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Saturday, December 06, 2025
Will Democrats Learn the Wrong Lesson from the TN-07 Election
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SCOTUS TO RECONSIDER BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP
…fist time since 1898
| Ralph Bristol |
The difference between Wong and today’s 250,000 children born annually is that their parents are not here lawfully, but most legal scholars are still betting against Trump, arguing that the 14th amendment does not require legal status, only that they are subject to the jurisdiction of the U.S., as they clearly are.
On the first day of his second term, Trump instructed government agencies to stop issuing citizenship documentation to children born to parents who were in the country illegally or visiting temporarily.
A class-action suit filed by the ACLU challenged Trump’s executive order. A federal judge issued a preliminary injunction in that case, but before an appeals court could render a verdict on that ruling, Trump officials petitioned the Supreme Court to hear the case.
The court has agreed to do so and will likely rule next June.
Barbara v. Trump, et. al. is a class action lawsuit against Executive Order 14160.
Ralph Bristol is the former long-time morning talk radio host broadcasting on Supertalk 99.7 WTN. He was one of the less provocative and bombastic of conservative radio personalities, more thoughtful and grounded in conservative ideas. He left talk radio in 2018 and retired. He lives in Nashville.
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Friday, December 05, 2025
Former Metro Human Relations Commission Deputy Director Indicted for Theft of Funds
| Mark Eatherly |
Investigators determined that Eatherly misappropriated at least $62,463.48 for his personal benefit. Eatherly directed Metro funds to organizations that he created and controlled, submitted ineligible reimbursement claims, and used public money to pay for personal expenses such as cell phone and internet bills; food delivery and rideshare services; and expenses for trips across the United States and Europe. Investigators also found that Eatherly transferred Metro funds through an external organization to disguise that he was the recipient of the money.
In addition to the misappropriation, Eatherly initiated unauthorized payments totaling $196,500 to support an initiative known as “Save the Morris.” The funds were intended to promote the preservation of the historic Morris Memorial Building in downtown Nashville. Eatherly directed three Metro payments totaling $101,500 to a private organization that he used to establish a “Donor Fund,” and he later transferred $67,500 from that account to a new fund at the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee. He also approved an additional $95,000 payment from MHRC to the same foundation. These funds were used to pay for event costs, performers, and public relations expenses related to the Save the Morris project. Metro’s Department of Law determined that MHRC had no authority to make these payments without Metro Council approval.
Mark Eatherly resigned from employment at MHRC effective July 3, 2025.
Based upon this investigation, on November 13, 2025, the Davidson County Grand Jury indicted Mark Scott Eatherly II on one count of theft over $60,000, one count of official misconduct, and one count of money laundering.
“This case demonstrates the importance of oversight, accountability, and separation of duties within government offices,” said Comptroller Mumpower. “No single employee should have unchecked control over financial decisions and approvals, especially when taxpayer dollars are at stake.”
To view the investigative report, go to tncot.cc/doireports. To view a map depicting Comptroller investigations, go to tncot.cc/mappinginvestigations
If you suspect fraud, waste, or abuse of public money in Tennessee, call the Comptroller’s toll-free hotline at 800.232.5454, or file a report online at: tncot.cc/fraud. Follow us on X/Twitter @TNCOT and Instagram @tncot
Related Links: Investigative Report and Associated Exhibit
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Lee Beaman draws fire during TVA board confirmation hearing
by Sam Stockard, Tennessee Outlook, December 4, 2025 - A key U.S. senator raised questions
Wednesday about whether former car dealership magnate Lee Beaman is fit to serve on the Tennessee Valley Authority Board of Directors.
| Lee Beaman |
Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, ranking member of the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, told the panel that Beaman’s qualification is that of a “Trump loyalist and 2020 election denier,” in reference to his support of President Donald Trump and claims that the presidential election of 2020 was stolen, a matter that has been debunked.
Whitehouse said Beaman signed a letter asking state lawmakers to appoint phony electors to overturn the election and noted he received a “Freedom Award” from Koch-backed Americans for Prosperity, which supports the fossil-fuel industry.
“When the ask comes to raise customers’ rates by backing away from clean energy, it’s a safe bet whose back he’ll have,” Whitehouse said.
In addition, Beaman is a landlord for several Republican members of Congress at a Capitol Hill rowhome, including U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, Whitehouse said, along with U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles of Tennessee. Critics have questioned whether the arrangements meet disclosure and ethics requirements.
The nonpartisan Office of Congressional Ethics found wrongdoing in an Ogles campaign finance report, with Beaman serving as treasurer at the time, and planned to subpoena the congressman to testify. But that has been stalled since Johnson took over the speakership, Whitehouse said.
