Spring Sale: Get 1 Year, Save 58%

Trumpers fold like cards — you just have to stand up to them

In the end, the Ottawa occupiers were left literally waving white flags.

After weeks of holding the Canadian capital hostage — with relentless honking and other abuse of the residents — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau finally brought an end to what pretended to be an uprising by truckers opposing vaccine mandates but was really a fringe minority trying to recruit more followers into a fascist movement. There had been a great deal of trepidation about violent resistance from the occupiers, who were big into chest-thumping and acting tough. Instead, they pulled out the most notorious symbol of surrender. 

“By midday Saturday, protest leaders had thrown up the white flag figuratively and literally — organizer Pat King told his followers, quite wrongly, that waving a white flag meant they could not be arrested under international law,” Paul McLeod of Buzzfeed reported

RELATED: Trump’s anti-vaccine hysteria has a mission: violence

They were lurking behind the tough “trucker” facade, but the truth is the protest was organized by far-right conspiracy theorists and was denounced by the Teamsters, the main trucker union. In the end, the weenieness of the occupiers got downright comical. The 911 line was flooded by protesters whining about being told to leave. Organizers kept saying unintentionally funny things like, “The vast majority of the truckers do want to withdraw, but it is an individual choice for any trucker.” The official “Freedom Convoy” Twitter account released a statement not declaring any intent to stand firm but asking if they could just have a little more time to clear out since trucks are big and hard to move. 

“Despite cries of ‘Hold the line’, the mood among protesters was dire Saturday, as they didn’t even manage to hold the line until lunch,” Mack Lamoureux of Vice reported

There’s a lesson in this for those who want to oppose rising authoritarianism: Don’t be scared of these people. Most of them are paper tigers, who will fold if they are confronted with the threat of a real consequence. 


Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.


Unfortunately, in the United States, far too many Democratic leaders are cowed by Donald Trump and his followers, behaving as if they are afraid that taking steps to hold them accountable will backfire and somehow only make Trump stronger.

In January, a year after the Capitol insurrection that Trump incited, Attorney General Merrick Garland made a mealy-mouthed statement promising, “The Justice Department remains committed to holding all January 6th perpetrators, at any level, accountable under law — whether they were present that day or were otherwise criminally responsible for the assault on our democracy.” In reality, however, there is no real sign that he has any such intention of doing so. Trump incited the riot on live TV and so far, not only has he not been arrested but there is no real sign of any Justice Department-led investigation that would lead to such an arrest. The January 6 committee referred Trump’s former chief of staff, Mark Meadows, on charges for contempt of Congress over two months ago, and still, there remains absolutely no sign that the DOJ has plans to arrest Meadows, either. 

RELATED: Trump lawyer interrupts hearing on company’s finances to demand Hillary Clinton probe

While there’s still a lot of hope out there that Garland is working in secret and will reveal the mass arrests any day now, it’s looking more likely by the day that we’re dealing with what former FBI director James Comey dubbed the “chickenshit club” problem. That’s when prosecutors avoid taking on rich and heavily lawyered criminals because they fear the court battles will be hard to win. The problem is, as Comey noted, you lose 100% of the fights you run away from. Trump, who will pay a lawyer ten times what he owes a contractor just to get out of the contract, has exploited chickenshittery in prosecutors his whole life. He is clearly hoping it will save his neck post-coup. 

But New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, has not shared Garland’s timidity in the face of Trump’s relentless threats of lawsuits and counter-filings. Instead, she’s gone hard after Trump and his family, based on the extensive evidence of decades of fraud. So far, her willingness to put up a fight has garnered significant returns. Trump’s accounting firm fired him, a sign they see his company as a ship they’d rather not go down with. And last week, a Manhattan judge ruled that Trump and his children must sit for depositions, after a ridiculous hearing in which Trump’s lawyers spewed conspiracy theories about Hillary Clinton in a pathetic bid to confuse the issue at hand. 


Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.


Last week, lawyers for Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., and for police hurt during the Capitol insurrection also demonstrated that fighting back works better than laying down. They are suing Trump for damages from inciting the insurrection and a federal judge shot down Trump’s effort to throw the lawsuit out with facetious claims that he enjoys “absolute immunity” from such lawsuits. 

And despite a lack of support from the DOJ, the January 6 committee has been doing a good job of accruing evidence that Trump’s coup was extensive and organized. Plenty of what has been leaked indicates criminal activity Trump could be easily be arrested for either pressuring Georgia’s secretary of state into fabricating votes, destroying evidence, or absconding with classified materials. The National Archives has now joined with the January 6 committee into unsubtly and publicly nudging a reluctant DOJ into doing something about this criminal who will absolutely attempt another coup if he’s not stopped. And in standing up to Trump, both the National Archives and the January 6 committee show that sometimes victory is possible — but only if you actually fight. 

Maybe the fantasies of so many on Twitter will manifest and the cuffs will suddenly come out for Trump. Likelier, however, is what Brian Beutler of Crooked Media recently wrote of Garland in his newsletter: “[W]e’d be naive not to wonder how much of his reluctance to enforce the law against prominent right-wing criminals is driven by fear” of a right-wing backlash. The problem, however, is that “if crooks can opt out of the criminal law through public intimidation, we should wonder how much they’ll ultimately get away with simply by threatening to whip up a public shitstorm if they meet any resistance.”

To make it worse, as the Ottawa situation shows, the fears of resistance are likely way overblown. Most authoritarians like to talk big, but cave the second they face real consequences. (That is why vaccine mandates have been so incredibly effective at getting shots in arms.) Even the violence of January 6 doesn’t disprove this point. As was quickly discovered once the FBI actually started arresting rioters, most of the people who stormed the Capitol did so under the delusion that they would never face actual consequences for doing so. They were so cossetted by white privilege that it simply didn’t occur to them that committing a crime could lead to prison time. 

Unfortunately, what was a delusion for the people who actually stormed the Capitol is just a lived reality for Trump and the other GOP leaders who led the coup from the safety of their overpriced hotel rooms. They are tearing apart our democracy with confidence. Not because they possess courage, but because they believe — so far, with good reason — that their opponents lack it.

Trump and his allies understand that it doesn’t matter if the January 6 committee reveals every detail of the conspiracy to overturn American democracy. As long as none of the ringleaders go to jail for it, they will be free to try again. Next time, however, they will likely succeed. 

Putin formally deploys Russian combat forces into Ukraine

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday ordered his country’s Defense Ministry to send troops into the Russian-separatist-controlled Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics in Eastern Ukraine, whose independence Putin formally recognized in a speech given just hours earlier.

This latest provocation is another escalation in what could be the largest military offense in Europe since World War II.

According to reporting in “The New York Times,” Putin issued decrees for “peacekeeping functions” to protect Russian-speaking residents, although “it was not immediately certain whether the Russian troops would remain only on the territory controlled by the separatist republics, or whether they would seek to capture the rest of the two Ukrainian regions whose territory they claim.”

And “it was unclear if a long-feared Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine had begun. The separatists might have invited Russian forces in, but neither Ukraine nor the rest of the world views the so-called republics as anything but Ukrainian territory,” the “Times” wrote.

Putin’s motives, however, are much less ambiguous. For Putin, reclaiming the former Soviet Union’s defunct borders is personal.

“By seeking to redraw the post-Cold War boundaries of Europe and force Ukraine back into Moscow’s orbit, Mr. Putin is attempting nothing less than to upend the security structure that has helped maintain an uneasy peace on the continent for the past three decades,” the “Times” explained. “Now edging toward the twilight of his political career, Mr. Putin, 69, is determined to burnish his legacy and to correct what he has long viewed as one of the greatest catastrophes of the 20th century: the disintegration of the Soviet Union.”

Putin also maintains that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s eastward expansion over the last four decades represents an existential security threat to Russia. Ukraine, a democracy that is not a NATO member, is the lone buffer between Russia and the Western alliance. 

As for his end game, Putin, the “Times” noted, “appears intent on winding back the clock 30 years, to just before the collapse of the Soviet Union.”

On Monday evening, “The Washington Post” Editorial Board stressed that Putin’s “true reason to target Ukraine is not Russian national security but preserving his own power in Moscow, which would be threatened by a successful democratic experiment in a former Soviet republic of Ukraine’s size and cultural importance.”

Now that Putin has formally deployed combat forces into Ukraine, the “Post” editors recommended that the United States and the European Union impose crippling economic sanctions onto Russia immediately.

“After Monday, it is unfortunately clear that Mr. Putin has not been deterred, war is likely, and there is no longer any reason to wait in imposing sanctions — even extending them beyond the breakaway regions, which the White House immediately targeted,” the Board concluded. “That would be the first step in decisively responding to this geopolitical crisis, but it can hardly be the last.”

GOP Senate candidate Josh Mandel makes bizarre claim about slavery during debate

Ohio Republican Senate candidate Josh Mandel on Monday claimed that Israel was “the only country” in which “Africans were not brought as slaves,” neglecting to mention that the Jewish state was formed in 1948, over a century after the Atlantic slave trade ended. 

Mandel’s dizzying remarks came in a Cleveland debate against his Democratic opponent Morgan Harper, who had just answered a question about whether she’d give unconditional support to defend Israel if Iran attacks the Jewish state. 

“Morgan, do you know the only country on the whole planet where Africans were not brought as slaves?” Mandel asked Harper. “The Jewish state of Israel.”


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Throughout the debate, Mandel and Harper engaged in several heated exchanges, with Mandel, in typical fashion, waging an array of personal attacks. 

In one back-and-forth, Mandel told Harper that he expected her to be “like [Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez], only smarter.” But after hearing her debate him, Mandel added, “I actually think she’s like AOC, only dumber.” The audience immediately let out a wave of groans. 

RELATED: ​​Ohio’s GOP Senate contenders desperately try to out-Trump each other — it could hurt them

In another exchange, Harper called Mandel a career politician, who is “funded by corporate interests” and spouts “whatever Big Lie Donald Trump is forcing [him] to talk about.” (Mandel has whole-heartedly endorsed Donald Trump’s baseless claims of election fraud.)

In response, Mandel tarred Harper as an “angry radical leftist” who is “all about political gameship.”

“You get up here and you call me names, call others names,” he told her. “But the reality is you sound like you’ve been in Washington for thirty years.”

RELATED: Republican Senate candidate gets booted from Ohio school board meeting

Monday marked the two candidates’ second debate along the campaign trail, with both of them seeking to replace Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, who has promised to bow out of re-election bid.  

Along the campaign trail, Mandel, the former treasurer of Ohio, has openly acknowledged his desire for an endorsement from Donald Trump. However, the former president has apparently been reluctant to give the candidate his imprimatur. According to the Daily Beast, Trump reportedly thinks of Mandel as being “f**king weird.”

Meanwhile, Mandel and Harper both face a crowded field of primary opponents, including J.D. Vance, the conservative venture capitalist and author of “Hillbilly Elegy”; Jane Timken, the former chair of the Ohio Republican Party; Ohio state Senator Matt Dolan; and Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan of Ohio.

White men as victims: America’s most dangerous fantasy

One of the most popular lies being circulated by the Republican Party and the larger white right is that white men are somehow oppressed in America. To say that such a claim is absurd would be an understatement. To be white is to have access to unearned advantages in almost every arena of American society and throughout the world. And to be male is also to have access to resources and life opportunities that in general are de facto still denied to women and girls.

By almost all indicators, men as a group dominate and control America’s networks of power, influence, wealth and other resources.

RELATED: Joe Walsh on Trump’s looming “race war” — and why his followers love it

Of course many individual men who happen to be white experience life hardships and other disadvantages. Moreover, the group advantages enjoyed by men overall do not trickle down equally to all men on either side of the color line. Likewise, there are individual Black and brown people, and individual women, who have tremendous power, resources and wealth. But in the aggregate, on a societal scale, white men are not being disadvantaged because of their race or gender.

But the absurdity of this claim should not be surprising. Race itself is perhaps the greatest absurdity in modern history; it is a social construct, not a genetic or biological fact. It was invented to legitimize global white supremacy and imperialism.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


As Peter Prontzos at Scientific American summarizes: 

In 2014, more than 130 leading population geneticists condemned the idea that genetic differences account for the economic, political, social and behavioral diversity around the world. In fact, said a 2018 article in Scientific American, there is a “broad scientific consensus that when it comes to genes there is just as much diversity within racial and ethnic groups as there is across them.” And the Human Genome Project has confirmed that the genomes found around the globe are 99.9 percent identical in every person. Hence, the very idea of different “races” is nonsense.

A second problem, as cognitive scientist George Lakoff has shown, is that simply using the word “race,” even when criticizing racism, actually reinforces the false belief that human beings belong to fundamentally different groups. That’s because the more a word is used, the more that certain brain circuits are activated and the stronger that metaphor becomes.

Nonetheless the “true lie” of race remains one of the most powerful forces in American and global society.

A binary understanding of gender — which itself is also a social construct — is only slightly less absurd than the race concept. When race and gender are combined with questions of whiteness, masculinity and power, matters only become more complicated, more confusing and therefore more politically and socially combustible.

Ultimately, white male victimology has historically proven itself to pose an extreme threat to pluralistic democracy. When the group with the most power believes in delusions and fantasies about its oppression, violence is the likely result. This is justified through claims of self-defense against an imaginary threat.

In a recent featured essay at the Washington Post, Cleve Wootson Jr. waded into the tumultuous debate about white male victimology and “oppression” in the Age of Trump and beyond. He begins with:

Holding court at a political rally in Texas last week, former president Donald Trump implied that he — a wealthy White man who was elected to an office almost exclusively held by White men — was a victim of racism.

His claim referenced what he said were three “radical vicious, racist prosecutors” — one in Georgia, one in New York, one in Washington, and all of them Black — who are investigating his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection and examining his business organization’s finances. But his comments made him the latest in a line of conservatives claiming, loudly and frequently, that White men are victims of racism.

After years of being branded a racist for his inflammatory comments and actions, Trump and some of his allies are attempting to turn that label back on their critics. In the process, they have wielded their own definition of racism, one that disregards the country’s history of racial exclusion that gives White people a monopoly on power and wealth. To make America more equitable, they argue, everyone must be treated equally and, therefore, White men must not in any way be disadvantaged.

Wootson locates this narrative of victimology within the larger context of Joe Biden’s promise to nominate a Black woman to the Supreme Court:

The decision to consider only Black women was deemed racist by many conservatives. For some, anything but a race-blind selection would reek of bias, and Biden’s parameters have been characterized as a political ploy to mollify a key constituency. Others have noted that narrowing the choices to Black women also excludes other historically disadvantaged groups, such as Hispanic women or women of Asian descent.

Wootson also triangulates these white male victimology narratives relative to the extreme partisan polarization of our era, in which a large majority of Republicans believe that “little or nothing needs to be done to ensure equal rights for all Americans,” according to a Pew Research study conducted last year, while a similarly large majority of Democrats believe “a lot more needs to be done to achieve racial equity.” 

For some White voters, experts say, efforts to give certain groups added help can be seen as unnecessarily onerous and even discriminatory. Such views are often deeply held and affect how people — and voting blocs — feel about any number of issues, such as whether children study racial equity in school, who should receive food stamps, or whether an implicit bias seminar at work is a waste of time.

To gain more context and insight into how the Republican Party and the larger white right are deploying the fantastical narrative of white men as an oppressed and persecuted group, I asked several experts on race, power and society for their thoughts on white male backlash, its origins and implications.

Jessie Daniels is a faculty associate at the Harvard Berkman Klein Center and a Professor of Sociology at Hunter College. She is the author of several books including “White Lies” and “Cyber Racism.” Her new book is “Nice White Ladies: The Truth about White Supremacy, Our Role in It, and How We Can Help Dismantle It.

There’s a long history of white men seeing themselves as the chief victims of racial oppression. This includes the end of slavery. White men who were also enslavers saw themselves as the true victims of the abolition of their way of making a living, so they went to their government and asked, even demanded, compensation for their “loss” in freeing the people who worked for them for no money. In Britain, this was enacted through the Slave Compensation Act 1837 and continued compensating slave-owning white families through 2015.  In the U.S., each slave-owning white man received $300 for each person they owned who was freed because of the Emancipation Proclamation, when at the same time formerly enslaved people were promised 40 acres and a mule, a promise that was mostly unfulfilled

Fast forward to the era of “affirmative action” in the early 1970s, and even with this very limited federal government program, white men felt attacked.

My research into the far right led me to the printed publications of groups on the right — from the KKK to David Duke’s NAAWP — from around 1970 through the early 1990s. Throughout the publications that I examined, I found white men deeply invested in the sort of twin imagery of themselves as “warriors” and also as “victims” of racial oppression. 

In the current era, examples proliferate of white men who see themselves as victims, chief among them former President Trump, who in his opening campaign speech referenced the “rapists” and “drug dealers” coming from Mexico, an old racist trope from the white supremacist playbook. It’s also deadly. White men as “victims” easily slides into a white guy with a gun. And there’s often a white woman standing by her man on the front porch of their midwestern palazzo, even with the guns. 

