Thursday, June 23, 2005

 

Thank goodness he won't be in Nashville for a while.

Well, I honestly can't say that I heard all that much at the Town Hall meeting I attended. Pretty much the same thing was echoed by a few people I spoke with.

Here is a quote from Hilly boy, out of the Jonesborough Herald & Tribune, about his town hall meeting held there on Thursday June 17, page 3a:
“We have a list of things we can do to help save [TennCare]. We just need people in government who are willing to work on improving the plan instead of kicking people off of TennCare.”
I am going to do some digging, but I am pretty sure about four months ago Hilly boy was complaining about how there were way too many people on TennCare. So when Bredesen responds to that Hilly boy changes his position. He is priceless. And related to that topic, I found it interesting how Mr. Vonderfecht of Mountain States Health Alliance intelligently argued that our politicians need to be fighting to lower pharmaceutical drug costs, not focusing solely on TennCare. This was definitely a message that drug money funded Hilly boy did not want to hear.

In the same paper Hilly boy wrote this in "his" column:
“The General Assembly saw two bills this year that dealt with allowing a person with a carry permit to bring their firearm into a restaurant where alcohol is served, provided that the carrier does not drink.”
Hilly boy describes them as both being defeated by Democrats. How in the world will restaurants that serve alcohol know if any of their customers are carrying firearms? These bills are incredibly dangerous because we don’t need drunks with guns in the same restaurants we take our children to.

And finally, I was told that at the Jonesborough town hall meeting that Hilly boy arrived late, and then said, "It is not government's place to create jobs." I sure am glad he is working for us in Nashville. And it appears that Jason Mumpower sharply disagrees with Hilly boy from the context of this article about how government better be creating jobs. When is Hilly boy up for re-election?

Comments:
Sounds like a typical Hill diversion --- do you remember how candidate Matthew Hill was really hot and bothered with then-State Rep. Bob Patton for not supporting (legislatively and philosophically) the creation (pardon my pun) of an official Tennessee "Right To Life" motor vehicle license plate by the Tennessee Department of Safety?

I seem to recall that candidate Hill made the bitch for the "Right To Life" license plate as his top legislative agenda --- and perhaps unfortunately for Matthew, his "Right To Life " license plate proposal became his first major legislative failures. The upside is that Northeast Tennessee residents won't have to listen to Rep. Hill and Michelle Gantz bitch and moan for the next year about Matthew's ineptitude as a lawmaker in Nashville.

"And finally, I was told that at the Jonesborough town hall meeting that Hilly boy arrived late, and then said, "It is not government's place to create jobs." I sure am glad he is working for us in Nashville. And it appears that Jason Mumpower sharply disagrees with Hilly boy from the context of this article about how government better be creating jobs. When is Hilly boy up for re-election? "

Hey salida, you should really try examinig at this job creation dodge from Little Matthew's perspective: "It is not government's place to create jobs --- that is Daddy Dr. Hill's responsibility!"
 
According to the 2003 IRS Form 990s filed by Dr. Kenneth Hill, President of the 501(c)(3) tax exempt Appalichian Educational Communications Corporation (WHCB 91.5 FM is the frequency for the mais cash cow) , AECC --- or rater, Dr. Kenneth Hill--- paid "key employee" Matthew Hill $36,125 for a forty hour work week. Way to "Harvesting Christ's Blessings", Matthew!

Come on now, you don't need government to provide the tax incentives, friendly laws, and business environment to help business owners create new jobs. Just thrrow up a radio tower and start panhandling "for Jesus"...and watch the money just roll in.

And you thought Rep. Hill made all his money selling coffee beans...
 
You are forgetting that the Tennessee General Assembly members can begin to collect campaign funds after the legislative session has ended....
 
yawn, you guys are really boring. You must be living on the Gov. to have so much time to "bitch and moan"! }:( WAHHHHHH!)
 
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
 
I dunno --- this Hilly Boy's Deception blog has more contributors than did Hill's former WPWT web forum board.
 
I think it's the same people.
 
That was a pretty funny post about Hill's daddy. Of course the government doesn't need to help us create jobs if your daddy can take care of you, especially when some of that pay comes from 'religious donations.'
 
I'm not sure what that comment about collecting campaign funds was about. And on the right to life plates, Patton opposed them because the Tenn. R2Life was being deceptive in their lobbying efforts and because the ACLU would suck a ton of taxpayer money out of Tenn in a lawsuit. Well, that is exactly what the ACLU is doing and now pro-abortion groups will probably be allowed to get state money from their own plates. Why don't we just drop the sponsoring of license plates and tell everyone to just buy their own stupid bumperstickers instead. I don't beleive the government was supposed to be an advertising agency.
 
,"yawn, you guys are really boring. You must be living on the Gov. to have so much time to "bitch and moan"! }:( WAHHHHHH!)"

I suppose that means that Rep. Gregory-Hill has won the Triple Crown for "Sponging a Easy Living Off Others":

1) State Representative
(courtesy of the everflowing Gregory money);
2) Daddy's "Key Employee", and;
3) Mooching on the Name of Jesus.


Whatta an artist...
 
abovementioned: meaning TNGA members cannot legally solicit or accept campaign contributions during the legislative sessions...
 
I do understand the rules about rasing funds during session, but I don't think anyone said they knew Hilly boy was doing that, at least not in regard to this post. I would not be surprised, but that is one thing I have not heard he has done. Supposedly his radio station fundraising activities are not connected to his political fundraising activities, but I have my doubts.
 
From late 2003 to around November 2004, state house candidate Matthew Hill had a PayPal campaign finance donation hyperlink on his campaign web site linking back to his former "Good Morning Tri-Cities" email address ---

"mailto:gmtc@hotmail.com"

with "gmtc" being an abbrevation for "Good Morning Tri-Cities". This URL was the exact same email address that Matthew Hill promoted for years during his tenure of WPWT 870 AM, and "mailto:gmtc@hotmail.com" is now again the same email address that his brother Timothy Hill is currently promoting on-air at WPWT 870AM as the current email address for "Good Morning Tri-Cities".

So how did Timothy Hill (the second "Good Morning Tri-Cites" host gain access to the same Hotmail email account that Rep. Matthew Hill utilized to route PalPay campaign finance donations to the bank account of his campaign treasury?

The first host following Matthew Hill's late 2003 departure as the host of "Good Morning Tri-Cities" --- McNurdland, as I recall, was pitching a

mailto:gmtc@powertalk870.com

email address --- and this email address was used between the time that Matthew Hill announced his intention to seek the 7th District House seat and the November 2004 general election.

Reads like a very shady ethical practice of campaign finance practices to me....
 
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