On Tyranny Lesson 18: Be Calm When The Unthinkable Arrives

From the On Tyranny series by Timothy Snyder, Lesson #18 of twenty. Check here for a lesson every Monday or you can find them on YouTube.  They are all short videos, no ads.

“Modern tyranny is terror management. When a terrorist attack comes remember that authoritarians exploit such events in order to consolidate power. The sudden disaster that requries the end of checks and balances, the dissolution of opposition parties, the suspension of freedom of expression, the right to a fair trial, and so on, is the oldest trick in the Hitlerian book. Do not fall for it.”   [bolding BFIA]

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Why Canada Has Plenty Of Eggs

 

(3 minutes)

 

From NPR Monday March 18

“With egg prices in the United States at record highs, the U.S. Department of Agriculture is now exploring the ways other countries produce eggs for potential solutions. The department may not have to look far: Just over the border, eggs remain plentiful and affordable in Canada.

<< skip >>

“But perhaps the biggest difference is that egg farms in Canada are much smaller, so when one farm does suffer a flu outbreak, the effects are less far-reaching. The typical egg farm in Canada has about 25,000 laying hens, whereas many farms in the U.S. have well over a million. In effect, American farmers have put a lot more of their eggs in a relatively small number of baskets.

“If individual farms represent a larger proportion of production, then when an individual farm is affected, you’re taking more of that supply, right?” von Massow says.

<< skip >>

“When avian flu is discovered on an {American} egg farm, all the chickens on the farm are killed to limit the spread. More than 40 commercial egg farms suffered flu outbreaks in January and February alone, with a loss of more than 28 million chickens, according to USDA figures analyzed by the Wells Fargo Agri-Food Institute. That’s about 9% of the country’s commercial egg-laying flock wiped out in just two months.

<< skip >>

“So, what has kept Canadian egg farmers relatively small? Von Massow points to Canada’s supply management system, which guarantees even small farmers enough income to stay in business.”

Thanks to NPR for this story. While America has always pushed the scale of its agribusiness, there are downfalls to the system. One of the downfalls is that failures can sometimes be on a massive scale that hurts the farmer and the consumer.

Let me add another wrinkle to this story. Also on March 18th, America’s newly confirmed Secretary of HHS- Robert F. Kennedy, jr. added his thoughts to the whole egg price discussion. To use a metaphor, RFK’s thoughts were way undercooked.

Kennedy’s idea was to just let the avian flu rip its way through the chicken farms of America and do its damage. Kennedy felt that once the damage was done the birds that were left would be resistant to the flu. Giving a simpleton like Kennedy a platform to make his insane arguments is one of the best reasons why the senate should have rejected him

Scientific American had an analysis of Kennedy’s thoughts:    I will give a quick quote from the article to give you a flavor:

“Farmers must currently cull infected flocks to contain the disease before it spreads. They’re financially compensated for the culled birds by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The policy is supported by science because highly pathogenic avian influenza is so deadly on its own, killing 90 to 100 percent of chickens in three or four days, says Matt Koci, an immunologist and virologist at North Carolina State University’s poultry science department.

The disease overwhelms birds, Crespo says. “It’s devastating,” she says. “It’s a disease that attacks every single organ.”

<< skip >>

Kennedy’s remarks belie a lack of knowledge about the way poultry breeding works, Koci says. The chickens that provide meat and eggs are not in the breeding population: they’re the product of parent generations that are bred to maximize disease resistance and meat or egg production. Wiping out the working offspring of these breeders wouldn’t do anything to alter the next generations of chickens coming down the line.

Another problem with the let-it-rip strategy would be the inability of farmers to sell chicken products internationally because the policy might lead importers to ban American products. The resulting mass poultry death would also make today’s egg prices look like a great deal.”

Just absolutely scares me that this guy has anything to do with health care policies for Americans.

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Sunday Funday: The High Holy Days Of Basketball Edition

Thanks to iowastartingline.com

That pic was stolen from iowastartingline.com. Absolutely gave me my best laugh of the week.

My picks are Connecticut in the women’s tournament and Duke on the men’s side. I don’t think an Iowa team has a chance(?). On the women’s side I have been a Paige Bueckers from the time I first saw her five years  or so back. Also a fan of Azzi Fudd who is finally back at full strength. They have quite a line up besides those two.

Basketball on for both sexes seems to be pretty level this year so the tourneys should be really fun to watch with lots of upsets

Can’t avoid the mess MAGA is making of our country, sadly. So much happened with this crooked administration last week, we can’t even come close to covering it all.

