Another Missoula Current Article About Job Retention Money That Omits Scrutinizing A Democratic Politician Named Ellie

by Travis Mateer

Are local news outlets, like the Missoula Current, REPORTING on problems with the small business retention funds distributed by the County to local businesses, or are they FRAMING this story in specific ways to protect a Democratic State Senator by the name of Ellie Boldman (no longer) Smith?

I would argue the latter, and this article by Martin Kidston is the best evidence (so far) that the real story of a State Senator double-dipping Covid relief money is being covered up.

I first wrote about Ellie Boldman receiving small business retention money on January 4th with this post. On January 13th I wrote another post after the Missoula Current wrote an article focusing on the geographic distribution of the job retention funds.

Now the Missoula Current is at it again, reporting on the revocation of $19,000 to the law office that is NOT owned by a Democratic State Senator. Here is the reason why the Morgan-Pierce law firm is having to give back the retention money:

“With the materials submitted as part of their application package, they met all the eligibility requirements, including the job retention criteria,” said Melissa Gordon. “What became clear last week in email communications about the contract was that they didn’t meet the job retention criteria for the grant and were ineligible for funding.”

Gordon, manager of grants for the county, said more than 125 businesses applied for the limited pool of funding, which totaled $625,000. The award amounts ranged from $10,000 to $25,000 and the majority of the funds – 58% – went to the food and drink industry.

I am impressed with how effectively Martin Kidston has kept Ellie Boldman’s name out of his reporting for his online rag, the Missoula Current. I would think at least a sentence or two might be warranted about Ellie’s law firm receiving money, since it’s THE ONLY OTHER LAW FIRM to have received retention funds.

Instead of making any effort to contact the Ellie Hill Smith Law Office for comment on this story, we get some cryptic shit about more revocations coming:

“I might be bringing another contract revocation to you,” Gordon told commissioners on Tuesday. “There’s another grantee that has some concerns about duplication of benefits with the Paycheck Protection Program loan they might accept.”

If another contract revocation is made by Missoula County, will the Missoula Current write another article that goes out of its way to NOT talk about the fact that $50,000 dollars out of $625,000 went to a Democratic State Senator with political connections?

If members of our local media are THIS obvious about framing a narrative to protect a Democratic politician from scrutiny, what other stories are flying under the radar?

I think that’s a question worth asking.

Sadly, The End Of Trump’s Presidential Term Does NOT Mean The End Of Trump Derangement Syndrome

by Travis Mateer

I was hoping Trump Derangement Syndrome would end for all those sad, afflicted liberals who spent 4 years in a mental prison constructed by Rachel Maddow, but Caitlin Johnstone has some bad news in a piece titled Viral #TrumpsNewArmy Video Is Liberals At Their Craziest And Scariest. From the link:

A new viral video calling on liberals to form “an army of citizen detectives” to gather information on Trump supporters and report their activities to the authorities has racked up thousands of shares and millions of views in just a few hours.

The hashtag #TrumpsNewArmy is trending on Twitter as of this writing due to the release of a horrifying video with that title from successful author and virulent Russiagater Don Winslow. As of this writing it has some 20 thousand shares and 2.6 million views, and the comments and quote-retweets are predominantly supportive.

A deranged army of citizen detectives is the perfect appetizer for the Biden regime’s reprisal of the PATRIOT ACT. In fact, those eager beavers are already at it, hunting down Trump supporters and trying to get them cancelled IRL.

For those old enough to remember, anti-war leftists were the popular targets for the security state during the quaint Bush Junior days; a nostalgic time when I naively assumed American liberals weren’t Orwellian language cops disappearing any wrong-think down the memory hole.

Now it’s 2021, and we have this:

“On or before January 20th, Donald Trump will no longer be the Commander-in-Chief: he will lose control of the Army, Navy, Airforce, Marines, Special Forces and America’s nuclear arsenal,” Winslow’s voice begins ominously. “On January 20th Donald Trump will become Commander-in-Chief of a different army: this army.”

Viewers are then shown footage from Trump rallies while being told that they are looking at “radical extreme conservatives, also known as domestic terrorists”. 

“They are hidden among us, disguised behind regular jobs,” Winslow warns. “They are your children’s teachers. They work at supermarkets, malls, doctor’s offices, and many are police officers and soldiers.”

Winslow talks about white supremacists and the Capitol riot, warning that Trump will continue escalating violence and fomenting a civil war in America.

“We have to fight back,” Winslow declares. “In this new war, the battlefield has changes. Computers can be more valuable than guns. And this is what we need now more than ever: an army of citizen detectives. I’m proposing we form a citizen army. Our weapons will be computers and cellphones. We, who are monitoring extremists on the internet and reporting our findings to authorities. Remember, before the Navy Seals killed Osama Bin Laden, he had to be found. He was found by a CIA analyst working on a computer thousands of miles away. It’s up to you.”

