Showing posts with label Conservatism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conservatism. Show all posts

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Conservatives need to stop saying stupid stuff.

Candace Owens claimed, and I quote:

I would be terrified if I got onto a plane and I saw a woman flying the plane.

Madison March, Air Force Officer and fighter pilot, and Miss Colorado.*

Oh, horsecrap, she would not be.

And that's just a stupid thing to say on multiple levels. 

For one thing, if you "got onto a plane" and saw anybody flying it, apparently you are engaging in some fancy movie gymnastics a la Sisu, as when you get on planes, you might see the pilots in the cockpit, but they're sitting there waiting for people to board the planes. 

And unless you last got on an airplane in about 1979 or so, you've seen women flying them.

What Owens is attempting to say is that United Airlines' CEO was quoted regarding a desire to hire female pilots on an employment diversity basis, and her point is that this means they aren't hiring some qualified male employees in order to fulfill the quota.

Well, okay, but that requires a little more attention to presentation and detail to say that. First of all, in order to be a commercial airline pilot, you have to have a lot of hours.  American rules are so strict that compared to the rest of the world, introductory commercial pilots are much more experienced than those of other nations.  

Secondly, while I do have a problem with women in combat (I have an old post on it I've never finished), women have been flying aircraft since Raymonde de LaRoche took it up in 1910.


The former actress and engineer did die in an airplane wreck in 1919, but if you look at the history of early aviators and find those who lived very long, they're the exception to the rule.  At any rate, by World War Two flying female aviators were so common that the US was using them to ferry every type of aircraft we used to the combat recipients, and even the Germans, who famously sought to avoid using women in anything but the home making and baby creation department, used some female aviators (and oddly enough, as anti-aircraft gun crew members).

Which brings me to this.  I'm familiar with efforts to readjust the scale on occupations through gender based selection personally.  I can't say for certain, but a couple of appointments that I put in for over the last thirty years went to women because that probably weighted in their favor for this reason. But, having said that, they weren't bad choices at all, and are really good in their jobs. Same thing at work. They were qualified to start with. Too bad for me, I guess, but that doesn't mean the choices were bad ones at all.

Which gets to this.

I am a conservative, and a real one. But saying stupid stuff, to include anti-scientific stuff, makes all conservatives look dumb, and frankly weighs the scale towards dumb.

Most people hearing Adams say this will just think, "well that's dumb", but somebody somewhere, as Adams is a populist hero, will in fact think; "doggone it. . that's right. . wimmin ain't outto be flying them big machine, why they'll panic and crash everything. . hand me another Bud, will ya".

Now, mind you, the left does this too, but with Donald Trump being the flag bearer for the political right, right now, and Trump regularly saying stuff that is dumb, the political right really has attention drawn to itself on these sorts of statements.  Indeed, as real conservatives have fled the party, or gone into seclusion, those who are willing to say real stupid stuff, such as the US is going to "liberate" Canada, or that the January 6 rioters were tourists, have become numerous. As the tolerance for their statements grow, they become more numerous in and of themselves.

There is a real place for conservatism in this country.  That's being completely lost.  Unfortunately, as it looks more and more like Donald Trump will return to office, people willing to tolerate him and things said in his support are increasing, when it is already well established he cannot be controlled, and that his followers cannot be either.

Saying stupid stuff doesn't help that.

Footnotes:

*Hey, just so we can show we're no slackers, in 2023 Sgt. Rebecca Bridger, a bandsman, of the Wyoming Army National Guard was our state's Miss Wyoming.


Okay, she's not combat arms and doesn't fly planes, but still.

Thursday, December 14, 2023

The 118th Congress. Part II

October 25, 2023

Mike Johnson, who supported Trump's bogus claim to have won the election, has been elected Speaker of the House of Representatives


Other than that he's a Republican from Louisiana, and some kind of lawyer (he claims to be the mysterious category of "Constitutional Lawyer", whatever that is, about all I know about him is that he's very conservative, and an evangelical Christian (of the young earth variety).

A "Constitutional Lawyer" (whatever that is) ought to know that the claims Trump won the election were devoid of legal merit.  A couple of other lawyers involved in such claims have recently plead guilty to crimes associated with that.  Presumably Johnson is immune from such charges, but the fact that he supported sedition under cover of law is distressing.

Harriet Hageman posted his agenda for Congress a couple of days ago.



October 26, 2023

More is becoming known about Johnson.

He's a hardcore conservative, very much of the Republican right.  Any issue that you can think of, on which he's expressed an opinion, is uniformly extremely conservative.

That doesn't mean he's a populist per se, but he did work on a brief that sought to support one of President Trump's Squirrel Ball efforts to overturn the last election. That puts him squarely in league with the those who attempted to use the courts to support sedition, quite a few of whom in the main of that are now pleading guilty to crimes.

He's been an opponent to aid to Ukraine.

He's a serious Evangelical Protestant (which being from Louisiana, he might not have been) who believes in the young earth theory.

He's a denier of man made climate change.

What this will ultimately mean isn't known, but at least it's reasonable to suppose that at this point the GOP in the House is being lead, and is, far right and Protestant Christian Nationalist in view.

Gaetz really won in this, as did Trump.  Gaetz took McCarthy down, and now the very hard right has installed one of their own.  It's really remarkable, to say the least.

October 28, 2023

The House of Representatives is going to pass a bill which funds aid to Israel alone, omitting Ukraine, and which funds the $14B by slashing the same amount from the entity that finds money for the government, the IRS.

That latter part is just plain stupid.

And so the dysfunction shall return. This will go nowhere.


The irrational hatred of the IRS in populist circles is flat out bizarre.  It's almost as if they're encouraging people to cheat on their taxes and preventing that from being discovered, or the rich completely control them.  Neither are true, so what it seems to amount to is the whole scale adoption of a really stupid set of beliefs about taxation.

November 3, 2023

Under new Republican leadership, we are voting late at night on … stupid stuff. We are about to vote on: -Reducing salary of EPA Administrator to $1 -Reducing salary of Director of Bureau of Land Management to $1 -Reducing salary of Secretary of the Interior to $1

I just had to explain to my Republican colleague from Georgia that Robert E. Lee was not a founding father. It’s been a very long day on the House floor.

November 8, 2023

November 8, 2023

Hamas v. Israel War

U.S. Rep Rashida Tlaib was censured for her "river to the sea" comment.  Tlaib is of Palestinian extraction and has a vocal critic of Israel.

U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman claimed n a television interview that Palestinian protests in the US were due to Palestinian infiltration of the U.S. government.

November 14, 2023

Eight Republicans voted with Democrats against a resolution to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas over the border crisis.  The vote was 209 to 201, showing how extreme the GOP is, but also that the far right lacks complete control over the Republican members.

November 15, 2023

The House passed a stop gap spending resolution yesterday to avoid a government shutdown, but the GOP was forced to rely upon Democratic votes in order to pass it.  That should be normal, of course, but with the current Republican makeup it is not.

Johnson is proving not to be a slave to his far right, which in turn will either result in his being removed liked McCarthy or perhaps start off a return to more normal behavior.

November 16, 2023

The Senate also passed the spending bill.

December 1, 2023

George Santos has been expelled from Congress.

December 2, 2023

Following up on this, the expulsion of Santos is real progress as by doing in the GOP is potentially cutting into its three vote margin in the House, and did it anyway.  It shows, at long last, that there are some standards which cannot be breached.

December 6, 2023

Getting a jump on behaving like a Soviet court in the early USSR, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan and a subcommittee chairman on the House Administration Committee announced Tuesday that they would be investigating any "cooperation" between Fulton County, Georgia, District Attorney Fani Willis and the former House Jan. 6 committee.  

Because, after all, it would be awful if the Dear Leader's behavior were to have come fully to light, as that would demonstrate independence of thought and loyalty to the truth.  We can't have that.

Cont:

Kevin McCarthy, who was complicit in Trump's recovery from his brief fall from Republican grace, and who rode Trump's favor into a brief Speakership, shall resign from Congress at the end of this month.  In so doing, he stated: “I have decided to depart the House at the end of this year to serve America in new ways". This will reduce the GOP majority in the House down to a single seat, at least temporarily.

December 14, 2023

The House is going to have a totally pointless impeachment inquiry regarding Joe Biden based on his son Hunter's conduct and baseless allegations that Hunter's business dealings involve his father.

Some assert that this is revenge dictated by "one day dictator" hopeful Donald Trump, whose own children certainly were active under his name during his presidency. Trading on a famous parent's name certainly isn't illegal, and is frankly nearly inevitable.  Congressional Medal of Honor Winner Theodore Roosevelt Jr certainly didn't become well known independently.  Of course, the baseless allegations here are that Biden was somehow involved in Hunter Biden's activities.

Whether Donald Trump ordered this or not, the level of delusion in the GOP side of the House of Representatives is sufficient to have likely brought this about independently.  Ironically, it's now come to light that the individual who will head this sorry affair, James Comer, has a complicated set of financial arrangements not unlike that of Hunter Biden, although he's not being accused of illegal activities.

At any rate, there are not enough votes right now to impeach Biden, and this is yet another example of the House of Representatives, under GOP control, doing something political that will do nothing whatsoever other than to distract.

All the Republicans voted for the measure, all the Democrats voted against it.

The long ago days under Kevin McCarthy already look better.

Last edition:

The 118th Congress.

Friday, November 17, 2023

The 2024 Wyoming Legislative Session. The Super Early Riser Edition (Part 1)


March 14, 2024

Having passed a bill to prohibit "cross over voting", which will in fact simply lock in as Republicans most of the Democrats who crossed over, to no effect, in 2022, the legislature is now pondering tying residence requirements for holding office to the same date.

Indeed, they should, in my view.

One recent, and fairly in effectual, member of the House of Representatives, Jeanette Ward, had arrived so recently from Illinois that she didn't qualify for office until after the primary, something that oddly didn't seem to come up in her primary election.  She's been in the state a little over two years now.   She was interviewed about this proposal and stated she had no strong feels one way or another, which is a bit difficult to believe, but perhaps.

A better solution would be to make a residency requirement stretch out to five years for the house, and perhaps seven for the senate and higher office.  Perhaps ten or fifteen years for the Governor's office.

April 13, 2024

Karlee Provenza will not be sanctioned for her recent comments, in the form of a t-shirt, which will upset some but which makes the leadership of the House in Wyoming continue to be admirably fair-minded and prudent, and which in the current atmosphere contrasts nicely with Tennessee.

An interesting aspect of this is that her political polar opposite, Anthony Bouchard, came to her defense.  He also, oddly, called for new state GOP leadership, calling the leadership "undocumented Democrats".

March 21, 2023

On May 19,  the Cowboy State Daily ran an op ed by Wyoming "Freedom" Caucus head John Bear and another by Speaker of the House Albert Sommers.  We already noted Bear's article on this with, with this: 

The blaring of the propoganda bugle.

Wyoming Rep. John Bear writes, "It was the Speaker’s decision to create an Appropriations Committee consisting only of socially liberal legislators from big cities, and now it appears that the President of the Senate sees some benefit in a Senate Appropriations committee loyal to the Uniparty’s cause as well.

John Bear, head of the Freedom Caucus, in the Cowboy State Daily.

There is no Uniparty.

A person would be hard-pressed to find a single "socially liberal legislator", let alone one from a "big city", in the State Legislature. 

I note this as this is the current drumbeat of the Freedom Caucus, and it's a fantasy.  A better case could be made that the Freedom Caucus is not made up of Republicans, as it doesn't reflect traditional Wyoming Republican values.  Of course, Bear isn't a Wyomingite, being a transplant.

The problem with false propaganda, however, is that people will believe it, including those spouting it.

We read Sommers, but didn't comment on it.  It's title raises a good question:

Albert Sommers: Why Does Freedom Caucus Tell Its Members How To Vote?

In it, Sommers states, reflecting the way that the Wyoming GOP has traditionally been:

I believe Wyoming Republicans remain “a Party for free men/women, not blind followers, and not conformists,” and yet the media, hardline conservative pundits, state party leaders, and the Freedom Caucus want to push all Republicans into the round hole of conformism when we are truly the square peg of diversity.

By doing so, he really does define the current state of affairs between the traditional Wyoming GOP and the populist branch. The Wyoming GOP is traditionally conservative, but Wyomingite, the populists are something else, and do very much march in lockstep.  Indeed, failure to adhere to uniformity yields to insults such as being accused of being part of an imaginary fictitious "Uniparty" to ending up getting listed on the WyoRino website which list traditional Republicans as RINO's.

Populist do appear to be driving the bus nationally in the GOP, which frankly just doesn't behave the way it used to in any fashion.  It's interesting that this fight is developing in Wyoming, which still is heavily Trump country, when Trump's supporters brought the Führerprinzip into the party. It might be telling that "think for yourself" is appearing here now.

