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Left-wing mega-funders target Alaska’s natural resources

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By HAYDEN LUDWIG
GUEST CONTRIBUTOR

In recent years, an Alaska mining project has garnered intense scrutiny from the Lower 48 in the shape of the environmental Left, which is desperate to kill it in the cradle. Should they succeed the consequences for Alaska—and the rest of the country—are dire.

The target is Pebble Mine, a mineral exploration project in southwest Alaska that’s been locked in intense legal battles for nearly fifteen years. Pebble has the potential to supply as much as 25 percent of the United States’ copper needs over the next century—a critical metal used in everything from refrigerators and smart phones to the electric cars and wind turbines so beloved by environmentalists.

In fact, copper is essential to electric vehicles; according to the Copper Development Association, up to 49 pounds of copper are used in the construction of petroleum-powered cars, whereas electric cars can require as much as 183 pounds of copper to build. And copper is even more valuable in the construction of wind and solar power sources, which couldn’t exist without the metal. Wind turbines, for example, are each built using some 800 pounds of copper.

Considering its value to the construction of renewable energy sources like wind and solar, one might expect left-wing groups to be the loudest voices in support of the Pebble project. After all, many of the environmentalist groups targeting the project are vocal supporters of the Green New Deal—you know, the one that mandates 100 percent renewable energy in the U.S. over the next decade.

But there’s little consistency from the “keep-it-in-the-ground” crowd, which happily demands renewable energy production while protesting the means to generate it.

Washington, D.C.-based mega-lobbying groups, including the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), Sierra Club, and Greenpeace, aided by front groups for D.C. “dark money” funders, are all aligned against the project.

As usual, hysterics rule the day. The NRDC has claimed the mine would pit an “eternal supply of food against an eternal supply of poison,” absurdly casting Pebble as a scheme by money-grubbing miners to pump toxics into Bristol Bay.

Bizarrely, the League of Conservation Voters even painted the mine as an insidious effort by “foreign mining companies” to intentionally pollute Alaskan waters. (Pebble’s primary backer is based in Canada, our friendly neighbors to the north).

The Left has coalesced its efforts to halt Pebble around the so-called “Save Bristol Bay” campaign, which alleges that Pebble will destroy the venerable salmon fishing industry. But Save Bristol Bay isn’t even headquartered in Alaska; it’s a front for Trout Unlimited, a D.C.-based group run by radical eco-activists masquerading as “conservationists.”

Trout Unlimited is a classic decoy funded by left-wing mega-foundations to fool viewers and the gullible media into thinking it’s a sportsmen’s group. The group was founded in the 1950s by conservation-minded fishermen, but it’s since been taken over by liberals closely connected to the professional Left. The group is led by Chris Wood, a member of President Barack Obama’s 2008 transition team.

Despite its outward appearance, Trout Unlimited is, in fact, little different from groups like the Environmental Defense Fund, pushing radical global warming policies such as an economy-wrecking carbon tax.

And little wonder. Trout Unlimited has received tens of millions of dollars from the Nature Conservancy and the GatesHewlett, and Wyss Foundations, which also fund the radicals pushing population control, abortion-on-demandglobal warming, and anti-Trump causes.

As I recently wrote, the Save Bristol Bay campaign is being waged alongside SalmonState, another front for Beltway cash. SalmonState is a “pop-up” group—eco-activism in the form of a website made to look like a real nonprofit.

But SalmonState is just one of hundreds of phony “pop-up” groups run by the D.C. consulting firm Arabella Advisors through its network of shadowy “dark money” nonprofits.

Arabella’s model is the ultimate form of “Astroturfing”—fake grassroots activism. And it’s huge; in 2017 alone, the Arabella empire brought in nearly $582 million which it used to push leftist policies in healthcare, gun control, and climate change. (My group, the Capital Research Center, recently mapped the reaches of the Arabella network in our exposé Big Money in Dark Shadows.)

And like Trout Unlimited, none of that activism would be possible without the steady stream of money coming from liberal foundations, almost all of which are headquartered in San Francisco, New York, and Chicago.

Does that sound like local “conservationism” to you?

Pebble Mine brings Alaska to an important crossroads. It’s an opportunity to tap into The Last Frontier’s vast abundance, bringing much-needed prosperity to the state as well as American mineral independence from countries like communist China. But it’s a decision Alaskans—not wealthy Beltway activists—need to make.

