State Rep. Edmond Jordan (D-Baton Rouge) dresses down Rev. Freddie Lee Phillips, Jr., for Phillips’ reference to black legislators’ actions entailing blocking hair braiding deregulation being akin to “Apartheid.” Jordan made his commentary at the meeting of the House Commerce Committee of Tuesday, April 22, 2025 as it discussed HB-370, a bill to reduce the requirements to braid hair to: #1) registration, #2) successful passage of a twenty-question sanitation exam, and #3) payment of a one-time $25 registration fee.
Editor’s Note:
Rev. Freddie Lee Phillips, Jr., is a close friend of Sound Off Louisiana founder Robert Burns, and he opened the first-in-the-nation totally online auction school. Burns has served as an instructor at the school since its inception and continues in that capacity today.
There is one thing that one of our new subscribers asked, and that is, “Why are you only planning to do a Republican Wall of Shame for those who vote in favor of Butler’s bill?”
Our new subscriber suggested that we should also publish any Democrat who votes in favor of the fee increase so, “I can know how my Representative voted on the bill.” She indicated sentiments paralleling our own sentiment, which is that the bill should be resoundingly defeated!
Accordingly, we will be more than happy to make it a generic “Wall of Shame” and include both Democrats and Republicans who support Butler’s bill.
At present, Butler’s bill is scheduled for House Floor debate tomorrow, Monday, April 28, 2025. Please bear in mind, however, that historically similar bills have been scheduled for debate only to be “returned to the calendar” and, in several instances, never even placed back on the calendar for debate or placed back only to be removed multiple times and ultimately never even achieve an actual vote on the bill. We’ll see how it goes tomorrow if in fact the bill is debated as presently scheduled.
Since Phillips’ testimony elicited such a wide range of emotions and observations, let’s present the highlights of his testimony, which also include a short segment of testimony Phillips made in 2018 entailing hair braiding deregulation:
April 22, 2025: Rev. Freddie Lee Phillips, Jr., testifies in favor of HB-370. [Note: Caption on video above has a typo and extra letter. It should be “divulged.”]
We see no need to write in text what Rev. Phillips said in the video above because he testified on substantive material entailing hair braiding, and we believe he does so in a manner we cannot even hope to try and match!
Now, there is another bill which also focuses on braiding deregulation. That bill is HB-509, which has been sponsored by Rep. Patricia Moore, D-Monroe. Her bill would make it completely optional for obtaining a hair braiding permit and would enable anyone to practice hair braiding without the need for obtaining the permit nor going through the 500 hours presently required to obtain such a permit.
Let’s present highlights of Moore’s bill from the House Commerce Committee testimony also on Tuesday, April 22, 2025:
April 22, 2025: Highlights of Rep. Moore’s HB-509 to make the obtaining of a hair braiding permit optional and permit the practice of hair braiding without the need for any such permit.
Just as Butler’s bill to massively increase the cost of a cosmetology license is, at least at press time today (Sunday, April 27, 2025), scheduled for House Floor debate tomorrow (Monday, April 28, 2025), so too are both Moore and Bayham’s hair braiding deregulation bills.
We will report on the outcome and, as promised above, we most certainly will create a Wall of Shame for all legislators supporting Butler’s fee increase bill.
We appreciate obtaining feedback that says Democrats should also be held accountable for voting for Butler’s bill and the added feedback that such an act should be deemed to be a rewarding of reckless acts by the Board of Cosmetology. We extensively outlined those acts in our last feature.
State Rep. Rhonda Butler testifying before the House Commerce Committee on Tuesday, April 22, 2025 during which she uttered complete falsehoods regarding the Louisiana State Board of Cosmetology (LSBC).
The following table illustrates historical efforts by the LSBC to enact a license fee increase:
Year of Proposed Increase
Sponsor of Proposed Increase
Applicable Sound Off Louisiana Coverage
Ultimate Outcome
2015: (increase from $25 to $40, or 60%).
Former Louisiana State Rep. Stuart Bishop
None because the blog had not yet been formed; however, Burns was included on conference calls initiated by Vietnamese manicurists who were very upset with the proposed increase, and Burns heard Bishop respond to those upset manicurists with this VERBATIM quote: "If I had this to do over, I wouldn't touch this thing with a 10-foot pole."
2017: (another attempted increase from $25 to $35, or 40%).
Former Louisiana State Rep. Sherman Mack
CLICK HERE to see how Executive Director Steve Young and then-Chairman Edwin Neill III, without ANY Board approval, sought the increase; furthermore, they sought to somehow circumvent Louisiana Statute and create a situation wherein the Board could increase fees by mere Rule Promulgation WITHOUT the need for Legislators to have to approve a fee increase bill (we are NOT kidding)!!
2018: (another attempted increase from $25 to $35, or 40% along with a plethora of other related fee increases).
