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American Wind Week

This week (August 11-17) is American Wind Week.  It’s part of a statewide effort across the state to promote local investments in wind energy.  Oskaloosa Mayor David Krutzfeldt has signed a proclamation recognizing American Wind Week.

“We’re all aware of how many jobs there are in the Mahaska County area from the building of the wind farms. So with that kind of economic impact, I thought, of course, we want to be supportive of bringing this kind of economic benefit to the area.”

Just over a third of Iowa’s electricity is produced by wind….with that figure expected to pass 40 percent by 2020.  Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds is scheduled to sign a similar proclamation for American Wind Week Monday (8/12) at the Iowa State Fair.

Vince Gill Helps 94-Year-Old Fulfill Bucket List Item

Vince Gill helped make the day of one of his fans, who was crossing off a huge bucket list item when she recently went to his show in Knoxville, Tennessee.

Sarah Darnell, who is 94, traveled from Johnson City, Tennessee with her caregiver Savannah Rushing in order to catch Vince’s concert, where she held up a sign that read, “I’m 94. You’re on my bucket list!” Two songs into the show, security guards gave Sarah quite the upgrade, bringing the pair down to the front of the stage, with Sarah’s poster placed on the stage so Vince could see.

After fans alerted Vince to the sign he told Sarah that she was on his bucket list too, and when she yelled to Vince that she loved him, he replied, “I love you too, darlin’.”

 

 

Scandal-ridden NRA head LaPierre digs in against gun control

By LISA MARIE PANE

In the aftermath of the back-to-back shooting massacres in Texas and Ohio, the debate over gun control has returned to the National Rifle Association and its immense power to stymie any significant legislation on the issue.

The man largely responsible for the NRA’s uncompromising stance is its decades-long CEO, Wayne LaPierre, who has been engulfed in turmoil and legal issues as he orchestrates the group’s latest effort to push back against gun control measures.

Law enforcement authorities are investigating the NRA’s finances, and the gun group has ousted top officials and traded lawsuits with the longtime marketing firm credited with helping to shape LaPierre’s and the NRA’s image.

LaPierre’s seven-figure salary, penchant for luxury clothing shopping sprees and reports that he sought to have the NRA buy him a $6 million mansion at an exclusive golf community have drawn considerable scrutiny amid allegations of rampant misspending.

Ardent gun rights supporters have turned on LaPierre in recent months, taking to Twitter and Facebook with the hashtags #changethenra and #savethe2a. Some are calling for his resignation and questioning how he can turn the tide against the push for more robust gun control measures after the Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas, rampages, given all the scandals.

“They’ve done so much damage to their reputation that the effectiveness of any NRA statements in really swaying opinion has to be considered diminished,” said Rob Pincus, a longtime NRA member and firearms instructor who is among the leaders of a group formed to change the NRA that has called for LaPierre’s resignation. “Anything that gets said by Wayne LaPierre is going to be followed by ‘amidst turmoil over $300,000 in suits and a $6 million mansion they were going to buy him,’ and all these other allegations that are out there.”

The NRA has abided by its usual reaction after mass shootings — initially saying nothing followed by a muted response. In this case, its lead spokesman said it would not “participate in politicizing these tragedies” and remained committed to the “safe and lawful use of firearms by those exercising their Second Amendment freedoms.”

Behind the scenes, however, there’s evidence of LaPierre’s pull. The Washington Post reportedthat LaPierre warned President Donald Trump after he expressed support for a background check bill that such a move would be unpopular among Trump’s supporters, according to officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the talks. The NRA would neither confirm nor deny the report.

LaPierre, who rarely speaks to mainstream media outlets, declined requests to be interviewed. In a written statement issued Thursday, he said none of the gun control proposals being discussed would have prevented the most recent attacks.

“Worse, they would make millions of law abiding Americans less safe and less able to defend themselves and their loved ones,” the statement said. He described many of the proposals as “soundbite solutions” that “fail to address the root of the problem, confront criminal behavior or make our communities safer.”

