Tag Archives: Utah

Traveling to Emery County

There is an article in the Emery County Progress on Emery County Elections Clerk Bruce Funk and his rejection of the Diebold voting machines for use in that county. The article explains at length how Funk discovered the deficiencies in the machines.

I have just committed to traveling to Emery County on April 18th for the Emery County Commission meeting (9am – 12noon at the Castle Dale courthouse) with Kathy Dopp.

This should be an interesting trip.

More news on illegal immigrants

Today’s news is full of articles on the immigration issue. (See my previous posts.) I’ve listed below the various items in Utah’s two major papers.

There should be no reason why people cannot move freely about under an established set of criteria.
The current trade laws are aimed at business only and not people. If money and goods can freely move across borders, why can’t people? It’s the “same old, same old” – the laws are designed for those who benefit the most from themn – the elite wealthy.

Deseret News
The real border issue – Deseret Morning News editorial
Illegals are hot issue for Utahns – article on election year issue with focus on state house races.

Salt Lake Tribune
Students make their voices heard: Utah students stay focused on immigration

My platform for County Council

Today I opened my political campaign bank account at my credit union, set up my contribution page, and worked in my platform.

My platform, so far, encompasses the following issues:

  • Smart Development
  • Peace
  • Environment
  • Economy
  • Living Wage
  • Health Care

    Check my campaign website for updates.

  • The saga surrounding Kanab’s city council decision in favor of “natural family” continues.

    Today’s Salt Lake Tribune reports that Kanab residents and business owners are calling for an end to the boycott called by writer Arthur Frommer. Frommer has
    urged tourists to shun the scenic southern Utah town after the City Council adopted a nonbinding “natural-family” resolution. The resolution was the brainchild of the conservative Sutherland Institute.

    Business owners and many residents did not support the city council’s resolution and in fact designed this logo to promote tourism:


    Kanab Boosters hope to counter the ”natural family” flap with Everyone Welcome Here! stickers. (Mark Havnes/The Salt Lake Tribune)

    “No business in Kanab had any input regarding this proclamation,” wrote [Vicky]Cooper in a letter sent earlier this month to Frommer. “A boycott will only hurt the residents of Kanab, not our City Council.” (Cooper owns Kanab’s Rocking V Cafe).

    Frommer has not yet received the letter and has not stated whether or not he will end his boycott call.
    “They [council members] seem hellbent on gay bashing,” he said, adding he is not a part of the gay community, but a grandfather with three grandchildren. “I guess I fit the resolution,” Frommer joked.

    Utah students continue to protest immigration issue

    As the issue on laws aimed at immigrants continues, Utah students also continue their protests as part of a week of rallies at several schools in Utah and across the nation.

    In the Deseret News Article today, Utah Governor Huntsman states:
    Thursday, Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. said there has to be some way for those undocumented workers to become citizens. He and other Western governors have proposed reform that that would give those “living in the shadows” a pathway toward citizenship.
    “You can’t simply wish people away. I think that is unrealistic,” Huntsman said during the taping of his monthly press conference on KUED Channel 7. “When you say, ‘Let’s simply send people back to their home,’ well, where is their home?

    But then Alex Segura, director of the anti-illegal immigration group Utah Minuteman Project and a West Valley candidate for the state House of Representatives,
    acknowledged the students’ First Amendment rights. But he said protests across the country seem to be “intimidation tactics” aimed at keeping Congress from enforcing immigration laws.
    “They’re misguided about what it means to be American,” Segura said. Of their Mexican flags and Spanish chants, he said, “It means they are proud of their country and feel that this is part of Mexico.”

    Students don’t see it that way.
    “It’s not fair. We come here to work, and they just want to kick us out,” Gallegos said. “We are the economy of the U.S.”

    Senate opens debate on immigration bill

    Earlier this week I wrote a post about Utah students demonstrating against proposed immigration laws. The demonstrations continue as the U.S. Senate began the debate yesterday on a bill that in general is designed to strengthen enforcement of U.S. borders, regulate the flow into the country of so-called guest workers and determine the legal future of the illegal population scattered across all 50 states.

    The debate is centered around whether or not illegal immigrants would be given “too much amnesty”.
    Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, voted against the bill in the Senate Judiciary Committee, even though it contained language that would grant in-state tuition to undocumented students, something he introduced himself in a previous bill.
    Hatch said there were “many things I like about the bill” but it essentially grants amnesty, which he does not support, and it contains too many provisions he felt would hurt small businesses.

