What’s That Lump, Wonders Adam From Debra Gets Red Pilled At A Motel 6 In Missoula…

by Travis Mateer

What are the real world impacts of the labor shortages plaguing businesses across different sectors of the economy, like hospitality?

If you ask Adam Alamano, creator of the Debra Gets Red Pilled podcast (after his road trip discussed in episode 63), the impact is the realization that the small lump at the foot of your bed at the Motel 6 you’re staying at in Missoula, Montana, is a tampon (unused) somehow stuck UNDERNEATH the fitted sheet.

The reason I think a lack of staffing could be part of the issue here is due to the brief investigation I did yesterday. I heard Adam mention his suspicion that people were living at this particular Motel 6 on a longer term basis, due to the personal items seemingly locked to the bannister on the third floor outside one room, so I biked down to the Motel 6 and took this picture:

After the tampon was found beneath the fitted sheet still in its hard-shell packaging, Adam’s wife addressed the issue and a new room was procured in addition to $50 dollars being returned.

Then, as Adam’s wife returned to the new room, she first wanted to double-check the first room to make sure they had everything out, and that’s when she saw the room being tidied up WITHOUT the sheets being changed, sheets their dogs had been on. Instead of new sheets, the visible dog hair was being removed by hand.

After taking the picture I went to speak with the person at the Motel 6 lobby. I wanted to see if there were any weeklies (a term I used when I worked at the shelter and spoke with motel managers) that were being rented out.

I didn’t get far enough in my conversation with the staff member. I identified myself as a local journalist and the woman said she was too busy to talk. I said I could come back later, and she said specifically that she didn’t have enough staff and had to do everything, including cleaning rooms, so there was no good time.

Maybe I shouldn’t have asked if there had been any recent complaints, and maybe I shouldn’t have referenced the tampon incident, because when I did those two things the woman got very defensive and asked if “crazy Winston” sent me.

I said no, and repeated that I was a journalist, and she demanded I prove it. She only gave me a few seconds of NOT responding to this demand before calling 911 on me. I took that as a cue to leave.

People who experience a nasty stay at a motel might think it would be the realm of the County Health Department to oversee, but it isn’t. Instead, if one were inclined to spend energy on bringing official attention to a situation like Adam and his wife experienced, one could file a complaint with the Better Business Bureau.

The rest of Adam and Emily’s brief Missoula stay sounded delightful, and reminded me of what inspired my then-finance and myself to decide to move to Missoula 21 years ago next month.

I get more and more nostalgic for the Missoula I remember with every new condo project that goes up, and the knowledge I now have, after working at the shelter, of what really goes on in too many of our nasty motels.

Dedicating My Cyber Polygon Song To John McAfee And The Deadman’s Switch I Hope Exists

by Travis Mateer

Yesterday, while talking to some of the best headline decoders out there on Zoom, I learned John McAfee was found dead in a jail cell in Spain. The alternative news realm is buzzing big time over this suspicious Epstein-like death, especially considering McAfee himself warned he might be suicided.

Then, this morning, I read about another data point that will tingle the spidey-senses of the conspiracy-minded: HAARP looks to be getting fired up in Alaska.

Add this to the recent cyber attacks and worries about magnetic meat and you have quite the paranoid stew brewing.

It makes the song I wrote about Cyber Polygon seem quite appropriate now, so here it is:

Mayoral Candidate Shawn Knopp Is Already Being Sniffed By Partisan Pete Talbot For Social Media Transgressions

by Travis Mateer

Yesterday I stopped by Montana Glass to talk with Shawn Knopp, the fourth candidate who beat the filing deadline on Monday to run for Mayor. It had been years since I last spoke with Knopp in my capacity as the coordinator for the Poverello Center’s Homeless Outreach Team program, but he recognized me and greeted me with a smile and a handshake.

Back then the Poverello Center had something called a “good neighbor policy”. This policy extended the behavior-based rules to the immediate surrounding around the Poverello property, so if clients were causing repeated problems for neighbors they ran the risk of temporarily losing services.

When I parked my car outside Montana Glass I noted the activity bordering on chaos in and around the street between Knopp’s employer and the Pov. Since relocating to West Broadway in 2015, Knopp and his co-workers have had a front row seat witnessing the failure of our community to address addiction, mental illness and homelessness.

Here is how proximity to what Poverello clients are experiencing is ALREADY being viewed by one partisan as a potential indicator of Knopp’s politics:

In preparation to run against Engen’s political machine, Knopp took down his personal Facebook page precisely for the reason Pete Talbot exemplifies; sniveling partisans like Pete salivate over the prospect of finding a shared Qanon post or anything that can be depicted as racist. Sorry Pete!

In my conversation with Knopp, I offered to educate his campaign on the failures of Missoula’s 10 Year Plan to End Homelessness, and which public officials and non-profit leaders are most responsible. Hello Susan Hay Patrick!

I also offered Knopp’s campaign my powers of vocalization when it comes to personally validating the challenges businesses like Montana Glass are facing BECAUSE OF their proximity to the homeless shelter, and if anyone wants to accuse me of hating on the homeless, well, they will get a VERY informed response.

If you want to hear my lovely voice articulate this kind of stuff with an EVEN MORE knowledgeable co-host on matters of the media and political campaigns, then please tune in to my podcast Zoom Town. Here is the latest episode, recorded and released yesterday.

I know it’s hard to pay attention to politics in such a beautiful place during the season we endure 9 months of winter for, but this local election cycle has the possibility of being engaging in some unexpected ways, so stay tuned.

And if you’re feeling generous, you can learn about how to support my work here.

Thank you.

Two More Candidates Have Filed To Run For Mayor Of Missoula

by Travis Mateer

Yesterday was the last day to file for Missoula’s municipal races, which includes the job of Mayor. I was keeping my eyes open for a third candidate to file against Engen and, low and behold, there were actually TWO names added to the list of challengers, Greg Strandberg and Shawn Knopp.

I am VERY happy to see two new candidates throwing their hats into the ring for Mayor, especially Strandberg’s. While I may have been harsh in criticizing Strandberg’s past political efforts to win a seat on City Council, there are a bunch of factors that I think makes him a compelling candidate, like the fact he RENTS his housing in our cherished Zoom Town, and he busts his ass working in the service industry.

Shawn Knopp I am less familiar with, even though our names both appear in this Missoulian article from 2015 about the Poverello Center’s new location on West Broadway. I was working at the Poverello Center at the time, and Knopp was working at Montana Glass, right next door to the shelter. I wonder if proximity to the shelter was a motivating factor in Knopp’s decision making process to run for Mayor?

These local political developments will be the main topic of today’s podcast episode of Zoom Town, which I’ll be recording with Tim Adams later this morning. We’ll also be discussing the Reserve Street homeless camps, which I posted this video about yesterday.

So stay tuned…