Take Down Of Ashley Hinson’s First Ad

Rural Polling Place

Republican Representative Ashley Hinson’s first U.S. Senate television ad, “Believe,” makes claims voters should question.

She says “veterans deserve a hell of a lot better.” They do. Yet in 2022 she voted against the EVEST Act, which automatically enrolls eligible discharged veterans in VA health care (HR 4673, Roll Call 14). She also opposed the Guard and Reserve GI Bill Parity Act, extending benefits to reservists and National Guard members (HR 1836, Roll Call 6).

Her ad accuses healthcare companies of “ripping off” veterans, but her own record has hurt them. She supported DOGE cuts that eliminated VA positions in Cedar Rapids and Iowa City, contributing to lost benefits and longer wait times.

She also claims to support banning congressional stock trading, yet refused to sign the bipartisan discharge petition to force a vote on the issue (H.Res. 725, 12/2/2025).

The contrast between campaign rhetoric and congressional actions is clear. While backing cuts affecting veterans, she increased her net worth nearly tenfold to $7.5 million through congressional stock trading she appears unwilling to prohibit.

Trust what Ashley Hinson does, not what she says in paid advertising.

Here is some local analysis of the ad from KHOI’s Capitol Week.

Posted in Iowa politics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Newspapers Now

Clipping from the March 4, 1923 Des Moines Register. Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

Not long after the Kennedy assassination, Mother found me a job as a newspaper boy. Before dawn, I rode my bicycle to pick up a bundle of Des Moines Register dailies and deliver them. The homes were spread out because the Register was not our local paper. It was the route that was available. My goal was to take a paper from my bag, fold and toss it on the porch, as close to the door as possible, without getting off my bike. I could do it most of the time. I almost never saw my customers because the Register had centralized billing and I did not have to do collections. It was just me, my bicycle, and my newspaper bag in early morning darkness.

Even though I delivered newspapers for the Register, then the afternoon Times-Democrat, until starting high school, I seldom read them. I preferred to read books I selected at the public library. Once the job provided money of my own, I bought books at the drugstore near the end of my route. My customers did read the paper, though.

In 1965, the Des Moines Register, under the Cowles family who bought the paper in 1903, had become one of the nation’s premier regional newspapers, famous for statewide reporting, editorials, and investigative work. By the 1960s, it had national stature beyond the readers on my paper route. Newspapers weren’t “media” as we define that word today. They were the physical labor of printing and distributing newsprint, a community ritual. The ritual aspect was evidenced by some of my customers coaching me on where exactly on the porch they wanted to find their daily newspaper. Newspapers were part of the infrastructure of Midwestern life.

Readers sought newspapers to participate in community. Many were reading the same stories on the same day. They also sought noon radio news, and this was the time of the rise in nightly televised news which changed from 15 to 30 minutes in 1963. News was comparatively linear, bounded, and voluntary. A person made a conscious decision to sit down with a paper. The newspaper occupied a defined portion of the day. My work as a newspaper boy was the end of the line, though. Once delivered, newspapers and other news outlets did not actively pursue the reader’s attention.

My newspaper reading during and after high school and university was intermittent. In eighth grade, I completed a class project that involved clipping news stories and assembling them into an album. Later, at the University of Iowa, I regularly picked up the Daily Iowan to follow coverage of student anti-war demonstrations during the final years of the Nixon administration. The next newspaper-reading experience that stands out came while I was living in West Germany during the Cold War.

For three years I lived near the main railway station in Mainz, Germany. During scarce free time, I often walked to the station newsstand and bought copies of the International Herald Tribune, where many of the same stories published in the United States appeared in a reformatted international edition. The Stars and Stripes was also widely available, carrying American domestic news, sports, comics, and reports related to military affairs. By then I had become a steady consumer of news, both in print and through Armed Forces Radio, although the way I gave it attention differed little from my days as a newspaper boy.