Hayden Ludwig is an investigative researcher at the Capital Research Center in Washington, D.C.

Trump launch watch parties in Fairbanks, Anchorage

Watch parties are the thing this evening around the nation, as President Donald Trump launches his campaign for reelection in Orlando, Fla., which will be live streamed starting at 4 pm Alaska time. Tens of thousands are planning to attend the event live, but elsewhere, Trump supporters will gather to watch on television.

In Alaska, we found two Trump launch watch parties:

Fairbanks: 4611 Maresh Avenue, the home of Ralph and Connie Seekins, 4 pm.

Anchorage: KOAN (radio)-sponsored party at Flattop Pizza, 600 West 6th, with host Eddie Burke, from 3:30-5:30 pm.

Both events are free.

Alaska Life Hack: A mosquito flies into a bar …

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IT’S MID-JUNE. MOSQUITOES ARE ON A MISSION

A mosquito flies into a bar that has a cow, a goat, a pig,  a human, a dog, a cats and a chicken sitting at the counter.

Which one is the mosquito going to target?

47.6 percent of the time, the blood-sucking mosquito is going for the cow, while humans are the target less than 5 percent of the time, according to a study conducted back in the 1940s.

There aren’t nearly enough cows in Alaska to feed our voracious mosquitoes, especially between mid-June through mid-July, when all 17 trillion of them in our state are at their most numerous and most voracious. A short breeding season and a short feeding season means they’re mosquitoes on a mission to reproduce.

The good news is that Alaska’s mosquitoes are not yet vectors for diseases like Zika or West Nile Virus. The bad news is, when we most want our arms to be bare, they are at their most determined.

Some facts about mosquitoes that you’ve been itching to know about:

Female mosquitoes have ovaries that need blood protein to produce the eggs that make more mosquitoes. They don’t get their own nourishment from blood — it’s strictly for the protein needed by the eggs. For their own energy needs, they sip flower nectar.

Male mosquitoes drink nectar from flowers; no blood for them.

Although numerous, Alaska mosquitoes are relatively small, especially compared to the 4-inch wingspan of the horror-movie-sized Holorusa mikado species, the largest mosquito family in the world.

Scents that attract mosquitoes include human sweat, limburger cheese, beer, carbon dioxide from breath, perfume, and feet.

What doesn’t seem to repel them? Eating garlic or ingesting vitamin B12. Studies show these have no effect.

To lessen the attraction to mosquitoes, it helps to bathe often and reduce body odors. Wear light-colored clothing; Insect Shield clothing is said to retain repellency for up to 70 washes. Use a DEET-infused repellant. Bring a net and gloves, like these hardy hikers in the Itkillik River did in this 2009 video:

Do electronic bug zappers work? Black light insect electrocution devices kill insects indiscriminately, unfortunately. One study showed that of all the insects killed, only .13 percent were female mosquitoes. There is no significant difference in the number of mosquitoes found in yards with bug zappers, vs. yards without them, according to the American Mosquito Control Association.

If you’re attacked by a swarm of mosquitoes, keep moving. They only fly about 1.5 miles an hour typically. If you can’t find shelter, try climbing a tall tree. A really tall tree. Mosquitoes don’t typically like to fly higher than 25 feet above ground.

If all else fails, take your cow hiking with you.

Alaska Life Hack: Alaska is ‘catfish’ capital for romance fraud

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ANCHORAGE RAPE-MURDER CRIMES LINKED TO ‘CATFISHER’ FROM INDIANA

Which state are you most likely to be scammed by online romancers?

Turns out, it’s Alaska, according HighSpeedInternet.com in its report “When Love Bites,” which identifies the 49th state as the Number 1 location where people are most likely to fall prey to romance fraud.

“Catfishing” is the term used for website bottom-feeders who create fake profiles and lure in their victims, often finding ways to extract or extort money from them, or even get them to commit crimes.

Such a scammer may be found in the Indiana man who is in federal custody after allegedly offering $9 million to an 18-year-old Anchorage woman, Denali Brehmer, to murder another Anchorage woman, Cynthia Hoffman, and to film it. Brehmer is accused now of murder for her role in that horrific incident at Thunderbird Falls in Chugiak.