    Funny how Hatch focuses only on business and doesn’t say how the bill would affect people.

    I am reminded that the United States of America was founded by “illegal immigrants”. Native Americans did not give permission for immigrants to visit and stay on their land. In fact native americans welcomed these immigrants with open arms. I guess it’s been way too long for our “leaders” to consider the historical facts – that their ancestors were once illegal immigrants who were “granted amnesty” in a foreign land so that they could pursue better opportunities.

    Hill Happenings

    Articles published in today’s papers about Utah legislative news:

    Salt Lake Tribune
    Legislators short on votes needed to override vetoes

    Desert News
    No override session
    Legislators question Provo school board bond plan
    Demo bills usually go nowhere

    More Voting Machine Fraud News

    One Utah has some posts on the Emery County situation where the elections clerk is being asked to resign because he exposed his concerns about the Diebold voting machines. The letter that was hand delivered to him today asking him to resign as of April 1 will be published at One Utah later today.

    Kathy Dopp has written a letter to the Governor of Utah about the Director of Elections Michael Cragun colluding with Diebold to commit fraud and to cover up fraud committed against the state of Utah.

    Voting Maching Fraud – Bruce Funk Needs Our Help

    Kathy Dopp is nationally known for her work in exposing voter machine fraud. Kathy is running for Summit County Clerk for the Desert Greens Green Party of Utah. She aims to win and work towardsa more equitable voting system.

    Kathy has been sending out notices on the recent fallout over voting machines in Emery County:

    Help Please if you can. Bruce Funk “really” needs our support right now (see
    http://utahcountvotes.org)

    This DesNews article parrots the disinformation that Diebold is giving to our election officials back to the public. Anyone who has time, please send in a pithy letter to the editor to the DesNews. I’m warn out. Just include the title & author & date of the article plus your name, address and phone number so they’ll print it.

    What a con job Diebold has done to bill $40,000 to Emery County to “fix” the damage that the best security experts in America did by examining two voting machines. Yet our state election director, Michael Cragun, is colluding with Diebold after they sent Utah falling apart, mixture of new and old rejected machines from other states, with printers without paper guides that are designed to fail, and a system that one might imagine is deliberately designed for undetectable tampering! I’m amazed at how many times Diebold has defrauded our election officials who keep colluding with Diebold against the interests of Utah voters! Anyone with a smidgeon of knowledge of computer security understands that the biggest security threat comes from the insiders (i.e. Diebold itself) not a nationally renowned security firm! Our state election director, Michael Cragun is, as we speak, giving Diebold access to the storage facility to tamper with the voting machines at Carr Printing in Bountiful, perhaps so that they can cover up the evidence of their fraudulent sale!

    Costly fallout in Emery over vote machines By Josh Loftin Deseret Morning News

    http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,635194949,00.html

    Concerns about potential tampering with electronic machines have come back to those making the accusations: the Emery County clerk and an independent election security firm.

    Now, the county will have to pay to bring in technicians to reinstall the software on approximately 40 electronic voting machines after the clerk let security experts from Black Box Voting, a national elections security watchdog group, test the machines. The cost to the county could be upward of $40,000, according to Joe Demma, the chief of staff for Lt. Gov. Gary Herbert.
    Continue reading

    Hundreds of Utah students walk out of classes – protest House Immigration Bill

    Yesterday about 30 students of West High Schoolwalked out of class and held a demonstration to protest the House Immmigration Bill . The students were able to ultimately attract a crowed of about 400 people, according the Salt Lake Tribune article.

    The walkout was part of a nationwide call for action for students to walk out of classrooms in protest of this legislation. Tens of thousands of students across the country walked out of their classrooms.

    About 300 students walked out of Northwest Middle School and 30 at Kearns High School in addition to the West High School Students.

    The House legislation is designed at “immigration reform”. Here in Utah undocumented immigrants have had their drivers’ licenses taken away and replaced with “driving privelege” cards. Legislation was introduced to eliminate in-state college tuition for undocumented immigrants here, but that failed.

    “They can put barriers on me, but they’re not stopping me,” said Marisela, who declined to give her last name. “The American dream is not a crime.” Marisela is a West High School student who walked out of her classes yeseterday.

    The Deseret News reports the U.S. Senators clears way for illegal aliens. In an obvious election-year move, the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee has cleared the way for 11 million illegal aliens to seek U.S. citizenship.
    Continue reading