To learn how LaPierre accumulated such vast power in both the NRA and American politics while remaining an enigma outside the closed-off world of the gun-rights organization, The Associated Press interviewed dozens of current and former staffers and members who have worked with him.

___

LaPierre’s public persona is as the hard-fisted leader of the NRA, the public face of the Second Amendment with his bombastic defense of guns, freedom and country.

Behind the scenes, however, the 69-year-old CEO’s current and former associates see a different man.

The LaPierre they know is an introvert who rarely roams the halls of NRA headquarters to interact with staffers. He’s not even considered a serious “gunner.”

In fact, LaPierre’s early career included working for Democratic lawmakers in Virginia, where he spent most of his childhood. He’s said to have been in line to work for liberal icon and then-Democratic House leader Tip O’Neill until the NRA came calling in 1977.

Pro-gun activist Jeff Knox tells a story about how his father, Neal Knox, a former top lobbyist at the NRA, brought LaPierre to a gun range outside Washington early in his NRA career. LaPierre pulled out a rusty shotgun and the elder Knox, appalled by its condition, removed the dipstick from his Cadillac and used the oil to wipe off the rust.

“Wayne was like ‘What? What’s the big deal?’” said Knox, whose father, now deceased, lost a battle with LaPierre for control of the NRA. LaPierre became the group’s CEO in 1991.

“He’s gotten some nice guns since then, but I wouldn’t call him a gun guy,” Knox said. “I think he’s a true believer, but I don’t think he quite gets it. … It’s always been business and political to him, where to Dad it was almost a religion. It was a calling.”

Richard Feldman, a former NRA lobbyist and author of “Ricochet: Confessions of a Gun Lobbyist,” recalls that during congressional hearings, he and other NRA lobbyists would sit together to observe the proceedings while LaPierre, carrying big yellow legal pads, would sit in the back and wave people away.

“He was really like the professor. His office was just chock-full of papers and books all over the place,” Feldman said. “He never looked like the kind of guy who would end up” CEO of the NRA.

___

LaPierre went on to become a powerful leader, surviving several internal NRA political skirmishes that lately have been worthy of a “Game of Thrones” subplot.

He also successfully navigated the Washington political landscape and helped create a culture in which Republicans don’t dare touch gun-control measures, even after massacres of children.

He’s credited with working to end the decade-long ban on assault weapons that expired in 2004. More recently, the NRA spent $30 million helping to elect Trump.

Yet, it’s been a rough road since Trump’s election. It’s been more difficult rallying contributions to the NRA with a president in the White House who’s viewed as friendly toward gun rights. The NRA’s power has been questioned, especially after the 2018 midterm elections where it was outspent by gun-control groups.

Since then, the legal issues have mounted almost by the week. The group’s non-profit status has been threatened by an investigation by the attorney general in New York, where the NRA’s charter was established in the 1800s.

There are allegations that LaPierre expensed hundreds of thousands of dollars in luxury clothing purchased in Beverly Hills and that the NRA has made tens of thousands of dollars in payments to a handful of influential board members. The Washington Post reported this week that the NRA considered buying a $6 million mansion at LaPierre’s request last year before deciding against the purchase.

The NRA’s president, Oliver North, stepped down in the midst of a rancorous annual meeting last spring. More recently, Chris Cox, its top lobbyist and widely viewed as a successor to LaPierre, resigned after LaPierre accused him of being in cahoots with North in a failed attempt to oust him as CEO.

The rare airing of the group’s dirty laundry has exposed a divide within the NRA among those who believe members’ dues are being misspent to enrich a small cadre of NRA elite.

Even some board members have openly criticized the NRA. Among them is Allen West, who described the organization as a “cabal of cronyism.” After he and other critical board members were stripped of their committee assignments, West said the NRA stands for “National Retaliation Association.”

The ire has also come from hardcore gun rights supporters. Some felt betrayed when the NRA didn’t push back on Trump’s ban on bump stocks after the 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas. Others are unhappy that the Trump administration hasn’t translated into an easing of gun laws.

Now LaPierre and the NRA are facing new backlash from Americans outraged over the violence in El Paso and Dayton carried out by gunmen armed with AK-47 and AR-15-style rifles.

