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Trump slams former press secretary Kayleigh McEnany

Presidential candidate Donald Trump called his former spokeswoman “Milktoast” and slammed her for giving out what he said were wrong polling numbers on FoxNews.

“Kayleigh ‘Milktoast’ McEnany just gave out the wrong poll numbers on FoxNews. I am 34 points up on DeSanctimonious, not 25 up. While 25 is great, it’s not 34. She knew the number was corrected upwards by the group that did the poll,” Trump wrote Tuesday evening on his social media site, Truth Social. “The RINOS & Globalists can have her. FoxNews should only use REAL Stars!!!”

Trump refers to Gov. Ron DeSantis as “DeSanctimonious.” DeSantis is his top challenger for the Republican nomination for president.

McEnany said on the “Jesse Watters Primetime” show that Trump’s lead over DeSantis had fallen from 34 points to 25 points in Iowa.

According to U.S. News, Trump leads the field of possible Republican presidential candidates in Iowa with 62% of voters’ support, compared with DeSantis’ 20%, a more than 42% difference.

However, an Emerson College survey show 49% of Iowa voters support Trump, with 38% supporting Biden in a general election. But if the general election had DeSantis vs. Biden, 45% would vote for DeSantis and 38% would vote for Biden.

She was Trump’s White House press secretary from April of 2020 to January of 2021 and was one of his fiercest defenders.

McEnany then went to Fox News, where she is a frequent guest host on The Ingraham Angle, Jesse Watters Primetime, The Five and Fox & Friends.

Photo credit: Gage Skidmore, Surprise, Arizona

Dunleavy’s former family advisor tells his critics to ‘f*&k off’

Jeremy Cubas, who served as a photographer for Gov. Mike Dunleavy before being promoted to the position of a policy adviser making over $110,000 a year, posted a video on Twitter on Wednesday in response to critics of his controversial views: He wants them to “Do everybody a favor and f*&k off.”

A long story Tuesday in Alaska Public Media chronicles the bizarre views of a man who was in the inner circle of influence with the governor. It shocks the sensibilities to read that he feels women want to be raped, and that rape is part of the marital contract.

“I don’t think it’s possible to rape your wife. I think that’s an impossible act,” he says on his podcast, which can be found at this link.

Cubas is also an adjunct professor at University of Alaska Anchorage, where he has taught philosophy as late as this year.

His expletive-laden on-the-record comments about his firing follow. Be advised: Content is spicy:

Alex Gimarc: High-density living comes to Anchorage?

By ALEX GIMARC

One of my correspondents sent out a blast e-mail last week, warning about AO 2023-66, a change in Anchorage municipal code relating to zoning of residential districts and waiving planning and zoning commission review process. 

The ordinance was first heard May 23. The Muni press release 5/23/23 can be found here. It says that the ordinance will be heard at the next regular Assembly meeting, July 25.  Whether that happens then or earlier is anyone’s guess.

A major rewrite of Anchorage zoning law during the summer while everyone is out fishing raises a red flag. Assemblywoman Meg Zaletel’s fingerprints on it raises that flag much higher, especially after she has left town for the next month or so.  

The problem comes down to trust. Do we trust this Assembly majority to do the right thing, as in take testimony, address concerns, and modify their proposal as necessary? Or do we trust them to simply shove whatever they want down our throats regardless of what we want them to do just like they have done with the homeless problem, Covid lockdowns, and spending over the last several years? 

Sadly, my dime on them doing what they do best, the cram-down technique.

The press release defines the problem as a housing crisis, with land use restrictions contributing to the issue. Solution in this ordinance? Higher density housing city wide.  A page and a half of WHEREAS clauses fall all over themselves touting the joys of increasing residential density.  

OK, problem stated, and Assembly solution proposed. The problem with this is that they completely ignore the deeper problem, opting instead to deal with the symptom (housing crisis). This is sort of like treating swelling around a broken leg as a problem rather than the broken leg.  

But what is causing the housing crisis? At its most basic, the housing crisis is caused by lack of land to build new homes on in the Anchorage Bowl. This has been a known issue for the last 30 years (or more), and to be expected in a chunk of land bounded by a National Forest and Cook Inlet. Happily, there are several hundred square miles of mostly empty land available right across Cook Inlet at Point Mackenzie available for building.  

How to get to that land? The Knik Arm Bridge, the same bridge Sen. Ted Stevens had funding for in 2008. The same bridge Sarah Palin killed in 2008. The same bridge every single Democrat in this town has opposed for the last two decades.  

