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Dunleavy applauds Hegseth’s military-wide initiative to support homeschooling families

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Tuesday directed a comprehensive review of how the Department of Defense supports homeschooling among military-connected families.

In a memorandum, Hegseth instructed the undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness to conduct a department-wide review that will examine current practices and identify new ways the military can assist families who choose to homeschool their children. The directive also calls for an evaluation of best practices, including whether Department of Defense facilities or other resources could be made available to homeschooled students within military communities.

“Through these efforts, the department will uphold the directive to improve the education, well-being and future success of military-connected students, supporting parents in choosing the best educational options for their children,” Hegseth wrote. “Ensuring that military-connected families receive strong educational support maintains morale and readiness, reinforcing the overall stability and effectiveness of our military communities. This is vital to the department and the quality of life of our service members, who deserve no less.”

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy called it a positive step for the large military community of Alaska.

“Alaska welcomes the support for our homeschooling families. Alaska has one of the most robust public homeschool systems in the country as well as private non-affiliated homeschool. With close to 22,000 students enrolled in Alaska’s public homeschools, Alaska does homeschool as well or better than any anywhere else in the nation, and we want to be known as the state where homeschool families are welcomed and supported,” he said.

The move is part of a broader Trump Administration effort, initiated in January through Executive Order 14191, which directed federal agencies to review how they can expand educational freedom for American families.

The executive order, signed by President Donald Trump, tasked the Department of Defense with assessing mechanisms that would allow military families to use DOD funds for school options of their choice, including private, faith-based, and public charter schools.

“The secretary of defense shall review any available mechanisms under which military-connected families may use funds from the Department of Defense to attend schools of their choice … and submit a plan to the president describing such mechanisms and the steps that would be necessary to implement them beginning in the 2025-26 school year,” the order states.

Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs and Senior Advisor Sean Parnell [not the same Parnell as the former Alaska governor] said in a statement that the review reflects the department’s commitment to both military readiness and family well-being.

“The department recognizes the vital role parents play in the education of their children and remains committed to providing military families with the flexibility and support necessary to choose the educational path that best meets their needs,” Parnell said. “Through this effort, the DOD will strengthen support for military-connected students and reinforce the readiness and quality of life of service members and their families.”

Military families, often facing frequent relocations and deployments, have increasingly turned to homeschooling for flexibility and stability in their children’s education. The Pentagon’s new initiative is expected to generate recommendations later this year.

Gov. Dunleavy has a long history of promoting homeschooling. As a state senator in 2013, he sponsored legislation (SB100, passed in 2014 as part of HB278) that created Alaska’s correspondence school allotment program, allowing parents to use state education funds for educational materials and services from public, private, or religious organizations. This program aimed to increase flexibility for homeschooling families to tailor education to their children’s needs.

Dunleavy considers public homeschooling and correspondence programs as part of Alaska’s public school system, emphasizing that they serve public school students with certified teachers to achieve public educational outcomes. He has defended the constitutionality of these programs, particularly the use of allotments, arguing they provide an “indirect benefit” to private or religious institutions rather than a direct one, which he believes aligns with the Alaska Constitution.

In 2024, when a Superior Court judge ruled that the allotment program violated the state constitution by allowing public funds to be used for private or religious education, Dunleavy appealed the decision to the Alaska Supreme Court, which reversed the ruling, affirming the legality of the program.

In 2025, Dunleavy introduced education legislation (HB 76, SB 82) that included provisions to fund homeschool students at the same level as the Base Student Allocation for brick-and-mortar schools, increasing funding from 90% to 100% of the BSA. His proposals often tie increased education funding to reforms that boost homeschooling and charter schools, which he sees as high-performing alternatives to traditional schools.

36 new officers graduate from Alaska Law Enforcement Academy in Sitka

In a ceremony held May 23 in Sitka, 36 new law enforcement officers officially joined the ranks of Alaska’s public safety professionals, marking the completion of the Alaska Law Enforcement Training Academy’s 17-week program. It was one of the largest graduating classes, just three short of the record of 39.

Graduates from the class represent agencies from across the state, including the Alaska State Troopers, Wildlife Troopers, municipal police departments, and Village Public Safety Officer programs.

“These new officers represent the future of law enforcement in Alaska,” said Gov. Mike Dunleavy. “I am confident that they will uphold the highest standards of professionalism and integrity, and I wish them all the best as they embark on their careers.”

