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Maybe this can help you stay alive

Republican Precinct Committeeman and Will County Board Member Gretchen Fritz is a Concealed Carry Instructor at Safer USA wrote an interesting article for the latest edition of The Illinois Shooter on the common misperceptions that her students had towards concealed carry. Here it is. A must read: “Not-So-Common Sense for Concealed Carry  
By Gretchen A. Fritz  April 2017
I have been involved with teaching Illinois concealed carry for SAFER USA since the state police authorized us to start teaching it, which was October of 2013. In that time SAFER USA has educated over 1000 students about the big concepts and finer points of concealed carry.
We prefer students arrive with open minds, ready to be filled with knowledge. But many come to class with some preconceived ideas that are not accurate and that do not contribute to their safety. To be honest, some of these ideas are so ludicrous that it is by sheer luck that these individuals have lived this long and are able to attend a concealed carry class at this point.
Whether or not you have already taken an Illinois concealed carry class, if I can re-educate you, maybe I can help you stay alive. We take great care to encourage questions and to answer them with the best facts we can find, dispelling the myths that people too often believe. So here are some statements students have actually made in class.
“My town is safe (and I basically never leave my town).” There is no such thing as a 100% safe town. Suburbs and parts of Chicago that were previously thought to be “safe” have been experiencing never-before-seen crimes lately. A man was murdered in his car in a school parking lot in Naperville at the end of January. Three people were shot and wounded in a parking garage in the Gold Coast, also in late January.
In November 2016 two men kidnapped a rideshare driver in Glen Ellyn and forced him to withdraw money from ATMs. A man from Skokie committed an armed robbery at a Target store in Plainfield last August; that one hit close to home. So don’t tell me you live in a safe town. Bad stuff happens pretty much everywhere, and you never know when it will be in your town.
“I don’t plan to carry all the time.” Carrying occasionally is basically pointless. You cannot possibly know when you will need a gun. The very nature of crimes, terrorist attacks and mentally unstable people committing mass shootings in public places is that they are unexpected. If someone knew these things were going to happen, they would have been prevented. To the credit of law enforcement in this country, many of these incidents have been prevented, but 100% prevention is not attainable.
If more people carried all the time, mall and movie theater shootings would be rarer and would be cut short by “sheepdogs” when they did occur. (Lt. Col. David Grossman coined the term “sheepdogs” for people who protect others: law enforcement officers, soldiers and people who carry concealed weapons.) Carrying occasionally will give you a false sense of security when you do carry, but you will be less mentally and physically prepared than someone who carries all the time. It is my experience that when you carry a gun, your situational awareness is heightened. So you are more likely to detect that a situation just doesn’t feel right and either leave the situation or alert law enforcement than someone who does not carry.   
“Cook County is so anti-Second Amendment that I will be prosecuted if I defend myself with a firearm.” There is no denying that Cook County is anti-Second Amendment. That’s a fact. Former Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy gave many interviews about the problems he expected to come with legal concealed carry. Sheriff Tom Dart and Mayor Rahm Emanuel didn’t hold back either. But it is also a fact that not one single concealed carry self-defense incident in Illinois has resulted in prosecution of the law-abiding citizen who defended himself or others.
The first two uses of Illinois concealed carry for self-defense happened in July of 2014, one in West Pullman and one in Crestwood. In April 2015 an Uber driver shot a man who was shooting into a crowd on a Friday night in Logan Square. In October 2015 a man who was committing an armed robbery at a Gage Park corner store was shot and killed by a man with concealed carry. Not one of these four sheepdogs has been prosecuted despite all the incidents taking place in Cook County.
Even back when Chicago still had a handgun ban, many homeowners who used guns in self-defense against home invasions were not charged or prosecuted for violating the ban. So I think we have enough evidence to show that even Cook County is a good place for concealed carry.
“If I get pulled over by a police officer, s/he will find out that I have concealed carry and will give me a hard time (or will be anxious or will take some other undesirable action).” I can’t say that none of these things will ever happen, but I will tell you that most police officers support concealed carry. A 2013 PoliceOne survey of 15,000 police officers revealed that 91 percent of them support law-abiding citizens carrying concealed. They know that they simply can’t be everywhere to prevent every crime.
They also know that the primary responsibility to keep you safe is yours. In 2005 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Castle Rock v. Gonzales that police have no specific constitutional duty to protect persons from harm. The smart ones will also consider that three or four background checks have been run on you in the past three years or less in order for you to have gotten an Illinois concealed carry license. People who have concealed carry are the crème de la crème of law-abiding citizens! You are actually the last person a police officer needs to worry about, and I think most of them intuitively know that.
“I won’t carry my gun with a round in the chamber.” I immediately know two things about the person who says this. The first is that you don’t trust your gun. Why would you want to carry a gun that you don’t trust? It is highly unlikely that a modern firearm will go off accidentally, like by being dropped, for example. I once dropped my Glock on my driveway from a height of about three feet. Nothing happened, just as I would expect.
The second thing I know is that you don’t know anything about what will happen when your life is threatened and you need to use your gun for self-defense. Because when your life is being threatened, you will get a dump of adrenaline, also known as the fight or flight response. When that happens, your fine motor skills don’t work as well because your hands shake big time. So while you are shaking, now you need to cycle the slide of your firearm, which you will not be able to do. As it turns out, you have been carrying a paperweight around rather than a gun with which you can defend yourself.
It is absolutely imperative that the 2A community applies logic to the keeping and bearing of arms, concealed carry specifically. The illogical beliefs that the Second Amendment is outdated, that carrying guns in public, legally, is somehow dangerous and that people who carry concealed will turn into irrational hotheads and kill people over parking spots must constantly be refuted. We cannot let the gun controllers or the criminals win simply because we did not educate ourselves about the actual facts of self-defense and concealed carry.”
“Reprint permission is granted provided that appropriate credit is given in the form of the statement: “Reprinted from The Illinois Shooter.”
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God Bless Everyone and Their Families

