Taylor Wettach For Iowa State Auditor

(30 minutes) A conversation that takes place before the primary two weeks ago:

One thing for Iowa Democrats is that our candidates hail from across the state. This shows that the power of Iowa’s Democratic Party is not just in the cities but is also moving out to the hinterlands as Republican policy in Iowa is being exposed as bad and corrupt.

 

Rob Sand set a standard for integrity and hard work as auditor. Republicans feared him so much they legislatively stripped his office of power. Now that Sand is running for governor, Republicans have cut the power of the governor.

 

I believe we can expect the same integrity and hard work from Taylor Wettach as Iowa State auditor. Sine the Republican legislature has shown itself to be untrustworthy, we better have an auditor who is trustworthy.

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Leave a comment

Sunday Funday: Trump Trashes Our Legacy Edition

 

tip of the hat to all-hat-no-cattle.com

Well, today Donald Trump will show his disdain for the country, for our government, for the formerly hallowed ground of the White House and many, many other norms and traditions of our country as he stages (let me look it up so I get it right) UFC Freedom 250 on the lawn of the people’s house. As I understand it there are three messages this monstrosity will convey:

  1. Forget about Trump raping children
  2. Trump family will once again make some big bucks from the presidency which contravenes everything this country any other president has ever done.
  3. The only American Donald Trump cares about is Donald Trump.

Panem et circenses (Latin for “bread and circuses”). From Wikipedia: This phrase originates from Rome in Satire X of the Roman satirical poet Juvenal (c. 100 CE), who saw “bread and circuses” (panem et circenses) as emblematic of the loss of republican political liberty:[5][6]

Trump is among the worst leaders in history, so all he can do is distract and divert. Hope you are not taken in by his trickery, lies and crimes. Vote Democratic this fall and let’s have some investigations.

 

A) What clean source of electricity generated more energy than coal in May in the US?

 

B) Theft at the self-checkout lanes in the US have risen to how much annually over the past year?

 

C) According to CNN how many times has Trump claimed there is a deal with Iran just around the corner?

 

D) What major sporting event is currently taking place in the US, Canada and Mexico?

 

E) What country in that event can not house its team in the US as it had planned?

 

F) Today is Flag day in the US. Why is today Flag Day in the US?

 

G) Who became the world’s first trillionaire Friday?

 

H) Iowa Republican Gubernatorial candidate Zach Lahn did not search out of state for a running mate, as some expected he might. Instead who did he pick?

 

I) What did Trump say Monday would normally bring a firestorm on a politician?

 

J) Although the traditions go back to the Revolutionary War, Flag Day did not become a holiday until when?

 

K) Due to slow counting that assures every vote counts, Trump and his ilk are claiming what state’s election process is rigged?

 

L) Another Trump presidency, another potential epidemic. For how long had the screwworm that is showing up in Texas cattle been eradicated for in the US?

 

M) In what feels like one last finger to the state, Gov. Reynolds plans to outsource what out of state costing 200 Iowa jobs?

 

N) How many red stripes on the current US flag?

 

O) Last Tuesday ended the career of what controversial South Carolina congress woman running for governor of that state?

 

P) Despite negative stories concerning this candidate in Maine, who won Maine’s Democratic primary to run for the US senate?

 

Q) Hey let’s not forget what big event taking place on the White House grounds today (or maybe tonight)? 9Pay-per-view!)

 

R) Acting like a petulent 5 year old, Trump walked out of an interview with what NBC news correspondent Sunday?

 

S) What billionaire tech bro spent a day last week meeting with congress concerning his links to Jeffrey Epstein?

 

T) Who has the power to order flags flown at half staff?

There are credible allegations made against Donald Trump that he mutilated a child’s nipples while raping her. Allegations so serious, his inner circle had to meet in the Situation Room to discuss them.

