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Thank you for listening to these radio tickets.
Thank you.
Ailee DeFoskey, the show starts now.
Our lines are open at 907-522-0650.
This is the morning drive on UseRadio 650 KENI.
Good morning.
It is finally Friday.
March 20th, current time, 606 AM.
Hopefully your day is off to a good start.
It is relatively mild temperatures
are definitely increasing across South Central.
I'm looking right now in Palmer.
I'm seeing at 11 degrees.
Anchorage isn't quite as warm,
but I've seen single digits all over Anchorage.
I was seeing two degrees, four degrees, six degrees.
My app is saying eight degrees for Anchorage,
but I did drill down into some of the different areas.
And it looks like all in all single digits,
but definitely the trend is warming.
That's nice.
KENI is checking in at 11, big lake, two fair banks,
a balmy negative 18.
So it does look like we are starting to hit the edge here
of the really cold temperatures I'm hoping.
We are expecting some wind out here
in the Palmer area this weekend.
There is a wind advisory that's in effect
from Saturday morning through Saturday evening.
High winds can move loose to breathe damage property,
cause power outages.
Right now they're predicting Northeast winds 25 to 45 miles per hour
with gusts up to 75 miles per hour,
starting on satter days.
So and they're saying for the lower Matt Newska Valley area.
So it does look like it's going to be a little bit breezy
this weekend.
So there you go.
There's the weather for the weekend.
But you know what, resistance is futile.
It's a spring equinox.
So that means bring on the sunshine.
Bring it on.
Speaking of bringing on the sunshine.
Good morning, Mr. Dean.
Good morning, Mr. Embosky.
I'll run a little late behind on my stuff in here.
So thank you for taking care of the weather there for me.
Four degrees is the average here in Anchorage.
Nice.
It's not feeling too bad out there.
It's better than 14 below.
I'm just saying you guys had some cold temps
the last two weeks.
But then of course, we were supposed to have all that snow.
So got expecting snow and happily surprised.
There was no.
I think everybody's like ready for spring.
That's the sense I'm getting is we're ready for spring.
You know, I don't mind winners where we have a lot of snow.
It's the wind that I can't stand in the winter time
because it just chills you to the bone.
And I was born and raised in the valley.
So you know, I learned you just hide in the garbage can
until the wind stops and everything's all good.
Unless the garbage can of course starts to blow away,
then well, you're in for a ride.
Houston, we have a problem.
Houston, we have a problem.
Yeah, no doubt.
Well, I will say as I'm looking at these weather trends,
you know, we're almost into April.
We're so close.
Can you believe it?
March is like zipping by.
It's almost in April.
It is marching past a nice little pun there.
I like it.
Well, I suppose I'll do some announcements.
There's only one right now for one community that I see it.
That has anything going on in his Anchorage.
Anchorage is a lot going on today.
The Anchorage school board in assembly
have a joint meeting.
They do this every quarter and they go back and forth
whether they meet at the ASD Education Center
or whether they meet at City Hall.
Today's meeting is going to be at the ASD Education Center
boardroom, 5530 East Northern Lights in Anchorage.
That will be again today.
Friday, March 20, 10AM.
Usually it's a couple hours long.
Typically, is that meeting?
And then they come back to City Hall.
And at one o'clock, they have a work session
on AO 2026-13, amending Anchorage Municipal Code
to establish review and common procedures
by an advisory commission for capital improvement projects
within the Chugak State Park Access Service Area.
So when they implemented that new Chugak State Park,
tax assessment zone for all those different capital projects
that they say they need, now they have an advisory commission
and they're establishing their process
to probably take public comment and rank those things.
But that will be today at one o'clock if you're interested in that.
And that will be a course at City Hall in room 155.
The second work session that they're going to have today
is at 210.
And that'll be on AIM, that's assembly information memorandum,
22-2026, internal audit report on the Sullivan,
Bokey, Dempsey contract compliance.
This will be again in room 155 at 210 and then at 320.
They will have a confirmation hearing for Lance Wilbur
to be this CFO.
So that will be at 320 in room 155.
Lance is a good guy.
I gotta tell you, he used to be a OMB tractor.
He's had pretty much every position.
I think he's run pretty much every department at the city
at this point.
I'm exaggerating, but he could do every department I guarantee it.
So I don't see any challenges at all in his confirmation.
He's great.
So there you have it.
That rounds it out for Anchorage today.
Again, the assembly is going to be busy.
They have a full day of hearings and meetings and whatnot.
But if you do want to track their calendar, easy to do,
all you have to do is go to muni.org, MUNI.org.
And then you'll be able to click on the assembly tab.
It'll bring you right to their landing page.
And it goes through every single one of these meetings
for today.
If you just click on it, it'll bring you to more information.
And that really is it for our public announcements for today.
Everybody else is pretty much taken Friday off.
It looks pretty light.
It looks pretty light around the state.
If you have any announcements that you'd like to plug,
if you know of a particular meeting that's going on,
or if it's something fun that's going on,
we're always happy to plug it.
All you have to do is give us call 522-0650.
We're going to go ahead and take our first break of the morning.
When we come back, we will jump into the headlines today
and stay with us.
Look at it, Chair Alaska, total traffic care.
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There are thousands of kids warming as we officially welcome in.
Astronomical spring today will top out in the 20s
and continue that climb into the 20s
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For Alaska's news source, I'm meteorologist, Aaron Morrison.
Amy Dimposky.
Six to eight mornings on News Radio 650, K-E-N-I.
Call out, 907-522-0650.
Welcome back.
Well, it is Friday.
And if you'd like to call in and talk about anything,
talk about this week or something else,
we're always happy to do that.
Number to call 522-0650.
I am anticipating at seven that we will get a call
from Representative Steve St. Clair.
Give us kind of an update on what's going on in Juneau.
There's a lot of moving pieces in Juneau right now.
So it feels like every two, three days,
there's some new twists to the stories that are coming out of Juneau.
So we'll get a quick update on what's going on in Juneau.
And hopefully, I'm sure it'll be entertaining.
Steve's always entertaining.
He's very direct, which I love.
I got to love it.
And he's informational.
I mean, he actually has good information.
He does.
And that's what we're digging for.
As we try to go to the source as much as possible,
that's why we love having legislators call in.
Well, there in Juneau, because they're in the back rooms,
they're hearing the conversations part of the conversation.
So we will have that conversation with him.
We are starting to see more and more musher's
cross the finish line for the I Didarad.
Jesse Terry, according to the ADN,
has earned the I Didarad's top rookie award this year.
As he crossed the finish line in Nome yesterday,
Terry is from Sue Lookout, Ontario,
arrived in Nome at 336 AM in 14th place.
It says right here, Ohio, Ontario, rather,
musher, Jerry Terry, I can't talk, Jesse Terry,
crossed under the rolled arch in Nome early Thursday morning
to earn rookie of the year award in 2026.
So that's fantastic.
I mean, now they're up to about 20 people
that have crossed the finish line.
So they are, they're making haste.
They are, it's coming to a close very soon.
So we'll see who gets the red lantern award,
but it looks like it's going to,
it's going to happen pretty soon here.
Largely, largely a very straightforward race this year.
I didn't hear a lot about any drama on the trail this year.
It just seemed like it was the,
the bison and the young rookie.
That was about the only drama I heard was the bison
and the young rookie.