U.S. Sens. Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty of Tennessee introduced Beaman at the committee hearing, with Blackburn touting his “decades of experience in business leadership, community service and organizational governance,” as well as leadership in the beverage industry for 35 years in Tennessee and Georgia, according to a knoxnews article. Work in those TVA service areas gives Beaman “first-hand familiarity with the communities, the people, the economic conditions and the operations needs of this region,” Blackburn said.
The full Senate will take a final vote on the nominations of Beaman and four other men to fill TVA posts that became vacant after Trump fired Biden appointees, leaving the board unable to reach a quorum for decisions.
Asked Wednesday about his views on the importance of nuclear energy to TVA’s future, Beaman said, “I think nuclear power generation is the future of power in the United States and probably around the world,” according to the Knoxnews report.
Similarly to the other four nominees, Beaman told the committee he opposes privatizing the federally-owned utility, saying, “TVA is more uniquely, appropriately operated as a government entity.”
U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, a Memphis Democrat, called for the committee to reject Beaman’s nomination, saying he has no experience in the energy and utilities industries, in addition to lacking “sound judgment” and independence. Instead, most of his career has been in automotive sales, beverage distribution, real estate holdings and political fundraising, Cohen said.
“Nothing in Mr. Beaman’s record reflects the expertise necessary to provide informed oversight of such a complex public utility,” Cohen said in a statement.
The congressman also said Beaman acknowledged he was encouraged to pursue the TVA seat because of the “ongoing race for energy to feed AI-driven demand for data centers.” Cohen said Beaman holds equity stakes in businesses depending on AI integration, including energy-intensive computing, raising questions about a potential conflict of interest.
Beaman is a member of the Belmont University Board of Trustees, returning to the post after a leave of absence related to a divorce and accusations of sordid behavior by his ex-wife.
He did not return a call requesting comment on the Senate hearing.
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Senate ACA Proposal Would Add $300 Billion to Deficits
preliminarily estimate this bill would add nearly $300 billion to deficits as written or nearly $550 billion if the enhanced subsidies are made permanent.
The bill would extend the enhanced subsidies in full with no further income limits for three years – from 2026 to 2028. It would also permanently repeal provisions in the 2025 reconciliation law that eliminated subsidies for certain groups enrolling during special enrollment periods, required full repayments of overpayments of the advanced subsidies, and required enrollees to affirmatively verify their eligibility for subsidies and reconcile those subsidies on their taxes. Finally, the bill would nullify portions of a 2025 regulation loosening limits on the actuarial value of exchange plans and changing the methodology of calculating the subsidies.
The following is a statement from Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget:
With the national debt as large as the economy and interest payments costing $1 trillion annually, it is absurd to suggest adding hundreds of billions more to the debt.
Any extension of the enhanced ACA subsidies should be enacted in the context of a bill to reform the subsidies, lower health care costs, and reduce overall deficits. At an absolute minimum, any extension should be fully paid for without games or gimmicks.
The new Senate bill is far worse than even a debt-financed extension – it borrows even more to expand the underlying ACA subsidies and remove recently-enacted program integrity measures. This is a bad idea made worse.
Even assuming the extension only goes three years, we estimate this bill would add $300 billion to deficits. If the temporary subsidies are made permanent, we could be talking well over half a trillion dollars more in borrowing over the next decade.
While other extension proposals at least give lip service to reducing fraud and abuse in the ACA exchanges, this bill would actually make it worse. Given the recent Government Accountability Office investigation showing how easy it is to defraud these exchanges, it’s hard to see the case for repealing program integrity measures.
After a pointless government shutdown over this issue, it is beyond disappointing that this is the preferred solution to such an important issue. With health care costs rising and deficits approaching $2 trillion a year, we need to be putting in place smart solutions to slow the growth of our borrowing and lower health care costs. This bill would do neither.
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For more information on the issue of ACA subsidies, see Understanding the ACA Subsidy Discussion.
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OLD NEWS BRINGS NEW OUTRAGE
| Ralph Bristol |
…and distracts from the important story
by Ralph Bristol, Facebook, Dec. 5, 2025- Most of the major media have recently reported the 3-year-old story of the Minnesota’s welfare fraud, funded by Covid relief and involving Minnesota’s expansive Somali population.
• (NYT) Over the last five years, law enforcement officials say, fraud took root in pockets of Minnesota’s Somali diaspora as scores of individuals made small fortunes by setting up companies that billed state agencies for millions of dollars’ worth of social services that were never provided. Federal prosecutors say that 59 people have been convicted in those schemes so far, and that more than $1 billion in taxpayers’ money has been stolen in three plots they are investigating. That is more than Minnesota spends annually to run its Department of Corrections. (The first charges were filed three years ago.)