 

I mean, how the f–k isn’t this the biggest scandal in the world right now? – JoJoFromJerz

tip of the hat to democraticunderground.com

Answers:

 

A) solar

 

B) $10 billion

 

C) 38 – whoops this just in – 39

 

D) Football (soccer) World Cup

 

E) Iran

 

F) June 14,1777 Congress designated the current design as the official design for the flag

 

G) Musk

 

H) Derek Wulf from Hudson

 

I) “I like inflation”

 

J) August 3, 1949

 

K) California

 

L) since 1966

 

M) IT work

 

N) 7

 

O) Nancy Mace

 

P) Graham Platner

 

Q) Them UFC rasslin’ champeenships!

 

R) Kristen Welker

 

S) Bill Gates – remember him?

 

T) Presidents, governors and mayors

 

 

from last week:

Sen. Grassley (R-Iowa): We talked about vaccinations for screwworms. What are the chances of the use of vaccinations? 

Brooke Rollins (Secy. of Agriculture): The screwworm is a flesh eating pest, not a virus or a disease.

 

tip of the hat to all-hat-no-cattle.com

Posted in #nevertrump, Humor | Leave a comment

Tom Lehrer Relevant In Today’s Iowa

(2 minutes)
 

Hey, you oldtimers, do you remember folk singer and mathematician Tom Lehrer in his heyday of the early 60s wrote some of the best satirical songs concerning the then issues of the day. One that has stayed quite relevant over the 60+ years since Lehrer wrote it is “Pollution.”

 

 

I am sure with a little imagination you can easily see how Lehrer’s words could be changed a bit to reflect Iowa’s high cancer rates and the chemical pollution that seeems to be behind those high and ever-increasing rates. If you need a reminder, I offer Trish Nelson’s excellent post on Wednesday concerning the issue of hog manure in the water and the cancer rate in Iowa:

 

 

As you ponder on Iowa’s situation, don’t forget that Iowa’s Republican trifecta – the governorship, and super-majorities in the Iowa House and the Iowa Senate – have contributed to this crisis.

 

Maybe it is time to quit believing something that has never been true, but is all that Republicans have to run on any more. Republicans are not conservative. Their fiscal policies are only slightly good in the very short run. In the long run their policies – fiscal and other – leave problems untended and unaddressed that will someday explode into disasters in the future.

 

When the disasters do explode – such as the cancer crisis or the screwworm crisis in cattle or poorly thought out tariffs – their response is not to tackle the problem but to try to find a scape goat. Voting for a Republican is saving a penny today that will cost us all thousands in a few years.

 

Before you vote, be sure to think about how much a Republican in office really costs.

Posted in #nevertrump, 2026 election, Corporate Greed | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Statement On Social Security

The following statement was issued on Tuesday by the Social Security watch site socialsecurityworks.org:

According to a report issued Monday by the Social Security Trustees, Social Security will no longer be bringing in as much as it expends in about 6 years.

Social Security has been the number one target of regressive Republicans since it was implemented in 1937. This report will add more fodder to their attempt to end SS.

Mike Johnson from a couple of days ago:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Contact: Linda Benesch, lbenesch@socialsecurityworks.org

Statement on the 2026 Social Security Trustees Report
Donald Trump’s Policies Are Hurting Social Security

 

 

(Washington, DC) — The following is a statement from Nancy Altman, President of Social Security Works, on the 2026 Social Security Trustees Report:

“This is the first Social Security trustees report that begins to take Donald Trump’s second term policies into account: A tax bill that largely benefited the wealthy, economy-wrecking tariffs, a needless war with Iran, and hostility to immigrants. All of these have reduced the amount of money going into Social Security, weakening the system’s finances.

Despite Trump’s damaging policies, Social Security remains fully affordable if the wealthy are required to contribute their fair share. Congress has only two options to address the projected shortfall: Bring more money into Social Security, or cut benefits. Any politician who refuses to raise revenue, including by making the wealthy pay their fair share into Social Security, is telling us that they support benefit cuts.

The American people, including Republicans, are overwhelming in their opposition to even a penny of benefit cuts. Support for means-testing and other benefit cuts (even if paired with revenue increases) is a betrayal of the American people.

Social Security’s future is on the ballot. Any of the U.S. Senators elected this November could become the deciding vote. Accordingly, all of them should tell the public how they would vote.

