Discussion:
Andy Brehm: Tim Walz has been a disaster for the once-thriving Minnesota
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useapen
2024-09-16 07:44:39 UTC
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Minnesotans are proud of their state, and there’s a lot of understandable
excitement here surrounding Vice President Kamala Harris’ selection of our
governor, Tim Walz, as her running mate. During his first term as governor
and time representing Minnesota’s 1st Congressional District in
Washington, the then-moderate and sensible Walz was held in high regard,
even by many Republicans such as me.

But in 2020, motivated to get the national attention he has now attained,
Gov. Walz tacked hard to the political portside. The strategy clearly
worked well careerwise for him, but it has been a disaster for the once-
thriving Land of 10,000 Lakes.

Walz faced his first major leadership test during the riots that ensued in
Minneapolis and St. Paul after the police killing of George Floyd. To say
Walz failed is generous. I lived in downtown Minneapolis at the time and
watched as our beautiful city burned for days without a response from our
state’s chief executive. Only after some $500 million in damage and
countless businesses destroyed did Walz call in the National Guard to
restore order. That impotent response — which sent a message to Minnesota
criminals that they can do as they please — has had a lasting impact on
the Twin Cities, which remain plagued by crime and shells of what they
once were.

Thanks to ineffective GOP candidates at the top of our ticket here in
2022, Walz was reelected, with Democrats taking complete control of
Minnesota’s House and Senate by thin margins for the first time in years.
Although he ran promising moderation during his second term on the theme
of “One Minnesota,” Walz governed like California Gov. Gavin Newsom in a
flannel shirt.

Walz and his Democratic allies in the state legislature spent the state’s
entire $18 billion surplus in 2023, increasing the state budget by an
unsustainable 40%. And while Minnesota has never been particularly
friendly to private enterprise and taxpayers, Walz pushed through a
panoply of progressive business regulations that have made the North Star
State economically uncompetitive. As a result, just like in California,
Minnesota is seeing an exodus of residents and business investment.
Minnesota’s loss of residents in 2022 and 2023 was more severe than 34 out
of 50 other states. And according to the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce,
from 2020 through 2022, Minnesota-based companies invested about $10.6
billion in projects outside of the state while corporations headquartered
elsewhere invested just $4 billion here, leaving a $6.6 billion “net
investment deficit” that hinders Minnesota’s economic growth. Walz has
never owned or worked in a private business, and it shows.

Walz has also pushed culturally transformative and extreme legislation
that would make California liberals blush. A hallmark of his legislative
efforts was the evisceration of parental rights on multiple sensitive
issues. Walz eliminated all parental notification laws regarding abortion;
parents of a pregnant 15-year-old can be left completely in the dark about
even high-risk abortion procedures, which Walz helped legalize — without
restriction — up to the ninth month of pregnancy. He also enacted
legislation making Minnesota a refuge for children from other states who
can come here to receive on-demand puberty blockers, hormone therapies and
irreversible sex-change surgeries — even over the objections of a parent.

Harris’ largest liability is that she’s too liberal for America’s center-
right electorate. In her attempt to win the presidency in 2020, she said a
lot of wild things chronicled well on social media. By picking the far-
left Walz as her running mate, she is signaling to the nation that she
meant them.

Andy Brehm resides in St. Paul, Minnesota, and is a corporate attorney.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/2024/08/12/opinion-tim-walz-minnesota-
liberal-record/
pothead
2024-09-16 12:35:01 UTC
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Post by useapen
Minnesotans are proud of their state, and there’s a lot of understandable
excitement here surrounding Vice President Kamala Harris’ selection of our
governor, Tim Walz, as her running mate. During his first term as governor
and time representing Minnesota’s 1st Congressional District in
Washington, the then-moderate and sensible Walz was held in high regard,
even by many Republicans such as me.
But in 2020, motivated to get the national attention he has now attained,
Gov. Walz tacked hard to the political portside. The strategy clearly
worked well careerwise for him, but it has been a disaster for the once-
thriving Land of 10,000 Lakes.
Walz faced his first major leadership test during the riots that ensued in
Minneapolis and St. Paul after the police killing of George Floyd. To say
Walz failed is generous. I lived in downtown Minneapolis at the time and
watched as our beautiful city burned for days without a response from our
state’s chief executive. Only after some $500 million in damage and
countless businesses destroyed did Walz call in the National Guard to
restore order. That impotent response — which sent a message to Minnesota
criminals that they can do as they please — has had a lasting impact on
the Twin Cities, which remain plagued by crime and shells of what they
once were.
Thanks to ineffective GOP candidates at the top of our ticket here in
2022, Walz was reelected, with Democrats taking complete control of
Minnesota’s House and Senate by thin margins for the first time in years.
Although he ran promising moderation during his second term on the theme
of “One Minnesota,” Walz governed like California Gov. Gavin Newsom in a
flannel shirt.
Walz and his Democratic allies in the state legislature spent the state’s
entire $18 billion surplus in 2023, increasing the state budget by an
unsustainable 40%. And while Minnesota has never been particularly
friendly to private enterprise and taxpayers, Walz pushed through a
panoply of progressive business regulations that have made the North Star
State economically uncompetitive. As a result, just like in California,
Minnesota is seeing an exodus of residents and business investment.
Minnesota’s loss of residents in 2022 and 2023 was more severe than 34 out
of 50 other states. And according to the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce,
from 2020 through 2022, Minnesota-based companies invested about $10.6
billion in projects outside of the state while corporations headquartered
elsewhere invested just $4 billion here, leaving a $6.6 billion “net
investment deficit” that hinders Minnesota’s economic growth. Walz has
never owned or worked in a private business, and it shows.
Walz has also pushed culturally transformative and extreme legislation
that would make California liberals blush. A hallmark of his legislative
efforts was the evisceration of parental rights on multiple sensitive
issues. Walz eliminated all parental notification laws regarding abortion;
parents of a pregnant 15-year-old can be left completely in the dark about
even high-risk abortion procedures, which Walz helped legalize — without
restriction — up to the ninth month of pregnancy. He also enacted
legislation making Minnesota a refuge for children from other states who
can come here to receive on-demand puberty blockers, hormone therapies and
irreversible sex-change surgeries — even over the objections of a parent.
Harris’ largest liability is that she’s too liberal for America’s center-
right electorate. In her attempt to win the presidency in 2020, she said a
lot of wild things chronicled well on social media. By picking the far-
left Walz as her running mate, she is signaling to the nation that she
meant them.
Andy Brehm resides in St. Paul, Minnesota, and is a corporate attorney.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2024/08/12/opinion-tim-walz-minnesota-
liberal-record/
And should the Harris/Walz ticket win the type of destruction that Minnesota is enduring will be
coming to a town near you.
--
pothead
Kamala Harris Word Salad Special Of The Day
Served Complete With Venn Diagram Dressing
Mitchell Holman
2024-09-16 13:26:38 UTC
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Permalink
Post by pothead
Minnesotans are proud of their state, and there’s a lot of
understandable excitement here surrounding Vice President Kamala
Harris’ selection of our governor, Tim Walz, as her running mate.
During his first term as governor and time representing Minnesota’s
1st Congressional District in Washington, the then-moderate and
sensible Walz was held in high regard, even by many Republicans such
as me.
But in 2020, motivated to get the national attention he has now
attained, Gov. Walz tacked hard to the political portside. The
strategy clearly worked well careerwise for him, but it has been a
disaster for the once- thriving Land of 10,000 Lakes.
Walz faced his first major leadership test during the riots that
ensued in Minneapolis and St. Paul after the police killing of George
Floyd. To say Walz failed is generous. I lived in downtown
Minneapolis at the time and watched as our beautiful city burned for
days without a response from our state’s chief executive. Only after
some $500 million in damage and countless businesses destroyed did
Walz call in the National Guard to restore order. That impotent
response — which sent a message to Minnesota criminals that they can
do as they please — has had a lasting impact on the Twin Cities,
which remain plagued by crime and shells of what they once were.
Thanks to ineffective GOP candidates at the top of our ticket here in
2022, Walz was reelected, with Democrats taking complete control of
Minnesota’s House and Senate by thin margins for the first time in
years. Although he ran promising moderation during his second term on
the theme of “One Minnesota,” Walz governed like California Gov.
Gavin Newsom in a flannel shirt.
Walz and his Democratic allies in the state legislature spent the
state’s entire $18 billion surplus in 2023, increasing the state
budget by an unsustainable 40%. And while Minnesota has never been
particularly friendly to private enterprise and taxpayers, Walz
pushed through a panoply of progressive business regulations that
have made the North Star State economically uncompetitive. As a
result, just like in California, Minnesota is seeing an exodus of
residents and business investment. Minnesota’s loss of residents in
2022 and 2023 was more severe than 34 out of 50 other states. And
according to the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce, from 2020 through
2022, Minnesota-based companies invested about $10.6 billion in
projects outside of the state while corporations headquartered
elsewhere invested just $4 billion here, leaving a $6.6 billion “net
investment deficit” that hinders Minnesota’s economic growth. Walz
has never owned or worked in a private business, and it shows.
Walz has also pushed culturally transformative and extreme
legislation that would make California liberals blush. A hallmark of
his legislative efforts was the evisceration of parental rights on
multiple sensitive issues. Walz eliminated all parental notification
laws regarding abortion; parents of a pregnant 15-year-old can be
left completely in the dark about even high-risk abortion procedures,
which Walz helped legalize — without restriction — up to the ninth
month of pregnancy. He also enacted legislation making Minnesota a
refuge for children from other states who can come here to receive
on-demand puberty blockers, hormone therapies and irreversible
sex-change surgeries — even over the objections of a parent.
Harris’ largest liability is that she’s too liberal for America’s
center- right electorate. In her attempt to win the presidency in
2020, she said a lot of wild things chronicled well on social media.
By picking the far- left Walz as her running mate, she is signaling
to the nation that she meant them.
Andy Brehm resides in St. Paul, Minnesota, and is a corporate
attorney.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2024/08/12/opinion-tim-walz-minnesota-
liberal-record/
And should the Harris/Walz ticket win the type of destruction that
Minnesota is enduring will be coming to a town near you.
From your own Fox News:


Minnesota is among the best states in US
By FOX 9 May 9, 2024

MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) - U.S. News &
World Report named Minnesota as one
of the best states in the nation.

The ranking uses 70 metrics and
thousands of data points to analyze
how states are doing in various
categories, such as education,
healthcare, economy, crime and
corrections, infrastructure, fiscal
stability, natural environment, and
opportunity. The states are ranked
based on their overall score and
receive rankings in individual
categories.


Here’s how Minnesota ranked in
the following categories:

Second in natural environment
Seventh in fiscal stability
Ninth in infrastructure
12th in opportunity
16th in health care
17th in education
22nd in crime and corrections
26th in economy
https://www.fox9.com/news/minnesota-top-10-best-states-in-us

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