When Trump and Biden threw more than $5 trillion into the population to help them cope with Covid and the government order to shut down most businesses for months at a time, it should come as no surprise that fraud is going to run rampant. $1 billion may be more than Minnesota spends on the DOC in a year, but it’s .0002 of the $5 trillion wasted by the very fact of the bipartisan Covid relief. And, it’s also a very tiny percentage of the fraud inspired by the Covid relief spending.
• (WSJ) Some 86 individuals have been charged with defrauding Medicaid and the Federal Child Nutrition Program in Minnesota—yes, literally stealing lunch money from kids. “No one was doing anything about the red flags,” one defendant’s attorney told the New York Times. “It was like someone was stealing money from the cookie jar and they kept refilling it.”
• (CBS) Three years ago, federal prosecutors in Minnesota filed the first charges in what they described as the "largest pandemic fraud in the United States." The $250 million scheme — which now includes upward of 75 defendants — revolved around a nonprofit group called Feeding Our Future that partnered with the Minnesota Department of Education and U.S. Department of Agriculture to distribute meals to children.
Yes, this is a very old story – recently revived by President Trump as part of his campaign against refugees, illegal immigrants and Democrats. On Tuesday, the president called immigrants from Somalia "garbage," and claimed they "destroyed Minnesota" and "contribute nothing."
• (CBS) Most of the people charged in the Feeding Our Future case are of Somali descent, though Bock, the group's founder and the scheme's alleged "mastermind," is White. Prosecutors in the alleged autism services fraud scheme said the defendant "approached parents in the Somali community to recruit their children." The named fraud defendants appear to represent a small percentage of Minnesota's Somali American community, which is among the largest in the nation. A particular focus of Mr. Trump's ire is Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Minnesota Democrat who was born in Somalia and came to the U.S. as a teenager. He has also lashed out at Walz, whom he referred to last week using a slur for people with intellectual disabilities.
Now, can we go back to discussing the kind of thing that inspires this kind of fraud – runaway government spending by both parties? Until we stop that, focusing on the fraud it births instead of the seed of the fraud only inspires more fraud.
Large businesses can assume a “shrinkage” rate of about 1.5%. Shrinkage is a nice word for employee theft and other forms of internal dishonesty. It is reasonable to expect at least that much fraud in the consumption and distribution of government handouts. I would be very surprised if $1 billion is more than one-tenth of one percent of the fraud that the outrageous spending on Covid-19 inspired.
Focusing on this one incident in Minnesota may serve a few political purposes, but nothing more. And, it distracts all the major media, Congress and the president from the much bigger, more important story, which – of course – is part of the plan by those in charge.
So, once again – to refocus you – it’s the spending, stupid!
Ralph Bristol is the former long-time morning talk radio host broadcasting on Supertalk 99.7 WTN. He was one of the less provocative and bombastic of conservative radio personalities, more thoughtful and grounded in conservative ideas. He left talk radio in 2018 and retired. He lives in Nashville.
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Wednesday, December 03, 2025
A Different Democrat Could Have Made TN-07 Election a Closer Race.
| Mark Rogers |
1) Matt was the calmest and least radical-sounding candidate in the Republican primary and he won handily. He easily won early voting before Trump's endorsement came through. I believe his approach inoculated him from the dissatisfaction of some Republicans over the state and national situations.
2) The endorsement by Trump prevented most far-right voters from staying home after their candidates were defeated.
3) Aftyn Behn ran excellent campaigns in the primary and the general, but the 'progressive' edge that helped her win in the first round hurt her in the second.
4) I think Behn should have directly addressed her comments about Nashville, bachelorettes, police, and (especially) country music early in the general election and put them behind her.
5) If the Democrats in Tennessee think their future is going to be in following Behn and the two Justins, they are, I suspect, badly wrong. The Democrats dominated Tennessee for well over 150 years by balancing economic populism with Southern values. Embracing the AOC-Bernie-Kamala axis of Walmart Socialism and the cultural values of Hollywood won't win over Tennessee voters.
Mark Rogers has served in government, the non-profit sector, and politics. He is well known as a successful campaign manager and political consultant. He lives in Nashville
I think Mark has hit the nail on the head. I was going to write something similar, but could not have said it better. As much as I am concerned about Trump's presidency and our march toward authoritarianism, and as much as I would like to see a Congress that would stand up to Trump, I could not bring myself to vote for Aftyn Behn. Had the candidate been Bo Mitchell or any moderate Democrat, I would have voted for the Democratic candidate.
