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Email to Alaska Republicans on Tuesday looked like voter suppression but was just a GOP ‘mistake’

Hanlon’s razor is a rule of thumb filled with political wisdom: Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.

An email received by Republicans in Alaska appears, on its face, to be voter suppression from a bad actor. But it was actually a “mistake” by the Republican National Committee.

The email came from what was listed as “GOP Headquarters.” Some Alaskans thought the Republican Party had been hacked because of the misinformation they were seeing.

The “error” email followed one RNC had sent out, telling Alaska Republicans that today is their “primary” day in Alaska and urging them to vote.

But the correction on the first error makes it look like there is no political event happening in Alaska on Super Tuesday, one Alaskan pointed out.

In fact, Alaska Republicans hold their caucuses by ballot. It is not exactly a primary, but it is a Republican event, sanctioned by the RNC. What is curious is that, so far, only Trump-supporting Republicans have reported getting the emails.

In a Presidential Preference Poll, like the one being held today, Republicans go to designated polling places, show their ID, are verified as Republican registrants by a Republican volunteer, and then get to vote for who they prefer the Republican nominee is for president.

This process takes place Tuesday, March 5, as 14 other states around the country go through either primaries or similar party-run caucuses.

Other Alaskans received an entirely different correction from the RNC midday on Tuesday, but it, too, did not advise them correctly about the Alaska Republican Presidential Preference Poll:

Must Read Alaska reached out to the RNC for an explanation of the first, second, and third emails, which ignored the opportunity to take part in the Presidential Preference Poll, but did not get a response.

There is very little information available at the Alaska Republican Party website — and no mention of the Presidential Preference Poll on the front page. A visitor to the website must click on the “Events” tab to locate information about the PPP, but there is no call to action.

The presidential polling takes place March 5 at the following locations:

Some Alaska voters heard from Sen. Lisa Murkowski today with this text message:

“This is Senator Lisa Murkowski. “I want to share an important message with you. I’m proud to endorse Nikki Haley. America needs someone with the right values, vigor, and judgment to serve as our next President—and in this race, there is no one better than her. Nikki will be a strong leader and uphold the ideals of the Republican Party while serving as a President for all Americans. It is crucial that you join me and make your voice heard, Denise. Your support for Nikki Haley in TODAY’S election will make a difference. Find everything you need to make a plan to vote HERE: NikkiHaley.com/Alaska”

Murkowski-style voters may have received this message, but Trump-leaning voters did not.

Veterans Affairs: Department bans ‘The Kiss’ photo, then quickly reverses itself

It was a public relations nightmare for the Department of Veterans Affairs. An undersecretary of the department on Feb. 29 banned the historic photo, “The Kiss,” from all of its facilities across America. The memo ordering the removal of the photo said the photo “depicts a non-consensual act” that is inconsistent with VA policy on sexual harassment.

The memo was posted on X/Twitter and the criticism was relentless over the U.S. government going woke. Hours later, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Denis McDonough rescinded the order.

McDonough posted a copy of the Aug. 14, 1945 Life Magazine photograph on X/Twitter, with this message: “Let me be clear: This image is not banned from VA facilities — and we will keep it in VA facilities.” 

The original memo said, “To foster a more trauma-informed environment that promotes the psychological safety of our employees and the veterans we serve, photographs depicting the ‘V-J Day in Times Square’ should be removed from all Veterans Health Administration facilities.”

RimaAnn O. Nelson, Assistant Under Secretary for Health for Operations, Veterans Health Administration, Department of Veterans Affairs since Jan. 2, 2022, penned the woke memo banning the iconic photo.

The photo was taken by Alfred Eisenstaedt, a German-born American photographer and photojournalist who worked for Life Magazine. It is formally called “V-J Day in Times Square” but is known to most people simply as “The Kiss.”