A) If DOGE isn’t given access to information in what area, interim head Lee Dudek says he will “turn it off”? 

B) A French minister to the EU has requested that due to recent events the US should return what to France?

C) What company is recalling 46,000 of its pick-up trucks because the glue on front panels are blowing off on the highway?

D) Iowa men’s basketball had some major success in the NCAA Tourney, finishing runner-up in what year? (Hint Bucky O’Connor was the coach)

E) Stinky Pants was rebuked for his stance on the American judicial system by whom last week?

F) A report by the Financial Times Wednesday showed that what US automobile manufacturer is missing $1.4 Billion in. Their accounts?

G) Mount Spurr in what US state is showing indications that it may erupt in a volcano soon?

H) The 2025 Happiness Report Thursday named what country as the happiest on earth?

I) Who can forget the heroics of the Iowa women’s basketball teams of the past two years? Can you remember who they lost to in the title games in ’23 and ’24?

J) Stinky Pants wants to undo pardons issued by President Biden claiming they were not legal because Biden did what?

K) Quite the interesting drama in our neighbor Minnesota. First state senator Justin Eichorn filed a bill to make what a mental illness in Minnesota Monday?

L) Later that same day Minnesota state senator Justin Eichorn was arrested for what crime in Bloomington, Minn.?

M) What ubiquitous mall clothing store has filed for bankruptcy for the second time in 6 years?

N) Thanks to an Executive Order what is no longer forbidden in companies getting federal contracts?

O) What do Jackie Robinson and Bea Arthur have in common?

P) When was the first women’s national basketball tournament?

Q) What advertising transportation icon is 100 years old this year?

R) Six million pages of documents were declassified concerning what event that happened 62 years ago?

S) MAGAs in Arkansas have introduced a bill that would ban what for minors?

T) Let’s end with asking when the first men’s NCAA championship was held?

Americans have thrown away their liberty and prosperity more rapidly than anyone would have imagined. They’ve given up the foundational ideals of the United States, surrendered them to the Russia-backed Musk-Trump regime, and gotten less than nothing in return. – Michael McKay

Tip of the hat to democraticunderground.com

Answers:

A) Social Security (get ready folks)

B) the Statue of Liberty

C) Tesla

D) 1956 where they lost to San Francisco in the national title game (SF was led by Bill Russell

E) Chief Justice John Roberts

F) Tesla

G) Alaska

H) Finland – the US is 24th

I) LSU in ’23 and South Carolina in ’24

J) Used an auto pen

K) “Trump Derangement Syndrome”

L) soliciting a minor for sex

M) Forever 21. Sounds like they may be forever done

N) Segregation

O) both of their WWII stories were disappeared by the administration in the push to purge what they call DEI stories. The Navajo Code Talkers were also caught in this purge

P) well the NCAA didn’t have one until 1991 (won by Tennessee) but (I believe) the AIAW held championships beginning in 1982 (won by Louisiana Tech)

Q) The Goodyear Blimp

R) The Kennedy Assassination – The Jeffery Epstein documents are still tightly locked up

S) Gender non-conforming haircuts

T) This is much clearer – March 27th, 1939 – played at Northwestern and won by Oregon over Ohio State

To protect the kids, Arkansas Republicans are proposing a bill to prohibit gender non-conforming….  haircuts.

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FACT SHEET: Republican Proposals Will Slash Medicaid

and Leave Families Behind

(An email from the good folks at https://www.protectourcare.org ) 

It is long, but important:

Democracy Now!’s Amy Goodman discusses Medicaid budget cuts with Sharon Parrot (9:27) 

FACT SHEET: Medicaid is an Economic Game Changer, But Republicans Want to Slash the Program and Leave Families Behind

This Week, Protect Our Care Highlights the Economic Benefits of Medicaid As Part of the “Hands Off Medicaid” Campaign 

Medicaid currently serves over 72 million people, that’s one in five Americans. As an essential pillar of our health care system, Medicaid covers seniors in nursing homes, children, people with disabilities, and working people who don’t receive health insurance through their employer. Yet, Trump and his Republicans allies are waging a relentless attack on Medicaid, aiming to cut almost $880 billion in Medicaid funding to pay for tax breaks for the ultra-wealthy and large corporations. From reducing poverty levels and inequality to creating more jobs, Medicaid has served as a bedrock of economic growth and development since its introduction. These Republican cuts will gut one of America’s largest health care insurers, leaving small businesses, working families, seniors, rural hospitals, and Americans across the country to suffer the consequences.

