Gay candidate says LGBTQ candidates need to be elected in SD so the transgendered can play on female sports teams.

There’s an article on political website “the Hill” website in the last couple of days where District 10 Democrat legislative candidate Kameron Nelson is declaring that South Dakota needs LGBTQ candidates elected to Pierre to stop the state from barring men playing on women’s sports teams.

Some of those bills, including measures in Louisiana and South Dakota barring transgender women and girls from playing on female sports teams, have already become law.

“Unfortunately, that’s not going to change until we have representation,” Kameron Nelson, an openly gay man running for a seat in the South Dakota House, told Changing America.

Nelson, 32, a Democrat and South Dakota native, said conservative elected officials in the state have for years been embracing anti-LGBTQ+ policies as a way to ignite their base.

Read it all here.

The problem with Nelson’s argument is that when you start making a campaign about one’s sexual preference, and claiming that electing someone on that basis is going to affect legislation, one really has nothing to do with the other. And it certainly didn’t when the South Dakota legislature previously had someone providing LGBTQ Representation.

In 2013, Democrat State Senator (at the tIme) Angie Buhl O’Donnell came out and declared that she was “first openly LGBT person elected to any office in the state.”  During her tenure, back in 2015 and 2016, is when South Dakota began digging into legislative intervention in addressing how the High School Activities Association should handle boys wanting to play in girls sports.  The measure passed both houses, only to be vetoed by Governor Daugaard because it “did not address any pressing issue concerning the school districts of South Dakota.”

Literally, the passage of the bill through both houses, as well as the Governor’s veto, really had nothing to do with whether someone in the Senate was LGBTQ, versus the Governor making his own decision, and not believing it needed to rise to the level of legislation.

That’s one of the problem with campaigning based on identity politics. Reality doesn’t always follow political posturing.

21 years later, remembering 9/11, and some of the lessons that might be good to remember.

21 years later, remembering 9/11

9/11 is always an odd day for me, as in the midst of remembering one of the nation’s greatest tragedies as one of the few times that our country had been attacked on our own soil, it shares a date with my oldest son’s birth.

A son who is taking a day off from serving our country in the US Navy to enjoy an afternoon of being “of age” in an Irish Pub in Norfolk.  I’m glad to hear him enjoying himself, as it should be a good day for him,  with nothing to look forward to but a future of service and hope.

Because 21 years ago, we were a nation in shock, not knowing what was going to happen next. Our center of trade in New York City was under attack. Our nation’s Capitol City was under attack, and another plane was downed in the midst of another attack.  Yet, for me, it was a time of happiness as much as shock, as I witnessed the birth of my eldest son For me, the story of his birth is forever connected to that day of tragedy, as I repeat this column that I first wrote many years ago.

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My kids were at school or at daycare, and my father, who was out of town was expected home that day from visiting a brother and sister in New Jersey. He was to going to be on a flight in the morning out of the Newark, N.J. airport, into Minneapolis. My mother, who had doted on her granddaughters, had passed away the previous November, and this was to be the first child born into the family that she would not see.

As my wife lay there having contractions, I walked out into the hallway where I noticed some floor nurses paying unusual attention to the television. They seemed awestruck, and as I walked over they noted that a plane had flown into one of the World Trade Center towers. It seemed a horrific accident until shortly after when another jet crashed into the other tower.

It was unheard of in nearly any of our lifetimes, and every medical professional on the hospital floor was abuzz with what was going on. On television, it quickly escalated when reports were coming in from all over of other possible planes being hijacked, and there wasn’t a soul who wasn’t glued to the television.

The military was on high alert, and planes were being grounded and there wasn’t a second of television that was not fully enveloped with the news. I had some troubled thoughts since my father was also to be flying that day, but my primary concern was for my wife.

I would bounce from attending to my wife, and checking updates of the events. I had noted to her a little of what was going on, but wisely she refused to allow the television to be turned on in her hospital suite, and said she didn’t want to know, because she had other business to attend to. And she was moving into more serious labor.

About that time, it was announced that yet another plane had been flown into a section of the Pentagon. Clearly, our nation was under attack, and there was worry written on everyone’s face.  The OB doctors came into the birthing suite and attended to my wife as professionally as could be, despite the distraction of the historic events of the moment. And all staff was in place as my wife gave birth.

After relatively short session of pushing, the baby was born. As my wife had previously given birth to four girls, a cheer went up from the staff as the Doctor announced that my wife had given birth to a boy. She held her first son in her arms for a moment, and the doctors took care of the rest of the business involved in childbirth.