Former Louisiana State Rep. Robert Johnson
Because we were informed that, with Johnson as the sponsor, the bill was "dead on arrival," we didn't bother with covering the matter.
CLICK HERE to see Johnson's bill fall a whopping 27 votes short of full House of Representatives passage.
2022: (another attempted increase from $25 to $35, or 40% along with a plethora of other related fee changes).
Current State Rep. Rhonda Butler
Again, having been told by sources we know to be reliable that the bill would, "never pass the House," we refrained from reporting on this attempt just as we did for Johnson's effort in 2018.
CLICK HERE to see how Butler, like Mack from 2018, sensed the bill would fail miserably and refrained from seeking a vote of the full House of Representatives on her bill.
2023: (another attempted increase from $25 to $40, but a reduction in out-of-state license fees from $50 to $40, and the bill had a "companion" bill to reduce hours for licensure).
After Butler was allegedly initially asked to sponsor the bill, the ultimate sponsor became former State Rep. Mary DuBusson, who was later defeated that same year (2023) by Brian Glorioso by a margin of 57-43.
CLICK HERE to watch a video of the all-time most buffoonish presentation by a Louisiana Legislator we have ever witnessed in all our years of following the Legislature!
CLICK HERE to see how DuBusson managed to pull it off with six (6) votes to spare with many legislators, including then-Representative Richard Nelson saying they had been "duped" and did not realize they were voting for a fee increase. Fortunately, the Louisiana Senate Commerce Committee bailed their asleep-at-the-wheels colleagues in the House out by declining to ever give EITHER of DuBusson's deceptive bills a hearing before the Louisiana Senate Commerce Committee.
2025: (swinging for the fences, they seek a rise from $25 to $50, or 100% incrase).
Current State Rep. Rhonda Butler
This feature and several to come including a resurrection of our Republican Wall of Shame (RWS) in which we will place on prominent display EVERY Republican Legislator who votes for this initiative!
As indicated on the table above, State Rep. Rhonda Butler, a former Cosmetologist, once again stepped up to the plate to carry a bill to raise cosmetology license fees.
When she did so, she uttered one flat-out falsehood along with another falsehood unless LSBC Executive Director Steve Young uttered a falsehood directly into our camera at the most recent LSBC meeting, and we would emphasize that he has steadfastly said the same exact thing repeatedly to the Board Members.
Specifically, let’s watch Butler’s testimony before the House Commerce Committee on Tuesday, April 22, 2025 during which she indicated that the Board, “has not had a license fee increase in 41 years.”
4/22/25: Butler testifies that the LSBC, “has not had a fee increase in 41 years.”
Now, here is video of LSBC Executive Director Steve Young stating that the last fee increase was in “1996,” which, by our math, is 29 years, not 41!
LSBC Executive Director Steve Young states that the last fee increase was in “1996,” which would be 29 years, NOT 41 years!
The next falsehood by Butler is entirely attributable to her apparent trust in Young when we could have told her falsehoods come out of his mouth with regularity!
Specifically, Butler apparently swallowed Young’s contention that the LSBC’s recent enrollment in the AG plan for Member liability protection is “mandatory.” The statement is FLAT-OUT false, and Young either knows, or dang well SHOULD know, that his statement is FALSE!
Young has stated publicly in meetings that the AG program is “mandatory” when it is totally voluntary, and Young knows that but utters the falsehood anyway!
In fact, he strongly discouraged LSBC Members from enrolling in the program at the Board’s regular January meeting; however, upon one Member, Michael Anderson, reading that declining to enroll in the program may subject Members to “personal liability,” the Board called a special meeting to “reconsider” whether it wished to enroll in the program, and they took a vote to enroll in the program. If one has the option and in fact has to take a formal vote of whether to enroll or not, how in the round world is that “mandatory?”
Nevertheless, Butler, who would be well advised to start paying attention to Sound Off Louisiana features rather than relying upon Young to give her accurate information, repeated Young’s falsehood as she testified before the Commerce Committee:
Butler FALSELY states that the LSBC was “mandated” to join the AG “insurance program.”
Here’s the proof that Butler was merely uttering a falsehood she heard directly from LSBC Executive Director Steve Young as he falsely told the LSBC Members that “insurance” (which it is not an insurance program), offered by the AG’s Office is “mandatory.” Young made his false statements at the March 10, 2025 LSBC meeting:
March 10, 2025: LSBC Executive Director FALSELY states that the AG program was “mandated” upon the LSBC Members.
Now here’s one for the books. Here’s video of Young stating the total cost for a new website and making all the building repairs would be a one-time $250,000 – $300,000 expense, yet he is seeking a $972,000/year recurring fee increase:
Young tells Rep. C. Denise Marcelle that the LSBC needs, “probably around $250,000 – $300,000” to make the necessary upgrades, yet the Fiscal Note for his bill calls for a whopping $972,000/year RECURRING fee increase.