[Read: Investigators: Indiana man offered $9 million for death of Cynthia Hoffman]

Darin Schilmiller, of New Salisbury, Indiana, was indicted in Alaska on Friday on multiple murder charges for his role in the killing of 19-year-old Hoffman. While he didn’t pull the trigger, investigators say he offered the money. His romance victim, Brehmer, is accused of organizing the execution of Hoffman.

[Read: Who is Darin Schilmiller and how is he connected with Cynthia Hoffman’s murder?]

Schilmiller is also under arrest for participating in child porn by encouraging Brehmer to film herself sexually abusing children. Evidence is found in text messages between the two.

Schilmiller posed as someone named “Tyler,” a millionaire from Kansas, and the texts between Brehmer and him indicate romantic attachment.

Two women who know Schilmiller have recounted their experiences that show it’s not the first time he’s posed with a fake identity online to lure women into sexual wrongdoing.

[Read that report here.]

HighSpeedInternet.com based its analysis on data from the 2018 FBI Internet Crime Report, and U.S. Census population estimates. While Alaska is Number 1, Nevada is Number 2, and Wisconsin is Number 3. Western states factor high for having victims of romance fraud.

Con artists use platforms such as Match.com, eHarmony.com, and Tinder.com, as well as lesser-known ones, such as Plenty of Fish. They move their conversations with their marks away from the dating app and over onto Facebook or Whats App to deepen their ability to discover useful things about their victims.

The Better Business Bureau has a complete primer on the ways that con men (and women) operate, how they gain the confidence of their prey, and some of the scripts they use to grow the relationships.  You can report to the BBB any instances of this occurring to you at its Scam Tracker page.

Have you been a victim of catfishing romance fraud? You can comment below and keep your identify private.

Juneau property taxes: fair or foul?

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By WIN GRUENING
SENIOR CONTRIBUTOR

Property tax management can be confusing for local taxpayers.

The mill rate is the amount of tax payable per dollar of the assessed value of a property. A “mill” represents one-tenth of a cent with the rate normally expressed as the amount per $1,000 of property value.

In recent CBJ Assembly action, the FY2020 mill rate was approved at last year’s level after an unusual split vote.  Typically, this part of the municipal budgeting process rarely raises controversy.

Win Gruening

Holding the mill rate stable over time is admirable but, as most people know, even if the mill rate remains unchanged, your property tax usually increases.  That’s because our current mill rate, 10.66 mills (or 1.066% of your property value), is only part of the equation.   The other part is the value of your property as assessed by the city – which tends to increase every year with inflation.

In other words, if the Assembly wanted to hold your property tax constant or even reduce it, it would have to lower the mill rate enough to compensate for the annual increase in assessed property values.

The City Manager initially proposed lowering the mill rate from 10.66 to 10.56 mills for FY2020. The Assembly Finance Committee then recommended leaving the existing mill rate unchanged at 10.66.  When the Assembly voted on it at their June 3 meeting, Assembly member Mary Becker moved to roll it back to 10.56 mills.  She cited the urgency in lowering the cost of living and housing costs, specifically, as the reason for her concern.  Others mentioned uncertainty about the amount of school bond debt reimbursement as a reason for the higher amount.  The motion failed with a 4-4 tie vote.

But did the Assembly really “hold the line” on property taxes?

Here is where it gets complicated.  Part of the mill rate is reserved for debt service.  But because we have continued to pay off CBJ bonds, our mill rate for this portion was reduced.  What the Assembly actually did was reduce the debt service mill rate and increase the operational mill rate an equal amount of 10 mills – a wash to the taxpayer. But, along with higher property values, this action effectively increases property tax receipts over $1.0 million for the city treasury next fiscal year.

And if budget fears don’t materialize, what happens with that extra tax money?  Assembly member Rob Edwardson stated it best,” …are people going to get a rebate?  I don’t think so.”

And indeed, recently the Legislature agreed on a compromise budget that preserved full funding for school debt reimbursement.

While that funding may be subject to the governor’s veto, the city has ample resources to bridge any fiscal gap until a long-term solution is crafted.  The tax relief at stake would have been good news for seniors on fixed incomes and young families struggling to make ends meet and wouldn’t have made much difference in offsetting a large reduction in state funding.

The Assembly can be commended for considering the unpredictability surrounding state funding, but one can also argue that the city has accumulated sufficient savings that it is now taxing residents unnecessarily.

