Tuesday, August 19, 2025
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De-transgendered Chloe Cole to speak tonight in Wasilla and Friday in Anchorage

A San Francisco teenager who went through a horrific experience in which doctors “transitioned” her with chemicals and surgery to appear as a boy is now on the speaking circuit, telling America that the transgendering of minors is wrong.

“Stop doing this to kids,” is Chloe Cole’s message. Now 19 years old, Cole traveled to Alaska this week and is the keynote speaker at the Alaska Family Council’s summer events in Wasilla on Aug. 16, and I Anchorage on Aug. 18. She is also meeting privately with a group of pastors to help them understand the grave harm being done to children of America.

Tickets and table reservations for the Wasilla and Anchorage lectures, as well as more information about the events, can be found at this link.

Cole had a doubts about her gender when she was a child. Doctors at Kaiser Permanente in San Francisco diagnosed her with gender dysphoria when she was 9 years old, and began treating her at age 12 with puberty blockers, testosterone treatments, and a double mastectomy. 

“I used to believe I was born in the wrong body,” she told a congressional hearing recently. “And the adults in my life, whom I trusted, affirmed my belief. And this caused me lifelong irreversible harm. I speak to you today as a victim of one of the biggest medical scandals in the history of the United States of America.”

At age 16, when she realized she had been medically abused, Cole detransitioned to her biological female gender, and became an activist in defense of children who face the same situation. She had to face the scorn and shunning of the transgender community, which practices gender ideology and exhibits cult-like qualities.

“Chloe Cole has a story to tell. She’s the victim of a woke agenda and a woke medical community, and she isn’t staying silent,” says Jim Minnery, president of Alaska Family Council. “Her story is powerful, and it’s one the Left doesn’t want you to hear – which is why we are giving you an opportunity to hear from her.”

Alaska Family Council is a family-centered nonprofit that believes life should beprotected from the time of conception to the end of natural life; marriage is between one man and one woman as the essential element of the family; strong families are essential to a strong and healthy society; First Amendment religious liberties are critical to our freedom as a people and must be protected and defended; and that parents have a right to guide their children’s lives and to responsibly direct every aspect of their education and care.

Bronson fundraiser packs them in

Mayor Dave Bronson’s reelection campaign fundraiser was packed at a hangar near Lake Hood on Tuesday.

Bronson, first elected in 2021, comes up for reelection in April. The commercial pilot-turned-mayor is challenged by two left-leaning candidates, Suzanne LaFrance and Chris Tuck, who are currently duking it out for primacy with Democrat voters, while Bronson maintains strength with conservatives, moderates and the business community.

Over 200 people who crowded into Keith Manternach’s hangar were in an upbeat mood. Legislators were spotted, including Sen. James Kauffman, Rep. Tom McKay, former Sen. Lora Reinbold, former Rep. Ralph Samuels, former Rep. Mel Gillis, and former Rep. Ken McCarty. Also attending were many people who were part of Bronson’s first campaign for office and who have returned to support him for a second term.

Aaron Lojewski signs up for mayoral race, North Star Borough for 2024

Fairbanks North Star Borough Assemblyman Aaron Lojewski may be term-limited off of the Assembly, but he’s not done with public service in the borough. He filed a letter of intent on Tuesday to run for mayor, the first to sign up for a seat that comes open in October of 2024.

Lojewski leaves Assembly Seat H after the Oct. 3 election is certified. He has served since being first elected in 2017.

Lojewski owns Fairbanks Aurora Tours, which specializes in sharing Alaska’s Aurora Borealis with visitors for viewing and photography in the Fairbanks area through van tours. He was previously a licensed real estate agent who has a master’s degree in resource and applied economics from University of Alaska Fairbanks, where he also earned a bachelor’s degree in finance. He served as a volunteer board member of Interior Gas Utility and is an Eagle Scout.

Current Mayor Bryce Ward is in his second term and is term-limited, having been sworn in in 2018.

School superintendent won’t allow Dr. Ben Carson to speak at local school

When Dr. Ben Carson comes to Anchorage for a speaking engagement next week, local educators arranged for him to also appear in a school assembly at Mountain View Elementary School, one of the most diverse schools in the nation.

After all, Dr. Carson was a kid once and attended a school just like Mountain View. Now, he’s a brain surgeon.