The “victim” rhetoric from white men coincides with the white-led backlash against any kind of Black progress. A year after the supposed “reckoning” of the summer of 2020 and the murder of George Floyd (and “Central Park Karen”), it’s not surprising to me that we are experiencing a season of whitelash with white men at the front, proclaiming their innocence for the destruction they’ve caused even as they profess their victimhood. 

RELATED: Donald Trump’s fantasies of racial violence reflect an all-too-real history

Wajahat Ali is the author of the new book “Go Back to Where You Came From: And Other Helpful Recommendations on How to Become American.” He is a contributing writer for the Daily Beast. His essays and other writing have been featured in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Guardian, the New York Review of Books and the Atlantic.

White male grievance is the lifeblood of white supremacy, an endless supply of faux victimhood to justify all sorts of irrational brutality and inequity to maintain power for them and only them. Trump has just tapped into this white rage to fuel the right wing movement; this is nothing new. Just go back and see the movie “Birth of a Nation” from 1915 — it’s all there. Black emancipation, even barely at that, was an affront to white power, rule and dominion. As a result? They were victims who then donned the hoods of the KKK to reclaim their honor. Victims or heroes, never the villains.

Jean Guerrero is an opinion columnist at the Los Angeles Times. She is the author of the recent book “Hatemonger: Stephen Miller, Donald Trump, and the White Nationalist Agenda.” Her essays and other writing have been featured at Vanity Fair, Politico, the Nation, Wired, the New York Times and The Washington Post.

White victimology politics were once the purview of neo-Nazis and the KKK, but they’ve become the engine of the Republican Party. Back in the ’70s, David Duke was largely reviled and rejected by Americans for his white victimology politics. He claimed the “white man” was the real “second-class citizen” in America today.

But this delusion that white men are the real victims is now mainstream gospel among Republicans. That’s thanks to decades of conservative politicians and talk show hosts cashing in on white racial anxieties about demographic change by injecting white supremacy or “white supremacy lite” into the GOP bloodstream.

Many of those key players (i.e., Rush Limbaugh, Tucker Carlson and Stephen Miller) have roots in California, where non-Hispanic white people became a demographic minority in the ’90s.

As I wrote in “Hatemonger,” that’s when we saw the rise of a racially furious, radicalized brand of conservatism that eventually morphed into Trumpism. It’s no surprise that Trump is now repeatedly framing white men as victims of racial discrimination, given that his trusted ally Miller has for months been busy thwarting efforts to help marginalized communities by casting those efforts as racist against white people. White victimology politics are rooted in the fallacy of civilization as a zero-sum game. Their logical conclusion is race war.

Ashley Jardina in an assistant professor of Political Science at Duke University. She is the author of “White Identity Politics.”

Central to Trump’s political strategy was an effort to stoke racial grievances among white Americans.

Feelings of racial victimization among white Republicans grew over Trump’s presidency. According to data from the American National Election Study, in 2016, 30% of white men identifying with the Republican Party reported that whites experience a moderate to a great amount of discrimination in the U.S. By 2020, that number had increased to 40%. But white Republican women also share this sense of racial victimhood. In 2020, nearly 43% of white Republican women surveyed said that white Americans experience notable amounts of racial discrimination.

RELATED: Mitch McConnell’s moment of truth: For many whites, Black people aren’t real “Americans”

Joe R. Feagin is a sociologist and the Ella C. McFadden Distinguished Professor at Texas A&M University. He is the author of many books including “The White Racial Frame,” “White Party, White Government: Race, Class, and U.S. Politics,” “Racist America” and “Two-Faced Racism: Whites in the Backstage and Frontstage.”

Prominent white men, including major white scholars, created and circulated the terms “reverse racism” and “affirmative discrimination” starting back in the late 1960s and 1970s solely to counter the new civil rights laws and presidential affirmative action orders (from Lyndon Johnson) pressuring whites in major organizations to redress centuries of extreme racial oppression and of white unjust enrichments from that oppression, enrichments passed along many generations of white families to the present day.

In the late 1960s and 1970s this federal pressure sought to redress the severe oppressive legacies of Jim Crow segregation.  For decades this reverse racism/white victimology notion has been a standard white deflection tactic to change the necessary antiracist discussions and actions away from those about seriously remedying those past and present unjust white enrichments from 400-plus years of white racist oppression, exploitation and dominance. It is basically an attack on Black America and Black efforts for change.

Especially relevant to this current white victimology is the reality that this broad white racial framing has always centered a very positive orientation to whites as highly virtuous and a negative orientation to racial “others” viewed as unvirtuous.

These narratives aggressively accentuate notions of white superiority, white civilization and institutions, white virtue and white moral goodness. That is what all these white politicians are doing with their phony and empirically undocumented claims that they are victims of racial discrimination. Their white virtuousness is being legitimately challenged, and their unvirtuousness in creating and maintaining racist institutions is being foregrounded.

Stacey Abrams, David Perdue in unlikely alliance after Brian Kemp changes election rules again

Democrat Stacey Abrams and former Republican U.S. Sen. David Perdue found themselves in an unlikely alliance last week after Georgia’s Republican governor, Brian Kemp, backed a rule change that could benefit his election chances — and not for the first time. 

Kemp, Georgia’s former secretary of state, has been repeatedly accused of abusing his power to aid his election chances, and is now backing a bill that would ban challengers to incumbents from raising money while the state legislature is in session, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The legislative session is scheduled to conclude in April, but critics have raised concerns that the legislation could allow Kemp to shut down fundraising by calling a special legislative session, possibly right ahead of the election.

The bill was introduced by state Senate Rules Committee Chairman Jeff Mullis, a powerful Kemp ally, after a federal judge ruled that the governor can’t use funds from a new leadership fund he signed into law without any public notice last year for his primary battle against Perdue, the former Republican senator who lost his seat to Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff in January 2021. The bill was introduced just days after new campaign finance reports showed that Abrams had raised nearly four times as much as Kemp since entering the race in December.

Perdue, who has drawn former President Donald Trump’s support in his campaign against Kemp, called the new leadership fund that Kemp planned to use to help fund his campaign a “slush fund.”

“In the dark of night, Brian Kemp signed a shady backroom deal to try and rig this race in his favor, and the people of Georgia aren’t going to let him get away with it. The court’s ruling goes to show that a 20-year career politician like Kemp will do anything to try and save himself,” Perdue said in a statement.

RELATED: GOP civil war set to begin in Georgia as David Perdue seeks to challenge Gov. Brian Kemp

Mullis said his bill would level the playing field for state lawmakers and officials who are barred from raising money during the legislative session.

“This brings parity and makes fairness for all. I don’t think it’s just because you are an incumbent, you can raise (more) money,” Mullis said during a state Senate hearing, even though Kemp has raised about 18 times more than his Republican challenger. The new leadership fund rules also allow Kemp to continue raising money for his committee despite the ban on fundraising.

Perdue’s campaign claimed that the proposal was coming from Kemp, calling it an “incumbent protection act.” Kemp has been supportive of the legislation and his aides recently met with state Senate leaders to discuss the proposal, according to AJC.

“This attempt by incumbents to shut down their challengers’ ability to raise money is politics at its worst,” the Perdue campaign said in a statement.

Perdue has found unusual common ground with Abrams on this issue, who is seeking the Democratic nomination after narrowly losing to Kemp in 2018.

“This is clearly a naked election-year ploy,” Abrams campaign manager Lauren Groh-Wargo said on a press call this week, adding that “if there is a campaign finance law change that protects incumbency and is clearly unconstitutional, we are ready to fight it.”

Abrams’ campaign warned that Kemp could also call a special session of the legislature whenever he wants, or even extend it through November’s election, giving him sole discretion over when his opponents may raise money.

An early draft of the legislation appeared to be aimed directly at Abrams. The draft version in the chamber would bar anyone with “outstanding taxes” from being eligible to run for office. In 2018, Abrams owed $55,000 in back taxes to the IRS, but she repaid it in 2019. Another draft provision would block PACs affiliated with candidates from raising money during the legislative session, which could limit fundraising by the Abrams-founded Fair Fight Action.

Abrams’ campaign noted that Kemp had 29 months to raise money before any of his opponents launched their campaigns. The campaign also questioned why Kemp had not pushed for such a ban during his 15 years in state office, or at least not until he faced Abrams’ fundraising behemoth.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Kemp’s campaign hit back at his challengers’ complaints.

“It’s no surprise that David Perdue and Stacey Abrams are joining forces to maintain the blatantly unfair status quo and continue raising money for their campaigns when the Governor is prohibited by law from doing so, solely because he is the incumbent during a legislative session,” Cody Hall, a spokesman for the campaign, said in a statement to Salon. “The surprising part is that they are being so open and honest about it.”

Critics previously accused Kemp of trying to tilt the scale in his favor when he signed a new law giving a handful of state leaders the ability to raise unlimited funds from big donors. That law, which was also sponsored by Kemp’s legislative ally Mullis, allowed leadership committees run by Kemp and legislative leaders to circumvent limits on political contributions and the restriction on raising money during the legislative session.

“In the middle of the night last year on the last day of session, he gave himself a leadership committee,” Groh-Wargo said. “And it’s absolutely anathema to our democracy and our constitution to have two candidates for the same race who have different fundraising limits.”

Perdue has filed suit over the new law, accusing Kemp of giving “himself power to raise unlimited campaign funds, while challengers have to play by different rules.”

While Republican lawmakers have generally supported the legislation, Democrats roundly voted against it.

“One thing I agree with Perdue on: the corrupt ‘leadership committee’ slush fund law is bad,” tweeted state Sen. Elena Parent, the chairwoman of the state Senate Democratic Caucus.

Parent told Salon that the new bill is an “obvious attempt by Gov. Kemp and his allies to again use the power of his office to rewrite campaign finance laws to his advantage after a judge put the brakes on their corrupt gubernatorial ‘leadership PAC’ scheme.”

“It’s unfortunately not surprising from a party that is more interested in retaining power through voter suppression than through free and fair elections,” she said in an email. “This could be another tool in that same toolbox, but hopefully the appearance of blatant corruption will cause this proposal to die in committee.”

U.S. District Judge Mark Cohen ruled earlier this month that Kemp’s leadership fund cannot spend money to back his bid during the Republican primary, writing that the new law “effectively negates the contribution limit upon which all candidates for Governor in the primary election are bound for just one person: Governor Kemp, the incumbent.”

Cohen’s ruling indicated that Kemp would be able to use the funds against his Democratic opponent in the general election if he wins the primary.

Kemp last year also signed a sweeping new voting law that restricts absentee voting, early voting and ballot drop boxes, and could make it easier for state lawmakers to subvert elections. Abrams accused the Republican-led legislature of seeking to “suppress” predominantly Black voters, who tend to vote Democratic, and called the new law “nothing less than Jim Crow 2.0.”

Abrams similarly accused Kemp of voter suppression in 2018, when he oversaw his own gubernatorial election while still serving as secretary of state. Abrams acknowledged that Kemp was the “legal” winner but refused to concede after the election was marred by a lack of voting machines in certain precincts, an unknown number of mail-in and provisional ballots that were rejected due to a lack of uniform standards, and Kemp’s suspension of 53,000 voter registrations after early voting had already begun in a race Abrams lost by fewer than 55,000 votes. Even prior to the election, the state under Kemp purged more than 1.4 million voters from the rolls.

“I could not in good conscience say that in order to protect my political future I’m going to be silent about the political present, which is that we have a system under a leader that sought to keep people from casting their ballot, that threw those ballots out, that said that voter suppression was a viable tactic for winning elections,” Abrams said in a recent interview.

Groh-Wargo argued that “Kemp has a long history of abusing his power” and warned that the fundraising ban could also hurt challengers in downballot races.

“It’s not just us,” she said. “Kemp and his colleagues who are running the state are facing primary challenges up and down the ballot, they’re facing strong Democratic opponents up and down the ballot, and appear to be hell-bent on preserving their power and abusing their power.”

Read more:

Russia has been at war with Ukraine for years – in cyberspace

The build up of Russian forces along Belarus’ 665-mile border with Ukraine is a physical manifestation of Russia’s intense interest in the region. Russia annexed Crimea in 2014, and now Russian President Valdimir Putin appears intent on pulling Ukraine under Russia’s influence and denying it a close relationship with the West.

But even as Russia engages in brinksmanship from snow-covered fields in Belarus to meeting rooms in Geneva, Moscow is already at war with Kyiv – cyberwar. Russia has been waging this fight since at least 2014.

In cyberspace, Russia has interfered in Ukrainian elections, targeted its power grid, defaced its government websites and spread disinformation. Strategically, Russian cyber operations are designed to undermine the Ukrainian government and private sector organizations. Tactically, the operations aim to influence, scare and subdue the population. They are also harbingers of invasion.

As a cybersecurity and public policy researcher, I believe that Russian cyber operations are likely to continue. These operations are likely to further destabilize Ukraine’s political environment – namely, its government, its institutions and the people and organizations that depend on them.

National power in cyberspace

To date, Russia has been aggressive in its attempts to undermine Ukrainian sovereignty. Russian propaganda has painted a war with Ukraine as one of liberation. Many false narratives paint the Ukrainians as submissive and eager for reunification. Russia’s intent is to sow confusion, shape the public perception of the conflict and influence the ethnic Russian population within Ukraine.

Russia has artfully employed cyber operations to project national power, particularly through its GRU military intelligence service. The phrase “instruments of national power” defines power as diplomatic, information, military and economic – all are mechanisms for influencing other countries or international organizations. Cyberspace is unique as a domain of warfare because cyber operations can be used in the service of all four instruments of national power.

Diplomatically, Russia has tried to shape international norms in cyberspace by influencing discussions on cyberspace norms and behaviors. In 2018, Russia introduced a resolution to the United Nations creating a working group with like-minded states to revisit and reinterpret the U.N.’s rule for cyberspace, emphasizing that a state’s sovereignty should extend into cyberspace. Some analysts argue that Russia’s true goal is to legitimize its surveillance-state internet tactics in the guise of state sovereignty.

Economically, the Russian “NotPetya” attack crippled international ports, paralyzed corporations, disrupted supply chains and effectively stalled the global economy – all with a single piece of code.

In the information environment, Russia is especially adept at influencing and manipulating information to suit its strategic interests. For example, Russian efforts against the U.K. have targeted its relationship with NATO by using bots to spread false stories about British troops in Estonia during a NATO military exercise in 2017.

Notably, Russia has a pattern of pairing information with military operations as tools of national power. During previous military conflicts in eastern Ukraine, the Russian military employed cyber capabilities to jam Ukrainian satellite, cellular and radio communications.

Overall, Russia sees warfare as a continuum that is ongoing with varying intensity across multiple fronts. Simply put, for Russia, war never stops and cyberspace is a key domain of its persistent conflict with Ukraine and the West.

Probing the US, hammering Ukraine

Russia has aimed its cyber operations at other nations, including the U.S. and Western European countries. Russia has targeted U.S. critical infrastructure and supply chains, and conducted disinformation campaigns. U.S. officials are still investigating the extent of the recent SolarWinds cyberattack, for example, but they have determined that the attack compromised federal agencies, courts, numerous private companies and state and local governments. The Russian activities are aimed at undermining U.S. domestic and national security, democratic institutions and even public health efforts.

But Russia is more destructive in its own backyard. Attacks on Estonia and Georgia illustrate how Russia can disrupt government functions and sow confusion as it prepares for military operations.

Most recently, Microsoft detected data wiping malware in Ukrainian government computer systems. Ukraine publicly named Moscow as the perpetrator and attributed the software designed to destroy data to Russian hackers. The presence of the malware marks an escalation of Russia’s current behavior toward Ukraine in cyberspace. The malware, if triggered, would have destroyed Ukrainian government records, disrupted online services and prevented the government from communicating with its citizens.

The ongoing aggression against Ukraine follows Russia’s pattern of waging cyberwar while publicly threatening and preparing for a military invasion. In many ways, for Ukrainians, the prospect of war and anticipating invasion have become normalized.

Deadly consequences

Website defacement and data loss are not the only concerns for Ukraine as Russia continues to mass troops and equipment along its borders. In the winter of 2015-2016, Russia demonstrated its ability to hack Ukraine’s power grid in a first-of-its-kind attack that cut off power to thousands of Ukrainians. Temperatures in Kyiv in the winter hover around freezing during the day and become dangerously cold at night. Any loss of power could be deadly.

Similarly, cyberattacks could disrupt Ukraine’s economy and communications infrastructure. An attack on the financial sector could prevent Ukrainians from withdrawing money or accessing their bank accounts. An attack on the communications infrastructure could cripple the Ukrainian military and limit the country’s ability to defend itself. Civilians would also lose their means of communications and with it the ability to organize evacuations and coordinate resistance.

[Over 140,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletters to understand the world. Sign up today.]

Ultimately, Russia is likely to continue to use cyber-enabled sabotage against Ukraine. Russian cyber operations over the past eight years hold three lessons to support this. First, cyberattacks that have costly physical effects, like knocking out the power grid, are destabilizing and can be used to erode the will of the Ukrainian people and counter their lean toward economic, military and political alliances with Europe and NATO. Second, cyberattacks that have a physical effect put Russian cyber capabilities on display and demonstrate their superiority over Ukrainian defenses. And third, Russia has done it before.