The Republican plan for Medicaid prioritizes billionaires over working families and the most vulnerable Americans. These Medicaid cuts alone will slash the income of the bottom fifth of the country by 7.4 percent, and the second fifth by 1.7 percent, meaning over 136 million Americans will have less money, less access to care, and less economic opportunity, all so Republicans can make the rich richer and poor poorer.

Protect Our Care is continuing its “Hands Off Medicaid” campaign with theme weeks to underscore the importance of Medicaid across the country. Alongside partners, lawmakers, and other advocates, Protect Our Care is working to defend Medicaid from the Republican-led plan to slash funding to pay for another round of tax cuts for the wealthy and big corporations. This week aims to highlight the economic impacts of the Medicaid program in communities around the country. Read more here.

Medicaid Reduces Personal Debt and Prevents Working Americans from Declaring Bankruptcy. Medicaid enrollees have been found to have significantly lower medical debt with around a $3.4 billion difference in just the first two years of Medicaid expansion’s existence, as well as better credit terms worth $520 million per year of enrollment. A 2020 study of around 5 million credit reports found that medical debt has decreased by 12 percent in Medicaid expansion states compared to only 1 percent in non-expansion states, reducing medical debt by $5.89 billion over just two years. Studies estimate that approximately 50 percent of the decline in Chapter 7 bankruptcy rates between 2014-2018 can directly attributed to people gaining Medicaid expansion coverage. Other studies show a 10 percentage point increase in Medicaid eligibility is associated with an 8 percent reduction in personal bankruptcies. This doesn’t stop at debt though: the bottom 10th percentile of earners in Medicaid expansion states have seen a 22.4 percent boost in their income, compared to only 11.4 percent in non-expansion states and Medicaid expansion has been shown to directly contribute to fewer evictions. Other research has found that Medicaid expansion also caused a “significant” reduction in poverty.

Medicaid Secures, Protects, and Provides Opportunities For Our Future Generations. Approximately 31.5 million children in the United States are enrolled in Medicaid, that’s around 40 percent of all enrollees. In 2021, the child uninsured rate was 8.3 percent in states which refused to expand Medicaid, compared to only 4.6 percent in states that adopted expansion. If holdout states expanded Medicaid, the number of uninsured children would drop by 7.3 percent. Medicaid eligibility during childhood lowers the high school dropout rate, raises college enrollment, and increases four-year college attainment. Medicaid also has a positive impact on children’s employment opportunities later in life. For each additional year of Medicaid eligibility as a child, adults by age 28 had higher earnings and made $533 additional cumulative tax payments due to their higher incomes. One 2020 report found that children who received health insurance through Medicaid were less likely to die young, more likely to be employed in their adult life, and less likely to develop a disability as an adult. This corroborates multiple other studies showing Medicaid pays for itself with children becoming higher tax-paying citizens who are less likely to be incarcerated and less likely to have chronic illnesses developed in childhood. Simply put, expanding Medicaid for children led to an 80 percent return to the government in the long run.

Medicaid Reduces Uncompensated Care Costs for Hospitals, Allowing Them to Remain Open, Maintain Good Jobs, and Provide Quality Care. Medicaid is essential in preventing hospitals from taking on unbearable financial loss associated with treating uninsured individuals. On average, uninsured people cost a hospital around $800 each. In 2012 alone, prior to the ACA coverage expansions, hospitals in the U.S. provided over $46 billion in uncompensated care. In an era where hospital closures predominately affect disadvantaged communities, this is spending that can’t be maintained. After 2014, hospital uncompensated care expenditures fell significantly in Medicaid expansion states, though not in non-expansion states; one study showed that uncompensated care fell by $2.8 million and Medicaid revenue rose by $3.2 million per hospital annually in states which adopted Medicaid expansion. As well, Medicaid is a lifeline for older Americans with around 6 in 10 nursing home residents relying on continuing funding.

Medicaid Strengthens Rural Economies. Medicaid expansion does more than provide vital health coverage to more Americans, it is also one of the pillars in maintaining thriving rural economies. For rural areas that often have high unemployment rates, hospitals contribute significantly to local economies by employing large numbers of people with relatively high-paying jobs. Medicaid helps fund rural hospitals, which employ 10 percent of all employees in rural counties. When rural hospitals close, communities can lose a staggering number of jobs, both within and outside of the health care sector. The closure of one rural hospital can eliminate 220 jobs immediately. A 2016 analysis identified 673 rural hospitals at risk of closing and estimated that if those hospitals shut down, 99,000 health care jobs in rural communities would be lost. Over 75 percent of all rural hospital closures from 2010 to 2021 occurred in states that had not adopted Medicaid expansion. Rural hospitals in Medicaid expansion states are 62 percent less likely to close. Today, around 748 hospitals are at risk of closing in the near future, almost all of which were within non-expansion states.

