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Report: Biden re-election bid to lean on army of free social media influencers

President Joe Biden has not yet announced his re-election intent, but when he does, it will include a battalion of social media influencers who won’t be paid but who will be given privileged and exclusive access to him and will even get their own private briefing room in the White House, separate from the White House press corps, according to the news site Axios.

The strategy is to help Biden overcome the reputation he has for being old and senile, and not appealing to young voters, who are seen as critical to his campaign. It’s also a recognition that former President Donald Trump has a huge social media following and Biden has a fraction.

Biden has 37.1 million followers on Twitter. Trump had 88.7 million followers by the time Twitter suspended his account in January 2021. He has been reinstated under the ownership of Elon Musk, and although the former president has not used Twitter since being banished and subsequently reinstated, his account still has 87.2 million followers. Trump has another 5.4 million followers on his own social media platform, TruthSocial. Biden has no account there.

Biden has 5.4 million followers on Facebook, while Trump has over 34 million followers. On Instagram, Biden does better, with 17.6 million followers to Trump’s 6.4 million.

According to Axios, Biden’s digital strategy team will romance influencers and independent content creators sympathetic to his campaign and who can reach young and suburban voters. Influencers mentioned include Harry Sisson, Heather Cox Richardson, and Vivian Tu. Tu and Sisson both have active TikTok presences and Richardson is widely read on Substack and Twitter.

Bob Flaherty, who is leading this effort, has been promoted to assistant to the president and holds the same ranking as the White House communications director and the press secretary.

“A dedicated White House briefing space for influencers to meet in person or by remote would be unprecedented — and a sign that the traditional Press Briefing Room no longer would be the administration’s only messaging center,” Axios said. “It also would give some influencers more consistent access to the president.”

More details are found in this story at Axios.

Barrier-to-work bill by Sen. Matt Claman: Interior designers to be registered by State of Alaska

Will that be a Viking or a Sub-Zero for that new kitchen? Granite counters or polished concrete? LED lights or incandescent?

Sen. Matt Claman has offered a bill creating yet another barrier to employment: He wants interior designers working in Alaska to be required to be licensed in Alaska through a board that now licenses architects and engineers.

According to Senate Bill 73, these interior designers would have their license overseen by a board. It’s not made clear in the bill if this is only applying to commercial interior design.

Unlike engineers and others who alter the structures of buildings, interior designers typically work in design centers of hardware stores, furniture stores, or often as independents who have business-to-business relationships with contractors. Some have had training and some even have associates or bachelors degrees in the field, which is all about aesthetics, safety, and functionality. Many come up through the trades, while others have related degrees, such as art history or even business.

The board that oversees engineers and architects would have authority over the qualifying, registration, and decertification of designers who pick curtains, bathroom fixtures, and bedroom ensembles.

Alaska does not currently require licensure or even offer registration to work as an interior designer and only a handful of states do require it for unsupervised commercial work, such as Louisiana, Florida, Nevada, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. Florida is considering deregulating the field, and it was even mentioned in Gov. Ron DeSantis’ state of the state speech.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor and Statistics says that the job description for interior designers is that they “make indoor spaces functional, safe, and beautiful by determining space requirements and selecting essential and decorative items, such as colors, lighting, and materials. They must be able to draw, read, and edit blueprints.”

The first hearing for the SB 73 will be in Senate Labor and Commerce Committee at 1:30 pm on Wednesday, April 12. It will be teleconferenced.

It’s unclear who is pushing the bill, which is meant to protect existing interior designers against those who might come into the profession by apprenticing or through their own gifts, but the American Society of Interior Design of Alaska is the likely suspect, as it hired veteran lobbyist David Parish to work on this bill last year.

Last week in New Mexico, a similar bill passed, requiring licenses for interior designers. It was signed into law by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham. The American Society of Interior Design got behind that bill and is pushing legislation across the country to fight the movement toward deregulation that has arisen and to support more regulations for interior designers in states like Alaska.

Senate Labor and Commerce members are Sens. Jesse Bjorkman, Click Bishop, Elvi Gray-Jackson, Kelly Merrick, and Forrest Dunbar.