Maggie Smith, Assistant Professor of Public Policy, United States Military Academy West Point

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

“I don’t know”: Kristi Noem perplexed by increased rates of depression after signing anti-trans bill

Two weeks after South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem signed a law banning transgender students from joining sports teams that match their gender identity, the Republican came under fire Thursday for her apparent ignorance of difficulties faced by many LGBTQ+ people.

During a press briefing, reporter Kyle Ireland asked Noem: “There’s a statistic circling around right now that 90% of South Dakota’s LGBTQ community is diagnosed with either anxiety or depression. Why do you think that is?”

The governor responded: “I don’t know. That makes me sad and we should figure it out.”

The National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) shared a video of the exchange on Twitter and noted that discriminatory policies like the one Noem approved earlier this month “can be directly correlated to anxiety, depression, and even suicidal ideation” in LGBTQ+ youth.

The NCLR also highlighted that similar measures are being considered and enacted in several other states, and reiterated that such policies “will have LONG-TERM and SERIOUS ramifications for the mental health and well-being” of the young people targeted.

Congresswoman Marie Newman (D-Ill.)—who has a trans daughter—also responded to Noem’s comments on Twitter.

“Really? Last year was the deadliest on record for transgender Americans. You just passed a discriminatory bill that attacks trans kids who just want be themselves and play sports,” Newman said. “Want to figure out why LGBTQ+ youth are more prone to depression? It’s because of people like you.”

After Noem—who is widely considered a leading candidate for the GOP’s 2024 presidential primary race—signed the anti-trans measure, Cathryn Oakley of Human Rights Campaign (HRC) said her “eagerness to pass a bill attacking transgender kids reveals that her national political aspirations override any sense of responsibility she has to fulfill her oath to protect South Dakotans.”

“Gov. Noem and South Dakota legislators need to stop playing games with vulnerable children,” added HRC’s legislative director and senior counsel. “Transgender children are children. They deserve the ability to play with their friends. This legislation isn’t solving an actual problem that South Dakota was facing: It is discrimination, plain and simple. Shame on Gov. Noem.”

Last year, according to HRC, legislators introduced more than 250 anti-LGBTQ+ measures in 31 states and enacted 17 laws in 10 states. As Common Dreams reported last week, Republican lawmakers continue to pursue such policies, despite warnings about the impact.

Polling published in August 2020 by Morning Consult and the Trevor Project found that LGBTQ+ youth “are significantly more likely than straight/cis youth to exhibit symptoms of depression, anxiety, and/or both.”

Of the 600 LGBTQ+ people ages 13-24 who were surveyed, 55% reported symptoms of anxiety, 53% reported symptoms of depression, and 43% reported symptoms of both in the two weeks preceding the survey. The figures were even higher for trans and nonbinary youth, at 69%, 66%, and 61%, respectively.

Amit Paley, CEO and executive director of the Trevor Project, said at the time that “we’ve known that LGBTQ youth have faced unique challenges because of the countless heartbreaking stories we’ve heard on our 24/7 phone lifeline, text, and chat crisis services; but these findings illuminate the existence of alarming mental health disparities that must be addressed through public policy.”

New evidence revives old questions about E.O. Wilson and race

Did Edward O. Wilson — Harvard professor, iconic biologist, champion of global biodiversity — promote racist ideas? For years, some scientists have suggested the very question is rooted in smear campaigns and misreadings of Wilson’s work. Other scholars have argued that racism and sexism are apparent in Wilson’s writing on human evolution.

Since Wilson’s death in late December 2021, at the age of 92, the question has been subject to renewed debate, after an opinion piece in Scientific American describing Wilson’s “dangerous ideas” set off a backlash from some scientists.

Now, two separate pairs of researchers, drawing from Wilson’s papers at the Library of Congress, have published details of correspondence in which Wilson privately supports a psychologist known for his racist work. “It doesn’t surprise me at all,” said Joseph Graves, Jr., an evolutionary biologist at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University who has written extensively about scientific racism, and who reviewed some of the new archival work before it was published. What’s important about the new research, he added, “was coming up with the smoking gun.”

Not everyone agrees the new evidence is so definitive, but the revelations promise to prolong the reckoning over Wilson’s legacy — and to add to an ongoing discussion about how racism and sexism may have shaped entire fields of study.

Wilson may be best known for his widely praised research on ants, and for his push to protect biodiversity. But the scientist’s work on human evolution has been contested since 1975, when he published “Sociobiology: The New Synthesis,” a sweeping study of the evolution of social behavior in animals. The book’s final chapter, which aims to “consider man in the free spirit of natural history, as though we were zoologists from another planet,” touches on the evolutionary origins of language, territoriality, and other behaviors. In the chapter, Wilson wonders whether there could be marked genetic differences between socioeconomic classes. (He concludes there’s little evidence that’s the case.) And he speculates that some of the differences between human cultures could be rooted in genetic differences, calling for “a discipline of anthropological genetics” to explore the question further.

Wilson was touching on questions that remain deeply polarizing: To what extent are certain features of human societies, like xenophobia, altruism, or inequality, dictated by our genes? And can some of the complex variation among human groups, from IQ scores to incarceration rates, be explained by genetic differences, rather than by environmental and social forces? Many racist projects — from the eugenics movement to Nazism to present-day White nationalism — have argued that racial differences have deep genetic roots. Such pseudoscientific ideas continue to fuel popular racist canards, such as the idea that Black people have genes predisposing them to violence.

Today, there’s a broad consensus among experts in human evolution that that race is a social construct, not a biological category, and that it is extraordinarily difficult to link specific genes to complex human behaviors. And some researchers and advocates warn that, absent better data, explorations of those questions often just reproduce old stereotypes — or offer thin cover for bigoted ideas.

After the publication of “Sociobiology,” Wilson was subject to fierce criticism, including from some of his Harvard colleagues, who argued he had gotten out ahead of the scientific evidence — and that his conclusions about the way biology shapes human behavior veered into dangerous territory.

Wilson pushed back against those charges, arguing that his work had been misunderstood and, in some cases, distorted. (“To keep the record straight, I am happy to point out that no justification for racism is to be found in the truly scientific study of the biological basis of social behavior,” he wrote in 1981, stressing his belief in “a single human nature.”) Despite the criticisms, “Sociobiology” was enormously influential: The book helped launch the field of evolutionary psychology, and it had a profound influence on the study of animal behavior and biological anthropology.

Less than a week after Wilson died, Monica McLemore, a health researcher at the University of California, San Francisco, published the op-ed in Scientific American describing Wilson’s work as problematic, and calling on scientists to reckon with his legacy. In response, the science blogger Razib Khan wrote an open letter challenging the way McLemore’s piece characterized Wilson’s work, including “baseless accusations of racism.” Dozens of prominent scientists signed the letter.

The open letter pitted a group of mostly White scientists against a Black colleague who had raised concerns about racism. McLemore, who has received threats and hate mail since her piece was published, questioned the judgment of the researchers who signed it. “That reputable scientists would be sloppy enough to sign a letter that would bring that kind of hate to my stance in this current moment — to me the naivete is huge,” she told Undark in a recent Zoom conversation. (Khan did not reply to requests for comment.)

Some of the letter’s initial signatories retracted their names after learning of Khan’s past connections with figures associated with white nationalism, including alt-right figurehead Richard Spencer and publisher Ron Unz.

Soon after, Wilson’s own connections to the right-wing fringe upended the conversation again.

One pair of researchers who surfaced those connections, Howard University evolutionary biologist Stacy Farina and her husband, Matthew Gibbons, began reading sections of “Sociobiology” while stuck at home during the Covid-19 pandemic. They were taken aback by what they found.

“I had read some chapters of ‘Sociobiology’ as a grad student,” said Farina. “And there’s a lot of really great science in there. It’s a very interesting book. And I had no idea that the last chapter had any of that stuff in it.” Part of her motivation for digging into Wilson’s work, she continued, was a sense of gaps in her own training. “I am frustrated with the lack of education about these issues in evolutionary biology.”

Later, during a Library of Congress workshop for Howard faculty, Farina asked if the Library had archival material on Wilson. Sure enough, the institution holds his personal papers — including boxes of documents related to the sociobiology wars. When she and Gibbons perused the collection, they were drawn to four folders labeled with the name of J. Philippe Rushton, a Canadian psychologist who, starting in the 1980s, published studies arguing that substantial genetic differences existed between racial groups.

“Population differences exist in personality and sexual behavior such that, in terms of restraint, Orientals > whites > blacks,” begins one 1987 Rushton paper published in the Journal of Research in Personality. His work would eventually be dogged by accusations of statistical flaws and ethics violations, and key papers were retracted.

In 2002, Rushton took the helm of the Pioneer Fund, an organization founded in the 1930s to promote eugenics, the idea that humanity can be improved by manipulating which people reproduce. He led the nonprofit until his death in 2012.

On weekends, Farina and Gibbons began returning to the Library of Congress. It was a “nice little escape during the pandemic,” said Gibbons, who works as a business development specialist for a public health organization. “Head out in the morning, go to an early session, grab some lunch, and sort of freak out over what the morning session revealed, race the clock and try to document as much as we could before they kicked us out at the end.”

The letters, Farina said, demonstrate a warm relationship between Wilson and the psychologist. In the correspondence, which dates from the 1980s and ’90s, Wilson expressed support for Rushton’s work, and lamented a stifling culture that, he suggested, had prevented him from speaking more freely, referring in one note to a “leftward revival of McCarthyism.” When Rushton’s university seemed poised to sanction him for academic misconduct, Wilson sent letters in his defense. He also sent letters to drum up support for Rushton from colleagues at Harvard and at the conservative National Association of Scholars.

Unbeknownst to Farina and Gibbons, a pair of historians were also exploring the Wilson archive. In 2018, University of Illinois historian of science David Sepkoski began working with Wilson’s papers while researching a book on biodiversity. Like Farina and Gibbons, he noticed and gravitated toward the Rushton folders.

Struck by what he was reading, Sepkoski began dropping scanned images of letters into a Dropbox folder he shares with Mark Borrello, a historian of biology at the University of Minnesota. “I’m sure I called you from the archives, and was like, ‘You’re not gonna believe this,'” Sepkoski told Borrello during a recent Zoom conversation with Undark. The two began sketching out a book project on Wilson.

The correspondence, Sepkoski and Borrello now say, suggests that Wilson was carefully managing his public persona — even as he quietly continued his dispute with his left-wing critics. 

Providing comments on one Rushton paper — which applied a famous Wilson theory, meant to examine reproductive differences between different species, to argue that Black and non-Black people pursue different reproductive strategies — Wilson was effusive. “This is a brilliant paper,” he wrote, “one of the most original and heuristic written on human biology in recent years.”

“Whether it can even be published in this or some other journal devoted to human sociobiology,” Wilson wrote later in his comments, “will be a test of our courage and fidelity to objectivity in science.”

Earlier this month, spurred by the backlash against McLemore, Farina and Gibbons published their findings in Science for the People Magazine, a left-wing outlet linked to the activist group that prominently opposed Wilson’s work in the 1970s.

Days later, Sepkoski and Borrello published their own essay in The New York Review of Books, with more details from the Wilson archives.

The reaction to the letters among the scientific community has been mixed. Some researchers suggested the revelations do not necessitate a substantial reevaluation of Wilson’s legacy. Asked about the new letters, sociologist Ullica Segerstrale referred back to her influential 2000 book, “Defenders of the Truth,” which covers the dispute between Wilson and his antagonists. In the book, Segerstrale challenges characterizations of Wilson as a racist thinker, and argues that his critics often failed to engage with the actual substance of his work. “I stand by my general analysis in that book regarding the thinking and behavior of both E.O. Wilson and Science for the People,” she wrote in an email to Undark.

At the blog Why Evolution is True, biostatistician Gregory Mayer described Farina and Gibbon’s findings as “small beer.” Wilson, he wrote, appeared to be primarily defending Rushton’s academic freedom, not endorsing his ideas. “To do so does not imply an identity of views,” Mayer wrote. In a phone interview, he suggested that historians should focus on more pressing historical topics, such as Wilson’s role in the development of a key concept in ecology, rather than his correspondence with a discredited Canadian psychologist.

For other scientists, though, the letters felt significant. Writing for Small Pond Science, a science and teaching blog, biologist Terry McGlynn reflected on the letters’ impact. “When navigating the whiter parts of the cultural landscape of biology, the general party line has often been that Ed was mostly right about sociobiology, but his ideas had been twisted by racists, and there wasn’t anything he could do about that,” he wrote. 

But, he continued, “it’s indubitable that the party line I have passively received over the decades simply does not comport with reality.”

Not everyone found the content of the letters especially surprising. Indeed, close attention to Wilson’s work and public statements, some scholars said, already provided ample evidence that he was sympathetic to ideas that most biologists now consider not just morally questionable, but scientifically unfounded.

In 2014, Wilson gave a warm blurb to then-New York Times science journalist Nicholas Wade’s book “A Troublesome Inheritance.” The book argues that Black people may be, on average, more impulsive and less hardworking than White or East Asian people, and that basic differences in human society — why Haiti is poor, for example, and European countries wealthy — are attributable to genetic differences among groups. In reviews, debates, and public statements, experts in human evolution pilloried the book for misrepresenting the science. A notable exception was Wilson, who, in his blurb, praised Wade for exemplifying “the virtues of truth without fear” and celebrating human genetic diversity.

“That’s pretty much out in the open,” said Princeton University biological anthropologist Agustín Fuentes, who describes “A Troublesome Inheritance” as “awful, racist, horribly unscientific.” What has changed, he said, is the scientific community itself. The field, he said, “is really hitting a peak moment of reflection, of engagement with the complexities of racism and sexism, and how it’s structured some of the basic ideas.”

Indeed, a recent paper in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution, authored by faculty, staff, and graduate students in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UC-Santa Cruz, is titled “Anti-racist interventions to transform ecology, evolution, and conservation biology departments.” Recently, biologists have mobilized to change species names that honor Confederate officers and other figures with troubling histories.

“Even just in the last two or three years, it feels like something has shifted,” said Ambika Kamath, a behavioral and evolutionary ecologist at the University of Colorado-Boulder. Among other factors driving that change, she said, is that biologists from more diverse backgrounds are coming into the field.

Kamath is hopeful that the conversation around Wilson will spark broader introspection among her colleagues. The problem, she and some other researchers argue, goes far beyond Wilson. “I don’t really care that Wilson had racist ideas, because I know pretty much all of the people that I dealt with, when I was coming up through the science system, had racist ideas,” said Graves, who in 1988 became the first Black American to receive a Ph.D. in evolutionary biology. “Wilson was just one of many.”

For now, more work from the archives may continue to flesh out a fuller picture of Wilson’s life and thought. Speaking last week, McLemore, the author of the Scientific American op-ed on Wilson, said she was still getting hate mail and threats. “All I wanted to do,” she said, “was to have a more nuanced discussion about the work.”

This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.

COVID “long-haulers” may have finally found relief in inexpensive, over-the-counter drugs

Two women have recovered from post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), a condition more commonly known as long COVID — and researchers believe that inexpensive, over-the-counter antihistamines were the reason.

The news comes from a report published this month in The Journal for Nurse Practitioners which describes the recovery of two middle-aged women who, by chance, found that antihistamines greatly improved their daily functions after suffering from long Covid.

The research will be welcomed by sufferers of long COVID, of which there are many. Up to 10 percent of those who contract COVID-19 have long-term symptoms long after the virus has cleared their body, according to University of Alabama researchers. The United States population has had a cumulative 78 million cases of COVID-19, meaning around 8 million Americans have long Covid symptoms long after the virus has cleared their system. Long Covid sufferers experience all kinds of different symptoms, though the most common include brain fog, psychiatric disorders, loss of taste and smell, fatigue and lack of energy. Long Covid appears to affect children and adults in equal measure

In this latest study, both women who recovered from long Covid took over-the-counter antihistamines for different reasons aside from their COVID-19 symptoms. The first woman had an allergy to dairy which was triggered by eating cheese. Prior to her January 2020 COVID-19 infection, she was healthy and active; after, she could no longer tolerate exercise, had prolonged chest pain, headaches, brain fog, fatigue, and a rash.

The morning after she took an antihistamine for her dairy allergy, she noticed considerable relief in her fatigue and ability to concentrate. But in the next 72 hours, when she wasn’t taking an antihistamine, her fatigue and brain fog returned. The woman self-administered diphenhydramine and observed an improvement in symptoms once again.

Over the next six months, she noticed many of her other symptoms — like the rashes — were improving as well. Now, she reports she’s back to 90 percent of her pre-infection functioning ability, including exercising 1 to 2 hours 5 to 6 times a week.

The second woman, who was similarly active and healthy prior to COVID-19, likely contracted COVID-19 from her child who was unwell with COVID-19 symptoms. While a PCR test came back negative at first for COVID-19, she was clinically diagnosed when she developed chills, shortness of breath, chest pain , and a fever. At first, her symptoms persisted for three months. During the course of this time, she also suffered from Covid toe, abdominal pain, and rashes.