Republican Efforts to Prevent Expanding Medicaid Have Led to Fewer Jobs and Weaker Economies. Republicans in South Carolina have staunchly refused to expand Medicaid to over 345,000 people. This has left over 180,000 South Carolinians in an insurance coverage gap that prevents them from accessing life-saving health care. The battle against Medicaid expansion has also continued to stifle the economic growth of South Carolina, with some projections showing that adopting expansion will produce a 9:1 statewide economic return on investment in the program. The Republican opposition to Medicaid expansion in Tennessee has meant that over $20 billion in potential funding to the state has been forfeited since 2014. Around 194,000 people would be eligible for low-cost health coverage if expansion was adopted and over 15,000 new jobs would be created in Tennessee. Meanwhile, reports from Ohio and Michigan found that Medicaid expansion helped enrollees retain employment or effectively look for work. Relatedly, a study from the University of Kansas found that people with disabilities are much more likely to be employed in states that have expanded Medicaid coverage

Republican Cuts To Medicaid Will Gouge State Budgets. Republican plans will create at least a $50 billion hole in state Medicaid budgets to pay for tax breaks for the wealthy and corporations. States rely on federal funding to provide crucial services such as nursing home care, prescription drug coverage, and complex care for children with disabilities. Most states rely on provider taxes to receive this crucial federal funding, but Republicans in Congress are threatening to prohibit states from using this critical source of funds at a time states are already facing immense budget pressure and fiscal uncertainty from a number of factors including expiring pandemic-era funding, increasing health care costs, new high-cost prescription drugs, and workforce challenges. Republican proposals will only increase this uncertainty and undercut states’ ability to continue to provide these crucial services to hardworking Americans.

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Tax The Rich

 

This happened last week in Nebraska’s first congressional district. Congress member Mike Flood decided that it was time to face the people of his district in a town hall. He was not greeted well (20 seconds): The smirk on Flood’s face is about as condescending as anything I have ever seen. Let’s call it the MAGA I know more then you face

MAGA pushed through their ’screw the people’ continuing resolution budget bill and decided it was time to take a break. So the House went into recess with only a few having any plan to meet their constituents. That is because their next order of business is to pass the Tax Cut For The Wealthy Rich bill in early April.

Based on what we have seen happening out in very, very Republican Nebraska, I am surmising that handing bundles of money to those who already have bundles of money will be as popular as skunks at picnics. Maybe instead of handing out bundles of money to the rich, congress should consider taking a few bundles from the excessively wealthy and turning that money into helping our poorest citizens live a decent existence.

Good Gawd, if we can’t afford health care for everyone, shelter and an adequate diet for everyone, we shouldn’t be handing out tax cuts to the rich. We should be making the tax system fair for all based on their means. As the Nebraska crowd chanted “Tax The Rich!” 

Here is a video from 6 years ago explaining how taxing wealth and not income could be a great way to even things out. The people who are extremely wealthy could much more easily handle a tax. Remember that those who are wealthy are also at the same time extracting more goods and services from the government than you or I by far. Walmart doesn’t build their own roads do they? This was Elizabeth Warren’s plan from 6 years ago (3:45):

But wait a minute! The mainstream media has warned us over and over that taxing the rich will hurt our economy! Also, the rich are the ones who create jobs! And it isn’t fair! I think I will just step back and let the very lucid Robert Reich take on these arguments. His logic is irrefutable.(8:25 – it is worth the time):

Remember the reason we believe the myths about how taxes slow the economy is because the media is owned by those who will make out like bandits with low taxes on the wealthy (Amiright Jeff Bezos? Amiright Elon Musk? Amiright Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong? I could go on)

Along with a wealth tax, how about extending the payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare to make those programs well into the future. There is no sense in capping the taxes at around $175,000. That makes no sense.

Taxing the wealthy instead of taxing the poor and middle class and then transferring that money to wealthy through tax cuts, taxing the wealthy just makes simple sense. As MAGAs are always chirping the federal government is deeply in debt. Tax cuts for the rich worsens that problem. Taxes on the rich could be used to pay down that debt. Jeez, brilliant!