‘Life Below Zero” Jessie Holmes wins Kobuk 440, toughest race above Arctic Circle

The toughest competitive event above the Arctic Circle is the Kobuk 440, a 189-mile race that starts in Kotzebue, turns in Kobuk, and ends in Kotzebue, belongs to Jessie Holmes this year.

Holmes came over the finish line just after 8:30 am on Easter Sunday. The temperature hovered around -21F, and is expected to get as high as -7F on Sunday.

Born and raised in Alabama, Holmes left home at 18 to head to Alaska. He made it as far as Montana, where he worked as a carpenter and saved money before heading to Alaska with his dog Freedom. He started running dogs on the Yukon River and competing. He won the Kobuk 440 in 2017, and was 7th in the Iditarod Sled Dog Race in 2018, as well as being named “Rookie of the Year” that year. He placed 3rd in the 2022 Iditarod and 5th in the 2023 Iditarod, which he finished less than a month ago on March 14, having raced for 9 days, 4 hours 8 minutes and 53 seconds, going from Willow to Nome.

Holmes lives in Nenana and makes a living as carpenter and TV personality. He has been featured on “Life below Zero,” a National Geographic series showing the daily lives of people living in Bush Alaska. Appearing on the show since 2015, he has become one of the most popular Alaskans and has a big social media following. He runs Can’t Stop Racing Kennels and his hobbies include running ultra-marathons, and subsistence hunting and fishing.

Hugh Neff, age 53, another legendary Alaska musher, is expected to make it to the finish line later today. Racers this year are Martin Early, Dempsey Woods, Hugh Neff, Kevin Hansen, Lauro Eklund, Jessi Downey, Jeff Deeter, Michelle Phillips, Jessie Holmes, Jim Bourquin, Richie Diehl, and Bailey Vitello.

Franciscan priests banned from providing pastoral care at Walter Reed Military Medical Center

It happened just before Holy Week: Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, the nation’s preeminent medical provider for veterans, issued a “cease and desist order” to Holy Name College, an order of Franciscan Catholic priests and brothers.

The cease and desist order says the priests cannot provide any religious services on the medical campus, and it was issued March 31, on the eve of the most sacred week of the Christian faith, when many Catholics attend services throughout the week to remember and pay tribute to the last days of Jesus as a mortal human. The week leads up to Easter Sunday.

The Franciscan brothers have provided pastoral care to service members and veterans at Walter Reed for nearly 20 years, according to the Archdiocese for Military Services.

The Franciscans’ contract for Catholic Pastoral Care was instead awarded to a secular defense contracting firm that cannot fulfill the statement of work in the contract, the Archdiocese reported. The Archdiocese did not name the secular agency.

“As a result, adequate pastoral care is not available for service members and veterans in the United States’ largest Defense Health Agency medical center either during Holy Week or beyond. There is one Catholic Army chaplain assigned to Walter Reed Medical Center, but he is in the process of separating from the Army,” the Archdiocese said.

“It is incomprehensible that essential pastoral care is taken away from the sick and the aged when it was so readily available.  This is a classic case where the adage ‘if it is not broken, do not fix it’ applies.  I fear that giving a contract to the lowest bidder overlooked the fact that the bidder cannot provide the necessary service.  I earnestly hope that this disdain for the sick will be remedied at once and their First Amendment rights will be respected,” said His Excellency, the Most Reverend Timothy P. Broglio, J.C.D., Archbishop for the Military Services.

Walter Reed issued a statement on Saturday that skirted the issue of why the relationship was ended:

“Tomorrow, Catholic Easter Services will be provided to those who wish to attend. Services will include a celebration of Mass and the administration of Confession by an ordained Catholic Priest,” the hospital statement said. “For many years, a Catholic ordained priest has been on staff at WRNMMC providing religious sacraments to service members, veterans and their loved ones. There has also been a pastoral care contract in place to supplement those services provided.

“Currently a review of the pastoral care contract is under review to ensure it adequately supports the religious needs of our patients and beneficiaries,” the hospital statement continued. “Although at this time the Franciscan Diocese will not be hosting services on Sunday parishioners of the Diocese while patients at our facilities may still seek their services.”

Elizabeth A. Tomlin, Esq., General Counsel of the Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA (AMS), has reached out to the contracting officers at Walter Reed numerous times throughout Holy Week asking for the Franciscans’ Catholic ministry to be reinstated at least through Easter. Walter Reed National Military Medical Center has not responded to these requests from the Archdiocese, she said.