This Easter “Be Not Afraid”

This Easter “Be Not Afraid”
Easter is the most important day of the year for Christians.
On Easter, Christians around the world celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Christians believe that Jesus Christ was crucified, died, and was buried; and that Christ rose from the dead – that all may have eternal life with God the Father in heaven.
At the heart of Christianity is this act of God’s love for humanity. “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life.” John 3:16
As we commemorate the resurrection of Jesus Christ, we should remember the many threats facing Christians today.
Christianity is under siege on two fronts. On one front, it faces a growing secularism, which seeks to place human desires ahead of God and His will.
On the other front, radical Islamism seeks to destroy Christianity across the globe.
We were reminded of this just days ago on Palm Sunday as Coptic Christian churches in Egypt were attacked and Christians were killed. This Easter we should remember and pray for those who lost their lives in these heinous attacks.
It is horrifying to watch the spread of ISIS around the world. It is equally horrifying to see Boko Haram’s treatment of Christians, especially young Christian women, in Nigeria, and to witness the countless atrocities committed by radical Islamist groups.
But in the face of this evil, we remember the words of Saint John Paul II, who throughout his papacy urged us to, “Be not afraid.”
In his book, Crossing the Threshold of Hope, John Paul II reminds us that we have been redeemed. “The power of Christ’s Cross and Resurrection is greater than any evil which man could or should fear,” he wrote.
Easter Sunday is a good day to reflect on the words of Saint John Paul II and remember that the Son of God overcame death so that we may be saved through faith in Him.
No enemy can threaten this gift from Jesus.
We wish you and your family a blessed Easter.
Your Friends,
Newt and Callista

Team Rauner News April 14, 2017

This week Gov. Rauner took to the road to visit Illinoisans across the state – in person – pushing for a balanced budget with real reforms. Here are a few highlights from his trip.
 
Happy Easter weekend!
 
– Team Rauner
GOV. RAUNER TOURS STATE TO PUSH FOR BALANCED BUDGET, REFORM
 
Watch Recap Video Here.
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THE GOVERNOR MADE STOPS IN 11 CITIES ACROSS THE STATE
 
ROBINSON: “There’s no reason, no excuse, for us not to have a balanced budget” – Gov. Rauner
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Gov. Rauner said it’s time to “stop the duct tape solutions” and fix what’s broken in Illinois.
QUAD CITIES: “This is about whether we are going to be on the track of prosperity with outstanding economic opportunity for everybody and a great education system for everybody so our children have a better future in Illinois.” – Gov. Rauner
SPRINGFIELD: “We’re talking about all the important changes we’re making in Illinois to make a strong and proud, prosperous and a better future for our children and grandchildren.” – Gov. Rauner
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CHICAGO: A renewed push to end the stopgap fixes and create longterm change for Illinois. Watch Recap Video Here.
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Why ISIS Declared War on Egypt's Christians

The group has been exporting Iraq-style sectarian tactics to the Arab world’s most populous country.