Over the course of more than 1,000 hours of training, recruits received instruction in topics ranging from use-of-force and de-escalation to physical fitness and complex scenario-based exercises tailored to the unique challenges of policing in Alaska.

“We are proud to welcome these new officers to our law enforcement family,” said Alaska Department of Public Safety Commissioner James Cockrell. “This rigorous training program has prepared them to protect and serve Alaskans. We are grateful for their bravery and dedication to our communities.”

Graduating Officers and Their Agencies:

  • Alaska State Troopers: Tyler Anderson, Abigail Danaher, Jess Evans, Levi Farrelly, Andrew Fishe, Noah Gandy, Nathan Marble, Wyatt Miller, Brycen Mitten, Christopher Morland, Riley Moss, Edward Owens, Stevan Smith, Jonah Strauel, Colten Taratko, Ethan Wynecoop
  • Alaska Wildlife Troopers: Schuyler Deeney, Elizabeth Jaeschke, Cody Johnson, Hunter Shay
  • Anchorage Airport Police & Fire: Skyler Borane, Leonardus Castro, Nicolas Herron-Webb
  • Juneau Police Department: Steven Johnston, Joshua Shrader, Tristan Taber, Justin Viehweg
  • VPSO Programs: Alexa House-Hoffman (Kodiak Area Native Association), Ryan Lane (Northwest Arctic Borough), Dakota Strong (Tlingit & Haida), Manmeet Teja (Aleutian Pribilof Islands Association)
  • Kenai Police Department: Lucas Michael
  • Soldotna Police Department: Cajewl Musgrave
  • North Slope Borough Police Department: Michael Reahl
  • Craig Police Department: Dylan Vanstralen
  • Other Departments: Axel McCrumb (Juneau PD)

Trooper recruits will now complete an additional week of department-specific training with the Department of Public Safety. After that, they will report to duty stations in Fairbanks, Soldotna, or the Mat-Su Valley to begin the Field Training and Evaluation Program. Those who complete the program and their probationary period, typically one year from the start of the academy, will be promoted to the rank of Trooper.

Just in: CDC nixes Covid shot recommendation for healthy kids and pregnant moms

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has removed Covid-19 vaccines from its recommended immunization schedule for healthy children and healthy pregnant women. In contrast to the CDC’s former stance that the shot is safe for children and pregnant women, the announcement signals that the Trump Administration believes more research is needed.

The decision was unveiled in a video posted to X by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who was joined by Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary and National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya. The three officials said the move reflects a “common sense” strategy that aligns US policy with countries like Canada, Germany, and the United Kingdom, all of which currently limit Covid-19 vaccination recommendations to high-risk populations.

Citing a lack of clinical data supporting routine Covid-19 boosters for low-risk groups, Kennedy said the change is a course correction from previous recommendations from the Biden Administration that he believes were overly broad and not supported by clinical data. The officials emphasized that Covid-19 vaccines remain available for those over 65 and individuals with underlying health conditions, but will no longer be promoted for universal use among healthy children or pregnant women without additional, more rigorous clinical trials.

Only 13% of children and 14% of pregnant women got the most recent booster, Makary noted in the video, adding “We need to follow the data, not double down on mandates that the public is increasingly rejecting.”

The decision bypassed the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which was scheduled to meet in June to review fall vaccine guidance.

Dr. Tina Tan, president of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, called the policy change “complete madness,” and said it ignores well-established data showing that Covid-19 poses serious risks to pregnant women and that vaccination is both safe and protective for them and their babies.

According to the CDC’s website, pregnancy increases the risk of severe illness from Covid-19, including hospitalization, intensive care, and preterm birth. The agency has also consistently cited studies indicating that Covid-19 vaccines are effective and pose no known safety risks during pregnancy.

However, as of April, only 23% of US adults have received the updated 2024–25 Covid-19 vaccine, according to the CDC. And only 13% of children are getting the shots now.

Beyond the medical debate, the policy change could have downstream effects on insurance coverage. Many insurers base vaccine reimbursements on CDC recommendations, and the removal of Covid-19 vaccines from the routine immunization schedule could mean some patients will need to pay out of pocket.

Commissioner Makary earlier this year implemented more stringent approval processes for future Covid-19 vaccines, requiring placebo-controlled trials for healthy populations before broad authorization.