It was a boy! While I love my daughters unquestioningly, and they give me great pride, I’d always longed for a son.

My son was as healthy as could be, and his mother was also doing exceptionally well. As things settled down, and as my exhausted wife began to recover, we turned on the television and discovered that the World Trade Center Towers had fallen. And we also heard the news of a plane out of the Newark Airport that was hijacked had crashed in Pennsylvania.

About that time, I had a call on my cell phone from my father who was noting the absolute pandemonium at the Newark Airport, and his good fortune to get a rental car to travel back to his sisters’. He was safe, and pleased at the news of the birth of his first grandson.

As I got off the phone and the television news recounted and repeated the tragic events of the morning, a lullaby played over the speakers in the hospital. A lullaby. At St. Mary’s Hospital in Pierre, after the birth of a child it has been their tradition for a number of years to play a lullaby to announce the joyful event.

It was a bit surreal. Amidst all of the pain and carnage of the day, a lullaby announcing the birth of a child.

For a while, I sat with my wife, and then I’d go back and check on my son. I’d do this for a while, alternating between my two family members. After an hour or so, there was another lullaby played over the hospital. And I believe I heard another one a couple of hours after that.

The thing that struck me about that day, with my son being born between the time the Pentagon was hit, and the twin towers came down was this: Hope is eternal.

And it’s an appropriate thought on this day when we remember when so many people died. It’s appropriate on a day when soldiers are fighting and dying for the right of a country to be free. It’s appropriate to remember on a day when we are only starting to count our dead countrymen struck down from a tragic natural disaster. (At the time this was written, the hurricane had just hit New Orleans – pp)

No matter how bad things seem, they will be better. The lullabies playing a duet with the television newscasts taught me that. So has my son.  Hope is eternal. Please remember that and offer your thoughts, prayers, and moral support today for the casualties of 9/11 and our soldiers.

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21 years later, the lesson we should be taking from 9/11 is that no matter how divided we can be, there are times we can come together as a country to support our fellow man. 

That lesson seems to be something that’s been moved to the back of our collective psyche as at times we spend more time bickering than remembering we are one country, and there are far worse enemies than someone across town, down the street, or even next door that we might disagree with over politics.

US Senator John Thune’s Weekly Column: A Slap in the Face

A Slap in the Face
By Sen. John Thune

On August 24, eight days after signing the so-called Inflation Reduction Act into law, President Biden announced that with a stroke of his pen, he would authorize a student loan giveaway of up to $10,000 in qualifying student loan debt for most borrowers and up to $20,000 for borrowers who received Pell Grants. Eight days. That’s how long it took President Biden to completely erase any of the supposed deficit reduction included in Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act.

I want to be very clear about this: Despite what the president and other Democrats might say, not one penny of debt is being “canceled” or “forgiven.” This debt is being transferred from the 13 percent of the country with student loan debt to the 87 percent of the country that does not have student debt. It’s a slap in the face and blatantly unfair to expect Americans who either never went to college, paid off their loans, or paid their way through college to shoulder the cost of other Americans’ loans that they agreed to pay back. What about all the parents who scrimped and saved to send their children to college, or the students who chose a lower-cost college or worked to put themselves through? Not to mention the men and women in the military who fought for this country and earned money for their college education.

The president’s plan isn’t even targeted to the people who need it most. Families making $250,000 – nearly four times as much as the average household – will now be eligible to have their obligation to repay student loans erased. Instead of focusing on ways to control the rising cost of college education, President Biden’s decision will provide a disincentive for colleges to lower costs for students, and it will likely encourage students to incur even more debt, since he has now set up an expectation that the government will step in and write a check. Also, given the fact that student loan debt is expected to be back to its current level in six years, I imagine we will be hearing more Democrat calls for student loan “forgiveness” in the very near future.

Our country is in the middle of the highest inflationary period in four decades, and families are already struggling with high grocery bills, high energy bills, and high rent prices – largely because of Democrats’ big-government, big-spending agenda. Instead of focusing on policies that would help lower inflation for American families, President Biden instead chose to pursue policies, like the unprecedented bailout of student loan debt, in order to appease the radical wing of the Democrat Party. To add insult to injury, according to the Penn Wharton Budget Model, this bailout could cost taxpayers more than $1 trillion over the next decade, which would only pour gasoline on the inflationary fire.