The aftermath of an explosion that took place at a Coptic church on Sunday in Tanta, EgyptMohamed Abd El Ghany / Reuters

The aftermath of an explosion that took place at a Coptic church on Sunday in Tanta, Egypt

Four months after an Islamic State suicide bomber killed 28 Christian worshipers in Cairo, the group struck Egypt’s Christians again—this time with a double church bombing on Palm Sunday that left at least 44 dead and scores injured. The attacks, only hours apart, targeted a church in the Delta city of Tanta as well as a church in Alexandria where Coptic Pope Tawadros II was leading a service. It was the single deadliest day of violence directed against the Middle East’s largest Christian community in decades.
When the ISIS claim of responsibility came within hours of the attacks, it wasn’t a surprise. For months, the Islamic State has been accelerating the import of Iraq-style sectarian tactics to Egypt. In doing so, the group hopes to destabilize the Middle East’s most populous country and expand the reach of its by now clearly genocidal project for the region’s minorities.

Egyptian authorities have thus far been unable to keep up with this escalating threat. This may be largely due to their own incompetence, but it also reflects the increasing sophistication of ISIS assets directed at Egypt. As the group goes on the defensive elsewhere, mainland Egypt is too attractive a potential front in its jihad to pass up. It appears that the group is now focusing more time, resources, and most importantly ISIS talent on Egypt, making the situation likely to worsen in the future.
Targeting Egypt’s Christians is a cold and calculated strategy for the group. ISIS hopes that inflaming sectarian strife in Egypt will be the first step in the country’s unraveling. Several explosions have rocked Cairo and the Delta since 2013, carried out by both ISIS and its precursor group Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis, which pledged its allegiance to Raqqa in 2014. Yet despite this, Islamic State efforts had before now largely floundered in mainland Egypt—where nearly 97 percent of the population resides—due in part to the strength of the central government, the amateur nature of Islamic State assets, and perhaps most importantly, the relative cohesiveness of Egyptian society. The group has fared much better in the remote North Sinai, where it has killed over a thousand government troops in recent years, but the area is simply too far away from Cairo to constitute an existential threat to the government.

And so, although the Palm Sunday attacks were hardly the first time Egypt’s Christians were targeted by jihadis, Islamists, or even ordinary Muslim mobs, they represent a sea change in the nature of the threat Egypt’s Christians now face, with far-reaching implications for the country as a whole.
ISIS has taken the radical step of positing that Christians are to Egypt what the Shia are to Iraq, embracing the position that they can be killed indiscriminately and for no reason other than for what they believe. Since the December 2016 Cairo church bombing, the group’s supporters online have been forcefully pushing this notion, claiming that the Christians of Egypt were first and foremost polytheists and that due to the “treachery” they had showed, by presumably “allying” with the West and the Egyptian government, they had to be killed.
Egyptian ISIS supporters launched an online “Campaign to Surveil Egypt’s Apostates” in order to crowdsource targeting information; they produced crudely made “wanted dead” posters to urge supporters to take action. A glimpse of the possible implications was on display last February, when hundreds of Christians in North Sinai fled their homes in panic after seven Christians were brutally murdered by IS fighters.
The strategy is in reality not the result of an ideological revision inside ISIS. And its implementation has serious repercussions for Egypt’s security, and if successful, for regional stability. For years members of the group, and jihadis in general, have struggled with the important question of why jihad has failed in mainland Egypt. The question is fundamental for the group not only because of Egypt’s size, but also because it tests whether the jihadi project can succeed in countries not already torn by civil war or hopelessly destabilized.
One 2014 jihadi “study” by an ISIS ideologue, Abu Mawdud al-Harmasy, is instructive. Titled “The Secret of The Egyptian Enigma,” the author first laments that Egyptian Muslims are like cattle for not understanding “the reality of the struggle,” before offering his “keys for jihadi success.” Among them is “sectarian killing of Christians” in order to inflame certain rural areas, and “most importantly targeting directly every Christian without exceptions.” He goes on to say that inflaming sectarian strife will be the key to “revealing the reality of the conflict and [inciting] the latent feelings of the Muslims towards their [Christian] creed;” to him, only after targeting minorities happened in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen did jihad take hold in those places. The author concludes with this exhortation: “Do not leave any infidel Christian in Egypt until you threatened their life.” In recent months in Egypt ISIS has also begun to take a similar tone toward Sufis, who constitute a large share of Muslims in Egypt, North Africa, and elsewhere, decapitating two Sufi clerics in Sinai and forcing others to “repent.”
It is unlikely that this strategy will succeed the way ISIS envisions in Egypt, but the attempt to implement it will leave a trail of destruction that will primarily devastate Egypt’s Christian minority. The group’s genocidal program may perhaps backfire as it did for their jihadi predecessors of the 1980s and 1990s, whose wanton killing of civilians dried up any base of popular support. But as the ISIS ideologue al-Harmasy hints, there is deep-rooted sectarianism in Egyptian society that has been fanned by Islamists for decades, to which government policies have also contributed. Egypt, like many other states in the region, still enforces blasphemy laws, places discriminatory restrictions on the building of churches, and fails to prosecute sectarian offenders, while Islamists continue to spew hate against minorities unchecked. Sectarianism wouldn’t have worked so well for ISIS in Egypt, or elsewhere before it, had the group not found an ideological context where its radical ideas could thrive.

News From on Gun Rights April 8, 2017

NRA-ILA: Institute for Legislative Action

NRA-ILA GRASSROOTS VOLUME 24, NUMBER 14

Freedom Wins! Pro-Second Amendment Judge Will Join U.S. Supreme Court
NEWS
Freedom Wins! Pro-Second Amendment Judge Will Join U.S. Supreme Court
On Friday, the U.S. Senate voted to confirm Neil M. Gorsuch to the U.S. Supreme Court. Judge Gorsuch’s nomination was heavily backed by the NRA, both because of the pro-Second Amendment views expressed in his judicial writings and his originalist approach to jurisprudence. Justice Antonin Scalia exemplified originalism in his landmark Heller opinion in 2008 that recognized the Second Amendment protects an individual right grounded in the principle of self-defense.
West Virginia Congressman Introduces Important Pro-Gun Legislation
LEGAL & LEGISLATION  NEWS  SECOND AMENDMENT
West Virginia Congressman Introduces Important Pro-Gun Legislation
On Thursday, Rep. Evan Jenkins (R-WV) introduced the “Protecting the Second Amendment Act,” H.R. 1976. This legislation would amend the Gun Control Act (GCA) to permanently prohibit executive actions like the Southwestern Border states’ rifle sales reporting initiative launched under the Obama administration. The bill states that no federal firearm licensee (FFL) could be subject to any generalized or ongoing reporting requirement based on the FFL’s geographic location or on sales of multiple long guns.
Canadian Gun Controllers Adopt Misleading Tactic on Children and Firearms
NEWS  SECOND AMENDMENT
Canadian Gun Controllers Adopt Misleading Tactic on Children and Firearms
The U.S. and Canada share much, not the least of which are a common colonial heritage and a robust appreciation for the outdoors. Unfortunately, it appears Canadian public health researchers and gun control advocates share a regrettable distinction with their U.S. counterparts; a willingness to use misleading statistics on childhood firearms-related injuries to advance an anti-gun agenda.
Firearms Purchases Still Trending Up
NEWS  SECOND AMENDMENT
Firearms Purchases Still Trending Up
We’ve covered – and debunked – the claims that firearms sales are significantly declining under the Trump Administration.  The latest FBI report on NICS checks for March 2017 should help put any lingering claims about the “Trump Slump” to bed.
NRA-ILA Grassroots State of the Union
NEWS  TAKE ACTION
NRA-ILA Grassroots State of the Union
Join NRA-ILA Grassroots Director Glen Caroline during NRA’s Annual Meetings and Exhibits in Atlanta, Georgia, for a FREE briefing on NRA-ILA’s grassroots successes in the 2016 elections and how those lessons learned can be applied to defending your rights moving ahead.  Glen will also be discussing modifications & improvements to NRA-ILA’s Grassroots programs to better meet the needs of today’s Second Amendment activists.
Attend NRA-ILA Collegiate Leadership Conference in Atlanta!
NEWS  TAKE ACTION
Attend NRA-ILA Collegiate Leadership Conference in Atlanta!
All college students and recent graduates are welcome to join NRA-ILA Grassroots staff for our third annual Collegiate Leadership Conference during NRA’s Annual Meetings and Exhibits in Atlanta, Georgia (admission is FREE). In addition to Grassroots staff, attendees will hear from a panel of pro-gun student activists who will share their successes in organizing in support of the Second Amendment on campus. Participants will also have the chance to network with other students, build a regional activism plan, and talk with NRA-ILA staff about job opportunities.
Attend Firearms Law Seminar in Atlanta
NEWS  GUN LAWS  SECOND AMENDMENT
Attend Firearms Law Seminar in Atlanta
The Annual National Firearms Law Seminar will be held on Friday, April 28, 2017 as part of the NRA Annual Meetings. The gold standard in firearms law classes, this day-long seminar provides legal instruction for attorneys and all others interested in Second Amendment law. CLE credit for all states is available.