V-J Day is the day Japan surrendered to the United States. In New York City and other cities across the country, Americans poured into the streets and celebrated. Navy sailor George Mendonsa planted a kiss on fellow celebrant Greta Friedman, someone he had never met but was inspired to lock lips with on that historic day.

Kevin McCabe: Let’s apply science to our statutes

I filed HB107 a year ago — March 13, 2023. This bill would merely define when we humans consider when and how life begins. We are good at determining when death happens but we have significant political issues defining life.

It was not my intent to get in a huge battle with pro-abortion or planned parenthood folks. I acknowledge (and welcome the idea) however, that HB107 may be used in that arena. The reality is that it was only my intent to apply science to our statutes

But first, let me say that I have believed in life at conception since I was in high school. At the time, I was not a Christian or even particularly religious. But I did go to a world-class high school and learned about biology and reproductive organs. Because of that classic education in science I have always believed that life began at conception.

Consider that we spend billions of dollars to send spacecraft to mars to “look for life” which we think would be indicated by evidence of a single drop of water. Evolutionists or people who believe in Darwin’s theory believe that all life began from a single cell amoeba climbing out of the primordial ooze. Most scientists believe that life begins at conception.

As a 17-year-old teenager who understood biology and the science of where life came from, pitting that knowledge against my hormones was difficult. I was still in high school and my girlfriend was pregnant. Our families, while maybe more on the liberal side, were not very understanding where teen out-of-wedlock pregnancy was concerned. So, abortion was a consideration – probably more from me than her. I was frantic as I was on my way to college and bigger things. I thought I did not want this child and I also felt like a huge disappointment even before the big reveal.

At the end of the day, though, we decided to get married and have the baby. Whether or not that was a great choice, given my limited emotional age, is up for discussion. It was, however, a great choice for many other people. 

Let me tell you why.

My oldest son, the “person” who would have been aborted, is my hero. He is a firefighter and lifesaver. Several years ago, a Cessna 206 crashed while taking off from Merrill field and landed on fire in the parking lot of the business my son worked for.

My son had been a ramp rat for a company in Kodiak, as a kid, so he knew what to do and exactly how to save the people trapped in that airplane. And he did not hesitate. He (and several other Alaskans of course) were there in an instant trying to save the people from the burning wreck. It is what Alaskans do, after all. But what if he had not been there with the knowledge he had from a previous job? What if he had not been there at all?

Now he is a firefighter in the MatSu valley. And even with his limited time there, he has probably lost count — as most firefighters, EMS, and LEO first responders do — of the number of people he has helped, or even saved. What if the smoke alarm he installed saved a life? What if even the child he talked to at school remembered how to dial 911, or how to get out of a burning room? 

But what if he were not even here? 

Shouldn’t we all wonder how many military heroes, first responders, Einsteins, Curies, Fords, JFKs, Reagans, and other notable humans have been killed in the womb? What if the life a firefighter saved was yours? What if the life of a relative could have been saved by a first responder who is just not here? 

Also consider that, with the advent of robotics and AI, we must find a way to define when human life begins, when is life a “person.” The science tells us that the human zygote, in the mother’s body, is a totally separate life, with its own DNA and its own path forward. The moral right of self-determination. Does that path include being a hero? A scientist that will find a cure for cancer? Or the person who will save you or a family member?

Scientifically, should we not also consider the aging demographics of our population? How about the huge number of jobs going unfilled because of lack of people? Are we making a mistake with our rampant declaration of “my body, my choice” and using abortion as birth control? It is a conversation we must have, and HB107 is designed to give us a beginning, not an end. It is not designed to limit any health care choices or put doctors in jail. It is merely designed to find a scientifically statutory way to define life.

I know that there is an alleged plurality of people in Alaska who disagree with me. And I accept that. But notable to me is that many of the comments received, by my office, speaking against HB107, are from out of state. I would even venture to say, without counting them, that the majority are from out of state. This makes me wonder what Alaskans really think. Are we being played again by the abortion-industrial lobby? Played over this simple bill that merely defines life?

