Brandon Bryant Released From Potential Coronavirus Incubator (Jail)

by William Skink

After listening to this NPR story about concerns that jails and prisons will become incubators for Coronavirus, and after reading there are now two confirmed cases of Coronavirus in Missoula County, I was going to write a post highlighting the fact political prisoner Brandon Bryant is still in jail.

But when I checked the jail roster I discovered Bryant was released yesterday.

This would indicate Bryant underwent a mental health assessment and was deemed NOT an imminent threat to our Missoula community.

Will a global pandemic slow the stride of the Missoula County Attorney’s office as Matt Jennings prepares his case against Brandon Bryant on felony charges?

Stay tuned as local media catches up to this latest development in the Brandon Bryant affair.

Making Preparations

by William Skink

I didn’t work yesterday, so had the opportunity to join the masses in the great rush to stockpile.

At Sportsmen’s Warehouse the cashier consulted his list and took back several boxes of ammunition I was going to purchase. He apologized and said they had just got word to put limits on certain kinds of ammunition.

At Murdoch’s I stocked up on chicken feed. Got to keep our little clucking egg machines happy and producing. My wife braved Costco and said it was absolute madness. The traffic was snarled in all directions from the mad rush.

The Good Food Store was packed. Lots of people shooting anxious looks about as they got forced into closer proximity with others than they were comfortable with. I mused to the woman packing my food how my dad used to laugh at me for ordering emergency food rations. She replied that the one thing she kept from her Mormon upbringing was maintaining an emergency food supply.

At the bank I made a withdrawal to add to the mattress fund (that’s a metaphor, it’s in a safe). The bank teller expressed frustration that non-toilet paper hoarders need to resupply as well. She’s still waiting for her online order to arrive.

Most people seem to be getting this is serious. Logjam presents front page now looks like this:

Screen Shot 2020-03-14 at 11.02.26 AM

Clicking more info tells you this:

Given the recent news regarding COVID-19, we want to let you know that we are taking this seriously and are taking as many preventative measures as possible to protect our patrons and community. We also need to inform you that this may impact upcoming events.

Logjam has a custodial staff that’s dedicated to cleaning and sanitizing our venues every day of operation. This includes thorough sanitization of tables, chairs, benches, counters, bar fixtures, bathrooms, etc. Our managers are very diligent in making sure these sanitizing steps are taken every day.

As usual, our employees are required to follow common-sense guidelines by not coming to work if they show symptoms of illness.

Hand sanitizer stations will be available for use at all Logjam venues during ticketed events. We also ask that all patrons take everyday preventative actions to help prevent the spread of illness.

Some touring musicians have begun to postpone or cancel events in certain areas. Logjam is working with artists on an individual basis to decide on postponements or cancellations.

But some people don’t seem to be getting this is serious. The pastor at my parents church, for example, went ahead with a trip to Hawaii. He left with his family just a few days ago.

And Missoula’s public schools are still, as of this writing, planning on having students return to classes after Spring Break.

Now that Montana has 4 confirmed cases I expect public schools will eventually make the call to keep kids home.

Beyond the health impacts the Coronavirus will produce, at best, a global recession. More than likely it will be much worse than that.

The income inequality that’s exploded through intentional central bank policy over the past decade–policies intended to paper over the insolvency of zombie banks and to keep stock prices artificially juice–will come into stark focus as this crisis develops.

If people can’t afford to stay home with their kids the virus will spread faster and more people will die.

If people can’t afford to be tested the virus will spread faster and more people will die.

If people can’t afford to miss a few paychecks because that means no food on the table, things will get desperate and more dangerous for everyone.

The next few days and weeks are going to be critical. Do what you can to prepare yourself for what comes next.

Corona Virus, Dementia Joe And The Stories Still Worth Exploring As Crisis Takes Hold

by William Skink

Yesterday shit got real as the scope of our national un-preparedness sank in.

I started the day at work with events planned for the elderly still happening. By the end of the work day it was all cancelled. I think the University system shutting down after Spring Break was what finally did it.

The reality of our healthcare infrastructure is that there are a finite number of beds. The people running this infrastructure–doctors, nurses–will become a decreasing resource as a lack of supplies for medical professionals results in more of them becoming ill themselves.

The scale of what China accomplished with its built infrastructure in a matter of days and weeks is a feat this country cannot duplicate.

But an emergency that cancels elections and unleashes the police state in a forced national quarantine? For the barely restrained fascism that emerged after 9/11, the Corona-crises is like a mainline shot of meth sure to jolt the incremental steps taken over the years into action.

Speaking of Fascism, the piece of shit centrists who have rendered the Democratic party an enemy of the people are coalescing around dementia Joe.

I knew there were a lot of policy reasons to despise this gropey swamp creature, but I didn’t know Biden has claimed original authorship of the Patriot Act in an effort to exploit the Oklahoma terrorist attack. Here is Biden himself from a time when his mind wasn’t disintegrating in real time:

“I drafted a terrorism bill after the Oklahoma City bombing,” Biden was quoted as saying by the New Republic in 2001.

“And the bill John Ashcroft sent up was my bill,” Biden continued, referring to the Patriot Act. The act broadened the surveillance capabilities of U.S. law enforcement agencies as it relates to identifying potential terrorists, and many of its provisions have been opposed by liberal Democrats and civil libertarians.

It wasn’t the first time Biden took credit for the Patriot Act . On Meet the Press that same year, he made similar comments referring to the Omnibus Counterterrorism Act of 1995.

“I introduced the terrorism bill in ’94 that had a lot of these things in it,” Biden again said.

Since America is incapable of deploying an efficient testing regime to actually understand what’s already spreading, there is a good chance the political field could change because politicians start dying.

This is not hyperbole.

Donald Trump has been exposed through a Brazilian official he dined with and took selfies with. Trudeau’s wife has tested positive for Coronavirus. And countless other politicians and the slime that accompanies them have been exposed at at AIPAC and CPAC:

The state of Maryland announced Wednesday that it has diagnosed three new cases on the deadly novel coronavirus, including one man who worked at the recent AIPAC conference.

At least six people have now tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, after returning from last week’s America Israel Public Affairs Committee policy conference, including attendees from Cleveland and Toronto.

If Biden catches this thing he’ll probably die. Same goes for Trump. Same goes for Bernie.

Mike Pence, on the other hand, I’m not so sure about. I think he could be either a time-traveling cyborg or inter-dimensional demon sent by dark forces to trigger the apocalypse.

Too soon?

In the days and weeks to come this rapidly evolving crisis will dominate the headlines. But other stories will keep happening and evolving as well.

I plan on continuing to follow the local stories I’ve been covering, hopefully in more depth as my work situation changes.

How will social distancing and possible mobility restrictions impact things like concerts? Only a few shows promoted by Lord Checota’s Logjam Presents have been postponed. Will our benevolent Lord do the right thing and indefinitely postpone ALL shows?

What are the risks facing our homeless population in Missoula? In another post I discussed how the seasonal transient population coming through town could be a problem. I am not saying this to unfairly stigmatize people without homes. I’m saying this to describe a real phenomenon that occurs that now has a new risk associated with it.

The same risk, I explained, that very wealthy people pose because they are less tethered to geographical locations for a paycheck and they have the resources (like vacation homes in Montana) to pick up and leave, if they can.

I will not deny that some degree of fear is coloring my perception. An unseen virus that anyone could have and that spreads for days before a person shows symptoms is going to make people afraid, anxious, and much quicker to see another human as a possible threat.

Amidst this “other-izing” that will occur, another story I will continue following is the death of Sean Stevenson at Missoula’s homeless shelter, the Poverello Center.

When I first started covering this tragic incident I noted how Sean Stevenson was depicted in a quote from the Sheriff’s Department as being not from our community. Here is the quote:

Missoula County Sheriff TJ McDermott reports that Sean Stevenson, 45, who is from out of state, died after being involved in an altercation on Friday night at the Poverello Center.

And here is my initial reaction to this odd depiction:

What constitutes “out-of-state” to the Sheriff’s Department? And why include this piece of information in the article? Is it relevant to the fact he’s dead?

There continues to be more questions than answers with this story, and not everything I know about it can be shared publicly yet.

Everything I’m hoping to do could change by the end of the day with how things are developing. My own family is the number one priority, obviously, and my overall confidence in our federal, state and local governments to do what’s needed is very, very low.

The big conversation in my household is what to do with the kids once school is cancelled.

Now excuse me while I go panic-purchase some box wine at Costco.

Some Notes On Our Current Predicament

by William Skink

The scramble is on.

For toilet paper?

National Guard in New York, empty basketball arenas. The sad signage put up by HR showing cough etiquette.

Too little, too late.

Capitalism cannot fathom the phrase for the greater good.

A prince in the desert started an oil war that Russia will win.

You want to pretend Joe Biden won’t be trounced by Trump?

You want to pretend we are still going to have an election?

Put away your Olympics, put away your Logjam concerts and tourist tax schemes.

Business as usual won’t be coming back any time soon.

That’s not a bad thing.

It’s time to put new ideas into practice.

Put away your Biden and tucked away Trump voodoo doll you stick pins in thinking it’s his grotesque persona to blame for all this because it’s not.

This has been a long time coming.

This will be a long-term test.

Fear makes it more difficult to think straight.

But don’t be complacent.

Your life is not their concern.

Primary Poem

by William Skink

I was ridin’ with my Biden
but I couldn’t see the trail
so I lit a roman candle
and let the fireballs sail

I sensed creepy crawlies
watched with insect eyes
hold me tight, Joe Biden
and we’ll make it through the night

suddenly Joe Biden
screamed a banshee shriek
then laughed maniacally
and kissed me on the cheek

pony soldier, pony soldier
don’t lie to me, he said
yankee doodles dandy
after Hunter goes to bed

somewhere behind us cameras
hungered for a taste
of this sundown’d Joe disaster
so we fled the gym, post haste

the AI isn’t ready, Joe
so you’ve got a few more gigs
we got to make Ohio
want to puff my cig?

I’m Obiden Bama, man
Jill, is that you?
Jill they’re coming after me
and I don’t know what to do

hush Joe, it’s alright
soon you’ll get to sleep
but for now we must keep ridin’
to herd your loyal sheep