While President Biden’s reckless student loan plan may buy him a vote or two, a lot of other Americans may decide that they’ve had their fill of inflationary spending, soaring prices, and far-left appeasement.

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Flags at Half-Staff in Honor of Queen Elizabeth II 

 

Flags at Half-Staff in Honor of Queen Elizabeth II

PIERRE, S.D. – PIERRE, S.D. – Today, Governor Kristi Noem ordered that flags be flown at half-staff statewide effective immediately until sunset on the day of internment in honor of former Queen Elizabeth II.

“Her Majesty saw so many triumphs and tragedies in her 96 years on earth,” said Governor Kristi Noem. “She was royalty who could walk with the common man. May she Rest in Peace.”

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Student Loan forgiveness may fuel boom in comic book market, as COVID stimulus funds did

How is Student Loan forgiveness potentially going to affect the country?

According to one source, it might just fuel a boom for those who deal in comic books.

Seem like a silly argument? Well, COVID stimulus was behind significantly increased comic values for those who buy and sell or otherwise invest in vintage comics.

And there’s a strong possibility that student loan forgiveness might drive up values for my collection, and make it tougher to buy those back issues I had when I was a kid.  According to Comic Book value website “Go Collect”:

As we all know, the pandemic and federal stimulus sparked the largest one-year jump in comic book values in history. While we can’t attribute the boom entirely to stimulus checks, it would surprise no one if comic book investors used that extra cash to buy key issues they couldn’t afford in the past.

and..

..millions of Americans, and thousands of comic book investors, just had millions of dollars of student loan debt wiped off their ledgers. Just as investors spent their stimulus checks on comic books, it’s likely they may do so again since their discretionary budgets just received an unexpected boost. In addition, since the comic book market is currently in a bear market, these investors who are now flush with cash have financial incentives to “buy the dip.”

The confluence of these two factors, relatively low values and larger discretionary budgets, could fuel another comic book boom.

Read the entire post here.

I can confirm prices on comics seem to have gone crazy. As I notice that some things that I’d left in a box in the garage for years now were potentially worth $50 or $100, and some books that sold a few years ago in the local comic store were now on their shelf behind the counter for over $1000, there are definitely collectors with cash to burn who are driving prices up.

Some might say that the latest runs on the market are courtesy of tax dollars being shifted to people who are spending it on the important things.

Like that back issue of Spider-Man that they had to have.

Governor Kristi Noem’s Weekly Column: Defending our Constitution

Defending our Constitution
By: Governor Kristi Noem
September 9, 2022

Our nation loves to celebrate holidays. Today, I want to talk about one day that does not get enough attention: September 17, Constitution Day.

On September 17, 1787, our Founding Fathers signed the document that has shaped our nation ever since: the U.S. Constitution. Over the last couple years, I have spoken many times about upholding the Constitution, and about how South Dakota is setting an example for the nation that constitutional principles still work. Some might think that I even talk about it too much – but there’s a reason why I do. That reason is best articulated by a story from another September 17.

To this day, September 17, 1862, remains the bloodiest 24 hours in American history. On that day, the Battle of Antietam was fought during the Civil War, and an estimated 23,000 young American men were killed or wounded.

What were those men fighting for? Our Constitution. It mattered to them. It mattered to those who were fighting to preserve our Union. The Confederacy had attempted to break the Constitution by seceding, and the men defending our Union were determined to uphold it.

There is a scene from this battle recorded by one anonymous soldier. As one of the regiments was, for the second time, entering the conflict, one soldier staggered. But he was not wounded – he had just seen his father lying dead upon the battlefield.

Another man, who knew them both, pointed to his father’s corpse and then pointed upwards. He said, “It is alright with him,” and the son continued with him into the battle. He passed his father’s dead body and did his duty to defend our Constitution.

We must exhibit the same bravery and sense of duty in defending our Constitution and the principles that our nation was founded on. We must do it even when it isn’t popular. We must do it because it is the right thing to do.

South Dakota has done this time and time again. When other states were destroying the Freedom of Religion, South Dakota never ordered a single church to close. When others were attacking the Freedom of Assembly, South Dakota allowed people to make their own decisions about who to gather with. When other states – and the federal government – tried to tear down the 2nd Amendment, South Dakota set the standard for defense of the right to keep and bear arms. I have always remained focused on what authorities I have and do not have – and I will continue to do so for as long as I am Governor.