But Dr. Carson won’t be able to speak at the school. The superintendent has put his foot down on the school assembly, which was scheduled to take place during the first full week of classes.

Carson served as the secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development during the Trump Administration. He ran for president in 2016. He is also an accomplished brain surgeon, having performed the first successful separation of conjoined twins who were attached at the back of the head.

Tickets to the Ben Carson event on Aug. 22 can be found at this link.

Carson, now with no future plans for politics, is the coauthor of a book published last fall on education: “Crisis in the Classroom,” written alongside Armstrong Williams, and famed civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump.

Carson said the book was conceived due to discovering that “people from multiple viewpoints who all felt the same: That the school system was failing the children, and if they’re failing the children, they’re failing our nation.”

In November interview, Carson said the “havoc and chaos currently plaguing our society have many of their roots in the dismal educational environment that has been allowed to fester in many communities throughout our nation. We really need to be talking about this and not just sweeping it under the rug.”

But Dr. Jharrett Bryantt, who has been superintendent of Anchorage schools for 16 months, is not, evidently a Carson appreciator. He said nyet to the visit.

A request to the school district to verify the claim that Dr. Carson is being banned from the Anchorage schools has gone unanswered, but credible sources tell Must Read Alaska that the arrangement had been made with the school principal, and when the Bryantt learned of the visit, he personally intervened and disallowed it.

Dr. Carson will be speaking at Cornerstone Church Aug. 22 as the keynoter for a fundraising evening with the Anchorage Republican Women’s Club. Gov. Mike Dunleavy is said to have helped arrange for the Carson visit to Alaska and will be accompanying Carson during at least some of his time in the state. Word is that a trip to a school in the Matanuska-Borough School District is in planning stages.

Barto: Chugiak-Eagle River Chinooks continue changing players’ lives

By TIM BARTO

Fourteen wins and 25 losses does not make the type of record the Chinooks wanted to post in the Alaska Baseball League this past summer, nor is it the type of record they expected, especially after a pretty successful start to the season.

It’s hardly anything to write about, yet here I am tapping away at the Olivetti keys to boast yet again that this past season was indeed a successful one for the young men from Chugiak-Eagle River. 

Prior to the summer of 2023 my experience with the team was as a fan, a member of the Booster Club Board and, for four seasons, the president of that Board. Chinooks baseball became a passion bordering on obsession, and it consumed my summers.

When it appeared that our family was moving out of Alaska last year, I stepped down from the board, and when it became clear that we were going to stay, I went into vapor lock thinking I might not be a part of what had become part of my being.

So I asked first-year field manager Tim Cole if I could be in the dugout as an assistant coach. “The Other Tim,” as he became known, knighted me as Coach Intern, and I was given the chance to see what went on in the dugout, hit some pre-game fungoes, and be a part of the team’s unique game day discipleship classes.

Members of the team gather in prayer. In photo above, members smile after being baptized.

I learned more about the game than I had forgotten since I first picked up a baseball bat 55 years ago, and I admit I’d forgotten a bunch; but it was the discipleship part of it all that provided the most indelible takeaways. 

The Chinooks’ game days begin with a visit to the Alaska Club gym in Eagle River, followed by a drive out to The Crossing, a church in Chugiak where players and staff hunker down for a couple hours of testimony and deep Bible dives. This is where the primary mission of this Athletes-In-Action sponsored team really takes place: Guiding young men to be helpful teammates, loyal sons, and devoted future husbands and fathers; in short, good Christian men. 

A favorite line of Coach Cole’s this summer was that we men are meant to do hard things. Life is not easy, and being a follower of Christ is particularly not easy, especially in today’s society. Whether it’s playing baseball, graduating from college, building a business, or raising a family, life is fraught with challenges. Being a believer does not make those challenges a cake walk, but having a solid foundation in faith makes the journey easier and the reward all the more worthy.

Each discipleship session begins – like almost all Chinooks’ activities begin and end – with prayer. Then a player or staff member is given the opportunity to present his Triple Hs to the team. “Triple H” stands for Heart, Heroes, and Hardships. Where does the man’s heart lie? Who in his life has he elevated to hero status? What hardships has he faced, or is he facing? 