For me, it is hard to reconcile that against the good that my son, my hero, has done for so many people. 

Rep. Kevin McCabe serves in the Alaska Legislature on behalf of Alaskans in the House District 8-Big Lake area.

It’s Super Tuesday: Facebook, Instagram part of worldwide outage

It’s Super Tuesday, when 16 state primaries and caucuses are going on. And so there’s a social media issue going on with Meta, the global behemoth in the realm of influencing.

The social media site used most in Alaska — Facebook — is experiencing a worldwide outage. It has logged users out and refuses to let them back in with their passwords.

The website Downdetector.com also shows that users are having trouble with Instagram, Messenger, Snapchat, Google, WhatsApp, and other popular websites.

This story, written at 7:15 a.m. Alaska time, will be updated as details emerge. At 7:54 a.m., many users reported they are able to access their accounts, while others report they still cannot.

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What makes an Alaskan? Alaska Supreme Court says it is basically leaving your bra behind in Alaska

The Alaska Supreme Court has ruled, in the case of Democrat Rep. Jennie Armstrong’s tenuous claims of residency, your home is basically wherever you left your bra behind. Or perhaps your carpetbag.

The legal case was brought by Republican candidate and longtime Alaskan Liz Vazquez, along with Chris Duke, Randy Eledge, Steve Strait, and Kathryn Werdahl, all longtime residents. They said that Armstrong had not met the residency rule for serving in the Legislature, because according to the Alaska Constitution, a candidate must have been a resident for three years immediately before filing for office. For the November, 2022 election, Armstrong would have needed to be a resident by June 1, 2022. Armstrong said she became a resident on May 20, 2019, while the complainants said she wasn’t a resident until June 7, 2019, at the earliest.

Armstrong is a born-and-raised Louisianan, who sold her stuff in 2016 and started traveling around the country. She met Benjamin Kellie, an Alaskan sometime around January, 2019, on a video call set up by a friend. The two became romantically interested and Kellie persuaded her to book a flight. She visited Kellie from May 10-20, 2019. That is when she started imagining life with him. While basking in the steamy waters of Chena Hot Springs on May 14, the two had conversations about how they felt about each other, and four days later, while visiting Seward, they discussed marriage and having children. Between May 18 and May 20, Kellie asked her to move in with him.

On May 20, Armstrong left the state with the intent to return after meeting some prior commitments. She told the Alaska Supreme Court that after she left the state she started looking for return tickets, but eventually decided it wasn’t logistically or financially feasible. She booked a flight back to Alaska on May 25 for travel on June 8. The two married in 2020.

When she applied for a non-resident fishing permit in June of 2019, she listed her Louisiana address as her permanent address. But she told the judges she had no intention to make Louisiana her home, even though she listed it as her home. In later years, she appeared to have fudged some of the dates on her fishing licenses.

The complainants said that there is no evidence Armstrong planned to stay until after June 7, 2019.

In 2023, the Supreme Court allowed Armstrong to be sworn in while the case proceeded.

The court ultimately believed Armstrong’s romantic story about adventuring to Alaska and then deciding to run for office to represent District 16 in Anchorage. The court upheld the Division of Elections certification of the November, 2022 election.

Justice Susan Carney was not convinced, sharing concerns that this new interpretation may invite transient individuals to claim residency with minimal proof. But the bra rule now stands in Alaska, as established by Rep. Armstrong’s summer romance in 2019.

Trump wins North Dakota

After winning at the Supreme Court in the morning, Donald Trump won the North Dakota Republican paper-ballot caucuses with nearly 85% of the vote on Monday evening, gaining 29 more delegates to the Republican National Convention in July. Nikki Haley got about 14% of the vote.

Haley needed 20% to be awarded any delegates, but any candidate that gets more than 60% of the vote gets all the delegates in North Dakota.

Haley spent the evening at a rally in Fort Worth, Texas, her last event before Super Tuesday.