I’m not keen on the charade that is our two party political system, which is why I voted for Kanye West for President. That said, this is the tweet I posted yesterday (while I still have my Twitter account):

The liberal political establishment in Missoula has already tried cancelling me once, and failed. Instead of shutting me up, the political retaliation I experienced resulted in a hardening of my resolve to expose how they operate in Missoula.

For that, and so much more, stay tuned…

A Zoom Town Interview With Missoula City Councilperson Jesse Ramos

by Travis Mateer

This week’s episode of Zoom Town is an hour long conversation with City Councilperson, Jesse Ramos. We discuss esoteric tax policy, like Tax Increment Financing, how mills are calculated, and the challenges of being a fiscal conservative advocating for fiscal restraint amongst Missoula’s liberal-dominant political establishment.

If you have a suggestion for someone you’d like to hear interviewed, or other ideas you would like to share, my email contact is willskink at yahoo dot com.

Micro-Targeting Vaccine-Hesitant Communities To Achieve Vaccine Equality

by Travis Mateer

On this MLK day I would like to focus on vaccine equality.

I know what you’re thinking: isn’t vaccine SAFETY a little more important than vaccine EQUALITY? Sure, if you’re a white privileged asshole selfishly worrying about what vaccines might do to you, personally, then yes, SAFETY is probably going to be your main concern.

But if you’re a virtue-signaling true believer in the benevolence of science with a strong financial incentive to sell minority populations an experimental vaccine, then focusing on EQUALITY might be the ticket.

One of the problems with emphasizing equality over safety for our “local” newspaper, the Missoulian, is this: history. More specifically, the medical/industrial complex doesn’t have the most stellar history when it comes to “helping” minority populations with their “medicine”. Some of that problematic history includes sterilizing indigenous populations.

To counter the potential for this troubling history to translate into vaccine hesitancy amongst Native populations, the Missoulian is doing its part to promote vaccine equality with this article from January 1st, titled Tiny needle, big result: Native leaders fight vaccine hesitancy. From the link:

D’Shane Barnett didn’t even feel the poke when he got his COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday.

“I was actually trying to do a video to promote vaccine usage among the Native population and I didn’t even realize she had already stuck me,” Barnett said.

Compared with other vaccinations he’s gotten, Barnett said the Moderna shot was hardly noticeable because of how small the needle is. Barnett is the executive director of the All Nations Health Center, previously known as the Missoula Urban Indian Health Center. He was among a group of 33 people who got their shots at the center on Tuesday. He still posted a video of himself getting the vaccine to his Facebook page.

Transparency was a huge part of the All Nations Health Center’s rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine. Barnett, who is Mandan and Arikara, encouraged his staff to share photos of themselves getting the vaccine. The pharmacist who gave the vaccine to the Center’s staff is a member of the Blackfeet Nation.

For this PR effort to convince Native Americans to take an experimental vaccine to be effective, it’s important to get authentic Natives to do this to themselves, because when it was WHITE people doing it to them, well, there’s an unfortunate history there that our benevolent media corporation is trying to skillfully address. Here’s more tailored media propaganda targeting Natives (emphasis mine):

As dozens of health care providers in the Missoula community and across the state receive the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines, experts are considering how best to approach vaccine hesitancy among the public. According to several polls conducted in November, the majority of Americans are willing to get a vaccine once it is available. However, some populations are reluctant.

Dennis Yi Tenen is a professor at Columbia University who studies the intersection of language and technology. Right now, he is looking at vaccine hesitancy in online communities.

Vaccine hesitancy is often considered a problem with what information people are consuming, Yi Tenen said. Health officials believe the solution to this is to continue to give people more science and more proof a vaccine was effective.

But what his team is observing is that people are hesitant to take vaccines for all sorts of reasons. And sometimes, they’re quite well-informed about the vaccines. So giving them more science might not address their concerns. People object on political grounds, on religious grounds and because of complicated histories with the medical community.

Ah, yes, “complicated histories” is a nice euphemism for blanket biowarfare and sterilization programs. But that was back in the day, when EVIL WHITEY was doing the mad scientist shit, like eugenics. That’s all in the past, Native Americans. Now there are red faces giving you this “medicine” instead of white ones, so it should all be good now. It’s called a “culturally informed approach”:

Congress has acknowledged instances of unethical medical practices and experimentation on Native American and Alaska Native communities. A stark example of this was brought forward in 1974 when Dr. Connie Pinkerton-Uri, Choctaw and Cherokee, found that one in four Native American women had been sterilized without consent, according to a timeline by the National Library of Medicine.

Two years later, the U.S. General Accounting Office reported at least four out of 12 Indian Health Service regions sterilized 3,406 Native American women without their permission between 1973 and 1976.