The head of the CDC was not included in the announcement because there is no current head of the CDC.

Dr. Susan Monarez, who served as acting director from Jan. 23 through March 24, is no longer serving in that position and a replacement has not been named, which left the announcement of the Covid recommendation change to HHS Sec. Kennedy. The CDC website shows only deputy directors.

Bongino says FBI investigating Seattle over religious discrimination following mayor’s comments

FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino announced on X that there is an investigation into a violent attack on a Christian rally and concert in Seattle’s Cal Anderson Park on May 27.

The event, organized by On Fire Ministries to oppose abortion and promote science-based views on gender, was disrupted by Antifa and transgender activists, leading to 27 arrests.

Bongino stated, “We have asked our team to fully investigate allegations of targeted violence against religious groups at the Seattle concert. Freedom of religion isn’t a suggestion.”

As reported Monday in Must Read Alaska, a worship rally organized by Christians from On Fire Ministries turned violent Saturday afternoon at Cal Anderson Park, located in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood, a formerly family-oriented neighborhood that has been taken over by the LGBTQ+ community. 

The Mayday USA event was part of a five-city national tour and in Seattle drew violent opposition from transgender activist groups and resulted in 23 arrests after the trans-activists attacked the worship attendees and police.

After the mayhem was brought under control and arrests were made, Mayor Bruce Harrell criticized the Christians for holding a rally and said closer review of rally permits would take place.

Mayor Harrell said the event was counter to the values of Seattle. He called the prayer gathering a “right-wing extremist rally.”

“When the humanity of trans people and those who have been historically marginalized is questioned, we triumph by demonstrating our values through our words and peaceful protest – we lose our voice when this is disrupted by violence, chaos, and confusion,” Harrell said.

Later, Harrell pulled the race card and said that “We will not be intimidated by the kind of fear-mongering and divisiveness inspired by the rally and extreme rhetoric … that takes aim at our residents and at Seattle’s second black and first Biracial mayor.”

“Seattle is proud of our reputation as a welcoming, inclusive city for LGBTQ+ communities, and we stand with our trans neighbors when they face bigotry and injustice. Today’s far-right rally was held here for this very reason – to provoke a reaction by promoting beliefs that are inherently opposed to our city’s values, in the heart of Seattle’s most prominent LGBTQ+ neighborhood. When the humanity of trans people and those who have been historically marginalized is questioned, we triumph by demonstrating our values through our words and peaceful protest – we lose our voice when this is disrupted by violence, chaos, and confusion. Anarchists infiltrated the counter-protestors group and inspired violence, prompting SPD to make arrests and ask organizers to shut down the event early, which they did,” Harrell said.

Elderly Alaskans were among those targeted by criminal conspiracy involving Chinese and Canadians

Alaskans are among nearly 300 elderly victims in 37 states who were targeted in a wide-reaching transnational fraud and money laundering scheme that cost seniors across the US and Canada at least $5 million, according to a federal indictment unsealed in Rhode Island.

The Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) say the conspiracy involved fraudulent pop-up messages on victims’ computers, often posing as alerts from well-known technology companies, claiming that bank accounts were compromised or that victims were under investigation.

The pop-ups directed victims, including residents of Alaska, to call bogus “agents” posing as employees of financial institutions or government entities like the Federal Reserve and Federal Trade Commission. Victims were then pressured through coordinated phone calls into transferring their life savings, via wire transfers, cryptocurrency, or even in-person deliveries of gold bars or cash, to fraudsters posing as government couriers, under the guise of “protecting” their assets.

The fraud included a scheme to steal cash, cryptocurrency, wire transfers, and gold from victims who were “defrauded through misrepresentations, including, but not limited to, statements to victims that their bank accounts and assets had been compromised by fraudulent transactions; that their bank accounts and assets were subject to garnishment by the government because the victims were under investigation for criminal activity; that to protect their assets and to avoid garnishment, the victims needed to withdraw funds from their bank accounts and liquidate their assets and obtain cash, cryptocurrency, and gold; and that if the victims gave the cash, cryptocurrency, and gold to a courier or government representative, the funds from their cash, cryptocurrency, and gold would be held in a secure location, would be protected, and would not be subject to garnishment,” the indictment reads.

