Tuesday, October 25, 2022

October 25 is the twentieth anniversary of the Wellstones' death. This memorial post is all for the day.


photo source


Wikipedia on Wellstone. See the green bus.

This YouTube video, not political, but showing him as a person. It is a video that should be observed by millions. Three thousand views means people are short-changing themselves. It is not as if twenty-two hours and extended background research is needed to see character in conversation, and to see much wisdom useful in life in a concentrated short viewing time. Are there any politicians now who you could relate to as having the same value set and potential impact for good, as you see with Wellstone and McDonald?

He would have been the best President in my lifetime, were he to have lived to do it. His death, the  timing and circumstances still trouble me greatly. Questions persist in my mind.


 

Monday, October 24, 2022

Why does this make me think of Jim Schultz trying to try a case in court, presuming he could even find the courthouse?

 Strib, today - 

Man accidentally shoots self in leg while at corn pit in Brooklyn Park

The discharge of his handgun "does not affect his permit to carry," said police Inspector Elliot Faust. 

The single gunshot occurred Saturday at the Twin Cities Maze, 109th Avenue N. and Hwy. 169, police said. The gun went off while the man was bending over in a tent-covered corn pit that people play in, police Inspector Elliot Faust said.

The 38-year-old man from Circle Pines called 911 to report what happened before he was taken to a hospital for treatment of his wound, Faust said. The gunfire did not strike anyone else, and police were withholding his name because they consider him a victim.

Faust said the man did have a government-issued permit to carry a firearm in public and was not doing anything illegal.

Okay, yeah, and JIm Schultz does have a license to practice law and would not be doing anything illegal if heading for a courthouse to do a jury trial, rules of evidence being what they are and admissability being important, while it is near impossible to imagine Schultz coming up with anything as creative as, "If the glove don't fit you've got to acquit," and delivering a zinger with aplomb instead of like a talking automaton.

38 years old, the gunshot guy. About the same age as Schultz, this guy, bending over and - bang!

Realize what this guy bending over and shooting himself in the leg means. And this should have more coverage in the know-the-fuck-what-you-are-doing-before-being-a-danger-to-others sense. I am no firearms specialist, but this fellow had to have been carrying a firearm in a crowded public place with a round chambered and the safety off for this to have happened, and that's plain ignorant.

Inexperienced.

So - back to the headline question.

In the lap of folly, or folly in the lap?

 


"The Long Slide" from the high-priced view. With a copy of the Dobbs decision as a bookmark? Something you cannot see for certain.

 

VOUCHERS AND TRUTH: While standardized test score results produce numbers which can be manipulated and argued, there is not certitude that test scores corrolate with: [a} any future success in life, or [b] whether, one way or the other, voucher programs offer student improvement if measued by standardized testing.. Moreover, it is well known that standardized testing is not a strong measure of lifetime success, years later. The questions of voucher value, positive or negative in terms of "student success" or "quality of teaching and learning" are relevant to politicians wanting to push vouchers against uniform general public education for a state's pupils.

Members of some religions hosting their own private schools for indoctrination purposes may desire having general public subsidization of their separate private efforts from money otherwise going into public education. Some might think it a good idea, others might favor not beggaring public education. Outlooks vary. 

In Minnesota statewide Republican candidates, and some legislative candidates want vouchers. Catholic candidates in particular, where private Catholic schools have existed apart from public education for decades; likely since before the founding of the nation.

IN THAT CONTEXT: Looking at the headlined statement, a quick and simple websearch = correlation vouchers "test scores"

It is clearly a simplistic first cut at seeing what credible study may have been done and what it says about the wisdom or lack of wisdom in implementation of vouchers (where often "parental choice" is used as a politically loaded term for voucher implementation). 

Readers are urged from that single search basis to do their own further more sophisticated web searching to satisfy their minds whether they can find if any even quasi-determinative objective data exists on the Internet, about the question.

From that beginning seach, things are inconclusive, as should be expected; with relevant return items (one a study by advocates of vouchers) here, here and here.

The paucity of results before returned links get further and further from the intended returns was a surprise. Apparently there is not much good data, and of the three items listed, the last was by Heritage Foundation, which is not objectively apolitical.

BOTTOM LINE: If anyone wants to sell you on vouchers, or against vouchers, demand they rest opinions on data, or if not demand they be clear and specific about what their opinions rest upon; or seek better advice from better advisors without skin in the game one way or the other. 

Catholics touting vouchers should be viewed as having skin in the game, not being subsidized by all of us without vouchers while being subsidized under private voucher programs, so that transparency of disclosure - conflicting interests, if any - is important to pin down.

Last, politicians touting "parental choice" without spelling out wtf they mean by such an obscenely elastic term should be distrusted as playing more to emotions than in favor of any real objectivity.

What you'd want from an honest politician (an oxymoron?) is the whole truth, not quick loaded words -briefly spun - which might sound resonant at the moment, but in fact be nothing but empty manipulation of some words with no substance behind them. Be a skeptic. Do not presume what a politician is saying is the same as what you might find reasonable in one sense but not in others. Pin things down.


Saturday, October 22, 2022

Everyone not a rabid abortion hater should pay attention to the style of legislation the haters would inflict upon those favoring liberty, rights, and live and let live.

 This link. It is a pdf of a "model" act the freedom haters woud inflict upon women most directly, and upon all of us trusting Constitutional privacy in our lives.

That mess of an imposition upon citizens of the US of A that abortion haters intend is full notice to you - YES YOU - about knowing who is who when filling out your ballot, never mind how the Republicans are telling all their candidates to duck the issue.

There was earlier related Crabgrass commentary, here. In the updating of that link.

Fear and loathing is but a mild description of the feeling I hold for James Bopp. Clear and present menace, same mildness for the visceral hurt that vile man causes in me to my bones.



There is a "763 PAC" thing in Anoka County which when backing candidates I recognize seems to be the ones I vote for or like. Ones they criticize, again, I agree if I recognize the candidate/office holder names. Strib gave them some attention. I see them as golf tournament boosters.

Strib, here.

I looked at their website, and they do Facebook and Twitter. 

From the Strib item, a quote:

[Matt] Look said the Most Wanted ad last time actually bolstered support for conservative incumbents. He said some of their personal attacks on social media have crossed a line and that he may pursue a defamation suit after the election.

He won't. But the level of web publishing they've done about Look is less about policy or job performance than otherwise, and again, aside from golf tournaments which some care about, not everybody, and liking the same candidates I do when I recognize the names of some of those they favor, they seem to post on sites I dislike and do not use. Their website, okay, but thin. It seems static, with their activity being posted elsewhere.

Their approach to things. You decide.

But they exist. Strib found them of sufficient interest to publish of them online. 

 

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Many Republicans are hiding behind the Hann memo's suggested tactic of saying Abortion is not on the ballot. They lie.

Hann Memo:

click the image to read it            

 The deceit of the thing is in saying existing lawful abortion in Minnesota can only be changed two ways, judicially or by referendum amending the state Constitution.

Which, of and by itself is not false. Yet it falsely misleads, as is its clear and total intention.

Glibly saying that, as if "hard to change." Not so. This summer Iowa's Supreme Court did a number to its state Constitutional protection of abortion, by a long hand-waving opinion changing from precedent to otherwise. Identical in direction if not equal in length and detail, to the way the Alito opinion killed Roe v Wade as recognizing a protected federal abortion right.

Des Moines Register, here and here. Magic, almost. Judicial pulling a rabbit out of a hat.

We need to greatly fear and to distrust any downplay of abortion hate coming from Republican candidates in Minnesota. 