VIDEOS

Chris W. Cox: NRA's Message to the Mainstream Media
Chris W. Cox: NRA’s Message to the Mainstream Media
NRA-ILA Executive Director Chris W. Cox delivers a message to the members of the mainstream media: The NRA will expose your attempts to use the First Amendment to destroy the Second Amendment. Cox also comments on the NRA’s recent victory in the confirmation of Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.
Why The Media Is Failing
Why The Media Is Failing
Wayne LaPierre explains why the news media has never been less trusted, less credible or less respected. If the fate of freedom had rested in their hands, our nation would have fallen long ago. Instead, Americans placed their faith with the most trusted defender of individual freedom in American history. The National Rifle Association of America is Freedom’s Safest Place.
NRA-ILA Leadership Forum
NRA-ILA Leadership Forum
NRA-ILA’s annual Leadership Forum is one of the most politically significant and popular events in the country, featuring our nation’s top Second Amendment leaders in government, the media, and the entertainment industry. The Forum is also a must-stop for candidates seeking the highest levels of elected office – including governor, congressman, Senator, or President of the United States.
Get your tickets for the The 146th NRA Annual Meetings and Exhibits in Atlanta, Georgia
Get your tickets for the The 146th NRA Annual Meetings and Exhibits in Atlanta, Georgia
The 146th NRA Annual Meetings and Exhibits in Atlanta, Georgia will be attended by over 80,000 patriots, feature 800+ exhibitors, and include a jam-packed schedule of seminars, workshops, special events and celebrity meet and greets! You don’t want to miss out on this exciting celebration of freedom.
Join us for the 11th annual Women's Leadership Forum and Luncheon
Join us for the 11th annual Women’s Leadership Forum and Luncheon
Connected by their commitment to freedom, women from all walks of life come together at the NRA Women’s Leadership Forum Luncheon & Auction. The Women’s Leadership Forum is a coalition of philanthropic women united with the mission of infusing new enthusiasm, new excitement, new leaders and new opportunities into the fight for Second Amendment freedoms. Please join the Women’s Leadership Forum Co-Chairs Susan LaPierre and Janet Nyce for an exciting day of auctions, food and entertainment. Held on Friday, April 28 at the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta, Georgia, the 11th Annual Women’s Leadership Forum Luncheon & Auction will be the best event yet!
NRA Country Jam: Story Behind the Song
NRA Country Jam: Story Behind the Song
NRA Country is known for delivering great country music entertainment, and this year will not disappoint! Come hear Chris Janson, Josh Thompson, Lindsay Ell, and Cary Barlowe tell the stories behind their songs, and get a glimpse of what it’s like to be a songwriter in Nashville.

STATE GRASSROOTS ROUND-UP

California California
California: “Shall Issue” Legislation Defeated in Committee
Florida Florida
Florida Action Report! 6 Wins for Gun Owners on Wednesday 4/5-7/2017
Nevada Nevada
Free NRA-ILA Grassroots Meetings in Nevada

Illinois Democrats Line Up to Run for Governor Written by John Biver From IFA

Illinois Democrats Line Up to Run for Governor

Written by John Biver  From IFA
Twenty months is a long time in politics. Like it or not, here in Illinois, that is how long the campaign for governor will be. In November 2018, Illinoisans will once again be going to the polls to elect or re-elect someone to run the executive branch — and that race is already underway. There are five Democrats who have announced their candidacy, and several more are rumored to be considering a run.
On the Republican side, it is assumed that Republican Governor Bruce Rauner will stand for reelection. And as of yet he doesn’t appear to have any primary challengers. If Rauner is the GOP nominee, the election will obviously be a referendum on his leadership. With the continuing budget and fiscal crisis in Illinois, Rauner has a lot of work to do to regain the trust of the voters.
Headlines such as this are common these days: “Rauner job-approval rating hits record low.”
Rauner and his fellow Republicans have spent the last two years making the very public case that Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan (D-Chicago) is the problem. The real problem, however, is that though Mike Madigan’s approval ratings are worse than Rauner’s, Madigan isn’t running for governor.
Who is running? In alphabetical order, here are the declared Democratic candidates:

  • Daniel Biss of Evanston, math teacher, former state representative, currently a state senator.
  • Bob Daiber of Marine, former teacher, current Madison County Regional Superintendent of Schools.
  • Chris Kennedy of Kenilworth, a real estate investor, former Chairman of the University of Illinois Board of Trustees and member of the Kennedy family.
  • Alex Paterakis of Vernon Hills, civil engineer and business owner.
  • Ameya Pawar of Chicago, where he is an alderman.

