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Document drop: The 2017 musings of the incoming chairwoman of the Alaska House Health and Social Services Committee

Rep. Genevieve Mina is the incoming chairwoman of the Alaska House Health and Social Services Committee as the Democrats take over the Alaska House of Representatives, with the crossover of two Republicans — Chuck Kopp and Louise Stutes.

Alaskans may thus be interested in Rep. Mina’s 2017 musings on Facebook, in which she berated white people and said they cannot do enough to undo their inherent racism. Voters may reflect on how she will conduct her committee, as she take over from current chair, Republican Mike Prax of North Pole:

Found at: Genevieve Minahttps://www.facebook.com/minagenevieve?hc_ref=ARRn0zwA1o-KDLt4cy2Pg31jwD-TCEST42gIgX9kPmgtxuGtJbR0eizL5hyZCZMcxmg&fref=nf

What can I do to help after #Charlottesville? It’s not enough to say “racists are bad!” Everyone needs to take action, especially if you are white. Even though there aren’t any formal white supremacy organizations in Alaska (thank God) or Confederate monuments in Anchorage (that would be confusing), implicit white supremacy still reigns. It is important to ALWAYS be vigilant to counteract oppression.

To fight fascism is to uphold the rights of marginalized individuals, act against oppressive policies, and diminish the fire of white supremacist organizations. Also understand that the fight is intersectional, and to help people of color weaves with the fight to help women, the LGBTQ community, people with disabilities, immigrants, refugees, and other countless groups. There are a huge range of things you can do to be an ally, from simple education and awareness, to conversation and activism. Here’s a couple of things I can suggest:

1.) Self-reflect: Think about what you have done to fight racism. Not just explicit racism or people saying derogatory terms, but implicit racism. Do you stay quiet when friends who are standing for POC are getting dismissed in conversation or online? Do you read about the problems of POC in the news? Are you aware about the concerns of your friends who are POC or are marginalized in our society? Do you understand that white supremacy exists beyond neo-Nazis? Do you recognize that racism exists not just in racists, but as an entire system of oppression?

2.) Educate yourself: The first step to helping people of color, and to fight fascism, is to understand the privilege white people have in our modern day. Read works by POC talking about systemic oppression. I like the works of Ta-Nehisi Coates, specifically his book “Between the World and Me”, and his essay about a case for reparations (https://www.theatlantic.com/…/the-case-for-reparati…/361631/). His writings, as well as James Baldwin, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Sherman Alexie, and others, do a great job elucidating how racism manifests as an entire system which oppresses the lives of people of color, and uplifts white people in our society.

3.) Have the difficult conversation with white people around you: When someone makes a racist joke, call them out. If someone victim-blames a black man who is unjustly killed by the police, or states that “all lives matter”, explain the complete discrepancy of the loss of black bodies due to the police, or due to incarceration rates. When someone tries to negate the racial aspect of Charlottesville by pointing at the tactics of other activists across the political aisle, redirect the conversation back to the fact that there are Americans who are actively trying to create a white nation in 2017.

People who have fascist or racist ideas in their head aren’t just neo-Nazis. They are your friends on Facebook sharing racist memes in isolation, your family members at Thanksgiving, your classmates, your co-workers, the folks you drink with at the bar – systemic racism is everywhere.

Having these conversations is incredibly important especially if you are white, because you frankly have more leverage and accessibility to these people than me or other POC. Some people who have racist thoughts are simply ignorant about oppressive policies which have upheld white supremacy. Some people are incredibly stubborn about ignoring the aspect of race, and wish to generalize every prejudice as wrongful. Some people are unwilling to wake up from the American Dream, and face the scars of their country. But in order to stop racism and fascism, you need to make people around you realize the problem of race in our society.

4.) Show up: Go to rallies, protests, and community events. I know there’s a candlelight vigil this Sunday for those in Anchorage who may be interested.(https://www.facebook.com/events/870612609759793/). Some people doubt the power of protests, but the mere action of showing up creates a solidarity in our community against hatred, and strengthens a support for marginalized individuals. And don’t only show up after a tragedy. Community council meetings and assembly meetings happen all the time, and the key to stopping hate from growing is to be consistently proactive about problems in our community.