On Super Tuesday, another 16 states will take part in caucuses and primaries. Trump is expected by pollsters to win all states by a large margin. According to Cook Political Report, Trump will win Tennessee by 62 points, Maine by 58 points, Massachusetts by 36 points, Vermont by 30 points, Minnesota by 62 points, Utah by 27 points, Virginia by 63 points, North Carolina by nearly 54 points, Texas by 71 points, Alabama by 75 points, Arkansas by 29 points, California by 54 points and Oklahoma by 79 points.

In Colorado, where the Secretary of State tried to keep Trump off the ballot, he’s project to win with 79%.

Alaska Republicans will have their Presidential Preference Poll across the state in the following locations; this is a privately run poll done by GOP volunteers, not by state election officials:

Moving on: Unalaska Makushin Volcano geothermal project to continue without initial partnership

The City Council of Unalaska has lost confidence in the ability of a private partnership to develop geothermal power from the Makushin Volcano, which is about 12 miles from the remote island city that is home to about 4,000 in the Aleutians. The Unalaska City Council made the decision during a recent meeting when presented with the past timeline of the project and the alternatives for moving forward.

Unalaska has been working for decades to try to develop geothermal power from volcanic sources, but the original investor partnership, Ounalashka Corporation and Chena Power, LLC, which formed in 2019, was not able to meet numerous stage-gated deadlines.

Difficulties meeting those deadlines led to the city council ending its formal business relationship with Bernie Karl, who has a joint partnership with Unalaska’s Native corporation, Ounalashka Corp. Karl and Ounalashka have a 50-year lease on the volcano but just haven’t been able to secure the financing.

Unalaska had an agreement to purchase power and has allowed extensions to the partnership several times, while financing kept slipping away.

Geothermal projects are the cutting edge for energy in Alaska, but any project would require a massive upfront investment. It appears the city of Unalaska believes it can secure a $500 million government grant to move forward without Ounalashka Corporation and Chena Power, LLC.

In January, the Makushin Geothermal Energy Project group said it was at the Final Investment Decision stage for private investors. 

“The project construction and logistic plan is complete, engineering procurement and construction contract (signed with Ormat Technologies), and  rigorous design criteria and specifications have been developed that allowed for the competitive and best value selection of all remaining contracts with speciality contractors and vendors.  Nearly all contracts are in the queue awaiting the right time for their execution,” the project group said on its website update. It projected three years of work ahead, based on permits in hand or near completion.

“Our focus now is securing the total project financing package. This process has taken longer than ever anticipated, which led us to our decision last fall to add a year to the project schedule,” the company said. “Our decision requires an amendment to the existing Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with the city of Unalaska . That, understandably, involves a community process which must be complete before we are able to advance a final financial package – you get the drift it’s been like the game ‘whack-a-mole.'”

Ounalashka Corporation and Chena Power produced an inspirational film to court investors:

“As with all development projects, such as these, it has constant twists and turns, however the project continues to march forward in lock step with that vision we had from the get go,” the partnership said in January, explaining the delays.

Must Read Alaska has learned that once the project is built, power costs in the out-years are projected to go as low as 2 cents per kilowatt to the community, which depends on diesel. Unalaska Island and the Aleutian Islands chain is mainly a treeless landscape, and so burning wood for heat is not viable. But the chain of islands does have volcanoes.

The City of Unalaska had committed to buying 100 megawatts of power over 30 years for a value of about $500 million. A memo from the city manager to the city council and mayor said the power purchase agreement had been amended on three occasions for reasons that include: extending the commercial operation deadline; extending the project financing due date; and for a mutual commitment to an interconnection/integration plan. The project financing deadline, Dec. 10, 2023, was also not met.

