Saturday, August 9, 2025
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Wien flight ceremony crashed by anti-Israel gaggle led by Fairbanks presiding officer Savannah Fletcher

In Fairbanks on Tuesday, a celebration of the accomplishments of legendary aviation pioneer Noel Wien was marred by a small-but-loud group of anti-Israel protesters.

Among the protesters was Savannah Fletcher, the radical presiding officer of the Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly. She is a former mayoral candidate who is now running for Alaska Senate Seat R, which represents the western Fairbanks North Star Borough and a huge swath of rural communities in Interior Alaska.

Fletcher’s protesters shouted, “Free Palestine!” Fletcher appeared to have been one of the organizers of the group and the most well-recognized of a half-dozen. She had a child on her hip during the loud demonstration.

The anniversary event was celebrating the centennial of the historic flight made by Wien from Anchorage to Fairbanks in a biplane. His feat was accomplished in 1924, a summer of many “firsts” by Wien, who brought his biplane to Alaska by boat and reassembled it to launch the era of flying.

As Gov. Mike Dunleavy, Sen. Dan Sullivan, and other leaders spoke, the shouting of pro-Hamas protesters at times made it hard for those in the back to hear the speakers assembled on a stage at Pike’s Landing. The protesters were quieter when Sen. Lisa Murkowski spoke, but louder when Sen. Dan Sullivan was at the microphone. In this brief clip, you can hear the protesters shouting as former Rep. Jay Ramras introduced Richard Wien, the son of the late famed aviator.

A couple of hundred of people attended the celebration of flight history, which was not covered by the mainstream media. The governor, lieutenant governor, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Sen. Dan Sullivan, Richard and Sally Wien, several legislators, Borough Assemblywoman Barbara Haney, former Sen. John Coghill and former Alaska Republican Party Chairman Randy Ruedrich, and former Rep. Dick Randolph.

The protest was similar to that which occurring during the July 1 swearing-in ceremony of Mayor Suzanne LaFrance in Anchorage, an event that was marred by protesters shouting nearby while people were gathered at Town Square in downtown Anchorage. As covered by the Alaska Landmine, neither Mayor LaFrance nor the police took action to move the protesters away so that people could hear the speakers, who were being drowned out by the loud bullhorn of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, which was staging the disruption.

That disruption was barely mentioned in the Anchorage Daily News coverage of the inauguration, although it was perhaps the most interesting feature of the event.

Trump sentencing postponed to September

The sentencing of former President Donald Trump was originally set for July 11 but is now delayed to Sept. 18. This gives Trump time to present the argument that his felony conviction should be vacated, since the Supreme Court ruled on Monday that he had broad immunity from prosecution for duties related to his office.

New York District Court Justice Juan Merchan wrote a letter to Trump’s attorneys agreeing to the delay in People v. Trump, a case in which a Manhattan jury found him guilty of all 34 counts of falsification of business records in the first degree, a felony in New York State that was expressly developed by the Legislature to be used retroactively against Trump.

The charges related to a payment to Stormy Daniels in October of 2016, just before he was elected president and before he would have had any presidential immunity. But at least some of the record-keeping took place while he was in office and because prosecutors introduced other evidence about Trump’s presidential conduct as evidence, the question now is whether that evidence tainted the outcome.

The original sentencing date was to take place four days before the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. which is July 15-18. Trump is expected to win the nomination of the party; he has already won primaries in most states and is the presumptive nominee, with more than the 1,215 delegates needed to win the nomination at the convention.

The sentencing is now set to take place seven weeks before Election Day, which is Nov. 5.

State files lawsuit over lost revenues resulting from Biden’s cancellation of leases in ANWR

The State of Alaska filed suit in the United States Court of Federal Claims, where it hopes to make the federal government pay for lost revenues from nine oil and gas leases canceled by the Biden Administration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge’s Coastal Plain.

The lawsuit suit is one of Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s many efforts to hold the federal government accountable for the costs of its environmental policies, especially when those decisions lead to severe economic impacts to the State and its citizens, the Department of Law said..