Is it a lie, if it indirectly misleads and lulls readers into a false sense of security? You decide.

 

Republicans - a number of related posts about website scrubbing as trying to weasel out and distance from the more egregious things they did and said before their people killed Roe v Wade.

 abetterminnesota.org is the website of a DFL leaning news and commentary outlet.

In August of this year, it published: ICYMI: Matt Birk Caught Making Hurtful Comments about Women and Abortion, which stated in part:

Birk is even on the record arguing that Planned Parenthood is next to the KKK as the most racist organization in America. He also said rape victims shouldn’t be able to get an abortion, a callous position considering that Scott Jensen has previously threatened to ban abortion in Minnesota without exceptions for rape or incest.

And it doesn’t stop there. Since joining the Jensen ticket and following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, Birk has doubled down on his attack on reproductive rights, women, and survivors of rape. 

The Epitome of an Anti-Choice Extremist

Recently, a video surfaced of Matt Birk making wildly offensive comments about women and abortion and promising to pass laws that ban abortion with no exceptions for rape or incest at a National Right to Life conference in June 2022, the day that the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. 

In the video, Birk celebrated the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. He compared safe, legal abortion to slavery and said, “women used to not be able to vote, now we let them drive.” 

He also reiterated that he doesn’t believe that rape victims should be able to get abortions and said that “if a woman is unexpectedly pregnant, she could be the answer to someone’s prayer.” 

Birk also repeated his and Scott Jensen’s intentions to ban abortion in Minnesota with no exceptions for rape or incest. 

To make it worse, conservative gubernatorial candidate Scott Jensen defended Matt Birk’s wildly offensive comments about women and abortion. In an interview on WCCO, Jensen praised Birk’s refusal to “back off” from his extreme anti-choice positions on abortion.

Of substantial interest, the sentence beginning, " Recently, a video surfaced of Matt Birk making wildly offensive comments[...]," is informative of who Birk and the Minnesota GOP are, so readers, please follow that link to see the video has been scrubbed.

They decided it was inconvenient for voters to have access to the truth. So they scrubbed.

Earlier posts document website scrubbing by statewide Minnesota candidates, and by the GOP candidate in MN CD2, the latter being via a rewrite of truth between the last election cycle and this one.

It would be great if all politicians could be trusted as consistent, day to day, election cycle to cycle, but some need to be closely watched. (Guess which party.)

 


Today is the day James Schultz and Ryan Wilson co-propagandize with their peers at St. Thomas. The alum and his buddy.

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHZxU8c4vtErl7FHas4rS-qrlzZgpcAXJWwwNEPbPBp26uN20FMbDWa33zBip6emvxB0HhdR2nNRXbp-s5hNw0tNIsU01lMOCz-qFMVcXb9JUFIVtgM-KGlWaLc3aoCj1NhLTyJA58HoGnGpZI8EnvZyAm8_OZScH7UmtN0s5SBKTvFkjQ7Sc/s16000/St.%20Thomas%20College%20REpublicans%20-%20311035648_181492114446045_1750244807488645710_n.jpg

Previously posted notice of Schultz and Wilson being invitees of the TommieCRs. 

Do you wonder why they are not co-hosting Matt Birk?

The Crabgrass guess: Birk is too direct, guileless,  straightforward and honest about who he is and what his position is on -

THE ABORTION ISSUE.

Something there about Birk might have TommieCRs wanting to stick only with fudging and dissembling; issue softening; "not an issue;"

on that issue. Or otherwise.



Tyler Kistner - let the scrub go on.

 Axios: Aug 31, 2022 - Politics & Policy

Republican candidates around the country are trying to disappear the hardline anti-abortion stances they took during their primaries.

Why it matters: It's longstanding practice for candidates in both parties to modify their rhetoric for general-election audiences, but this year's messaging gymnastics are next-level.

  • Some GOP nominees also are curbing their focus on voter-fraud conspiracies about the 2020 election and other far right or Trump-centered topics.

Zoom in: Big wins in a Kansas abortion referendum and a special House election in New York, in which Democrat Pat Ryan made abortion a centerpiece issue, have emboldened Democrats.

  • Republicans initially argued that abortion wouldn't significantly boost Democrats.

[...]Minnesota's GOP nominee for governor, Scott Jensen, changed the copy on his website to water down his abortion message, removing lines including, "He believes in the sanctity of human life, from conception to natural death."

Axios Sept 6, 2022 - 

Republican congressional candidate Tyler Kistner pledged to support federal legislation aimed at further reducing abortion access in response to a recent issue survey.

Why it matters: Abortion has become a hot topic in the rematch between Kistner and DFL U.S. Rep. Angie Craig in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade.

  • The Prior Lake Republican, who touted his "100% pro-life" record in his 2020 campaign, said this summer that he does support exceptions for rape or when a pregnant person's life is in danger.
  • He said in June that the issue should be "left at the states to decide."

Yes, but: The "pro-life" survey, published this summer by Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life, asked candidates for federal office if they would support so-called "incremental approach" bills seeking to reduce abortion as part of "a strategic plan for creating a pro-life nation."

  • Kistner answered yes to that question, as well as one asking candidates if they'd work to uphold any "pro-life" laws or policies in place when they took office.

A spokesperson for Kistner didn't respond to a request for comment.

Zoom out: Republican candidates around the country have been downplaying— or in some cases reversing — hardline anti-abortion stances they took during their primaries in light of signs that the Dobbs decision has energized Democratic voters, Axios' Alexi McCammond and Andrew Solender report.

...........................................................

What bothers Crabgrass even more, Alpha News reporting,  Aug, 2020, last cycle:

“I am honored to receive the endorsement of the National Right to Life Committee PAC. As the nation’s oldest and largest pro-Life group, NRLC has been in the trenches fighting for the rights of the unborn for many years, and I look forward to working with them,” said Kistner.

(that is now a dead link, per the new scrubbed Kistner persona)

You have to know something about NRLC to fully appreciate why Crabgrass puts a focus on that particular situation. Via a few links.

https://www.nrlc.org/ - the homepage - has a link,

NRLC Post-Roe Model Abortion Law

 And that link, when followed, shows a pernicious intent which is Kistner's to bear.

Lead page screenshot -

click to enlarge and read

That shows a cover sheet to a proposed statute The Bopp Law Firm, per James Bopp and others, offer to citizen-voters and all America, where Crabgrass readers are strongly urged to read the full Draconian "NRLC Post-Roe Model Abortion Law, proposal, replete with the word "felony" from the beginning. Only very troubled, tortured minds could come up with that full pile of crap.

The Bopp Law Firm's https://www.bopplaw.com/attorney-profiles/ tells something about James Bopp.

Member: Republican National Committee, Vice Chairman 2006 – 2012; The Federalist Society for Law & Public Policy Studies, Co-Chairman, Election Law Subcommittee, Free Speech & Election Law Practice Group 1996-2005; Board of Governors, Republican National Lawyers Association, 2002-present; Indiana State Bar Association.
Professional Affiliations: General Counsel, James Madison Center for Free Speech, 1997-present; General Counsel, National Right to Life Committee, 1978-present;  [...]

So - Federalist Society and General Counsel for NRLC - the organization shining love on Tyler Kistner. 

Kistner is their guy.

The point, beyond that dreadful mean-spirited "model law" is James Bopp who is a professional devastation spreader. The bastard litigated Citizens United.

BOTTOM LINE: More devastation for the US of A from James Bopp than from physical devastation a world away via Tyler Kistner's Marine unit in its war mongering. 