Nearly 13 months after the onset of the infection, she substituted her usual allergy medication with diphenhydramine. The next morning, she also noticed a significant relief in her fatigue and brain fog. Since then, she has been taking 25 milligrams of diphenhydramine at night and 180 milligrams of fexofenadine in the morning and is back to exercising and feeling better. Both fexofenadine and diphenhydramine are common over-the-counter anti-histamine drugs.


Want more health and science stories in your inbox? Subscribe to Salon’s weekly newsletter The Vulgar Scientist.


Because of the small sample size, the study is not conclusive; currently, there are no evidence-based treatments for long COVID patients. Yet the findings align with the results of a separate study published in The Journal of Investigative Medicine, on October 5, 2021, which included 49 long COVID patients. Twenty-six of these patients were  given antihistamines for treatment; of these, 19 reported to either a complete or partial end to their symptoms. Only six out of the 23 in the cohort who weren’t given antihistamines reported that their symptoms improved within the same time period.

“Most patients tell us that providers have not recommended anything that has helped,” said Melissa Pinto from the University of California, Irvine, ​​ one of the report’s corresponding authors. “If patients wish to try over-the-counter antihistamines, I urge them to do so under medical supervision.”

Pinto added that medical providers might not know about the potential of antihistamines.

“I would encourage patients to be active in their care and consider taking research and case reports like ours to appointments with providers so they can help create a regimen that will work,” Pinto added.

The anecdotes were obtained from Survivor Corps, a virtual COVID-19 research and advocacy organization on Facebook. More people are starting to work with their care providers to see if antihistamines work for long COVID.

Katherine Hansen told Salon via email she started using a natural antihistamine protocol along with a low histamine diet last January.

“I discussed everything with my [doctor], she said let’s experiment, so we did,” Hansen said. “I did combine it for a time with a nasal antihistamine but continued mostly with the natural protocol and diet.”

Hansen, who was stricken with COVID-19 back in March 2020,  finally regained some sense of her taste and smell. Other symptoms began to improve as well. 

“I didn’t have my sense of taste or smell for over a year and developed a heightened sense of texture, which has caused an eating disorder,” Hansen told Salon. “The brain fog was debilitating.”

People who experience long Covid sometimes refer to themselves as “long-haulers.” Some long-haulers eventually experience full recoveries, while others do not. Notably, not everyone who becomes a long-hauler previously had a severe infection or was hospitalized after their COVID-19 diagnosis.

Diana Berrent, who started Survivor Corps, told Salon in an interview that this study is a “perfect example” of patients “bringing real world evidence to the scientific and medical community to understand why something might be working and how it might be a clue to how the virus is affecting people in the long term.”

“This is a true sign of citizen scientist collaboration,” Berrent said. “Whether or not antihistamines are the answer, it could prove useful in understanding its role in tamping down the cytokine storm.

Researchers still don’t know definitively what causes long COVID.

“Indeed, we need every shred of evidence to put together clues,” Berrent said. “Think about long COVID as a jigsaw puzzle and each piece we’re able to fill in will help us see the larger picture, and ideally lead us to effective treatments and therapeutics.”

Read more on COVID-19:

Slutty Vegan founder Pinky Cole on creating a Black-owned, plant-based empire

​​If you haven’t witnessed the many business ventures of Pinky Cole before, it’ll only be a matter of time. Cole is the definition of a multi-hyphenate; the Baltimore-raised, Atlanta-based businesswoman is primarily known for her wildly successful restaurant and brand, Slutty Vegan.

In addition to her restaurant ventures, Pinky is a philanthropist, mother, writer and beloved public figure, recently gracing the cover of Essence with her partner Derrick Hayes. We sat down with Pinky to pick her brain for a quick Q&A that talks about all things veganism, identity, and how she plans to keep growing her provocative plant-based empire.

Manuela Lòpez Restrepo: What do you attribute the rapid success of Slutty Vegan to? 

Pinky Cole: “Well, there’s a few things. The first piece of it is my story. And where I come from. I am an entrepreneur who had a business that was seemingly successful, had a grease fire, lost that business altogether, lost everything. And then I got it back. So that story of triumph really resonates with a lot of people. 

And they get excited about that, because they too, believe themselves, that they can follow their dreams no matter what. That’s the first thing. 

Secondly, ‘Slutty Vegan’ is a marketing company that happens to sell food, and we help people to reimagine food. So we create an experience, and this lifestyle, around vegan food, something that, once upon a time, was considered expensive, boring, bland, tasteless… and we created life around it.

RELATED: From breakfast to dessert, here are the 22 essential vegan items at Trader Joe’s

I would say that we are in a progressive movement, where veganism is now at an all time high. I like to say that Slutty Vegan had a finger in making it extra popular because when I created Slutty Vegan, you could barely get a really good vegan meal, let alone with something that tasted good, right? So I like to say that we were the guinea pig. Once we did it, all [the] other big corporations did it. But it was all about timing and what was happening environmentally, in the economy and the pandemic. People just wanted to live and eat better. And there were just so many things happening. I think that we had the right positioning and the right timing. So all of those things coupled together, plus community, is a winning recipe for the success of the business.

MLR: Slutty Vegan has quickly become a cornerstone for the plant-based community. What does it mean to you as a Black woman to be representing a lot of that plant-based movement?

PC: So for me, one as a Black woman, it amazes me every single day. But I’m not just a Black woman. I’m Black, I’m a minority. I’m a female, I’m a millennial. I’m the daughter of former immigrants. So I speak to so many audiences, where people feel like they can see themselves in me. That right there just tells me that I can tap into so many people, in the hearts and minds of people. 

And it just tells me that the inclusion of all people into my dream…..just shows we can really all come together in the name of food and that feels good to me. It feels better than money. It feels better than notoriety, to know that I’m literally walking in my purpose and making an impact while doing it is one of the biggest things for me.

MLR: Slutty Vegan, as a restaurant experience is pretty limited to people who have been able to go to the pop-ups or to the restaurant in Atlanta. Do you think that part of your upcoming cookbook release, “Eat Plants, B*tch” will help make the Slutty Vegan philosophy more accessible to others? 

PC: Well, I don’t want to do that, that’s what I’m doing now, right? I’m creating a space where people don’t have to feel like they can’t eat healthier, because they don’t have the options or the resources or the access. So I’m putting Slutty Vegan in areas where vegan food probably wouldn’t be consistent with the neighborhood. I’m putting Slutty Vegan in areas where people who may have never been interested in vegan food may want to try it. I’m creating this concept where I’m creating damn good food, and it just so happens to be vegan. And then we put so many labels on food that people get stuck into. They’re like, ‘Oh, I’m vegan, I’m not vegan. I’m flexitarian.’  Like, who cares about all that, I just want you incorporating better options into your lifestyle, even if it starts with comfort food. And to see that, we’ve been able to succeed at that tremendously. I’m about to be four years old in the business. And you know, the restaurant industry is not easy. To be able to do what we do, still with lines down the block, people still come in, still supporting the brand, and 97% of the people who come to ‘Slutty Vegan’ are meat eaters. So what should that tell you? That tells you that we are creating access that didn’t necessarily exist before and, and removing the labels and telling people that you can eat really good food and it could be guilt free.

MLR: What do you have to say to those exact people, the meat eaters who may be hesitant about trying something like ‘Slutty Vegan’ or any other vegan restaurant? 
 

PC: You can come to Slutty Vegan [laughter].

The good thing about what I got going on in here with our brand is that people come because they want to know what the hype is all about. So again, they’re really not coming for the food, they hear the food is good. But they keep hearing about this crazy ass experience that they need to connect to and tap into because everybody keeps raving about it. So when I tell you I got like a cult following, it is a cult following. People don’t play about Slutty Vegan. And so now the people who at least are willing to come to Slutty Vegan just tells me that they’re curious. And the minute that I have your curiosity, I have your attention. 

And when I have your attention, I could teach you about veganism, through entertainment, through a fun environment. And then by the time that you leave, you didn’t even realize you just ate a plant-based burger and that shit was good! And it happens every single time.

MLR: Where did the ‘slutty’ aspect of the brand come from? I was cracking up looking at the menu. 

PC: So it’s funny, I used to be a television producer. Well I’m still a television producer, because we never die at heart. But I come from the TV world, and I was a producer at the “Maury” show, and a whole bunch of other shows. What I learned working with TV is that you gotta have that [make audiences] care factor, you gotta have things that people want to talk about. And you got to make them want to pay attention and not change the channel. I took those things that I learned, and I infused it into the restaurant space. If I named this “Pinky’s Vegan” I ain’t having no customers, maybe they’ll come here and there. 

But if I create a whole production experience around a concept, and make it a lifestyle, and make it so racy and raunchy, it’s going to force you to want to know: ‘Why in the world would somebody name a business a slutty name that is so provocative, and feels disrespectful?’ ‘That’s anti feminist, like why would somebody do that?’ But the minute that I get them feeling offended, there’s an underlying intention there, and the intention is to help people to reimagine food. So when I came up with the name, it was really just a way to draw people in. Because veganism is not boring. It’s fun, it can be sexy, it can be tasty. I know vegan food that is “sloppier” than just “regular” food that comes from an animal. But like there’s so many variations of being vegan and being plant based, that it can be the sexiest thing on the planet. And you don’t just have to eat grass all day, and salad and I love salad. Right? But it can be sexier than that. And that’s why I created the name.


Want more great food writing and recipes? Subscribe to Salon Food’s newsletter.


You can keep up with Pinky on social media here. Her upcoming cookbook “Eat Plants, B*tch” will be available in stores this fall.

The world’s poorest bear the burden of heat — and it’s getting worse

As temperatures climb with climate change, the world’s poorest will increasingly take the brunt of the heat, according to a new study in the journal Earth’s Future. Lower-income countries are already 40 percent more likely to experience heat waves than those with higher incomes. The researchers expect this disparity to widen in coming decades.

By 2100, the study says, people in the lowest-income quarter will experience 23 more days of heat waves each year than those in the highest. The top quarter is expected to maintain about its current level of discomfort, power outages notwithstanding.

Discrepancies were expected, said Mojtaba Sadegh, a climatologist at Boise State University, in a statement. “But seeing one-quarter of the world facing as much exposure as the other three-quarters combined … that was surprising.” 

Location shapes exposure: Many lower-income countries, like Madagascar and Bangladesh, are in the tropics. Access to air-conditioning, water, cooling shelters, and electricity matters, too. Without them, heat waves hit harder. 

Climate change exacerbates the problem, magnifying heat wavesand upping their severity and frequency. Last year brought plenty of examples. In June, a heat dome gripped the Pacific Northwest — an event one expert said was “virtually impossible without human-induced climate change.” The event left some 600 excess deaths between Oregon and Washington, and another 600 in British Columbia, in its wake. The same month, temperatures in the Middle East spiked to 125 degrees, while extreme heat and drought in Kazakhstan killed scores of livestock.

Some countries are taking steps to protect the most vulnerable. After a deadly heat wave in 2010, the Indian city of Ahmedabad developed a comprehensive heat plan, which has since been scaled-up across the country. In the United States, outdoor workers, such as those in agriculture or construction, are more vulnerable to heat stress. Last October, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration began the process of setting the first national heat standard, a significant step toward improving protections for workers in a warming world.

“All Creatures Great and Small” star on animals, slow-burn romance & what makes a Scottish Christmas

As has becomes tradition for many British series, the big finale for the second season of “All Creatures Great and Small” includes a visit from Saint Nicholas

Or in this case, Nicholas Ralph.

The star of the good-hearted series – based on James Herriot’s books about a 1930s British veterinary surgeon set in the Yorkshire Dales – had the honor of playing Father Christmas this time, since his employer Siegfried Farnon (Samuel West) is otherwise occupied. Although the finale centers on many issues of “gentle peril” – ranging from the possible death of a beloved pet to having too many social commitments – the children of Darrowby will not be denied Santa during a Christmas Eve party. Young veterinarian James Herriot (Ralph) steps up, while his fiancée Helen Alderson (Rachel Shenton) plays his elf.

Ralph, who’s played Father Christmas before in a local production, found this to be a slightly different experience, especially since the episode was shot during the summer.

“I had never played it in the green and white outfit, the old Father Christmas outfit,” Ralph told Salon in a Zoom interview. “Yeah, it was absolutely boiling. It was like, oh 28 degrees [celsius] and I had that big suit on with a pillows stuffed under for my belly. And so it was warm.”

RELATED: A worthy return for “All Creatures Great and Small” celebrates the little things

The series has become a welcome respite from the current troubles in our world. With its rolling green hills, low-stakes emotional drama and animals aplenty,  “All Creatures Great and Small” has become a pandemic hit for its soothing storytelling. Paired with Masterpiece’s produciton of “Around the World in 80 Days,” it’s become a destination for family viewing. Despite its gentleness, however, the series is also undercut with a wistful melancholy for people missing loved ones and the encroaching specter of World War II

One of the final scenes of the Christmas episode is of Mrs. Hall (Anna Madely) looking out the window and seeing the shadow of a bomber pass overhead. 

Check out the rest of Salon’s interview with Ralph, who discusses the show’s slow-burning romance, his scene-stealing canine co-star and hints of what to expect in season 3.

The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Nicholas Ralph and Rachel Shenton in “All Creatures Great and Small” (PBS)Last time I saw you at a press conference, writer Ben Vanstone said that he’s pacing the show over several seasons. And last season, Helen had just left her fiancé Hugh (Matthew Lewis) at the altar. So I was actually surprised that your character James managed to get engaged to Helen this season. I thought Ben was going to make us wait.

The pacing has to do with the source material. They’re engaged and married by the end of the first book. We knew once it started that it would move quite swiftly. But I think as well one of the main storylines of season 2 certainly is this slow-burning kind of romance. And I think it’s just paced wonderfully well, from the initial very tentative stepping towards each other being reacquainted under these new circumstances, going to the ball to the kiss on the barn roof to saying “I love you” to a very spontaneous engagement, pushed along by Siegfried. 

Did I miss how exactly James and Helen resolved their living situation? As funny as I think it would be having Tristan (Callum Woodhouse) in their cupboard, I know that’s not the most conducive to marital bliss. And Helen still has to work on her farm.

There’s a bedsitter at the top of Skeldale house, and no one’s in it. It’s a little place up there for the bed, a couple of chairs and a cooker, a little kitchen basically. So they’ve decided that’s where they’ll be, but they’re still trying to work out Helen’s place within Skeldale House. And of course, she’ll be going back to work on the farm as well day-to-day.

It’s kind of thrilling to see since it’s a very chaste romance for TV today. What’s been the response to that?

Oh, hugely, hugely positive. Everyone had gone nuts for the kiss on the barn roof. I still still get messages now about it. Or the memes: “Find someone the way that Helen looks at James here,” or “Find someone the way James looks at Helen here.” It’s a lot of fun. 

The show looks another way around; it’s just as simple as two hands touching. Even in the Christmas episode in season 1, when they’re looking after the puppies, urging them on to start breathing – they hold hands here, kind of unbeknownst to them, just like something that naturally happens. And there’s little moments of that as well in season 2 after the dance when the she comes into the practice and says, “I would like to dance with you again.” And then she said, “I’ve been out and about and I feel a lot more like myself. It’s because of you,” and they hold hands. It’s little things like that. And we see it between Mrs. Hall and Siegfried as well. They hold hands. There’s these little things that are just really lovely.

Patricia Hodge and Derek in “All Creatures Great and Small” (PBS)Sadly, Dame Diana Rigg died after the first season, so Patricia Hodge has stepped in to play the iconic Mrs. Pumphrey, who has quite a lot to do this season, between hosting the cricket match to having some very dramatic moments with her dog, Tricki-Woo. We’ll get to him later. How was it working with her this season and what does she bring to Mrs. Pumphrey?

She’s come in and just completely made the character her own. She’s got her own twist on it, her own flavor, and it’s brilliant. She’s so good in general, but she’s brilliant with comedy as well. One of the first scenes we had her do, Patricia’s using Derek, who plays Tricki-Woo, almost like a ventriloquist’s dummy. And it was so funny. I was struggling to keep it together. 

So she’s just brought that and also just off set as well. She’s really lovely to chat to, like Dame Diana was – heaps of stories from from being in the industry as long as she has. It’s just a real treat to have her on set. I think her Mrs. Pumphrey is just wonderful. I can’t wait to see more of her.

She plays such a big role this season. Could you discuss the finale, in which James invites both the Skeldale House folks and Helen’s family over to Mrs. Pumphrey’s for Christmas? Otherwise, she would’ve been all alone except for Tricki-Woo.

Because we have a surrogate family between Siegfried, Mrs. Hall and the boys – and Helen ever growing more a part of that as her in James’s relationship develops – then Mrs. Pumphrey is almost like the grandmother of the family. Hopefully we’ll see a lot more of her but certainly that’s how I see her. She’s the grandmother of this surrogate kind of mishmash family.

Now let’s talk Trick-Woo, her little Pekingnese. Were you upset that “Uncle Herriot” wasn’t the favored veterinarian this season? It turns out that Tricki has transferred his trust and affections to Siegfried. Although it’s your character who has the breakthrough and administers the anesthetic to help Tricki rest and recover enough to get well.