Authorities have charged eight individuals for their alleged roles in orchestrating and facilitating the scheme:

  • Nanjun Song, 27, of Brooklyn, New York, a Chinese national alleged to have overstayed a B2 visa, was arrested in Las Vegas.
  • Jirui Liu, 23, of Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, a dual citizen of China and Canada, was arrested in Rhode Island.
  • Xiang Li, 37, and Xuehai Sun, 37, both of Flushing, New York, Chinese nationals, were arrested in New York.
  • Fangzheng Wang, 24, of Westborough, Massachusetts, a Chinese national, was arrested in New England.
  • Cynthia Jia Sun, 25, of Houston, Texas, is in federal custody pending transfer to Rhode Island.
  • Zhenyang Xin, 25, of Hamilton, Ontario, and Wing Kit Ho, 22, of Markham, Ontario, are still at large. Arrest warrants have been issued.

In addition to the $5 million in confirmed victim losses, authorities say they uncovered a bank account that may have laundered an additional $16 million in suspected fraud proceeds.

The indictment, returned in US District Court in Providence, charges the defendants with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and/or money laundering. If convicted, they could face significant prison time.

The investigation was led by HSI Providence and IRS Criminal Investigation, with support from agencies in Texas, New York, New England, and Canada, including the Narragansett and East Providence Police Departments, Texas Department of Public Safety, and the Connecticut State Police.

The case is part of a broader effort by the Rhode Island Homeland Security Task Force, a multi-agency initiative aimed at dismantling transnational criminal organizations involved in fraud, money laundering, drug trafficking, and other serious crimes.

Federal authorities are urging the public, particularly seniors, to remain vigilant and skeptical of unsolicited tech warnings or financial threats appearing online. Anyone who believes they may have been targeted is encouraged to report the incident to law enforcement.

Photo tour: Democrats blasted Bronson for Centennial Park campground. They ushered in Anchorage trail system’s Wild, Wild West

After Democrats blocked former Mayor Dave Bronson’s solution to the homeless and vagrant problem in Anchorage, voters elected a new mayor — Suzanne LaFrance, who had been on the Assembly during the time when Mayor Bronson was attempting to develop a navigation center to get services to the inebriates, drug addicts, and down-and-outers.

With the navigation center blocked by the Assembly, Bronson opened up Centennial Campground for a summer camping area for the growing population of outdoor-living enthusiasts.

Today, as part of our series on Mayor LaFrance’s management of the decline of Anchorage, we take you through the Chester Creek trail and watershed, and the Benson and New Seward Highway rights of way, where vagrant encampments have fouled the land, burning it and moving on to the next unburned area, defecating in the watershed, and leaving litter everywhere in their wake. It’s another of many lawless areas of Anchorage, where criminals have staked their territory and where law enforcement is never seen.

Mayor LaFrance says she plans to spend millions on a pilot project that will set up tiny homes for a couple of dozen people this winter. But in the meantime, the pillaging and fouling of Anchorage goes on.

According to the local media that has written about the tiny home pilot project, the mayor’s special assistant Thea Agnew Bemben said: “This could be unrealistic. But we’re just gonna give it a whirl.”

LaFrance was one of the leaders of the opposition to Mayor Bronson’s navigation center, which was to be located in the area of Elmore Road and Tudor Road, where now the 24 100-foot cabins with no running water are planned.

Click on the links below these photos for previous coverage of the vagrant crisis in LaFrance’s Anchorage.

Encampments like this along Chester Creek use the creek for both kitchen and toilet.
Midtown Anchorage.
Midtown Anchorage.
Municipal workers are providing maid service along New Seward Highway and Benson Blvd. rights of way (on Sunday, during a holiday weekend, and that’s double overtime and a half.)

Extended NOAA weather radio outage in Juneau due to system upgrade

A mandatory system upgrade at the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Juneau is expected to cause an extended outage of NOAA Weather Radio services from May 27-29. Officials have warned the outage could last longer than initially scheduled.

The planned maintenance will also affect the Alaska Weather Information Line, a popular phone service used by residents and mariners throughout Southeast Alaska. During this period, the NWS is urging users to turn to alternative sources for weather forecasts and updates.