5.) Get involved in groups and activism: Volunteering and taking time out of your day can take a variety of forms. I personally am involved in the Alaska Young Democrats, and I lead the UAA College Democrats. The current issue AKYD is working on is to help the ACLU Nationwide fight against a bathroom bill that will be on the 2018 ballot measure. You also can get involved with Catholic Social Services-Anchorage, AK, which helps with refugee assistance and homelessness. You can even volunteer at Food Bank of Alaska! There’s so many organizations to choose from!!! Getting involved in your community improves our society, widens our social network, and strengthens our relationships with each other.

6.) Support anti-fascist organizations: If you have money, you can donate to a couple of groups. Here are a few I found:
-“Life After Hate”, founded by former neo-Nazis, reaches out to white supremacists and de-radicalizes potential violent extremists (https://publicgood.com/…/camp…/help-life-after-hate-fight-on).
-“Solidarity C’Ville” directly helps the Charlottesville activists who organized against the “Unite the Right” protest last weekend (http://solidaritycville.com/donate/).
https://medium.com/…/what-to-do-about-charlottesville-dfc7d… is a longer list of Charlottesville-specific organizations.

I welcome any other suggestions! Only YOU can prevent fascism and stop white supremacy!

Congressionally authorized Covid investigative report to be released next week

The House’s Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic’s final report will be released Dec. 4.

The reported was directed by the 118th Congress to conduct a “full and complete investigation” into the policies, decisions, and events surrounding the Covid-19 pandemic.

Select Subcommittee staff and members have sent more than 100 investigative letters, conducted more than 30 transcribed interviews or depositions, held 25 hearings and meetings, and reviewed more than one million pages of documents.

Next week’s final report markup will conclude the Select Subcommittee’s two-year after-action review of the Covid-19 pandemic, which began in the United States in the winter of 2020.

The final report will include investigative materials, findings, and recommendations related to:

  • Covid-19 origins — including gain-of-function research
  • Taxpayer funded Covid-19 relief programs
  • Laws enacted in reaction to Covid-19
  • Covid–19 vaccine development and implementation
  • Economic impact ofCovid–19 on individuals, communities, businesses, states, and governments
  • Societal impacts of Covid–19 — including school closures
  • Executive branch Covid–19 related decisions
  • Executive branch cooperation with Congress to prevent a future pandemic

Ahead of the report’s markup, the Select Subcommittee will release its final report to the public.

The markup meeting will be open to the public and press and will be livestreamed on Dec. 4 at 10:30 a.m. Eastern at https://oversight.house.gov/.

Pedro Gonzalez: A moment of national reflection for Democrats, and it’s better late than never

By PEDRO GONZALEZ

Democrats are doing some serious soul-searching in the aftermath of the presidential election. Well, some are anyway. 

One of the most common refrains you hear now is that the party lost the middle mass of Americans by having gone all-in on identity politics, which was accompanied by an inquisitorial and confrontational attitude toward real and imagined dissenters. Democrats forsook the woes of everyday people in search of ideological monsters to destroy and found no shortage of them over the years. Voters voiced their complaints at the ballot box in November. 

One group among Democrats seems keenly aware of their excesses in retrospect: transgender activists. “To get on the wrong side of transgender activists is often to endure their unsparing criticism,” wrote Jeremy Peters in The New York Times. “Now, some activists say it is time to rethink and recalibrate their confrontational ways, and are pushing back against the more all-or-nothing voices in their coalition.” 

Better late than never.

It’s worth reflecting on how egregious this political chapter has been now that everyone, including the advocates of transgenderism, seems to be acknowledging that. It is certainly true that culture war items can and do get blown out of proportion. Here this was not the case, and I will show you why.

Back in 2021, City Journal published a report on how social workers across the country were challenging parents’ rights when they suspected a child in their care could benefit from so-called “gender-affirming therapy.” In one instance, a Pakistani immigrant and devout Muslim named Ahmed was forced to flee his home for fear of having the government take away his autistic son, Syed. 

Ahmed took a 16-year-old Syed to Seattle Children’s Hospital when the family worried that he might hurt himself. Due to a COVID-19 policy, Ahmed could not stay with his son, who was left in the care of hospital staff and social workers. The isolation of lockdowns had severely exacerbated Syed’s preexisting issues. He had hardly been sleeping at all and was excessively binging on the Internet. His mental health took a serious toll—to the point that he began experiencing visual hallucinations. 