“Oil and gas production from those leases could greatly contribute to our nation’s energy independence and the economy of our state,” Dunleavy said in a statement. “This about-face by the federal government opposes the direction given by Congress and deprives Alaska of our natural resource rights.”

As a condition of joining the Union, Alaska was promised the ability to build its economy through resource development.

“The Biden administration’s decisions since day one have been aimed at making the State of Alaska off limits to any resource development to the detriment of Alaska and Alaskans seeking to provide for their families,” said Alaska Attorney General Treg Taylor. “As the rest of the nation celebrates the Fourth of July, the federal government has systematically undermined the State’s ability to maintain its economic independence. This was not what was promised Alaskans at statehood, and why the State must continue to fight.”

“We know these resources can be developed safely and responsibly, and with the support and involvement of the local communities that live within the 1002 Area,” said John Boyle, Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Natural Resources. “The only obstacle is the radical environmentalist agenda of the Biden Administration.”

According to its documents, the federal government estimates there are more than seven billion barrels of recoverable oil within the Coastal Plain, and, under federal law, the State is entitled to 50 percent of the royalties paid under the leases. Even if only half of the recoverable oil could be produced, Alaska would be entitled to nearly $25 billion in royalty revenue; this is in addition to the millions owed to the State for its share of the lease rental fees and bonus payments made.

Once the United States issued these leases, it owed the State a duty of good faith to protect the State’s royalty interests. But, by canceling the ANWR leases, the United States breached its obligations. The United States’ policy decisions have consequences, especially when those decisions lead to a breach of contract. Here, one of the consequences of the United States’ cancellation of the Coastal Plain oil and gas leases was to deprive the State of billions of dollars in statutorily-provided revenues. Now it must address the results of that policy by providing all compensation required by law to the State of Alaska.

This lawsuit adds to the growing list of challenges to federal actions affecting Alaskans, most notably the State has filed suits in federal district court and the Court of Federal Claims challenging the EPA’s unlawful decision to put off limits 300 square miles of State lands to mineral development and is asking for $700 billion in compensation.

Read the complaint here.

Fritz Pettyjohn: The stars are aligning for return to a republic, ‘if you can keep it’

By FRITZ PETTYJOHN

Fellow conservatives, our decades of patience and hard work are finally being rewarded. 

For 60 years we’ve been waiting for the courts to recognize “affirmative action” for what it is: state sanctioned racial discrimination. Finally, at long last, the Supreme Court has ruled that benign intentions cannot justify discriminating against any racial group.

For 50 years we waited for the great, and thoroughly unconstitutional exercise of eugenics and birth control known as Roe v. Wade to be overturned, and it finally happened. 

For 40 years we’ve waited for the sprawling, invasive administrative state to be brought under control, and with the overturning of “Chevron deference” it’s finally happening. 

And now, all of a sudden and in one debate, all the lies from the media about Joe Biden have been exposed, and his sordid political career is coming to its humiliating conclusion. The media has disgraced itself covering for Biden, and its reputation has been destroyed, perhaps permanently. We can hope.

With big Republican victories across the country only four months way, it’s going to get even better. In Alaska this wave election might even be big enough to overturn Prop 2, the elaborate scheme designed to assure the reelection of Lisa Murkowski to the Senate. It should certainly result in a more conservative legislature, and the end of the embarrassment of Peltola’s service in Congress.

All of us should be energized and motivated to do everything we can to make the November election a watershed, an historic turn in politics equivalent to 1932, the election that changed everything. For almost 100 years now the federal government and the deep state have been accumulating power. Even the great Ronald Reagan, despite his best efforts, could not turn the tide. The year 2024 is our great opportunity to begin a reversal, and start returning power to the states, and the people.

The Framers of the Constitution gave the states, and the people, a mechanism to make such a reversal permanent. Article V allows the states, working in concert, the ability to amend the Constitution, and exercise control over the federal government which they created when they ratified the Constitution. This provision has never been used. Once the states exercise this power, the restoration of federalism which would result is the best hope of reconciling our deep political divisions.

One election, even one as significant and promising as 2024, won’t solve all our problems. We will remain a deeply divided country. There have always been deep divisions in a country as vast and diverse as the United States. Federalism allows such a nation to function successfully. Federalism means, in practice, live and let live. It means tolerance and diversity. It means let California be California, and let Alaska be Alaska. It’s how our government was originally designed to work. 