Has the city been over-collecting?  According to CBJ financial statements, available general government fund balances and budget reserves now exceed $32 million which should allow Juneau to weather any short-term financial gaps.

The budget fears expressed seem at odds with on-going Assembly conversations regarding sizable municipal contributions toward a $26 million arts and cultural center and another $26 million for a new city hall.  Further, discussions continue unabated about implementing a Juneau pre-K program that will eventually cost millions of dollars annually.

People will continue to debate the merits of these projects, but their economic benefits remain largely uncertain.

Here is what is certain.

According to 2018 Alaska Department of Labor reports, among urban areas of the state,

  • Juneau has the most expensive housing.
  • Juneau has the most expensive groceries.
  • Juneau has the highest medical costs.
  • Juneau has the highest transportation costs.

Instead of speculatively raising property taxes, perhaps the Assembly could raise its collective social consciousness and consider the most basic needs of Juneau residents first?

Win Gruening retired as the senior vice president in charge of business banking for Key Bank in 2012. He was born and raised in Juneau and graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1970. He is active in community affairs as a 30-plus year member of Juneau Downtown Rotary Club and has been involved in local and statewide civic organizations.

MRAK Almanac: Anchorage Assembly to talk trash, homeless solutions

PRODUCED BY KOBE RIZK

The MRAK Almanac is your place for political, cultural, and civic events, events where you’ll meet political leaders or, if you are interested in getting to know your state, these are places to meet conservative- and moderate-leaning Alaskans.

POP QUIZ

Question: What is Alaska’s state insect?

Answer: While most Alaskans would likely answer with the mosquito, the state insect of Alaska actually consumes (in vast numbers) those whining winged invaders: the four-spotted skimmer dragonfly. Alaska adopted the dragonfly as its state insect in 1995 after a referendum among Alaska’s public school students. It bested the mosquito 3,914 votes to 3,035. From our science desk, we’re happy to report that dragonflies eat mosquitoes, and mosquito season is upon us.

THIS WEEK

6/17: Copper River personal use dip-netting fishery will be open for a 168-hour period from Monday June 17 through Sunday June 23. This unique fishery is open only to Alaska residents, and the annual limit is 25 salmon for the head of household and 10 salmon for each dependent of the permit holder.

6/17: Alaska State Commission for Human Rights will meet in Anchorage at 9 am. There will be no public comment period at this meeting, and most of the meeting will take place in executive session to discuss the hire of a new executive director. Read the agenda here.

6/17: Mat-Su Miners play the Glacier Pilots at Hermon Brothers Field in Palmer, 7 pm. It’s Military Appreciation night. Schedule for other games this week here.

6/17: Elephant (Spirit) Lake near Kenai will be stocked with approximately 5,000 catchable arctic char this morning. Here’s to bent rods and wet lines.

6/17: Gazebo Night Summer Performance at Pioneer Park in Fairbanks. Come to enjoy live music at 7 pm. Free.

6/17: Deadline to submit public comments to the Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority regarding the upcoming competitive lease of 24 land parcels across the state. The authority owns and manages almost one million acres of land. Read more here.

6/17: The Ketchikan Gateway Borough Assembly will hold a regular meeting at 5:30 pm. On tap for this evening is approval of a state lobbying contract for $48,000 as well as discussion of an increase on the tobacco excise tax. Read the full agenda here.

6/17: The Anchorage Chamber of Commerce will host the regional director of the U.S. Small Business Administration to speak about rural small business initiatives and technical assistance offered from the federal government. Registration is required, Facebook link here.

6/17: HooDoo Beer Night at Growden baseball fields in Fairbanks. Facebook link here.

6/18: The U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee will hold a public hearing to discuss deferred maintenance needs on federal lands managed by the Department of the Interior and the Forest Service. Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski is chair. The hearing can be viewed live here. 

6/18: The Anchorage Assembly will hold a regular meeting at 5 pm. There will be various ordinances up for public comment, including new regulations for bear-proof trash cans and new homeless shelter rules. Access the full agenda here.

6/18: Alaska State Fair Royalty informational meeting in Eagle River. Come to learn more about being a royalty contestant at the state fair in late August. Read more here.

6/18: Regular meeting of the Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly. Will begin at 6 pm at the assembly chambers in Soldotna. Read the agenda at this link.