Of all the things that could possibly be the source of his distress during such a difficult time, the white coats determined that gender was the true source of Syed’s distress. Ahmed understood what that meant: transition your boy or have him taken into the custody of Child Protective Services. That was what a psychiatrist friend warned him would happen if he resisted. So, Ahmed played along long enough to get Syed back from Seattle Children’s Hospital, then quit his job and moved his family of four out of Washington.

Ahmed’s story is just one example among many, many others, each essentially involving people fighting to keep the state of their homes.

A school administrator in California supported the transition of a child behind the mother’s back, resulting in a $100,000 settlement.

A military family lost custody of their autistic son after they refused to transition him in accordance with the demands of Children’s National Hospital in D.C.

A Montana family whose 14-year-old daughter was taken by the state, allegedly without a warrant, after opposing her transition.

Advocates saw themselves as benevolent warriors in the war for social justice. But mothers and fathers, including those in traditionally Democratic households, saw a threat to the integrity of their families and their rights as parents. If and when they voiced their dissent, they were regarded as backward and bigoted. All that is on top of the locker room and sports issues, which also directly affect children.

The best possible outcome of this election is a period of national reflection among Democrats who saw no downside to ideological excesses until now. It would be good for the party—and the country. 

Pedro Gonzalez has joined the editorial staff of Must Read Alaska. His work has appeared in The New York Post, The Washington Examiner, and elsewhere.

Wayne Heimer: The American Experiment — shall we continue?

By WAYNE E. HEIMER

Ever since George Washington coined the phrase, it has been fashionable to refer to government in the United States of America as The American Experiment.  Washington’s experimental vision of government may have been deemed experimental because it began with the premise that individuals could/would act altruistically in concert when it came to governance or greater social good. 

The American Experiment was also a departure from the classic monarchies of most of the world.  

Still, our original governing recipe seems to have been predicated on the rather shaky assumption that altruistic individual freedom/responsibility would produce stability. The U.S. Constitution is decidedly oriented  toward individuality in that it focuses primarily on what the central representative government cannot do, and on which individual rights are to be assured.The assumption of altruism as a steady virtue seems to be where things got off track.

As the colonies became a nation, this individuality expanded to the notion of sovereign states cooperating in the mutually beneficial federalist system.  Compressing history at the risk of overlooking quite a lot of it, it looks like that worked reasonably well.  Of course, there were relatively few of us during that early pre-industrial time, and the memories of cooperative founding were still pretty fresh. 

Of course, all that came crashing down when the issue of southern state sovereignty/succession arose with human slavery as the defining issue. Hence, our Civil War, which proved the oxymoronic principle that states in the union aren’t truly sovereign.  It also forcibly demonstrated that once you’re in you can’t just up and leave over a sovereignty issue. The ultimate outcome was that the central government was strengthened.  States were only kinda sovereign.

The South didn’t like that at all, but it lost the war, so (pardon my French): c est la guerrece/c est la vie– such are war/life. The American South is still at least half-pissed over the outcome, and the American West is increasingly chafing under urban environmental edicts emanating from the eastern elite. Nevertheless, the USA stumbled into the 20th century with its maintenance-type stability more-or-less intact.  

However, as we moved toward the 20th Century we saw the rise of disruptor/reformers/leaders.’ These influential individuals focused on the failed promises of the original, individualistic recipe given the changes that resulted from immigration, the industrial revolution, and capitalist opportunism. Thinking we could do better; they began to embrace and espouse adaptive concepts from the socialist and communist thinkers of their day. 

The first notable influencer in this vein may have been President Woodrow Wilson. President Wilson considered the original Constitutional recipe for individual freedom obsolete.  He advocated for a broader group identity priority extending to the world stage with the League of Nations.  

Thus began what I see as the second phase of The American Experiment. This phase focused less on individualism, and more on the altruistic governmental impulse to provide (equally or equitably) for everyone.  The paradigm from individual responsibility to the collective to collective responsibility to the individual through his/her group. 

I rate the next giant after Wilson as President Franklin D. Roosevelt. FDR adapted to the challenges of his day (the Great Depression, and subsequently World War II) by shifting farther toward group identity because the societal forces of the day.  These forces seemed, because of increasing population and the shift from rural to urban residence, to render urban masses powerless to take responsibility for their own destinies during the depression. FDR’s central government stepped in. There were several Republican party administrations mixed in along the steady trend toward group-oriented administrations since Wilson. 

