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~ covering government and politics in Missouri – since 2007

Show Me Progress

Monthly Archives: June 2023

Campaign Finance: just in time

30 Friday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

BILL Pac, campaign finance, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, PAC, right wingnuts

Everyone else: Why so frantic?

Campaigns, PACS, and candidates: We have to get those contributions in before the end of the quarter!

Everyone else: A day here, a day there, it still ends up in the same place, right?

Campaigns, PACS, and candidates: [….]

Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Gorny Dandurand 4330 Belleview Ave Ste 200 Kansas City MO 64111 6/30/2023 $10,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Strong, Garner, Bauer 415 East Chestnut Expressway Springfield MO 65802 6/30/2023 $25,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Dollar, Burns, Becker & Hershewe, LC 1100 Main Street Ste 2600 Kansas City MO 64105 6/30/2023 $25,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Langdon & Emison LLC 911 Main Street PO BOX 220 Lexington MO 64067 6/30/2023 $25,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Placzek Winget Placzek LLC 2750 E Sunshine St Springfield MO 65804 6/30/2023 $10,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Ortwerth Law LLC 1922 Chourteau St Louis MO 63103 6/30/2023 $10,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Barnes Law Firm LLC 919 W 47th Street Kansas City MO 64112 6/30/2023 $10,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Sanders Law 9800 NW Polo Drive Ste 100 Kansas City MO 64153 6/30/2023 $10,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Brown & Crouppen PC One Metropolitan Sq 211 N Broadway Ste 1600 St Louis MO 63102 6/30/2023 $10,000.00

C190784 06/30/2023 Believe in Life and Liberty – BILL PAC Simmons Hanly Conroy One Court Street Alton IL 62002 6/30/2023 $25,000.00

Their overhead burn rate must be awesome.

Narrator: It is. $7,000.00 a month.

Campaign Finance: The promise of what?

30 Friday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

campaign finance, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, PAC

Just asking.

Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission

C232396 06/30/2023 American Promise PAC 2S Business Management LLC 1391 Lawrence 2140 Sarcoxie MO 64862 6/30/2023 $16,100.00

C232396 06/30/2023 American Promise PAC Holiday Inn Express & Suites Crown Hospitality LLC 1100 Lodora Dr. Wentzville MO 63385 6/30/2023 $9,000.00

C232396 06/30/2023 American Promise PAC Auto Plaza Motorsports, LLC 13980 Manchester Road St Louis MO 63011 6/30/2023 $25,000.00

C232396 06/30/2023 American Promise PAC Pacifica Consulting Services, LLC 1067 N. Mason Rd. Suite 2 St Louis MO 63141 6/30/2023 $500,000.00

[emphasis added]

Back in March:

C232396 03/31/2023 American Promise PAC Pacifica Consulting Services, LLC 1067 N. Mason Rd. Suite 2 St Louis MO 63141 3/31/2023 $500,000.00

C232396 03/31/2023 American Promise PAC AIG Virginia, LLC 2128 William Street #161 Cape Girardeau MO 63703 3/31/2023 $200,000.00

[emphasis added]

$1,000,000.00 from one contributing entity in three months. What’s with that?

Hmm.

Previously:

Campaign Finance: pretty soon, we’d be talking about some serious money (March 31, 2023)

Forget the homeless and the unhoused, our society has even bigger problems *

30 Friday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in meta

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

homeless, meta, missouri, sociopath, unhoused, Warrensburg

* that’s sarcasm, in case you’re really clueless

We don’t allow ignorant comments out of moderation to be linked with the original post, but we will present some of them in subsequent posts for the purpose of public derision and mockery. As we see fit.

We see fit.

An attempted trolling comment submitted today in response to – Town Hall on Homelessness/Unhoused – Warrensburg, Missouri – June 29, 2023 (June 29, 2023):

Is there going to be a meeting for the citizens of warrensburg against homeless people on a fair basis and hear their opinions. If no homelessness is in warrensburg then nothing changes but if you keep attracting homeless people to warrensburg it can be the downfall of a very established driving community

First, there was a meeting. It’s on you that you didn’t bother to find out about it and attend. It was well publicized.

“Against homeless”? Seriously.

“Fair basis”? Un unedited audio recording of the entire hour and a half town hall is about as “fair” as anything can get.