Yeah, absolutely, I couldn’t believe it when I read the scripts and I saw that someone else was taking care of Tricki. “That should be me!” [Laughs]

Little Derek who plays Tricki-Woo is a sterling professional. I remember we were doing the scene where I anesthetize him. And the director just said, “Alright everyone, quiet quiet.” And then as I was doing the injection you saw Derek’s eyes, Tricki’s eyes just drop, drop. And he went to sleep. The director said, “Cut!” and [Derek] was up back up and around again. He just he gets better every season.

Also Sam says he knows that Derek reads the scripts as well because there was a scene where we were all sat in the kitchen. Sam comes through into the kitchen. He’s supposed to go into the pantry, and Tricki follows him in. So we shoot it, and Sam came in, stopped before the pantry, but forgot to go in. Tricki followed him in and went straight to the pantry. Sam was like, “Oh, yes, that’s what I meant to do.” So [Derek] is even showing us how it’s done. 

Samuel West and Derek in “All Creatures Great and Small” (PBS)One of the pivotal moments in the finale is Tricki-Woo becoming sick. It’s actually touch and go there. But fortunately he recovers. It’s a Christmas miracle! What was the response to that like?

There were a lot of tweets during the show. A lot of outpouring of concern: “Oh, my God, they can’t!” and “No way, Not Tricki!” Just a long list of all that sort of stuff. He is the real star of the show. And I’m also glad that he pulled through.

But it’s not just dogs. James is primarily a vet for farm animals. Other than getting splattered, what at the dangers of working with these animals?

We have a lot of big animals on this show, and I end up spending 80% of my time at the back end of these big animals. They’re very pleasant from the front, but you know, I’m at the wrong end. We’ve got some big sequences of big procedures with horses and their steel feet. So you don’t want to be getting in the way of those. And cows as well can kick and things like that. 

All Creatures Great and SmallNicholas Ralph as James Herriot in “All Creatures Great and Small” (PBS/Playground Television Ltd.)You’re talking about the scene where you have to shift the foal inside the mare who’s pregnant?

Yeah, we had to roll the horse. Thankfully, the horses are trained impeccably well, but you have a massive horse lying on its side and then being rolled over while I’m stretched out [like] Superman at the back of it. We use a mixture of real-life animals and prosthetics. Most of the wider shots, it’s the real horse. And then it’s a mix of myself and Andy Barrett, our vet, at the backend who fills in for me as James, Superman laying out in the back of the back of the horse. And there was one take where the horse went to get up. So obviously you’re by its back legs, and it’s like swinging its legs to get up. So you’ve just got to get out of the way because you don’t want those steel feet coming anywhere near you. 

But I love getting my hands dirty. I love a challenge. And this show is wonderful for that. I’d read the scripts, and I’d make a beeline for Andy Barrett and ask him everything there is that I need to know about the procedure. And for example, when I was doing birthing the calf and season one I was like, where’s the pain on the arm? And what is it out of 10? So then we did a take, and I was like, “Andy, what do you think? Any good?” Andy said, “Yeah you kind of milked it a little.” 

You pulled a Tristan?
Yeah, exactly, but not quite as much as him. 

We see James whittling a log, a Cailleach, this season that he says is tradition for his family to burn on Christmas night. Have you ever done this and do you whittle yourself?

No. My short answer is no. Ben, our writer, got in touch with me and he said, “Is there any specifically Scottish Christmas traditions?” I was like, “Sorry, Ben. Not particularly.” But I had a little look and I found this about the Cailleach, Old Woman Winter. That was pretty great news because I think there was a time in Scotland where there wasn’t Christmas. There was something with it being a religious holiday, but basically, it wasn’t celebrated as it is now. So there was even less scope for traditions to be made because people kind of just go on as if it was another day. But yes, I found that and so we use that. And I haven’t done any whittling before, no. I’m glad you bought it.

We also see James recite a little bit of Robert Burns, “Auld Lang Syne,” on Christmas. Although this isn’t related to the show, Burns Night just passed recently. Do you usually celebrate that?

Yeah I did a night. We had friends around, and I addressed the haggis. And we’ll do like a toast. Years before I would do “Address to a Haggis” and I’ve done a couple of poems, like “To a Mouse” and “My Love Is Like a Red, Red Rose” and things like that. We have haggis, neeps and tatties and a glass of whiskey to toast everybody and the haggis. We do the full show.

Rachel Shenton, Callum Woodhouse and Nicholas Ralph in “All Creatures Great and Small” (PBS)One of the more intense episodes this season was the big cricket match, in which you join the Darrowby Eleven against Hugh’s team. How was that to play, and how are you at cricket?

So, much like James, I am not very good at cricket so that was fine. I didn’t have to pretend. I’m very sporty like James, like Alf Wight, but not cricket. Not one of my ones. That was the final week of filming and we had this beautiful weather, which is lovely. And it was great because we had so many extras in for the end and the way it had to be shot with kind of the montages as well. I take my hat off to Andy Hay, our director for that episode, because without him we would have just been lost. He pulled it off in spectacular fashion. 

I think it’s a brilliant episode, a little bit of a change of pace for the series, you know, the style is slightly different. And, of course, there’s the big matchup between James and Hugh. And we also see James a bit jealous as well, which is, which is good. He’s human. It’s nice to see these other, his very human qualities.

How do you feel about the way that that episode ended as far as James’ choice to basically throw the match in the very last play?

Yeah, I think he realizes that he’s got the girl. Him and Helen at this stage are getting on very well. And Hugh’s of his own choices decided to kind of outcast himself and take himself away. And you’ve got to feel for someone under those circumstances, because James seems to know how horrible that was. Obviously, he’s been with Helen now, so he would have got it from her perspective as well, I’m sure along the way. I think it was the right choice in the end to give [Hugh] a win knowing that James is the real winner.

I know the war is encroaching. And even though the Dales don’t necessarily get that much action – obviously, it’s not like you’re on the front lines or anything like that – but has there been discussion about how much that will infiltrate a little bit of the storyline? It’ll be 1939 next season.

Yes, that’s right. Obviously, we can’t ignore that there’s a war going on or is about to begin. Definitely it will be a thing that’s happening that will be commented on. But we will stay within the world of Darrowby and we’ll be seeing this time period all through the eyes of these people, because although that’s happening, the farmers are still there, the animals are still there, they still need tending to. The life as it were goes on. We will see bits of that throughout the third series, I imagine, even though I haven’t seen all the scripts yet.

World War II has a different impact in Europe. The writer of “World on Fire” called it your “foundation myth.” Do you know your family’s history in relation to the war?

My grandfather on my mom’s side, and his father and his family were farmers. So they were, what do you call it, they were in a protected profession. They’d stayed [to work] so that there was food for people. On my dad’s side, my grandfather was in the merchant navy. He’s on the ships but with supplies and things like that. He made it he made it through the second world war on those ships; he was he was doing his his bit that way. 

“All Creatures Great and Small” (PBS)Last summer at the press conference, Ben Vanstone was already writing scripts for season 3. What’s the status on that? Are you about to shoot soon?

We’re about to shoot start of March. We’ve got a couple of scripts in so far, but we don’t know the whole story arc. We know block one, roughly. It’s a real treat for us as well when we get scripts in because then we’ll read through them and then we’ll message each other on in the What’s App group for the five of us, the main characters. “Did you see what happens there? Do you see what happens? Oh, that’s gonna be really cool.” So in a couple of weeks’ time we’ll be filming again.

We got lambs and chickens in season 2. What’s coming for season 3?

I’d like to think we’ve come back bigger and better. We have another bull that comes along and horses and cows, sheep – all those bigger animals. But we also have littler animals as well. We have – what is he again? the little bird – a little budgie. We’ve got all sorts of animals big and small

What do you do during during COVID When you’re not shooting? Have you picked up extra hobbies like some people are? Baking bread or whatnot?

I packed a bag and I ended up going home for the first lockdown; it was like two and a half months. It was lovely. We were back home in Nairn, in a little town north of Scotland. It’s like a 10-15 minute walk to the beach. And it was stunning weather here. I was listening to podcasts and then I’d go for a walk or go for a run down the beach. 

And then once things opened up again, you’re allowed to golf again, so I’d go golfing. I just had chilled out and read books. Then actually because of film and TV, we were very fortunate to be picked up quite quickly afterwards. And after that first lockdown, I went off a month afterwards in August to film “The Devil’s Light” in Bulgaria. Then I went on to another job after that. Then we had a couple of lockdowns and then I started “All Creatures” season 2.

What is “The Devil’s Light” and your role in it?

I play a priest who’s in exorcism training. They have this kind of church university for priests and nuns. And one of the sisters in training, she wants to be an exorcist basically. Tradition dictates that priests are the exorcists, and the sisters look after people. So one of the lecturers take an interest in her and lets her come into his classes for that. It turns out she has a personal connection with one of the possessed who were held downstairs. So then that kind of kicks off. And as we are being trained, we are thrust in to take on this demon when we’re not quite ready to yet.

So night and day from “All Creatures Great and Small,” very different. But it should be really exciting. And apart from that, I may be back on stage, which would be amazing. We’ve got “The Devil’s Light” coming out for Halloween. Fingers crossed, it’ll come out this time.

More stories to read: 

The AIDS crisis never ended — and COVID may have even made it worse

The report out of Denver earlier this month, that an unnamed woman being treated for leukemia may have become the third person ever to be cured of AIDS, made headlines around the globe. More than four decades into a crisis that has killed nearly 80 million people, the news offered real hope of an end to AIDS on the horizon. It also served as a potent reminder, two years into a different deadly epidemic, that this earlier one never went away.

The US government estimates that 1.2 million Americans are living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, and approximately 13% of them don’t even know they’re HIV positive. That’s more than the number of Americans who have Parkinson’s disease or multiple sclerosis. Although the HIV-related mortality rate has plummeted since its peak in the nineties, it’s still among the top ten causes of death for people aged 25 to 44. (While HIV diagnoses dropped for most age groups between 2015 – 2019, they have held steady among young adults.) And HIV, like COVID-19, is far more pervasive and deadly in the most vulnerable populations.

“As you’re drawing the parallels between the HIV and Covid epidemics, I don’t think people were surprised to see the same racial disparities show up. One of the sad things to reflect on is the reality that Black men and Latino men, Black women and Latino women, and certainly, transgender women, are disproportionately affected by HIV,” says Marc Meachem, the head of U.S. External Affairs at ViiV Healthcare, a company solely focused on HIV and AIDS treatment and research. “Those disparities were there at the beginning of that epidemic. And because in the early days the face of HIV activism was really a white gay male face, I think that led people to think that it was a problem limited to them. Those disparities are enduring, and still here.”

RELATED: A new HIV vaccine is in phase one trials. But scientists aren’t holding their breath just yet

Shows like “Pose” illuminated the devastation of AIDS to trans women and people of color, but left the story in the past. The numbers tell a different story. While the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is yet to be calculated, the CDC estimates that in 2019, 34,800 Americans were newly infected. That number is likely to be rising, as the restrictions of the pandemic have created a decline in testing and treatment. “At the worst, it potentially brought us an increase of cases for at least the next couple of years,” Emory University researcher Samuel Jenness told Fortune last year.

Dr. Sarah Bauerle Bass, an associate professor and director of the Risk Communication Laboratory at Temple University, says, “Covid is everywhere. It occupies everybody’s brain and that’s all everybody talks about. That kind of pushes away anything else that might be important, especially for young people who are sexually active. They’re not getting that information that really gives them the sense that this is a risk that I need to listen to.” She says, simply, “Wear a mask — and use a condom.”

And that advice is especially important for people belonging to high risk groups. Nearly a quarter of the people living with HIV in this country are cisgender females, and straight women are diagnosed at more than twice the rate of straight men. The CDC also notes that “Blacks/African Americans represent 13% of the U.S. population but accounted for 44% of new HIV diagnoses, [and] Hispanics/Latinx represent 18% of the U.S. population but accounted for 30% of new HIV diagnoses.” As Meachem explains, “When you look at the lifetime chance of acquiring HIV, statistics are that it can be from one in two to one in three Black gay men will acquire HIV. Similarly, for gay Latino men, that number is one in four.”


Want more health and science stories in your inbox? Subscribe to Salon’s weekly newsletter The Vulgar Scientist.


What’s going on, and what can be done? The first challenge is reducing transmission.

“We’re not talking about HIV like we used to,” says Dr. Bass. “People, especially young people, aren’t getting a lot of that education in school like they used to. There used to be AIDS-specific health education in most school districts. That’s been largely taken away, or it kind of just gets enveloped into a general discussion around sexually transmitted diseases. You just don’t have that kind of level of heightened awareness anymore. I think that’s why we’re starting to see this uptick in infections in some of these younger populations.”

Dr. Gary Blick, the chief medical officer of Health Care Advocates International, agrees. “Education in schools is a problem,” he says. “I take care of so many transgender kids that are not getting HIV education in school, don’t even never heard of PReP [pre-exposure prophylaxis]. You can’t talk about PReP in a high school when you get your sex education and health classes? The thing that’s really troubling me is we’re still dealing with HIV stigma and discrimination. I think that’s probably our biggest hurdle to overcome still.”

Another huge set of challenges is in getting — and maintaining — treatment. Dr. Bass says, “You definitely see what we would call the HIV care continuum. From the time somebody tests positive and actually gets into care and is on antiretroviral therapy, you see drop off at every stage. People get tested but don’t get into care, or maybe people start care but then drop out of care, or people start taking antiretroviral therapy but then stop or are not adherent to that antiretroviral therapy. There’s different levels of disparities that are happening in that way too, because people at those different stages often either don’t have healthcare or have the type of healthcare that isn’t going to pay for long-term antiretroviral therapy. There’s all sorts of barriers to people getting to that gold standard of being on antiretroviral therapy that keeps it into that chronic condition.”

For people who have health insurance and access to efficient care, there is good news. Science has come a long way in prevention and treatment, which means more people at risk living longer and healthier lives. Just this month, the FDA approved a new injectable treatment for HIV-1 that can be dispensed every two months. That’s a big deal, considering that eleven of the current FDA approved treatments are once a day pills. “Going from 365 to six [treatments a year] is just an incredible level of innovation,” says Meachem. “That daily pill for some people is a daily reminder of living with HIV. People are able to give up some of that mental space, and have a sense of freedom of that burden.”

And now, that encouraging recent news about an individual seemingly cured, via a unique umbilical cord blood transplant, cracks the door of possibility open even wider. The patient’s profile makes the breakthrough even more significant. “The fact that she’s mixed race, and that she’s a woman, that is really important scientifically and really important in terms of the community impact,” Dr. Steven Deeks, an AIDS expert at the University of California, San Francisco, told the New York Times this week.

The AIDS crisis is still a crisis. We are still a long way from wiping the disease out, and COVID-19 has presented unique challenges and setbacks to progress. But the potential for a world free of AIDS is there.

“I think people, particularly in the disproportionately affected populations, need to have a sense of hope,” says Meachem. “We’ve had so many struggles in the country over the last few years. I think that people aren’t aware of the full breadth of the science. I feel like our job is to create hope. It’s to say to people, ‘Look, we can end the epidemic.'”

More HIV and AIDS coverage: 

Kenneth Branagh’s “Death on the Nile” forgets Agatha Christie was a master of the murder mystery

Kenneth Branagh’s new adaptation of “Death on the Nile” arrives with a lot of preconceived baggage. We know Agatha Christie. We know Poirot.

Christie’s influence on the murder mystery genre cannot be overstated. Her stories feature heavily in the contemporary media landscape; reruns of various incarnations regularly appear in television schedules. David Suchet’s portrayal of her detective Hercule Poirot is iconic – as are Julia McKenzie, Geraldine McEwan and Joan Hickson as Miss Marple.

The author of 66 detective novels, 14 short story collections and six bittersweet romance novels under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott, Christie has sold over two billion books. The first film adaptation of her work was “The Passing of Mr Quinn” in 1928. Her mysteries have been a staple of the big and small screen ever since.

Key to the Agatha Christie narrative – on screen and on the page – is the puzzle. The murder mystery is ultimately a game where you have to guess the killer before the detective does.

For many fans of Christie, adaptations are judged according to the degree to which they conform to their source text. How close is the adaptation to Christie’s original puzzle? Do the clues “fit together” in a similar fashion?

Reactions to Branagh’s adaptations of Christie complicate this picture even further. We aren’t just comparing these films to the novels themselves but other screen adaptations – the portrayals of Poirot we are more accustomed to.

Past Poirots

David Suchet is known as the quintessential Poirot, having played the role on television from 1989 to 2013. Suchet is faithful to Christie’s description of Poirot in her writing and fantastic in portraying Poirot’s iconic “rapid, mincing gait” and particular mannerisms.

This is Branagh’s second performance as Poirot. In 2017’s “Murder on the Orient Express,” the importance of the clues given by the suspects in the interviews became secondary to Branagh’s own peculiar portrayal of Poirot.

Branagh’s adaptations are more concerned with Poirot himself than any of the suspects.

The method of the crime in “Death on the Nile,” the puzzle Poirot (and we) must solve, is very intricate. It is one of Christie’s best in my opinion. In Branagh’s film, the central murder happens far too late in the narrative: the murder happening 70 minutes into a two hour film leaves insufficient time for the investigation.