In the military, I developed an identity that differed from the one I carried in civilian life. Mine became the “Iowan,” even though I had never thought much about Iowa as a defining identity before leaving home. During field exercises, bundles of Stars and Stripes arrived through the military supply chain and were distributed in the mess hall during meals. This Iowan and others like me read the paper not simply for information, but for reassurance that we were still participating in American life while stationed overseas.

I especially remember President Jimmy Carter’s 1978 trip to Wiesbaden during a state visit to West Germany. Our unit became involved in preparations for it. Afterward, reading about the visit in the newspaper felt like direct contact with public events. I saved newspaper clippings about Carter’s speech and the events. It felt like I was preserving pieces of history.

When I returned to Iowa after military service, many newspapers were experiencing strong financial performance. After the choppy waters of the 1970s—stagflation, a recession, and the fuel crisis—advertising remained strong. If a department store, grocery chain, automobile dealer, or realtor wanted to reach large numbers of local consumers, the newspaper remained the most efficient vehicle available. Newspapers were making money the way they printed advertisements.

This period of prosperity made diverse news coverage possible. In Iowa and elsewhere, newspapers could afford to send reporters across the state for feature stories, agricultural reporting, political campaigns, and local investigations because advertising revenue subsidized ambitious journalism. The Cowles family reaped the benefits of this period of economic growth. Eventually, though, they could not withstand the pressure of newspaper consolidation and were acquired by the Gannett Company, which later became USA Today.

What newspapers could not foresee during those profitable years was that their greatest vulnerability was not competition from other newspapers, television, or even radio. It was the transformation of human attention into a measurable and marketable commodity. Newspapers had always competed for readers, but they did not follow people through every idle moment of the day. Once the paper landed on the porch, the transaction was complete. Readers either opened it or they didn’t.

Writers such as Tim Wu in The Attention Merchants and Chris Hayes in The Sirens’ Call argue that modern media systems are designed not merely to inform but to capture and retain human attention. Digital platforms monitor clicks, scrolling behavior, viewing time, and engagement in ways newspapers never could. Earlier newspapers sought readers, but they could not track whether one page held attention longer than another. Modern systems can measure every interaction.

At first, newspapers participated enthusiastically in this transformation. Publishers moved content online, often giving it away free in the hope that digital advertising would replace print revenue. Instead, companies such as Google and Facebook absorbed much of the advertising income that once sustained local journalism. Classified ads virtually disappeared almost overnight. Newsrooms shrank. Stories increasingly came from wire services, syndicated material, and content-sharing agreements because local reporting had become expensive.

Today, when I open the digital edition of the Cedar Rapids Gazette, I find I already know many of the stories going in. During the day I encounter headlines through websites, social media, email alerts, and conversations. The newspaper no longer organizes the public’s attention in the way it once did. It now competes within a crowded marketplace where every platform seeks clicks, engagement, and time spent looking at a screen.

I still subscribe to a newspaper because they continue to provide something difficult to find elsewhere: a sense of deliberate attention. Someone has made decisions about what matters, arranged stories into a coherent order, and attempted to distinguish what is important. That older idea of news persists even as the economic and technological world that sustained it continues to disappear.

Our family first logged on to the internet using a personal computer and dial-up service on April 21, 1996. I didn’t anticipate how this new technology would change how I gathered news about our world and society. I certainly did not understand how media outlets would seek my attention and monetize it.

By then, the idea of a paperboy was more nostalgia than reality as adults began newspaper delivery in automobiles to cover a new set of challenges, including growing suburbs, declining circulation, and more complex logistics. The way newspapers are now is much different from when I tossed them on porches in early morning darkness.

While our sense of community changed, and newsprint has largely gone away, a newspaper remains important to our sense of community. There is value in that.