6/18: The Fairbanks Borough Assembly will be interviewing five candidates for vacant assembly Seat E. Read their names here.

6/18: Monthly board meeting of the Denali Chamber of Commerce in Healy. Begins at 6:30 pm at the Healy Visitors Center.

6/18: Re-elect Fairbanks Mayor Jim Matherly kick-off fundraiser and reception at the home of Ralph and Connie Seekins. Begins at 5:30 pm. Can’t go? Info at www.jimmatherly.com

6/20: KTOO has an electronics garage sale at 360 Egan Drive in Juneau. Obsolete computer and broadcast gear and some of it will be free to a good home.

6/20-23: International Food Blogger Conference comes to Juneau. Approximately 250 bloggers, writers, foodies, influencers, social media gurus, food company representatives, and others will gather to talk, eat, and learn. More info here.

6/21: Summer solstice.

ALASKA HISTORY ARCHIVE

June 17, 1925: On President Calvin Coolidge’s recommendation, George Alexander Parks took the oath of office as the 5th Governor of the Alaska Territory. A mining engineer, Parks spent most of his life in Alaska serving in various government positions regulating land use and permitting. After hearing of Parks’ extensive knowledge of the territory, President Coolidge nominated him to serve as territorial governor. The 323-mile George Parks Highway, connecting the city of Fairbanks with the Glenn Highway north of Anchorage, is named in honor of Gov. Parks.

June 18, 1945: General Simon Buckner Jr., commander of the U.S. Army’s Alaska Defense Command during World War II, was killed by Japanese artillery fire in in the Battle of Okinawa. General Buckner was promoted to brigadier general and assigned to oversee army operations in Alaska in 1940. He also supervised military response to both the attack on Dutch Harbor in 1942 and the famed Battle of Attu in 1943. The general was the highest-ranking U.S. military officer killed by enemy fire during World War II.

Alaska Raw: Dad, this story is for you

As you may remember from our last installment, while flying down the beach Bob had just spotted a walrus carcass with a large brown bear eating on it.  The walrus had one long ivory tusk that was just too attractive to pass up. The negotiations are…tense.

By BOB LACHER

Since both airplanes had been flying fairly low coming down the beach, I expected to look back and see the bear shagging off in a hurry. Instead, the intrusion appeared  to have made him more possessive. The hulking bear took up a guarded position hunched over top the walrus and snapping and popping its jaws.

The whole deal was starting to look challenging, fitting my style perfectly. I thought the ivory should be negotiable. My generous offer would be the bear could have the entire carcass but he needed to make room for me at the table for just an hour or so. But he didn’t see it that way.

With time short and the bear uncooperative, I needed  a plan B. I decided to land just down the beach and taxi up nearer to it and see what would happen. As I taxied up I would keep my spinning prop between me and the bear and see how big its balls were. Once I landed the game of chicken began. As the airplane got within 100 feet, the bear started to move off, but only retreated 50 feet before stopping. That seemed like progress so I moved a little closer, spooling up the engine to taxi ahead.

The bear was not small. In the high eight foot or low nine range, it probably weighed 700 pounds.

He paced around just 50 feet away from the carcass, moving out then back, lurking, not wanting to give it up. I kept easing the airplane forward and slowly closing the distance. With 100 feet between us and a walrus directly in the middle, we were at a standoff. He was not eager to move all the way off the carcass and I was reluctant to get the airplane fully into a shutdown position where he could charge it.

There was no telling what might happen, he could have enough sense to avoid the prop and attack the fuselage or tail. I did not want him to charge the propeller either, of course. If that happened there would be no winners. With the bear seriously hoarding his kill, I thought hard about the next move. I inched the plane ahead slowly and gunned the engine a few times trying to establish some dominance.

The bear finally decided he was out matched and moved off further, heading up the incline of the beach to the cut bank…but he was still only 150 yards away. He initially sat down and stared at the idling plane, then within a minute had rose again and started pacing back and forth, but at a distance. I stayed put in the front seat and stared back, hoping he would entirely abandon the kill. My father and Frank were still circling above and no doubt shaking their heads.

It was getting darker by the minute. This was obviously not developing into a situation where I could take an hour or more to debone and cleanly cut the head off the walrus. If I wanted the tusk I had to get innovative and whatever I did would have to be quick.