This format provides the opportunity for the players to open up, to provide their Christian walk while disclosing their transgressions and challenges, and honoring those people who helped them along the way. And let me tell you, this was one of the most remarkable experiences I have had the opportunity to witness. Without disclosing identities in this article, I can tell you that we heard tales of substance abuse, sexual addiction, spiritual doubt, parental neglect, family discord, suicidal ideations, and the generally loathsome behaviors that are found among most of America’s youthful population.

Hearing this was surprising, often shocking, especially since these are highly skilled college athletes who seem to have it all together and are either already Christ followers or seek to be, but it all just reaffirmed the fact that we are all flawed people, sinners who fall short of the glory of God. And the guys embraced every bit of it. After each Triple H testimony, most of which included tears of either joy or embarrassment or both, players and coaches all lined up to shake hands, hug the confessor, and – quite often – told that guy that he was loved.

Mind you, these are male athletes between 18 and 23. They are hard-working, masculine athletes who thrive on competition, and they were saying to their peers, “I love you.”  

Don’t get me wrong. They’re still baseball players – knuckleheads who joke around continuously and razz each other mercilessly – but they embraced each other’s faults and, through it all, bonded closer than just about any group of young men can, topped only by those who serve together in combat.

They became close, had one of the best summers they will ever have, despite the low winning percentage; and it was something special to witness. 

Author Tim Barto hitting some “fungoes” during pre-game.

During the last week of the season, word was put out that anyone who wanted to be baptized would have that opportunity. Three young men said they would like to take the plunge, one of them a coach barely older than the players under his charge. So, one morning we all gathered at Mirror Lake in Chugiak to watch Easton, Austin, and Noah publicly commit their faith in Jesus and demonstrate it by being dunked into its chilly waters.

After the three of them completed the ceremony, and the requisite hugs were administered, a fourth young man, Kevin, trudged into the water and declared his desire to join his brothers in Christ and make it a foursome of baptized baseballers.

While society’s squeaky wheels bemoan toxic masculinity, it is heartening to see thoroughly masculine men committing to being good men without compromising their masculinity. Confessing one’s sins to his teammates and opponents – yes, these guys provide their testimonies to the other teams as well – is not weakness.

It’s a strength, and it takes courage. It is, in fact, a hard thing to do, just as Coach Cole preached.

_________________________________

Tim Barto was a part of the Chinooks’ 2023 coaching staff. With baseball season now over, he can pay more attention to his full-time job as vice president of the faith-based advocacy organization, Alaska Family Council. 

Justice Shrugged: The persecution of Donald Trump

By FRANK MIELE | REAL CLEAR POLITICS

Here’s what I dream of Donald Trump saying when he stands trial on bogus charges proffered by his political opponents: “I do not recognize this court’s right to try me … I do not recognize my action as a crime.”

Those are the fighting words of industrialist Hank Rearden when he was put on trial for ignoring an unjust law in Ayn Rand’s novel “Atlas Shrugged.” Although the circumstances of the cases differ, Rearden is a perfect avatar of Donald Trump, as both larger-than-life men are persecuted by the justice system for seeking to pursue their own self-interest and for refusing to surrender to government oppression.

Self-interest is central to the Objectivist philosophy of Rand, who grew up in Russia and witnessed first-hand the oppression of free thought and free enterprise following the 1917 Communist revolution. Her masterpiece, “Atlas Shrugged,” is the ultimate roadmap to how American democracy can be subverted by leftist bureaucrats and a corrupt media to destroy some individuals and intimidate the rest.

In the novel, Rearden has created a unique metallic alloy that carries his own name. Rearden Metal is far superior to steel and was in high demand by contractors, but tyrannical government regulations prohibited Rearden from selling to customers of his own choice. He ignored the government’s warnings and sold to one of the few honest businessmen left in the country. That meant he had broken the law, and because of his stature and reputation for excellence, the government prosecuted him as a warning to others that they dare not pursue their own self-interest, too.

Rearden epitomizes the essence of individualism, striving to achieve his goals despite societal pressure. As an industrialist, he prioritizes his innovation and accomplishments, unapologetically pursuing personal success. His trial underscores the struggle between individual rights and the perceived interests of society, reflecting Rand’s championing of individualism.

Similarly, Trump’s refusal to accept the election results turns on his deep sense of individualistic ambition, his willingness to challenge societal norms, and his determination not to surrender his principles, even at the expense of public ridicule, political persecution, and now potentially years in prison. But you can’t view the 2020 election in a vacuum.