The two Assembly members offering the high-density residency as a “solution” completely ignore both the underlying problem and the simple solution, opting instead to blow up planning and zoning rules so that it is easier to cram us all together like rabbits in a warren, bringing all the family unfriendly blue inner-city pathologies here to Anchorage.  Quite the solution, that.

No discussion about why the current planning and zoning system no longer works. No discussion about why the planning and zoning commission review is no longer necessary.  No discussion of any other solutions that don’t involve high density housing. No discussion about the local impact of the nationwide crash in commercial real estate that is working its way north.  

High density housing is what they want. And with this majority, this is what they are going to try to get, property rights of homeowners now irrelevant.  

Bad legislation is proposed to solve a symptom rather than the actual problem, which will work out for homeowners just as well as Assembly efforts to solve the ongoing homeless problem for the last decade. 

Like homelessness, it’s going to be difficult to agree on a solution if you can’t even acknowledge what the actual problem is.  

Alex Gimarc lives in Anchorage since retiring from the military in 1997. His interests include science and technology, environment, energy, economics, military affairs, fishing and disabilities policies. His weekly column “Interesting Items” is a summary of news stories with substantive Alaska-themed topics. He was a small business owner and information technology professional.

KINY deal goes through; new owners are based in Bakersfield

A California company has completed the purchase of KINY AM radio in Juneau, as well as TAKU 105 FM, as part of a purchase of over two dozen radio stations around the west.

Six commercial radio stations in Juneau were previously owned by Frontier Media, whose principals, Richard and Sharon Burns, were Australians who were the first foreigners to own U.S. broadcast licenses.

BTC USA Holdings Management Inc. of Bakersfield, Calif. is the new owner of KINY, KSUP, KXXJ, and KTKU. The $1.3 million deal includes a group of stations in Texarkana, Texas.

The new company is led by KUZZ Bakersfield morning host Cliff Dumas.

“Dumas will own 80 percent of the new company through his Broadcast 2 Podcast Inc. with the Bryan Woodruff-led Local First Media Group holding the other 20 percent. In addition to hosting mornings at KUZZ, Dumas has also hosted mornings at KRST Albuquerque and spent a decade at KSON San Diego. Dumas is a member of the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame for hosting mornings at KHAM Hamilton and CISS-FM Toronto, was the voice of CMT Canada and the Canadian Country Music Awards, and produced and hosted many Canadian Country music specials,” reported RadioInsight.com, in October.

“I’m thrilled to now be part of the ownership group of 23 radio stations in 5 states,” Dumas wrote on Facebook this week.

Don Bateman, Alaska aviation safety pioneer who invented Ground Proximity Warning System passes, 91

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A retired engineer who is credited with saving more lives than anyone else in aviation history has died.

For more than 50 years, Bateman led engineers at the company now knows as Honeywell International, creating GPS systems that combine squawks, warnings, and flashing lights to tell pilots if their plane is heading into a mountain or other obstacle.

Don Bateman’s life work brought him to Alaska after the 1971 crash of an Alaska Airlines Boeing 727 jet on a mountain near Juneau.

“He has probably saved more lives than anyone else in modern aviation history,” said William Voss, former chief executive officer of the Flight Safety Foundation, as quoted in the Wall Street Journal, which ran a full news story about his death.

On Sept. 4, 1971, an Alaska Airlines Boeing 727 approaching Juneau International Airport crashed into the Chilkat mountain range, killing all 111 people on board.

Bateman flew up to Alaska after the crash and surveyed the wreckage, which to this day remains Alaska’s worst air disaster.

“It had a big visual and mental impact on me,” he later told the Seattle Times. “That energized us engineers. It was, ‘Hey, we’ve got to do something better.’”

Bateman flew the path of Flight 1866 in a small plane that carried the device he had invented, later called the Ground Proximity Warning System. As they came close to the mountain, the device warning activated, and as the “terrain ahead — pull up!” warning went off, the pilot pulled the plane up and avoided the collision.

Since that system has been implemented, there have been few major commercial airline crashes due to “controlled flight into terrain,” which was the major cause of crashes before the FAA mandated the system in 2001.

In fact, throughout the 1960s and 1970s, one controlled flight into terrain occurred every month. Now, they rarely occur.