President Lyndon B. Johnson was probably important. Nevertheless, token Republican efforts to uncouple government from the overall trend toward collective altruism did not significantly alter the trajectory toward increasing group identity.

The progression continued from standouts like Wilson, FDR, and LBJ to the next giant, Barack Obama. Then there was the frustrated first Donald Trump administration, which gave us President Joe Biden. This overall trend led the USA toward socialistic government in the second phase of the American Experiment. Perhaps this is simply the inevitable result of increasing population and the loss of individualism.  

Exceptionalism is out. “Average-ism” or equity (of outcome) is in.  

To achieve an equitable mean, the obvious corrective action suggested by reformers was to decrease the misery of the lowest social strata by transferring wealth from  the upper classes to the lower ones.  (The rich must pay their fair share in increased taxes.)  This became a Democrat Party mantra, based on the presumed responsibility of the collective for the group rather than the original notion of individually assumed virtue of individual responsibility to the collective.

So, I suggest that time, circumstance, and ideology moved The American Experiment from its original focus on local/individual freedom/responsibility to one where the central government asserted its responsibility for groups which (not inconsequentially) could be manipulated as voting blocs in democratic elections. The French observer, Alexander de Tocqueville, predicted this early in American political formation.

As the altruistic group identity phase of The American Experiment moved toward its toward its present iteration, it, like the first experiment, failed to produce the utopia it had promised.  It now appears to be economically unsustainable. The factors that apparently resulted in Trump’s present election may betoken the realization of a failed American Experiment in collectivism.  

Hence, we may be entering another phase of The American Experiment. Are we going to run the original/control experiment again to see if it makes America great (again)?

If we admit the possibility that our prolonged experiment with Wilsonian Progressivism didn’t work, it may be that the American Experiment is logically headed toward repeating the original experiment. This is credible approach to experimental science. It amounts to re-testing an original theory. 

When this is done, the experimental control becomes a return to the original concept (where the central government must cede more control back to the states and, by extension, individuals). If things get better with an original federalism, greater individual state sovereignty, and then perhaps increased individual freedom/responsibility for one’s actions, the experiment may be quite revealing in terms of human adaptive capacity.

Of course, the USA still has a huge population of folks with limited adaptive capacity due to socio-economic constraints left over from our last experiment in group management by central government.  And that doesn’t even consider the plight of millions of recent immigrants. That part of the equation may or may not work out. It is possible we can’t go back.  Perhaps we’ll see.

Wayne Heimer may be politely called a natural history scientist (he’s actually a Dall sheep research/management guy).  This may drive his unique perspective on cause and effect.

Flashback: Murkowski cast 51st vote for a judge who has just OK’d men on women’s NCAA teams

A Denver U.S. District Court judge has ruled that the San Jose State women’s volleyball team is eligible to play in the Mountain West Conference tournament, including the one man who plays on the team, identifying as a woman but physically dominating all others.

Judge S. Kato Crews denied a motion filed by 12 athletes against the conference, a motion that requested the benching of the man from the San Jose competitive volleyball team. The motion requested all of the season’s 12 wins be removed from the team. Six of the teams wins came due to other teams forfeiting.

That judge making the decision was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in January, with 51 votes — including Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski.

Murkowski and Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, both who continue to serve because of their states’ unusual ranked-choice voting schemes, were the only Republicans to vote for the judge in his confirmation. Sen. Dan Sullivan of Alaska voted no.

The lawsuit against San Jose State University was filed Nov. 13 by SJSU volleyball co-captain Brooke Slusser and associate head coach Melissa Batie-Smoose, with 10 current and former Mountain West women volleyball players. The group had asked for an emergency injunction against the male player; the Mountain West tournament started this week in Las Vegas.

“The Court finds the movants’ delay was not reasonable, there is no evidence to suggest they were precluded from seeking emergency relief earlier, and the rush to litigate these complex issues now over a mandatory injunction places a heavy lift on the MWC at the eleventh hour,” Crews wrote.

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Riley Gaines: Speaker Mike Johnson fights back against radical gender ideology

By RILEY GAINES

I traveled around the country as an elite swimmer for more than a decade, and I could never have imagined a world where men would be welcomed into the female-only bathrooms and locker rooms I used. I instinctively knew that separate spaces were for my privacy and protection. But as I have shared my own story about having to compete against a grown man in the pool, I’ve seen how broken our nation’s understanding of sex is.