Trump was no different than Rearden in fighting what he knows is a rigged system. For the preceding five years, Trump had been the victim of a series of vicious attacks by the Deep State and the  media who never really accepted him as president. So Trump had no reason to accept the election results parroted by the same actors who had already tried to destroy him multiple times.

And now, two and a half years after the 2020 election, as Trump has a fighting chance of returning to the White House in the greatest political comeback in history, his enemies have come for him again, with three separate indictments and soon to be a fourth.

The four-count indictment most recently brought against Trump by Special Counsel Jack Smith is intended to make a victory in 2024 nearly impossible. The Deep State in this case represents the entrenched bureaucracy of the federal government as well as the individual states’ election officials. This is the same Deep State that gathered up 51 national security officials to sign a statement prior to the 2020 election that falsely claimed that Hunter Biden’s laptop “has all the classic earmarks of Russian disinformation.” It had none of them. No wonder Trump was disinclined to accept their conclusions that the election was secure and fair. Trump sought to prove his concerns about the legitimacy of the 2020 election by pursuing a vigorous legal strategy as was guaranteed to him under the First Amendment’s right “to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”

Biden’s weaponized Department of Justice is determined to deny that right to Donald Trump, and by extension to the rest of us. You either agree with the government’s interpretation of election results or else you risk going to jail. The indictment brought against Trump acknowledges that everyone has a First Amendment right to speak their minds and even to “formally challenge the results of the election through lawful and appropriate means,” but it then avers that Trump’s right to believe he won the election is abrogated by a string of court losses and equally pessimistic assessments from so-called experts.

Here’s where it gets interesting, and where the Department of Justice has overstepped. The four counts in the indictment are based on what prosecutor Jack Smith calls three conspiracies: “A conspiracy to defraud the United States” by seeking to stop the counting of electoral votes on Jan. 6, 2021; “a conspiracy to corruptly obstruct and impede the Jan. 6 congressional proceeding at which the collected results of the presidential election are counted and certified; and “a conspiracy against the right to vote and to have one’s vote counted.”

All of these alleged conspiracies and the resulting four charges are directly related to the joint congressional session on Jan. 6, when the Electoral College votes were opened and debated to determine whether they should be counted. Moreover, when Jack Smith announced the indictment, he suggested that Trump was responsible for the riot that occurred at the U.S. Capitol on that day, yet none of the charges hold Trump responsible for the violence. Every charge in this dubious indictment could have been brought even if the protesters had marched “peacefully and patriotically” to the Capitol as Trump had requested. The charges in the indictment have nothing to do with the violence; they only relate to Trump’s insistence that he won the election, and that he would do whatever it takes to prove it.

In other words, these are not real crimes like insurrection or sedition; they are thought crimes. Smith’s “conspiracy” charges simply reflect that Trump consulted his lawyers to develop a legal strategy on how to right the wrong that he perceived. In its substance, from paragraphs 8 to 123, the indictment merely alleges over and over again that Trump refused to accept the conclusions of others that the election of Biden was legitimate, and that he had help from like-minded attorneys. How infuriating that must be to prosecutor Smith, who believes with all his heart that no one could doubt the veracity of what government officials (like him!) tell us.

But millions of us did doubt the official story of a Biden victory. In the weeks after the Nov. 3, 2020 election, I wrote about problems with the election on Nov. 6, Nov. 13, Nov. 23, Nov. 30, and Dec. 7.

If I had been able to ensure that Trump had read those columns at RealClearPolitics, I might be under indictment for conspiracy now, too. Then on Jan. 2, 2021, I wrote a column called “Our Electoral Crisis: The Call of Conscience on Jan. 6.”

In that preview of the challenge of electoral votes from disputed states, I wrote, “There is no reason to expect that the Jan. 6 session of Congress will result in certification of President Trump as the victor of the 2020 election. Despite the extensive evidence of fraud that has been amassed, this vote will be an exercise in raw political power, not an expression of blind justice. Probably the best that Trump supporters can hope for is a fair hearing before the American people regarding the reason why doubts exist as to the legitimacy of Biden’s apparent victory.”

Because of the riot at the Capitol, even that small hope was dashed, as most of the congressional debate about fraudulent activity in swing states was canceled when the joint session resumed late in the evening. It is important to note that Trump was the political victim of Jan. 6, not its beneficiary. Because of the violence, he lost his last opportunity to have a public debate on the voting irregularities that made millions of us believe the election returns were compromised.