What I love about the books and many of the adaptations, particularly Suchet’s versions, is how each clue is slowly considered.

How do we interpret each clue? What are its implications? This is where having an assistant for Poirot to bounce ideas off (and to show off as well) comes in handy. In the book of “Death on the Nile” it is Colonel Race. In this film, Poirot doesn’t really engage with anyone in any meaningful manner.

Rather than just a mystery, this film functions more as an exploratory narrative into Poirot. We get an absurd origin story for his moustache. We learn of his lost love. This theme about the extremities heartbreak can drive us to permeates throughout all the suspects.

It is an interesting narrative device but, in the end, it is still all about Poirot. There is no care given to these suspects or the importance of several clues.

But the biggest crime with Branagh’s portrayal of Poirot is the lack of charm. While the Poirot audiences are used to is peculiar, pompous and obsessed with order, he is above all else charming. He gets to know each suspect, asks them seemingly irrelevant questions and makes them lower their guard.

In this version he is gruff, unfriendly and often mean.

Death of the author

As with “Murder on the Orient Express,” Branagh again has the film veer into absurd action sequences. These moments break the narrative tone. The Poirot we are accustomed to does not chase suspects as if he was an action hero.

The visual effects are notably poor. The green screen is laughable at times. With the exception of a wonderful scene in Rameses II’s tomb, there is no genuine sense of place. There is no depth given to Egypt here.

There is so much potential to this film. The cast is superb and harks back to the incredible cast of the 1978 version, which featured Maggie Smith, Bette Davis, Mia Farrow, Angela Lansbury and Jane Birkin.

“The Murder on the Orient Express” performed well at the box office but received mixed critical reviews. The negative response was centred largely around the notion of fidelity. As the Atlantic described it, the film was “self-indulgent and thoroughly unnecessary.”

Branagh’s adaptation of “Death on the Nile” has been met with an equal amount of trepidation. The adapted work can never fully forget the original source.

It is interesting, then, that Christie’s name isn’t as present on the promotional material for Death on the Nile as, say, the BBC’s recent collection of miniseries adapted by Sarah Phelps.

Perhaps this is to signal Christie is no longer the sole author of this mystery, or maybe we are supposed to believe this version of Christie is elevated above the quaint, televisual fare that we may be accustomed to.

Fidelity informs the critical responses of Agatha Christie fans to adaptations of her work because, as film academic Christine Geraghty argues, “faithfulness matters when it matters to the viewer.”

Branagh’s adaptations of Christie are for an audience that haven’t read the original book and don’t already adore Suchet’s portrayal of Poirot. This film is for a new audience: an audience which isn’t hoping for fidelity.

If many go on to read her work and watch the rich history of Agatha Christie screen adaptations, that can only be a good thing – it gets a lot better than this attempt.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

What can I cook in a Dutch oven? Everything

Owning a Dutch oven is proof that you’ve made it. No matter what else is going on in your life, you can come home to a dependable piece of cookware that will cook soups, stews, braised meats, and bread better than any other piece of equipment in your kitchen.

My Le Creuset Dutch Oven is one of my prized possessions. It’s bright orange—a color I intentionally chose because it’s the brand’s signature hue—and has a gold knob, that I swapped myself and never looked back. Who needs a dining room tablewhen you have a Le Creuset Dutch oven? (Don’t answer that, I know how it sounds.)

Of course, Le Creuset isn’t the only brand that makes dutch ovens. Nowadays you have your pick from established kitchenware brands like Emile Henry, Staub, Cuisinart, and Lodge to newcomers like Great Jones and Misen. They come in a rainbow of colors, a whole host of different sizes, and in both oval and round shapes. There’s a Dutch oven to fit every budget and every kitchen. And once you obtain one, there are all kinds of great ways to fill it.

For regular weekdays and snowy weekends, there’s tortellini, chuck roast, sweet potatoeskalechicken thighs, and lentils that are yearning to be turned into a delicious one-pot meal.

1. No-Knead Sourdough Bread

No loaf pan is needed to make this sourdough bread. A Dutch oven works double duty to both create steam, which helps the bread to rise, while the enameled cast iron creates a crusty exterior.

2. Nach Waxman’s Brisket of Beef

One of the best things to cook in a Dutch oven is a tough cut of meat, like pork shoulder or brisket. It’s the perfect vessel for handling a large piece of meat that needs to cook low and slow for hours. Give this simple preparation of beef brisket a go.

3. Pomegranate-Braised Pot Roast

Told you a Dutch oven is good for meat! Sure, you can cook pot roast in a slow-cooker, but a Dutch oven brings out so much more flavor. Here, a four-pound boneless chuck roast braises in a combination of hearty root vegetables, tomato paste, onion soup mix, chicken stock, red wine, and pomegranate molasses.

4. Spinach Tortellini Soup by Joanna Gaines

On a cold day, settle into a comforting cooking project like homemade soup. This one comes together sneakily fast (in just 20 minutes), which is perfect for when you need to get dinner on the table like five minutes ago.

5. Marcella Hazan’s Tomato Sauce With Onion & Butter

This is easily the most famous tomato sauce recipe. The beauty comes in its simplicity—all you need are super-ripe tomatoes (or your favorite canned San Marzano tomatoes), a generous amount of butter, white onion, and salt. If you really want to feel like an Italian grandmother, you obviously should cook it in a Dutch oven.

6. Dutch-Oven Scalloped Idaho Potatoes

I grew up with scalloped potatoes cooked in a casserole dish so the idea that the same cheesy, creamy side dish can be done in a Dutch oven is a new, but welcome change in my life.

7. Butternut Squash Soup with Miso and Coconut

Braised meats aside, the Dutch oven really proves its worth for homemade soups. This one is a totally vegan butternut squash soup that gets creaminess from coconut milk, heat from cayenne pepper, and warmth from cumin and freshly grated ginger.

8. Baked Beans

Canned baked beans are convenient but homemade have much better flavor and texture (sorry, but it’s true!). You can make them as sweet or spicy as you like, but recipe developer Merrill Stubbs turns to bacon fat (brilliant), chopped canned tomatoes (I’m listening), Dijon mustard (duh), and brown sugar (double duh).

9. Smoky Clams for Two

A little bit of smoked paprika and sausage bring big flavor to this quick Dutch oven recipe.

10. Herby Mushroom Stew

Food52 Resident Carolina Gelen puts her Dutch oven to good use with this vegetarian stew that features a pound and a half of mixed mushrooms cooked with basic pantry staples (think: soy sauce, stock, balsamic vinegar, and red wine) for lots of umami-packed flavor.

11. One-Pot Roast Chicken a la Julia Child

Recipe developer Jennifer Clair attempted to recreate Julia Child’s method for cooking roasted chicken and vegetables in a Dutch oven—we think she succeeded, but try it for yourself.

12. Barley & Root Vegetable Rainbow Stew

Not only will this vegetable stew warm you up from the inside out, but it will also make you feel nourished all night long. (Oh, and if you’re wondering, yes it can be cooked in a Dutch oven).

13. Cheesy Potato Soup With Peppered Scallions

Think of this like a vichyssoise soup but instead of leeks, you’ll find so, so much cheese (a necessary and beautiful swap).

14. Pulled Pork

I find that cooking pulled pork in a Dutch oven rather than a slow cooker or Instant Pot yields more flavorful meat, as it has had the opportunity to caramelize on the outside. Not only do you crispier bits of pork, but the seared meat seals in all of the juices as the pork breaks down.

15. Mexican Chicken Noodle Soup

Grandma’s chicken soup just got a punchy upgrade from jalapeño peppers, a generous amount of fresh lime juice, chopped cilantro, coriander, and cumin.

16. Chicken Stew With Potatoes, Carrots & Celery

“Nourishing, easy, and flavorful, this chicken stew feels like a big warm hug if you ever need one. Whether it’s putting a comforting meal on the table on a weeknight or nursing a loved one back to health, this recipe will come to your rescue. The best part? It takes only 30 minutes to put together,” writes recipe developer Rachel Gurjar.

17. Beef Short Rib Bourguignon With Garlicky Panko Gremolata

Beef bourguignon is my all-time favorite dish to cook in a Dutch oven. It’s the easiest, and yet most impressive, dinner I can make, all in one sturdy pot. Serve with mashed potatoes for the ultimate comfort food meal.

18. Rice Pilaf With Crispy Chickpeas & Cashews

Assigning editor Rebecca Firkser has done a public service by sharing her three key tips for making fluffy, flavorful rice pilaf in a Dutch oven.

19. Our Favorite Chili

While you can make our chili recipe in a slow cooker, it’s tastes better and comes together more quickly when cooked in a Dutch oven (I know I sound like a broken record, but I only speak the truth). This one is extra good because it uses a trio of beef chuck, Italian sausage, and ground veal.

20. My Favorite Bolognese

Bolognese was made for the Dutch oven (okay, I don’t actually know if this is true, but it makes sense, right?). “The longer you can slowly simmer this sauce, the better it will taste,” writes recipe developer Josh Cohen.

21. A Pot of Beans & Greens

This beautiful bean stew is filling and inexpensive (a unique 2-for-1 special!). Assigning editor Rebecca Firkser perks up a pound of beans with dried chile, olive oil, and a previously-frozen Parm rind.

22. Chicken Stock

Give a chicken carcass and bones a second life by making homemade stock in a Dutch oven.

From breakfast to dessert, here are the 22 essential vegan items at Trader Joe’s

Whether you are a vegan, a vegetarian or just trying to consume less animal products, it can be helpful to have a few go-to, easy options that are compatible with your dietary needs. That’s where Trader Joe’s comes in. The cult-favorite grocery chain is constantly pushing out new products and resurrecting old favorites — many of which are vegan! Here’s your guide to shopping the aisles for the best plant-based items to get you through your day deliciously. 

Breakfast 

Trader Joe’s jumbo cinnamon rolls fall into one of my favorite food categories: accidentally vegan. Flip over the cardboard tube and scan the ingredients list. Not an animal product in sight! If you’re looking for something a little more protein-packed to get your day started, steer your cart over to the frozen aisle and pick up the tofu scramble with soy chorizo; it’s filling and flavorful without being too heavy. If you’re in the mood for something sweeter, TJ’s gluten-free organic rolled oats with ancient grains and seeds are a perfect complement to their blueberry cultured coconut milk yogurt. Eating on the run? Spread some vegan buttery spread on toast and you’re out the door in no time. 


Want more great food writing and recipes? Subscribe to Salon Food’s newsletter.


Lunch 

With a little food prep, you can set yourself up for a delicious week of vegan lunches sourced from within the aisles of your local Trader Joe’s. Whip up a batch of their falafel mix (or buy the frozen falafel if your store carries them) and bake them off on a sheet pan or in the air fryer until crispy. Toss them on some mixed greens with olives, cherry tomatoes and the store’s vegan feta alternative. Drizzle a little vegan tzatziki dip over the whole thing and you’ve got a delicious salad. 

If you’re running short on time or energy, thankfully TJ’s has some grab-and-go vegan options. Two of our favorites are the organic hearty minestrone soup and the peanut udon noodle salad

Dinner 

If your weeknights, like mine, are a flurry of impending deadlines underscored by overwhelming desire to just fade into the couch, perhaps frozen dinners are a good option. Thankfully, Trader Joe’s has you covered. Their vegan enchilada casserole is melty, saucy and lightly spiced. Their vegan tikka masala and vegan pad thai are both classics for a reason. If you’re looking for something that gives the same vibes as old-school Chinese carry-out, pair their chicken-less mandarin orange morsels with instant white rice and frozen broccoli. For an all-in-one meal, consider their yellow jackfruit curry with jasmine rice

Snack 

There are so many great vegan snack options at Trader Joe’s. Three that are consistently on-rotation in my kitchen are the spicy porkless plant-based snack rinds (these are also really fun to sprinkle on black bean tacos), the chile-spiced dried pineapple (which is addictive) and the veggie gyoza.

Desserts 

Time for the sweet stuff. As the weather gets warmer, spend some time in the frozen aisle and pick up a treat or two, like the Hold the Dairy! Vegan chocolate mini cones, oat non-dairy frozen dessert sandwiches or the vegan cookies & cream vanilla bean bon bons. For something classic, grab a box of the vegan oatmeal chocolate chip cookies and a glass of your non-dairy milk of choice. 

 

More stories about vegetarian and vegan meals: 

“Arthur” creator on iconic cartoon’s 25-year legacy and those “legendary” memes

If you know a young millennial, chances are they’ve never once had a problem spelling the word “aardvark.” They also will never forget that nine times nine is 81, and that having fun isn’t hard if you’ve got a library card. They may not have watched the PBS cartoon “Arthur” – which airs its final episodes on Feb. 21 – in 20 years or more, but pieces of it are more than likely ingrained in their brains, alongside Eminem lyrics and the name Amelia Mignonette Thermopolis Renaldi.

And even if you don’t know or understand the references above, you’ve definitely seen what has become the show’s most defining image: a clenched fist next to a yellow sweater, usually used to communicate subtle anger. 

What you may not know about that now famous meme is that in context, it’s not actually about subtlety at all. It’s actually Arthur, a young aardvark perpetually stuck in the third or fourth grade, revving up to punch his little sister D.W. in the face for breaking the toy plane that he explicitly told her not to touch. Arthur is not a role model of self-restraint, and D.W. is a character whose entire existence seems to be in pursuit of being punched in the face, yet you can’t help but love them both.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BbLakZ_hRY7/?utm_medium=copy_link

This is not lost on creator and author Marc Brown, who appears to be exactly the gentle, soft-voiced man you might expect to be behind one of the most beloved kids shows – and whose delighted approval of your question might make you feel like you just got an A+ in your worst subject.

“You put your finger on what I think kids find most relatable about Arthur,” he tells Salon on a Zoom call, regarding the punching. “He’s not perfect. Yeah, he does fight with his sister. He does make mistakes. He’s navigating the mud puddles of life, but he can’t do it alone. He needs help from his friends. He needs help from his family to solve a lot of these problems, but kids see that he’s got a good heart and that he’s a good person and he’s like them – he makes mistakes. We all do.” 

RELATED: Alabama Public Television bans episode of children’s show “Arthur” over gay wedding

Arthur comes to an end this week after 25 seasons, and Brown has spent some time reflecting on the legacy his little aardvark is leaving behind, both in an effort to give the show a good sendoff, and to put together his newest book, “Believe in Yourself: What we Learned from Arthur.” A flip through the book serves as a reminder of all the things the show managed to cover in its 25 seasons: divorce, cancer, autism, asthma, dementia, racism, bullying, censorship, failing grades, people lying on the internet, ripped pants, dueling birthday parties and “witches” who live up the street.

And then in season 22, everybody’s favorite teacher Mr. Ratburn got married to his boyfriend and invited all his students – a nod to the time Brown’s own third grade teacher invited all of her students to her wedding. (“Oh, what was she thinking?” he wonders of that decision.) And never forget that everyone in this world is an animal of some kind. Mr. Ratburn is a rat, and his husband is an aardvark, like Arthur. Arthur’s best friend Buster is a rabbit. When civil rights icon John Lewis guest-starred to talk about racism and civil rights, he was a bear. 

“I chose to write about animals for this age group 45 years ago, and the reason is that it levels the playing field,” Brown explains. “Any kid who reads a story or watches the show can relate to any of the characters.”

Arthur and his friends and family members are also based on real people Brown has known over the years, which he believes helps kids see them as real people, despite the fact that they might be a monkey. 

Brown is thrilled that the kids raised on his characters and these important lessons grew up to celebrate them with memes – a great honor, on today’s internet. He loves the fist jokes, and brought up additional memes of his own of two iconic D.W. images: one in which she’s staring longingly through a fence, and another where she’s standing in front of a sign meant to deter her saying, “That sign can’t stop me because I can’t read!”

He was particularly tickled to see Lebron James post an Arthur meme in 2017, and John Legend recreate the fist scene – complete with yellow sweater – in a Google ad after being trolled by his wife Chrissy Teigen over his resemblance to the character. Brown found it “amazing” that they had connected to the show in that way. He even sees Legend as the ultimate embodiment of Arthur in real life.

“Well, he is just an amazing man, and I’m in awe of his talent,” Brown said. “I also love that he is a good citizen, and he cares about our country and he cares about what’s going on and that people have a good life here. He doesn’t get stuck in his celebrity. He’s a real person, so he’s pretty terrific.” 

RELATED: What’s in a meme? A brief history of what Salon thinks memes are

All that said, Brown doesn’t love all of the internet. “Arthur” premiered in 1996, when people were just beginning to get used to this new form of communication and the new world that was now open to them. The show has spanned a major technology boom, from waiting for dial-up to having access to almost anything or anyone you want in a thin piece of metal you can hold in one hand. The change has been both positive and negative. In 2005, a “Postcards from Buster” segment featured Buster meeting a kid with lesbian moms had sparked national outrage, but when Mr. Ratburn married his husband in 2019, Brown said 98% of the responses he saw were “glowingly positive.”