Posted in media | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

The High Cost Of Nuclear Power

Nuclear power has significant economic, health, and environmental costs and poses safety hazards that far exceed those of any other type of energy. Meanwhile, state and federal lawmakers are pushing policies to incentivize “new nuclear” and even bring back to life closed nuclear plants like Three Mile Island. Join us for a special symposium to learn why this is a poor investment for our country and a risk to our health and environment.

PSR National and our network of chapters invite you to this one-hour event featuring speakers Dr. Philip Landrigan, Dr. Benjamin Sovacool, and Dr. M.V. Ramana. Dr. Caren Solomon will be moderating. Read their bios and more details here: https://psr.org/event/nuclear-power-symposium/

Register for the online meeting here.

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

AI Deserves The Boos

Photo by Gustavo Fring on Pexels.com

I want to say something about artificial intelligence’s intrusion into life. Because the emerging technology is rapidly changing since public awareness of it increased a few years ago, whatever I might say seems unlikely to persist in relevance for long. For now, people I know reject it as something of value. Evidence is everywhere.

May commencements brought a share of public derision. Speakers were being booed after bringing up AI and touting its benefits, notably former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and Gloria Caulfield, a real estate executive. Graduates face a difficult labor market, and a technology that could make it more difficult to find a job was neither welcome nor news.

There is a lot to hate about Schmidt, but who is Gloria Caulfield? She comes from the Lake Nona development world, a 17-square-mile, master-planned smart city and innovation hub in Orlando, Florida. To her, AI and related innovation represent modernization, economic growth, and future competitiveness. She thought her speech was relevant, yet graduates in media, arts, and communications heard another warning that the professions they trained for may become more unstable. No wonder they booed.

Among problems encountered by recent college graduates are that their work internships are not turning into jobs as employers don’t accept that as experience. The use of resume scanners instead of a human is off-putting. The struggle to talk to a human at a prospective employer creates uncertainty. In addition, there are fewer jobs out there. Entry level positions are viewed as most likely targets of AI-driven automation. These things put together create stress in graduating seniors. AI is simply one more thing.

When I’m working at my desk I have a Twitch stream on in the background. The community is more than five years old with a good group of regulars I’ve gotten to know, some of them in real life. To a person, they are not fans of artificial intelligence. When the chat turns to AI, rejection is immediate. There are reasons for that, although the discussion never gets to them.

In part, this cohort spent years adapting to unstable working conditions. They are well-versed in the digital world, and a bit weary of yet another technology purporting to make their lives better when so many new technologies did not fulfill their hype and promise. They lived through outsourcing, remote work transitions, automation, software churn, layoffs, and constant demands to retrain or rebrand themselves professionally. AI is yet another source of volatility in the job market, yet another skills race with no certain outcome, and one more way to jimmy-jack the job market to the advantage of business interests.

My Twitch cohort is mostly of digital natives likely to have played Oregon Trail in school computer labs, and first experienced the internet by loading a disk into their home computer to access by dial-up on a phone line. They have seen it all and the commercial nature of AI represents nothing special. They are tired of the next new thing.

Why don’t I like it? The theft, mainly.

In October 2025, my blog got a dramatic increase in number of views from a single source. By dramatic, I mean in September the view count was 2,800, and October was 51,335. Most of these views took place from Oct. 7-9, or roughly 12 views per minute on average. The views were of individual posts going back to the first still existing online. Obviously a machine was doing this “viewing.” To what end, I don’t know, but I suspect AI training.

A local used bookseller reported a surprising number of recent online purchases of obscure books, to the tune of 500 orders per week. They feared the worst, that the purchasing was algorithm driven to acquire the books, tear off the covers, scan the pages for AI, and then discard them. In aggregate, taking millions of used books out of the marketplace. The Washington Post recently ran a story about this operation. This is a clear intrusion into what many of us believe are social norms—people buy books to read and cherish them. It represents AI theft.