 As wealth inequality grows, the concern of an American oligarchic government that only works for the wealthy will supplant our democracy. We have already seen it in other western democracies such as Hungary. MAGAs are doing what they can to impose oligarchy here and money from the rich is funding the program.

In his substack letter for Thursday March 20th   Robert Reich notes that the Trump administration is claiming that the tax cuts for the wealthy will be covered by money raised by Trump’s tariff program:

But Trump’s tariffs — and the retaliatory tariffs already being imposed on American exports by the nation’s trading partners — will be paid largely by the American working class and poor.

And the people who will benefit most from another giant Trump tax cut are America’s wealthy.

It will be a giant upward transfer of wealth.

As if the tax of the tariffs weren’t enough of a kick in the gut to the poor and middle class add to that the reductions in various programs that will come out of the poor and middle class hides in the forms of cuts to Medicaid, Social Security, various funding for food programs etc. 

In all we are looking at HUGE tax cuts for the rich paid for by the poor and middle class.

I join with those in Nebraska screaming “TAX THE RICH!”

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Iowans To Chuck Grassley: “Where is Congress?”

While Chuck was inside trying to defend his conservative credentials because his constituents are really Trump and Musk, the folks outside who think they are the real constituents are shouting “traitor!” 

Why did Grassley voluntarily point out to the room of Iowans angry about the closing of the Dept. of Education, that he was the only member of congress still in congress now who voted AGAINST establishing the Department of Education in 1979? And he didn’t stop there. He went on to say that he would vote the same way today. So there you have it.

Chuck showed who he is loyal to today and ordinary Iowans, including those who voted for him, are inconvenient obstacles in Trump’s path.

This video clip is the overflow of people who couldn’t get in. The lobby inside was also full. One report said about 100 people did not get inside.

Clips from the Gazette YouTube channel:

In this video the Dept. of Education closing is being questioned. In one of the two videos,  Grassley tries to equate the illegal actions Trump and Musk are taking to Biden forgiving student loans. It’s just like that, same thing.  Yes, he said that.

In the next video a guy calls Chuck on the carpet quite effectively, but in my opinion there will be no help from Chuck as far as defending democracy. But we still have to pressure him and congress. We can’t obey in advance. And we can’t make it easy for them.  This is how we grow the pro-democracy movement.  Visibility.

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Action Alert From Rep. Jamie Raskin


U.S. Representative Jamie Raskin is encouraging all U.S. citizens to join him this week in filing formal demands for access to their personal data obtained by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and Elon Musk.

The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia has issued an injunction commanding DOGE to comply with citizen requests under the Freedom of Information Act. This law encompasses the Federal Privacy Act of 1974, which entitles any citizen to access personal information held in any U.S. government records system. Please find a fillable Privacy Act request form HERE.

Citizens need only fill out the form and mail it in to DOGE.  This newly recognized federal agency, which has been systematically accessing government computer data systems, now has an obligation to respond to specific information demands from any of the 340 million U.S. citizens who exercise their legal right to defend their privacy and establish the security of their private information.

Once you have mailed a Privacy Act Request to DOGE, please fill out the form HERE and we will stay in touch with additional details and updates as they become available.

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Video: Bobby Kaufmann Attempts To Defend “Cancer Gag Act” At Town Hall

Action alert from Food & Water Watch Iowa:

Rep. Kaufmann, our demand is simple: DO YOUR JOB. Protect Iowans. Not the profits of the pesticide industry.

On Saturday, Food & Water Watch attended Bobby Kaufmann’s town hall to question him about his support for Bayer’s Cancer Gag Act. This multi billion dollar corporation – and industry front groups like Modern Ag Alliance – are pulling out all the stops to mislead the public and get this bill passed. But in Iowa and beyond, massive opposition has formed against the Cancer Gag Act. Already, this bill has been defeated in THREE state – and we we’re organizing to make sure Iowa’s next!

Join Food & Water Watch and Iowa CCI Action Fund THIS Thursday [today] for a statewide campaign meeting: https://actionnetwork.org/…/kill-the-cancer-gag-act…

We’ll be sharing developments from across the country AND the Iowa Capitol, before jumping into an presentation and exercise to help campaign supporters to confront opposition lies and respond to those who’ve been mislead about what the Cancer Gag Act will mean for Iowa.

We hope to see you Thursday!

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Tim Walz Town Meeting In Iowa

ICYMI – Apparently, we forgot to post this full video of the Tim Walz town hall held in Zach Nunn’s district in Des Moines last Friday.  Walz was excellent.  The contrast between the anti-democratic Republicans who do not feel obligated to meet with constituents  and pro-democracy Democrats was on full display for voters.

 

 

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Hog-Tied In Iowa

From the March 2025 edition of The Prairie Progressive, Iowa’s oldest progressive newsletter. The PP is  funded entirely by reader subscription, available in hard copy for $15/yr.  Send check to PP, Box 1945, Iowa City 52244. Click here for archived issues.

Hog-tied, Part Two

Since its founding about nine months ago, Driftless Water Defenders, on behalf of its nearly 200 members, has initiated litigation on several fronts.

• On June 5, 2024, DWD President Chris Jones petitioned the E.P.A. Region VII, imploring that agency to take over enforcement of federal Clean Water Act laws from the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) with respect to concentrated animal feeding operations in the Driftless Area, due to the DNR’s utter neglect of its regulatory duties.

• DWD members have attended public hearings in Winneshiek County and have filed petitions in the Iowa District Court to challenge zoning changes and the issuances of permits made by the Board of Supervisors and Board of adjustment, respectively, to local farming operations to allow out-of-state investors to construct dairy-cattle manure digesters. The digesters, DWD alleges, will cause local dairy herd sizes to increase, with resulting increased amounts of nitrate-saturated residuals to be placed on the area’s fragile karst landforms and fragile soils.

• DWD is filing court documents in support of appeals made by others of a decision by the Iowa Utilities Commission, which has allowed Summit Caron Solutions to use eminent domain to benefit its private equity owners in the construction of the ill-advised CO2 pipeline.

• On December 23, 2024, DWD issued to AgriStar Meat & Poultry, LLC, located in Postville, a 60-day Notice of Violations and Intent to Sue under the Federal Clean Water Act (CWA). In that Notice, DWD has alleged that Agri Star has repeatedly violated its discharge permits issued pursuant to the CWA and that, as a result, DWD will be seeking, in the Federal District Court for Northern Iowa, in its capacity as a so-called “private attorney general,”declaratory and injunctive relief, civil penalties and other relief allowed by law.

• DWD is filing a formal complaint with the DNR, asking that agency to cancel a water use permit renewal earlier issued by it to Supreme Beef, thereby enabling a 10,000-head cattle feeding operation located in Clayton County, at the headwaters of Bloody Run Creek, one of Iowa’s purest streams to accumulate and spread manures and nitrates on farm land forming the creek’s watershed.

The complaint follows a major ruling issued by Administrative Law Judge Toby Gordon, who determined that when renewing the water use permit the DNR should have but failed to consider the impact of such a permit on the public interest and surrounding environment, as required by Iowa Code.

• DWD drafted and supports a new amendment to the Iowa Constitution (under Section 1 of Article 1) which expressly recognizes the fundamental right of Iowans to access clean water and air. In addition to protecting this fundamental right, the proposed amendment also imposes an affirmative public trust duty upon our government, under which agencies are charged with taking positive steps to protect and improve our natural resources. Three states in the United States currently have such public trust doctrines set forth in their constitutions: New York, Pennsylvania, and Montana.

Under the amendment, Iowa’s courts will be required to give strict scrutiny to any governmental action that impedes a citizen’s exercise of that fundamental right. Further,
under the amendment, the State of Iowa will have a new affirmative duty under the public trust doctrine: to protect our natural environment— including, importantly, our water
supplies—for public benefit, now, and into the future.

We are on the cusp of a new civil rights movement in Iowa—one dedicated to protecting this fundamental right. Like all civil rights movements in the past, this one, too, may well take many years and many election cycles before it becomes the law of our state. In Iowa, a constitutional amendment in identical form must be approved by the House and Senate in two consecutive legislative sessions. The amendment must then be approved by a majority of Iowa voters.

Until then, citizens of all political persuasions (cancer does not recognize political boundaries; nobody wants to drink or bathe in shit-water) would be wise to demand that their local, state, and national government officials protect public access to clean water and air.

In the yawning gap between the needs of Iowans for environmental protection and justice on the one hand, and on the other hand the lack of focus of our political leaders on these matters, Iowa citizens, acting on their own volition or working with others through citizen advocacy groups such as DWD, are encouraged to take action to support the civil rights movement that lies ahead of us. Let’s get going.

—Jim Larew practices law in Iowa City. Part One of this article appeared in the January 2025 issue of The Prairie Progressive

View Part One – theprairieprogressive.com/archive/

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