The political alignment of 2024 is the most promising I’ve seen in my lifetime. We can’t let this opportunity go to waste.

Fritz Pettyjohn’s first venture in politics was working for Goldwater for President in 1964. He served in the Alaska Legislature in the 1980s and writes the blog ReaganProject.com.

First elected Democrat calls for Biden to drop

By CASEY HARPER | THE CENTER SQUARE

House Democrat Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas publicly called on President Joe Biden to “withdraw” from the race Tuesday, the first elected Democrat to do so publicly.

“Having devoted his life to public service, President Biden has achieved much for our country at home and abroad,” Doggett said in a statement. “Stepping up to lead a Nation in crisis, President Biden helped rebuild our country from the devastation of a pandemic, an insurrection, and years of Trump wreckage. Yet, for more than a year, many Americans have indicated dissatisfaction with their choices in this election.”

Doggett’s bold move comes after a disastrous debate performance from the president last week sent Democrats into a panic and speculation on who could replace Biden, possibly in time for the Democratic convention this summer. 

According to media reports, Democratic Senate and House candidates have expressed concerns that Biden will cost them their own election by affecting Democratic turnout.

“President Biden has continued to run substantially behind Democratic senators in key states and in most polls has trailed Donald Trump,” Doggett said. “I had hoped that the debate would provide some momentum to change that. It did not. Instead of reassuring voters, the President failed to effectively defend his many accomplishments and expose Trump’s many lies.

“Our overriding consideration must be who has the best hope of saving our democracy from an authoritarian takeover by a criminal and his gang,” he added.

While the media has widely reported on Democrats’ concerns since the debate, Doggett’s public call could start a chain reaction among Democrats to put even more pressure on Biden.

So far, Biden has waved off calls to drop out.

“I know I’m not a young man, to state the obvious,” Biden told supporters at rally in North Carolina in an apparent response to his debate performance. “I don’t walk as easily as I used to. I don’t talk as smoothly as I used to. I don’t debate as well as I used to. But I know what I do know. I know how to tell the truth. I know right from wrong, and I know how to do this job.

“I know, as millions of Americans know, when you get knocked down, you get back up!”

Biden stumbled, paused, and lost his train of thought several times during the CNN-hosted debate, drawing jabs from former President Donald Trump and widespread concern among the CNN panel, which panned Biden’s performance despite their liberal leanings.

Doggett echoed some of those concerns in his statement.

“Too much is at stake to risk a Trump victory – too great a risk to assume that what could not be turned around in a year, what was not turned around in the debate, can be turned around now,” he said. “President Biden saved our democracy by delivering us from Trump in 2020. He must not deliver us to Trump in 2024.”

Fentanyl, illegal Ozempic, fake e-cigs, and weapons being seen more frequently at northern border towns

By BETHANY BLANKLEY | THE CENTER SQUARE

Federal agents working at ports of entry in northern U.S. cities and in small towns along the U.S.-Canadian border are continuing to thwart illegal activity.

Federal agents working in Detroit, Chicago, Cincinnati and in a small border town of North Dakota continue to interdict fentanyl, weapons, fake e-cigarettes and illegal prescription drugs stemming from the border crisis.

In Detroit, U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Office of Field Operations agents seized nearly six pounds of fentanyl in one enforcement action at the Fort Street Cargo Facility.

It was the largest seizure of its kind for the Port of Detroit, and one of the largest inbound fentanyl seizures at the northern border in the last five years, CBP says.

As CBP agents inspected international mail, a K-9 sniffed out the synthetic opioid, uncovering a package containing multiple plastic bags of pills. The pills were tested and identified as fentanyl. With two milligrams considered a lethal dose, they seized enough fentanyl to kill more than 1.3 million people.

Farther north, in the CBP Grand Forks Sector in Pembina County, North Dakota, Border Patrol agents working with a K9 discovered three backpacks full of abandoned firearms. They found them after responding to a report of suspicious activity west of the Neche, North Dakota Port of Entry.