Among those also considering a run:

  • Robin Kelly (D-Chicago) U.S. Representative from the 2nd Congressional District.
  • J. B. Pritzker, billionaire venture capitalist, philanthropist and attorney from Chicago.
  • Kwame Raoul (D-Chicago) State Senator from the 13th Senate District.

In this article we’ll introduce state State Senator Daniel Biss. Future articles will introduce the other candidates listed above.
State Senator Daniel Biss
Daniel Biss is young — only 39. He lives in Evanston with his wife and two children. He holds degrees from Harvard and MIT, and has taught math at the University of Chicago. He served a term in the Illinois state house before moving to the senate in 2013.
Biss has been a critic of both Governor Rauner and Speaker Madigan. The Rauner criticism is to be expected. The Chicago Tribune’s Rick Pearson reported some of what Biss has said about Madigan:

Asked directly in a Facebook question about Madigan, who is Rauner’s chief political nemesis, Biss sought to create some distance from the House speaker, who also chairs the state Democratic Party.
“I’ve been clear for a long time that Madigan’s been there too long,” Biss said. Madigan has been speaker for 32 of the past 34 years. Biss noted that he early on sponsored a measure to limit how long a legislative leader can serve.
At the same time, Biss said focusing on clashing personalities in Springfield such as Madigan and Rauner helps obscure the need for a comprehensive plan to restore Illinois’ economy and finances.

On the latter note, Biss has been published in academic journals such as the Annals of Mathematics. Might someone who understands math be just what Illinois needs to fix the fiscal mess? A statement announcing his candidacy included this:

“Daniel isn’t a millionaire or part of any political machine. As a math professor and legislator, Daniel has spent his career finding solutions to complex problems.”

Spending too much money and over-promising lavish benefits and pensions for public sector workers isn’t complex, but it is a math problem. While understanding mathematics is not the same as understanding economics, it can be helpful.
In the video on his homepage, Biss says that Illinois’ fiscal problems are solvable. We get more than a hint about his “big idea” solution: “millionaires and billionaires are not paying their fair share – so the burden is shifted to the rest of us” … “it’s time to make the billionaires pay.”
After reading that, few will be surprised to learn that according to news reports, Biss is competing for votes in the “progressive wing” of the Democratic Party. We all know what that means: he’s all in on the radical left-wing Democratic Party Platform.
“We’re building a movement more powerful than money and the machine,” his website says, “Join us.”
Feel the Bern?
Also from his website:

“People across Illinois are hurting, and it’s time to be honest about why. For too long, the rich, special interests and political insiders have made decisions about us, without us. They have set up a system that benefits them, and the rest of us are paying the price.”

Earlier this year, Senator Biss introduced a resolution condemning the temporary refugee order signed by President Donald Trump, calling it “cruel, unnecessary, and bigoted…”.  Biss’ resolution also called Trump’s temporary ban “malicious and arbitrary.”
During the previous session of the Illinois General Assembly (2015-2016), Senator Biss voted to support legislation to force pro-life medical workers to give referrals to abortion providers (SB 1564), and he also voted to support legislation censoring professional therapists from counseling minors who struggle with same-sex attraction and gender confusion (HB 217).
In 2013, Senator Biss voted to support legislation to redefine marriage (SB 10), to legalize “medical” marijuana (HB 1), and to mandate that public schools, grades 6-12 teach “comprehensive sex education.”  To his credit, however, he did vote against gambling expansion and a Chicago casino in 2013.
Recently, Senator Biss applauded legislation to legalize recreational marijuana in Illinois, saying:

It’s the right criminal justice policy, it’s right from the point of view of fairness, and it’s right for the state’s bottom line.

The state senate seat that Daniel Biss holds is up for reelection in 2018, so he will have to choose which office to run for as the filing deadlines approach later this year.