This history is why Barnett took a transparency approach. What has changed between 1970 and 2020 is how many Native American doctors, epidemiologists and pharmacists are working today, Barnett said.

“Almost every atrocity that’s ever been committed against Native people — by the United States’ government, by American medicine – there have not been Native experts at the table,” Barnett said. “And that is what has changed.”

Yes, instead of just white faces going to University to learn about western medicine and the healthy society western medicine has helped create in America, red faces were ALSO allowed to those universities to learn about western medicine. This is what is known as EQUALITY. Here is more evidence of this equality:

Native Americans are now working at the National Institute of Health. These educated Native professionals are the people Barnett is trusting. Not to mention his own knowledge. Barnett is getting a doctorate in public health and researched the safety and efficacy of the vaccine.

Cool, Barnett will have a doctorate AND he’s researched the safety and efficacy of the vaccine, so I guess there’s nothing to worry about, like why vaccine “efficacy” doesn’t mean reducing transmission, or the risk of pathogenic priming, or why Big Pharma got a sweetheart deal under Reagan to protect them from lawsuits when their vaccines hurt and kill people.

No, those concerns should just be shelved because Native Americans are now working at the NIH, and if that doesn’t convince you to take the WARP SPEED vaccine, then how about some MICRO-TARGETING?

Yi Tenen’s belief is that the way to help change minds about vaccination is to micro-target communities across the country in a similar way to Barnett’s strategy.

His team will collect the conversations of people in vaccine-hesitant communities online and then analyze what is being said to try to understand the reasons behind the hesitancy. Step one is to observe and understand. Step two is to help craft outreach campaigns based on the data about these conversations.

The goal is to be as scientific with the messaging about the vaccine as researchers were about its development, he said. Because both are important. All of the physical challenges of getting a vaccine to people, such as keeping it at the right temperature and away from light, won’t matter if officials can’t address the ideological component of not wanting to take the vaccine.

For the vaccine to be effective, a large number of people need to be willing to get it.

Do you feel better about vaccines yet, Native Americans?

I wonder what other “vaccine-hesitant communities” have been identified for micro-targeting? Are conspiracy theorists one community, or should they be broken up into smaller segments for micro-targeting? I’m sure the caring people at Lee Enterprises will let us know once the studies of us have been completed.

One significant question NOT being posed in this article is this: what if a large number of people are NOT CONVINCED and REFUSE to take the vaccine? Are there more coercive strategies ready to go for that scenario?

If you think the answer to that last question is “no” then CONGRATS, no more micro-targeting for you is required.

As for those of you who still might be exhibiting troubling displays of “hesitancy”, I’m sure being locked out of any semblance of living a normal life will be enough to convince you the science is sane and the oligarch eugenicists are your friends.

Partisan Twitter Detectives Should Dig Their Cancel Claws Into “Activist Johnny” From Utah

by Travis Mateer

I can’t handle watching all these Twitter detectives patrolling the internets to catch insurrectionist whitey and ALL his white supremacist pals. Whatever degree of sympathies are exhumed by these useful idiots–be it a confederate sticker on a car, or maybe that well-known racist twinkle in the eye–it’s enough to DOX the person in order to trigger whatever exciting real life consequences might await their target from cowering HR departments.

One of these characters is jhwygirl, the anonymous blogger of the long-defunct blog 4&20 Blackbirds blog, where I got my start writing for an invisible audience. While I know her real name, I am NOT interested in doing what was ALREADY done to her. Why do you think she stopped writing? It was made clear to her that what she was writing about could cost her her government job, so she stopped.

I respect that decision, considering I have ALSO been the target of political retaliation for a fucking poem I published about a dead homeless man and the city obsession over new sidewalks. The main obsessor of that 2018 effort, City Councilperson Gwen Jones, used her position as a board member of my employer to intimidate me, on the clock. If it wasn’t for the skills of that HR person, it would have been much more than a signed apology I received in compensation.

I would hope someone who has experienced how unpopular opinions get you heat from those above you on the power ladder would be less enthusiastic about THE PURGE, but this is a different world we now inhabit.

If self-deputized online sleuths like jhwygirl want to FULLY explore the dynamics of 1/6/21, an interesting portal into one substrate of this event is “Activist Johnny” from Utah. I just watched a pre-1/6/21 interview with John Sullivan on Rokfin (might be exclusive to this new platform, I dunno) and it has me more interested than ever to keep looking at our local network and things like housing and homelessness.

And taxes.

Tuesday’s upcoming episode of Zoom Town is a 70 minute conversation with Missoula Councilperson, Jesse Ramos. If you can handle the math breakdown of what a “mill” is at the beginning, and the linguistic intimidation inherent in terms like Tax Increment Financing, you will discover (hopefully) how Ramos has inspired others to get more engaged in understanding LOCAL dynamics affecting their lives.

So stay tuned…