Kistner, the politician now aiming to catch up to James Bopp. If given the chance.

Figure whether you'd want effective, rational, live and let live DFL Rep. Angie Craig replaced in MN CD2 with an acolyte of, (admittedly a step removed through the  National Right to Life Committee as intermediary), lawyer-menace James Bopp. 

Bopp's Federalist Society alignment with Leonard Leo and the "Justices" who murdered Roe v. Wade is Kistner's cross to bear.

All that and yet, now, site scrubbing - https://www.tylerkistnerforcongress.com/issues#Abortion 

click to enlarge and read

How mild. How gentle. How --- unaggressive. A/K/A how scrubbed.

 

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

President Joe Biden and his administration continue to endure criticism for enacting a program to forgive some college loans but some of the Republican politicians who have criticized that program did not respond to questions about whether they support the farm loan help.

Charlott NC broadcasting and web publishing outlet carries an AP web feed about farm debt relief per USDA assistance.

It is only fair, students who foresaw jobs that never happened, help them.

Farmers who foresaw good crops, prices, good weather and then faced pressure, help them.

Two sides of the same coin. The government assisting those in a pinch. It is what government is for, as part of providing for the common good per roads, bridges, public goods, where help for those facing distress situations - that is a common good. 

Keeping concentration in farming down by helping the marginal survivors, a public good.

Educating a part of the population able to be gaining access to higher education leads to a better educated, inventive and entrepreneurial populace - wiser voters too - and is a public good.

And all that good a tiny, tiny fraction of the cost of the military industrial complex's annual upkeep. 

What could be more sensible?

And why do the Republicans not act like good citizens and praise both sensible programs? Because - 

FURTHER: Another public good program, where Republican support should be expected. (Whether there or not.)


Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Reinventing oneself for intended purposes. Yet, still, talk fast, stacato, and sell the product.

 This is James Schultz, looking like a young Robert McNamara:

click to enlarge and see the McNamara glasses
 

 He's the successful alum St. Thomas touts, among others. And he remains the same man:

Harvard Law School graduate James Schultz ’08 currently serves as in-house counsel for global investment firm Värde Partners. His work spans a wide range of services from purchasing and investment, to leasing office space, to looking at regulations to ensure his firm is compliant with applicable law.

He credits his time at St. Thomas with helping to form his mind, not just for lawyering but as a lifelong learner.

“[Catholic studies] develops in its students the ability to think about the world rigorously and with an authentically broad perspective. Those habits of thought apply to nearly every bit of work I do day to day.” Schultz noted that he reads 60-plus books a year, and that “This starts with the faculty who themselves are examples of a lifelong pursuit of truth.”

YET -

Now he's "Jim," dressing humbly, ditched the McNamara glasses and the big office halo. Fast talker, back in the suit for PBS, with the focus changed - corporate no longer; and Wardlow wrong on "Jim's" anti-abortion bona fides chops. AND - Crime oh my! Oh my!

As said, he remains the same man. 

 Next an image collage. On tour, rural Minnesota. An Everyman, meeting folks?

click to enlarge and see that phony final image


LAST: They say for a movie, (even for a short negative election ad posted by an opposition outside player), you should never disclose the end. However, here's the end where you can see who posted the ad; and this link allows you to see the entire preparatory commentary to reach the famous final scene.



Monday, October 17, 2022

Scrubbing "Elections" from a campaign website arguably implies an intention to not crash and burn in flames if Trump does. "Elections" is Kim's issue. Sheriffs really like me. I really like them. SO - My campaign. My issue. My lean and hungry look.

Judgmental of Jim Schultz? Yes, but not the first one to judge. Ceaser judged Cassius. Etc.

Here is evidence:

 Beyond never seeing Schultz in a MAGA cap, Schultz hides from issues whenever his finger to the wind suggests it wise. Seamlessly switching.

The man hides by scrubbing his campaign website. Specifically, his present Issues campaign webpage:


The Schultz campaign "ISSUES" webpage as first archived Feb. 17, 2022, by Internet Archive's Wayback Machine:


Compare and contrast. You may need to click each image to enlarge and read.

Yes. He cut weak GOP candidate Kim Crockett loose with no lifeboat. It seemed appropriate to his own campaign, apparently.

 Iissue to non-issue. Easy enough. Just talk differently from yesterday. Webmaster makes a few keystrokes to nullify elections as a Schultz issue. Keep Trump's election challenge screeds well distanced, but not in a way to alienate MAGA voters. They vote, they're fine, they're lovable.

Make of that what you will. Headlining of the post gives the Crabgrass impression.

 A lean and hungry look? (Videos posted by his own hand.)

CAESAR

[aside to ANTONY]  [...]  Seldom he smiles, and smiles in such a sort As if he mocked himself and scorned his spirit That could be moved to smile at anything. Such men as he be never at heart’s ease Whiles they behold a greater than themselves, And therefore are they very dangerous. [...]

Sour-faced but on script when Laura Ingram throws him attention. She shines scorn on Ilhan Omar with Schultz eager to use airtime to segue to shining scorn on Ellison. In common, stated MN5 representation, unstated but in common, Muslims. 

Each speaker in Ingrahm's video with converging agendas. 

All the videos are grim faced, the only smile shown at all is in the headlining banner; and if ever there's been a forced smile on anyone, it's there. Few take themselves that seriously. Cassius was not Caesar's friend. Conclude what you will.

Sunday, October 16, 2022

It could be the event of the year; parents later tell their children, I was there, live, they really rocked the house.

 

An alum and a buddy. What more? Kim Crockett? Follow the blueprint, stick to the plan, Dan; or will they make it a memorable event, a jam session to remember, like only true entertainment artists can?

Abortion is the giant single overarching issue that Knight of Malta Sam Alito and cohorts made it this election cycle. Republican candidates cannot hide from it, try as they might.

Women are not to be forced to be child-bearing slaves against their will, no matter what, under the vulnerable Minnesota Supreme Court's Doe v. Gomez judicial holding. There is in Minnesota a general right to privacy reaching to include womens' abortion rights being Constitutional rights under Minnesota's Constitution. Open access to morning after pills or early-term pharmaceutical arbortificants included. No pharmacist should be allowed to stand in the way of dispensing lawful medicine over his/her own personal mythologies. If unwilling for that, get out of pharmacy into other work. And if politics ends things other than that, keep up the fight.

PiPress, a week ago:

With abortion rights shaping up to be a central issue in the 2022 election, Democratic candidates continue to press their Republican opponents on the issue, including in the race for Minnesota attorney general.

Republican attorney general candidate Jim Schultz has expressed views against abortion in the past and has served on an anti-abortion nonprofit, but he insists the race is about combating rising crime. Democratic incumbent Keith Ellison, meanwhile, says his GOP challenger misunderstands the role the attorney general’s office should play in prosecuting crime, and should stand up for abortion rights, which are guaranteed under the state constitution but no longer protected federally following the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (right) is being challenged by Republican Jim Schultz. He unveiled his public safety plan at the Minnesota Capitol on Monday, July 11, 2022. (Schultz photo by Dana Ferguson of Forum News Service; Ellison photo by Jean Pieri of the Pioneer Press)
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (right) is being challenged by Republican Jim Schultz. (Schultz photo by Dana Ferguson of Forum News Service; Ellison photo by Jean Pieri of the Pioneer Press)

“This is absolutely an issue in this campaign, and I want to be clear that my opponent is not committed to these rights,” Ellison told Capitol reporters Friday, later adding: “Nobody can escape, being accountable to the public as to what they will do to stand up for a woman’s right to choose.”