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Tuesday, December 02, 2025
My End-of-Year Giving Guide and List
By Rod Williams, December 2, 2025 - I am in the process of completing my end-of-year giving and for those who may be doing the same or are those who are normally not very charitable and are thinking of becoming so, I wanted to suggest you consider the organizations I list below.
I don't make a distinction between supporting the cause of freedom and charitable giving. To my way of thinking, there is no better use of my money than in helping to conserve the American Founding. I want to leave the world a better place than I found it and I want future generations to know the blessings of liberty, justice, a free-market economy, and a world not dominated by authoritarian and totalitarian tyrants. I believe freedom is the greatest gift we can leave our descendants. The way I view it, making a campaign contribution to someone who will advance the cause of freedom is as worthwhile as giving to Saint Jude's or the Alzheimer's Foundation.
I am not a wealthy man, and my contributions are modest by the standards of some, but for the last dozen years are so, I have had more disposable income than I have had in earlier periods of my life, so I have increased my giving.
Like last year, I am not feeling quite as generous as I have felt in years past. I am not sure why, exactly. With the reelection of Donald Trump and seeing how he is shredding the Constitution, and day by day imposing his authoritarianism on the nation, I think that helping thwart this march toward authoritarianism is the most important use I could make of my money, but I don't really know where it is best to spend it to that end. I refuse to support candidates or causes that advance a woke, progressive, socialist agenda. I want to oppose Trumpism and yet not advance the left.
Prior to the Republican Party becoming the Party of the Trump cult, I contributed to the RNC, the Senate Republican fundraising organization, the House Republican fundraising organization, and the Republican Governors Association and the State Party and the local Party. I also supported individual conservative candidates and I supported prominent conservative organizations such as the American Conservative Union, also known as CPAC, and the Heritage Foundation. I have recently seen no candidates worthy of my support and several of the Republican and conservative organizations that I used to support have abandoned the principles they long advocated and now advance the cause of authoritarian nationalist populism, so I no longer give to them. So, that money is looking for a home.
I wish there was a prominent PAC dedicated to advancing traditional conservatism within the Republican Party and financing candidates to primary the Trump acolytes, but I don't see one, so I am holding a lot of my funding in reserve until I find the right place to put it to work.
While organizations like CPAC and Heritage have gone Trump, there are still several think tanks and other organizations advancing conservatism and I have increased my contributions to these. I think it is important to fund the organizations that continue to promote free market ideas, constitutionalism, and liberty. Liberty is now threatened from the Trumpian right and the progressive woke left. Those promoting liberty need to be supported.
In addition to the list below, I also help a couple of individuals financially. If you have a family member or an acquaintance in need whom you could help, that may be where your charity should begin. If people helped other people directly, there would be less demand for the welfare state. Personal giving creates a community bond, and you know if the recipient is deserving. Often, churches help fellow church members in this way. I am not a member of a faith community, but I think that supporting one's local congregation can be a good way to give.
Unfortunately, sometimes charity does more harm than it does good, both foreign and domestic charity. A good documentary that makes this point is Poverty Inc. Before giving, I ask myself if this organization just perpetuates dependency, or does it respond to a crisis, or support actions that really help people long-term. Sometimes it is hard to know.
When I give, I want to make sure I am not being scammed and that the organization I support does more than just perpetuate itself. A lot of organizations spend more money raising money than they do funding their goal. A good source for checking an organization's efficiency is Charity Navigator and Charity Watch.
Another thing I consider when giving is that I don't want to support and encourage bad behaviors. I never give money to beggars holding signs on the side of the road. In addition to encouraging bad behavior, they may be trying to scam you. I don't want homeless people freezing on the streets, so I support organizations like The Salvation Army and The Nashville Rescue Mission, but do not support panhandling.
I also do not contribute money to organizations that insult my values. For several years, I gave money to an organization that saves places of natural beauty in Tennessee and preserves critical habitats. I still think they do a worthwhile job doing what they do. However, in one of their email communications about three or four years ago, they went off-topic and expressed their support for Black Lives Matter and pledged a commitment to equity and diversity, and social justice. I support tolerance, equality, and non-discrimination, but not contemporary woke concepts of social justice and equity. I marked them off of my giving list. There was also another organization I stopped supporting for the same reason. I am not going to support any organization whose values I do not share and that insults my values.