The bear was still watching, swinging his head from side to side in an agitated, aggressive posture but never getting any closer than 150 yards. I let a couple of minutes pass and remained sitting in my cockpit, engine running, hoping his pacing and nervousness would chill out a little. But it didn’t.

At this point, seeing nothing was changing, I was close to calling the whole thing off. I could not be sure what would happen once I jumped out of the airplane and physically exposed myself…and provoked the bear by taking over the carcass. But it was now or never. The plane was still running and was by then about 20 feet from the carcass.

Remembering that I had a .44 mag revolver stashed behind the seat, I reached for it and put it in my lap thinking about how I might be able to use it as a dental extraction device. I left the engine running at idle, locking the parking brakes so it wouldn’t pull itself ahead. I opened the door and jumped out, revolver in hand, and never taking my eyes off the bear. If he decided to challenge me I thought I would fire a few rounds into the air and dive back in the airplane.

Stepping carefully around the spinning prop, I took several big and rapid strides to the walrus and pulled his single tusk upward, freeing its half buried skull from the sand. My genius plan was to fire a .44 mag round (or rounds) into the gum line and hopefully dislodge the three foot long chunk of ivory. I knew that when I fired the gun I wanted to be several feet away at minimum, and with my head turned away to help avoid any bone and flesh blowback.

Crouching to my knees and aiming first from a distance of five feet, I could not seem to hold a point of aim steady enough in the exact spot I needed to be certain to hit the root cavity. It needed to be perfect. All the while I’m keeping my eye peeled for the bear to come charging in. I’m a ball of nerves and sweating buckets. I could see the problem with my set up from five feet was that my aim deteriorated the instant I tried to turn my head sideways and shut my eyes before pulling the trigger. It was not going to work. To make sure to hit the sweet spot I really had to do this execution style. I had to be much closer. I had to be point blank.

The bear was now intently focused on the fact that I was out of the plane and that I no longer looked so big and threatening. I could feel his eyes on me and knew he could be on me in just a couple of seconds. All of my senses told me that time had run out. I quickly stepped in close to the walrus and put the nose of the Smith and Wesson .44 revolver three inches from its head, aiming for a spot about four inches up the gum line precisely above the top of the tusk. Turning my head hard left to try to avoid any flack, I closed my eyes and let loose the carnage.

Kaboom! Bits of hide, goo and bone flew everywhere. The right side of my cheek and ear and a couple of knuckles were immediately on fire with little slivers of bone embedded in my skin in several places. My right hand and coat sleeve were spattered to the shoulder with bloody chunks of rotten walrus gums and dental cavity bits.

The hydraulic shock and bone busting power of the .44 round loosened and partially ejected the tusk out of its socket. It was loosened well enough that a couple rapid ninja kicks fully freed it. Surprisingly the bear never reacted  to the gunshot but stood staring, head hung low, body crouched and looking for his opening to lurch. In seconds I salvaged the tusk and hustled the few steps back to the running airplane, jumped into the front seat, slapped shut the door, throttled up and took off. Making one more circle over the carcass in the shrinking light I saw the bear was already back feeding on it

We had our caribou, we had our ivory. We had slipped in and out of a part of the world almost no one gets to see. And we did it without breaking too much hardware. The flight back was indeed made in the dark and not at all comfortable. Lake Clark Pass is nothing to be toyed with on a heavily overcast evening late in September. But it worked out.

By the way Dad, this story is for you. I will always remember how good it felt to have you along to share some raw Alaskan adventure. And thanks for never second guessing your guide. I’m amazed that you always trust me 110 percent even in some really sketchy circumstances. It occurred to me, old man, that you must mistake my commanding self confidence in the field with actual capability. Don’t be fooled. I’m never too far away from shitting my own pants over something going sideways… I just hide it well.


A FINAL WORD

We all ask ourselves from time to time, what acts of ours should, in the end, accumulate to some satisfactory finish that memorializes the high water mark of our time here. What body of striving or accomplishment or just earned sense of peace will we reflect on when we are all alone and mentally ticking down the list of missed opportunities, hoping to leave here with as few regrets as possible?

A summit bagged or some expanse conquered perhaps?  Sure. That all works.  Big, bright, tangible.