Bateman also invented other warnings for wind shear and for planes that are at risk of overshooting a runway on landing or that wander into the wrong runway before takeoff or on landing, the Wall Street Journal reported.

In 2011, President Barack Obama awarded Bateman the National Medal of Technology and Innovation. After retiring in 2016, Bateman died on May 21, 2023 at 91. He had suffered from Parkinson’s disease.

“I would give Don individual credit for having saved more lives than any other individual in the history of commercial aviation,” said Earl Weener, of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board and former chief engineer for safety at Boeing Company, as reported by Bloomberg in 2016.

“RIP, Don, what a tremendous contributor to aviation safety. I saw him in action first hand when I worked for Boeing. Countless lives saved!” wrote William Royce in response to the news of Bateman’s passing.

“I first heard of Don Bateman, and met him in person, in about 1994. Over the ensuing years, and till my (temporary?) departure from the airline world in April 2010, I have had many occasions to interact with him. Each such encounter had a profound impact on me. I could hardly believe that a man with an international reputation would accommodate me without in any way being patronising. He invariably made me feel that I really mattered to him — that it was worth his while holding discussions with me. And as a bonus, my technical repertoire was always enhanced by each of our encounters,” wrote J.T. Joseph, formerly of Singapore Aviation, in 2016.

Thanks to this man, airplanes don’t crash into mountains

Chinese spies posing as tourists are in Alaska: USA Today

According to USA Today, Chinese citizens posing as tourists visiting Alaska may actually be spies who are trying to gain access to U.S. military facilities.

“In one incident, a vehicle with Chinese citizens blew past a security checkpoint at Fort Wainwright in Fairbanks, several soldiers told USA TODAY. The vehicle was eventually stopped, and a search found a drone inside the vehicle. The occupants claimed they were tourists who had gotten lost,” the newspaper reported.

“Many of the encounters have been chalked up to innocent mistakes by foreign visitors intent on viewing the Northern Lights and other attractions in Alaska, officials say. Other attempts to enter U.S. military bases, however, seem to be probes to learn about U.S. military capabilities in Alaska, according to multiple soldiers familiar with the incidents but who were not authorized to speak publicly about them,” the newspaper reported.

Not everyone who appear to be tourists in Alaska, are, in fact tourists, one Army officer told the newspaper. Instead, they are foreign spies.

In January, a Chinese spy balloon entered U.S. Air Defense Zone off of the Aleutian Islands and traveled across Alaska. The Biden Administration allowed the balloon to proceed across the country until it reached the Atlantic Ocean, where it was finally destroyed over water.

“Whether it’s a Chinese spy balloon, Russian Bear Bombers, or this new reporting of suspected Chinese spies in Alaska, this is another wake-up call that we are in a new era of authoritarian aggression led by dictators in China and Russia. It’s also another example of just how important Alaska is for America’s national defense. In my oversight, I am pressing for more details on these alleged security breaches and will continue to work with the Defense Department to ensure our installations in Alaska remain secure,” said Sen. Dan Sullivan in a statement.

In 2020, a rash of suspected Chinese spy incidents took place in Florida. A Chinese woman entered the grounds of Mar-a-Lago through the service entrance, possibly passing as staff, and took photos with her cell phone. She was the second Chinese woman to try that stunt in a year.

Eight days later, a Chinese man walked around the fence of the U.S. Naval Base Air Station Key West, and took pictures of the base buildings.

Nine days after that, two Chinese students were stopped at the Key West base after they were seen taking photos of the base.

Alaska’s bases, which are spread over vast landscapes, are apparently not immune to spying, although the USA Today story is not quoting named sources.

Federal authorities are working to answer those questions, according to the newspaper. FBI counterintelligence agents are investigating whether the spate of incidents might be part of a coordinated espionage effort.

Former Gov. Bill Walker, seen above greeting China President Xi Jinping to Alaska in 2017, used his term in office to try to make a deal with China to finance and help build an Alaska gasline, and he was preparing to seal a deal to sell most of Alaska’s natural gas to China.

 The Chinese government, which signed loan agreements with Walker in 2017, would have established Alaska as a “debt trap” province of communist Chinese entities.

China began spying on State of Alaska computers during Walker’s overtures to President Xi Jinping, as part of Walker’s quest to get financing for the Alaska Gasline.

Photo: Gov. Bill Walker welcomes China President Xi Jinping to Alaska in 2017.