It’s come so far that even organizations that were once “pro-woman” have completely rejected the basic understandings of woman and womanhood.

Earlier this year the National Women’s Law Center, an organization supposedly founded by women to protect women, filed a brief opposing my suit against the NCAA on the grounds that “woman” should be redefined to include men.

When leading “pro-woman” organizations are engaged in a campaign of lies about basic physiology and anatomy – when they support men more than they support women – we need leaders who are bold. We need leaders who speak out and refuse to cave to critics.

Last week, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson did just that. He sent shockwaves through the media for saying something so painfully obvious it would have gone unnoticed even a few years ago. Johnson simply said: Men are men, women are women, men cannot become women. He understands that the government should protect men’s and women’s privacy, safety, and opportunity.

For nearly all of congressional history, this sentiment was so widely understood that it did not need articulating. But in our modern world, where traditional definitions of sex have been conflated with completely flexible and ever-changing understandings of “gender identity,” Speaker Johnson might as well have set off a grenade.

His comments were made as all newly elected members of Congress were beginning their orientation in Congress. One of those new members is Sarah McBride, a man who says he identifies as a woman.

I know Speaker Johnson, and he is a man of principle and faith. Just a few months ago, he hosted a panel regarding Title IX protections and invited me, former Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, Rep. Virginia Foxx, and chairman of Independent Women’s Forum Heather Higgins. He was clear about his positions and rightly criticized the Biden administration’s efforts to change the definition of “sex” to include “gender identity” under Title IX.

Speaker Johnson once again showed leadership last week on the critical issue of protecting women. He used his authority over the Capitol’s facilities as speaker of the House to ensure single-sex facilities would remain separated by sex and to protect women’s-only spaces.

This is not an attack on Rep. McBride like some in the media are suggesting. In fact, Speaker Johnson noted that McBride is a duly elected member of Congress who deserves to be treated with dignity as a human being, and with the respect that comes with high public office.

But Rep. McBride is also a victim of the modern gender ideology that says men can become women, and that tells individuals suffering from gender dysphoria that the issue lies with their body, and not with their mind. The treatments offered to these people can end in sterility, loss of sexual function, and numerous other devastating and irreversible medical issues.

Independent Women’s Forum has detailed the stories of many de-transitioners who have had their bodies mutilated by doctors who told them to take puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones, and have healthy body parts surgically removed. Many of these de-transitioned men and women are now suffering from intense regret along with permanent physical damage, but as they have spoken out and tried to warn others, they have been excoriated by the same left-wing media and activist class that has been demonizing Speaker Johnson’s decision to stand with women.

The gender ideology madness has to stop, both for the protection and privacy of women and girls, and for the long-term health of the rising generation. Right now, every American who cares about the future and safety of their daughter, or niece, or sister, or cousin, has a responsibility to speak up and reject the lies of our modern age that call men women, and women men. Speaker Johnson is standing up for women everywhere by taking a stand to keep men out of women’s bathrooms in the House. I hope his actions inspire leaders across the country to do the same.

Riley Gaines is an ambassador with Independent Women’s Forum, the host of Gaines for Girls on OutKick, and 12-time NCAA All-American NCAA swimmer. This column first appeared in RealClearWire.

Job count up in October in Alaska, year over year

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October’s statewide job count was up by 7,000, or just over 2% from October 2023. 

North Slope oil and gas and federally funded infrastructure projects contributed to about 1,800 jobs, while professional and business services came in with 800 jobs and governments brought in another 800. Health care, which is primarily another taxpayer-funded sector in Alaska, added 1,700 jobs since last year.

The losses were in seafood processing, which lost 600, information, down 100 and retail also down 100.

Alaska’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 4.6% in October, while the U.S. overall rate was 4.1%.

East Aleutians Borough had the lowest unemployment at 2.6%, followed by Sitka at 3.2% and Anchorage had the second-lowest at 3.9%.

Highest unemployment was found in Kusilvak Census Area, formerly known as the Wade Hampton Census Area, at 14%. It’s in the far northwest region of the Arctic, and is where 23.7% of the population is on government assistance of some sort.

Will Murkowski do to Defense nominee Pete Hegseth what she did to Justice Brett Kavanaugh?