The principles that our Founding Fathers followed in creating our Constitution – Freedom, Equality, Opportunity – these are still the most powerful forces known to man to make all of us safer, stronger, and healthier. South Dakota will continue to stand for these principles, and I will continue to stand for our Constitution.

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Congressman Dusty Johnson’s Weekly Column: There’s No Place Like Home

There’s No Place Like Home
By Rep. Dusty Johnson
September 9, 2022

The August District Work Period is coming to a close, and next week Members of the House head back to D.C. for votes.

August was full of meetings in South Dakota with constituents, community leaders, small business owners, and more. I hosted town halls, visited county fairs, honored veterans, and toured businesses.

My meetings took me all over the state—from Spearfish to North Sioux City and St. Francis to Frederick—let’s just say I had a lot of time in the car.

Some of my favorite stops?

  1. Touring Anthem Oats in Frederick—their story of a five-generation family farmstead is rooted in South Dakota values and tradition. The Sumption family grows the Rushmore variety of oats that was developed at SDSU. They value quality from start to finish and they support other American family-owned businesses in the process. Not to mention how delicious these oats are!
  2. Seeing the newest innovation for the ag industry at DakotaFest.
  3. Visiting Silencer Central when they were named one of America’s fastest growing companies.
  4. Honoring hundreds of Vietnam Veterans at Vietnam Veteran Pinning Ceremoniesacross the state. Each veteran had an opportunity for their unique story to be recognized and received thanks and gratitude for their service.
  5. Touring Albany Farms in Belle Fourche—after encountering supply chain disruptions in California, Albany Farms decided to relocate its ramen noodle production to South Dakota, and we are happy to have them. Their new facility will bring 150 jobs to Belle Fourche.

While I have meetings regularly in South Dakota throughout the year, being home for the whole month of August was a great opportunity to have more visits. There truly is no place like home.

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Release: Attorney General Mark Vargo announces that Hughes County State’s Attorney Jessica LaMie will investigate Government Accountability Board complaint

Attorney General Mark Vargo announces that Hughes County State’s Attorney Jessica LaMie will investigate Government Accountability Board complaint 

PIERRE, S.D. – The South Dakota Government Accountability Board has informed the Office of the Attorney General that it has voted to refer Complaint No. 2021-04 involving South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem to the Attorney General’s office for investigation by the Division of Criminal Investigation. The board has done so without making any findings based on its statutory authority to refer any investigation, report or complaint it receives to the Division of Criminal Investigation.

The Division of Criminal Investigation will promptly review and investigate this matter. Gov. Noem appointed Attorney General Vargo to his post in June. In order to avoid even the appearance of impropriety, Attorney General Mark Vargo has requested that supervision of the investigation and any charging decisions will be undertaken by Jessica LaMie, Hughes County State’s Attorney. LaMie has agreed to oversee the investigation. Because the investigation is on-going, the A.G.’s office will have no further comment and will not release any reports or evidence concerning the complaint until the investigation is complete.

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Steve Bannon indicted for stealing millions from “We build the wall” contributors. Haven’t we heard about that group before?

Former Trump advisor Steve Bannon was indicted in New York State this week for allegedly bilking people for millions, and making it his personal piggy bank:

Bannon, 68, surrendered to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg on Thursday morning. A six-count indictment charges the controversial former White House adviser with money laundering, conspiracy and scheming to defraud for his alleged role in We Build the Wall, a group that raised at least $15 million to construct a barrier along the border with Mexico but skimmed the donations.

and…

“It is a crime to turn a profit by lying to donors, and in New York, you will be held accountable,” Bragg said in a statement. “As alleged, Stephen Bannon acted as the architect of a multi-million dollar scheme to defraud thousands of donors across the country — including hundreds of Manhattan residents.”

Read that here.

I know that group sounds familiar. Where have we heard about the “We Build The Wall” group before? I think it was back in 2020 When Julie Frye Mueller was being wined & dined by the group….

 

and..

and…

Whoops!

Queen Elizabeth passes away at age 96

From Fox News, Queen Elizabeth passed away today at the age of 96:

Queen Elizabeth II, Britain’s longest-reigning monarch who served as the beloved face of her country and source of strength for seven decades, died Thursday at Balmoral Castle in Scotland. She was 96.

Elizabeth’s doctors said earlier Thursday that they were “concerned for Her Majesty’s health” and that she was “resting comfortably” at Balmoral under medical supervision.

Read the entire story here.