We will be presenting a link for the presentation of HB-326 (the massive fee increase) at the end of this feature, and it will depict Butler bemoaning and crying about how “broke we are” (and we object to her use of the word “we” so many times as if she is a Member of the LSBC)!
What Butler fails to note is that the LSBC could have funded ALL of the one-time building expenses if it had merely done like Mississippi 20 years ago and deregulated hair braiding, which would have conservatively raised about $125,000/year for the last 20 years (or a whopping $2.5 million). Instead, Butler doesn’t even mention the fact that, instead of obtaining that $2.5 million in revenue, the LSBC actually spent $157,000 in legal fees fighting hair braiders being able to operate. Who was the beneficiary of that $157,000? Why, the young lady seated to Butler’s right, LSBC attorney Sherri Morris, no less!
Accordingly, excuse us if we have no sympathy whatsoever for any financial plight Young or Butler complains about. It’s a case of misplaced financial priorities. For that reason, as we state in the table above, we do plan to reintroduce the Republican Wall of Shame to place on prominent display any Republican legislator who votes to approve this patently absurd request for this massive fee increase.
As for Butler, we would have to grade on the curve to award her an “F” on her testimony, so her grade is officially “F-.” Her testimony is based on pure 100 percent emotion, and it is not even remotely reflective of the facts when it comes to the LSBC, which is a body we have been monitoring, attending meetings, and recording those meetings for a decade now! We humbly submit that our knowledge is far, far, more integral than that of Rep. Butler!
In conclusion, here are other anti-free-enterprise acts this agency has inflicted upon the citizens of Louisiana:
On # 11 above, the matter was litigated in Federal Court, and Federal Judge Brian Jackson openly stated that the LSBC had, “unquestionably engaged in Constitutional Rights violations” when, on a Saturday morning, then-LSBC-inspector Sherry Stockstill entered a nail salon demanding that, “everybody freeze, nobody move.” Her command was equally applicable to customers as it was to salon employees.
It is undisputed that Stockstill then demanded that the owners/managers of the salon place themselves in an office (i.e. “false imprisonment”) while she, without a search warrant or possessing any legal authority to engage in any of these actions, began plundering through the drawers at the facility, all while the customers and staff had to “not move!” [CLICK HERE for the litigation].
That litigation was settled out of court, but it is demonstrative of the kind of tactics routinely deployed by the LSBC, yet we don’t see Butler mention the first word about how “we” got into the mess she asserts this Board is now in from a financial standpoint.
As any Member of the House is aware, whenever a Representative presents his (her) bill, it is very common for other Representatives to use the infamous, “Did you know……..?” line of questioning.
Should this bill actually make it to a vote in the Full House (past history has indicated that has been too much of an uphill climb, and we believe it should be this year as well), there is certainly plenty of material depicted above through which any Representative could quiz Butler on in terms of those infamous, “Did you know……..?” lines of questioning! We can’t wait to see video of this bill’s presentation when and if it is called for formal debate.
CLICK HERE for the presentation of HB-326 in its entirety, which is a video causing anyone who knows the facts and past history of the LSBC to literally want to throw up.
We steadfastly maintain that ANY Republican Legislator who votes in favor of this absurd fee increase given all of the material above (and we could supply more) deserves to be booted out of office, and we will certainly strive to do what we can do to ensure that transpires! After all, DuBusson is no longer around, is she?
Screen shot of activist Gary Chambers’ Tik Tok page wherein he interacts with radio host Roland Martin. Chambers’ page shows, for that one feature broadcast the day before the March 29, 2025 election: 5,866 “loves,” 762 comments, and 2,734 forwards. Chambers’ strategic deployment of Tik Tok was accompanied by a small army of opponents to Gov. Landry’s proposed Constitutional Amendments who used Tik Tok to likewise lambast both Landry and his initiatives in the weeks and days leading up to a crushing defeat at the polls on election day.
When we published this feature regarding the resounding defeat of Gov. Landry’s proposed Constitutional Amendments, near the end of the video on that feature, we stressed our contention that opponents did a far more effective job of utilizing social media and Tik Tok in particular to strongly motivate opponents to show up at the polls and defeat Landry’s initiatives.
We discussed in detail that aspect opponents’ effective use of Tik Tok beginning at the 15:00 mark of this video. We took heat for our emphasis of just how effectively Amendment opponents utilized Tik Tok to, “hand our heads to us on a platter,” (using “us” because Sound Off Louisiana founder Robert Burns strongly supported Proposed Constitutional Amendment Two). The strongest sentiments were expressed by a dedicated follower of our blog who had this to say soon after we published the feature on the humiliating defeat suffered by Landry and everyone else who supported the initiatives:
I don’t think Tik Tok has a thing to do with it……I’ve never been on Tik Tok. I don’t know anybody that was influenced to vote on this either way based on TikTok.