Recommended alternatives include:

  • The NWS Juneau website: weather.gov/Juneau
  • Local radio broadcasters, such as KINY, KTOO, KHNS, KRBD, KSTK, KCAW
  • The Marine Exchange of Alaska: mxak.org

In the event of severe or significant weather during the outage, the Juneau Forecast Office has arranged to relay critical weather alerts via the US Coast Guard on emergency marine Channel 16 and other maritime transmitters. Additionally, the Marine Exchange of Alaska will assist in disseminating information over the Automatic Identification System network.

NOAA Weather Radio is the resource for continuous weather information and emergency alerts across Alaska. This temporary disruption comes during a period when mariners and residents rely heavily on accurate forecasts during summer travel and fishing season.

The NWS has not provided a specific time for service restoration but will issue updates as work progresses.

Carl Cannon: Globalizing Naziism

By CARL CANNON | REAL CLEAR WIRE

It takes severe depravity, not to mention sheer stupidity, to believe that shooting an unarmed couple in the back as they stand at a crosswalk is somehow going to “Free Palestine,” which is what the cowardly killer yelled into the Washington night as he was led away by police.

If they didn’t realize it before, Americans have now learned precisely what kind of demons are being summoned up when pro-Hamas demonstrators on college campuses chant “Globalize the Intifada.” No one in Israel needed to be told. They’ve known for a long time.

The “Second Intifada” was burned into Jewish memory at the dawn of the 21st century by a series of gruesome attacks known in Israel by their place-names: the Dolphinarium discothèque in Tel Aviv, Sbarro Pizza and Café Moment in Jerusalem, Maxim Restaurant in Haifa, the Park Hotel in Netanya.

The Dolphinarium was blown up on June 2, 2001, by a suicide bomber who took the lives of 21 young people – most of them Jewish teenage girls from Russia and Ukraine.

Two months later, seven Palestinian terrorists with ties to Hamas carried out the bombing of the Sbarro pizza parlor. Sixteen people were killed, including three Americans and a pregnant woman. Half the victims were children. One of the Americans, a mother named Chana Nachenberg, spent 22 years in a coma before dying in 2023. Ahlam Tamimi, one of the masterminds of the crime, was released in a 2011 prisoner exchange. She lives freely in Jordan today and is unrepentant – saying in one television interview she’d do it again.

The deadliest single attack of the Intifada, known in Israel as the Passover Massacre, took place on March 27, 2002, at the Park Hotel along the Israeli coast. The killer disguised himself as a woman, and carrying a suitcase bomb entered the hotel dining room, where 250 civilians were celebrating Seder dinner. Thirty people, most of them elderly, were killed, and another five dozen wounded. Some of the victims were Holocaust survivors.

Hamas leaders boasted about the Passover attack, while Israeli government spokesman Gideon Meir spoke for most Israelis when he said, “There is no limit to Palestinian barbarism.” Apparently fearing what did, in fact, later ensue (a fierce IDF crackdown on the West Bank) even Palestinian Authority officials condemned the attack.

By the time the second Intifada waned, more than 1,000 Israelis were dead, most of them civilians.

Two of the terrorist attacks in particular foreshadowed the Wednesday evening murder of Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim at the Capital Jewish Museum. The event featured humanitarian organizations that use interfaith dialogue in places like Gaza and Syria to alleviate civilian suffering.

Café Maxim had a similar ethos. Co-owned by Jews and Christian Arabs, the Haifa restaurant was a tangible symbol of peaceful co-existence when a female suicide bomber – a lawyer from Jenin – destroyed the place two days before Yom Kippur in 2003.

Jewish and Arab Israeli customers dined together in that place – and they bled and died there together, too. Twenty-one people perished, including three children and an infant. Among the dead were four Arab employees of the restaurant.

On May 2, 2004, a Jewish social worker named Tali Hatuel who was eight months pregnant, was driving with her four daughters when she was ambushed by two Palestinian gunmen. After it was disabled, the killers walked up to her car and shot the four girls and their mother at close range. Islamic Palestinian groups praised the deed as “heroic.”

That was 22 years ago. But it was only last week that Tzeela Gez, an Israeli mother of three being driven to the hospital to give birth, was shot and killed in the West Bank, a murder lauded by Hamas as a “heroic act.”

That’s what the word “Intifada” signifies. What happened seven days later in Washington is what’s meant by “globalizing the Intifada.”