New York Attorney General Letitia James and Planned Parenthood North Central States president and CEO Sarah Stoesz also spoke in support of Ellison.

“Abortion rights are very, very, very much on the ballot in this election,” said Stoesz. “And Minnesotans are rightly curious as to where candidates stand.”

The worse offender on trying unsuccessfully to duck the issue is Auditor candidate Ryan Wilson, who has published in the Diocese of Duluth's Northern Lights website recently, characterized there as "Ryan Wilson - a law clerk at the Minnesota Catholic Conference." He, so far, has been opaque on the issue. Wilson assertively wants to audit public schools if elected; whereas schools of his faith, Catholic schools, presenting a World of difference as private entities under his watch, if elected, would escape audit responsibility. That much is of record. The man needs to better tell the public who he really fully is. On all issues which matter. Where he stands on privacy and specifically, the unfettered Constitutional right to abortion access in Minnesota. As well as rejection of vouchers to private schools, so far, in our State.

Back to  PiPress reporting on the AG race, and the abortion issue there:

Schultz, who became the GOP nominee after defeating challenger Doug Wardlow in the August primary, supports some restrictions on abortion, including a 20-week ban, but insists the central issue in the campaign for attorney general is crime. He has said he would not use the office to pursue further restrictions on abortion. Ahead of the Aug. 9 primary, Wardlow [ref. concluding: " 'Doug Wardlow is a desperate candidate who consistently loses and lies,' Schultz’s campaign says. 'Jim’s pro-life record speaks for itself.' ”] attempted to paint Schultz as weak on abortion, but ultimately the strategy failed to win over the majority of GOP voters.

Now confronted with a challenge from the other side of the abortion debate, Schultz continues to downplay the issue’s importance in the race. He argues the attorney general’s office ultimately has very little influence over abortion policy in the state of Minnesota and said the question is fundamentally for the Legislature to decide.

Compare, Schultz saying he'd have appealed the Gilligan abortion decision, a step which would have shown a will toward great influence on the issue; this link. Same item, Ellison declined incurring further cost on what he viewed as a futile appeal. Schultz now appears to backpeddle from that position. 

Back to the PiPress report:

Asked what he thought of Ellison’s June pledge to protect out-of-state abortion seekers from prosecution or liability in their home states, Schultz said his opponent was merely invoking a hypothetical situation in an attempt to make the race about abortion.

Lame! Very, very lame. 

And this anti-hypothetical comment from the candidate who is insisting adding an entire host of criminal specialist lawyers to the AG payroll will quell violent crime - that claim being a total hypothetical since there's nobody to prosecute on an unsolved crime. A minor expansion of criminal law expertise in the AG office, as Ellison contends necessary, would leave additional funding to be allocated to investigating and solving crime by bolstering such functions, so that prosecutor numbers balance their need in processing such cases as law enforcement solves. Balance is good. Excess in a wrong direction is bad. Now. back to basics -

ABORTION IS NOT MERELY AN ISSUE. IT IS THE ISSUE, ALL ELSE BEING SUBORDINATE. Republican Federalist Society Supreme Court actors put it there.

And yes, opinions can differ, but attempted ducking an issue, one that major, is fantasy. You cannot get away with it. Trying to minimize the issue in any sense rings untrue. 

Ellison is the trustworthy ballot choice for protection of a general Minnesota Constitutional right of privacy as the bedrock upon which ancillary rights stand; rights to abortion, contraception use, gender identification choice, and open marriage rights - full legal protections between a pair of consenting, willing adults wanting to legally marry and be recognized as being married. Live and let live.

 

Saturday, October 15, 2022

Minnesota's two Attorney General candidates held a recent debate moderated by MPR. Schultz debated his "thoughts" and agenda. Ellison, as incumbent, knows the range of requirements of the office, which have coalesced over decades. Ellison would have liked to have added a few criminal law specialists to his payroll to aid county attorneys when they request assistance from his office, hence, he sought legislative funding to do so, (it being county attorneys who charge and prosecute crimes on info brought to their offices by investigating sheriffs or police officers, with the AG uninvolved unless expressly requested). Mary Kiffmeyer led other MN. Senate Republicans, holding the majority, in denying additional AG funding for Ellison to expand staff. Packing the AG office with a vastly higher number of new prosecutors, spending for that, as Schultz says he'd do, what benefit at all would that bring? Schultz is taking a hot-button issue and jiving everybody who'll take him seriously in what basically reduces to fear-mongering. When facts are examined, his agenda of spending on a trove of new AG lawyers, as crime-busting prosecutors, is a pipe dream fantasy Schultz is trying to sell that makes no real sense.

Clearly the headlining of this post is judgmental. The question for readers, what hangs together, what does not?

First, reporting - Pioneer Press reported, this link. First observation, Schultz tried an amateur "Gotcha" which, in reporting, was a self-inflicted wound:

Schultz asked Ellison whether he knew the name of the special agent in charge of the Minneapolis FBI office, which is overseeing the investigation. He didn’t give Ellison a chance to answer before naming the agent as Joseph Thompson. Schultz suggested that Ellison had failed the test and was “missing in action.” But Schultz failed his own test. Thompson is not the head of the FBI office; he’s a federal prosecutor on the case. The local special agent in charge is Michael Paul.

Besides being a dumb mistake, there is more to this. Schultz confuses function. Investigators investigate criminal events in hope of identifying, apprehending and detaining suspects. They solve a crime or fail to. Prosecutors are uninvolved bystanders until results of a successful investigation has happened. Surely things such as added liability, such as a felon in possession of a handgun, or discovery of contraband can be side benefits, but first a perp must be identified and confronted. 

 Prosecutors analyze and act on investigation results. Their job is to neither imperil an ongoing investigation, nor to try to co-opt the investigative function, for which they are not trained. In his attempted Gotcha Schultz showed his confusion over functions.

Back to PiPress:

Democratic Attorney General Keith Ellison defended his record on crime Friday against aggressive attacks from his Republican challenger, Jim Schultz, who charged that the state’s top prosecutor has failed in his duty to keep Minnesotans safe.

Ellison — a former congressman, state legislator and criminal defense attorney — countered that the 36-year-old Schultz, a hedge fund lawyer who has no courtroom experience, lacks the background needed to be Minnesota’s chief legal officer.

Crime, abortion rights and the Feeding Our Future scandal — a $250 million food program theft that has raised questions about whether state officials responded properly to it — dominated their spirited debate on Minnesota Public Radio, their first of four before the Nov. 8 election in what’s seen as a tight race. Here are some key takeaways:

CRIME

Crime has been Schultz’s signature issue, and he renewed his claims that Ellison supports “defunding the police,” something Ellison has long denied.

“That is extraordinarily wrong, and it is reckless, and it has helped deliver extraordinary crime to our communities,” Schultz said.

While Ellison supported a Minneapolis charter amendment last year to replace the police department with a loosely defined department of public safety, which voters rejected, he insisted he never supported cutting funding for police. He said he even asked the Legislature for “millions of dollars” to fight crime but was thwarted by key Republicans.

“If I’m supposed to be this ‘defunder,’ I must be the worst one ever because I am seeking more resources for law enforcement,” Ellison said.

Schultz called Ellison’s response “complete lies” and added, “Everyone knows that the Minneapolis charter amendment was focused on defunding and deconstructing the Minneapolis police force.”

What the ballot measure said and commentary on it:  Strib, FOX9, MPR, Ballotpedia.

PiPress earlier published:

 The Attorney General’s Office currently has three attorneys working in its criminal division and Ellison said the current staff has been unable to meet the demand around the state.