“No homelessness” “Attracting”? They’re here. One has to wonder about someone’s sense of place and reality that they consider a small town in west central Missouri with limited social service resources an attractive alternative for anyone trying to get back up on their feet.

“Established driving community”? WTF is that?

By the way, the IP address and email address of all comments are attached to the original comment in our blog operating system.

Previously:

Trails Regional Library – Board of Trustees – Holden, Missouri – June 21, 2023 (June 22, 2023)

Town Hall on Homelessness/Unhoused – Warrensburg, Missouri – June 29, 2023 (June 29, 2023)

Campaign Finance: only if you can afford it

30 Friday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

campaign finance, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, PAC, Rex Sinquefield, right wingnut

Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C222296 06/30/2023 Liberty and Justice PAC Jeanne and Rex Sinquefield 244 Bent Walnut Ln Westphalia MO 65085 Retired 6/30/2023 $50,000.00

[emphasis added]

Must be nice.

Town Hall on Homelessness/Unhoused – Warrensburg, Missouri – June 29, 2023

29 Thursday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in Town Hall, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

homeless, missouri, town hall, Trails Regional Library, unhoused, Warrensburg

A panel representing local shelters, community resources, the Trails Regional Library, and a local church held an open public town hall this evening at the Trails Regional Library Warrensburg Branch to discuss, explain, and enlighten the community about what they do and what they can’t do for homeless/unhoused individuals in Warrensburg.

A representative from the Trail Regional Library – Warrensburg Branch:

Kansas City media market news coverage:

The rest of the panel:

The town hall (1 hour, 37 minutes):
https://showmeprogress.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/WbgMoHomelessTownHall062923.mp3
.
It’s a special kind of irony when someone’s business plan is predicated on higher rents and profits, making housing less affordable, and thus helping create the unhoused/homeless issue that they’re complaining about…because business.

There were questions and statements from individuals attending the meeting:


https://showmeprogress.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/WbgMoHomelessTownHall062923excerpt-001.mp3
–

….And I really want to emphasize that then folks who are unhoused have a huge, huge just wide variety of reasons for being unhoused. Some of them are working, some of them are looking for work, domestic violence victims, there’s a lot of reasons that people become unhoused. Some of them are mentally ill. We don’t have any cure for persistent mental illness, except to take care of them the best that we can.

And trying to lump all of these situations, because we’re talking people that have jobs, they are, they’re living in their car, they’ve got kids that are going to school, they’re trying to do all the right things and they can’t afford housing.

So we can’t allow ourselves to lump them in to this cattle car situation and say all of the homeless can’t come here, we’re gonna ship ’em south of town, we’re gonna ship ’em to some other place. That is a huge, huge danger sign. That is cattle cars. And you should be, we should never go there.

People who are unhoused are human beings and they are citizens of this place. It may not be the most recent place, but they are citizens here. And yes, they pay taxes every time they buy something, every time they have to put gas in their car, every time they have to fix a busted car, yes, they’re paying taxes.

I’m over, over the demonization of people because they fell into the hole that we have been lucky enough not to fall in yet. I’m really over it.

I have worked with the severely mentally challenged. I have had people on moving…try to shove heads through windows. They don’t ask to be that mentally ill. And it’s a minority, but because we don’t have mentally, mental health services at the scale that we need these people get lost.

Warrensburg is a great little town. It cannot become that gated community where we cattle car people out because they don’t look nice.

Nobody’s got a scarlet H on their forehead that tells you that they’re homeless. I’m over it.

These folks [on the panel] are doing an incredible job and there’s more. And they have half the Warrensburg cat ladies here tonight [laughter] and I admire the work that they do, but they know that, that homeless people, sometimes the only thing they have that loves them back is their animal, and yes, they will stay out in the woods to protect that animal. I don’t care if it’s a cat, or a dog, or [inaudible] possum.

I’m over it. We can do better than this. And we do not have to get ugly about it.

These folks deserve our compassion and our attention and help because most people that are homeless aren’t homeless permanently. It’s very short term….