Once they arrived, “they observed two individuals absconding from the area into Canada,” Border Patrol said. The agents continued searching the area and with the help of their canine, Odin, found backpacks left behind containing a significant amount of firearms.

They seized 65 handguns, 65 pistol magazines, two rifles, one suppressor, and two rifle magazines.

“Bulk firearms seizures are an uncommon occurrence for the Grand Forks Sector, but this serves as a humbling reminder of how critically important our mission is,” Grand Forks Sector Chief Patrol Agent Scott Garrett said.

“There is currently no threat to the community at this time,” Border Patrol said – but “encourages everyone to stay vigilant and report suspicious activity.”

Reports can be anonymous. Residents are encouraged to call 1-800-982-4077, “24 hours a day, 7 days a week.” They can also send tips via email to [email protected].

Community involvement has been critical to Border Patrol agents working in the remote areas along the northern border, The Center Square has reported. Lack of operational control at the northern border presents a national security threat, experts have told The Center Square. They have issued warnings after the greatest number of illegal border crossers, including the greatest number of known or suspected terrorists, have been apprehended at the northern border in U.S. history under the Biden administration.

In Chicago, CBP agents recently seized 53,700 illegal electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) shipped from China destined to a wholesaler in Mississippi with an estimated retail price of over $1 million.

They discovered a shipment of 179 boxes was mislabeled as electronic atomizers but full of vaping pens in violation of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, which regulates consumer goods. CBP agents, working with Food & Drug Administration officials, determined the products were adulterated and being imported by an unauthorized agent.

Mislabeling the contents as electronic atomizers is “a common practice used to smuggle unapproved goods into the US,” CBP says, adding that they were likely being sent to a wholesaler for wider distribution nationwide.

Last month, the FDA announced a new federal multi-agency task force to combat the illegal distribution and sale of e-cigarettes.

Another product CBP and the FDA have found is being illegally imported is an FDA approved prescription drug used to treat type 2 diabetes and weight loss, Ozempic. Importing Ozempic into the U.S. is prohibited without FDA authorization and oversight.

At the Port of Cincinnati, CBP agents have so far seized a record 11 shipments of unauthorized Ozempic coming from Columbia this calendar year. CBP agents first detected shipments in February of pre-filled injection pens containing Ozempic coming from Columbia. The shipments have primary destinations of New York, Massachusetts and Texas, with a combined estimated value of $887,000.

“Unfortunately, very few online pharmacies are compliant with the U.S. pharmacy standards,” CBP said. “This poses health risks to consumers who purchase what they believe is a genuine product at a much lower cost.”

“Prescription drugs that are smuggled from outside the U.S., particularly injectable products that should be sterile, can present a serious health risk to those who use them. The drugs have not undergone the proper import processes and may contain unknown or dangerous ingredients,” Dan Solis, FDA Assistant Commissioner for import operations, said.

Director Field Operations-Chicago LaFonda Sutton-Burke said there have been “soaring sales in E-commerce of illegal medications from overseas entities that fail to abide by the rules set in place. … Stopping illegal shipments of Ozempic saves consumers a substantial amount of money and potentially dangerous health risks.”

Federal judge blocks Biden’s ban on LNG exports

A federal judge on Monday blocked President Joe Biden’s ban on liquified natural gas export permits.

The case, filed by Alaska’s attorney general and 15 other states in March, was decided when U.S. District Judge James Cain of Louisiana ruled that Biden’s LNG ban “be stayed in its entirety, effective immediately.”

In January, the Biden Energy department halted all new approvals of LNG export permits to non-free-trade agreement countries, jeopardizing the production, storage, and transportation of natural gas, which would cost thousands of jobs and hurt the economies of numerous states. The decision ignored the congressionally approved Natural Gas Act and broke from decades of agency policy.

The attorneys general argued that the LNG export ban has already and will continue to decrease investment in the natural gas industry and infrastructure, leading to decreased production and loss of specific tax revenues for the states that are the plaintiffs in the lawsuit against Biden.