I use artificial intelligence almost daily, mostly through Google’s Gemini which is now embedded into the search function. I also use ChatGPT for more complex questions. Both provide responses quickly but I find half of them problematic, or more simply said, they are garbage. Crappy work product makes AI just one more suspect opinion in a society where there is a lot of that going around.

Likely a machine designed the rollout of artificial intelligence to more public use. As is typical, the machines missed the human factor, which is another reason to boo.

Posted in Labor | Tagged , | Leave a comment

The Upcoming Battle Starts Now

I get just as frustrated with the Democratic party as anyone, but more than that I am sick of everyone piling on like high school.

Democrats didn’t cause our current situation.  If our party is guilty of anything it’s of underestimating the Republicans’ bad intent.  We’re guilty of not being clear-eyed enough about them, about MAGA, about Trump in particular, about their propaganda, and now we are coming to understand we weren’t clear-eyed enough about our own Republicans in congress and in Des Moines.

Democrats are on the right side of the issues and history while Trump tries to destroy everything. Our party has been guilty of not knowing how to cope with Republican money, media, power, aggressiveness and corruption. Seems like when the going gets tough we usually stand down and hope to survive the next contest. So many problems, so little cardboard…

Lately, Ken Martin, our current chair has been blasted for not releasing the report of mistakes made in 2024.  The DNC under Ken Martin’s leadership is heading in the right direction, correcting the things that we have done wrong over time.  Many have no idea what the DNC has been doing that is helping our campaigns since he became chair.

But it’s not that hard to find out.  The DNC now has a weekly update from the DNC Grassroots team called the Blue Print and a YouTube channel. Find out for yourself what Dems are doing. Rita Hart has been talking about it. State party chairs are talking about it. Here is Jane Kleeb discussing investment in Democratic party infrastructure.

Ken Martin has acknowledged his mistake in not releasing the report. (Has anyone in the Republican party ever done that?)  You can read Ken’s statement about it here on the Blue Print substack.

As Simon Rosenberg says, “Everyone in Washington is not a corrupt piece of shit.” 

 Btw, the false narrative that everyone in DC is a corrupt piece of shit is helpful to Republicans because they need us to believe everyone is as bad as they are.

Below is an excerpt from a piece published on The Hill balancing some of the one-sided crapping on Democrats that has been out there. You can read the entire piece here.

“Just look at what Martin is actually building. The DNC, in partnership with the Association of State Democratic Committees, is delivering more than $1 million every month to all 57 state and territorial parties — the largest sustained investment in state parties in our history.

And Red-state parties are receiving an additional $5,000 per month through the Red State Fund. State parties from Mississippi to Alaska are growing their staff and infrastructure for the first time in years. This is the strategy Howard Dean used to deliver the 2006 and 2008 wave elections. It works.

It also happens to be the strategy we desperately need. The Clinton campaign in 1992 contested more than two dozen states. In 2024, we played in just seven.

In other words, we spent three decades surrendering the map, and the math is now closing in on us. Population projections for the 2030 Census show between eight and 12 electoral votes shifting from blue states to red states ahead of the 2032 presidential election. If we keep writing off Texas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and the rest of the Sun Belt, we will lose the Electoral College permanently.

Martin understands this. His critics, evidently, do not.

Meanwhile, the actual results keep coming in. Democrats have won or at least over performed in hundreds of special elections under Martin’s leadership. We swept Virginia and New Jersey in November 2025. Grassroots fundraising hit record levels in his first months as chair — more than any DNC chair raised in his first four months, ever — and continues at an historic pace. Small-dollar donors are responding to the strategy because they understand what it is for: building Democratic power in places where Democrats have not shown up in a generation.”

more

Simon Rosenberg of Hopium Chronicles is one of my few paid memberships as one of the most reliable sources of information on the current electoral environment. He gave some advice to the Hopium community on his substack platform this week.  I think it is realistic.

“This is going to be a brual election and we have to brace ourselves for it. 