As Burns stated on the above-referenced video, the best thing a losing team can do after a football game is learn from the loss and observe why the other side enjoyed such a resounding victory.
To us, failing to learn why the other side had the football equivalent of blowing you out of your own stadium in legendary fashion is akin to saying, “We don’t need to study the opposition’s film. We can just wing it on game day.”
If the proponents of the Amendment would take our advice (which they very well may not), they will do as Burns advised near the end of that postmortem video on the March 29, 2025 election and develop an effective Tik Tok assault of their own!
Unfortunately, what we have found is that, like the gentleman who texted us the above comment, many supporters readily admit to not even having a Tik Tok account (indicating an apprehension to its Chinese ownership) and are in apparent total denial of Tik Tok’s incredible influence in elections.
President Trump rode the Tik Tok craze and the “Pledge Tok Trump Dance” to achieve rock star status by reviving a song (YMCA) which came out when Burns was a sophomore in high school and use it to catapult his way to another term as President. Furthermore, Trump, who once spoke against Tik Tok, now appears to be hell bent on finding a way to keep it around.
Since State Rep. Julie Emerson (R-Carencro) came in second place on who endured the worst adverse impact from Constitutional Amendment Two’s resounding defeat at the polls, Sound Off Louisiana’s Burns decided to ask her if she would concede opponents to Amendment Two did a much more effective job of deploying Tik Tok to defeat the initiative. Here’s what she had to say as she appeared at the April 7, 2025 meeting of the Baton Rouge Press Club:
4/7/25: Emerson addresses whether opponents to Constitutional Amendment Two deployed social media and Tik Tok in particular to kill the initiative at the polls on March 29, 2025.
Emerson’s response sounds at least a little like there’s an acknowledgement that proponents were way behind the curve on effective utilization of a platform like Tik Tok to sway voters. What we’ll say is that we firmly believe that burying heads in the sand and pretending Tik Tok doesn’t exist is a formula for future even more humiliating defeats, at least in our opinion.
Now, at special request, Burns also asked if any church language would be removed from any future initiative. Let’s view just how succinct Emerson’s answer was on that:
4/7/25: Emerson addresses whether any “church language” is included in Round Two of she and Gov. Landry’s Rewrite of Article VII of the Louisiana Constitution.
Since Emerson is so crystal clear on that question, we see no need to even cover some of the extensive efforts by both preachers and former politicians (and at least one who is a preacher and ran for public office but was defeated) to defeat Landy and Emerson’s initiative.
Instead, we will only state our own frustration at having to literally paddle upstream to even get the message out that we did regarding Amendment Two in the final 10 days of the campaign. We cannot begin to adequately express our frustration level to see opponents getting off-the-charts numbers on Tik Tok to defeat Amendment Two and our own efforts to promote it being like pulling teeth! It’s now history, but it’s a lesson we’re not going to forget anytime soon, and we’ll let it go at that!
Now, we’re going to provide the YouTube video of Chambers and Martin’s interaction, but we’ll state that Tik Tok videos tend to be much shorter (typically 90 seconds to two minutes at most) and, if anyone is curious as to the content of the Tik Tok feature of Martin and Chambers, simply advance the following video to the 7:00 mark and that’s basically where the Tik Tok feature begins and lasts for a couple of minutes:
YouTube video by radio show host Roland Martin featuring Gary Chambers and the Power Coalition’s opposition to Constitutional Amendment Two on the March 29, 2025 ballot. To get a good idea of the Tik Tok “executive summary” of the feature, advance to the 7:00 mark and play the next two or three minutes, and that gives a good feel for Chambers’ own Tik Tok feature on the matter.
As we conclude this feature, Emerson’s second time at bat regarding the reintroduction of the “Article VII Rewrite” of Louisiana’s Constitution is scheduled for Tuesday, April 22, 2025 before the Louisiana House Ways and Means Committee (which Emerson Chairs). If the initiative makes it through both Chambers (no pun intended) of the Legislature, it will go before a vote of the people on November 3, 2026.
It’s our sincere hope that, if it does go before the people for another vote, supporters will have a vastly improved ground game when it comes to Tik Tok because, sticking with the football analogy, supporters got absolutely crushed on the field by the absence of any offense whatsoever where Tik Tok is concerned.
That fact (because it is a fact notwithstanding the gentleman’s text to us that “neither side” was influenced by Tik Tok) is something which must change before any future vote on the matter (game played on the football field) lest the same result ensue once again!
CLICK HERE for the 4/7/25 meeting of the Baton Rouge Press Club in its entirety, which included a joint appearance by State Rep. Jack McFarland.