Thank You, Congressman Loebsack

Dave Loebsack’s term in congress ends today. We will miss him.

I was going back over some videos of Congressman Loebsack to try to find one that would capture the essence of the Loebsack years. The video I selected is from 2017. No matter what videos of the Congressman I looked at there was a recurring theme: Loebsack told the truth and didn’t duck questions. 

Loebsack also proudly worked with Republicans on issues that were for the good of his constituents. He was a leader in working on farm issues and  for small businesses. He worked tirelessly to get broadband into the rural areas. Farming like all industries is becoming more and more dependent on information on the internet. Loebsack worked his butt off for his district, willingly working across the aisle as needed.

One thing we will really miss when Loebsack leaves is his availability. Most every weekend Loebsack was back in his district making appearances and mingling with his constituents. Nearly  everyone called him Dave. He listened to every constituent as an equal. Week after week, Dave was back in the district listening. He didn’t only listen to those he agreed with, he also would listen to those who disagreed with him to fully understand their perspective.

Dave gave us 14 good years through thick and thin. Surely we will see him at fundraisers and civic functions. Be sure to shake his hand (after the pandemic ends) and thank him for being something that we don’t always see any more – someone who worked his butt off for his district.

Thanks for those good years, Dave. We’ll see you around! 

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Media Reform Should Be The First Priority Of 2021

Former FCC Commissioner Nicholas Johnson

In 2021 if you consider yourself a media reform activist and you don’t know who Nicholas Johnson is, now would be the time to familiarize yourself with his work.  Watch this video in its entirety and you will be armed with a better understanding going forward into 2021 and beyond how the mass media, owned by corporations, controls most of the information we receive and prevents citizens from knowing what is really going on.

This lecture from 1971, while Johnson was an FCC Commissioner, is every bit as relevant now as then. You will enjoy quite a bit of biting sarcasm and humor as your consciousness is raised about how the media affects our thinking without us really knowing it, how the truth is censored and what we can do about it. Check out his YouTube channel and blog FromDC2Iowa.

Enjoy and Happy New Year from Blog for Iowa!

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Help Iowans For Gun Safety Stand Up To The NRA In 2021

A new year’s message from Iowans for Gun Safety

2020 is winding down.

Iowans for Gun Safety, the organization seeking common-sense solutions to gun violence, is looking to 2021 as the year to gather the members and resources necessary to stand up to NRA lobbyists as we prepare to defeat the Strict Scrutiny amendment to the Iowa Constitution.

You should know that the Legislature is poised to present Iowa voters with an important question on the November 2022 ballot: should Iowa pass a “strict scrutiny” amendment to Iowa’s constitution that will make it even harder to pass reasonable measures to protect the public and our communities from the dangerous use of guns?

As happy as many of us are to see 2020 end, we’d like to end it on a solid financial footing. We would be grateful to be included in your end-of-the-year donation plans. Gifts to Iowans for Gun Safety are tax-deductible as provided by law. Please help us by donating online or send a check to Iowans for Gun Safety, P.O. Box 8834, Cedar Rapids, IA 52404.

Thank you for your gift now and those in the past, and for your confidence in us to continue the work to make Iowa a better and safer place to live.

Gratefully,

Scott Peterson
Chair and Executive Director of Iowans for Gun Safety


Iowans for Gun Safety
PO Box 8834, | Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52408-8834

Question? Email us at info@iowansforgunsafety.org or call 319-551-4545

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Recount Update: Wapello County Voter Asks for Vote to be Counted in IA-02 Race

From the Rita Hart campaign ICYMI: First Time Wapello County Voter Asks for Vote to be Counted in IA-02 Race

“I want my vote to be counted,” Klawonn wrote in the affidavit. “This was my first time voting and I want my voice to be heard.

Last week, following an initial state recount process that left thousands of ballots in question, Rita Hart filed a Notice of Contest with the U.S. House of Representatives outlining why Rita is the winner of this race. Further, the Notice explains why the House should count every legally cast ballot to guarantee fulfillment of each voter’s constitutional right, like first-time Wapello County voter Krystal Klawonn, who was profiled by the Ottumwa Courier. With uncounted ballots remaining, Klawonn has asked Congress to fulfill its duty and ensure all voices in Iowa’s Second Congressional District are heard.

Ottumwa Courier: Wapello voter included in Hart recount fight

By Kyle Ocker, December 22, 2020

WHEATLAND, IOWA — Wapello County voter Krystal Klawonn voted for the first time in the November general election. But her vote didn’t count.

Klawonn is one of the Iowans who provided sworn affidavits to the Rita Hart campaign included in the challenge being filed to the U.S. House of Representatives, made public Tuesday.

The affidavit by Klawonn states she is a registered voter in Wapello County, who voted in her first election on Nov. 3. She voted absentee and cast her ballot for Hart in the second congressional district race.