Those close to the project say it is the No. 1 place in Alaska for proof-of-concept for how geothermal could work. While Bernie Karl, owner of Chena Hot Springs outside of Fairbanks, had the vision, he and his partners didn’t have the hundreds of millions of dollars needed to complete it. However, Must Read Alaska has learned Karl is going to keep helping Unalaska as it goes it alone to try to develop the project. He is committed to the concept, even if it means he is not in charge of it.

“The City invested significant time working with OCCP to continue moving the project forward. Three amendments to the original PPA were negotiated and approved by City Council. The City adopted the MGP within its state and federal legislative priorities and included OCCP representatives in legislative fly-in visits with state and federal elected leaders. The City and OCCP have worked together to develop the electric integration/interconnection plan that would connect the new electric source to the City’s existing distribution system,” the Unalaska city manager’s memo stated.

Guessing game season: Tripod set on Tanana River

The 2024 Nenana Ice Classic Tripod was placed on the Tanana River on Sunday at Nenana.

The Ice Classic is Alaska’s beloved guessing game. It started in Nenana in the winter of 1917, when a group of engineers surveying for the Alaska Railroad bet $800 in the pot with their guesses for when the river would break up. The tradition has continued for what will be the 107th year.

Tickets are $3 and must be purchased and turned in between Feb. 1 and April 5. The trick is to guess correctly the month, date, hour, and minute that the ice on the Tanana River will break up and the tripod will fall over. The tripod is connected by a cord to a clock, which will stop and reveal the winning time.

The ice is very thick on the river this year, at 44 inches on Feb. 24, which is about one inch thicker than normal, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado Boulder.

In 2023, the ice went out at 4:01 p.m. on May 8. The $222,101 jackpot was shared by 10 winning tickets from people who had guessed that exact time.

Find out more from the Nenana Ice Classic website.

Try, try again: Anchorage Assembly will take up resolution urging cease fire in Israel vs. terrorism war

During the last regular Anchorage Assembly meeting, a resolution urging the Alaska congressional delegation to support an immediate cease fire in the Israel-Hamas war was waved off by the majority of the Assembly.

The resolution had been brought to the consent agenda by members Karen Bronga, George Martinez, and Felix Rivera. It was member Meg Zaletel who made the motion to postpone, seconded by member Daniel Volland, and the vote was 8-4.

The makers of the resolution have put it back on the consent agenda for Tuesday, March 5. The consent agenda is supposed to be reserved for non-controversial items, but this resolution, when it was first brought forward last month, drew nothing but controversy last time, including Assembly Chairman Chris Constant calling security to remove a loud pro-Palestinian protester.

During the last Assembly meeting, about two dozen anti-Israel individuals brought signs that they held on their chests to communicate to the Assembly that they want Israel to stop trying to get its hostages back.

Since that meeting, President Joe Biden has authorized air drops of food and other humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza, who are trapped in a war started by their elected leaders, Hamas, when terrorists raided Israel on Oct. 7 and took around 240 Israelis hostage in what has been the largest terrorist attack in Israeli history and the most savage attack on Jewish people since the Holocaust.

Israel is working to eliminate the threat that Hamas and Iran poses. The air drops have taken the place of trucked-in supplies after an aid delivery truck was overtaken and its driver killed by residents of Gaza, who then clambered for the aid.

Many of the original Israeli hostages have since died. During a cease fire in November, 105 were released from Hamas captivity, including 81 Israelis, 23 Thai nationals, and one Filipino. Other hostages, some now dead, have endured rape and torture at the hands of Gazans, many of whom dedicate their existence to wiping out the Jews.

The Anchorage Assembly meeting begins at 5 pm in the meeting room on the ground floor of the Loussac Library, which is on the corner of 36th Ave. and Denali Street in midtown Anchorage.

The link to the item on the agenda is here: Resolution No. AR 2024-87, a resolution of the Anchorage Municipal Assembly urging our congressional delegation to support negotiations which lead to an immediate bilateral ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas conflict, Assembly Members Bronga, Martinez, and Rivera. (Addendum.)

The rest of the agenda can be viewed at this link.