“You would have thought that we blew up the world” with the two moms, he recalls. “So when we did Mr. Ratburn’s wedding, I thought, how wonderful that we have made so much progress in this country.” 

Arthur“Mr. Ratburn & the Special Someone” episode of “Arthur” (WGBH/PBS)

Normally, however, Brown advises creators not to read their reviews. “Just keep on working,” he says. “Keep on looking for good things to play with and make stories about and keep your eyes open about what’s happening in the world.” 

He says “Arthur” has always strived to tell kids the truth, and right now, the truth is that the way kids take in the world is changing. “Kids are taking in their stories on a phone! Twenty-five years ago, we never could have imagined that happening.” 


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


There are also more things for kids to watch than ever before, and that is concerning to a man who has dedicated his life to making that content. 

“I can’t control what other people are feeding children, but I know that I’m not happy about a lot of the things I see,” he says. “But we’re all in this big, glorious mess together, and all you can do is control your little part of the mess. I focus on what we can do, and I can’t worry about everything that’s being done wrong. But I do worry about problems, and I’m always thinking about things we need to talk with kids about, like school safety. I worry about social media, and the good and the bad that it brings into a child’s life. So we have work to do.” 

As he continues to take that work on, Brown is reminded of an another TV legend. 

“My friend Fred Rogers used to talk about the space between the television screen and the child and it being sacred, and how we had this responsibility to use it well. And I mean, God, talk about setting a high bar for the rest!” 

RELATED: The enduring guidance of “Mister Rogers” on both children and adults

While some former fans of “Arthur” might be both surprised and a little saddened to know that it’s ending, the good news is that in 2022, nothing really ends. Not only will episodes continue to run on PBS for “many years,” but Brown explains that the show will be taking advantage of the “good fortune” of technology to find new ways of reaching kids in today’s world. They’ll be “experimenting with new media,” which includes podcasts. Plus, you know, 25 seasons is a lot. 

“Who even dreams of reaching that point?” Brown says. “We felt like we could take a chance to try something new.” 

Unfortunately or fortunately, depending on your perspective, Arthur’s ending was planned long before they had to figure out how to address kids in the midst of a global pandemic. But while the future now feels fuzzier than it did a few years ago and the present feels even fuzzier than that, Brown is confident in the future that he and the writers have given Arthur and his friends in the series finale. 

Arthur“The Rhythm and Roots of Arthur” episode of “Arthur” (WGBH/PBS

“I think we wanted to satisfy the most often-asked questions we get from kids. What happens to Arthur when he grows up? What do Arthur and his friends become?” Head writer Peter Hirsch is credited with writing the finale, and Brown is proud of the way he was able to take the different facets of everyone’s personalities and fast forward them to adulthood to see what their “gifts” would do for them as adults. That future doesn’t change with the hardships of the past two years. 

“The future is always uncertain,” he says. “And you can point to just about any place in time and there have always been obstacles that we have to overcome. So I believe in the power of kids, and what they can do. I don’t think things are gonna get in their way. I think they’re going to march forward. I’m encouraged by how positive the youth in our country is.” 

And if Brown’s wrong, at least we’ll always have the memes.

A special “Arthur” marathon is running on PBS Kids 24/7 and its YouTube Feb. 16-21. The final four episodes airs on Monday, Feb. 21 on local PBS stations and streams for free on PBS Kids.

More stories to read: 

 

Bernie Madoff’s elderly sister and brother-in-law found dead in Florida

Sondra Wiener, the sister of Bernie Madoff, and her husband Marvin were found dead on Thursday in their Boynton Beach, Florida home, according to the New York Times.

Deputies from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s office responded to a 911 call and found Weiner, 87, and her husband, 90, dead. 

According to the sheriff’s Facebook page and Twitter account, the death “appears to be a murder/suicide.” The cause of death will be determined by a medical examiner. 

RELATED: The dark lesson of Bernie Madoff

The social media post also reports that the family invoked Marsy’s Law for Marvin, which provides protections for crime victims

Madoff, who was once the chairman of NASDAQ, ran the largest Ponzi scheme in history, worth about $64.8 billion. He not only defrauded thousands of investors, but his family was also affected by his crimes. His older son Mark died by suicide in December 2010.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Madoff began serving the maximum 150-year sentence in 2009. He died of chronic kidney disease and other natural causes at age 82 last year in a federal prison hospital.

More to read: 

CNN’s Laura Coates dares the right to come after Joe Biden’s Supreme Court pick

“The pursuit of justice creates injustice,” is the paradoxical line that opens CNN legal expert Laura Coates’ bestselling new book, “Just Pursuit: A Black Prosecutor’s Fight for Fairness.” I spoke to Coates for “Salon Talks” about her fight for fairness as a federal prosecutor, how she has handled criticism as a prosecutor and her take on the prospective Black female Supreme Court justice President Biden has promised to nominate.

“I always found it to be very shocking that people have the impression that you could either be an advocate and proponent for civil rights or a prosecutor,” Coates said. “You have to be both and you have to wield the discretion that you have with an eye towards what is fair.” She added that the true goal of a prosecutor should not be how many convictions you rack up, but how strongly you fight for fairness, because that, as she explained, “is the predicate for any real justice system.” But in that pursuit of fairness, injustice can emerge.  

Her work as a federal prosecutor also included a stint in the voting rights section of the Department of Justice, where she fought against efforts to disenfranchise voters of color. At that time, however the Voting Rights Act was in full force, and had not yet been gutted by the Supreme Court in the infamous Shelby County v. Holder decision of 2013. Coates made it clear that many of the voter suppression laws passed by Republican-dominated state legislatures since January 2021 would not have been permitted if the Voting Rights Act’s pre-clearance provision was still in effect — the very section of the law invalidated by the Shelby County decision. As Coates noted, the GOP’s attack on voting rights has made it feel like America has gone backward in time to the days before 1964.

On the issue of Biden’s yet-to-be-named Supreme Court justice, Coates made a passionate case for why nominating a Black woman is an important move, not just for diversity’s sake, but for substantive reasons. “When we’re talking about voting rights cases, I want a Black woman on the bench,” Coates said, and also “when we’re talking about issues related to abortion bans that relate to and impact disparately Black and brown people.” She acknowledged that the forthcoming nominee’s integrity will be questioned: “We know it’s coming, but I have to just sort of smile and put America on display and say I dare you to challenge the dignity of these particular women.” Watch or read my “Salon Talks” with Laura Coates below.

This transcript has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

In your book, you talk about leaving private practice as a civil litigator to join the Department of Justice. Share with us a little about that.

It felt like a calling for me because I had always been very interested in civil rights, not only because, of course, I’m a student of history and I revere those who have come before me, but also as a Black woman in America. I think about just how impactful civil rights have been over the course of my generation, my parents’ generation, my grandparents, my children and their children as well. I knew the story of Ruby Bridges more than I knew the stories of Dr. Seuss and all of his characters because it was taught in my home. It was an idea of being a constant, fluid forward journey, not just an era confined to some particular decade. When I really thought about what I wanted to do with the practice of law, I was instantly drawn and compelled to go, and I was glad that the calling could be received.

The first line of your book is, “The pursuit of justice creates injustice.” You give us an example right away, in the first chapter, of a man who was a victim of a crime. It turned out he was an undocumented alien.

You know, I think people often think to themselves, when I wrote that first line, how could the pursuit of justice create injustice? I mean, it just seems very counterintuitive to people. I myself did not realize that when I first went from being in private practice to a civil rights attorney’s office to actually being assistant U.S. attorney. I can tell you that the reason I put it out there is because so often people think about justice as a binary outcome, right? It’s either a conviction or it’s an acquittal. It’s not something that you ever contemplate, what happens in between. To use the words of John Lennon, life is what happens when you’re busy making other plans. Justice and injustice occurs when you’re busy trying to get a conviction or trying to avoid an acquittal.

I started with the story of Manuel. He had arrived in this country illegally as a teenager, had spent decades in this country, had not so much as sneezed in the direction of a police officer, was gainfully employed, was raising his family. And because his car was stolen and he did what we want people to do, which is to report a crime when society is offended by a criminal, it’s what we have — the “United States versus” — he reports it.

And because I had to run a background check on any witness who may come into a courtroom to alert a marshal, if there’s a security concern or otherwise, it came up as an active deportation warrant. In that moment, I had to try to figure out what to do. It was an obvious unfairness. It was an obvious injustice that here we are knowing that the criminal code is such as it is, but we don’t think of the person who commits car theft, the person who has a long rap sheet of violent crimes to be a criminal on the same level, if at all, as somebody who has illegally been in this country, trying to make a better life for himself and his family.

Yet they’re treated the same. In the pursuit of trying to get a conviction of this particular car thief, here I was having to work with ICE to get this man deported with this active warrant. And it was one of those moments, for me, that it became crystal clear that whenever I would say “Laura Coates on behalf of the people of the United States,” that included the defendant, that included the people who were in the periphery, those who were going to have collateral damage, certainly the victims of the crimes as well.  It’s not that there was a viable alternative without consequences, but that should tell you something about the state of affairs in America. If we know that there is an imbalance between what is right and what is lawful, what is required and what ought never to have been the only choice, that’s where progress begins.

As a prosecutor, your job is to put people in jail. But really, as you explain, the touchstone is justice. Can you touch on that a little bit, so people understand that prosecutors are not just hellbent on prosecuting for the high-fives you get in your office? It’s bigger than that.

Yes. If your goal is simply to get and rack up as many attaboys or attagirls as you possibly can, I think you’re in the wrong profession. We’re supposed to be prosecutors who recognize that due process, the Fourth Amendment, all of our civil liberties and our constitutional rights, the idea of a healthy level of skepticism and the idea of ensuring that you can meet your burden of proof, not just rely on being a beneficiary of the benefits of the doubt that law enforcement get.

For example, the idea that an officer wouldn’t get up in the morning to commit a crime or that an officer would not have stopped you had you not done something wrong. We think about these things. Or, hey, the government would not be prosecuting this person unless they really had a case. I was a beneficiary of that benefit of the doubt that’s extended on my cases. The issue, though, is: Are you going to exploit that and not try to meet your burden, and rely on that to carry you through and put blinders on about injustices that might occur? 

There are instances, of course, when you’ve got exculpatory material and you can’t withhold that, things that could prove the person’s innocence, just because you’d like to get a conviction. You have to hand it over. You can’t try to stack the deck against the defendant in a way that they have no opportunity for a fair trial, if you really believe that we have a presumption of innocence in this country. 

I mean, these are elements I always found shocking, in that people have the impression that you could either be an advocate and proponent for civil rights or a prosecutor. You have to be both, and you have to wield the discretion that you have with an eye toward what is fair. And the title of the book really was “Just Pursuit: A Black prosecutor’s Fight for Fairness,” not just for justice, because fairness really is the predicate for any real justice system. 

So often we are a legal system trying to become a justice system. That linchpin is fairness and we profess to care about those things. Then in reality, in practice we say, well, the prosecutor’s supposed to be this caricature, unfeeling, robotic, only interested in the kill, so to speak. In reality, you ought to be interested in fairness.

In your book, you share an exchange where a Black female defense attorney clearly feels some contempt for you and the idea that you’re helping put Black people in prison. It’s a funny chapter, the way you wrote it.

Yeah. Because I was minding my own business in a restaurant, having a nice quiet lunch!

Did you ever worry that you were not helping your community, or even that you were hurting your community? Or did you actually think you were helping your community, in a certain way, because of your pursuit of justice?

I knew that was the perception. But I also knew who I am and what I stood for. But the perception sometimes can really guide the way you approach different scenarios and can guide the way people receive you and the way they’re willing to cooperate or not do so. And frankly you need not even go to officers about officers. We watched the woman sho is now vice president, who before that was U.S. senator and presidential candidate, where she had to face the ideas of, could you really be on behalf of reform or the people of a community if you were the top prosecutor in a state like California? 

I found a kindred spirit in all the prosecutors in that notion, and it’s really this fallacy that Black and brown people are only expected to fill one role in the justice system, either that of the defendant or maybe defense counsel and that what seat you have at the table is somehow going to convey who your allegiance is owed to and whether you have power.

That conversation we had was really about power. The idea of both of us feeling like we were in the right seats. I, as a prosecutor, felt like I was in the right seat because I had the opportunity to use my discretion, exercise it to, in many ways, be a gatekeeper, in many ways to bring my lived experience as a human being and Black woman and wife and mother and civil rights attorney to really question whether the Fourth Amendment had been followed, to question whether this was going to be a viable case, to question what was going on. And in the same instance, she thought that she was in the best position to react to those exercises of discretion.

This notion of whether to be proactive or reactive, we never can resolve it. But it does tell you why it’s important to have Black and brown people and those who are civil rights advocates in all parts of our justice system, whether it’s law enforcement, prosecutors, defense counsel, judges, whether it’s members of Congress, state and local officials, community boards, mental health advocates, parole board. It runs the gamut on all these things.

It’s interesting because I transitioned, as you know, from being in the voting rights section of the civil rights division. It was a foregone conclusion to people, no one questioned my allegiance then, no one questioned for whom I was a champion. Nobody questioned whose side I was on. And then under the same umbrella of the Department of Justice as a criminal prosecutor, that was immediately questioned, the idea of “Whose side are you on?” and the audacity for me to say that I believed in civil rights and then to be standing where the stereotypical man, the stereotypical white man would have been, was one that left me scratching my head at times. But I understood that because of the fundamental distrust that we have so often with the justice system in America.

The laws on their face are racially neutral, but with their application, there’s a big debate about institutional racism. The data is all there. You’re three times more likely be killed by the police if you’re Black versus white. The bail you get will likely be higher if you’re Black versus white for the same offense. It shows up in sentencing, in chances of parole. What do you suggest, as someone on the inside? How do we effectively address institutional racism in terms of legislation?

I think one of the big disservices of the justice system, and I know it sounds odd, is its mascot. This idea of a blindfolded lady justice because somehow that conveys that if we don’t see it, then it really didn’t happen, right? The idea of the three monkeys in a row: Hear no evil, speak no evil, say no evil. This has helped no one over the course of history. We have to actually see and actually say what we have seen and address it. And this idea of essentially blindfolding ourselves and pretending like the justice system is the one place in this country where race has no influence whatsoever, where gender and bias mean nothing, that’s preposterous. But I think it makes people feel as though, if we say phrases like, well, “no one is above the law” or “justice is blind” or that we’re “colorblind” or in a “post-racial” world.

These somehow make people feel as though America is no longer the experiment that say, Justice Breyer recently reaffirmed and spoke about, talking about the Gettysburg Address upon his retirement, or the idea that we feel safer if somehow we can hold ourselves as the America on paper, out to the world, as opposed to who we are oftentimes in reality. You hear phrases like, “This is not who we are.” And then there are moments when you say, well, I want to know why you think that’s not who we are, because it is definitely who we’ve been in some places. So I think the first instance of why I wrote this book was I wanted people, when you’re trying to speak truth to power, to first know what the truth is. to actually acknowledge and understand the ways in which race and bias continue to infect and infuse and disrupt our areas of justice.

We have to get out of that mindset, just as it’s not a binary system where it’s conviction or acquittal, and then the end justifies the means. We talk about reform. It’s not just about acknowledging the impact of race. It’s not just about looking at police encounters. There are so many areas we can look at. For example, the judicial adoption of qualified immunity, the idea of the Graham v. Connor decision that gives officers the “reasonable police officer” standard, rather than the reasonable person standard. There’s the idea of the power of unions. There’s the idea of the presumption of innocence and our bail system, up to and including issues surrounding these slogans around how to reallocate resources to officers. There’s so many different aspects of it, and I think that the conversation begins by un-blindfolding the nation.

You worked with the DOJ’s voting rights division. In the Shelby County v. Holder case in 2013, the Supreme Court gutted the pre-clearance provision, and since then Republicans have passed 34 laws restricting voter access in 19 states. If Shelby County had not gutted the Voting Rights Act, would you feel more confident in our election system, which would have required pre-approval of these laws to make sure there was not a disproportionate impact on people of color?

The majority of the laws that have now passed muster would not have under the pre-clearance requirements. And that’s by design. It’s no coincidence, right? When I was in the voting rights section, I had the benefit of Section 5 pre-clearance still being intact. I had the benefit of the Supreme Court not rendering it anemic through making it harder to challenge under Section 2, and even then it was difficult under public policy considerations, and perceptions of a political Department of Justice.

In our pandemic, we talk about prevention being better than cure. Well, you’re asking people to simply treat the symptoms after someone’s already been infected when it comes to voting rights cases. If we are going to actually hope to have a strong democracy, then you can’t be weak on voting rights. You can’t be. And you know as well as I do that it’s no coincidence that our criminal justice system is tied to voting rights. It’s no coincidence that people are trying to take away something they know is powerful. It’s no coincidence that when there’s no oversight, when the cat’s away the mice come out to play. Unfortunately, we are being impacted every single day, challenged on the principles of one person, one vote, and being told, as you said, that here we are in a land of progress and it feels like 1964 all of a sudden.

RELATED: From SCOTUS to “critical race theory”: There’s no law or fact the GOP feels bound to respect now

A Supreme Court seat will soon be open, and President Biden has committed to nominating the first Black female justice in the history of this republic. What is the significance of that to you, and to young Black girls growing up in America now?