The criminal division is a backstop when local prosecutors need help to bring a criminal case. State prosecutors can’t step in without an invitation from those local attorneys, under state law.

The $1.8 million boost would allow the division to hire seven additional prosecutors and two administrative assistants, Ellison said.

“It would put us in a position where we don’t have to triage and tell people ‘no,'” he said.

Minnesota House Democrats have included the additional funding in their supplemental budget proposals, meanwhile, Senate Republicans have opposed the extra funding, saying that Ellison’s office got a budget increase last year.

“The attorney general had plenty of time and resources to shut down businesses last year, I think he has enough time and resources to prosecute crime now,” Sen. Mary Kiffmeyer, R-Big Lake, said, referring to the office’s enforcement of COVID-19 related state regulations.

Senate Majority Leader Jeremy Miller, R-Winona, on Thursday said members of a legislative conference committee would determine whether to approve the money during negotiations in the next two weeks.

Three Twin Cities metro area county attorneys flanked Ellison during his news conference and said their greater Minnesota peers didn’t have the staffing or resources that they did to bring complex criminal cases.

“I stand here in support of my colleagues who are doing the great work that they do in greater Minnesota,” Anoka County Attorney Tony Palumbo said. “They are fighting the battles that we in the Metro also have to face and I also have to fight but we have many resources to be able to do that. They do not when they have a major case.”

[Italics added.] Upon request of the Hennepin Country Attorney Ellison's office successfully prosecuted Derek Chauvin for his murder of George Floyd. Despite Republicans squeezing him via denial of his budget request to expand criminal staff.

More from the originally cited PiPress report on the debate: 

Schultz also accused Ellison of using abortion to distract from an alleged scheme that federal prosecutors say stole at least $250 million from a program to feed children during the pandemic. The nonprofit at the center was called Feeding Our Future. Nearly 50 people have been charged with federal crimes. But questions remain about what state officials including Ellison knew about the magnitude of the fraud, when they learned of it and whether they could have stopped it earlier.

Schultz said Ellison should have used the power of his office before $250 million in taxpayer money went out the door. Federal authorities have recovered about $50 million so far.

Ellison hailed the investigation as a successful collaboration between state and federal authorities. He noted that three of the defendants have already pleaded guilty. He repeated assertions by him and Gov. Tim Walz’s administration that the FBI asked them not to stop the flow of money in order to protect the secrecy of the pending investigation.

“Because of the collaboration, we believe that this whole thing has been pulled out root and branch,” Ellison said.

Schultz accused Ellison of lying about his role. “The FBI does not tell victims of theft to send out $200 million to people we know to be thieves,” he said.

Note, federal prosecutors, in the first sentence. It was a federal program, and the crimes are federal offenses. It is offensive Schultz, a hedge fund lawyer only, saying "The FBI does not tell victims of theft to send out $200 million to people we know to be thieves." He was not privy to any FBI discussions with State officials, and nothing, zero, zippo in his background bolsters his having any knowledge of how the FBI operates. Both candidates should hash out details, instead of repeating responses already made. The FBI likely would deny any statements about a pending investigation, so, Schultz slings mud, Ellison was there and conversed with federal officials about best steps as things evolved.

Moving from things said back and forth in the recent debate, facts exist, facts matter.

CBS News, Sept. 2021 -

Unsolved Crime Rate Increases In Minneapolis, With 88% Resulting In No Arrests

Yes. Schultz could put a thousand super-sharp prosecutors on an unlimited payroll and yet the truth is that crime stopping involves crime solving, and if Schultz were wanting to make an impact there he would run for mayor, or county attorney, or sheriff - because that is where bolstering the process would work. He's grandstanding and not looking at the effectiveness of those who are endorsing him, whereas Ellison wants better professionalism and accountability.

Police Tribune, July 2021 - stating -

Police chiefs from the Brooklyn Park, Crystal, Maple Grove, Plymouth, and New Hope police departments described the spike in gun violence that they’re seeing in their communities to KMSP.

Violent crime in Hennepin County was up 24 percent last year from the prior year, and it skyrocketed up to 36 percent in the last three months of 2020.

But when you take Minneapolis proper out of the calculations, crime was still up by 19 percent in the suburbs, KMSP reported.

[bolding added]. Ellison is attacking handgun straw buying presently, in litigation against Fleet Farm's negligent gun sales practices. Schultz has no handgun regulation proposal because - who knows? Schultz is dismissive of Ellison's litigation, but has no real promising answer to the situation. He just complains.

Moreover, despite crime, crime, crime from Schultz, and that is handgun crime, be it murder or car jacking at gun point; the fact is handgun suicide is a greater cause of death than handgun homicide. Handgun proliferation, the Schultz answer? He has none.

Strib debate coverage included:

When Ellison talked about sitting with crime victims, Schultz recalled being with his sister after her north Minneapolis home was hit by gunfire. Those sorts of gun crimes are "exactly" why his office is suing Fleet Farm for negligently selling guns, Ellison said.

Schultz had repeatedly referred to the Fleet Farm lawsuit as an election-year stunt.

Ellison responded, "It's not politics, man, it's real and going upstream with guns is the right thing to do."

Gun retailers are the source. Squeeze better responsibility, get better results. It is something Schultz could have advocated himself, but now that Ellison is already there, throw stones. Again, Schultz is not even saying stop-and-frisk, which would at least propose something concrete instead of being Chicken Little about the sky falling. Bloomberg proved in New York City that stop/frisk fails, but at least it is a proposal; and Schultz offers no real on-the-street answer. None. A hundred new prosecutors; a thousand angels, would make no difference if crimes happen and go unsolved.

Aside from year-old statistics; Strib, weeks ago

Task force urges Minneapolis to be more aggressive against violent crime

The city has solved just 38% of homicides and 12% of carjackings, according to a new report 
September 9, 2022


Again, the people endorsing Schultz are not solving crimes. Not apprehending. That is not to say solving crime is easy, because it is not. What it is saying is that Schultz is not too dumb to know the score, but he is not running for mayor or sheriff, so he is not saying more money and reformed thinking is needed in law enforcement; he is running for a job another holds and is doing better than a hedge fund lawyer could, so he is saying more prosecutors. 

More cops, better trained, is the answer, but that answer gives Schultz no mud to sling.

Rand has ideas. Individuals have ideas. Schultz likely has none, while certainly he offers none. Except, more prosecutors. 

Throwing more lawyers at anything has seldom if ever improved anything, much less solved how to solve and reduce crime.

When Schultz criticizes recidivism or "soft on crime" he's redoing the Bush revolving door ad. HOWEVER - If he thinks judges are too lenient, that they impose inadequate sentences or set low or no bail, then he should be running to be a tough-on-crime judge.  But the Bush revolving door ad taught, blame the guy you are running against, never mind the logic of who to blame and where you should be running, given your complaint. The fact is the Minnesota Attorney General does not set bail or terms of detainee release. Judges do. Police solve and apprehend. County Attorneys plea bargain and convict and recommend sentences. 

The Attorney General is not a cop. Not a prosecutor, but an administrator mainly focused on civil law involvements of state departments and officials, and also strongly focused on consumer protection - where the truth is you're far, far more likely to be cheated in a contract than shot to death on a steet; and the criminals that fuck over consumers are more numerous with money as an incentive so that deterrence can work there; quelling rational optimizers such as consumer cheaters, as with Fleet Farm being sued being notice to Gander Mountain and Cabala, notice that can rein in a money-driven motive to relax attention and/or to push boundaries, in a way making more money than if reined in and deterred. 