McCarthy confident he has votes to pass debt ceiling bill, but first must pass rule hurdle

The deal aimed at raising the national debt ceiling by trillions of dollars has made progress by advancing through the House Rules Committee.

The bill barely passed by a 7-6 vote, with two Republicans crossing party lines to join Democrats in opposing the bill: Rep. Chip Roy of Texas and Ralph Norman of South Carolina. The two said the bill doesn’t have enough spending cuts.

Conservative Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky voted in favor of moving the bill to the House for a full vote Wednesday evening. Massie usually votes with Roy and Norman.

The Democrats have vowed to block a procedural vote on a rule rule governing the debt ceiling increase final vote. McCarthy can lose only five Republicans and still pass the rule if Democrats try to block passage. Republicans need 218 of their members to vote for the rule to advance to the final vote.

“In regards to the rule, it’s very simple: The majority is responsible for passing the rule,” Democrat Rep. Katherine Clark of Massachusetts, told a scrum of reporters. Clark is the Democratic whip.

The bill helps the federal government avoid default by raising the amount of money it can borrow. The debt limit would be increased for two years. It puts limits on discretionary spending that Congress does each year. It also puts sideboards on the president’s ability to spend without congressional approval, and it claws back unspent Covid-19 funds that was appropriated but is unspent. There is also a small amount of welfare reform and some minor loosening of federal permitting requirements that slow the economy down.

China refuses to meet with U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin

The People’s Republic of China has declined an invitation from Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to meet with his counterpart in Singapore while an annual global security conference is under way.

“Overnight, the PRC informed the U.S. that they have declined our early May invitation for Secretary Austin to meet with PRC Minister of National Defense Li Shangfu in Singapore this week,” Pentagon Press Secretary Pat Ryder said in a statement, as reported first by the Wall Street Journal. “The Department believes strongly in the importance of maintaining open lines of military-to-military communication between Washington and Beijing to ensure that competition does not veer into conflict.”

Chinese Embassy Spokesman Liu Pengyu told the Wall Street Journal that the U.S. was “seeking to suppress China through all possible means and continue imposing sanctions on Chinese officials, institutions and companies.”

In 2017, then-Gov. Bill Walker of Alaska had all-but sealed a deal with the government of China and its government-owned banks and financial institutions to help Alaska build a gasline, from which the majority of natural gas from Alaska would be sold to the Chinese.

Orca-strated: Eco lawsuit has win in Washington, but Alaska appeals ruling harming Southeast troll fishery

An environmental group that blames Alaska salmon fishing for the decline of Washington-area orcas won another day in court last week. On Friday, U.S. District Court Judge Richard Jones of Seattle denied the State of Alaska’s request for a stay of Jones’ May 2 order vacating the “incidental take statement” for the Southeast Alaska winter and summer commercial Chinook salmon troll fishery.

The document would give these fisheries coverage for the incidental “take” of species listed under the Endangered Species Act. The judge’s order has the practical effect of closing the directed summer and winter Chinook troll fisheries until a new ITS is in place.

Wild Fish Conservancy sued the National Marine Fisheries Service, alleging violations of the Endangered Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act. The group says that Southeast Alaska troll fisheries are at fault for the decreasing population of Washington and Oregon Chinook salmon and the Southern Resident Killer whales off the coasts of Washington, Oregon, and Canada.

Troll fishing is one of the least intensive forms of commercial salmon harvesting.

The environmental industry plaintiffs make no mention of the major dams that Washington and Oregon have built over the many years that have cut off those states’ own supply of salmon.

The State of Alaska quickly filed an appeal to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and is filing a motion for stay of the judge’s order. 

The State is requesting a decision by June 23 so that the fishermen can gear up for the summer season, which starts on July 1.

“Vacating the ITS and effectively closing the fishery spawn disaster for Southeast Alaska’s economy and way of life while providing no meaningful benefit to the endangered Southern
Resident killer whales,” said Alaska Fish and Game Commissioner Doug Vincent-Lang.

“Troll fishing for Chinook is critical to Southeast Alaska’s economy, local government, and culture. It is a way of life. And we intend to do everything we can to defend our fisheries.”
Vincent-Lang added, “the district court singled out an Alaskan fishery to shoulder the entire burden of conservation, while other fisheries, notably those occurring along the Pacific Northwest coast that have disproportionately higher levels of impact, are left untouched and unrestricted. This is unequitable and unfathomable. If this ruling sticks, we will be looking at having all fisheries treated equally.”