June 28, 2023

A committee rejected a bill proposing to make EMS services essential.  This would have provided for some level of state funding.

August 25, 2023

A committee heard testimony from Wyoming Secretary of State Chuck Gray on a bill that would require 30 days residence in order to vote in a Wyoming election.  It was formerly one year, some time go, but that was struck down by a Supreme Court opinion and never re addressed.

In spite of Gray's having been voted into office, he's not universally popular with long time Republicans or long time residents, and one multi generation Wyoming rancher and former legislature apparently also testified and called Gray a "snake oil salesman".

August 31, 2023

The 30 day's residence bill was tabled by the Corporation's Committee.

The Committee unanimously passed a bill that banning private funding for the administration of elections in Wyoming.  My prediction is that the Law of Unintended Consequences will end applying to this bill as political parties are private organizations and primaries are the use of public funds for their internal choices, and somehow this will blow up on the parties, which will be fine.

The committee passed in a 9-5 vote a resolution asking Congress to propose a constitutional amendment that would restrict corporations and organizations from making campaign contributions, an act that will go nowhere as Congress won't do it.

"Freedom Caucus" legislator John Bear, originally of Missouri, wrote a longish letter to the Casper Star Tribune complaining about Senate President Ogden Driscoll using the term "Uniparty", which FC members use to slam anyone who is not a member of the populist right.

October 7, 2024.

Senator Bob Ide has an op ed in the paper today, promising to introduce legislation to somehow require the Federal government to turn over the Federal domain to Wyoming.  He terms the Federal Government's possession of its public land in Wyoming illegal and contrary to a promise it made at the time of Wyoming's statehood, both of which are absolutely false.

This would be a disaster for the state's sportsmen and the state in general, and would soon result in the land likely going to the wealthy, and wealthy out of staters.  It would frankly make it not worth living here and destroy the character of the state.

Ide cites the popular transfer of the Marton ranch to the Federal Government and the recent southwestern Wyoming BLM plan as part of the reason this needs to occur, both of which are reason why it should never occur.

Poster from several years ago.

Ide is a far right member of the legislature and was in Washington, D.C. at the time of the insurrection, although there is no reason to believe he participated in it.

October 15, 2023

Oh brother:
A legislative committee will draft a measure to prohibit state and local authorities from aiding or cooperating with federal land management agencies “when they pursue policies which harm Wyoming’s core interests.”

The move is in response to the U.S. Bureau of Land Management’s draft plan for managing 3.6 million acres of federal land in southwest Wyoming.

The Select Federal Natural Resource Management Committee also voted unanimously to draft a bill creating a new full-time position in the governor’s office to act as a watchdog “protecting the state’s interest against federal overreach.” Lawmakers on the panel suggested recruiting current and former BLM employees for the position with a signing bonus. They also discussed offering “bonuses and or opportunities for promotion” for state employees who go “above and beyond in protecting the state’s interests” against perceived federal overreach.

Casper Star Tribune 

November 2, 2024

A $68M inflation adjustment funding bill for education will be introduced.

At least this makes sense for a budget session.

November 4, 2024

Election related bills will appear in the upcoming budget session.

A bill to require a person to be a resident for 30 days prior to voting in an election will move on to the budget session.

A bill to expand the definition "of organization" for campaign donation reporting also will.

A bill to add a misdemeanor offense for intimidating an election official has been added to the one that already exists at the felony level.

November 10, 2023

After a special purpose bill failed, judges were added to the statute that makes it a felony to intimidate jurors, witnesses and peace officers while they are fulfilling their duty.

This seems to fall considerably short of the originally proposed bill which was specific to judges.

November 14, 2023

A bill to create a Rural Lawyer Incentive Pilot Program which grant entering lawyers in rural communities $16,000 each year over five years, so little as to be of no practical effect whatsoever, is advancing to the legislature.

The bill states:

HOUSE BILL NO.

Wyoming rural attorney recruitment program.

Sponsored by: Joint Judiciary Interim Committee

A BILL

for

AN ACT relating to attorneys-at-law; establishing the rural attorney recruitment pilot program; specifying eligibility requirements for counties and attorneys to participate in the program; specifying administration, oversight and payment obligations for the program; requiring reports; providing a sunset date for the program; authorizing rulemaking; providing an appropriation; and providing for an effective date.

Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Wyoming: 

Section 1. W.S. 33-5-201 through 33-5-203 are createdto read:

2024 STATE OF WYOMING 24LSO-0061

Working Draft

Bill Number

ARTICLE 2 – RURAL ATTORNEY RECRUITMENT PROGRAM

33-5-201. Rural attorney recruitment program established; findings; program requirements; county qualifications; annual reports.

(a) In light of the shortage of attorneys practicing in rural Wyoming counties, the legislature finds that the establishment of a rural attorney recruitment program constitutes a valid public purpose, of primary benefit to the citizens of the state of Wyoming.

(b) The supreme court may establish a rural attorney recruitment program to assist rural Wyoming counties in recruiting attorneys to practice in those counties.

STAFF COMMENT 

In light of the Committee's discussion at its last meeting, the Committee may wish to consider whether the Supreme Court or the State Bar should establish and operate the rural-attorney program. 

(c) Each county eligible under this subsection may apply to the supreme court to participate in the program. A county is eligible to participate in the program if the county:

(i) Has a population of not greater than twenty8 five thousand (25,000); 

(ii) Has an average of not greater than one and one-half (1.5) licensed attorneys in the county for every one thousand (1,000) residents of the county;

16 STAFF COMMENT

The State Bar proposed the following alternative qualification/standard to paragraph (ii) above:

(ii) Has an average of not greater than one and one-half (1.5) qualified attorneys in the county for everyone thousand (1,000) residents. As used in this paragraph, "qualified attorney" means an attorney who provides legal services to private citizens on a fee basis for an average of not less than twenty (20) hours per week. "Qualified attorney" shall not include an attorney who is a full-time judge, prosecutor, public defender, judicial clerk, in29 house counsel, trust officer and any licensed attorney who is in retired status or who is not engaged in the practice of law;

(iii) Agrees to provide the county share of the incentive payment required under this article;

(iv) Is determined to be eligible to participate  in the program by the supreme court.

(d) Before determining a county's eligibility, the supreme court shall conduct an assessment to evaluate the  county's need for an attorney and the county's ability to sustain and support an attorney. The supreme court shall maintain a list of counties that have been assessed and are  eligible to participate in the program under this article.  The supreme court may revise any county assessment or  conduct a new assessment as the court deems necessary to reflect any change in a county's eligibility.

(e) In selecting eligible counties to participate in the program, the supreme court shall consider: 

(i) The county's demographics;

(ii) The age and number of attorneys in the county;

STAFF COMMENT

Rather than require the consideration of age as a factor the Committee may wish to consider alternate language for paragraph (ii) above:

(ii) The number of attorneys in the county and the number of attorneys projected to be practicing in the county over the next five (5) years;

(iii) Any recommendations from the district judges and circuit judges of the county;

(iv) The county's economic development programs;

(v) The county's geographical location relative to other counties participating in the program:

(vi) An evaluation of any attorney seeking to practice in the county as a program participant, including  the attorney's previous or existing ties to the county;

(vii) Any prior participation of the county in the program;

(viii) Any other factor that the supreme court deems necessary. 

(f) A participating eligible county may enter into agreements with any municipality, school district or nonprofit entity within the county to assist the county in meeting the county's obligations for participating in the program.

(g) Not later than October 1, 2024 and each October 1  thereafter that the program is in effect, the supreme court shall submit an annual report to the joint judiciary interim committee on the activities of the program. Each  report shall include information on the number of attorneys and counties participating in the program, the amount of incentive payments made to attorneys under the program, the general status of the program and any recommendations for  continuing, modifying or ending the program. 

33-5-202. Rural attorney recruitment program; attorney requirements; incentive payments; termination of program.

(a) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, any attorney licensed to practice law in Wyoming may apply to the supreme court to participate in the rural attorney recruitment program established under this article. No attorney shall participate in the program if the attorney has previously participated in the program or has  previously participated in any other state or federal scholarship, loan repayment or tuition reimbursement  program that obligated the attorney to provide legal services in an underserved area.

(b) Not more than five (5) attorneys shall participate in the program established under this article at any one (1) time.