“Everyone pays attention to Wayne LaPierre as the face of the NRA, but really everything under him has been washed away,” said Adam Winkler, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Law and an expert on gun rights and politics.

___

Longtime watchers of the NRA say it would be a mistake to count out LaPierre, who has earned the firearms community’s trust with the successful fights against gun control he’s led for decades.

Some acknowledge the allegations of financial improprieties are a problem, but they are happy with the NRA’s legislative record under LaPierre.

“Wayne’s got a lot of equity,” said Rick Manning, a former NRA lobbyist. “When you win, people give you a lot of rope. … And he’s won.”

Tom King, a longtime NRA board member, said LaPierre deserves that loyalty. The criticisms lodged against LaPierre, he said, have been fueled by anti-gun advocates and taken out of context.

“He’s not going to give up. He’s going to fight to the bitter end. And anybody who says differently doesn’t know the man,” King said.

 

2019 Iowa State Fair’s Ugliest Cakes ‘you can’t unsee’

BY 

Judges reviewed a few dozen hideous masterpieces at the Iowa State Fair yesterday.

The Ugliest Cake Contest entries from bakers between the ages of seven and 17 ranged from a dissected frog to dentures that needed a brushing.

Twelve-year-old Ashlin Williams of Pleasant Hill won second place for her recreation of a stubbed toe, complete with a Band-Aid, hairs, and a bloody wound.

“It’s all cake and then…licorice is for the hairs and the Band-Aid is fondant, Williams said, “and like food coloring.”

And, of course, red is the color of the blood.

Bret Doerring, one of the sponsors and judges of the competition, shared what he’s looking for when choosing the ugliest cake.

“In the ugliest cake we’re not only looking for ugly, but unique and gross, originality,” Doerring said. “It’s that thing that you can’t unsee.”

Fair warning — here’s the description of the winner: the cake was a puss-filled pimple. It was baked and decorated by 13-year-old Taylor Weese of West Des Moines.

(Story and photos by Olive Gardner)

 

2020 candidates to speak on gun issues at Iowa forum

BY 

RADIO IOWA – Sixteen Democratic presidential candidates will attend what organizers are calling a “gun sense forum” tomorrow in Des Moines.

Former Vice President Joe Biden previewed his remarks yesterday, telling reporters at the Iowa State Fair that a ban on assault weapons does not violate Second Amendment rights.

“We can get it done and we can get background checks done. We can get it done because the public is finally at the point where they are sick of it,” Biden said after speaking at The Des Moines Register’s Political Soapbox on the fairgrounds. “…I’ve got it done before and I can get it done again.”

Biden was the chairman of a key U.S. Senate committee when the assault weapons ban passed congress in 1994. It expired in 2004.

Saturday’s forum is sponsored by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s Everytown for Gun Safety Action Fund. Bloomberg will speak. Former Texas Congressman Beto O’Rourke has recorded a video message for the forum. O’Rourke has spent the past week in his hometown of El Paso, where a gunman killed 22 people last Saturday.

Willie Nelson Will Still Be At Farm Aid

Willie Nelson has been forced to cancel some tour dates due to a “breathing problem,” but contrary to initial reports he is expected to be back on stage for Farm Aid next month.

Willie’s rep says only six shows have been affected by the cancelation, and he is still set to join John Mellencamp, Dave Matthews, Neil Young and Bonnie Raitt for Farm Aid in East Troy, Wisconsin on September 21st. Following that, Willie has concert dates confirmed through November 29th in Thackerville, Oklahoma.

All the shows canceled are part of Willie’s tour with Alison Krauss. The dates include:

August 9th: Grand Rapids, MI -Van Andel Arena
August 10th: Huntington, WV -Big Sandy Superstore Arena
August 12th: Florence, SC – Florence Center
August 14th: Charlottesville, VA – John Paul Jones Arena
August 16th: Greenville, SC – Bon Secours Wellness Arena
August 17th Greensboro, NC – Greensboro Coliseum Complex

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