Pete Hegseth, nominated to lead the Department of Defense and return it to its mission, has been accused by a woman of awful things that supposedly happened during a date with him.

The accusations involve alcohol, partying, and sexual assault in 2017, and the woman who says she is the victim filed a police report about it at the time.

Hegseth has described her as what many would see a stalker obsessed with him at the time. The former Fox News host denies the assault allegations and told California police in 2017 that “there was ‘always’ conversation and ‘always’ consensual contact,” between him and the woman. The Monterey County district attorney and the Monterey police Department investigated but could find nothing solid to support the claims. They refused to prosecute.

“As far as the media is concerned, it’s very simple: The matter was fully investigated and I was completely cleared, and that’s where I’m gonna leave it,” Hegseth said last week on Capitol Hill, as he was making the rounds to meet with Republican senators, who will be the ones to confirm or deny his appointment.

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski will be in the spotlight once again on this and other confirmation votes. She hates Donald Trump and could become his worst Senate nightmare, for confirmations and legislation.

Murkowski famously went against the nomination of now-U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who was confirmed without her vote, which was “present.” Kavanaugh had also been accused by a woman for a sexual assault that supposedly took place during a college party. He also denied the accusation, but Murkowski, who flunked the Alaska Bar Exam three times, was in the “believe all women” category and decided he wasn’t qualified.

Murkowski even asked for an addition FBI background check on Kavanaugh, saying “I was one who joined in asking that the FBI step in and do further review.” In the end, she just sat there and didn’t vote.

Over the eruptions of ululating women protesters in the Senate gallery and halls, the vote to confirm Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court proceeded 50-48, with just one senator withholding her vote: Murkowski.

A “present” vote is technically a “no” vote.

Once, Murkowski was a defender of the wrongly accused. Harken back to Sen. Ted Stevens, subject of a Department of Justice witch hunt back in 2008. Murkowski believed Stevens. But that was then. And this is now — one of Donald Tump’s appointees. She was one of seven Republican senators who voted to convict Trump for an imagined role in the Jan. 6, 2021, surge of protesters at the U.S. Capitol.

Of the six most likely holdouts on Hegseth, including Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, and Sen.-elect John Curtis of Utah, Murkowski appears to be the most dug in on all the appointments, saying she will need to see their FBI reports. And then maybe additional ones, as she did with Justice Kavanaugh.

Passings: ‘Motorcycle Mary’ McGee, legendary racer born in Juneau who went on to make racing history

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The first woman to race motocross in the United States, the first to compete in an international motocross competition, and the first to receive sponsorships from major brands, has died at 87.

Mary McGee, known as Motorcycle Mary, was born in Juneau on Dec. 12, 1936 to parents James Holmes and Mary Dorcas Holmes (born Atkinson) and became the most influential woman in the history of motorcycle sports.

“Mary embodied resilience, grace, and optimism,” her family wrote on Facebook. “She was a historic athlete and a motorsports pioneer who embraced life’s challenges, cared deeply for others, and made time to brighten the lives of those around her. While we are deeply saddened by this loss, we are comforted knowing that her light will continue to shine in everyone she touched.”

She moved as a child to Iowa to live with her grandparents during World War II, because Alaska was at risk of being invaded by the Japanese. The family later settled in Phoenix, Arizona, where she met her husband, Don McGee, who was a mechanic. Don introduced her to racing cars, which led to her passion for motorcycle racing, and she inspired generations of women to take up the sport.

Among her firsts, she was the first person ever to complete solo the grueling Baja 500 off-road race in Mexico.

A documentary film about her life, Motorcycle Mary, made its premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York on June 7. Directed by Haley Watson and executive produced by Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton and Oscar winner Ben Proudfoot, it captures the remarkable life of a woman known throughout motocross sports.

The ESPN 30 for 30 film, was shown Thursday on ESPN’s YouTube channel, the day after she died.

Watch it here and listen to the introduction by the director, who talks about her experience working with McGee:

Her last race was in 2012, when she was in her 70s and competed in the Grand Prix of Canada. She died in Gardnerville, Nevada on Nov. 27, 2024, a day before ESPN released the documentary.

The American Motorcycle Association, which inducted her into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 2018, has an obituary at this link.

ESPN has another story about Motorcycle Mary’s life at this link.