Yet Jack Smith would have you believe that it was Trump’s plan all along to shut down the electoral count that day as part of a plan to overturn the results. It’s just a fairy tale told to Trump-hating liberals to make them feel better.

MSNBC commentator Mike Barnicle summed up Smith’s theory of the case in a segment on “Morning Joe” the day after the indictment was unsealed. “It’s one thing to have beliefs. We all have beliefs,” Barnicle said. “Donald Trump had the belief that he won, and he can articulate it as long as he wants, but he does not have the right to transform that belief into illegal conduct.”

What that means is that we all have First Amendment rights to be wrong, but we do not have a right to persuade others that we are right. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the first step toward totalitarianism. What we are seeing in Jack Smith’s indictment is the attempt to criminalize what I would call “other thought,” the insistence that you will make up your own mind and pursue your own truth regardless of what the government tells you. This is an attempt to codify the suppression of ideas that we saw the Deep State impose on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media platforms in 2020. You have the right to think whatever you want, but as soon as you share thoughts that dispute the official narrative, you can be silenced, and in Trump’s case locked up in a federal penitentiary.

Well, he wouldn’t be the first person to be jailed for “other thought,” and you don’t have to turn to Russia or China for examples. How about Henry David Thoreau, who spent a brief time in jail in 1846 for protesting the Mexican-American War and wrote about his beliefs in “Civil Disobedience”?

“Any man more right than his neighbors, constitutes a majority of one already,” Thoreau told us. “Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison.”

That certainly will be true should the unthinkable happen and Jack Smith achieve his goal of imprisoning Trump. In a very real sense, the indictment is less an accusation against one man than a ham-handed attempt to enforce group-think on any Americans who resist the imperial decrees from Washington, D.C. Consider this passage from “Atlas Shrugged” in light of the hundreds of Jan. 6 convictions that turned ordinary Americans into felons:

“Did you really think we want those laws observed?” said Dr. Ferris. “We want them to be broken. You’d better get it straight that it’s not a bunch of boy scouts you’re up against … We’re after power and we mean it … There’s no way to rule innocent men. The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren’t enough criminals one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws. Who wants a nation of law-abiding citizens? What’s there in that for anyone? But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be observed nor enforced or objectively interpreted – and you create a nation of law-breakers – and then you cash in on guilt. Now that’s the system, Mr. Rearden, that’s the game, and once you understand it, you’ll be much easier to deal with.”

One of the most striking parallels between the Trump and Rearden cases is the complicity of the mass media in promoting hatred for the defendants. The legacy press has been trying to destroy Trump for seven years now, starting with the Russia hoax, the Ukrainian impeachment hoax, the Trump taxes hoax, and the classified documents hoax. It didn’t matter what topic came up; the media turned it into another reason to hate Trump. Most recently, they have drummed up the “fake electors” narrative as proof that Trump intentionally tried to steal the election.

That is essentially the linchpin of Smith’s case. When Trump’s team put forward alternate electors on Dec. 14, 2020, they were following the entirely legal precedent that Democrat John F. Kennedy used successfully in the 1960 election, when Hawaii’s result was in doubt until after Dec. 14. The reason that date is so important is because the U.S. Constitution mandates that all electors must give their votes on the same day. If Trump’s lawyers were able to prove fraud after Dec. 14, but his electors had not voted on that day, then their votes would be lost forever.

Trump is an obstacle to the Deep State that seeks power over people, just as Hank Rearden was an obstacle to the economic tyranny of “Atlas Shrugged.” Rearden was not a person of quite the stature of Trump, but more of an Elon Musk – a self-made man of unthinkable wealth who didn’t follow anyone’s rules but his own. But that last quality is shared by all three men, and perhaps that more than anything is what has made them all targets.

Here’s how Rand described the media’s assault against Rearden as his trial began, and how their campaign to marginalize him had failed because the regular people oddly identified with the millionaire industrialist just as Trump gains popular strength with each new indictment thrown his way:

“The crowd knew from the newspapers that he represented the evil of ruthless wealth; and … so they came to see him; evil, at least, did not have the stale hopelessness of a bromide which none believed and none dared to challenge. They looked at him without admiration – admiration was a feeling they had lost the capacity to experience, long ago; they looked with curiosity and with a dim sense of defiance against those who had told them that it was their duty to hate him.”