“While Walter Reed’s chaplain office claims Catholic care is being provided during Holy Week, the AMS maintains that without Catholic priests present at the medical center, service members and veterans are being denied the constitutional right to practice their religion,” the organization said.

“Walter Reed National Military Medical Center is one of many medical centers within the Department of Defense and Defense Health Agency whose pastoral care lies within AMS jurisdiction. The refusal to provide adequate pastoral care while awarding a contract for Catholic ministry to a for-profit company that has no way of providing Catholic priests to the medical center is a glaring violation of service members’ and veterans’ Right to the Free Exercise of Religion. Especially, during Holy Week, the lack of adequate Catholic pastoral care causes untold and irreparable harm to Catholics who are hospitalized and therefore a captive population whose religious rights the government has a constitutional duty to provide for and protect,” the Franciscan order said.

The Franciscan Friars of Holy Name Province is the largest of the seven provinces belonging to the worldwide Order of Friars Minor in the United States. Since their founding in 1901, they continue the vocationally oriented St. Francis’s mission to make the Gospel message alive in the contemporary world. The Franciscans as a group of orders for both men and women were founded in 1209 by St. Francis of Assisi.

The Walter Reed Army Medical Center is located in Washington, D.C., and served more than 150,000 active and retired personnel from all branches of the United States, plus members of Congress and presidents.

Photo credit: Archdiocese of the Military. Archbishop Timothy Broglio (center) celebrates Ash Wednesday Mass at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, MD, on March 2, 2022.

Study: Nearly half of Gen Z is atheistic or agnostic, as mental health declines

By KATE ANDERSON | DAILY CALLER NEWS FOUNDATION

Nearly half of Generation Z does not identify as religious, according to a new study, and religious leaders that spoke to the Daily Caller News Foundation said the trend is not surprising because they have substituted church for “a new religion.”

Data published last week by the Cooperative Election Study found that 48.5% of Gen Z identifies as either agnostic, atheist or nonreligious, a 3% increase from the previous year and another study from last month found that only 31% believe religion is “very important.”

While the data did not delve into what has caused the rift between young people and religion, several experts that spoke with the DCNF had similar ideas about what is behind the split. (RELATED: Nearly A Third Of Americans Rank Evangelicals As The Most Unfavorable Religion: POLL)

“[I]t’s not that Gen Z isn’t religious, it’s that they picked a new religion,” Joshua Mercer, co-founder of the CatholicVote, told the DCNF. “They have fervent beliefs and rituals, they have their symbols and sacraments, and they definitely purge their ranks of ‘blasphemers’ or anyone insufficiently dedicated to their faith. Look at how every corporation rushes to embrace the rainbow flag every June and look at how people adorn their social media platforms with symbols to show solidarity with Black Lives Matter, Covid vaccination, Ukraine, or climate change. They are definitely evangelizing, [i]t’s just not Christianity.”

As faith has declined for Gen Z, so has mental health. Recent studies found that Gen Z reports the highest level of mental illness and suicidal ideation compared to other generations.

In 2022, a study revealed that 42% of Gen Z reported being diagnosed with a mental illness and 70% said that their mental health has gotten worse since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Read the rest of this story at The Daily Caller. Photo credit: Gunnar Klack, MIT Chapel

Read more about this topic at Religion in Public blog.

Workers in Alaska did better than inflation between 2012-2021

Wage increases in Alaska exceeded inflation for the decade between 2012 and 2021.

Alaska’s consumer price index for urban Alaska rose 15.2%, according to the Department of Labor, while average wages grew a remarkable 24%, from $50,097 to $62,123.

That adds up to a real gain of 7.7%, after price level changes are taken into account. Only during two years — 2013 and 2017 — did wage growth fail to keep pace with inflation.

The Department of Labor warns that high inflation in 2022 could gobble up some of those gains. The urban Alaska CPI rose 8.1% in 2022. Wage data for the full year aren’t yet available, but wage growth would have to accelerate rapidly to keep pace with inflation that high, the department said.

Kenai City Council decides not to lobby for more state funds for schools

The Kenai City Council has voted against a resolution that would have supported an increase in the funding formula for school districts around the state.

