
Before coming to Missoula and taking the lead at United Way of Missoula County, Susan Hay Patrick was a deputy director at Feeding America, one of the “top” non-profits in America. When the compensation of top administrators at Feeding America came to light as the pandemic hit American food banks, I have to wonder–did Susan Hay Patrick take a pay cut when she moved from Washington DC to Montana?
In the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, a record 44 million Americans lost their jobs and filed for unemployment. Many turned to their local non-profit, charitable food banks for hunger relief.
Based in Chicago, Feeding America is the largest food bank in the country with revenues of $2.9 billion (2019). Primarily a pass-through organization, it makes grants and donations to local food banks across the country.
Our auditors at OpenTheBooks.com reviewed Feeding America’s payroll disclosures and found Diana Aviv, CEO, made $1.1 million (2019). This amount included $347,209 from a previous employer and rolled into a new 457B plan which was distributed to her when she left the organization that year.
While big money to top people at a food bank conglomerate is something to take note of, a different line of criticism from 2014 got my attention because the article (New York Post) unpacks how a slick ad campaign claiming American children were starving was based on just one skewed study by the USDA, which Feeding America has a close relationship to.

The only basis for Feeding America’s claim comes from US Department of Agriculture surveys in which heads of households were asked if at any time during a calendar year their children were a) unable to eat what they wanted; b) unable to eat in whatever quantity they wanted; c) forced to eat cheaper brands, or d) afraid their food supply might run out on any single day.
Fully 85.5 percent said “no”; just 14.5 percent replied “yes.”
The Agriculture Department tendentiously labels the latter group “food insecure.” And it is from this number, and this number alone, that Feeding America gets its nonsensical claim that one in five kids is fighting starvation daily.
This style of reality tweaking, facilitated by Federal government language games, reminds me of the homeless “point-in-time” survey I used to help administer when I worked at Missoula’s homeless shelter, the Poverello Center. If you want an idea of how this game is played, read this 2019 post.
The controlling of narratives is something that Susan Hay Patrick seems to understand from multiple angles, since her resume includes being a “reporter” and a “corporate communication writer” before her tenure in Missoula began. Then there’s her “long-time” association with the Montana Ambassador program to consider.

What’s a Montana Ambassador? Here’s the definition and the associated goals that this “non-partisan” program (established in 1983) promotes for Governor Gianforte:

According to the definition provided at the website, members of this ambassador program can be “out-of-state” while still actively promoting Montana–people like Alina Alvarez, a Devener-based lawyer for the Oracle Corporation, the CIA-seeded tech company that made Greg Gianforte a very rich man.

Another name I found while clicking through each ambassador office is a name most people won’t recognize, since Paige Pavalone was just a communication cog for the Missoula County Sheriff’s Office a decade ago, but when she backed the wrong candidate running against the Democrat’s pick for Sheriff (T.J. McDermott) the Sheriff’s Office did her dirty, something that appeared to be part of a pattern of retaliation that McDermott and his cronies engaged in after the heated political showdown he “won” over his opponent, Josh Clark.
When I saw Paige Pavalone’s name for a business that does glorified janitor work next to Cushing Terrell gentrifiers (a quarter million in TIF?) and public/private incubators (Blackstone’s launching pad?), my educated guess is that this is an example of Susan Hay Patrick “helping” someone who could have made bigger problems for her and her Democrat schemers after they secured the Sheriff’s Office for Klaus and friends.
Is this image starting to make more sense now?

When Susan Hay Patrick helped Feeding America feed America bullshit, she had celebrities like Beyonce and corporations like Kelloggs helping her out, the same corporations feeding our children shit food while the celebrity class filled their heads with their toxic, predictive programming garbage.
To highlight this awkward reality, here’s another quote from the New York Post article with a quote from Adolf Hitler, which I find hilarious considering Susan Hay Patrick’s alleged “faith”.
Its corporate sponsors represent America’s largest agribusiness companies, food processors and retailers (Conagra, Food Lion, General Mills, Kelloggs, Kroger, Pepsico and Walmart).”
If you make or sell food, you want to inculcate brand loyalty at the youngest age possible. And to get the public thinking we’re still not spending enough on food — never mind that 35 percent of poor kids are obese.
But the damage from the Feeding America campaign is far more insidious. Above all else, it promotes the perception that our free-market system — which, lest we forget, enables America to be the most generous and socially conscious country in history — has barely progressed beyond the sweat-shop era.
In other words, the campaign doesn’t just serve the interests of Big (Agri)Business, it boosts Big Government.
“Propaganda skillfully employed will convince people living in paradise they are living in hell, and people living in hell they are living in paradise”: That’s how Adolf Hitler once put it.
For six months last year writing this post was illegal for me, which means hitting the publish button on content like this would have risked violating my plea agreement where it was specifically stipulated by Missoula County Attorneys, and upheld by District Court bathroom judge, Shane Vannatta, that I was FORBIDDEN to write about United Way of Missoula County.
Because of my experiences and the resulting poverty from years of lawfare against me, with only the weak veneer of “public defender” support the Constitution guarantees that someone gets while being ass-rammed by the dildo of justice, any claim that “Democrats” or “Republicans” make about actually wanting to defend the principles this country supposedly stands on appears, at least to me, to be nothing more than performative bullshit.
As I’ve already documented, Susan Hay Patrick was integral in the political rise of Ellie Boldman, but until today I haven’t explicitly shown that BOTH women have curious ties to the State Department. Let’s start with Ellie’s State Department connection, something that stretched from her youthful travels all the way up to helping South African teenage girls get STEM educated, which is what Ellie was doing when the pandemic hit:
A team of Montanans – high on solving the lack of science and math in South African schools – has won the first-ever Citizen Diplomacy Action Fund award.
The group will teach vital STEM curricula to girls in sub-Saharan Africa early in 2020. The $10,000 grant will cover the faculty’s work in March.
Comprised of Missoula lawyer Ellie Hill Smith, University of Montana chemistry graduate Tyler Smith, plus two Great Falls retired math professors, the team’s plan is one of 25 winning projects selected.
Using a different collection surnames back then, Ellie got this award because of her previous work traveling around the world for Uncle Sam. Hmmm.
The team’s mission is to boost the U.S. government’s investment in international exchanges – and support public service projects behind the expertise, skills and knowledge of “citizen alumni” who previously traveled abroad on government-funded exchange programs.
…
Previously, Hill visited Egypt, Jordan and the Middle East as an alumni of the bipartisan American Council of Young Political Leaders.
Around the same time Ellie was “helping” poor South African girls, Susan was ALSO getting recognized by the US State Department. Coincidence?
The chief executive of the United Way of Missoula County on Wednesday was named the U.S. State Department’s national winner of its Professional Fellows impact award.
The award places Susan Hay Patrick on the global stage and recognizes her “exceptional contribution” to civic engagement and service.
“I was very honored and humbled and grateful to the Mansfield Center for giving me the opportunity to be part of the Professional Fellows Program,” she told the Missoula Current. “We need more citizen diplomacy in our world, and the Professional Fellows Program is a great example of building bridges between our country and developing countries.”
If the Mansfield Center sounds familiar, maybe that’s because I just wrote about Montana’s Governor giving some well-timed kudos to Ghandi as World War III enters its second week.
If it sounded hyperbolic when I made the bold assertion last year that the CIA owns Montanan, I’m hoping my continued effort to contextualize how power REALLY functions in Big Sky Country gets some better traction now that I’m more fully able to write about the insidious “non-profit” birthing canal that makes PPPs (public/private partnerships) the new abomination of scheming to keep a careful eye on.
Thanks for reading!