Maybe the mark is no mark at all but only the satisfaction of rejecting a life lived looking through a keyhole constructed by the myths and memes of our time, a keyhole that divines order out of disorder in the minds of those who cannot live without it. Maybe it’s not about any high mark but all the white space in between, savoring the moments we live that are scrubbed of all pretense and insincerity.  Among such moments are our experiences in the wilderness.

There is something spiritual about looking behind you after just laying a single mark on crystalline untracked snow that reaches upwards through the frozen hills and canyons for thousands of feet.  The landscape is your canvas but the picture you drew will soon be gone, as will its artist. It is the canvas that lives on forever, waiting to temporarily accept the handiwork of another spiritual voyager.

Right there among the gods and angels of our vivid imagination, another picture will emerge, laid down a piece at a time like a painter drawing color from his brush, and again it will disappear leaving nothing at all.  In a life well lived we should craft many beautiful things, songs from nothing that we sing into the wind without a care if they are ever heard again.

[Read: Alaska Raw Parts 1-7]

Find this book at Barnes & Noble, Todd Communications, Title Wave Books, Once in a Blue Moose, and Amazon.

BuzzFeed: Justin Schneider’s victim speaks, first-time interview

LAWS THAT PROTECTED SCHNEIDER ARE STILL THE NORM ACROSS THE COUNTRY

A reporter for BuzzFeed.com traveled to Alaska in May. He posted about his visit on Instagram, shown above, hiking in the Chugach Mountains and thinking about his late father.

But it was not a vacation. It was an assignment.

David Mack, an Australian writer living in gritty New York City, left his desk as the “breaking news editor” at the web-based, often sensationalistic news agency, and headed to the seamy streets of Anchorage to follow a story about how one man’s crimes led to a change in the sexual assault laws in Alaska.

Justin Schneider was in Spenard in August of 2017, when he picked a woman up at a gas station, took her to a dead end street at 36th Avenue and Wisconsin, choked her to the point of unconsciousness, masturbated on her, left her there covered in semen … and never was convicted of a sex crime.

Schneider, who at the time was an air traffic controller at Ted Stevens International Airport, served only a nominal amount of time in jail, and most of his sentence on an ankle monitor

Until now, the woman has always been known as Jane Doe.

[Read: A horrific assault, and a perp walks free]

In Mack’s story, we learn that the first name of the young woman is Lauren. We also, for the first time, hear the voice of the Lauren, talking about her life growing up in rural Alaska. We hear her description of how she met the guy at the gas station who introduced himself as “Dan.” How he said he thought they had met before. How he offered to give her a ride home, and how she accepted that ride. We learn about why prosecutors never contacted her before sealing the plea deal with the man who was Justin Schneider.

BuzzFeed is a left-leaning web publication with a penchant for being click-bait heaven (“21 Scary Chernobyl Facts That I Don’t Recommend You Read Late At Night”).

But Mack got something no reporter in Alaska has gotten — an interview with Lauren telling how the crime against her went down that August day.

He also talked to former Judge Michael Corey, and lays out the details that led up to the plea deal that let Schneider serve his sentence on an ankle monitor. The reader is left with little doubt that just about everything conspired to let Schneider off easy — missing phone number of the victim, and criminal justice laws written by lawmakers who had never conceived of such a crime.

The point of the story comes early:

“But the reality was much more complicated. The prosecutors didn’t drop the sexual assault charge. They never brought one in the first place — because, they said, the law would not allow them to.

“In Alaska, sexual assault has a very narrow definition: It has to involve either “knowingly touching, directly or through clothing, the victim’s genitals, anus, or female breast,”  or knowingly causing the victim to touch either the defendant’s, or the victim’s own, genitals. So because Schneider touched only his own genitals but didn’t touch Lauren’s or force her to touch his, his actions didn’t qualify as sexual assault.”

[Read the rest of this story at BuzzFeed]

Gunfire in Fairbanks: Trooper injured, suspect dead

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As Alaska State Troopers in north Fairbanks were attempting to serve a felony arrest warrant at 4 am on Saturday, one person — the suspect — was shot to death and a Trooper was injured by gunfire, Troopers announced today.

The details of the shooting were not released but the Trooper involved in the shooting was admitted to the hospital and later released, Must Read Alaska has learned. He is expected to make a full recovery.

A media availability is scheduled for this afternoon in Fairbanks. Names of troopers involved in shootings are released after three days.

This story will be updated; check back later.