The resolution was offered by Councilman Henry Knackstedt, in response to an estimated $13 million budget deficit for the coming year.

The Legislature is unlikely to pass an increase to the formula, called the Base Student Allocation, because the state itself is facing a budget shortfall. Instead, the House is proposing a one time allocation that would be outside the BSA, as it has done in the past — adding more money for schools without committing itself in the future to a formula that might not be affordable.

The Soldotna City Council and the Kenai Peninsula Borough have passed resolutions in support of the higher amount of formula spending. But after a spirited debate, in which opponents pointed out that every year there are dire predictions of funding shortfalls, and that the BSA increase comes with no accountability, the majority of the council voted to postpone the item indefinitely.

Watch the debate at this link:

The Kenai City Council is comprised of a mayor, Brian Gabriel, and six council members who are elected at large by the residents of the City of Kenai. The vice mayor, currently James Baisden, is selected to serve a one-year term by council members shortly after the election.

Photo credit:  Tammy Vollom-Matturro

Anchorage activist files lawsuit against Assembly for Open Meetings Act violations

Citizen activist Russell Biggs has filed suit in Alaska Superior Court alleging the intentional destruction of public records and illegal use of secret messaging apps by members of the Anchorage Assembly. 

Biggs, who won a Supreme Court case in 2021 against municipal clerk Barbara Jones’s unlawful rejection of the recall petition of Meg Zaletel, alleges that members Chris Constant, Meg Zaletel, Kameron Perez-Verdia, and ex-assembly member Forrest Dunbar have violated the Alaska Public Records laws by erasing the electronic communications that were sent within assembly meetings that were coordinating the vote. 

The lawsuit alleges that destruction of those records and the intentional use of secret messaging apps were an attempt to hide “serial communications” that would violate the Open Meetings Act. 

Biggs had filed two separate lawsuits last year related to Anchorage Municipal Clerk Barbara Jones’ failure to provide emails from the Assembly that involved communications with Matthew Beck, the ex-Alaska Democratic Party’s communication director who was publishing anonymous articles with the Anchorage Press that were highly critical of the recall petition. Those two suits were settled by the municipal attorney and the records were eventually produced.

“This is an important case,” Biggs said, “because Forrest Dunbar has admitted using the secret messaging App signal at the same time Chris Constant, Meg Zaletel, and Kameron Perez-Verdia were intentionally deleting public records that showed they were secretly coordinating the vote. We have proof this was happening in the Assembly meetings, and this lawsuit will start the process that will eventually hold them accountable for that.”

Biggs also stated that “deleting documents specifically to avoid discovery in court is considered spoliation of evidence and is reason for court sanctions. The 2019 federal district court ruling was clear that a litigant’s use of ephemeral messaging apps like Wickr and Signal is by itself evidence of bad faith sufficient to warrant sanctions. Forrest Dunbar is claiming that because someone tried to hack his phone he gets to completely ignore Alaska Statute and Meg Zaletel is claiming that a system update to her phone erased all of her records except the personal ones she decided to save. Ridiculous.”

The lawsuit’s claim that the records would show serial communications that violate the Open Meetings Act is a serious breach of Alaska Statute. 

A similar violation resulted in the recall of three Palmer city council members last year. 

Bio-male wins women’s golf trophy

Breanna Gill, a biological male impersonating a female identity, won the Australian Women’s Classic golf tournament this week, adding yet another trophy to biological males who are competing in women’s competitions as women.

Gill has been playing in professional women’s tournaments for eight years, and this was his first win on the women’s circuit. The WPGA ended up taking its Twitter account private after a backlash of rebuke from the public, including what the association said were hate messages.

The Australia Women’s Classic was held April 2 in New South Wales. Gill was ranked No. 393 in the Rolex Women’s Golf Rankings going into the tournament.

“It’s the biggest win of her life. It’s really sad that she can’t celebrate that win,” WPGA Tour of Australasia Chief Karen Lunn said, as reported in The Sydney Morning Herald.

Gill is not the first transgender to win a golf tournament in the women’s division. In 2021,  Hailey Davidson, a Scottish pro golfer, won in a mini tour in the United States, after transitioning to female appearance in 2015. Gill has not revealed at what age he transitioned to his current female appearance.

Photo: WPGA

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