Begich 3 aims to become a Bitcoin player

“It’s time for America to become the first #BITCOIN superpower,” Nicholas the Third wrote on X. “I am working on something Big with Sen Lummis,” he said, referring to Wyoming Republican cyrpto promoter Cynthia Lummis.

Lummis, who posts pictures of herself with laser eyes, claims to have a plan to “supercharge the U.S. dollar and pay down the national debt by establishing a strategic Bitcoin reserve.”

The Bitcoin Policy Institute claimed Begich will make “an historic announcement at Bitcoin for America,” an online gabfest with Lummis as the honorary co-host. A cyrpto promotion site claimed Begich’s “statement has sent ripples across the cryptocurrency market.”

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Trump trade war will cost Alaskans as British Columbia moves to apply truck toll

"This is unacceptable, and we're going to ensure that the Americans understand how pissed off we are, how unified we are, how committed we are to working as a country to stand up for each other," the Canadian Press quoted B.C. Premier David Eby as saying. "And I say we don't let up until the president takes the threat off the table."

Tolls on Alaska-bound commercial truck traffic may be coming soon.

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Clarity from Trump, Vance and Sen. Dan Sullivan on Ukraine

Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s response to the White House debacle is a model of what Sen. Dan Sullivan and other Republicans should be saying about Trump, but aren’t.

She said, “I am sick to my stomach as the administration appears to be walking away from our allies and embracing Putin, a threat to democracy and U.S. values around the world.”

Sullivan’s silence makes his position clear. He is right there with the Alaska Republican Party in agreeing with anything Trump says.

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Dunleavy pledged in 2021 to back taxes, but only if the Legislature led the way

The oil industry has already cued its publicity people to recite text from the Fear and Loathing Anti-Tax Playbook handed down by oil company employees since the discovery of Prudhoe Bay: Any tax increase, no matter how small, will kill investment and ruin the industry, the Fear and Loathing playbook says.

These bills will not kill investment, though there will be much wailing and gnashing of teeth, along with the fear and loathing.

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Dunleavy says Bible promotes mining and drilling federal lands to the max

‘The Bible’s parable of the talents offers a valuable lesson for government, as it does for spiritual life. The good and faithful servant is the one who takes his employer’s money and increases it, while the unfaithful one simply buries it in the ground. When it comes to America’s abundant natural wealth, we face a similar choice,” Gov. Mike Dunleavy said in a press release printed by the Wall Street Journal.

The state sermon does not say anything about saving for the next generation or the generation after that. Or that the good and faithful servant could be a foreign mining company hoping to make a killing from public resources.

The reverend governor also didn’t mention the long-term value of leaving wealth in the ground that belongs not just to those alive now, but to all future Americans.

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Sullivan goes silent on Musk/Trump decision to side with Russia against Ukraine

Sen. Dan Sullivan took a strong stand this week to support the U.S. troops who fought and died on Iwo Jima. No one in Congress will oppose the resolution he co-sponsored with about 20 other senators.

Sullivan has yet to take a strong stand in favor of the embattled people of Ukraine, who have been sold out by the Musk/Trump regime to Putin.

Trump is using Putin talking points. He has abandoned Ukraine.

Sullivan has either flipped his position to side with Musk/Trump or he is afraid to cross his leaders about the betrayal of Ukraine.

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Dunleavy to scrap $50 million AIDEA budget request that would never have been OK'd

This week the Dunleavy administration is going to officially abandon the effort to give AIDEA—which has plenty of cash reserves—the $50 million, Randy Ruaro, the head of AIDEA, told the Senate Finance Committee Monday.

The reality of this situation is that there was no chance the Legislature was ever going to approve the $50 million request from Dunleavy because AIDEA has hundreds of millions it can draw upon. AIDEA is led by a former Dunleavy employee and a board of Dunleavy supporters.

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