Daniel Turner, founder and executive director for Power The Future, said, “Joe Biden seems to have as much trouble following the law as he does putting together a sentence without a teleprompter. This ban on American energy from Joe Biden not only hurt our energy workers but gave Vladimir Putin an opportunity to expand the market for Russia’s natural gas. This was another election year failure from Joe Biden trying to appease his extreme climate base no matter how much it hurts American families.”

Attorney General Treg Taylor joined his contemporaries from Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, and Wyoming in the lawsuit led by Louisiana.

Biden Administration acted “completely without reason or logic,” wrote Judge Cain, who said the states are likely to succeed in showing that the ban was arbitrary, capricious, and unconstitutional.

As with other actions by the Biden Administration, the Energy Department’s decisions were “above and beyond its scope of authority.” Cain said he reviewed the voluminous studies attached as exhibits, “all of which boast of both the economic and environmental benefits of exporting natural gas” and that the department failed to justify why it needed to pause the approval of permits.

“Past precedent, which the applicants relied upon, allowed the approval of the applications to proceed when updates were made,” Cain said, adding that there is a legitimate concern about. the impact on national security, state revenues, employment, funding for schools and charities, and increased pollution from foreign energy development.

The ban did not apply to Alaska because the LNG project already has its permits.

Susan Stone’s life to be celebrated July 6 in Ketchikan

Susan Ann Stone of Ketchikan passed away on June 22, 2024, after a courageous battle with cancer.

She was born Susan Bullock on July 12th, 1954, in Seattle, Wash. Susan spent her early childhood years in Fairbanks, Juneau, and Concord, Calif. before her parents settled in Kodiak, where her father, Don, was the pastor at St. James the Fisherman Episcopal Church.

She cherished her memories of the years her family spent in Kodiak. They truly lived out the Alaska pioneer experience, starting the church there, and experiencing the 1964 Alaska earthquake and tsunami. In 1969, her family relocated to Ketchikan where Susan graduated from Ketchikan High School in 1971.

Susan then attended the University of Idaho where she earned a degree in Political Science and a teaching certificate, was a member of the Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority, and was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society. While at the University of Idaho she met Roger, and they were married at St John’s Episcopal Church in Ketchikan on June 25, 1974. Susan and Roger settled in Lewiston, ID where they both worked at First Security Bank. Her first job with the bank was filing checks, and she held additional clerical positions until being one of the few women accepted into the Management Training Program.

In 1978 Susan and Roger let their sense of adventure bring them back to Ketchikan. Shortly after returning to Alaska, Susan and Roger welcomed their first daughter Tiffany, who was followed later by Stacey and then Kimberly.

Susan spent the next years of her life raising her children, volunteering her time with Parent Teacher Associations, Girl Scouts, St John’s Episcopal Church, First Lutheran Church, Long Term Care, the Pioneer Home, Ketchikan Theatre Ballet, and the Alaska Republican Party. Susan was a member of PEO Chapter A. She also spent time as a cruise lecturer on Alaskan cruises, sharing stories and knowledge about the state she loved so much.

In 1997 Susan accepted a position teaching 7th grade geography at Schoenbar Middle School. This began a 27-year teaching career in which Susan taught geography, Alaska studies, U.S. history, world history, AP U.S. history, American government, AP American government, and street law at both Schoenbar and Kayhi. Susan loved sharing her love of history with her students and was always urging her students to be involved in their communities, engage in acts of service, vote, and find support systems that would allow them to succeed. Susan retired at the end of the 2023-2024 school year.

Susan was recognized for her service to her community in a number of ways over the years. She received the First Lady’s Volunteer Award from First Lady Emmalee Hickel. She was honored by the Ketchikan Chamber of Commerce as the outstanding youth leader in 1992. She was recognized for her service as president of the Tongass Alaska Girl Scout Council by the Alaska State Legislature and honored with a lifetime membership in Girl Scouts of the USA.

Susan was a beloved wife and sister, talented educator, and dedicated volunteer, but above all she was a mom. She always referred to her daughters as “my girls,” and her students were always “my kids.” In the years her girls were growing up her home was always open as a gathering place, and she was a second mom to many.

During her years as a teacher, she was always concerned about her kids, and gave them her best every day. She quietly assisted many students to ensure they received their diplomas, and she was an outspoken champion of doing what is right for the kids of Kayhi. She also gave them an incredible example of perseverance as she continued to teach while she waged her mighty battle against cancer.