Previously:

Trails Regional Library – Board of Trustees – Holden, Missouri – June 21, 2023 (June 22, 2023)

The demographics they are a changin’

29 Thursday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in Mark Alford, social media

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

4th Congressional District, affirmative action, former newsreader, higher education, Mark Alford, missouri, right wingnut, social media, that ridiculous hat, U.S. Supreme Court

Today, at the U.S. Supreme Court:

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
[….]
STUDENTS FOR FAIR ADMISSIONS, INC. v.
PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS OF HARVARD COLLEGE
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE FIRST CIRCUIT
No. 20–1199. Argued October 31, 2022—Decided June 29, 2023

[….]
For the reasons provided above, the Harvard and UNC admissions programs cannot be reconciled with the guarantees of the Equal Protection Clause. Both programs lack sufficiently focused and measurable objectives warranting the use of race, unavoidably employ race in a negative manner, involve racial stereotyping, and lack meaningful endpoints. We have never permitted admissions programs towork in that way, and we will not do so today.

At the same time, as all parties agree, nothing in this opinion should be construed as prohibiting universitiesfrom considering an applicant’s discussion of how race affected his or her life, be it through discrimination, inspiration, or otherwise. See, e.g., 4 App. in No. 21–707, at 1725–1726, 1741; Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 20–1199, at 10. But, despite the dissent’s assertion to the contrary, universities may not simply establish through application essays or other means the regime we hold unlawful today. (A dissenting opinion is generally not the best source of legal advice on how to comply with the majority opinion.) “[W]hat cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly. The Constitution deals with substance, not shadows,” and the prohibition against racial discrimination is “levelled at the thing, not the name.” Cummings v. Missouri, 4 Wall. 277, 325 (1867). A benefit to a student who overcame racial discrimination, for example, must be tied to that student’s courage and determination. Or a benefit to a student whose heritage or culture motivated him or her to assume a leadership role or attain a particular goal must be tied to that student’s unique ability to contribute to the university. In other words, the student must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual—not on the basis of race. Many universities have for too long done just the opposite. And in doing so, they have concluded, wrongly, that the touchstone of an individual’s identity is not challenges bested, skills built, or lessons learned but the color of their skin. Our constitutional history does not tolerate that choice.

The judgments of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and of the District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina are reversed. It is so ordered.
[….]

Justice Sotomayor’s dissent:

[….] Today, the Court concludes that indifference to race is the only constitutionally permissible means to achieve racial equality in college admissions. That interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment is not only contrary to precedent and the entire teachings of our history, see supra, at 2–17, but is also grounded in the illusion that racial inequality was a problem of a different generation. Entrenched racial inequality remains a reality today. That is true for society writ large and, more specifically, for Harvard and the University of North Carolina (UNC), two institutions with a long history of racial exclusion. Ignoring race will not equalize a society that is racially unequal. What was true in the 1860s, and again in 1954, is true today: Equality requires acknowledgment of inequality.
[….]

[….]
This extensive body of research is supported by the most obvious data point available to this institution today: The three Justices of color on this Court graduated from elite universities and law schools with race-conscious admissions programs, and achieved successful legal careers, despite having different educational backgrounds than their peers. A discredited hypothesis that the Court previously rejected is no reason to overrule precedent.
[….]

Notwithstanding this Court’s actions, however, society’s progress toward equality cannot be permanently halted. Diversity is now a fundamental American value, housed in our varied and multicultural American community that only continues to grow. The pursuit of racial diversity will go on. Although the Court has stripped out almost all uses of race in college admissions, universities can and should continue to use all available tools to meet society’s needs for diversity in education. Despite the Court’s unjustified exercise of power, the opinion today will serve only to highlight the Court’s own impotence in the face of an America whose cries for equality resound. As has been the case before in the history of American democracy, “the arc of the moral universe” will bend toward racial justice despite the Court’s efforts today to impede its progress. Martin Luther King “Our God is Marching On!” Speech (Mar. 25, 1965).

Justice Jackson’s dissent:

[….]
Gulf-sized race-based gaps exist with respect to the health, wealth, and well-being of American citizens. They were created in the distant past, but have indisputably been passed down to the present day through the generations. Every moment these gaps persist is a moment in which this great country falls short of actualizing one of its foundational principles—the “self-evident” truth that all of us are created equal. Yet, today, the Court determines that holistic admissions programs like the one that the University of North Carolina (UNC) has operated, consistent with Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U. S. 306 (2003), are a problem with respect to achievement of that aspiration, rather than a viable solution (as has long been evident to historians, sociologists, and policymakers alike).
[….]