“Spend time watching the way they are attacking James Tavarico and come to a place of understanding about what we’re going to be up against this year everywhere in every single race.”

There’s going to be AI generated images of [candidates] having the equivalent of dinner with the devil, every day throughout the entire general election. Which is why we need to provide them the resources required to be able to anticipate all of this and get out ahead of it.

With Talarico they’ve signaled in the last 24 hours the way they’re going to play the game. It’s why we need candidates who can survive the unbelievably brutal kind of attacks that are going to come against them.”

Happy Friday everyone!

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Democrats Can Still Flip The Senate

Since this podcast aired, James Talarico won the Democratic primary in Texas. He will be the party’s nominee in the upcoming general election. Good conversation between Jennifer Rubin and Dan Pfeiffer.  Iowa gets a mention.  “Voters are getting sick of non-stop Republican leadership for the last fifteen years or so.”  

 

 

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , | Leave a comment

How America Prevailed Against Hate

Audio only but worth a listen. Rachel interviewed historian Steven J. Ross about his new book The Secret War Against Hate: American Resistance to Anti-Semitism and White Supremacy before a live audience Monday.

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , | Leave a comment

With Little Or No Concern

Photo: WQAD

From our inbox an important message from Chris Jones –

Iowa is already experiencing a major water quality and serious public health emergency.

Now, trillion-dollar tech companies want to build massive AI data centers across our state that will consume enormous amounts of electricity, billions of gallons of water, and thousands of acres of farmland — all while receiving taxpayer subsidies and corporate tax breaks. Enough is enough.

Iowa is in crisis — adding new data centers without legal protections will only make this crisis worse.

Click here to Say NO to building new AI data centers in Iowa — Sign today if you support a Moratorium on building new data centers across Iowa. Every voice counts!

Data centers have proven to be environmental and public health disasters across the country, while also driving a major spike in energy prices for local residents, with little or no concern about these impacts from the Silicon Valley billionaires who benefit at our expense.

Serious Concerns — The Explosion of New Data Centers Across Iowa

It’s time for Iowa’s elected officials to listen to the growing public concern.

Iowa’s data center footprint is exploding!

According to Iowa Public Radio, Iowa already has 65 major data centers in operation, with another 25 massive data centers in the planning stages across the state.

Iowans face rising cancer rates, and our state’s water quality is among the most polluted in the nation due to industrial agricultural runoff — with many communities struggling with dangerous nitrate contamination in their drinking water.

Our state is already crowded with over 10,000 factory farms and 41 ethanol plants, which have placed a massive burden on our water quality, creating over 7,000 contaminated private wells in rural counties. We can’t afford to become Silicon Valley’s new dumping ground for AI data centers that will only add to this burden.

Communities are fighting back.

In communities across the state, everyday Iowans are organizing to protect their basic rights and environment in the face of this new growing threat. Every day Iowans are standing up.

From Cedar Rapids and Dubuque to Mason City and Dickinson County, residents across the state are being forced to fight to protect their communities from unwanted data centers being pushed into their backyards without meaningful input or consent.

These are not distant or abstract threats. People are showing up at local zoning meetings, school board halls, and county supervisors’ offices — demanding answers about water use, noise, energy costs, and the long-term impact on their land and way of life. Their courage is why we need statewide action now.

Add your voice TODAY — Sign this petition —  Stand with Iowa’s land, water, and people!

Add your name today and share with your friends to show our state’s elected officials that data centers need public approval to make sure that clean water, environmental, and economic policies must be based on science and public health, not political convenience.

Sincerely,
Team Jones

Can you make a donation today? Every dollar we raise will go directly to helping get Chris’s message out to more Iowa voters.

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Are Red States Still Safe For Republicans?

Joe Trippi and Alex discuss Nebraska, Dan Osborn, Iowa, Alabama, and why strong candidates are changing the map in places Republicans thought were safe. Joe argues Trump’s approval collapse is accelerating — and Republicans cannot redistrict fast enough to catch up.

