Here Are All The Ways To Support The Creative Content Of William Skink

by William Skink

It’s weird making moves to monetize content, and very much outside my comfort zone, but at the same time it’s exciting because I’m joining other content creators doing the same thing, like Sam Tripoli.

The Tin Foil Hat podcast was my entry point into a new platform I am now a subscriber to, called Rokfin. They’ve got Tripoli’s spiritual podcast, Zero, and other amazing contributors, like Whitney Webb, Jimmy Dore, Ryan Christian and more.

Today I submitted an application to join the contributors at Rokfin, so I’m hoping to hear something back in a couple of days. I can think of no better hosting site for my weird videos currently gathering dust on Youtube.

At Substack I just released the third installment of my serial work of “fiction” called Zula. So far I’m keeping everything public because my agenda is to lure you into my narrative, then throw up the paywall for subscriptions.

I should warn readers that the third installment has a violent scene that mirrors what happened to a local homeless man last month. I had written this scene around 4 years ago, so am a little unsettled at the synchronicity.

On Instagram I’ve started posting pictures of my art journal, or what my kids call “dad’s sticker book”. But it’s so much more than just stickers; it includes ephemera from my past, images of cultural icons, ink doodles, and poems, all mixed together in strange collages.

Other ways to support my work include the donation button at my about page, buying my book of poetry at the ZACC’s online artist shop, and going LIVE and IN PERSON to the Loose Moose in downtown Missoula (219 N. Higgins Ave.).

If all this is not enough, I’m recording interviews now for a podcast I plan to be launching very soon, and just in time to join the SINISTER SOUNDS OF DISINFORMATION claimed by this scaremongering Guardian article.

Maybe podcasters like Joe Rogan wouldn’t be so popular if traditional media hadn’t become such obvious propaganda platforms for the parasitic oligarch class.

I’m excited for 2021, and I hope you are to

On This Shortest Day I Say Fuck Their Big Short And Long Reset Con

by William Skink

You’ll get six hundred bucks.

They got a few trillion.

Why isn’t BLM burning down Wall Street?

Why is everyone moving to Texas?

Bernie is still a sheepdog and Jimmy Dore is exposing their Progressive charade.

(like a socialist commenting on Zoom while his wife runs the Pre-K program for United Way)

My kids are not your juicy new data markets and if you work for the parasitic predator class salivating over their GREAT RESET you are not my friend, not my ally, and not someone I can afford to spend energy on convincing you what they have planned for us.

They think they can credit default swap consciousness with their dark arts.

They are wrong.

Susan Hay Patrick’s Damage Control Op-Ed About The Temporary Safe Outdoor Space: A Rebuttal

by Travis Mateer

I’m posting this under my real name because I want it to be clear that this response to Susan Hay Patrick’s op-ed is coming from me, the former Homeless Outreach Coordinator of the Poverello Center.

In her Sunday guest column, Patrick begins by emphasizing the temporary nature of the Temporary Safe Outdoor Space, the federal funding it has received, and its placement on private land. The belief we are being asked to share is that this space has the potential to reduce demand on emergency service providers, our health care system, and law enforcement.

Instead of contextualizing the current demand on emergency service providers as it relates to homelessness in Missoula, Patrick quickly transitions in the next paragraph to taking a position of victimhood, claiming that she (and the non-profit world she is speaking for) are accustomed to being told we are ruining our community.

By taking this position of rhetorical victimhood, Patrick is negatively framing her critics before even addressing them. Even better, after claiming this victimhood, her next move is to brazenly declare the rightness of the actions being undertaken:

But we also know that this is the right thing — the safe, healthier thing — not only for the unhoused people who will have access to the space during this cold COVID winter, but for our community.

The fourth paragraph is where we finally get to Susan Hay Patrick getting it, and we waited all that time for this:

To those who oppose this project: We get it. You’re good people who care about and do a lot for your community. Don’t let anyone tell you differently. We know you’re angry and frustrated. We have that in common with you. Because we’re angry and frustrated, too.

Let’s pause for a moment to think about HOW Susan Hay Patrick is framing critics; she refers to them as those who OPPOSE this project.

Is that what is going on here? Are people simply OPPOSING this project, or are they ASKING QUESTIONS about this project? Because there’s a difference.

After some platitudes about why Patrick shares our anger and frustration (deflecting local failure by referencing our national one) we get this:

We’re not going to Poverello Center or United Way or Hope Rescue Mission our way to the end of homelessness, or by putting people up for temporary stays in cheap motels. The answer to homelessness is housing.

So, maybe we can BLUE LINE DEVELOPMENT our way to ending homelessness, is that what you’re saying, Susan Hay Patrick?

I know it would be easier to dismiss the critics if we were all just dumb haters who simply opposed this homeless camp because our small, little minds see dangerous sex offenders behind every bush, but the questions about funding, and zoning, and skipping public input, and intake processes, and the convenient tie-in to Blue Line Development, are valid, appropriate things for concerned citizens to be asking of their non-profit leaders and elected officials.

Near the end of the op-ed, the future success of our community is made conditional on critics not being angry. I am struggling to understand how this statement is JUST A FACT:

“…until everyone moves beyond anger, we’re going to be stuck in the same cycle we’ve been in for decades: cobbling together underfunded emergency projects instead of working on finding appropriate, sustainable homes for our very diverse population of people experiencing homelessness. That’s just a fact.”

What about the fact that, at the same time we cobble together underfunded emergency projects year after year, we are also funding a new library, and new schools, and new parks, and open spaces, and fairground improvements, and traffic-calming circles, and Spider McKnight crafted communication plans?

No, just ignore all that, because the problem isn’t how resources are prioritized and allocated, it’s angry critics who can’t move beyond their anger.

I think that’s a bunch of crap, and that’s NOT a fact, just one angry critic’s humble opinion.