(c) Subject to available funding and as consideration for providing legal services in an eligible county, each attorney approved by the supreme court to participate in  the program shall be entitled to receive an incentive payment in five (5) equal annual installments. Each annual incentive payment shall be paid on or after July 1 of each year. Each annual incentive payment shall be in an amount equal to ninety percent (90%) of the University of Wyoming college of law resident tuition for thirty (30) credit hours and annual fees as of July 1, 2024.

STAFF COMMENT

The College of Law's resident tuition for 30 credit hours for the 2023-2024 academic year and annual fees is $17,946. Ninety percent of that amount is $16,151. The Committee may wish to simply specify the amount of each annual payment in subsection (c) above.

(d) Subject to available funding, the supreme court shall make each incentive payment to the participating attorney. The Wyoming state bar and each participating county shall remit its share of the incentive payment to the supreme court in a manner and by a date specified by the supreme court. The responsibility for incentive payments under this section shall be as follows: 

(i) Fifty percent (50%) of the incentive payments shall be from funds appropriated to the supreme court;  (ii) Thirty-five percent (35%) of the incentive payments shall be provided by each county paying for attorneys participating in the program in the county;(iii) Fifteen percent (15%) of the incentive payments shall be provided by the Wyoming state bar.

(e) Subject to available funding for the program, each attorney participating in the program shall enter into an agreement with the participating county, the Wyoming state  bar and the supreme court that obligates the attorney to  practice law full-time in the participating county for not less than five (5) years. No agreement shall be effective until it is filed with and approved by the supreme court.

STAFF COMMENT

The Committee may wish to consider:

Whether attorneys participating in the program must live in the county in which they practice.

Whether language is needed to clarify what it means for an attorney in the program to practice law in the applicable county. Whether a local contribution or match should be required, or whether alternatives to the local matchshould be included in the bill draft. (This was a suggestion raised by the State Bar at the Committee's meeting in September.)

Whether a failure to repay an incentive payment when required to do so should expressly subject the attorney to license suspension (this was an item raised at the September meeting).

(f) Any attorney who receives an incentive payment under this article and subsequently breaches the agreement entered into under subsection (e) of this section shall  repay all funds received under this article pursuant to terms and conditions established by the supreme court. Failure to repay funds as required by this subsection shall be grounds for attorney discipline.

(g) The supreme court may promulgate any rules necessary to implement this article. 

(h) The program established under this article shall cease on June 30, 2029.

STAFF COMMENT

In light of the Committee's discussion in September, the Committee may wish to consider whether clarifying language is necessary to make clear that attorneys can begin the program before June 30, 2029 and complete their requirements after June 30, 2029.

33-5-203. Sunset.

W.S. 33-5-201 and 33-5-202 are repealed effective July 17 2029.

Section 2. There is appropriated one hundred ninety20 seven thousand three hundred seventy-five dollars

($197,375.00) from the general fund to the supreme court  for the period beginning with the effective date of this act and ending June 30, 2029 to be expended only for  purposes of providing incentive payments for the rural attorney recruitment program established under this act. This appropriation shall not be transferred or expended for any other purpose. Notwithstanding W.S. 9-2-1008, 9-2-1012(e) and 9-4-207, this appropriation shall not revert until June 30, 2029.

Section 3. This act is effective July 1, 2024.

There is a real shortage, but as noted, the amount of money proposed here will do little to address the problem.  Most likely, what it would do is allow new law school grads to fool themselves into opening local practices that would soon be closed, something that has been going on for quite some time.

The problem that this bill addresses is caused by a variety of things, a significant one being the adoption of the Uniform Bar Exam which has caused Colorado firms in particular, but also Montana and even Texas firms to license lawyers in Wyoming while they practice from their actual localities. This has made practicing law in Wyoming less viable, and in return reduced and consolidated local practice.  This could easily be fixed by requiring residency requirements to practice in Wyoming or restoring a Wyoming specific bar exam.

November 17, 2023

In an act of flaming hypocrisy, the Converse County GOP voted 20-12 to censure state Rep. Forrest Chadwick R-Evansville, for a record that doesn't follow the state's GOP platform and which claims  he violated“the oath that he made to God.” Seeing as the state's GOP is presently heavily supportive of sedition, that's rather rich.

It's not surprising that Chadwick has run into trouble, however. The Businessman turned politician is a Natrona County resident and it could have been predicted from day one that Converse County would not really appreciate a Casperite being in the legislature for some of them, something that occured due to recent redistricting.