Klawonn is also a student going to school in Cedar Rapids. She deposited her ballot in an election drop box in Linn County, and did so before election day. The ballot was later rejected by election officials in Wapello County as being untimely submitted.

[…]

The Hart campaign contends that “Iowa law does not specify that the envelope must be returned to the commissioners office where the voter resides.”

Klawonn’s ballot is one of 22 that the Hart campaign is now petitioning to the U.S. House to count. Hart said those 22 ballots were legally cast, but not counted during the recount process that unfolded across the 24-county district in November.

If all were counted, Hart would gain a net of 18 votes over Republican Mariannette Miller-Meeks, who was certified in Iowa as the winner of the election by a six-vote margin.

[…]

Read the full piece here.

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Focus On Covid-19 And Indoor Air

Interesting information here. Important discussion with Scott Bowman, a building engineer about COVID-19 and indoor air mitigation.

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An Epistemological Crisis

Lake Macbride Dec. 21, 2020.

It’s no secret there is an epistemological crisis undermining the authority of knowledge. It may be the most significant problem to grow out of the Reagan administration. That the discussion of creationism versus evolution returned during the 1980s was only the beginning.

There is a difference between justified belief (a.k.a. facts) and opinion and it is epistemological. That is, “relating to the theory of knowledge, especially with regard to its methods, validity, and scope, and the distinction between justified belief and opinion,” according to Dictionary.com. At issue is that solutions to other pressing problems rely on the ability of Americans to separate opinion from facts, something we as a society have become less able to do. Al Gore recently summarized our current situation as follows:

And though the pandemic fills our field of vision at the moment, it is only the most urgent of the multiple crises facing the country and planet, including 40 years of economic stagnation for middle-income families; hyper-inequality of incomes and wealth, with high levels of poverty; horrific structural racism; toxic partisanship; the impending collapse of nuclear arms control agreements; an epistemological crisis undermining the authority of knowledge; recklessly unprincipled behavior by social media companies; and, most dangerous of all, the climate crisis.

Al Gore, New York Times, Dec. 12, 2020

Unless we can agree there are facts, and how to distinguish them from opinions, we may have reached the end of the long, good run that was the American republic.

During the time since Reagan, moneyed interests gained hegemony in our government and society. Thom Hartmann put it this way in his forthcoming book The Hidden History of American Oligarchy: Reclaiming Our Democracy from the Ruling Class:

Billionaire oligarchs want to own our republic, and they’re nearly there thanks to legislation and Supreme Court decisions that they have essentially bought. They put Trump and his political allies into office and support a vast network of think tanks, publications, and social media that every day push our nation closer and closer to police-state tyranny.

Thom Hartmann, The Hidden History of American Oligarchy: Reclaiming Our Democracy from the Ruling Class, to be released February 2021.

It is particularly distressing American oligarchs used the cover of the coronavirus pandemic to increase their grip on the nation and extract taxpayer money intended to alleviate the fiscal crisis it caused. In normal times this would be unthinkable. These are not normal times.

In 1996, President Bill Clinton signed the Telecommunications Act which deregulated use of the public air waves. Regulations put in place in the 1920s through the 1940s were largely repealed. The result has been to consolidate most media under half a dozen corporations which now control the message. Perhaps Sinclair Broadcast Group is the worst in that they distribute editorial pieces from the corporation for inclusion during on-air broadcasts. All of the media corporations play a role in the deterioration of knowledge.

In 1987 President Ronald Reagan directed the FCC to cease enforcement of the Fairness Doctrine. In 2011 the Obama administration removed it from the FCC rules completely. Broadcasters no longer had an obligation to present balanced or fact-based information. The significance to the epistemological crisis these actions brought is hard to overstate.

What do we do about it? For those of us on small, private blogs it is easy: have a basis in fact if we run a story, focus on inquiry and understanding. As Tom Nichols pointed out in his book, The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why it Matters, “None of us is a Da Vinci, painting the Mona Lisa in the morning and designing helicopters at night. That’s as it should be. No, the bigger problem is that we’re proud of not knowing things.”

With their 40-year head start, it will be challenging to overtake the oligarch puppet masters who bought much of our government. Hartmann has a dozen ideas to get us started. Gore and Nichols have more. The bottom line is the truth matters, scientific methods matter, and while religious belief plays a role in human culture there is a difference between things we take on faith and those that can be verified through scientific methods.

At the Oct. 22 presidential debate, Joe Biden said, “We’re going to choose science over fiction.” It’s a starting point on a long journey, one which we all should join.

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Dear Leader’s 100 Greatest Scandals*

*Up until early November*

Well, soon we can have a conversation where we talk about the glorious future that can happen in America. Once this garbage dump of a human being is gone it may be possible. The wounds and scars that Trump will leave will be deep and long lasting. Included in that will be a party of sycophants who will be trying to restore him to his “throne.”

