The Dietsch “I Don’t Know Sh!t About the FSP” Tour Lands in The Lakes Region
The tag line at the end of the Farmer’s Insurance Ads with JK Simmons is ‘We know a thing or two because we’ve seen a thing or two.” Former State Senator Jeanne Dietsch has been on a tour of sorts, during which she demonstrates that she doesn’t know a thing or two about the Free State Project. And her tour is landing in the Lakes Region.
Dietsch brings this fear-mongering street theater to the Moultonboro Library on August 4th, with the amusing title, Who are the Free Staters and Out of Staters Taking Over New Hampshire.
Join us for a presentation, followed by Q&A. The meeting is hosted by the Moultonborough Dems, but open to all. Jeanne Dietsch will speak at 6pm on how we can wake up New Hampshire to Free Staters in the legislature and to the billionaires defining & funding their agenda.
Ian Underwood took one for the team and watched, then reported on her last presentation, saved and shared on Zoom. His observations about how wrong Diestch is are worth the time, especially if you’ve been to one of Jeanne’s “presentations.”
Taken individually, none of these misstatements or mischaracterizations is a big deal. People make mistakes. But when someone makes so many misstatements in such a short amount of time, for your own protection, you probably should stop listening. If this presentation had occurred in a court, the judge would have stepped in after a few minutes to instruct the jury to disregard anything said by the witness.
I called it Dietsch-Splaining when we reported on her June 7th appearance.
The infamous Democrat scold, Jeanne Dietsch, has been struggling to find political relevance for years. Since being booted from her very short stint in the NH State Senate, she has launched project after project, unable to accumulate meaningful traction because – let’s be honest – they are little different from the rest of the Left’s resentment-industrial complex.
In the lead-up to the 2024 elections, Dietsch crafted at least two lists we know of. One was a list of House seats Democrats ought to be able to win, and the other was a list of right-wing extremists. If you’d like to know how that went, some people were upset she left them off the latter, and Republicans grew their majority in the NH House and managed a supermajority in the State Senate.
We know a few “Free Staters,” up that way, who might want to drop by and find out what she knows about them that you don’t.
And for the record, the out-of-staters trying to “take over” New Hampshire have long been the Democrat emigrants escaping the political house fires they helped set in the states they are fleeing, and the out-of-state college students they insist must be allowed to vote in your elections. Not a Free Stater among that lot, nor did they come here to change New Hampshire. They chose it because it was already a lot more like how they wanted to live their lives. Back to Ian again.
A longtime state representative (and native of New Hampshire) once told me that there is really only one political party in our county: Fix my roads and leave me the hell alone.
If you’re ever curious about how the FSP came to choose New Hampshire, it’s because it was already filled with natives like this.
Dietsch, for the record, was born and raised in Marion, Ohio, and went to Western Michigan University. She’s not from here either. She is also (ironically, given her lack of knowledge on the subject matter of her presentation) famous for saying that parental choice in education is “great if the parent is well-educated.”
Yes. Another atypical liberal out-of-stater trying to change New Hampshire but with a twist. Jeanne has been struggling to be even a fraction as politically relevant to New Hampshire as the Free State Project for years.
This tour of hers might just be malicious envy.