Trump News April 14, 2017

The White House
 

FEATURED
President Trump's Weekly Address
WHITE HOUSE MEMO
This is a season of hope for millions of Americans. This week, Jewish families celebrate Passover and retell the story of God’s deliverance of the Jewish people. This Easter Sunday, Christians celebrate the resurrection of Christ and the promise of eternal salvation. America is a Nation of believers. As long as we have faith in each other, and trust in God, we will succeed!
OVAL OFFICE HIGHLIGHTS
President Donald J. Trump meets with I-85 bridge first responders.
Read More

President Trump signs H.J.Res. 67 into law.
Read More
President Trump signs H.J.Res. 43 into law.
Read More
WHITE HOUSE UPDATES
Photo of the Day:

Spring flowers outside the South Portico of the White House on April 12th, 2017. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead).
View Photo

Retweet

Retweet
President Trump Welcomes NATO Secretary General Stoltenberg to the White House.
Read More
PRESS ROOM
Watch yesterday’s press briefing with Sean Spicer:

Read Transcript
NEWS REPORTS
  • Daily Signal: “Hefty Drop in Border Arrests a Credit to Trump’s Enforcement of US Law”
    Read More
  • The Hill: “EPA head: Obama created false choice ‘between jobs and the environment'”
    Read More

Even If You Voted, Your Job’s Not Over

Even If You Voted, Your Job’s Not Over  By Grant Spooner 4/13/2016
By the time many of you read this, you would have had the opportunity to vote April 4, or before, for one or more races in your communities.
I would like to say, “many of you voted,” but, generally that’s not the case in a consolidated election, which features the most local races you can get: sanitary districts; lighting districts, townships, school districts and park districts, as well as municipal elections.

I always found that interesting: The races that have the most direct influence on our everyday lives often have the lowest turnout – by far.
Let’s look at it another way: Each of these races often has a line on your property tax bill, meaning they get a share of the pie each tax season. They use those tax revenues to operate for the year, and even though each of them has meetings open the public, again, we often are sitting at home watching talent shows or binging on Netflix feasts.
When we get our bills, we shake our heads and say, “This is outrageous! My taxes are too high!” Or at least we did before the recession hit and put many of our bank-owned homes underwater financially.
Even now, I hear commercials and see stories about groups urging people to vote against tax increases. Then I’ll think, OK, yeah, taxes are too high, but what is the choice? Cutting things like crazy? I’m certain there is waste is just about any taxing body. But enough to hold or even cut taxes? http://willcountynews.com/2017/04/13/rauner-attempted-to-bring-union-costs-more-in-line-with-what-illinoisans-can-afford/
Could I tell you where? If we paid attention to every taxing body, we probably could. If we found the waste, would cutting it be enough to hold down our taxes? Or, would increases in the cost of doing business – labor, insurance costs, general cost of living – mean we need to ante up a little more, or at least explain why taxes are what they are?
The point here is we often say taxes are too high, government is wasting, etc., without any real knowledge of what the heck they are doing and why. One of the best posts I saw on Facebook recently was a response to an official saying government should be run by like a business, and constituents are the customers.
The response? We, the constituents, are the BOARD OF DIRECTORS, not customers. And you, government dude, work for us.
The problem is, once we vote – or worse, don’t vote – we turn over the reins, and let them do whatever they want.
On a local level, that means we don’t attend meetings, and often, we don’t let our representatives know if we disagree, at a meeting or otherwise. Can you imagine hiring a contractor do redo your home and giving them free run of the place?
But we have. Do you know how we got into a pension crisis in the state? The state Legislature set up the rules for local school boards, which then voted on pension amounts for teachers and administrators, and sent the bill back to Springfield.
I know, right? http://willcountynews.com/2017/04/09/illinois-has-a-74-billion-debt-hole-for-teacher-pensions-and-the-third-party-payer-problem-helps-explain-why/
But do you attend your local school board meetings to see them vote on such things? Even though school districts generally account for the highest portion of your tax bills? Do you know why?
Do you know why your son or daughter comes home the first day of school with yet another new way of doing math? You ask the teacher, and many times, they just throw up their hands and say, it’s the will of federal and/or state government officials, many who have not been in a classroom since they graduated.
Now, here’s a question: If you voted in the April 4 election, do you know how the person you voted for will represent you on issues such as these? I hope you do.
If you didn’t vote, I’ll assume you don’t care. If not, you’ll be getting those property tax bills in several weeks. Have fun with that. http://willcountynews.com/2017/04/12/property-taxes-increase-property-value-decrease/
 
 
 

Trump News April 13, 2017

The White House
 

WHITE HOUSE MEMO
Today, President Donald J. Trump will meet with first responders who courageously jumped into action during the I-85 bridge collapse in Atlanta, and thank them for their service. Our first responders are the bravest among us, and President Trump is behind them 100%.
MORNING:

  • 11:00AM: President Trump signs H.J.Res. 43

AFTERNOON:

  • 2:00PM: President Trump meets with the I-85 bridge first responders – Watch LIVE
GET INVOLVED
President Trump is committed to making our government more accountable to you, the American people. President Trump wants to hear your ideas on how government can be more efficient and effective.
Give YOUR input here.
OVAL OFFICE HIGHLIGHTS
President Trump holds a joint press conference with NATO Secretary General Stoltenberg.
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WHITE HOUSE UPDATES
Photo of the Day:

President Donald J. Trump and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg walk along the Colonnade at the White House. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead).
View Photo

Retweet
President Trump: Creating an Efficient, Effective and Accountable Federal Government.
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WHITE HOUSE HISTORY

The White House Easter Egg Roll is a tradition that dates back to 1878, making it one of the oldest annual events in White House history. This year’s Easter Egg Roll will be held on Monday, April 17th. Tune in here on Monday to watch all the festivities of the day as the White House hosts the 139th Easter Egg Roll.
(President Harding at the South Portico of the White House attending the Easter Egg Roll. Library of Congress Online Catalog). View Photo
PRESS ROOM
Today’s press briefing will take place at 1:00PM ET in the White House Briefing Room with Press Secretary Sean Spicer. Watch it LIVE here.
NEWS REPORTS
  • Washington Examiner: “NATO chief: Allied spending up $10 billion because of Trump”
    Read More
  • Breitbart: “Trump Admin Releases ‘Drain the Swamp’ Guidance to Restructure the Federal Government”
    Read More
  • Washington Examiner: “Gorsuch begins first day at Supreme Court”
    Read More

Rauner attempted to bring union costs more in line with what Illinoisans can afford

Illinois Supreme Court’s denial of quicker AFSCME appeal means taxpayers still on the hook for millions each month
A recent Illinois Supreme Court order allows AFSCME to continue to stall implementation of a contract for state workers. For each month the contract is not in effect, taxpayers pay an additional $35 million to $40 million in health care costs alone.

AFSCME obstructed progress for months on a new contract for state workers. Whether AFSCME and the state are at impasse in negotiations now sits with the Illinois courts – and the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision not to take a direct appeal of the case means taxpayers must continue to pay an additional $35 million to $40 million each month in health care costs alone.
A recent Illinois Supreme Court order allows the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees to continue to stall implementation of a contract for state workers, and it will cost state taxpayers millions. For each month the contract is not in effect, taxpayers pay an additional $35 million to $40 million in health care cost alone.
Those burdensome costs led Gov. Bruce Rauner to file a motion asking the Illinois Supreme Court to more quickly determine whether the state and AFSCME are at impasse in their negotiations over a new contract.
The state labor board determined in November 2016 that contract negotiations between the state and AFSCME were at impasse, or deadlock. That meant the governor could implement his last, best offer to the union.
But instead, AFSCME ran to multiple state courts, seeking a decision to overturn the labor board’s impasse determination. The case currently sits before the Fourth District Appellate Court, and it could be months before that court decides whether the parties are at impasse.
In the meantime, the court has stayed the labor board’s decision, meaning the governor cannot implement his contract offer. This means the state is forced to continue paying AFSCME workers under the terms of the expired contract, which includes monthly health care costs $35 million to $40 million higher than under the state’s proposed contract.
Seeking a more timely resolution, Rauner filed a motion requesting a direct appeal to the state Supreme Court. Instead of waiting for the Fourth District to issue an opinion, the case would be transferred immediately to the state’s highest court.
A quicker resolution of the appeals process potentially would have saved the state millions of dollars and put an end to the union’s stall tactics. But despite the fact both parties know the state Supreme Court will ultimately decide the case, AFSCME opposed Rauner’s motion for a direct appeal to the Supreme Court.
Obstructionist tactics were the theme of the union’s “negotiating” strategy. According to an administrative law judge with the Illinois Labor Relations Board, AFSCME’s approach to negotiations was “atypical.” She added, “… the [u]nion’s conduct calls into question its commitment to reaching an agreement through bargaining.”
Throughout negotiations, Rauner attempted to bring union costs more in line with what Illinoisans can afford. But AFSCME refused to compromise and instead continued to demand wage and benefit increases that would cost the state an additional $3 billion.
The longer it takes for the impasse decision to move through the courts, the longer Illinois taxpayers will be on the hook for millions of dollars the state simply does not have.

TAGS: AFSCME: American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees, Bruce Rauner, state worker pay

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