Susan was preceded in death by her parents Father Don & Evelyn Bullock. She is survived by her husband of 50 years Roger, daughters Tiffany (Tim) Cook, Stacey (Kiel) Stone, and Kimberly (Frank) Divelbiss, and grandchildren Timothy II, Sophia, Torin, Olin, June, and Gustaf. She is also survived by her siblings Don (Brita), Bob, Jennifer, and Geoff (Ruth) Bullock, Laird (Vicky) Stone, and a wonderful abundance of nieces and nephews.

A memorial service for Susan will be held at First Lutheran Church on July 6 at 11 a.m., followed by a reception in the Kayhi Commons at 1:30 p.m. Susan would especially want her students to know that they are welcome to come and celebrate her wonderful life.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to the Susan Stone Memorial Fund to continue Susan’s mission of supporting the youth of Ketchikan. Donations can be mailed to P.O. Box 5911, Ketchikan, AK 99901, or sent by Venmo to @MrsStoneMemorial .

Mount Marathon nonbinary division has three racers

In March, the Mount Marathon Race board of directors decided to make a molehill out of what is becoming a growing mountain of gender controversy: They voted to establish a nonbinary category of racers for the 96th running of Mount Marathon in Seward, an event that happens every Fourth of July.

Since there is a growing sense of nonbinary-ism among younger generations, the race board could avoid a lawsuit or public embarrassment by simply having a category so that men would — possibly — not compete in the women’s division. There’s still no “test” for gender, but having a separate category might make the race more fair for women racers.

Thus, this year for the first time, there are three nonbinary runners signed up for the race to the top of Mount Marathon, which sits over Seward line a hen guarding her chicks. This will be a first for the famous run that is the toughest 5-K in the country.

Nonbinary refers to people who have not settled in their minds that they are male or female. It’s not the same as transgender, although the category may attract such a competitor.

In all, this year’s race has 956 runners signed up. They get to be in the race through a variety of paths: Some win by lottery, others through being veterans of the race and still others get a one-time petition, or through a sponsor slot. There’s a 375-racer per adult division cap.

Zoe Dohring, who teaches gender studies at the University of Alaska Anchorage, was the first to sign up as a nonbinary racer for the race that dashes out of downtown Seward and up the slippery, shale mountain. In Dohring’s bio, he says he is white, trans femme, non-binary, temporarily able-bodied, queer, and that he has the best time in the country for running a marathon in high heels.

“I’ve dreamed of running in Mount Marathon for all the 10 years that I’ve lived in Alaska, but I’ve chosen to not join the lottery in recent years, knowing that I no longer fit in the category devoted to my sex assigned at birth,” Dohring said in March, when the change was announced.

In addition to Dohring, a runner from Salt Lake City, Utah, and another from Tyler, Texas have signed up, all but assuring that there will be a first, second, and third place prize winner in the new gender-ish category.

The nonbinary division will have its own results and nonbinary participants will receive the same overall and age-group awards as participants in the men’s, women’s, boys’ and girls’ divisions, the race website says.

Because the event has separate gendered races, adult nonbinary entrants must choose to participate in the men’s or women race and will be placed in a start wave that corresponds with their ability, the race explains on its website.

Nonbinary juniors will run with others the juniors’ race, as boys and girls run together in a single wave.

The three nonbinary entrants may seem like a drop in the bucket out of 956 racers, but considering that the Chicago Marathon has 50,000 runners, and had 70 nonbinary entrants in 2022, which grew to 242 by the next year, Seward’s Mount Marathon race appears to be off to a running start. According to the Non-Binary Racing Database, Alaska now is home to 2% of the all the races in the country with nonbinary divisions.

The race is among the oldest footraces in America and is considered the oldest mountain footrace in the country. It started as a bet between two miners as to whether someone could reach the top of the mountain and return within one hour. The race was officially organized in 1915.

Thousands head to Seward for the Fourth of July, and line the street to cheer on the racers, who scramble up and back from the slope of Mount Marathon, a rocky, ankle-turning mountain of shale and loose rock.