Full ep:    • Trump’s Collapse Is Outrunning the GOP’s R…  

00:00 Nebraska Democrats make a surprising move
00:34 Why Dan Osborn is such a strong candidate
01:05 The candidates changing red-state politics
01:32 Iowa’s Senate and governor races heat up
02:12 Four Iowa House seats may now be in play
02:48 Trump goes underwater in Alabama
03:32 Trump’s Iowa collapse accelerates
04:03 Why Republicans can’t redistrict fast enough
04:24 Joe Trippi: “There’s no reason to panic”

 

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Pattison Sand Persists In Wanting Iowa Water

I wrote at length in 2020 about Pattison Sand wanting to mine the Jordan Aquifer and ship the water out west. They persist in needing water, and Iowa DNR sent me this email about their current permit request on Tuesday.

You are receiving this email because you previously expressed interest in or commented on Pattison Sand Company’s Water Use Permit Application.

For a quick recap: Pattison Sand Company requested additional water last year for their quarry facility near Clayton, IA. In response to comments received during the public notice period for the current modification, the Water Use Program held a public hearing, a public meeting, and gathered additional public comments on the proposed permit modification.

Since the last meeting, the Iowa Geological Survey completed a Hydrologic Investigation and the Water Use Program evaluated options for environmental safeguards and permit conditions. We’d like to share those findings with you at an upcoming meeting:

When: Tuesday, June 9th, 2026 | 1:00–6:00 PM

Where: Garnavillo Community Center, 106 W Niagara St, Garnavillo, Iowa

Staff from the Water Use Program, Iowa DNR Field Office, and Iowa Geological Survey will present on permit conditions, local geology and hydrology, environmental impacts, and timeline. Feel free to drop in at any time during the event. There will be presentations at the beginning (1pm) and end (5pm) of the event.

We hope to see you there.

This looks to be an excellent meeting.

For background information, here is an excerpt from my 2020 post on Pattison Sand:

Mining the Jordan Aquifer

News on Friday, Feb. 28, 2020, was Pattison Sand Company of Clayton sought to extract 34 million gallons of water per year over a ten-year period from the Jordan Aquifer, according to Perry Beeman of Iowa Capitol Dispatch. The water would be shipped by rail to arid regions in the American west, potentially to New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, Nevada, Utah, Arizona or California. The Jordan Aquifer is also the source of municipal water for the city of Marion which lies within Liz Mathis’ senate district.

Earlier this month Pattison proposed to extract 2 billion gallons per year from the Jordan Aquifer using wells they drilled to support their frack sand mining operation. This proposal was rejected by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.

The problem with tapping the Jordan Aquifer is it is prehistoric water, in other words, it has been there a long time. The aquifer does not recharge at the same rate as the Silurian Aquifer which lies on top of it. Once the Jordan Aquifer is drained, the water will be gone and communities that currently rely upon it could be left without a reliable water source.

The climate crisis is evident in the American west. Demand for water exceeds the region’s capacity to produce it through rainfall, snow melt, and underground aquifers. Something’s got to give for people who settled there to survive. Mining and shipping water from Eastern Iowa is not a good idea because what may be abundant to meet our current needs will be diminished by the extraction proposed by Pattison and others. It is easy to see how a discussion over water rights could escalate into regional conflict over this basic human need.

If we look at history, humans have continued to exploit natural resources until they are gone, in many cases leading to the collapse of societies. Our brains are not wired to perceive the threat shipping billions of gallons of water from Iowa to the west could have. We have to pay attention, and the role of government is to look out for the common good.

It is hard to image an overall plan to resolve the climate crisis at its root causes. Further exploitation of natural resources doesn’t solve anything and could potentially make matters worse. At least we were discussing it and in doing so raising awareness on a sunny morning in Ely over kolaches.

Posted in Blog for Iowa, Environment | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment