Friday, October 17, 2025

Andy Ogles’ Campaign Files Bleak Financial Report

by Eli Motycka,  Nashville Scene, Oct 16, 2025- An Oct. 15 quarterly report from Republican U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles shows mounting debt and weak fundraising just when his reelection bid needs a boost. Ogles reported $57,916 on hand against $70,368 in campaign debt ($20,000 of which is a personal loan, while Ogles owes the rest to firm Holtzman Vogel) through Sept. 30. Columbia Mayor Chaz Molder, a Democrat, and Tennessee Agriculture Commissioner Charlie Hatch, a Republican, are both launching bids to unseat Ogles, a Trump acolyte who has held the 5th Congressional District seat since 2023.

Legitimate challengers in the primary and general ensure a daunting and expensive year for Ogles....Ogles raised roughly $39,000 this quarter from donors and another $25,500 from PACs ...The Ogles campaign spent $57,507 between July 1 and Sept. 30. Almost $50,000 went toward GOP political consultants, some of which may be pass-throughs for direct ad buys. Other various expenses include Ogles’ 21 Uber rides, nearly $700 in Chipotle receipts and a $2,227 bill at D.C.’s ritzy Capitol Hill Club. (read more)

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Dem Candidate Chaz Molder Has 13 Times Andy Ogles Current War Chest.

by Vivian Jones, The Tennessean, Oct. 11, 2025 - Columbia Mayor Chaz Molder, the Democrat challenging U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles for his seat in Congress next year, announced an eye-popping fundraising haul this week.

In the first four weeks of his campaign, Molder raised $785,000, according to a release from his campaign. That's about one-third of the total fundraising Ogles has achieved since he first declared his candidacy for Congress three years ago, and more than 13 times Ogles' current war chest.

Ogles had just over $59,400 cash on hand as of June 30, according to Federal Election Commission disclosures. (read more)

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Thursday, October 16, 2025

Take a Stand this Saturday at the No Kings protest

 

Time: Saturday, October 18, 10am – 12pm CDT

Location: 667 James Robertson Pkwy, Nashville, TN 37219, Map

by Rod Williams, Oct. 16, 2025- I will be participating in the No Kings protest this Saturday from 10Am to 12 noon here in Nashville. I attended the other two such protests in Nashville. I urge all freedom-loving people to attend. 

I wish the opposition to Trump was more of a united front effort than it is. That it is not is not the fault of the organizers, however, but Republicans and independents who are not sufficiently alarmed about Trump's authoritarianism. 

At the other two events I attended, the first at Centennial Park in April and the other in June at the Bicentennial Mall, the number of offensive far left or progressive displays of support for causes was at a minimum. Most signs and displays were on the theme of denouncing Trump's abuse of power and disregard for the rule of law.

If you go, of course, you will see some pro-abortion signs and some Mexican flags, and maybe a couple of Palestinian flags and some pro-gay stuff. I am not comfortable marching with people supporting those causes. Any mass movement, however, is going to attract a fringe with its own agenda. During the Tea Party days, we saw some of the same, where some people promoted their own cause, either not on-topic or some even embarrassing. Such is the nature of mass movements. Don't let that stop you from taking part. 

Some of the stuff, such as the drum circles and the call and response, "no justice-no peace," and such, turns me off, but I am not going to let that stop me from attending. I just won't participate in that. I will attend the rally, but won't sing in the choir. I recognize that many of the participants are not my kind of people, yet sometimes you just have to rub shoulders with the unsavory for the greater good.

I think these mass protests are important. Apparently, Donald Trump thinks they are important also because he is upping the ante in trying to stifle them.  He has sent a letter to police departments saying the nationwide No Kings protest may be a cover for terrorist networks.  His administration is calling them "hate America' rallies. A big turnout will show that people are not cowered. 

I suspect Nashville's event and most to be peaceful, but would not be surprised to see violence in cities like Chicago and Portland and maybe some others. I hope everyone remains peaceful. Trump supporters may show up and counter-protest and the more radical among No Kings protestors, the Antifa types, may engage the pro-Trump people. If such occurs, then the resulting violence may be the excuse Trump needs to invoke the Insurrection Act. That can not deter us from speaking out. If we don't speak out because Trump may increase his authoritarianism, he has already won. 


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Hitler Loving Young Republicans.

 

by Rod Williams, Oct.16, 2025- I find the recently leaked racist and Hitler-praising text exchange between Young Republican leaders disgusting. There is no way to put a good spin on it. 

I remember when I was in high school, in response to a lame joke, one would say, "That is about as funny as a truckload of dead babies." That is pretty offensive, but we thought it was funny. Also, I know that smartass kids, mostly boys, I assume, will try to outdo each other in being gross and offensive. One could assume there is some of that going on here, but the people on this text chain are not high school boys.  Don't let the name Young Republicans fool you. Young Republicans is the Republican organization for Republicans between the age of 18 and 40. College Republicans is a separate organization. 

The people in this text chain were not just random young nobody Republicans. People on the chat chain that included the offensive texts are leaders of the Young Republicans and some are influential people. They include the vice chair of the Kansas Young Republicans, the former chair and current vice chair of the New York Young Republicans and others. Michael Bartels is one of the people in the chat. He serves as a senior adviser in the office of general counsel within the U.S. Small Business Administration. Others hold positions within the party or government.

The people they are jokingly talking about sending to the gas chamber are other Republicans. The participants in the chat are Trumpy Republicans talking about wrestling control of the national Young Republican organization away from more normie Republicans.

Do I think these people really want to send people to the gas chamber and that they really love Hitler? No, I don't. I am appalled, however, that it is considered acceptable or cool or funny to talk about sending people to the gas chamber and to say, "I love Hitler."  I am appalled that this is the culture of today's Republican Party.  I think out of 2900 pages of text over an eighth-month period, some people said some really stupid and really disgusting things. However, they were speaking in a group chat where that type of thing is not found alarming and is not immediately denounced. Do I think the people who posted the offensive text should be removed from positions of leadership in the Republican Party, and their statements should be condemned? Absolutely.

Some are being punished, and the YR's texting these things are being denounced.  Peter Giunta is the one who posted the "I love Hitler" comment. He was chief of staff to New York Assemblyman Mike Reilly but has now been fired due to that post. The Kansas Republican Party disbanded the Kansas Young Republicans. The Young Republican National Federation said on X it's "appalled by the vile and inexcusable language revealed" in the report. "Such behavior is disgraceful, unbecoming of any Republican, and stands in direct opposition to the values our movement represents." 

To read more about this, see: 


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Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Jack Johnson's Boots and Jeans, BBQ and Beans, Sunday Oct. 19.

 


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Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Hatcher to Challenge Ogles in GOP Primary for 5th Congressional District

Charlie Hatcher. (Credit: Erik Schelzig)
From AI Overview of Charlie Hatcher, Oct. 14, 2025-As of October 2025, Charlie Hatcher is a Republican candidate for Tennessee's 5th Congressional District and the former Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Agriculture. 

Political career

Congressional run: Hatcher announced on October 14, 2025, that he would challenge incumbent U.S. Representative Andy Ogles in the Republican primary for the 5th Congressional District.

Agriculture Commissioner: Hatcher served as Tennessee's 38th Commissioner of Agriculture from January 2019 until September 30, 2025. He was appointed by Governor Bill Lee and was one of his initial cabinet selections.

State Veterinarian: Prior to his appointment as Commissioner, Hatcher was the state veterinarian for the Tennessee Department of Agriculture for ten years. 

Background and personal life

Veterinarian: Hatcher earned his Doctorate of Veterinary Medicine from the University of Tennessee in 1984. He also founded Rock-N-Country Veterinary Services in College Grove in 1993, a practice now managed by his daughter, Jennifer.

Family Farm: He is a fifth-generation Tennessee farmer whose family has operated a farm in Williamson County since 1831.

Hatcher Family Dairy: He and his family are well-known in the dairy industry for the Hatcher Family Dairy, which began bottling its own milk in 2007. His son, Charles, currently serves as the business's president. 

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Monday, October 13, 2025

Harwood Salon (formerly The Bastiat Society) Presents Dr. Ryan Yonk on The China Dilemma, Wed. Oct. 13

 


From Harwood Salon - Join us on Wednesday, October 15, at 6 p.m. CT for an event with Dr. Ryan Yonk, Director of Education and Senior Research Fellow at AIER.

Dr. Ryan Yonk explores the complexities of U.S.-China relations through the lens of public choice theory. Drawing on his personal experiences in China and insights from his book, Yonk challenges conventional international relations models that treat China as a monolithic actor. Instead, he argues that understanding individual motivations—particularly those of Chinese leaders like Xi Jinping—is key to predicting behavior and crafting smarter foreign policy. Yonk emphasizes that economic liberalization in China stemmed from internal pressures, not Western influence, and that nationalism now serves to maintain regime power.

📍Location: Hilton Garden Inn Nashville Brentwood, 217 Centerview Dr, Brentwood, TN 37027

Registration is required to attend and seats are limited. Register now!

REGISTER HERE

Harwood Salons - Nashville is made possible through the generosity of supporters like you. We encourage you to become a member or make a donation to support the American Institute for Economic Research and ensure the continuation of these important events. All donations are tax-deductible and directly contribute to sustaining Harwood Salons - Nashville.

Membership Options: 
Sustaining Members: $100/yr
Founding Members: $500 (One-time)
1933 Club Members: $1,000/yr

If you would like to donate or become a member of Harwood Salons - Nashville, follow this link.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Sincerely,

Jim

Jim Lordeman, Harwood Salons Ambassador
Harwood Salons - Nashville
nashville@aier.org


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Trump’s ‘Domestic Terrorism ’Memo Chillingly Targets People by Ideology

by Adam Goldstein, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, October 1, 2025 - On Thursday, the White House published a presidential memo — technically, a national security presidential memorandum — outlining its upcoming efforts to combat political violence.

In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, a heightened attention to political violence makes sense. But this memo doesn’t focus on actual violence. It includes frequent references to constitutionally protected speech and ideas. 

While there are quite a few pieces of this order that set off alarm bells, a few of the phrases struck me as especially troubling. Here they are. 

'anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity'

The memo says: 

There are common recurrent motivations and indicia uniting this pattern of violent and terroristic activities under the umbrella of self-described “anti-fascism.” [ . . . ] Common threads animating this violent conduct include anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity; support for the overthrow of the United States Government; extremism on migration, race, and gender; and hostility towards those who hold traditional American views on family, religion, and morality.

This is the most troubling passage in the memo, and there’s stiff competition for that title. This is the White House directly identifying beliefs, pointing the finger at them, and saying, “These are the suspicious people we need to watch.” In America, we shouldn’t target people for their ideologies. We should target them for their actions, full stop. 

Recent Democratic administrations have engaged in the same guilt-by-association tactics. During the Obama administration, the IRS targeted nonprofit groups with the words “Tea Party” or “Patriots” in their names, identifying groups by ideology and punishing them by subjecting them to extra processes. And its explanation was that this was just a “shortcut” — other organizations with similar profiles had violated IRS rules, so they jumped to targeting groups that used similar words.


In 2023, the FBI distributed an internal memo linking “ethnically motivated violent extremists” to traditional Catholic ideology, a call for viewpoint-based targeting that was only exposed by a whistleblower and oversight from Congress. In 2022, an internal FBI memo linked the Gadsden flag and other patriotic symbols to violent extremism. And while such links do exist, and it makes sense for law enforcement to identify them, it also risks sweeping up ordinary Americans.

It may well be that some people who engage in politically motivated violence have anti-American beliefs, oppose the traditional family, or dislike organized religion. They should be prosecuted. And if there’s evidence of conspiracy or concrete steps toward violence, that may warrant an investigation. But we cannot start investigating other people simply because they happen to share those beliefs. Doing so would open the door to investigations of any political movement or ideology if any one of its adherents happened to engage in violence. 

'…designation as a ‘domestic terrorist organization’'

The memo also says:

[T]he Attorney General may recommend that any group or entity whose members are engaged in activities meeting the definition of “domestic terrorism” in 18 U.S.C. 2331(5) merits designation as a “domestic terrorist organization.”

Designating something a domestic terrorist organization sounds like a parallel to the process we use for identifying foreign terrorist organizations (FTO). That process was created by Congress in a statute. Being designated as an FTO triggers a number of legal effects, enabling the government to seize assets, revoke visas, bar entry of non-citizens, and prosecute people who provide any direct help to the organization. Congress has the ability to block or revoke FTO designation, and organizations themselves are entitled to judicial review of the decision to include them on a list.

There is no such process for designating a domestic terrorist organization. In fact, the “domestic terrorist organization” definition proposed here has no legal safeguards and no clear significance. It’s completely made up. It seems an organization so designated will receive extra scrutiny from the federal government until it pleases the attorney general to remove them from the list. Donors, speakers, employees, and members of these organizations will all have their speech chilled for as long as the executive branch sees fit. 

It’s hard not to compare this to the Hollywood blacklist during McCarthyism. There were, in fact, real Russian spies elsewhere in America, many of them motivated by their ideological commitment to communism. Some of them were passing nuclear secrets to our rival in the middle of a nuclear arms race, the stakes of which were, potentially, catastrophic beyond all human imagination. Many people on the blacklist did have ties to communism or communist sympathies, as well. But putting people on a list because the government didn’t like their politics violated the freedoms we claimed to be protecting. 

'...politically motivated terrorist acts such as organized doxing…'

“Organized doxing” is a strange phrase. 

Doxing (or doxxing) is generally defined as publishing private information that makes someone online personally identifiable. It’s also legal in most places, as long as the information was lawfully obtained and isn’t otherwise part of harassment or incitement efforts. Whether you think that’s bad or not, I don’t know that organizing the effort makes it worse. If someone posts your personal information online, your first question isn’t likely to be, “How many people were involved and what was their political purpose?”

However distasteful it might be in context, doxing is protected speech unless it violates some other existing law. After all, doxing describes much of the basic activity of news media, where otherwise unknown information is found and published, and frequently, that information is personally identifiable. That’s especially true when the “doxing” the government is upset about is information related to public employees in the course of their duties, such as the location of ICE agents.

A missive from the most powerful man in the world carries so much force that it is, inevitably, a blunt instrument. When the president uses his pen to take aim at anything, it will cause a chilling effect.

The administration itself has arguably been encouraging coordinated doxing efforts to identify people who said cruel things in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination. When the vice president calls on the public to contact the employers of people who made unkind statements, and there have been groups soliciting submissions of those statements to catalog them, it would take exceptional care on the part of any future participants to avoid their efforts turning into doxing. 

If organized doxing is a politically motivated terrorist act when an NGO encourages it, but it’s legal when the White House encourages it, the current administration should remember that it will be leaving that loaded gun on the desk of the next president — who may define “permissible doxing” much differently. 

'Investigate institutional and individual funders, and officers and employees of organizations…'

The memo directs that the National Joint Terrorism Task Force and its local offices shall investigate “institutional and individual funders, and officers and employees of organizations, that are responsible for, sponsor, or otherwise aid and abet the principal actors engaging in” political violence, intimidation, or obstruction of the rule of law. 

To aid or abet criminal conduct requires knowledge of the conduct. To the extent officers and employees of organizations are knowingly breaking the law, I’d like to think that law enforcement is investigating them anyway. It’s been a few decades since I took criminal law, but I’m pretty sure “investigate people who know they’re breaking the law” was on the first page of the outline. Same with people who are “responsible for” it. 

So what this memo is adding, then, is to investigate “institutional and individual funders” who “sponsor” the organizations that aid the principal actors engaged in political violence. That reading is also reflected in a call for the use of financial surveillance tools. It’s also consistent with a Justice Department push to investigate a group tied to billionaire investor and Democratic megadonor George Soros.

If there is evidence that a donor was knowingly funding violence, they should be investigated, but the administration hasn’t actually shown such evidence. They simply assert there is a vast conspiracy on the left — going all the way up to its highest echelons — to fund and foment political violence, and so a sprawling investigation of the president’s ideological and political opponents is justified. 

We have already seen orders like this get misused

A missive from the most powerful man in the world carries so much force that it is, inevitably, a blunt instrument. When the president uses his pen to take aim at anything, it will cause a chilling effect.

For example, when President Trump issued an executive order on gender ideology that prohibited federal funding to programs that suggest gender is a spectrum, Texas A&M cancelled an annual drag show and the National Endowment for the Arts reviewed applications for their consistency with the order. Neither of these outcomes were obvious on the face of the order. 

What will the overreactions to this new memo look like? Donors ending their support because they don’t want to risk an investigation? Groups being denied bank loans or leases because they’re on a government list with no way to appeal that determination? Activists going underground because they want to challenge an orthodoxy, hiding their opinions from the places where they would otherwise be challenged in the marketplace of ideas? 

If this is the plan to save American values, what’s the plan to destroy them look like?

FIRE is one of the organizations that I support with my charitable giving. To learn more about the organization follow this link

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Happy Columbus Day!

 


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Tennessee is the Fifth Highest Ranked State for Fiscal Health

by Rod Williams, Oct. 13, 2025- Truth in Accounting has just released its sixteenth annual State of the States report. This report provides a comprehensive analysis of the fiscal health of each state. TIA examines a state's assets and liabilities.   When states do not have enough money to pay their bills, TIA takes the money needed to pay bills (the shortfall) and divides it by the estimated number of state taxpayers. They call the resulting number a Taxpayer Burden.  Conversely, a Taxpayer Surplus is the amount of money left over after all of a state’s bills are paid, divided by the estimated number of taxpayers in the state.  TIA ranks the states based on these numbers. States with a surplus are called "sunshine states," and states with a taxpayer burden are called "sinkhole states." Tennessee always ranks well. This year, Tennessee is the fifth-highest-ranked 

Sunshine State. To see the full report, follow this link




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Sunday, October 12, 2025

CM Jenny Welsch withdraws Her Resolution Denouncing Acts of the United States and Isreal.

by Rod Williams, Oct 12, 2025 - At the last Council meeting in the face of opposition, CM Jenny Welsch withdrew her resolution denouncing the United States and Israel. I am pleased. It is my view that the Council should not engage in debate about national and international issues on the Council floor. The local governing body should restrict itself to local governance.  These resolutions take valuable time away from the business of local government and are divisive for no apparent reason. A memorial resolution is just a statement of the opinion of the Metro Council. It accomplished nothing and I doubt anyone anywhere else really cares what the Metro Council thinks. 

The above video is of the full Council meeting of Oct. 9, 2025. To see the public comments period where the resolutions "denouncing all acts of the United States Government and the State of Israel that contribute to a continuation of the genocide of the Palestinian people" is discussed, go to time stamp 11:27. Notice that the first speaker is wearing a Party for Socialism and Liberation t-shirt. I am not sure that helps his cause. The second speaker is a Nashville member of the Jewish community who reports on how Council Member Jenny Welsch cavalierly brushed off her concern about the threat to Jews in Nashville. 

To see CM Welsh's motion to withdraw, where she unsuccessfully tries to make a speech on the merits of her resolution, go to time stamp 1:58:52. It is not stated in the meeting, but the rules committee voted for an indefinite deferral of the resolution. To read the text of the resolution, follow this link.

Below is the reporting on this resolution from The Pamphleteer

The Metro Council wasted time on resolutions at last night's meeting

From Megan Podsiedlik. The Pamphleteer, Oct. 10, 2025 - The meeting kicked off with a colorful public comment period during which the majority of speakers mentioned Councilmember Ginny Welsch’s resolution denouncing “all acts of the U.S. Government and the State of Israel that contribute to a continuation of the genocide of the Palestinian people.” When it finally came to the floor for discussion among council members, Welsch decided to withdraw the legislation with a brief explanation. 

“I withdraw this resolution today and hope that the cease fire reached today will bring an end to the horrors of the war in Gaza,” Welsch stated, before hopping onto her soapbox—a move her colleagues didn’t appreciate. The sponsor was eventually cut short while explaining how evil manifests and flourishes in the world.

“The rules call for an explanation of the withdrawal,” Councilmember Tom Cash pointed out. “And I really feel like this is going beyond that.” Both he and Councilmember Jason Spain cited the council rule regarding withdrawal. As a result, Vice Mayor Angie Henderson asked Welsch to “wrap it up,” preventing her from taking further advantage of the fact that she would be the only one allowed to speak on the resolution topic. 

Where Welsch’s resolution caused divisiveness with its explicit language asking the council to condemn specific geopolitical topics, a resolution more inclusively condemning political violence of all kinds passed with a wide range of bipartisan sponsors. During discussion, it suddenly dawned on Councilmember Zulfat Suara that all these types of resolutions may be more performative than useful. 

“This is a good resolution, but unfortunately, it's just words,” said Suara. “What I have seen oftentimes is that we say things to make ourselves feel better, but we don't follow it with action. Political violence is bad—should never happen, but there are factors that lead to it that even some of us may not know that we're contributing to.”

Suara proceeded to use the rest of her time encouraging council members to listen to Palestinian advocates and not just “stand up for one group.” She also said that the body could pass more than just “fluff” and “be more than just words” by… using their words to condemn things more consistently. Seems she lost her own thread.

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