The following was a list compiled by the Daily Show up until early November. Thus it has left out the use Russian computer hack of our government perhaps one of the greatest national security breeches ever in the US and his determination to end democracy to stay in office.

25 minutes. You may enjoy this but it also may rile your blood. Like a train wreck, it will be hard to turn your eyes away from the scene.

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A Short Trip Down Memory Lane

Since it is Christmas weekend, we will take it a little easy. Enjoy the holidays and please stay safe.

We started the year with a president under impeachment. We end the year with that same president threatening to overthrow the government. In between these mileposts he was able to to be a huge factor in the deaths of nearly 400,000 Americans due to his purposely bad leadership. The best friend a killer virus ever had. From January 20, 2020:

And now a few memories of the year that lasted a decade – 2020!

from democraticunderground.com

tip of the hat to EarlG at democraticunderground.com

And it is still paying dividends

Theresa Greenfield

trump is culpable
This cartoon is from March 13, 2020

 

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A Christmas Message From The Biden Family

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from the Bidens

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Advocate Now For Legislative Issues In January

And now a word from senator Rob Hogg:

Dear Iowans:

The Iowa Legislature convenes January 11. What do you want the Legislature to do in 2021?

One immediate need is to help Iowans with food assistance.

Last week, Senator-Elect Sarah Trone Garriott and I wrote a guest column urging legislators to provide supplemental funds for food assistance. (See below for links to the guest column.) This was a follow-up to the joint statement released December 14 by Iowa Senate Democratic Leader Zach Wahls and other Senate Democrats calling for food assistance.

Here are four different links to the column that you can read and share on your social media:

Potluck Media: https://potluck.fm/articles/iowa-legislature-must-act-to-feed-hungry-in-iowa/

Ottumwa Courier: https://www.ottumwacourier.com/opinion/columns/iowa-legislature-must-feed-the-hungry/article_373d9646-3ff0-11eb-b1ae-6fa29b1e2e66.html

Cedar Rapids Gazette: https://www.thegazette.com/subject/opinion/guest-columnist/iowa-legislature-must-act-to-feed-the-hungry-20201218

Iowa Senate Democrats: https://www.senate.iowa.gov/democrats/2020/12/iowa-legislature-must-act-to-feed-hungry-in-iowa/

You can also follow Senator-Elect Trone Garriott on Twitter and Facebook at @SarahforIowa.

Please keep speaking up – and inviting others to speak up – with your state legislators and legislators across the state to support immediate state food assistance and other basic needs when we convene on January 11. We need advocacy now, over the holidays, so that legislators are ready to act quickly when we convene. This is a January issue, not an April issue.

You can find contact information for returning legislators at this link: www.legis.iowa.gov.

You can find contact information for newly elected legislators at this link:
https://sos.iowa.gov/elections/pdf/candidates/generalcandidatelist.pdf

The need for food assistance is high in Iowa. While I support private efforts and appreciate federal aid, the reality is that Iowans need more help to get through the winter and the rest of the ongoing coronavirus epidemic.

Iowa has over $305 million in cash surplus and over $770 million in our “rainy day” funds. That’s over $1 billion. Let’s use some of that money to help Iowans in need.

And remember, food assistance doesn’t just help hungry Iowans. As Senator-Elect Trone Garriott and I write, it can help farmers, community grocery stores, and restaurants, too, and it is important for our health, our communities, and our economy.

Please keep speaking up so we can make food security and other basic needs a top priority in 2021.

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The coronavirus epidemic has now killed over 3,500 Iowans, or more than one out of every 900 Iowans. Please keep up your work to stop the spread, and call Gov. Reynolds’ office at 515-281-5211 to urge her to take action to stop the spread and to protect caregivers and the most vulnerable Iowans.

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Tuesday, December 29, 7 pm – The Disability Caucus of the Iowa Democratic Party is hosting a legislative forum. For more details, or to register, visit:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/iowa-virtual-legislative-preview-forum-for-disability-issues-tickets-133112720731

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Just a reminder that I am raising money for “Iowa’s Democratic Resurgence.” We don’t know what the state legislative maps will look like yet, but I promise that every dollar you contribute will go to helping Democratic candidates for the state legislature in 2022.

You can contribute by sending a check to “Citizens for Rob Hogg,” P.O. Box 1361, Cedar Rapids, IA 52406, or you can contribute online at this link:
https://secure.actblue.com/donate/iowa-democratic-resurgence-2022

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I hope this information is helpful. As always, let me know if you have any questions or suggestions. Together, we can help feed hungry Iowans, stop the coronavirus epidemic, and build Iowa back better than ever.

State Senator Rob Hogg

Rob

Senator Rob Hogg
Cedar Rapids
Telephone: (319) 247-0223
Email: SenatorRobHogg@gmail.com
Twitter: @SenatorRobHogg
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hoggforsenate/

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