….But the response is simple: Our country has never been colorblind. Given the lengthy history of state-sponsored race-based preferences in America, to say that anyone is now victimized if a college considers whether that legacy of discrimination has unequally advantaged its applicants fails to acknowledge the well-documented “intergenerational transmission of inequality” that still plagues our citizenry.
[….]

With let-them-eat-cake obliviousness, today, the majority pulls the ripcord and announces “colorblindness for all” by legal fiat. But deeming race irrelevant in law does not make it so in life. And having so detached itself from this country’s actual past and present experiences, the Court has now been lured into interfering with the crucial work that UNC and other institutions of higher learning are doing to solve America’s real-world problems.

No one benefits from ignorance. Although formal race-linked legal barriers are gone, race still matters to the lived experiences of all Americans in innumerable ways, and today’s ruling makes things worse, not better. The best that can be said of the majority’s perspective is that it proceeds (ostrich-like) from the hope that preventing consideration of race will end racism. But if that is its motivation, the majority proceeds in vain. If the colleges of this country are required to ignore a thing that matters, it will not just go away. It will take longer for racism to leave us. And, ultiately, ignoring race just makes it matter more.
[….]

The demographics, they are a changin’:

What then?

Mark Alford (r) [2022 file photo].

Today, from Mark Alford (r):

Mark Alford @RepMarkAlford
Huge win out of SCOTUS today!

Race shouldn’t have ever been a factor in the college admissions process, and now it never will be again.
9:59 AM · Jun 29, 2023

Some of the responses:

Please make a list of every college and university and their presidents who denied admission because of race and read them publicly in Congress.

Uh, to what end? That’s not how it works. That’s not how any of this works.

Spoken like the Caucasian American male you are.

But you will still be a pathetic liar.

If you think it never should have been then you have named yourself a racist.

To have a discussion as to win to end it I can understand. But after hundreds of years of killing people of color who learned to read followed by unequal schools to not have it at all is wrong.

Congressman Alford, Please know –

The Supreme Court “DID NOT” strike down Affirmative Action Admission preferences for legacies, donors, employee families. Special recommendations are still allowed. The Court struck down Affirmative Action For everyone except WHITE PEOPLE!

You really are this fuckin’ stupid, aren’t you?

Inadequate legacy Mark Alford got stupid bullshit.

And what school did you graduate from? Just goes to show how stupid and ignorant you are. Way to represent our state you fool.

The demographics they are a changin’.

House Finch – Carpodacus mexicanus – in June

28 Wednesday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

bird, Carpodacus mexicanus, House Finch, missouri

In west central Missouri:

House Finch. Carpodacus mexicanus.
Canon 5D III, 2.8 – 70-200 mm, 2x III.
F 5.6, 1/100, ISO 400, 400 mm.

House Finch. Carpodacus mexicanus.
Canon 5D III, 2.8 – 70-200 mm, 2x III.
F 5.6, 1/100, ISO 400, 400 mm.

Previously:

Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon (June 28, 2023)

Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon

28 Wednesday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

missouri, Shirley Jackson, The Lottery

Crazy times, eh?

Campaign Finance: PAC for what?

28 Wednesday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

campaign finance, Gladius PAC, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, PAC

Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

222160 06/28/2023 Gladius PAC Quality Schools Coalition 1100 Main Street Kansas City MO 64108 6/27/2023 $25,000.00

[emphasis added]

Defunding what?

Previously:

Campaign Finance: sure, go ahead, name your new PAC after a Roman sword (June 24, 2022)

Campaign Finance: some last minute shopping… (July 29, 2022)

Campaign Finance: passing it through (July 30, 2022)

Campaign Finance: at the last instant (August 2, 2022)

Primary investment returns (August 4, 2022)

Campaign Finance: Roman sword (October 23, 2023)

Still waiting for “trickle down” to work after all these years

28 Wednesday Jun 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in Eric Schmitt, social media, US Senate

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Eric Schmitt, Fascist pig, gaslighting, missouri, ratio, right wingnut, social media, U.S. Senate

Eric Schmitt (r) [2022 file photo].

Yesterday:

Eric Schmitt @Eric_Schmitt
The Republican Party is now and always should be the home for working class, blue collar families.
8:38 AM · Jun 27, 2023

Thye still don’t have a seat at the table, though they are all on the menu.

Some of the responses:

I never understood why they weren’t in the past.

Then you’d think that Saints Nixon and Reagan would have been excommunicated by now.

Its policies have never been farther from benefiting the working class. This would, however, explain your previous tweet deriding the protection of truthful information.

Yes, the party that takes their money and pisses on them while handing it to ChristoFacists & American Oligarchs is definitely the party for hardworking Americans who get by on sweat & blood, many in Biden infrastructure jobs. WILD gaslighting job, tho, @gop. #UnionStrong #DemocratsDeliver

Yeah? Clue us in when you actually do anything to benefit the lives of the working class, blue collar families.

Republicans oppose workers’ rights and only care about fattening the bosses’ pockets.

I don’t even need the sarcasm font on this comment sir. The last time Republicans were for working class and blue collar (some of us white collar are working class too) was when Eisenhower led the Republican Party, you guys don’t support Unions or a living wage.

Then why is the Republican party constantly cutting taxes for the ultra wealthy? [….]

Nobody who works for a living should have anything but contempt for lazy corrupt Republican thieves.

You are lying. Your party does nothing for the middle class. You’re trying to destroy public education, science, medical care, and trust in fair elections through lies and misinformation.

The Republican Party has always been the home for the wealthy and corps. They fight for deregulation, especially when it comes to the safety of workers or food safety. In 2017, they gave the wealthiest and corps. the biggest unpaid for tax breaks but screwed the middle class.

So you agree, Unions are vital part of the working class? Minimum wage should be raised? And we should close the wealth gap so that the lower and middle class folks that keep businesses running should not be living paycheck to paycheck?
[….]

If only your policies showed that.

As long as they are white and straight and only read the books the GOP approves of at the local library.

[….] That’s wildly inaccurate. Even when I was a Republican I knew that wasn’t true.

BS

It has never been home for the working class, it’s always been a safe haven for big corporations that want huge tax breaks at the expense of working class blue collar workers

So…
Raise the minimum wage
Protect union rights
Fund public schools
Cut taxes on incomes below $125k
Tax the rich
Build infrastructure in rural and urban working class communities
Build public transportation
Enhance voting rights for the working class poor

Put up or shut up

“Should be”? But not even in the same ballpark.

Union busting, trying to repeal ACA, lower minim wages, against Medicaid expansion…how does any of that help blue collar families?

Is that because of Republican support for “right-to-work” laws, a lower minimum wage, foreign ownership of US land and companies, and offshoring?

True, if they’re working class billionaires.

Wasn’t the Republican Party in MO responsible for RTW, but labor rallied and told you NO! Republicans are not for blue collar working families.

I’ve not seen much from the billionaire tax cut. Maybe you have the check in the mail, Er?

Well Eric Missourians know that’s a crock of crap!!

It’s not though. Working class blue collar families are just the blood you rich republicans feed off of in acts of exploitation. The jig is up

The GOP keeps trying to push right to work and weaken labor unions. What are you doing do benefit anyone except yourself and your wealthy donors?

You are a laughing stock.

A working class with no health insurance, earning minimum wage of $5/hour and paying a higher proportionate share of their income to taxes than the Republicans who warped America’s tax policy. Yeah. A real hero for the working class.

…. but mostly billionaires. Definitely billionaires, those are the priority, ya?

Definitely not

That sir is a lie.

No Eric, you’re not.

Those of you about to get better internet access can thank Democrats.

No, it’s not and hasn’t been for a while now. And while we’re at it, it’s not the party of women’s rights, small government, letting families make decisions about their children’s healthcare and equity for all, either!

Oh, that would explain why you became a corporate attorney and spent your life helping corporations against working people.

Since when?

Yea the party that doesn’t support social security, Medicare, healthcare, job training, college tuition assistance, and minimum wages, unions. Oh such support for the working class!

LOL. This Republican Party shifts the tax burden to working class families to give rich families tax breaks, doesn’t think working families should have affordable healthcare, and undermines safety regulations for workers at every turn.

This Republican Party attempted a coup.

Eric is wrong again. Tactic of repeating a falsehood to convince people it’s true. Very fascist of you.

No it has been the party of the super rich since Reagen and his voodoo economics . Trickle down does not work and will never work.

This is the funniest thing I have a long time.

You attack wages, you attack, benefits, you attack unions, you attack worker protections, you saddle the middle class with billionaire in corporate tax breaks, and now you’re trying to pollute our water and air with impunity.

We’re here for the ratio.

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