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Open letter to readers: Today and tomorrow

By Lynda Waddington | 11.17.11

Wednesday was a difficult day for The American Independent News Network, which is the larger entity that operates The Iowa Independent. Our chief executive and founder announced two of our sister sites would close and their content would be moved to The American Independent.

ACS lockout continues; plan emerges to repeal sugar protections

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By Virginia Chamlee | 11.15.11

A recently introduced bill could have far-reaching impact on the U.S. sugar industry, including American Crystal Sugar, a farmer-owned cooperative that locked out 1,300 Midwest workers on Aug. 1.

Cain campaign: Farmers know more about regulations than EPA

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By Andrew Duffelmeyer | 11.15.11

The chairman for Herman Cain’s Iowa effort says the campaign “relied more on the word of farmers than Washington regulators” in deciding to run an ad containing claims the Environmental Protection Agency says are false.

Mathis wins, Democrats maintain Senate control

Liz Mathis
By Lynda Waddington | 11.08.11

The Iowa Senate will remain under the control of a slim 26-25 Democratic majority when it reconvenes in January 2012.

Press Release

PR: Nation should work to address veterans’ challenges

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

BRUCE BRALEY RELEASE — As US involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan ends, it’s more important than ever that our nation works to address the challenges faced by the men and women who fought there.

PR: Honoring veterans, help in hiring

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

CHUCK GRASSLEY RELEASE — A difficult job market is challenging the soldiers, sailors and airmen who have protected America’s interests by serving in the Armed Forces.

PR: In honor of America’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

TOM LATHAM RELEASE — No one has done more to secure the freedom enjoyed by every single American than our veterans and those currently serving in the armed services.

PR: Honoring and supporting our nation’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

DAVE LOEBSACK RELEASE — Veterans Day is an opportunity to reflect on the service of generations of veterans and to honor the sacrifices they and their families have made so that we may live in peace and freedom here at home.

The Ron Paul presidential campaign works a booth at a recent 2nd Amendment Rally. (File Photo: Lynda Waddington/The Iowa Independent)
The Ron Paul presidential campaign works a booth at a recent 2nd Amendment Rally. (File Photo: Lynda Waddington/The Iowa Independent)

Ron Paul, NRA say they’re not behind anti-library calls in Carroll

Iowa Gun Owners director applauds anti-bond message
By Douglas Burns | 08.02.11 | 6:04 pm

The campaign chairman for presidential candidate Ron Paul Tuesday morning was investigating a link between anti-library recorded robocalls bombarding homes and cellphones in Carroll. The calls urge residents to vote against a new library today to send a message to the Carroll City Council for a decision last winter prohibiting firearms on public property.

Some of the calls originated from the Iowa office of GOP Presidential candidate Ron Paul, a Texas congressman who strongly supports the Second Amendment.

“This is nothing we have done,” said Drew Ivers, campaign chairman for Paul.

Ivers did say the Paul campaign had for a time been associated with the Iowa Gun Owners (IGO), a firearms-rights organization that other Second Amendment groups have sought to distance themselves from because of the IGO’s tactics.

“Frankly, they are too abrasive,” Ivers said. “That’s their style.”

The director of the Des Moines-based Iowa Gun Owners, Aaron Dorr, said his organization is not behind the calls, that the IGO doesn’t get involved in local bond issues. But he agrees with the content and mission of the calls in Carroll.

“I’m not saying we’re ashamed of the calls,” Dorr said this morning.

He said Carroll-area gun owners should be frustrated with any decision from local elected officials that strips Second Amendment rights, and he urged people to vote against the library today.

“I hope the folks in Carroll take action to send a message to the town hall on this,” Dorr said.

Dorr speculated that the calls were financed by some individual gun owners, perhaps even people living in Carroll.

Ivers said Paul has a strong track record on gun rights but that the campaign wants nothing to do with the IGO and Dorr.

“He wants to associate with Ron Paul, but he’s not a team player,” Ivers said.

Other gun-advocacy groups said the connection between Paul and the IGO is well-known.

“You will find that the Iowa Gun Owners has fairly significant ties to Ron Paul and their organizations,” said Jeff Burkett, president of the Iowa Firearms Coalition.

The Iowa Firearms Coalition is not involved in the Carroll calls and finds them distasteful and counter-productive to the gun-rights cause, Burkett said in an interview Monday night.

“The Iowa Firearms Coalition most certainly was not responsible for the recent phone bombardment in Carroll,” Burkett said in a follow-up statement.

“We are a pro-Second Amendment organization, and we echo the NRA’s stance against the city council’s illegal ban on firearms, but we simply don’t see any value in trying to undermine efforts in Carroll to build a new library. It’s simply not a Second Amendment issue. There are other options for voicing concerns against the council’s previous anti-gun policy that we advocate which doesn’t involve politicizing the decision to build a library as a Second Amendment issue. I expect that most reasonable citizens in Carroll will consider the balance of the issues in reaching their decision on how to vote.”

Ivers confirmed that the number which showed up on caller IDs in Carroll in connection to the robocalls against the library was in fact one for Paul campaign headquarters.

He said the connection was “not good” for the presidential campaign.

“We are very anti-tactics-that-are-not-ethical,” Ivers said.

A spokeswoman for the National Rifle Association said in a phone interview that her organization was not behind the calls.

“We don’t know anything about those calls,” Rachel Parsons said.

Regardless of who made the calls, the fact that they don’t identify the source is not a violation of Iowa campaign law, said Megan Tooker, executive director of the Iowa Ethics and Campaign Disclosure Board.

Phone calls are not specifically listed as political communications that require attributions as newspaper and radio advertisements do, she said.

“The robocall did not have to indicate who paid for it,” Tooker said.

Tooker said the Legislature has eyed the issue as a potential loophole that needs closing.

“It is an interesting issue, and I know it is something that some legislators are concerned about,” Tooker said.

The calls took issue with the council’s February vote to ban weapons from city property.

“This turned peaceful citizens using these city properties that they helped pay for into prime targets by the criminal class when they know the peaceful citizen is disarmed,” a man’s voice on the call says. “And now city hall wants you to pay more property taxes to expand these really victim zones.”

The caller asked people to vote against the library as signal of support for the Second Amendment.

“We will never approve their attacks on the Constitution and on our liberty,” the call goes on to say. “You can help send that message to city hall by joining us and voting no this Tuesday.”

About 12 hours after the Carroll City Council passed a resolution this winter prohibiting firearms on city property the politically muscular National Rifle Association said it would challenge the vote as an infringement on constitutional rights and an end run around a new state law. The council voted 5-1 with Councilwoman Carolyn Siemann dissenting to prohibit firearms and certain other weapons on city property.

Ironically, library director Kelly Fischbach said the Library Board of Trustees supports gun rights in the library.

“The library board of trustees would defend the Second Amendment just like they defend the First Amendment, if that decision had been left up to them and their policies,” Fischbach said.

Comments

  • http://www.facebook.com/thaddeus.kaczor Thaddeus S. Kaczor Jr.

    And the Dirty tricks in Iowa begin! Wonder who hacked the Paul Campaign phone bank in order to make the campaign look bad this close to the Ames Straw Poll?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_R66UNCLWTNKU5CYDCSUDCMB6WA renee

    I don’t think people that want to carry a weapon into a public place are the majority.  I would avoid going to the LIbrary or a College Campus if I knew that people were allowed to carry a loaded weapon at those places.
    I feel that allowing loaded weapons everywhere would infringe on my right to go places without being afraid that some idiot might do something stupid and dangerous because he/she was in a public place with a weapon.
    Even our military does not walk around with loaded weapons, and they get alot more training than the average civilian gun owner

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_Y3J7VTFOCTKRISGX377C3TCKHA See the Light

      So, you think the only ones that should be allowed to carry guns in the library are criminals?  

      Just out of curiosity, if you were being threatened by a group of thugs – say they’d knocked you down and had a knife to your throat and were whispering sweet nothings in your ear about how you were going to pleasure them sexually, and just suppose a concealed carry permit holder, with gun (in violation of the illegal City Council ordinance) were to stumble upon the scene, would you want the man with the gun to:

      a) Pull his gun, aim it at the bad guys and tell him to leave you alone, or, 
      b) Laugh at the stupid female who never thought she’d be gang raped, beaten and murdered – and wanted other people to be just as defenseless as she was?

      Before you answer, you should know that concealed carry permit holders are arguably the most law-abiding segment of society.  They are less likely to commit serious crimes (felonies) than the legislature that enacts the laws or the police who enforce them.  That’s right – cops are more likely to commit serious crimes than are concealed carry permit holders. Oh, and citizens are SIX TIMES less likely to shoot the wrong person at the scene of a crime than are cops.

      So choose.  Rescue?  Or gang rape, torture and death?

      • Anonymous

        Of course, you have the concealed carry person who comes on the scene where shots were fired and the man with the conceal carry almost shoots an innocent man who had just removed the gun from Jared Loughner’s hand after he murdered 6 and wounded 12 or 13 people.

  • http://www.facebook.com/lnardozi Louis Nardozi

    To all RP supporters – don’t think that someone else will do YOUR job.
    Sign up to vote in the primaries TODAY, while there’s still time. Show
    YOUR spine for The Man With A Spine.

    Vote Vertebrate – Ron Paul 2012!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Darren-Rufer/671790224 Darren Rufer

    I think everybody knows that Ron Paul would never endorse such a thing. This seems very suspicious and oddly timed.

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