Deterring somebody seventeen years old carrying a stolen handgun and getting into anger-management problems with other similarly situated armed hot-heads at bar break is a far harder thing to accomplish; so put the effort into what works. Quelling the Gangsta outlook is also hard to deter; while legalizing recreational marijuana and taxing and regulating it as with liquor would take one of the incentives out of a lot of Gangsta posing and activity.

How can you deter ones who post on Facebook pics with a fanned out hand of hundred dollar bills or showing off a handgun while giving a hand sign, when prudent criminals would never do that? 

Schultz surely does not know how to deter. He likely has never seen such online demonstrations. He probably does not use Facebook. Making hedge fund money is something where a Facebook account is of no help.

LAST: With time having passed, viewing one or both of two interviews online of four Mpls. Police Union board officials is worth the effort, (here and here) now, when they say - We do not train. We do not investigate. We grieve some disclipline not all. We negotiate pay and other terms of employment. We do not set policy.

Mayor Frey, after effort to defeat the Public Safety Amendment, is moving to do something about police-community relations issues. That's positive. 

Schultz is throwing shit at his opponent over things where the problem he hinges his campaign on is headquartered far and away from his opponent and the office his opponent holds while he is shooting for it; and the facts line up proving that. 

Demagoguery, big time, with no answer but to criticize and bloviate and reinvent repackage the equivalent of the Bush 1988 revolving door ad hardly suggests capability if put in office. He is a dangerous man. His approach is reckless.

____________UPDATE____________

Strib's image. Body language.Who's smug? Who's not? What's your reaction?

click the image to enlarge and view better

  ___________FURTHER UPDATE___________

Axios has unusually lucid coverage.

FURTHER: Strib, covering responses from the two candidates in August, during the State Fair. Schultz's response as reported on Abortion has been reconstituted since then.

Monday, October 10, 2022

ABC Newspapers: "Ramsammy, West campaign for Minnesota House District 32A seat"

 Two candidates. One office. Each responding to key questions posed by the news outlet. No quote. Read it. Be informed, if in that district.


Sunday, October 09, 2022

MinnPost recently published about the Minnesota State Auditor's election. The upshot was that the pension fund management practices of the current auditor were examplary. [UPDATED]

 Link. Ryan Wilson, the GOP candidate emphasized ROI, and while return on investment is a measure in finance, risk is always a lurking factor. Pension funds are not private equity funds taking high risks to chase high ROI. The article makes that clear without mentioning the keyword, "prudent" in terms of investing other people's future. 

From that item:

“I will not play politics with our pensions,” GOP nominee Ryan Wilson said during the only debate so far with the incumbent DFL Auditor Julie Blaha. “We must put return on investment first.”

Unlike the way some Republicans are stepping gingerly around the issue of abortion and some Democrats are trying to finesee the issues around public safety, Blaha is running toward this political fire rather than away from it. She said considering ESG factors is the trend in retirement fund investing, not just by public systems but by private investors.

“Even if you don’t care about the environment at all, you need to think about climate change in investments,” she said during the WCCO radio debate. “There are significant risks and there are significant opportunities in how climate is changing and how we’re transitioning energy.”

Blaha blamed “MAGA auditors and treasurers” who are trying to discredit ESG in investment decisions. “The evidence is overwhelming, and it’s also common sense. How many of us are sinking our savings into coal right now?”

“You know what’s been a great investment over the last six months that we missed out on?” Wilson asked. “Coal.” To which Blaha responded that pension funds are invested with 10, 20 and 30-year outlooks, not six months.

“You cannot be running around trying to day trade with my pension,” she said.

[...]  While it is not an issue so far in the race for Minnesota governor between Walz and GOP nominee Scott Jensen, so-called woke investing is an issue in other states. Texas has cut ties with 10 private investment firms that include ESG factors in their investments, including the largest manager of retirement investments BlackRock Inc. It came in response to a state law meant to sanction investors who are turning away from oil and gas.

BlackRock has used the voting power that the shares it manages give it in corporate decision making to promote ESG policies on company management.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis pushed that state’s investment board to adopt policies that force it to not consider ESG factors. 

The conservative American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) has prepared a model ordinance called the State Government Employee Retirement Act for state lawmakers who want to ban consideration of ESG in state investing.

ALEC is poison, it is a Koch financed snake pit. (As always, opinions can differ.)

Blaha is the incumbent. Retirement fund management by Blaha and the Board made up of statewide office holders is of record (the present board is Blaha, Walz, Simon and Ellison). Wilson the challenger, is wanting something to focus upon in order to position himself as offering something different. So, ROI is mentioned without any "plan" how he'd get more ROI without more risk. 

More from MinnPost:

Consultant looks at ESG in Minnesota

The study commissioned by the Minnesota investment board with Meketa Investment Group described Minnesota as “among the more engaged U.S. public pension plans,” noting the actions to include ESG factors in its list of investment beliefs, the push to urge the SEC to require more reporting by public companies, and the participation in ESG discussions being held by national institutional investors such as state investment boards.

The state doesn’t generally buy and sell individual stocks but instead invests in large investment funds banks and investment houses such as BlackRock offer. Because many of those funds “will likely be incorporating assessments of climate risks and opportunities,” the state’s will be incorporating ESG factors “even if the SBI changes nothing in their investment strategy.”

While Meketa recommended the board consider shifting some assets into companies that “benefit from long-term shifts to a low-carbon economy,” it did not support full divestment from fossil fuels as Maine has done. The consultant said that would not reduce overall demand for such energy sources and would not reduce carbon emissions directly. It would also give up the board’s proxy voting powers that could be replaced by others who don’t share the board’s investment beliefs. It might also separate the state from companies that are transitioning to renewable energy even though they continue to own non-renewable energy assets.

Minnesota’s investment board is considered among the best managed public investment entities in the U.S. and has reported returns in the top 25 percent, sometimes the top 20 percent, among other public pension plans [PDF]. Those returns have slipped during the last several quarters, something common among pension funds. Blaha attributes Minnesota’s worse-than-average performance to the state’s heavier use of publicly traded companies than some other pension plans.

 The state fund is the 14th largest non-federal investment fund in the U.S. and the 38th largest in the world.  The state has also done a good job restoring the health of its fund – having 82.2 percent of the money needed to cover future payments – the 14th highest among states.

Blaha said she was happy when the issue came up during the radio debate with Wilson because it is a “real issue” in the campaign and gave her a chance to fact-check some of the claims being made about ESG factors in public investing. It isn’t just states with Democratic governors that are looking at this, and it isn’t just governments. All, she said, are doing it to reduce exposure to companies that will decline in value and instead invest in companies that will grow in value.

“I would like to think that Goldman Sachs is doing this for good environmental reasons,” she said. “But, come on, they’re trying to make money.” Blaha said she rejected calls from organizations such as Youth Climate Change to immediately sell oil stocks because it would violate the board’s fiduciary duties. She also said that many of those same companies could be helping develop alternative sources of energy just as car companies built on gas-powered vehicles are helping advance electric cars.

She endorsed a key recommendation from the board’s consultant that the board move toward investments with a net-zero carbon footprint “while holding investment in our back pocket in extreme situations.”

So, all told, a prudent long horizon value-based management did well. Chasing short term swings might work for some, but it is not well thought of as a pension fund approach. 

Blaha has her record to run on. Who is Wilson? We need to know. First, a screen capture from his campaign website:

click image to enlarge and read

One can wonder about "Removing Politics" touted with the Jensen lawn sign in the image, not removed. But it's Wilson's site, to fashion as he feels best.

Wilson's Linkedin profile is unimpressive, touting company experience in ventures most have never heard of, and which may or may not be doing well today.

Wilson's Linkedin profile contrasts with a DFL press release about who Wilson is, via who he has been, with links to outside sourcing, including Internet Archive. (That press release could also be posted via image capture, but then links would be inactive that way). Hence, by quoting, the press release says:

05/13/2022

Wilson is a right-wing extremist  with a history of working for corrupt politicians looking to further his political agenda in the Auditor’s office

DFL Party Chairman Ken Martin released the following statement in response to Ryan Wilson’s endorsement from the Republican Party of Minnesota:

“The fact that Ryan Wilson served as an election lawyer for Donald Trump, the most corrupt president in living memory, is proof that Wilson could not care less about transparency and accountability in government. 

“Wilson also cannot credibly tell Minnesotans he’s running to remove politics from the Auditor’s office when he has been a leader in multiple, far-right groups. Minnesotans deserve an Auditor with integrity, and that is not Ryan Wilson.”

Background on Wilson:

At a recent campaign event, Wilson admitted to working as an election lawyer for Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. During his presidency, Donald Trump used his office to funnel astonishing amounts of taxpayer money into his pockets at every opportunity possible. Trump was even impeached for withholding weapons for Ukraine until they manufactured dirt on a political opponent.

While Wilson claims to be non-partisan, his career proves otherwise. Wilson was recently a Law and Liberty Fellow at the Institute for Justice, a libertarian, Koch-funded law firm. The Institute for Justice has worked to send public funds to private schools and successfully sued to eliminate part of the Arizona Citizens Clean Elections Act that attempted to limit big money in elections.

In his staff biography for the Institute for Justice, Wilson says he was “president of the local student chapter of the Federalist Society,” a conservative legal organization working to place far-right judicial activists into the court system. The Federalist Society helped Donald Trump select his Supreme Court nominees and has been working to overturn Roe v. Wade

Yes, it is opposition research. However, links are real and are aplenty to back up plain assertions. A Trumpist and Koch acolyte with strong Federalist Society love is not who Crabgrass would want managing anyone else's pensions. The background is political, extremely so, in contrast to the "Take politics out of the office" self-description he features on his campaign site. I trust the history, as sourced.

I trust Blaha to be less political when reelected, while, from circumstantial evidence, I have problems with believing Ryan Wilson has any real care to depoliticize anything. He is a lawyer looking for a government paycheck while "libertarian." I find contradiction of value in making a value judgment.

_________UPDATE_________

Ryan Wilson's LinkedIn page has a gap, 2016 to present, in the chrono listings, while his opening "About" tout says, "Public interest litigator with experience in federal and state courts and at the trial and appellate level.[...]" That means he was in private practice doing "public interest" litigation with it begging the question of what he means by that. ALEC and Federalist Society can be "public interest" to some, but not to me. It is politician in training from the far, far right. 

It would be nice to know more about Wilson's past, in political mode.

_________FURTHER UPDATE__________

The Blaha website has detail. Experience matters. Blaha has a background in labor relations and education. She is endorsed by Planned Parenthood, meaning she's not in favor of taking personal body autonomy away from anyone. 

Contrary to the Federalist Society doing court packing to attack privacy rights as the underlying bedrock of Roe v. Wade and Griswold, Blaha's endorsements show she  holds women's rights and everyone's privacy as important. As an educator she knows the insidious nature of vouchers as touted by those wanting to disable quality public education by taking taxpayer money from public education for reallocation to sectarian and nonsectarian private schools, some being for-profit ventures.

In effect, it looks as if this is another DFL vs GOP contest where the GOP wants interference into the lives of others on the abortion issue, and where the GOP wants to disable effective public education. Ryan Wilson, Federalist Society and all, looks beneath the surface to be largely if not totally akin to Jensen/Birk and Jim Schultz, on abortion, vouchers, and other policy issues. 

As to allegations about transparency and depoliticization of anything, Wilson seems to dissemble in that he should be more open about his ALEC and Federalist Society links, something he does not tell people directly and where the DFL is having to disclose things about him.

Blaha's campaign website is not deceptive in any way. She says who she is and seems proud of her accomplishments in running the Auditor office. And proud of and open about her earlier career.

Last, back to the MinnPost focus on investment strategy in running pension plan decision-making which is a major part of duties of the office both candidates seek. What is prudent, what is not? What is the job, in that regard? Blaha has the track record. From MinnPost coverage, she's done the job well, while Wilson is an enigma saying ROI but little else.

________FURTHER UPDATE________

Further web search: With regard to the Wilson LinkedIn history, Medpace is real and headquartered in Cincinnati, continuing to exist, and the appearance is that it did a merger/acquisition with Symbios Clinical, to where the latter small Minnesota operation was absorbed into the larger out-of-state venture, with Wilson staying with the acquiring firm until that employment situation was ended in 2016. That seems a logical inference, absent Wilson telling us more. It says little of relevance to the Auditor job.

_______FURTHER UPDATE_________

MPR has good coverage. Crabgrass readers are urged to follow that link. Wilson, for one touting transparency, could not be found having any position on issues MPR deems important. Wilson also is opaque on what exactly he did after 2016, with "constitutional law" showing up in a place or two where the term could mean anything, including Federalist Society or ALEC pet projects. He needs to disclose more, while touting "transparency." Blaha positions are reported. As an example of opaqueness vs trahsparancy, from that MPR item:

Abortion

Blaha: “Health and human services are a significant part of local government budgets, so we need an auditor who understands that healthcare includes abortion. An auditor pushing an anti-abortion agenda could disrupt local access to reproductive care, particularly for low-income Minnesotans. I’m proud of my history supporting abortion rights as a president of the National Organization for Women of Minnesota and am proud to be endorsed by Planned Parenthood and EMILY’s list,” Blaha told MPR News in a written statement.

Wilson: “It’s really not a part of our race,” he told MPR News.

_________FURTHER UPDATE________

This perhaps is a reach. But it seems a lock based on my wetware facial recognition equipment. Whether it is trustworthy, you decide.

From the Ryan Wilson website, mouths to feed, the population bomb still ticking:

 


From "The Northern Cross," an undated op-ed

Ryan Wilson: It’s time to take the ‘porn problem’ public

The Catholic faith has long drawn attention to the serious and sinister consequences of pornography on the human soul. In 2016, for instance, the USCCB released “Create in Me a Clean Heart,” a pastoral letter describing pornography’s ability to distort one’s understanding of human sexuality and stunt his or her capacity for self-giving love. The bishops condemned pornography as part of the “throwaway” culture and warned that its harms “include physiological, financial, emotional, mental, and spiritual effects.”

But for too long, the church’s warnings about the dangers of pornography were written off as unnecessary and even prudish moralizing from an institution that had long-ago grown out of touch with the realities of human life.

RyanWilson
Ryan Wilson
Faith in the Public Arena

In the last decade, though, science has begun to recognize what faith and morals have held true for years — that pornography has significant harmful effects to both the individual and the broader community, not just on the soul but on the human psyche. To address this reality, a bipartisan group of state legislators are proposing a resolution to declare pornography a public health crisis in Minnesota.

Harm to self

The “porn problem” has reached epidemic proportions. Over 77 percent of households contain pornographic material or have accessed it online in the last month. Nearly half of families report that pornography is a problem in their home.

The average age of first exposure to pornography is only 11-12 years old, and 93 percent of male teens have viewed pornography at least once. This is not surprising when a simple Google search on an iPad brings any child to an unending, unrestricted, free supply of vile sexual images and videos.