This is particularly important for Republican candidates, given that Speaker Mike Johnson just announced plans to ‘adjust and fix’ Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid next year. That’s DC-insider speak for ‘cut benefits.’ Outrageously, Johnson claims this is necessary to reduce the federal deficit — even though Social Security is an earned benefit that doesn’t add a single penny to the deficit!

As the Trustees Report plainly states, if there is insufficient revenue, Social Security benefits will be automatically cut. Johnson’s ‘solution’ is to cut them sooner (and likely by a larger amount) instead of making his billionaire donors pay their fair share. Sen. Ted Cruz and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent are more specific than Johnson, saying that the Republican plan for Social Security is privatization, handing Social Security over to Wall Street. Do Republican House and Senate candidates agree with Johnson, Cruz, and Bessent?

Ultimately, the Social Security shortfall is cause for action but not for undue alarm. Congress has acted to avert such shortfalls before and will again. When members of Congress act, they should listen to their voters who overwhelmingly value Social Security, not their ultra-wealthy donors who want to steal their voters’ hard-earned benefits out from under them.”

For more information on the report, we invite you to review our fact sheet.

Paul Krugman, eminent economist and Nobel Prize winner also immediately responded to the report noting that the problem is political: 

On Tuesday the Social Security Trustees released their latest report on the system’s finances. The numbers didn’t change much: Unless something is done, the Old Age Survivors and Disability Insurance (OASDI) program, Social Security’s official name, will be unable to pay full benefits starting in either 2032 or 2034, depending on some technical issues. That’s not far away: If the Trustees are right, the prospect of a Social Security crisis will loom over the next presidential administration.

It’s important to understand, however, the nature of the looming crisis. It won’t be an economic crisis. It won’t even be a serious fiscal crisis. Whatever you may have heard, Social Security isn’t in danger of going bankrupt.

What we’re facing, instead, is potential political crisis. Congress and the White House could easily take action to sustain America’s retirement system. But given the current state of our politics, there’s no guarantee that they will.

There is a widespread misunderstanding of how Social Security works. While Social Security was designed to look like a pension fund, it isn’t. A pension fund pays benefits out of a stock of assets it has accumulated over time. In contrast, Social Security operates as a government transfer program, like food stamps or Medicaid.

Now, unlike food stamps — but like the highway trust fund — Social Security is on paper supported by a dedicated tax, the payroll tax, that is assigned to that program. But I say “on paper” because from an economic point of view assigning the payroll tax to Social Security is just an accounting convention. What matters for the U.S. economy is the overall balance between government spending and government revenue, not the difference between one type of spending and one source of revenue. So there’s no inherent economic significance to the fact that by 2034 payroll tax receipts will be insufficient to cover promised benefits.

Iowa has one of the oldest populations in the country. Social Security is vital to our economy. No matter what we hear from Republican candidates claiming to support Social Security, in reality SS is the #1 target for every Republican in the country. If you vote for Hinson, Miller-Meeks, Nunn, Mitchell, or MacGowan you will be voting to end Social Security.

Posted in #nevertrump, 2026 election, Social Security, Social Security Disability Insurance | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

HCR Speaks With Josh Turek

“I think that we should ban members of Congress and their families from owning and trading stocks. Here in Iowa my opponent Ashley Hinson in six years in her time in Congress is now up to ten times more wealthy, owns up to $5 million in insurance stock, is taking millions of dollars of corporate PAC money, particularly from pharmaceuticals and insurance, which is why we see nothing getting done on health care reform.” – Josh Turek

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Preparing Ourselves For The Battle Ahead

One of only two confirmed photos of Lincoln at Gettysburg (seated in center facing camera),[1][2][3] taken about noon on November 19, 1863; some three hours later, Lincoln delivered the famed address. Wiki

Every Wednesday Simon Rosenberg holds a Zoom get-together for paid subscribers of the Hopium community. I always find something inspiring.