The bison and the young rookie.
I didn't hear about that.
Oh, yes, stand off.
I, you know, every year somebody runs into those
out out on the burn out there.
They run into one and yeah,
that what little rookies found out,
bison liked to block the road from their dogs.
And so yeah, a bit of a standoff with them,
but it all turned out good.
No, no harm to the bison,
no harm to the dogs, no harm to the musher.
So hey, just one of those great memories,
because if nothing else, what a memory that would be.
Oh, what a story.
Usually it's mousse, you know,
it's not unusual that you'll hear about a mousse
charging a dog team or, you know,
them getting into a little tussle with a mousse.
That does happen.
But I hadn't heard about the bison.
So yeah, it was just a little bit of a mess.
I said it was a real calm.
I mean, I expect a lot,
but you know, almost every year
where they go into the farewell burn,
we got sleds being broken or it's all rough.
Yeah.
And as you said this year,
it was like nothing.
It was like peaches and cream out there, man.
Oh, well, I was laughing when you said bison,
I was waiting for the punchline.
I thought it was a joke.
Oh.
That's why it looked at you funny.
I'm like, I'm like already trying to figure it out.
Oh, well, you know, well, no damage this year
that I've heard about.
So that's good.
The arch stood.
It did.
Yeah, I didn't think about it.
This is the first year I think that the run
under the new arch, isn't it?
It was last year the first year.
I think it was last year.
Was it?
I don't know.
I could be wrong.
But nonetheless, it was up in everybody's
being able to cross it.
So that's good.
Yeah, yeah, that's the ticket.
I think they made to make the final challenge
of the I did a rod to jump the arch, okay?
Giving enough energy, enough speed, make a ramp,
and let's have them jump the arch.
Maybe Iron Dog.
Maybe Iron Dog instead of a sled dog, right?
Well, those guys could do it easy.
You know what I'm saying?
Pizzic egg, pizzic egg.
Well, today is a day that will live in history.
It will go down in history.
It has happened.
We all knew this day would eventually come.
Though people doubted the possibility of it.
But I am looking at two different articles here.
I have one in variety.
And I have one from a local station,
but Chuck Norris has died at the age of 86.
That is such sad news.
Actually, to be honest, I don't think he's dead.
I think he just took death, told him his job is done
and he took over death's job.
He's still rolling around out there.
Because Chuck Norris had a disagreement with God
in the very beginning, right?
You know that.
In the beginning, God said, let there be light.
And Chuck said, say, please.
And since then, you know, we all know.
Since it's done, I was gonna say yesterday
he was hospitalized in Hawaii.
And this morning his family put out a statement
that said, well, we'd like to keep circumstances private.
Please know that he was surrounded by his family
and was at peace.
That was a statement that was put out by his family.
So legendary action and martial artist action,
action actor, I should say, and martial artist Chuck Norris
it's being reported at a local stations in Hawaii too
that Chuck Norris has passed away as of this morning.
So sad news coming out of Hawaii.
Sad news, but again, never ending jokes
because we all know Chuck probably stopped the world
and spun it backwards.
I think my favorite one is that Chuck Norris
counted to infinity twice.
The Chuck Norris jokes are legendary.
You know, I was going through doing the show prep for today
and I kind of looked at this one local anchorage article
and I just kind of looked at it and I just shook my head.
This is coming from the Lasca News source.
This is the title of the article.
Anchorage man attempts to rob bank with authority of Jesus
according to the affidavit.
And I'm like, what real real real deal here?
An Anchorage man robbed a credit union last month
armed only with quote, the power and authority of Jesus
and quote, according to the affidavit filed in the Alaska
court system, Deschelon Jelkes 35 is being charged
with first degree robbery and the use of a weapon,
second degree robbery and the use of force
to compel delivery, second degree theft
and two counts of violating conditions of release.
Around 5.50 a.m. on February 26th, the affidavit says
that Jelkes approached the teller, a credit union one,
on Debar, he gave them a note reading quote,
I have a weapon and that weapon I am armed with the power
and authority of Jesus Christ, empty the drawer
into the envelope, do not set off an alarm.
So then he said, Nickletty sent me, thank you.
And quote, that's what the affidavit says.
That's interesting, sounds like a guy
you don't want to cross.
Oh, there it is, there it is, Darryl.
The teller emptied the teller money and handed it
to Jelkes with an envelope, which included a tracker.
Once the tracking device was removed from the teller,
it activated a silent alarm, notifying APD dispatch,
APD tracked Jelkes to Costco across the street
from credit union one.
Officers saw Jelkes at Costco with the same clothes
worn by the suspect in security camera footage.
Well, police approached Jelkes, a minor confrontation
ensued and a quote, large amount and quote of money
spilled onto the floor, including the tracking device.
Officers later counted $1,701 taken from Jelkes.
During his interview at APD headquarters,
officers noticed Jelkes was wearing an ankle monitor
and he claimed he had previous state charged Jelkes,
claimed he did enter the credit union.
He wanted to ask for money.
He admitted he told the teller he was armed
with the authority of Jesus Christ, but not denied.
He had any literal weapon.
Oh, I mean, I mean, come on.
You're gonna, okay, you're on an ankle monitor.
So number one, they're gonna be able
to track locations anyway.
But number two, really, we're gonna go back
to prison for a 1,700 bucks.
It's crazy.
I don't understand it with the robbing of the banks
because pretty much everybody knows.
Well, not only are you gonna get caught,
but there's never any real dollar bet.
I mean, back in the day where we were kids,
you watched them walk out with these big bags of money
and all kinds of stuff.
Nowadays, you're lucky if you're gonna get $1,000
from one of those tills.
So, but of course, if you're gonna be robbing
your stupid anyways, so play stupid games.
What's the answer?
When's stupid prizes?
Exactly, exactly.
Needless to say, he is back at Anchorage Correctional Complex.
Yeah, he's gonna be spending some time behind bars.
I mean, once you ratchet it up to federal charges
and you rob a bank, he's not gonna be out for any time.
So, I don't think he's gotten the memo from Jesus,
which is that shall not steal.
Just, I'm just putting it out there.
I think he needs to continue reading scripture.
Getting it back to the Old Testament,
I didn't notice one thing from the picture.
He's got his little light of his on his forehead,
but he didn't have it lit,
so he couldn't single this little light of mine song.
So, that would've done the only thing extra there.
You know, I just look at it and I'm like,
this day and age, there's cameras everywhere
and you're gonna get caught.
It's just a matter of how long is it gonna take him
to get you, but you're gonna get caught.
That's for sure gonna happen.
Well, it was also a busy week out here in the Mad 2.
I don't remember the last time this has happened,
but the Matto Assembly overrode Mayor Edna's veto.
Did you see that?
Yep, it happened.
I did not.
It didn't happen.
Yep, this article's in the ADN.
It's coming from the Matto Sentinel.
Actually, it's just republished in the ADN.
The Mat News Assistant in Burrow Assembly this week
voted to override a mayoral veto
and move forward with a plan to help a private company
find a partner to build a large data center
or a high tech facility on Burrow Oldland.
The Assembly voted six to one
during its regular assembly meeting
to override Mayor Edna's veto
with Assembly Member Stephanie Nour's being the only NOVO.
The resolution was initially approved earlier this month
in a five to two vote with Nour's and Bulls opposed.