That’s how the trial started, but by the time Rearden spoke in his own defense – or rather spoke to demolish the prosecution’s false claims – the crowd was in full support of Rearden in his battle against the nameless, faceless bureaucrats who had regulated the country into despair. When he turned to the crowd in the courtroom:

He saw faces that laughed in violent excitement, and faces that pleaded for help; he saw their silent despair breaking out into the open; he saw the same anger and indignation as his own, finding release in the wild defiance of their cheering; he saw the looks of admiration and the looks of hope.

As the crowd surged around him, he smiled in answer to their smiles, to the frantic tragic eagerness of their faces; there was a touch of sadness in his smile. “God bless you, Mr. Rearden!” said an old woman with a ragged shawl over her head. “Can’t you save us, Mr. Rearden? They’re eating us alive, and it’s no use fooling anybody about how it’s the rich that they’re after…”

It is just that same magical connection which happens between Trump and his supporters at a MAGA rally, and that is why Jack Smith, Attorney General Merrick Garland, and President Joe Biden want to put Trump behind bars. He gives people hope, and hope is dangerous when you have a plan to subjugate them. To succeed, tyranny needs willing victims, and Trump – like any Ayn Rand hero or heroine –  fights back. That’s the true reason his enemies hate him.

“We fight like hell,” Trump said on Jan. 6, not in regard to violence but in regard to protecting our country from the thugs who would transform it into a dictatorship. “And if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.”

That’s the fighting spirit which makes me know my dream of Trump rejecting the court’s authority, like Hank Rearden did, will never come to fruition. While it would have a hint of poetic justice, that’s not what Trump is after. He wants real justice, political justice, freedom for all, and that means he has to stand up, stand tall, stand firm. When he says that the government is coming through him to get to you, he’s not joking. And millions of us are on his side, with one desperate question on our lips: “Can you save us, Mr. Trump?”

This article was originally published by RealClearPolitics and made available via RealClearWire. Frank Miele, the retired editor of the Daily Inter Lake in Kalispell, Mont., is a columnist for RealClearPolitics. His newest book, “What Matters Most: God, Country, Family and Friends,” is available from his Amazon author page. Visit him at HeartlandDiaryUSA.com or follow him on Facebook @HeartlandDiaryUSA or on Twitter or Gettr @HeartlandDiary.

Fourth indictment a charm? Trump accused by Georgia grand jury

On Monday, Donald Trump faced his fourth indictment, this time concerning the 2020 Georgia election.

A grand jury in Fulton County, Georgia, charged the former president with 10 counts, alleging he tried to reverse the outcome of the 2020 presidential election in Georgia, which Joe Biden won by a slim margin.

The grand jury alleges Trump violated an anti-Mafia crime law similar to RICO, which stands for Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. It’s a passed by Congress in 1970 to battle organized crime. Most states, including Georgia, also have their own anti-racketeering laws.

Reuters reported that the Fulton County court’s website showed a document Monday prior to the official announcement of the indictment, which listed several criminal charges against Trump, “before taking the document down without explanation.” 

The document was dated Aug. 14, Reuters service said, adding that the document named Trump and listed the case as still open.

“Reuters was not immediately able to determine why the item was posted or removed,” Reuters wrote.

Eighteen other Trump World individuals were charged, including Mark Meadows, Trump’s former chief of staff; Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s former attorney and former New York City mayor; and several attorneys from the Trump Administration.

The investigation leading to the indictments began in February 2021, spearheaded by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. Willis, a Democrat, had promised to indict Trump when she ran for office in 2020.

Trump had a statement ready today: “Fulton County, GA’s radical Democrat DA Fani Willis is a rabid partisan who is campaigning and fundraising on a platform of prosecuting President Trump through these bogus indictments,” the statement read. “Ripping a page from Crooked Joe Biden’s playbook, Willis has strategically stalled her investigation to try and maximally interfere with the 2024 presidential race and damage the dominant Trump campaign. All of these corrupt Democrat attempts will fail.”

The charges Trump and his associates face include conspiracy to commit impersonation of a public officer, solicitation of violation of oath by public office, and false statements and writings. Read the indictment here:

On Monday night, Willis set a deadline of Aug. 25 for Trump and the 18 codefendants to voluntarily turn themselves in. Willis said she wants to begin trials of the 19 defendants within six months, and she has insisted that she is not motivated by politics.