Typically, segments of the legacy media struggled to find moral clarity, or even simple coherence, in Wednesday’s awful news. X.com was full of such examples, including one confusing passage from an NPR story that seemed to accept the Washington, D.C., killer’s logic.  (“Many U.S. and Israeli officials identified the attacks as the latest in a marked rise of antisemitic incidents in recent years — and more notably, as Israel ramps up its offensive in Gaza, where the risk of famine looms for a population ground down by a months-long blockade.”)

Bari Weiss, as usual, cut to the heart of the matter. Writing in The Free Press about the double murder outside an iconic Jewish landmark in the capital city, Weiss unspooled “the culture of lies that created the climate for his murderous rampage.”

She details many of them; I’ll fill in others. The list of culprits is long.

  • It starts with college presidents who accepted money from sketchy Arab autocrats who buy peace in their own country by fomenting bigotry and intellectual dishonesty in ours.
  • Next are the faculty cadres who spread specious theories such as critical race theory aimed not just at the United States, but at Western culture in general. The apotheosis of this insanity is grafting the dubious “colonizer” label onto Israelis, who occupy a land inhabited by Jews 2,000 years before the advent of Islam.
  • Democratic Party politicians who’ve repeated these toxic lies, or at least not objected to them out of fear of alienating the kookiest elements of their progressive base. On Friday, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortes issued a forceful denunciation of antisemitism. Yet last year she was supportive of the pro-Hamas demonstrators at Columbia. “At Columbia University they call for Intifada constantly,” former Columbia student Jonathan Epstein explained on CNN. “They’re not doing it quietly. They’re loud … You can hear it. They make recordings of themselves.”
  • Liberals who repeat the spurious slander about “genocide” in Gaza – on behalf of a movement that openly calls for the destruction of Israel and murderous attacks on the Jewish diaspora around the world.
  • Islamicists working for the U.N. who aided and abetted the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas atrocities.
  • Useful idiots in the Western media who repeat Hamas propaganda uncritically, particularly the deliberately deceptive exaggerations about famine and wartime casualties.
  • Performative posers who glamorized political violence by swooning over accused assassin Luigi Mangione.

“Words matter,” we are constantly told. It’s true and it’s a lesson we learned anew this week.

On Tuesday British diplomat Tom Fletcher, U.N. Undersecretary General of Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief, told the BBC that if food trucks didn’t start rolling into Gaza, “14,000 babies would die in the next 48 hours.”

This was nonsense, as Fletcher knew. The report he cited actually claimed that 14,000 children under the age of six would be at risk for malnutrition in the coming 12 months if the situation remained static.

The BBC didn’t check Fletcher’s specious claims. Neither did the British prime minister, nor the hysteric members of the House of Commons who repeated them. His line was regurgitated ad nauseam by the U.S. news media and uncountable numbers of social media “influencers” around the globe.

By Wednesday, the BBC and the U.N. had backed off this assertion. Perhaps it’s unrelated, but by then a man with a pistol and evil intent had boarded a plane from Chicago to Washington and bought a ticket to a humanitarian event attended by Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim.

Carl M. Cannon is the Washington bureau chief for RealClearPolitics and executive editor of RealClearMedia Group.

Take our survey: Should Alaska Children’s Trust funding be vetoed since it’s spending state dollars on developing ‘Alaskans for Trans Youth’ nonprofit?

ANCHORAGE CITY GOVERNMENT IS ALSO SPENDING TAXPAYER DOLLARS ON PRIDE PARADE

The Municipality of Anchorage is spending taxpayer dollars to organize a parade entry into the Pride parade, which is for support of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other sexual identities. The parade is an annual event in most communities, celebrating sexual variations. In San Francisco, it often features naked people walking down the parade route.

“Join Team MOA in the Anchorage Pride Parade,” says the flyer announcing the city’s sponsorship.

This year’s “Pride Month” is sure to be filled with a host of anti-Trump and anti-conservative activity, in Anchorage and around the state. It begins June 1.

But there are some pre-Pride month activities in Alaska, such as the one being sponsored by the Alaska Children’s Trust.

With the support of millions of dollars of State of Alaska funds, the Alaska Children’s Trust is sponsoring a Trans Youth event to kick off Pride Month. ACT is providing seed money for the new organization, Alaskans for Trans Youth.

That kick-off event is May 29 in Fairbanks, as shown on the flyer above (red arrow added by MRAK editor).

Take our survey: Should the Alaska Children’s Trust funding be vetoed?

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