The override was requested by Assembly Member Dimitri Vanoff
who co-sponsored the resolution
with Assembly Member Ron Bruneer.
Faunov represents District 6 and Bruneer 7.
The Measure Directs Pro staff to work
with Terra Energy Company to identify companies
interested in developing a data center
or high energy use facility on Burrow Oldland near Port McKenzie,
Big Lake, or the proposed West Houston Access Road.
The resolution establishes a two-year partnership
between the Burrow and Terra allowing the company
to use Burrow staff time and resources.
It does not require the Burrow to sell or lease land
or commit to allowing a data center.
So this is really just an exploratory option.
It says the effort to tend to support Terra Energy's
parent company, Flatland Energy,
and seeking investors for proposed cold-fired plant
near Squintna, getting that project off the ground
and securing funding also requires a large energy user
to serve as an anchor customer.
Mayor Edna said she vetoed the resolution
because they could expose the Burrow to risk
by allowing a private company that has not been fully vetted
to represent the Burrow to outside entities.
She said the Assembly should first review the properties
involved and determine whether it's supported
in data center development.
Bull said he changed his mind after learning more
about the proposal from project experts and supporters.
He said he now backs the plan because it could encourage
development without committing Burrow funds
or harming salmon.
He went on to say, quote, the data center is just
a potential concept to help capture some of the energy
and lower costs and lower the cost of energy
for Matty residents.
Two weeks ago, I was not educated, now I am, end quote.
It takes a lot of courage for politicians to say,
either I learned something more
or I was wrong about something.
You don't see this very often.
So I commend him for doing his homework
and doing his research.
You know, when I saw this originally,
I had a friend of mine text me and tell me
that they overwrote her last this week.
And I guess what it comes down to me
is this is really an exploratory mission.
There is a lot of talk and there's another story
in the Alaska story actually about the Matty
potentially getting the first coal-fired plant
on the rail belt in a long time and over a decade.
This would be a really big deal,
especially if you're going to start expanding
into the realm of data centers or anything like that.
They're huge energy intensive operations.
And so you have to be able to deal with the transmission issues,
you have to be able to deal with the energy generation issues
in order to support things like that.
So this issue in the Matty
as it's being reported,
it doesn't necessarily commit the burrow
to any particular parcel of land
or it's just basically exploratory mission.
That's how I see it.
If somebody disagrees with me or they have more information,
you're more than welcome to call in,
share with all of us.
But to me, I understood Edna's being extra cautious.
The burrow assembly is saying, let's explore it.
Let's go in and see what's happening
and see what the options are.
And I think that's fine.
Like I said, the real proof is in the pudding.
Will anybody from the private sector come in
and say we want to be the anchor
to fund this project, to make it go forward?
That they don't know yet.
So I would say getting to worked up about this early on,
it's way, right way premature.
There's no details yet.
It's just really an exploratory mission.
So there you have it, but that is the headlines
in the Matty this off.
It does not happen very often.
We're married and it gets overwritten.
Really not very often.
I can't even think of a time before where she's been overwritten.
Like I'm scratching my brain.
I cannot think this may be the first time.
I can't think of a time.
But here we go, like I said, I know the concept of data centers
is very controversial because they are big users of energy.
But the reality is if we're going to expand
into data center operation here in Alaska,
you have to fix the transmission issue
and you have to fix the capacity issue.
Those two things, you have to generate more energy
in order to support those operations.
There's no data about it.
And that's where President Trump has said
a lot of these different things.
They should be able to build their own little power plants,
generate their own energy.
I mean, that would be one solution.
So we'll see what happens and how it translates into Alaska.
But that's kind of what this is all centering around.
And I think cutting off the possibility early on,
I don't really think it's appropriate.
I think whenever we're talking about any type of development
project, whether we're talking resources or otherwise,
I think you have to go through the motions
and get all the facts and explore it.
And so that's kind of how I see this issue.
Right there with you, the one thing I'd never hear anybody
talking about is the water usage
because it takes a huge amount of water to cool those
and then it's coming out as heated water,
which of course you can chill it by putting it in pools.
But we have a lot of resources of water in Alaska,
but not that many if they're pulling from groundwater.
You know, they need to locate this someplace
where maybe wind turbines can cool it or something.
I don't, some kind of a creative idea.
Yeah, well, in the lower 48, I would say that's one of the biggest,
one of the biggest challenges I hear about data centers
is water consumption and potential environmental impacts.
And that's why I say when you do get into these regions,
you do have to think about all the uses,
whether it's energy consumption, water consumption,
whatever it is, all the uses and then the downstream impacts.
And I think that's a fair critique and it's a fair,
but I do think just like with coal plants,
I think there's innovative technologies out there
that mitigate those impacts.
And we just have to educate ourselves on what those are
and how that particular project is implementing them.
All right, well, we're going to go ahead and take a quick break.
If you'd like to call in, be part of the show 522-0650.
We'll be right back.
This is News Radio 650, K-E-N-R, Anchorage.
An Anchorage man is facing charges after allegedly
roping a bank while armed only with the power and authority
of Jesus Christ.
An affidavit filed in Alaska District Court
says 35-year-old Shalyn Jelkes walked into a credit union
won on February 26th and handed the teller a note.
The note read, I have a weapon and the weapon I am armed with
is the power and authority of Jesus Christ.
The teller gave Jelkes the money in an envelope
that included a tracker and police tracked him to a Costco
across the street and arrested him.
Police say he asked arresting officers
if he'd be getting any of his stolen money back.
New details coming to light regarding a two-alarm fire
that displaced several people at a multi-family building
in Anchorage.
The red cross of Alaska says 10 people were displaced
in the fire Wednesday afternoon near Mountain View Drive
and North Lane Street.
Seven units in all were damaged.
I'm Monica Nelson.
News Radio 650, K-E-N-R.
You are pipeline to the world.
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At 220650, it's Amy Depposky on NewsRadio 650, K-E-N-I.
Welcome back, turn time 640.
I follow Kevin the cave on some stack.
I don't know where he gets time
to write all these articles, he writes,
but he writes them on all kinds of different topics
and he has a really good one on data centers.
And it was just put out this week, March 18th, actually.
So it was just put out this week
and it says, what is a data center
and why does it matter to the Mat Zoo?
I love his sub headline,
Between Alarmism and Opportunity,
we need more than headlines in hysteria.
Only I can curve with that.
So he gets in with basically what is a data center,
like getting into the basics of it.
A data center is a secure industrial facility
packed with computer servers, storage systems,
networking equipment, cooling systems, and backup power.
Its purpose is to store process and deliver the data
that powers our modern world 24 hours day, 365 days a year
with almost no doubt of time.
So he says in this, if you're reading this
from a computer, which I am,
it's likely past your data center.
These facilities are the backbone
behind cloud storage, streaming videos,
online banking, remote work,
the rapid growth of artificial intelligence,
they power companies like Amazon, Meta, YouTube, Uber,
AI systems require enormous computing power
and he goes into the real need of it.
And then he gets into why is Port McKenzie being discussed?
He says Port McKenzie was not chosen by accident.
The Matzu borough set aside thousands of acres
there years ago for heavy industrial development,
complete with deep water, pour, and potential rail connections.
A data center fits that purpose.
Alaska also has real advantages.
Our cold climate allows for more efficient cooling,
reducing both energy use and water demand
compared to warmer states.
The key issue is power.
A large data center can require as much electricity
as a small city with cook and let natural gas supplies
tightening the potential shortages
between 2027 and 2030.
Concerns about impacts on real-belt grid
and residential rates are valid.
There is no shortage of noise online
about projects like this.
Most of it skips over the facts.
Alaska are capable of making good decisions
when they are giving accurate information
and that is the discussion that needs to take place really.
He goes on and says one practical option
is a pair of data centers with a dedicated local power
source, such as the proposed Wessosant
and Biomassant Coal Facility, with carbon caps
are studied by the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
A portion of the power could be sold directly
to the data center through long-term agreements.
The developer would pay for the transmission
and infrastructure needed protecting residential rate
pairs.
Access power could be sold to the broader grid.
Other concerns he says could be addressed
with proper design.
Water use can be reduced through air cooling
and closed loop systems, which work well in Alaska's climate.
Noise can be managed through setbacks, equipment,
design, and standard industrial controls.
Data centers do not create large permanent workforces,
but they do support construction jobs
and generate a strong property tax base
for local services.
Environmental impacts are addressed
through permitting, including stormwater controls,
habitat protections, and full review.
When paired with modern power source,
using carbon capture emissions can be competitive
with other generation options.
He goes on and talks about the conversion,
reached a turning point with Mayor Edna's veto
of the resolution 26-019.
The veto was not a rejection of data centers.
It raised legitimate concerns about process,
including moving too quickly, allowing a private company
to represent the borough and limiting public review,
all good reasons for the mayor to pump the brakes.
The assembly has now overridden that veto.
The decision moves the conversation forward,
but it does not replace the need for clear information,
honest conversation, and public understanding
of what is actually being proposed.
And then he goes on to talk about Port McKenzie
being zone projects just like this.
And he says there shouldn't be an automatic approval.
There should be a fair evidence-based process.
Developers should pay the full share of infrastructure.
Standards for noise, water, and environment
should be clear and enforceable.
Power arrangements should be protect residential rate payers.
And the public should have a real opportunity
to review the details.
That's what responsible development looks like, really.
I mean, honestly, great article.
I've told you this before, but if you don't follow Kevin
McCabe on sub-stack, you should.
He pumps out so many different topics
that are relevant to the topics we're talking about today.
I think it's helpful to digest what's being talked about,
for sure.
So I appreciate it seeing this data center topic pop up,
because it's applicable to this week's to conversation.
All right, I'm going to take another quick break.
When we come back, we will go straight to the phones.
The number to call 522-0650.
Looking at your Alaska total traffic
cameras on this Friday morning,
traffic's moving well all around the anchored bowl.
No major stoppages are slowed up.
We need Dem Bosky called 9075-22-0650
and be a part of the show on NewsRadio 650, K-E-N-I.
Welcome back, our time's 650.
Let's go to the phones in Gary's with us.
Good morning, sir.
Good morning, Jamie.
You know, looking at Iran and all that stuff
and what's going on and seeing our fuel prices just
explode like they have.
This is the highest I've ever seen in Alaska right now.
And so this is my issue.
Why, if America is battling tyranny worldwide,
and right now it's about oil, and our American oil companies
are growing on public land that the taxpayers are in charge of.
Why aren't we wholesale that oil to Americans and Americans only?
Let, you know, if you look at the pharmaceuticals,
America was paying for Europe's cheap pharmaceuticals
and everybody else's.
Let's switch that around and get the world to pay
for cheap oil in America.
So when we go to the pumps, we're paying a buck
and a half a gallon and it stays there no matter what happens.
And our nation will explode with industry.
Yeah, I will tell you, Trump has said when it came to Venezuela
that they were going to pay for any CSUS assets.
And so I think he's going down that same route, which is,
you know, we come in, we help you out.
You're going to pay us back, he took that strategy anyway
with Ukraine, you know, where he went from being a handout
to you're going to be paying us back.
I think that's probably true.
You know, I will say, the gas prices right now,
I do remember in 2022, diesel was over six bucks a gallon.
So I don't think it's that high yet.
And I think I'm looking at data prices right now from ArcGIS.
And it's saying that in June of 2022, gas prices
in Alaska were averaging 556.
So, I mean, we're definitely getting up there.
I mean, this is what happens when you have large scale
military operations.
It strains the supply for sure.
I mean, you're seeing that with a straight-of-home use
being closed effectively for the past couple of weeks.
I think that you have to get it back open for sure.
And then I think you're also going to see Venezuela
coming back on the market in much larger scale.
And I think you'll see the US benefit from it,
just as what you're saying.
I think that's exactly the direction they're going to go.
Okay, let me switch subjects.
And I agree with you to the data centers.
You know, they're putting the cart before the horse.
And I've been involved in building high power lines
for the last 10 years, five years ago.
I was all across America building the high power lines.
And in Alaska, do you realize when you look at them
high power lines that's going through the countryside here,
we're at its limit right now.
So the data centers they're putting the cart
in front of the horse, you know,
it's not going to work unless we upgrade our grid.
And just for an example, do you realize that Google,
Google alone to run its massive computers
to gather all the information they need?
They use 12.5 Carol Watts.
That's an incredible amount of, and that's just one company.
That's not Facebook, that's not banks,
that's not governments, that's not universities.
I mean, all of us are on these computers.
And I believe in my heart that who's subsidizing it
is the homeowner, with their electrical rates going up.
And these big, massive companies are getting wholesale electricity.
That's probably get a better price from the homeowners.
So our system needs to be doubled or tripled.
And now, before we start all this other spending money
on building a data center,
because data centers just eat electricity.
Well, here's the cold hard truth.
The data centers are coming online
because the consumers are mandating it, right?
It's our usage, everything's technology driven these days.
And now with UC AI becoming more and more prevalent,
AI is gobbling up more and more.
And people are using more and more AI,
and they're everyday work that they're using it.
So the reality is, is consumers are driving this trend.
And I think that's why when it comes back to,
like I would encourage you to read Kevin McCabe's
sub-stack article, because I think he lays it out really, really well.
When he starts talking about the University of Alaska study,
and he's showing that you can have a new type of model,
a new type of power generation model, I agree.
I started this conversation with saying,
in here in Alaska, we have an issue, which is transmission, right?
You have the issue of the transmission lines.
And then, you know, so how the power is getting to and fro.
I mean, let's just break it down for folks.
And then you also have the issue of energy development.
And that's why I think when I start looking at,
when I start looking at the articles that are out there,
I mean, one of them, that's in Suzanne's,
Suzanne's must-real Alaska,
coal-fired power plant planted for Railbelt
would be the first and over a decade in the entire country.
This is where we're talking.
We have to deal with the transmission issue,
and you've got to deal with the energy development issue.
You deal with those two issues,
and I don't think it has to be the way it's always been.
If these data centers start building their own type
of energy transmission power that is not feeding
into the Railbelt, that's just generating their stuff,
I think you potentially, that's kind of the concept
I have heard President Trump talk about.
I think there's other ways to do it
than the traditional model.
And I think that's what people are exploring
because they realize our grid is insufficient.
I mean, that's just a fact.
All right, we're gonna go ahead and take a quick break
when we come back on the other side.
Representative Steve St. Clair is gonna join us.
Stay with us.
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Thank you for listening to News Radio 650, Katie and I.
Welcome back to live, local and insightful morning drive
radio on News Radio 650, K-E-N-I.
Welcome back to our two of the A-B-Dibosque Show
broadcasting live and local every weekday morning,
Monday through Friday, right here on 650 AM,
from 6 to 8 AM.
I will tell you, I'm gonna be off next week,
so actually next week, I'm sure it's the 30th.
But you guys are gonna be entertained.
You're gonna love it.
We have better people that are coming in.
I'm telling you, you're gonna love it.
It's gonna be the greatest, it's gonna be the greatest
morning show.
You're gonna have Rick Whitbach.
He will be on Monday Tuesday Wednesday.
And then Thursday Friday, then the following Monday
will be Glenn Beagle.
So two people that I just adore will be in studio.
They know way more about Alaska politics.
They've been doing it a long time.
They're very involved.
And we are in the middle of an Anchorage Municipal Election.
So it will be helpful to have two Anchorage politicals
in Alaska politicals, really, that know a lot about energy.
They know a lot about development.
They know a lot about Alaska politics.
They will be both sitting in for me while I'm out next week.
And the show will go on as they say.
All right, joining the show now, my dear friend
and my representative Steve St. Clair.
Good morning, sir.
Good morning, Amy.
How are you?
Oh, I am fantastic.
I will tell you, Representative St. Clair,
it has been fun watching you.
You have wasted no time.
I've watched you in committees now
and I've seen you on the floor.
You're not shy at all.
You jump right up.
You're representing District 26 very well.
I just wanna say thank you.
Well, that's what I'm supposed to do.
And I just, and the big thing is,
I tell constituents District 26,
if I'm doing something that you disagree with, call me.
Text me, email me.
I believe in transparency and accountability.
There may be, I do a vote
and you may disagree with it, call me.
There may be something in the background
you didn't know about that kind of justifies the vote.
You know, and my experience with you too
is we could have a conversation
because maybe we see something differently
and maybe I give you more information
and you're like, hey, that's a good thing.
I never thought of that.
So the fact that you're willing to listen to people too,
I think is helpful.
Well, that's what, you know,
that's what I'm here for on their voice in Juneau.
Well, let's get to the sausage.
Now I gotta tell you,
now I haven't watched it the last two days
because I've been busy working and stuff.
You know, that happens.
The job gets in the way of, you know, politics sometimes.
But give me, can you give us an update
on where we are with the supplemental budget?
Oh, how many hours do we have to talk about?
Not very many.
Not very many.
I'm kidding.
What happened is last week, it came on the floor,
everyone voted, but George, it was 40 to nothing to pass it.
Then the CBR vote came, which is a funding mechanism
and that vote failed.
Now, let me digress just a little bit.
When you go back to the bill itself,
it was going to be funded by general funds
to, you know, just under $400 million.
But then they were going to take $400 million
out of the CBR and put it back in to the general fund.
And I can't do that.
You know, we found out that we have enough money
in the general fund to pay for it right here, right now.
So what happened when we passed 40 to nothing
in the Constitutional Budget Reserve vote failed,
it was someone called for reconsideration,
which means kind of like a mulligan or a doover.
They wanted to re-vote.
So we re-voted and actually, let me,
I got ahead of myself again.
When the CBR failed, they asked for a sanction
to mulligan doover and then they sent it back to rules,
which means we couldn't vote on it.
We tried on earlier this week to pull it out of rules
to discuss it and the majority wouldn't let us.
And then come Wednesday.
They made a motion to bring it out of rules
and bring it back to the floor, voted on it.
And the majority did not vote for it.
So what was their own motion?
That's crazy.
What is the game?
What is the game?
Come on, tell me, tell us the inside scoop.
What is the game?
OK, the inside baseball on this is by them failing it.
It would go to conference committee.
Conference committee.
Three members of each body, House and Senate,
one minority and two majority.
So basically, we've been ganged up on four to two.
And they go in there and they do conference committee.
And there are three different levels of conference committee.
There's normal conference committee.
We're basically just trying to get one to agree with or both
to agree with the status quo in there now.
Then you've got conference committee with limited free powers,
which means they can go in there and they can tweak it a little bit,
do a couple little things, which is what I believe is going to happen.
And then the last one is conference committee free conference,
which means they can do basically anything they want.
Right now, it's in regular conference committee.
I don't think anything's going to happen.
So they'll write a letter to the Senate President
and the Speaker of the House saying that we have not
come to a conclusion and agreement.
So they're going to request limited powers of free conference.
And then with that, what I believe,
what kind of the scuttle butt is,
is they're going to change the language
on the constitutional budget reserve.
Instead of just a carte blanc drop in it in the general fund,
they're going to use it as backstop language.
Backstop means they're going to use the money in the general fund,
which we've been telling the entire time they had the funds for.
And then if, let's say that there's only 400 million
in the earnings reserve account,
if they need an additional $590 million
because the whole girl was higher,
then they would just use the CBR to backfill
that little bit of that's needed as backstop.
Well, okay, that's kind of what you guys have been arguing for this whole time.
And when you say you have the money in there,
with the new financial force cast that came out,
clearly you guys are going to have enough money.
So it should be a non-issue,
but what are they gaining by this whole game?
Because to me, I think they were trying to do a bait and switch
and hope you guys didn't notice.
But by forcing it to the conference committee,
the conference committee can't make you vote for a CBR draw.
I mean, they still,
whatever comes out of the conference committee,
don't you guys still have to vote on it again?
Yes, it's a concurrence, non-concurrence.
We can't amend it or fix it or make it better.
But we're pretty adamant that we're not going to give a CBR vote
because it's unnecessary.
That is, you know, that's our savings.
Our checkbook is the ERA and earnings reserve account
and the money that we have right now.
We have enough money.
Why would you take out of your savings
when you have enough in your checking account?
Exactly, exactly.
Well, you know, I got to tell you,
as we're watching this debate, you know,
I feel like they were,
we covered this a great length earlier this week
because I thought there was some good debate on the floor
and the game, the jig was up.
We were watching and all of a sudden,
it was pretty obvious what they were doing.
And when we look at the head space,
and I'm using air quotes when I use that,
when they look at the head space,
they potentially were creating for themselves
with dumping CBR money into the general fund.
Obviously, we're looking at his 2027s operating budget
and we start looking and saying,
well, if they have all this extra head space,
then you look at what's going on in the Senate
and you say,
a new education spending bill,
a desire to return to refined benefits,
then to me, it started making sense what they were doing.
Yeah, they're trying to use it.
I've heard that they wanted to use it for,
you know, an OTI or one time increment for education.
But it's unnecessary.
If we look at the governor's budget
and the fall or spring forecast and combine the two,
if we follow the governor's statutory budget,
we're still in debt to sit about $1.5 billion.
And that's because there's a transfer
from the earnings reserve to the corpus
or the main fund of $1.5 billion,
which is used for inflation proofing.
We've been told time and time again,
we do not need to inflation proof.
However, it's in statute.
The second thing is the governor wanted a,
and I hate people saying super size dividend.
No, a statutory dividend.
And that's about $2.1 billion.
Well, if you take everything in totality,
if you follow all that,
we still have a deficit of probably about a bill,
well, actually, no, if you use,
oh, you have a deficit of about $1.5 billion,
which can be, you can argue that there's enough
in the earnings reserve account,
because it's supposed to be a $12 billion
at the end of the year.
Or we could tap into this TBR and use about half of it
and pay for everything.
Everything is statutory, though.
I take that back.
It comes down to when I ask the question,
which law are you gonna break?
Yeah.
It's a bottom line.
Well, and they just refused to go in
and actually deal with the laws that appear to,
they don't even conflict.
They're two separate laws.
Really, when we're talking about the PLMV, right?
The percent of market value,
and these are the two that are always juxtaposed
against each other.
It's the percent of market value.
We're gonna cap ourselves at this percentage of spending.
That's what we're gonna do.
And then it is the permanent fund distribution,
the statutory formula.
They can coexist, but it would require them
to shrink the size of government.
Right?
So significant, significant value reduced.
And we're working, a couple of us in the minority
working on a fiscal plan.
We're trying to wait to a supplemental issue's done,
and then do a bridging plan to get us through this year,
and then come up with a three year plan.
And in the three year plan, they are significant cuts.
And they're not willing to only cut across the board.
You go in there, okay, you've got 100 vacant positions.
And there's a vacancy factor.
We're out of those 100.
We're gonna take 90 of them, still leave you with 10.
And then those 90, we saved money right there.
I can work in the end.
Well, representative, Steve Sinclair just pointed out to us
is what I lament about all the time.
This is what in public budgeting,
what we call adding your budget.
This is their slush fund.
They constantly, we see it in the Anchorage School District,
you see it everywhere,
where they will have, they call it a vacancy factor,
but what it is, it's funded, but unfilled positions.
And this is the squishy money that departments are able
to use effectively to shift if there's more expense
over here or less expense over here.
They're able to take from those vacant positions
to continue the budget.
And that's not, that's kind of the antithesis
of zero-based budgeting, honestly.
It doesn't really tell you what their budgets really are
because they're kind of padding them a year over year.
Representative Sinclair, we need to take a quick break.
But when we come back, I would love to ask you
the last update I had when I was watching the finance committee
and they were talking about the operating budget.
They had a committee substitute
in which the majority in the house is zeroed out
the permanent fund dividend.
I'd love to get an update if there's been any movement
on that, if that has changed, where we are.
We're talking with Representative Sinclair,
we're going to take a quick commercial break,
but we'll be right back.
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And always insightful morning drive radio
with Amy Dembosky on NewsRadio 650 KENI.
Get on the show now by calling 907-522-0650.
Welcome back.
We are talking with Representative Steve St. Clair.
He represents District 26, which is out here in the valley.
Representative St. Clair, I have been one that said,
I watched what they did in the House Finance Committee,
which I know you're not on the Finance Committee,
but I know you do pay very close attention
to what's going on there.
I have said they zeroed out the PFD
when they did their community substitute,
but I don't think it's gonna end there.
I think there will be a PFD.
I just, the question is how much in my mind.
Do you agree with that assessment
or have they made changes already?
What is the chatter about the PFD in the House this week?
Well, I agree that they're gonna make it something.
They're probably gonna bump it up a little bit above
probably about $1,700 to make it seem like they gave us extra
instead of the $3,900 that they're supposed to give us.
But I'm looking at House Committee substitute number two,
which is their second document.
The first one is usually just, they adjusted base.
It's the basic stuff we have to pay,
minus one time increments, et cetera.
But House Committee substitute two shows
that it's gonna put in about $111 million,
which is not a very big dividend.
That's less than a thousand.
Okay, well, it is election year.
So your theory might be right.
They might have to bump it up over that thousand thing
because it's an election year, right?
It seems like every election year,
we see them giving us something more.
But it's never quite the statutory formula.
That's the problem.
Correct, and again, it goes back to my comment earlier
is which law are we going to break?
And how many of them are there that we're willing to break?
I mean, I believe that we shouldn't break any of them.
The POMV should either be changed
or the other traditional methods should be used,
but there's not a willingness.
It's hard for a lot of people to understand.
There isn't a willingness here in Juneau
to mess with the formula.
We're not gonna get any anti-abortion language.
We're not gonna get second amendment stuff.
It's just that the makeup down here in Juneau
is not conducive to really conservative values.
You know, that's gotta be frustrating
because I think most people would say,
look, there's a statute on the book for the PFD.
So just follow the law, follow the statute.
And the reason in my humble opinion,
the reason the legislators don't wanna do that
is because though they ignore it
and they just don't follow the statute,
they don't wanna go and change it
because they don't wanna be the one saddling
with changing and taking people's PFD
necessarily changing the statute.
I mean, I could be wrong about that,
but that's exactly what I say.
I think it's a political reason
why they don't wanna change that statute.
They just choose to ignore it year after year.
Yeah, and part of that is,
is the percent of market value
is supposed to curb spending on how much money it's not.
It's not doing what it was intended to do.
And there's actually legislation to decrease the POMV
from percent of market value,
from 5% down to 4% and just keep reducing it.
By continually reducing it,
what's going to happen is we're going to have a revenue problem,
which means we're going to have to do significant cuts
which they're not gonna do.
And that says, okay, we need new revenue,
where's it coming from?
The T word, taxation.
That's always where it comes down to.
And here's what's frustrating to, I think, most Alaskans
is they keep hearing we have a revenue problem
and we're broke, but on one hand,
we're broke and we have a revenue problem.
But on the other hand, they're introducing
more an increased spending.
These two things do not go together.
I mean, if you're broke, why are you increasing spending?
It makes no sense to me.
Yeah, and they find it in the silliest places.
I'd like to talk a little quick if we got a moment
to talk about a house bill that was in state affairs,
represented Galvin's, they called it an education tax.
We got the education taken off.
Basically, it's an income tax on anyone
that makes over 150,000 or 300,000 as a couple.
If you look at the numbers in Department of Labor,
that's 27% of the population.
Is the only one that's gonna pay that.
And then they had an escort tax
and there are over 11,000 escorps in the state,
but we know which escort they were going after.
Mm-hmm, absolutely targeting Hillcorp.
Yep, I'll say it, you don't need to.
Yep.
Well, to your point, constantly,
this is where they're constantly poking and poking
and they're trying to make the argument that,
hey, we have to go back to a defined benefit plan.
Hey, last year, remember the big fight
over the base student allocation.
We have to spend this huge injection of money
into the BSA to make it permanent, to lock it in.
And this is what we're gonna need for education.
Well, we all said that they would come back this year
and do the same thing and here they are.
Come and back this year, doing the same thing.
Every year, it's gonna be the same
because they haven't figured out how to actually
control their spending, number one,
but make those dollars the most impactful.
And I think that's the frustration most Alaskans have
because they see their permanent fund whittling away.
They see government spending growing
and they see no real return on investment for that spending.
Correct, and they're doing a great job marketing
because they market this as an education tax,
which I've got on the record, Rep Galvin saying,
it's not, we can't dedicate it.
It's not, or it cannot specifically be used for education.
It's basically another bucket that they can stick
their hands in and pull it out.
They may have the intent to spend it on education,
but that doesn't guarantee that that's what it's gonna be used for.
Of course, typical political stocking points,
it reminds me of Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act,
which actually spurred inflation, you know, I mean, come on.
Well, Representative St. Clair, as always,
it's fun talking with you and catching up with you.
We appreciate your time this morning.
I know you're super busy down in Juneau,
but these conversations we're able to have,
it brings a lot of information to people,
so we're super grateful for your time.
Well, thanks for having me on, Amy,
and I'm trying to make it so people can understand it.
I know you and I are, I'm not gonna call you a nerd,
but I am a nerd.
I'm a hundred, I'm a hundred percent a nerd.
And I'm often told that I get too far in the weeds,
and people really don't care that far in the weeds,
so I'm trying to get it so that people understand it
and have a conversation.
Well, I will tell you, the listeners of this show,
they care about the permanent fund dividend,
they care about spending, they understand the correlation
between the more the government spends,
the more they take from you.
And I think that message is received loud and clear
as people hear our conversation,
so I'm very grateful for your time.
Thank you so much, and we'll talk soon.
Okay, thanks for having me, Amy.
Yes, no problem.
That's representative Steve St. Clair,
he represents District 26.
We're gonna take a quick commercial break
when we come back, we will go straight to the phone
and stay with us.
Your morning expresso starts right here.
It's the Sean Hannity morning minute.
I think one of the main challenges is,
when Steve Whitkopf told me they had 460 kilograms
of 60% enriched uranium,
we have to ask the question and we have to deal with it
before we leave is where is that enriched uranium?
Is that's the uranium that if they ever get
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That's a problem, that's a big problem.
I think getting rid of the remnants
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Ensuring the safety of the straighter hormones,
that's probably the last part of this.
I would imagine that we will take control of Carg Island
considering that is the lifeblood
of their entire economy in Iran.
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This is news radio is 650, K-E-N-I, Anchorage.
Alaska C planes is adding a temporary fuel surcharge
as global fuel prices continue to climb.
The regional airline says it will implement
a 6% increase on fares starting this weekend.
It comes amid a roughly 40% rise in fuel costs
tied to the conflict involving Iran.
Company officials call the spike unprecedented
and say they cannot absorb the added expense.
The surcharge will be kept separate from base fares.
airline leaders say the fee will be reduced or removed
once fuel prices stabilize.
An Anchorage man facing charges after allegedly robbing
a bank while armed only with, quote,
the power and authority of Jesus Christ.
Mean time of fifth musher has scratched
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Rookie Adam Linden moves scratched
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News radio 650, K-E-N-I.
Look at it, you're Alaska total traffic cameras.
0752-0650.
Welcome back.
Current time 737.
Let's go to the phones and Rodney is with us.
Good morning, Rodney.
Hey, good morning.
Good morning.
Thank you for taking my call.
I just, but I wanted to know as a team,
this is where the Republican, this is where the conservative
and the cool kids hang out.
Is that correct?
No, I hope so.
I don't know.
I'm not that cool, but I am a Republican.
I want to know what we're doing as a team to get rid of.
Lisa Murkowski.
Amen.
I'm sick and tired of on the national stage.
She's making it famous for all the bad things.
And it makes me mad.
The Democrats are way better politicians.
They have no soul.
Yeah.
Well, I will tell you, there has been a movement.
And yesterday we talked to Zach Oshall.
He's running for the Alaska Republican Party chair.
And he pointed out, I think he said, there's 12 districts
now that have past censures on Lisa Murkowski.
And we need a few more to be able to actually censure her
here on the statewide level.
It needs to happen, but there needs
to be pressure put on from the party leadership.
Really, we hear nothing.
It's quiet.
It's like, yeah, that's what I never knew anything.
And the Democrats say they could elect Charles Manson,
neighborhood watch captain, with one memo,
it'd be on 100 to zero.
And they would all walk in the next morning
and round him and go, oh, he loves it.
He legal aliens.
He's a great guy.
And the Republicans can't agree that water's wet.
The sky is blue.
We have all these fabrics.
You're so right.
I'm laughing only because you're nailing it.
You're absolutely.
Look, there is a guy that's running for federal office.
I think it's either the Senate or Congress in Maine.
I can't remember.
But he literally on his chest has a Nazi tattoo.
And he's running as a Democrat.
Do you see Democrats disavowing him?
No, not at all.
Not at all to your point.
They stay quiet when their people are crazy.
And they actually circle the route.
If you're a D, you're a D, and they're with you.
The only time they are breaking from that is John Federman.
When you start seeing John Federman
like the only common sense Democrat out there,
you know, when he says, no, we shouldn't defund the police.
We shouldn't defund Homeland Security.
Yes, we should have secure elections.
You would have thought that is the worst sin
he could have committed, which is agree with Republicans.
But Republicans, back to your point,
I'm starting to see all these articles
on the national level about Nisra Murkowski
and saying, Alaska, what are you doing?
Well, some of us have been yelling this for years, right?
Look, we already, we already, what happened to Joe Miller?
You know, I know.
I was a Joe Miller supporter.
I voted Joe Miller.
Yeah, I voted for Joe Miller both times.
And I will tell you, from inside the party,
I wasn't super involved in the party back then,
but I was involved enough.
Joe Miller was running for a Senate.
He beat her in a Republican party,
and you had a large chunk of the establishment GOP
that were helping Lisa Murkowski behind the scenes.
I mean, that's what happened.
You know, in Miss McConnell,
and those guys gave her five million or something,
for losing.
They didn't want to do blood.
No, they don't want Joe Miller going, are you?
They don't have the ring.
Exactly, exactly.
They don't have the ring.
I'm with you.
I'm with you.
I got to tell you, this is why I've been advocating
so hard to repeal ring choice voting,
because I don't think lightning strikes twice.
I don't think Lisa Murkowski survives
another close Republican primary,
which will force her to do one or two things.
She's either going to have to leave the Republican party,
so she can run as an independent or Democrat,
which she really is Democrat,
so she should run as Democrat,
or she's going to have to retire.
Because I do not think Lisa Murkowski survives
a close Republican primary.
That's the whole reason we have ring choice voting
is to protect her.
That's where it came from.
And then she won't even vote for ID for everyone else.
Here, we already have it in our state,
and she's going to help the blue states get elected
by the dead vote and the illegal aliens.
You know, it's unconscionable.
It's unconscionable to me that any,
any legislator at my house,
at my house, they probably get six ballots
that every house in Anchorage is the same.
And we don't clean up our roles.
And somehow they all get Democrat votes on them
in the state when I thought we were public,
I've been here all my life.
Yeah.
I thought this was a conservative state.
I know the people out there
struggling to make living are conservative.
Well, I will tell you,
Donald Trump has won the state three times.
I say it's still a conservative state,
but boy, look what happens when we send him to Juno.
You have people that get elected as Republicans,
but as soon as they get to Juno,
they make deals with the Democrats
that benefit themselves to put themselves
in positions of power and they vote like Democrats.
I mean, this is the problem.
That's why I say we have a fundamental problem
beyond just Lisa Murkowski.
We need to go back to the traditional system of voting.
So we can, we need them out.
Yep.
Yeah.
You know what buddy is, is Adam Schiff.
He could have censored him.
Adam Schiff is still committed chairman
in like three or four committees if you can believe that.
So it hates our country,
hates everything.
No, I agree.
I agree.
I know.
This is why I say DC is a cesspool.
And sometimes you can't tell the difference
between Republicans and Democrats when you get down there
because they're protecting their own bureaucratic power
is what they're doing.
No, great call this morning, Rodney.
Thank you so much for calling in.
I appreciate it.
Have a good day.
You too, sir.
I love our callers.
All right, let's go to Lady.
Good morning, Lady.
Well, good morning.
Good morning.
Did you get your poster?
I, I, Darryl, I have to get into the diamond center
to get it.
But Darryl showed it to me already.
Yes, I've seen it.
Yeah, did you see the carrot?
I was going to say those were some big carrots.
I got to tell you.
Yeah, it started out from anybody
little carrot out of a plastic bag.
And it turned into two carrots, grew in a box.
Yeah, you know, they need to take that commercial off the air,
the one about pick, click, and give.
Because zero from zero is zero.
That's true.
Zero from zero is zero.
If they're going to zero out your PFD,
there's nothing that there's nothing to pick on
to click to because there's nothing to give.
I will tell you, I don't think the PFD is going to end up
at zero this year, but I do think it's going to be.
It's not going to be the, I guarantee it's not going
to be the statutory PFD because even in, you know,
the vast majority of legislators do not support a statutory PFD,
but they don't have the courage to go in
and actually change statute because they don't want that
to be hung around their neck.
Got a question for you.
Sure.
This is going to be silly.
But do you think that if a bunch of us Republicans went
and changed our ticket, vote as a demon rats?
And when we go to vote,
went through it to the Republicans,
like they've been doing to us, you think that would work?
You know, I don't, I don't know that it would
because number one, I don't, in Alaska right now,
you don't have to be a specific party to vote.
So you don't have to change your party anyways,
but they, you know, rush had this theory of basically,
he called it Operation Chaos when he was on the air,
which is Republicans do exactly that.
And you saw it a little bit happen in Texas, it didn't work,
but people in, Republicans in Texas were, in fact,
crossing over to vote for AOC, or not AOC,
what's the other one, Jasmine Crockett,
Jasmine Crockett for that Senate race
because they thought she'd be easier to beat
in a general election.
Now it didn't end up working.
She did not win that primary,
but this is not a new, this is not a new strategy.
And in fact, I think Democrats sometimes do it
with in Republican races, vote for the weakest Republicans,
the weaker Republican, the one that they think
they can be in a general.
I think both sides do it.
Well, it might work a little bit, you know,
I mean, they've been playing that game on us,
you know, like Lisa Murkowski, you know,
saying the Republicans and they're really not.
Right, exactly.
Well, that's what I say.
I start seeing these TikTokers in these videos
right now, people say, Alaskans, what are you doing?
Lisa Murkowski is the only Republican
that voted against the state of that.
Well, if this is the first time you're getting,
and Lisa Murkowski is getting on your radar
as being a fake Republican, they're like very slow to the game.
Alaskans have been wise to this.
Republicans have known this for a long time.
The problem being is she's been able to game the system
frankly, very effectively for 20 years.
That's why she's still there.
But we have got to repeal ranked choice voting.
You know, there's multiple states across the country
that have made ranked choice voting illegal
and said, nope, we are not gonna allow this type of process.
I think Alaskan needs to follow suit.
Not only do we need to go back,
but we need to absolutely ban this type of vote shifting
because this is all it is, it's like a show game.
They keep moving around, keep moving it around
until they get an outcome.
It totally destroys one person, one vote.
So we absolutely, there will be a proposition
in front of voters this year to repeal ranked choice voting
in its entirety and that needs to happen.
We need to get that thing repealed.
Yep, the word rank, it means it stinks.
Yeah, I like it.
I like it.
Well, lady, thank you for calling in today.
It's great hearing your voice.
Thank you, honey.
Bye, bye.
All right, bye, bye.
We're going to take a quick commercial break
if you'd like to call in 522-0650.
We'll be right back.
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As we head into next week.
For Alaska's news or sign meteorologist, Air Morse,
welcome back to live local and insightful morning drive radio
on news radio, 650 KENI.
Welcome back, current times 752.
Let's go straight to the phones and William is with us.
Good morning, William.
Oh, good morning.
Good morning.
What's on your mind this morning?
I just want to talk about the situation
the president got us in.
And what situation is that?
It's the one I ran.
OK.
Got us in a situation where we don't need to be.
Of a relationship.
OK, now it's OK that we disagree a little here.
Because I would say I ran the one who actually started it.
They've been killing Americans for 40 years.
And at some point, I think we have two different philosophies
that kind of look at this.
Even if you're in the conservative mind frame,
I think I have friends that totally support the president
but do not support a military action in Iran.
And then I have friends on the other side of it
who say, you know what, Iran can't become a nuclear power.
They've caused so much havoc with their funding
of terrorism, not just over in the Middle East,
but now in Europe, they had to be dealt with.
So I have friends on both sides of it.
And other people that say, you know, that say,
nope, we shouldn't get involved in any other foreign conflicts
ever, you know, only on our homeland.
So where do you kind of fall in that?
Well, I fall in that for 40 years, you
saying that it was a threat.
OK, how about direct war?
Was that a threat also?
Oh, that's a thing.
Yeah.
No, no, that's a whole different thing.
The president took us in Iraq war.
It was a war that was based on life.
And it was, yeah, based on life.
I think they're totally different issues.
No, no, no, no, no, no, yes, yes, yes, here's the reality.
Who was it that bombed our embassy and killed over 200
Marines?
Who was that?
Who was that?
I already talked to you.
Radio station, right?
No, you got to look at some facts, though, as well.
The president said it was like two weeks
before they could build a weapon and shoot at everybody.
That's a lie.
I don't know that that's a lie.
They're lying.
Hold on, hold on.
He's been lying.
Every since he came down there, it's a little.
See, and we all know that this war is going
to cause a lot of death in the stretch.
We know that.
And what is he going to do?
Is he going to come out there and fight with us?
No, he's going to be protected in a bunker like a coward.
That's just be real.
Well, William, I think if we're going to have a real conversation,
you have to address the attacks I ran
has done many, many times over the years on Americans.
What about the Beirut embassy in 1983?
What about the 66 American hostages they took for 444 days?
What about, you know, we have the bombing
of the Kobar towers in Saudi Arabia in 1996?
The ship.
You know, what's that there?
The ship, remember they bombed the ship?
Absolutely.
They have killed hundreds of Americans directly
in terrorist attacks directly attributed to Iran.
Iran has a hit squad out that has
tried to assassinate not just this president,
but other US diplomats.
I mean, the reality is Iran has been the number one
state sponsor of terrorism since 1947.
And it's direct links and direct attacks on US military,
on US military assets, and on Americans.
And if you're saying that that doesn't make sense,
there's a big difference in my view between Iran and Iraq.
So we start to conflate arguments
when we don't want to deal with the reality.
And the reality is that Iranian regime
has killed 30,000 of their own citizens
simply for protesting against the regime.
So this is a bloodthirsty regime that, frankly,
whether they, however long they were going to be
to it, getting a new would be a problem, for sure.
The Iranians themselves told US negotiators
that they had 60% enriched uranium.
That's a problem.
You only get that if you're going to put weapons
great uranium.
There is no way you can let some regimes like this
get a nuclear weapon, because if they can, they will kill us.
And Donald Trump took them out first.
So I appreciate your call in.
All right, everybody, I gotta go,
but I will be back with you in about a week,
but the rest is history.
Stay safe, God bless.
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