Early exposure is leading to lifelong consequences. Multiple medical studies using imaging testing have found that viewing pornography causes neuro-biological changes in children’s and teen’s brains. These brain images show the same pattern researchers observe in those suffering from serious drug addiction.

Tell me from the photos that it is not the same Ryan Wilson. A footer to that Northern Cross item: "Ryan Wilson is a law clerk at the Minnesota Catholic Conference."

The Northern Cross publication is top-captioned:



Does this identify candidate Wilson as yet another Catholic candidate, along with Matt Birk and Mike Schultz, with views on abortion and vouchers for sectarian schools similar to such other candidates with such outlooks?

You tell me. What is troubling, if the photo congruence/name is a correct association, what is this self-alleged "transparancy" maven up to in not being up front about who he is and what he's been doing since 2016, the last LinkedIn chrono date he offers.

Yes, he can be Catholic, not my business, but no, he cannot impose his religious biases upon me or anyone else, in a perfect world. Somebody looks at porn, it is no skin off my ass, nor Wilson's. Porn is a marketplace, lawful at present. Live and let live. 

That Northern Cross publication which Wilson presumably endorses by publishing there, recently published a couple of items that make Wilson's ducking the abortion question - questionable.

Editorial: Respect Life Month — after Roe

MOMS fight for abortion regulation return

 Of interest: https://www.dioceseduluth.org/presbyteral-council

https://www.mncatholic.org/

https://www.mncatholic.org/advocacy_areas 

https://thecatholicspirit.com/news/local-news/minnesota-bishops-emphasize-prenatal-justice-in-november-elections/

 https://thecatholicspirit.com/commentary/inside-the-capitol/whom-should-i-vote-for/

https://www.mncatholic.org/morning_air_family_security_act 

https://www.mncatholic.org/pro_life_moms_fight_for_abortion_regulation_return 

https://www.mncatholic.org/life_and_bioethics

 https://www.mncatholic.org/abortion - provocatively declaring in absolutist terms:

 Abortion is the human rights tragedy of our age and is unequivocally condemned by the Catholic Church. We must all work towards a society where no child is at risk of being murdered in the womb.

But while bans and restrictions play an important role, building a culture of life means more than just making abortion illegal. Our ultimate goal should be to create a society where no woman ever feels like abortion is her only choice. In addition to working to limit abortion and stop Minnesota tax-payer funding for this horrific practice, we should also pass public policy that supports mothers facing challenging pregnancies and should do more to expand the availability of adoption.


If you are interested in helping further the efforts to have a "Choose Life" license plate in Minnesota, you can visit: chooselifeminnesota.org.

Share this page to spread the word.

 https://www.mncatholic.org/gender_ideology stating in part:

The Minnesota Catholic Conference opposes the advancement of gender theory, especially in places where young people are affected. In recent years, this has included efforts against the MSHSL’s transgender student-athlete policy and the Minnesota Department of Education’s transgender toolkit. Currently, MCC is focused on protecting the conscience rights and religious liberties of those persons and organizations who refuse to embrace harmful gender ideologies.

Instead of harmful, unscientific approaches to gender and sexuality, we advocate for practices that help people struggling with gender identity disorders find healing and integration.

God created us male or female. Our biological sex is not an accident. It is a gift from God and shapes how we participate in His self-giving love.

https://www.mncatholic.org/education - stating:

Humans strive for heaven by being part of social communities on earth. Understanding one’s cultural heritage and making contributions to the common good are the responsibilities of any good citizen. Therefore, education is an inalienable human right, insofar as it is the process of preparing children to pursue salvation and contribute to the good of their earthly community. Parents have the duty of being the primary educators of their kids. Because of this serious responsibility, they have a right to great liberty in shaping the education of their children. While other institutions, including public schools, may share in the responsibility of educating a child, they do so with the implicit permission of a child’s parents, and should never supersede or marginalize parents in the education process.

We support public policies that support the role of Catholic schools and other non-public education institutions in Minnesota, and that affirm the rights of all parents to choose schools that best fit the educational needs of their children. We advocate for the equitable participation of non-public school students in state and federal education programs.

[linking to:  https://www.mncatholic.org/school_choice and https://www.mncatholic.org/non_public_pupil_aid -- the latter stating:

 

Non-public schools educate the Minnesota public. In fact, private schools serve nearly 100,000 Minnesota students each year. Therefore, the education of these children should be supported by our state’s public education dollars. Students at private schools have many needs outside of the realm of religious instruction, including textbooks, computer equipment, and other basic school needs.

MCC is committed to ensuring that Minnesota kids at non-public schools are receiving the aid and support they deserve. Our students are our future, no matter what school they attend.


Nonpublic Education Partners is a coalition of organizations working to advance a unified legislative agenda in support of nonpublic students in Minnesota.

 https://www.usccb.org/prolife

It is a massive online communication machine. If Ryan Wilson is a part of the belief system, he should own up to that truth, unless he thinks it best we be less informed voters. Two more links, only, in juxtaposition:

https://www.mncatholic.org/billtracker - listing bills with side colors, "

Red = Oppose

Green = Support

Gray = Monitoring or Seeking Amendment

And then -  https://www.mncatholic.org/electionresources - arguably in a strange juxtaposition fashion states

Parish Guidelines for Political Activity

As Catholics, we must never be afraid of bringing our faith into the public square. However, because the Church is not a political entity, we must make sure that our individual advocacy efforts are kept distinct from the Church’s teaching voice. This election resource, updated in June 2022, provides guidelines for parish and church organization political activity, clearly laying out which activities are prohibited and which are permissible.

[...] Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship

“Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship” is the official Election Year teaching of the U.S. Catholic bishops. This resource provides guidance for Catholics in the exercise of their rights and duties as participants in our democracy, lifting up our dual heritage as both faithful Catholics and American citizens. The Faithful Citizenship webpage includes additional resources, such as bulletin inserts and informational videos.

Living the Gospel of Life: A Challenge to American Catholics

Read through "Living the Gospel of Life: A Challenge to American Catholics". Originally released in 1998 by the USCCB, “Living the Gospel of Life” is still a viable election resource for American Catholics looking to form their consciences in preparation for elections in 2020. It contextualizes our present-day policy debates within deeper shifts and trends in society’s consideration of human life and dignity.

 Some might view that juxtaposition as fine, others might see it as problematic.

BOTTOM LINE: Given the Catholic Church's advocacy against abortion as a privacy right of women, against personal body autonomy, and indirectly but ultimately against privacy as a fundamental Constitutional right - the exact Alito and Thomas opinions, via Leonard Leo's Federalist Society court packing agenda, etc.; given all that, to suggest it politically incorrect to point out candidate religions (and suggest there is adherence to Catholic belief among Catholic candidates) is nonsense because it is politically correct beyond debate that informed voters are better voters. This is particularly true for this election, with abortion access being a current burning societal issue given how a Catholic Supreme Court majority murdered Roe v Wade

And if the appearance of a "Ryan Wilson" photo congruence between "Ryan Wilson" candidate and a "Ryan Wilson" Catholic religious outlet commentator is coincidental, not the same person, then there would not be a "transparency" deceit. 

Likewise, if candidate and "Faith in the Public Arena" commentator (identified at the end of a web post as "a law clerk at the Minnesota Catholic Conference") is one and the same individual, why would the man decline to disclose such to the public?

All we can say, there is circumstantial evidence, again, suggesting a likelihood that ducking going on record on abortion by Wilson is a self-contradiction to his ostensibly running on "transparency."