I think in this age of misinformation and attacks on the press that it is important to support journalism, and I subscribe to many more publications than I can possibly read. I subscribe to The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal and some others. I also subscribe to The Tennessean, although it is not much of a newspaper; however, I do not want our city to not have a daily newspaper. If we don't support journalism, the truth will suffer, and corruption will flourish. While there are thousands of blogs and podcasts and pundits, a free society needs boots on the ground digging for the truth. We need more than just opinions; we need facts. I think subscribing to newspapers is a contribution to a better world and preserving freedom. I am not listing these publications as charitable giving but in a sense, it is. I am using my limited resources to advance a worthwhile goal.
I also subscribe to National Review and a couple of other conservative journals that have not succumbed to Trumpism. In addition, I am a paid subscriber to The Bulwark and The Dispatch. I get more than enough of their free stuff on YouTube and newsletters, but I want to support them. Not all analysis can fit in a meme or be expressed in 280 characters. Good analysis and opinion journalism need to be supported.
If you are looking for a place to give, please consider the following.
Rod's End-of-Year Giving List
The Beacon Center is my favorite non-profit and gets the largest single chunk of my charitable giving. It is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, and independent organization dedicated to providing expert empirical research and timely free-market solutions to public policy issues in Tennessee. Time and time again, Tennessee is recognized for being one of the most fiscally responsible and economically free states in the union. Much of the credit for these honors is due to the work of the Beacon Center. The Beacon Center has worked to ensure the Right to Work by pushing to overturn professional licensure laws that serve no purpose but to keep out the competition. They have worked to prevent local government from banning work-from-home opportunities like recording studios in homes in Music City. They have stopped local government from forcing homeowners to build public sidewalks when they remodel their homes. Beacon is responsible for enshrining the protection against being forced to join a union in the State Constitution. Beacon gets much of the credit for the advancement of educational choice in Tennessee. Beacon produces the annual "Pork Report," highlighting the most egregious examples of government waste in Tennessee.
Nashville Rescue Mission: "A Christ-centered community committed to helping the hungry, homeless, and hurting by providing programs and services that focus on a person’s entire life-physical, mental, spiritual, emotional, and social. We are devoted to restoring the whole person through a Christian approach that helps the homeless and addicted learn how much God loves them and gain the biblical insight they need to lead a productive life in and for Christ.
We provide emergency services that meet immediate and practical need for people experiencing homelessness, hunger, disappointment, and regret. By meeting these most basic and immediate needs, not tied to any expectations, we provide “hope for today” in a nurturing environment that reflects the love of God in tangible ways.
Guests are cared for in a safe, supportive environment where they can find refuge and rest. Once their basic and immediate needs are addressed, case managers work one-on-one with each person to identify next steps, including healthcare and treatment options with a goal of helping them change unhealthy patterns of behavior.
If you or someone you know is in immediate need of food, clothing, or shelter, Nashville Rescue Mission serves three hot meals a day and is open 365 days a year. You are welcome here.
Nashville Rescue Mission’s Emergency Services Include: FOOD, SHELTER, CLOTHING, HOT SHOWERS AND PERSONAL HYGIENE, COURTYARDS/DAY ROOMS, CASE MANAGEMENT TRANSFORMATIVE PROGRAMS, EDUCATION/TRAINING."
The Mercatus Center: "A research center at George Mason University that advances knowledge about how markets solve problems and help us lead happier, healthier, and richer lives. For more than 40 years, Mercatus has supported leading talent and scholarship in the mainline economics tradition, applying rigorous research to real-world concerns. Through our continuing efforts to bridge the gap between theory and practice, we strive to realize a world where markets operate at their full potential to increase abundance, civility, and well-being. Your gift to the Mercatus Center ensures free-market ideas are championed in public policy, the academy, and the broader public discourse. 100% of your donation supports educating tomorrow's academic leaders as well as generating peer-reviewed research on today's most pressing issues."
Doctors without borders: "Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) translates to Doctors without Borders. We provide medical assistance to people affected by conflict, epidemics, disasters, or exclusion from healthcare. Our teams are made up of tens of thousands of health professionals, logistic and administrative staff - bound together by our charter. Our actions are guided by medical ethics and the principles of impartiality, independence and neutrality. We are a non-profit, self-governed, member-based organization. MSF was founded in 1971 in Paris by a group of journalists and doctors. Today, we are a worldwide movement of nearly 63,000 people."
Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee opened its doors in 1978 with commitment from several community leaders. The purpose of the organization was to provide a central distribution center for companies, groups, and individuals who wished to help provide food for hungry people in Middle Tennessee. During my years of working for a non-profit agency, we were a Second Harvest outlet. This organization provides food, mostly bread, that would otherwise be thrown away, to needy people.
The Fund for American Studies: "(TFAS) is a 501(c)3 educational nonprofit that is changing the world by developing leaders for a free society. Our transformational programs teach the principles of limited government, free-market economics and honorable leadership to students and young professionals in America and around the world."