Last night he told the community that this election cycle, unlike the last election cycle, republicans will be spending way more money than us. He advised that we need to be prepared for endless AI crap all over the internet and right wing media, that they will daily dump garbage on our candidates. That they will do anything to win, that Trump knows he is losing and is desperate. These things we need to brace ourselves for, he said, so that we don’t lose heart when they happen. He encouraged the community to resist getting caught up in the things that will not help our candidates and to remain focused on doing the work of winning the mid-terms.

And then he closed the conversation by reading aloud the Gettysburg address.

Some things we also need to be reminded of. Especially in these times.

Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives, that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.

But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate ~ we can not consecrate ~ we can not hallow, this ground. The brave men living and dead who struggled here, have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us ~ that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion ~ that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain ~ that this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom ~ and that government of the people by the people for the people shall not perish from the earth.”

Abraham Lincoln
November 19, 1863

Simon pointed out that it was only 81 years between Lincoln’s Gettysburg address and D-Day.  And only 82 years between D-Day and now. Eighty years from now, what will America be like? What will be the legacy of the Trump era?

Will this be the end of democracy as we know it or will we have a new birth of freedom?

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Iowa Doesn’t Have To Be Like This

“Fifteen miles from here, 265,000 gallons of nitrogen fertilizer spilled into the river and ended up killing – 50 miles of the river – 800,000 fish. That case was sitting on the Attorney General of Iowa’s desk for one year with no response.”

More Perfect Union

“Cancer rates in Iowa are rising faster than anywhere else in the country. Politicians blame individual choices, but the real villain is the industrial farming covering the state. We went, tested the water, and found cancer causing levels of chemicals running through Iowa.

If you’d like to get a free nitrate testing kit, you can request one from Nitrate Watch: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FA… Once you test your water, log your results in their database to build a publicly sourced dataset that can’t be covered up.”

“More Perfect Union is an Emmy-winning, nonprofit newsroom whose mission is to build power for working people. Here’s what that means: We report on the real struggles and challenges of the working class from a working-class perspective. We attempt to connect those problems to potential solutions. We report on the abuses and wrongdoing of corporate power. And we seek to hold accountable the ultra-rich who have too much power over America’s political and economic systems. To support our independent journalism, please subscribe or contribute at the links below.” –

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Rally For Rob Sand For Governor Of Iowa

Bleeding Heartland YT Channel:  “Laura Belin recorded this video at a Des Moines rally for Rob Sand, Democratic nominee for governor, on June 7, 2026. Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear introduced Sand.” Watch his remarks here:    • WATCH: Andy Beshear stumps for Rob Sand in…  

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , | Leave a comment

“He Lives In Kansas”

Have a listen and here is a highlight from the June 5th, 2026 edition of Iowa Press with Rob Sand, the Democratic nominee for governor of Iowa. Click here  to read the transcript.

Brianne Pfannenstiel

In in the final days of the primary cycle, Zach Lahn was drawing big crowds. He’s really energizing the Republican base. Is he going to be a tougher opponent for you than perhaps Randy Feenstra would have been had he been the nominee?

Rob Sand

No.

Brianne Pfannenstiel

What makes you think so?

Rob Sand

He lives in Kansas.

Posted in Blog for Iowa | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Dave Dawson For Congress In Iowa Congressional District 4

Folks, we have an open seat in Iowa’s 4th congressional district. It is open because Randy Feenstra chose to sort of run for governor and not for reelection as the representative from Ia-04. This district has been Iowa’s most reliably Republican district in recent years. Yet, not too long ago this area was the home of one of Iowa’s most liberal representatives in Berkley Bedell.

Donald Trump continues to lead his party with an attitude that the voters opinions don’t count. Remember that any vote for a Republican this year is a vote to endorse the Trumpian failed policies. Those policies include open corruption and bribery; attacking Americans for no reason; cutting food aid to children and cutting health care especially in rural areas; tariff policies that have closed markets for Iowa farmers and a wholly insane war that is causing rampant inflation.

When you think of the election in those terms, no district anywhere should be considered safe. So let’s support Dave Dawson for Congress!

Interview with Laura Belin from last August: (15 minutes)

Posted in #nevertrump, 2026 election | Tagged , | 1 Comment