at the time the 10-cent fee was designed to “coerce people to change their behavior.” Now Assembly members are mandating business hiring and retention practices.

We suggest that if Rivera and Dunbar really want to stick their noses into the whozits, whatzits and howzits of hotel hiring and firing they should buy their own hotel and have a field day.

But micro-managing hotels should not be an Assembly function.