By offering a portfolio of more than 20 different academic programs, fellowships and seminars, the TFAS Journey helps cultivate future leaders from high school, all the way through to their university studies and professional careers.
Today, there are more than 42,000 TFAS alumni making the difference in their communities and throughout the world by championing the values essential to the preservation and success of a free society."
"The Salvation Army has Been Serving Nashville For Over 125 Years Through Much Needed Social Services And Programs. A 90-bed Adult Alcohol and Rehabilitation Center for men was opened in 1900 and served the community for over 100 years. In 1940, The Salvation Army built and opened the “Red Shield” Community Center – rebuilt in 1984 as the Magness-Potter Community Center which offered Army-administered youth and adult leisure activity programs. Now, the community center houses the United Way-sponsored Family Resource Center, the Red Shield Kids Club after-school and summer day camp programs, the Life Skills Learning Center, the Second Harvest Food Pantry, and the Emergency Services Program. In 1980, the Area Command facility was moved from Demonbreun to Dickerson Pike, receiving the name the “Center of Hope”, and opened a 75-person transient shelter, an emergency shelter for men, and a day and night child care center serving homeless and other families in urgent need. Today, the Center of Hope and the Magness-Potter Community Center, along with the three worship centers, serve Nashville by being strategically placed in the neediest areas of the community. Our services are provided to all of Davidson County, as well as Cheatham, Dickson, Hickman, Williamson, and Sumner Counties. Your donation will directly impact your community.
The Salvation Army has been many things over the years as communities’ needs have changed over the years, but today, the focus of the Nashville Salvation Army is to fight poverty and prevent homelessness in our community through a myriad of comprehensive programs designed to bring a holistic approach to the individual’s or family’s need."
The Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation (VOC) is an educational, research, and human rights nonprofit organization devoted to commemorating the more than 100 million victims of communism around the world and to pursuing the freedom of those still living under totalitarian regimes.
Institute for Justice: "IJ is a nonprofit, public interest law firm. Our mission is to end widespread abuses of government power and secure the constitutional rights that allow all Americans to pursue their dreams. Donations to the Institute for Justice enable us to represent our clients at no cost to them—and to stand with them no matter how long their cases take. And when we win for our clients, we secure precedent that protects the rights of all Americans. IJ’s work is powered by nearly 10,000 supporters from across the country who believe in the Constitution and its ideals. 70% of our funding comes from individuals like you. Please join our fight for freedom and justice today."
IJ has been involved in several high-profile fights over the years in Nashville. IJ defended a small music studio owner from efforts of the city to take her property by condemnation for no other purpose than to provide room for expansion of a bigger neighbor. In the pre-ride-share days of Uber and Lyft, IJ defended an innovative entrepreneur who wanted to provide cheaper limo rides and had to fight city hall. IJ has defended homeowners who wanted to work from home.
"The American Enterprise Institute is a public policy think tank dedicated to defending human dignity, expanding human potential, and building a freer and safer world. The work of our scholars and staff advances ideas rooted in our belief in democracy, free enterprise, American strength and global leadership, solidarity with those at the periphery of our society, and a pluralistic, entrepreneurial culture.
The Center Square. The disappearance and decline of journalism concern me. Nashville went from two daily papers to one newspaper that is only a shadow of its former self. While there are lots of people, like me, blogging and sharing opinions, without staff they can seldom break stories. Journalism needs paid boots on the ground. News, especially local news, most often comes down to shootings, car wrecks, sports, and reposted press releases. There are far too few outlets looking for scandals and corruption. The watchdog of democracy has died.
The Center Square is conservative but without the rancor, sensationalism, and conspiratorial mindset of what defines many so-called conservative news sources today.
"The Center Square was launched in May 2019 to fulfill the need for high-quality statehouse and statewide news across the United States. The focus of our work is state- and local-level government and economic reporting. A taxpayer sensibility distinguishes our work from other coverage of state and local issues. As a result of this approach, our readers are better informed about the focus of state and local government and its cost to the citizens whose tax dollars fund governmental decisions.
The Center Square is staffed by editors and reporters with extensive professional journalism experience. We engage readers with essential news, data and analysis – delivered with velocity, frequency and consistency. We distribute our journalism through three main channels at no cost to our partners or readers: a newswire service to legacy publishers and broadcasters. The Center Square is a project of the 501(c)(3) Franklin News Foundation, headquartered in Chicago."
Pre-Born! partners with life-affirming pregnancy clinics all across the nation. In the wake of the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade, several states where abortion is still legal have become key destinations for vulnerable women seeking abortions. Planned Parenthood has placed mobile abortion units on the borders of states where abortion is illegal.