Trump has also been charged in a New York State Supreme Court indictment with 34 counts of Falsifying Business Records in the First Degree. He surrendered to New York authorities in April for alleged “hush money” payment to a stripper. He was also charted in Washington, D.C. by federal prosecutors who say he attempted to interfere with the 2020 presidential election during the transfer of power.

Recess: EPA tours Alaska and talks to tribes, while partying Peltola punts

Environmental Protection Agency Regional Administrator for Region 10 Casey Sixkiller is in state this week, along with EPA’s #2 Deputy Administrator Janet McCabe and Jane Nashida, assistant administrator for tribal affairs.

The group is keenly interested and focused on tribal sovereignty, while reducing the State of Alaska departments to observer status during the meetings this week. Alaska’s Native Rep. Mary Peltola will miss these meetings, as she has been partying out of state.

On Monday, the EPA met with leaders in Alaska’s oil industry, including ConocoPhillips, Hilcorp, Santos, and Alyeska Pipeline Co. The group is heading to the North Slope to talk with tribes and review federally contaminated lands, and then to Southeast Alaska to focus on transboundary mining issues with Canada. Although Alaska has a transboundary working group, it appears to be cut out of the talks. The EPA has also been hearing about air quality in Fairbanks.

Steve Cohn, state director of Bureau of Land Management, has been part of the entourage.

Sixkiller was appointed Regional Administrator, Region 10, of the EPA by President Joe Biden in May 2022. In his role, Sixkiller oversees the EPA’s work across the states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Alaska, and 271 tribal nations, most of them in Alaska. He is an enrolled citizen of the Cherokee Nation.

Along with the EPA, Alaska is getting another big Biden Administration visitor this week, Secretary of transportation Pete Buttigieg. Alaska’s senators will be accompanying him in Kotzebue, Anchorage, and Southeast Alaska, but Peltola will not attend.

In addition to not showing up to help members of the Biden cabinet understand Alaska’s economy, Pelota was missing from meetings of her own House Infrastructure and Transportation Committee last week. Instead, Peltola has been attending parties out of state.

Litigation group wins in Montana court in case it lost in Alaska over climate change and the constitution

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A Montana court has ruled that the Big Sky state’s failure to consider climate change implications when approving fossil fuel projects is unconstitutional.

The decision comes on the heels of a nearly identical case that was lost by the same litigation group, Our Children’s Trust, in January of 2022, when Alaska justices ruled against it.

The Montana case, Held v. Montana, is seen as a win for environmentalists fighting oil, gas, and coal, which they say contributes to global warming.

“Today’s ruling in Montana marks a crucial turning point. As wildfires fueled by fossil fuel emissions devastate the West, this decision is emblematic of a broader change in perspective on the climate crisis,” said Julia Olson, of Our Children’s Trust. “This victory isn’t just for Montana but stands as a beacon for democracy, youth, and our planet. It’s a sign that more of these favorable rulings are on the horizon.”

Under the Montana’s judge’s directive, Montana must factor in climate change in any decisions related to fossil fuel projects.

Montana’s attorney general’s office will appeal the decision to the Montana Supreme Court.

“The ruling is a mere outcome of a week-long, taxpayer-funded show presented as a trial. Montanans shouldn’t be held accountable for global climate changes,” said Emily Flower, spokesperson for the attorney general. “Montanans can’t be blamed for changing the climate.”

“This legal battle is not an isolated incident. The Our Children’s Trust group is preparing to challenge the State of Alaska again this year after their previous defeat in Sagoonick v. State of Alaska,” said Attorney General Austin Knudsen.

The impending lawsuit in Alaska alleges that the State of Alaska’s promotion of fossil fuels aggravates the state’s climate issues, thus infringing on the constitutional rights of its younger citizens.

The Our Children’s Trust group argues that the Alaska State Constitution promises every Alaskan a stable climate and equal access to essential natural resources, which the present government is allegedly jeopardizing with its policies.

The earlier Sagoonick case saw the Alaska Supreme Court dismiss the lawsuit because the court, in a split decision, deemed the plaintiffs’ requests non-justiciable political questions, largely leaning on a precedent set in an earlier case.