Pre-Born! provides ultrasound equipment to pro-life pregnancy crisis centers. Data shows that when an expectant mother sees an ultrasound image of her baby and hears the heartbeat, she most often decides to keep the child.
National Review Institute. "Your support ensures that NRI will continue to preserve and promote the legacy of William F. Buckley Jr. and advance the conservative principles he championed: limited government, free markets, individual liberty, personal responsibility, a strong national defense, and the rule of law. Your philanthropic investment is a vote of confidence in our mission and our methods. "
Foundation of Economic Freedom. "FEE's mission is to inspire, educate, and connect future leaders with the economic, ethical, and legal principles of a free society. These principles include: individual liberty, free-market economics, entrepreneurship, private property, high moral character, and limited government. Here are some highlights from 2021: We broke a world record for the largest online economics lecture. We made 95 mainstream media appearances. Our videos received 11 MILLION views and over 1.8 MILLION shares. On TikTok, we went from reaching 65,000 people to over 2 MILLION in just seven months! We reached over 83 MILLION Gen Z online."The Pamphleteer: The Pamphleteer is an arts, culture, and politics publication based in Nashville, TN. Corporate and progressive media dominate the landscape in the state of Tennessee. The word "independent"—typically associated with legacy brands such as the Nashville Scene—means less and less as time goes on. Many of the perspectives from local media outlets you read come from an almost identical perspective, inseparable from the tone and tenor of politics at the federal level. The Pamphleteer seeks to reinvigorate local discourse by offering fresh, regional perspectives on local topics. It is our hope that through our work, we can challenge readers to engage more earnestly in local politics and motivate leaders to reach higher and farther in their efforts to make Nashville a world-class city.
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget is a nonpartisan, non-profit organization committed to educating the public on issues with significant fiscal policy impact. Our bipartisan leadership comprises some of the nation's leading budget experts, including many past heads of the House and Senate Budget Committees, the Congressional Budget Office, the Office of Management and Budget, and the Government Accountability Office.As an independent source of objective policy analysis, we regularly engage policymakers of both parties and help them develop and analyze proposals to improve the country’s fiscal and economic condition. These efforts have reinforced the Committee’s role as an authoritative voice for fiscal responsibility and an educational resource for policymakers and the general public. We are also a trusted budget watchdog that assists journalists across the country in understanding fiscal developments in Washington.
WinTheCenter PAC: "Elections are decided in the center. That’s where most Americans are – and that’s where Democrats must compete and win. Win the Center was built from the momentum of Adam Frisch’s campaign against Lauren Boebert, where a pragmatic Democrat almost unseated an extremist in a Solid Republican district.
We know the path to victory isn’t about chasing the loudest voices – it’s about earning trust in the center, building broad coalitions, and putting our communities over Washington politics. In partnership with WelcomePAC, we’re taking these lessons national, and backing Democratic fighters who can win tough races, beat extremist opponents, and deliver for working families."
This is new for me. I never thought I would be supporting a Democrat PAC, but given the current political landscape, I am willing to support any faction of the political spectrum that is not far-right nationalist populist or far-left woke progressive socialist. I would much prefer a commonsense Republican PAC rather than a commonsense Democratic PAC, but I can't find a Republican one.
I am going to wrap this up, but below are other organizations that I think are worthy of support, to which I have previously contributed or am considering contributing.
- The Hoover Institute
- Institute for Humane Studies
- CATO Institute
- American Institute for Economic Research (Harwood Salon Nashville)
- National Association of Scholars
- Friends of Warner Park
- Independent Institute
- The Tax Foundation
- Political Economy Research Institute at MTSU
- American Enterprise Institute
- Foundation for Individual Rights in Education
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Monday, December 01, 2025
Well, This is Embarrassing. Moms Legislator of the Year Convicted of Distributing Child Sex Porn.
| Rep. RJ May |
The 2023 Moms for Liberty "Legislator of the Year" was former South Carolina state Rep. RJ May (R-West Columbia). He was recently in the news for pleading guilty to federal charges related to distributing child sexual abuse material (CSAM).
Key Details
Award: May received the 2023 "Legislator of the Year" award from the South Carolina chapter of Moms for Liberty for his work in "defending parental rights".
Arrest and Charges: In June 2025, May was indicted on 10 counts of distributing child sexual abuse material.
Guilty Plea: In September 2025, May pleaded guilty to five federal counts of distributing CSAM, with the other five counts dropped as part of a plea bargain.
Controversy: The news of his crimes led to widespread criticism, noting the hypocrisy of a "family values" politician who frequently attacked the LGBTQ+ community for allegedly "harming" children being the one involved in sex crimes.
Current Status: May resigned from his seat and is currently in custody pending sentencing in January 2026. He faces a mandatory minimum of five years in prison and up to 20 years on each count.
Moms for Liberty is a conservative parents' rights group that the Southern Poverty Law Center has categorized as an extremist group. They are known for their efforts to ban books and influence school board elections.
To make it worse, apparently, May was under investigation for distributing child porn for over a year before he got the Moms award, and the South Carolina chapter knew he was under investigation. (link)
I have mixed views of Moms for Liberty. I would like for parents to have more influence in schools, and I think normalization of diviancy and gender dysphoria should not occur in public schools. There are some books that I think should be removed from school library bookshelves. However, I don't want what is stocked in school libraries to be decided by the most engaged who show up at School Board Meetings. Since a library cannot stock every book published, it is not "banning" to choose to stock one book over another.
That being said, I have seen the list of books they try to remove, and it is not porn we are talking about. If I had a teen reading The Kite Runner or Where the Crawdads Sing, I would not be alarmed. I would be pleased he is reading.
I attended one Moms meeting in Brentwood a few years ago, and they had blown-up pages of books they found offensive on display. One was a frontier adventure story, featuring Indians on the warpath and raiding settlers. Moms objected because it contained violence, such as scalping. I would have loved that book as a kid. I recall that when I was in about the sixth grade, I read a series of books about American heroes, such as Davy Crockett and Kit Carson and Daniel Boone. I loved them. They contained violent conflict and people died. I don't think schools should shield children from the harsh realities of history.
Another book Moms wanted to ban was the story of Ruby Bridges, the first African American child to attend a formerly whites-only school. It is a true story and children should not be shielded from it.
I don't doubt there are some woke teachers pushing their ideology onto kids and molding them into good little liberals with a brain full of mush and a load of White guilt. I don't think school classrooms should fly the Pride rainbow flag and teach that Heather Has Two Mommies. Some of the books Moms have exposed and opposed are age-inappropriate, in my view. I want engaged parents pushing back against that. However, I think Mom's for Liberty goes too far. To be fair, I do not have children or grandchildren in public schools so I don't know how bad this woke indoctrination is, but I try to stay informed. However, I don't quite trust Moms to tell me how bad it is. From what I do know about them, they seem a little too prudish, alarmist, dogmatic and excitable for my taste.
On the other hand, when the Southern Poverty Law Center calls Moms for Liberty a hate group, it makes me want to send them a donation. The SPLC tends to label pro-life, pro-normalcy, Christian groups as hate groups. It you are not a woke progressive, SPLC wants you to sit down and shut up and will label you a hate group if you don't keep quiet. You do know that the Southern Poverty Law Center has also been labeled a hate group, don't you? Yes. I just labeled it as such.
Back to the issue at hand. This scandal of the SC legislature of the year being a pervert is not the first scandal associated with Moms. Back in 2023, the Florida Republican Party State Chairman, Christian Ziegler, who has been accused of raping a woman who claimed to have been involved in a long-term threesome relationship with Christian Ziegler and his wife Bridget Ziegler, was removed as Chair of the Florida Republican Party. Bridget Ziegler is the co-founder of Moms for Liberty.
I don't know what to make of this. Is it an aberration or is it statistically significant that a number of activists for morality are themselves deeply flawed? I remember the televangelist scandals of a few decades ago. I was living a more spiritual life at that time and was involved in my faith and regularly attending church. Some of the TV preachers exposed as immoral, I had no respect for and never had confidence in, such as Jim and Tammy Faye Baker. Jimmy Swaggart, on the other hand, I really believed was sincere and good, some might say "godly," man. I hated to learn that he was a frequent customer of prostitutes. And then of course we had the worldwide scandal of the Catholic priests who were pedophiles. I keep thinking of other examples. This could go on for a while.
When those who are prudish and sanctimonious are exposed as libertines or perverts, part of me wants to say, "See! You are a bunch of hypocrites." The other part of me feels sad.
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For more on Mon's for Liberty, see below:
- The Disgruntled Republican in Nashville: Moms for Liberty's complaint about age-appropriateness and context of material taught to 2nd graders dismissed without a hearing.
- The Disgruntled Republican in Nashville: Republicans, Rape, Moms for Liberty, and Threesomes
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AOC Set to Campaign for TN-7 Democrat Aftyn Behn
I went to Behn's website and could not find any additional information about the event. She has a "News and Press Campaign Updates feature." but this event is not mentioned. I don't know how one goes about signing up for the event, not that I would.
The elections is tomorrow, Dec. 2nd.
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