To me, it’s extremely significant and not because it’s diversity for diversity’s sake. Have you seen the embarrassment of riches that this president has to choose from? We’re not talking about people that he’s picked out of oblivion and said, “I hope this meets the standard.” They have surpassed it in their legal excellence. They are revered and renowned for their intellect, for their impartiality, for the idea of being able to have the integrity we want on the bench. It’s high time, past time that we have the bench more reflective of the people of the United States. Women, Black women in particular have been a part of the bench and lawyers since the 1800s, and have been judges since at least the 1960s. And yet here we are, still grappling with the idea that people say, “Well, you have a woman up there. Isn’t that good enough? You got two, isn’t that good enough?”

Black women, as you know, continuously find themselves from the feminist, womanist movement and beyond of having to answer the question, well, ain’t I a woman and ain’t I qualified in so many respects? So we’re talking about the standards now that will be applied, the idea of, well, are they qualified enough? Yes, they all are. And while it’s an embarrassment of riches, it is an embarrassment that the intellectual wealth of Black women as legal scholars and advocates has not been fully recognized until now. For most people, when they think about a Black woman in the Supreme Court confirmation hearings, they think of Anita Hill. And we all know the treatment of Anita Hill, whose career was incredible and she herself is a force to be reckoned with in her own right, yet that’s overshadowed by her relationship with respect to a man.

I think it’s high time we bring that perspective to the bench. Now I don’t in any way suggest that it’s a foregone conclusion I will know how a Black woman will rule on every matter that comes before her. But you know what? I want a Black woman on the bench. When we’re talking about voting rights cases, I want a Black woman on the bench. When we’re talking about issues related to abortion bans that relate to and impact disparately Black and brown people. When we’re talking about defense cases and issues about reform and issues about the treatment of defendants. I’d like somebody who has a defense-minded perspective as well on these issues. All these things are important. All these things are impactful. And it’s time that we brought that perspective to the bench. This president has had his work cut out for him and that in and of itself, Dean, makes me very proud.

You have already have Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity and others on the right, smearing a person who’s not even been nominated. To me, the question isn’t why should it be a Black woman, the question is why hasn’t there been a Black woman in over 230 years? But what’s your reaction: Do you expect them to smear this person even more in a heightened way because she is a Black woman? 

Let me say on behalf of all of them, boo, because it’s time for people to actually understand what that fear comes from. And if it’s a fear of one having so much integrity, so much competence and credibility, that it might actually challenge the assumptions and ridiculous comments you make, well then so be it. But I’ll tell you, when we’ve heard people make comments like that, why on earth would you say that? Why would you essentially act, Mr. President, as if you shouldn’t cast a wider net? That’s not very impartial.

We’ve heard, even since Reagan, discussions about wanting to have a woman on the bench. Now, Black women seem different all of a sudden? We had former President Trump even outsourcing, frankly, his list of nominees to the Federalist Society, asking for somebody who would overturn Roe v. Wade. Now that is the height of what is not impartial. So if anyone comes to talk about the hypocrisy or what this could possibly mean, I hope they came with the same energy and charisma and condemnation related to those who were looking for a particular reversal of precedent as they intend to come to challenge somebody who has criteria that frankly might make the sitting Supreme Court justices go, “Let me up my game.”

You’re talking about former clerks and solicitors general in respect to this. You’re talking about the most recently installed Supreme Court justice, Amy Coney Barrett, who — I’m not taking away from her mind at all, she is a force to be reckoned with and should be acknowledged as that, but I’ve heard already comments about, “Well, if somebody hasn’t been on the bench for a set number of years, they ought not to have a chance.” She had a very relatively short tenure compared to other justices. Justice Elena Kagan had never been a judge a day in her life before she became a Supreme Court justice. I could go on with others as well. 

So we know it’s coming. but I have to just smile and put America on display and say, I dare you to challenge the dignity of these particular women. If you have things that need to be addressed, by all means let the American people know. But these coded dog whistles about why a Black woman’s not qualified, or President Biden is wrong to hone in on particular criteria, that are an asset, an addition — not a credential, but an asset in addition to the credentials that are already there? Please.
 

Read more on Biden’s upcoming Supreme Court pick:

Sports teams are finally scrapping Native American mascots – on both sides of the Atlantic

After two years of simply being called the Washington Football Team, the U.S. capital’s American football franchise has unveiled its new name and branding: the Washington Commanders. Following over 80 years known as the Washington Redskins, the offensive name was removed in 2020 as a result of sustained activism from American Indian groups, and eventually, the threat of corporations withdrawing sponsorship.

The rebrand is one of the most high-profile in a wave of professional sports teams abandoning their use of American Indian team names and imagery. Also in 2020, the Kansas City Chiefs withdrew their mascot, and in July 2021 the Cleveland baseball team changed its name from “Indians” to “Guardians”. Some US states are now passing legislation banning public schools from using Native-related mascots.

The ripple effects of these activist campaigns reaching British shores have strengthened. On January 27, the Exeter Chiefs Premiership rugby union club announced that they will remove all American Indian logos and related imagery. The name Chiefs will remain, but will now instead be associated with regional history, representing the Celtic Iron Age Dumnonii Tribe.

Indeed, the use of names and mascots associated with indigenous communities around the world is extensive. The pattern of use in Europe — including the Bürstadt Redskins in Germany and KAA Gent football) in Belgium — is one where instead of indigenous groups self-representing, the images are adopted by teams with no connection to these groups. This has been linked with ideas of ongoing colonialism and conceptual control.

Campaigns against the use of American Indian imagery are rooted in the Red Power era of the 1960s-70s. Efforts have focused not only on team names and logos, but also the paraphernalia and activities that fans are encouraged to buy into. The Atlanta Braves’ controversial, but still widespread, “tomahawk chop” is just one example.

The use of this imagery in the UK appears incongruous given the degree of historic, cultural and geographic separation from the indigenous population of America. There is no link between the Exeter team and Native America, but the branding ran from the team mascot to crystal brandy glasses, golfing gloves and baby’s bibs. A number of other British sports teams use American Indian imagery, such as the Tees Valley Mohawks basketball team and the Whitley Warriors ice hockey team.

Using such names and images in the UK, shorn of all historic context, ensures that the use of American Indian branding becomes more pointedly associated with the stereotypical attributes that the teams seek to exploit: bravery, savagery, ruggedness and the “warrior spirit.” Teams often claim that they are in fact honouring American Indian heritage and traditions, but this argument has come close to collapse under the weight of ongoing activism and academic research into the harmful effects of racial stereotyping and caricaturing.

Changing times

In 2016, the London-based Streatham Redskins hockey team rebranded to the RedHawks, as a result of the growing campaign against the Washington team. Exeter have now followed suit, but only after vocally resisting calls to change. In the same year Rachel Herrmann, an American academic working in the UK, published a critical blog post about the Exeter branding. The piece provoked a largely hostile response everywhere from local newspapers to national morning chat shows.

Herrmann’s blog post echoed many of the arguments that campaign groups in the U.S. had been making for years. Mascots “freeze” American Indians in the past, connect them to a pre-modern landscape, and conceptually deny them existence in the present: the very idea of American Indians is welded to the idea of the great plains and the frontier. Activists and academics also discuss the idea of “playing Indian,” where white men and women perform their version of “Indianness” by putting “war paint” on their faces, wearing war bonnets and participating in the tomahawk chop. Many argue this act of “red-facing” is equivalent to blackface minstrelsy.

In June 2020, fans established the Exeter Chiefs for Change group. Working with many indigenous activists, they quickly gave added impetus to the campaign for change.

In July 2020, the Exeter club stated that their use of American Indian imagery was “highly respectful,” but admitted that the mascot, Big Chief, should be removed. The National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), America’s largest and oldest American Indian civil rights organisation, wrote directly to the club in autumn 2021 urging them to remove all branding. The NCAI had helped to decisively shift public opinion in the US on the issue with a prominent campaign video released in 2013.

In mid-October 2021, the Exeter club’s chairman, Tony Rowe, wondered: “Are all these people really getting upset in North America? I don’t quite believe that.”

Ignorance around such critical issues owing to geographical distance is no longer an excuse. The change now occurring on both sides of the Atlantic is proof of this.


What did you think of this article?
Great | Good | Okay | Weak
The Conversation

Sam Hitchmough, Associate Professor in Modern US History, University of Bristol

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Why France really helped America’s Founding Fathers fight the Revolutionary War

No sooner had Benjamin Franklin signed the Declaration of Independence than he was off, secretly, to France, on what seemed, in the winter of 1776, to be an impossible mission: to secure loans and arms from King Louis XVI.

Why would France — only a dozen years after its complete thrashing by the British in the Seven Years War and the loss of all North American colonies, in defiance of the Treaty of Paris and international law — risk helping revolutionaries? To exact revenge for their humiliating defeat? To rekindle an ancient rivalry between two royal families? And how, whether or not they succeeded, could the Americans ever repay any loans? The embryonic United States had no money, no banks and no credit.

RELATED: America’s last king: The unsettling parallels between King George III and Donald Trump

Franklin, after decades of living in England as a colonial lobbyist, and as a noted man of science and inveterate traveler, knew Europe, its culture, its customs and its habits probably better than any other American. He was undoubtedly well aware of the highly popular fad of using costly cured, scented and finely pulverized tobacco called snuff.

Tobacco had first entered Europe at the end of the sixteenth century on Columbus’s return to Spain from his second voyage of discovery. His crews had observed native Caribs smoking it. The Portuguese similarly brought the weed home from their base in Brazil.

In 1611, John Rolfe, Pocahontas’s husband, introduced sweet tobacco from the Caribbean to Virginia. Planters soon grew nothing else, sending off their crops to England to be to dried and crushed to a fine powder called snuff.

The costly new commodity became a hallmark of the elite. Commoners couldn’t afford it; they smoked their tobacco in pipes. Snuff inhalers were rewarded with a powerful charge of nicotine.

Snuff became a court favorite for men and women. In England, Queen Charlotte, wife of King George III and mother of 14, kept a well-stocked room full of her favorite varieties under lock and key in Windsor Castle. In France’s elegant court at Versailles, Queen Marie Antoinette demurely took a pinch of snuff between the tip of her thumb and her index finger and inhaled it, considerately sneezing it into a scented handkerchief.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Aristocratic diplomats and businessmen competed by exchanging elaborately decorated snuffboxes, often of painted porcelain, sometimes of gold. Preferring the use of silver spoons to dip a bit of the powder, they kept their hands clean. Gentlemen carried small snap-top cases of snuff in their vest pockets.

In Amsterdam, Dutch devotees preferred to assemble in fashionable snuff houses.

France, having no tobacco-growing colonies, had to pay a premium to England to import fine flavored powder. The English forbade their colonies to sell tobacco outside the British empire. Extracting a fortune from the red soil of the Chesapeake colonies, English colonists grew rich from the backbreaking labor of ever-growing numbers of enslaved Africans, shipping half-ton barrels of leaves to London for processing.

Franklin and his colleagues on the Continental Congress’s Secret Committee on Trade knew of France’s snuff dependency on England. A full year before declaring American independence, Congress, in defiance of British law, declared their ports open for foreign trade.

RELATED: Colonial America was divided over smallpox inoculation, but Benjamin Franklin championed science

French diplomats had been watching the growing American resistance movement. On a secret mission, the French foreign minister sent playwright Beaumarchais to London with a million livre (pound) gift from the King.

Congress responded by dispatching more secret envoys to join Franklin in Paris.

They took up rent-free residence in the suburban palace of the foreign minister’s brother-in-law and set about arranging cargoes of munitions to be sent to French ports in the Caribbean for transshipment to American forces.

By the end of 1776, French arms dealers were meeting with George Washington at his headquarters to take orders for weapons, tents and uniforms.

American financiers funded construction and rounded up crews for hundreds of heavily-armed merchant ships to transport cargoes of crops to the French and capture British prizes.

RELATED: America’s violent birth: Why we shouldn’t be surprised that U.S. politics is a blood sport now

By the summer of 1777, shiploads of French cannons arrived in America just in time to defeat a British army at the pivotal battle of Saratoga. Convinced that the Americans could succeed, Louis XVI signed a treaty of trade and military alliance with Benjamin Franklin and his fellow emissaries.

Whenever an American diplomat came home, he went to Versailles to say adieu and receive the gift of a snuff box adorned with a flattering portrait of the king and a sprinkling of jewels. Benjamin Franklin was the king’s favorite. He gave the foreign minister special instructions: Franklin received a gilded snuff box, the royal effigy surrounded by 401 diamonds!

The final battle of the American Revolution was a double victory for the French. Their cannon and their fleet had boxed in the British at Yorktown. Not only had they helped their American compatriots win independence, but France had secured the monopoly on American tobacco. No longer would they depend on England for every sniff and sneeze.

More stories on the Founding Fathers and American history: 

What we haven’t learned from decades of endless war: How to stop it

When I urge my writing students to juice up their stories, I tell them about “disruptive technologies,” inventions and concepts that end up irrevocably changing industries. Think: iPhones, personal computers, or to reach deep into history, steamships. It’s the tech version of what we used to call a paradigm shift. (President Biden likes to refer to it as an inflection point.) 

Certain events function that way, too. After they occur, it’s impossible to go back to how things were: World War II for one generation, the Vietnam War for another and 9/11 for a third. Tell me it isn’t hard now to remember what it was like to catch a flight without schlepping down roped-off chutes like cattle to the slaughter, even if for most of the history of air travel, no one worried about underwear bombers or explosive baby formula. Of course, once upon a time, we weren’t incessantly at war either.

However, for my students, the clumsily named Gen Z, the transformative event in their lives hasn’t been a war at all — no matter that their country has been enmeshed in one or more of them for all of their conscious lives. It’s probably George Floyd’s murder or the COVID pandemic or the double whammy of both, mixed in with a deadly brew of Trumpism. That alone strikes me as a paradigm shift.

RELATED: Military might, market ideology and moral posturing: A toxic combination

It’s not that they are uncaring. Those I know are ardent about fixing myriad wrongs in the world and prepared to work at it, too. And like many Americans, for a few weeks as August 2021 ended, they were alarmed by the heartbreaking consequences of their country’s failed mission in Afghanistan and its betrayal of the people there. How could you not be heartbroken about people desperate to save their lives and livelihoods? And the girls… ah, the girls, the 37% of teenage girls who learned to read in those years, went to school with boys, saw their lives change and probably will be denied all of that in the years to come.

In my more cynical moments, though, I note that it was the girls and women who were regularly trotted out by our government officials and generals insisting that U.S. troops must remain in Afghanistan until — until what? Until, as it turned out, disaster struck. After all, what good American heart doesn’t warm to educating the young and freeing girls from forced marriages (as opposed, of course, to killing civilians and causing chaos)?

Militarism is among the all-American problems the young activists I meet do sometimes bring up. It’s just not very high on their list of issues to be faced. The reasons boil down to this: the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, interminable as they seemed, had little or no direct effect on most of my students or the lives they imagined having and that was reflected in their relative lack of attention to them, which tells us all too much about this country in the 21st century.

Spare change

So here we are, 20 years after U.S. troops invaded Afghanistan and months since they hotfooted it out. That two-decade-long boots-on-the-ground (and planes in the air) episode has now officially been declared over and done with, if not exactly paid for. But was that an inflection point, as this country turned its military attention to China and Russia? Not so fast. I’m impatient with the conventional wisdom about our 21st-century wars and the reaction to them at home. Still, I do think it’s important to try to figure out what has (or hasn’t) been learned from them and what may have changed because of them.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


In the changed column, alas, the answer seems to be: not enough. Once again, in the pandemic moment, our military is filling roles that would be left to civil society if it were adequately funded — helping in hospitals and nursing homes, administering COVID-19 vaccinations and tests, teaching school and driving school buses — because, as Willie Sutton answered when asked why he robbed banks, that’s where the money is.

Apparently, it’s so much money that even the Defense Department doesn’t quite know how to spend it. Between 2008 and 2019, the Pentagon returned almost $128 billion in unspent funds from its staggeringly vast and still expanding budget. Admittedly, that’s a smaller percentage of that budget than other departments turned back, but it started with so much more and, as a result, that Pentagon spare change accounted for nearly half of all “canceled” government funds during that time.

Yet too little of those vast sums spent go to active-duty troops. A recent survey found that 29% of the families of junior-level, active-duty soldiers experienced food insecurity (that is, hunger) in the past year, a strong indicator of the economic precariousness of everyday military life, even here at home.

RELATED: Can we stop calling our humongous military spending the “defense” budget?

It didn’t help that the U.S. military’s wars only sporadically drew extended public attention. Of course, before 1979, when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, that country’s name was shorthand for a place too obscure for most Americans even to find on a world map. And maybe that was still true in 2020, when, nearly two decades after the U.S invaded that nation, the American presence there got all of five minutes of coverage on the national evening newscasts of CBS, NBC and ABC.

Years earlier, when the focus was more on Iraq than Afghanistan, I attended a meeting of the Smedley Butler Brigade of Veterans for Peace. I was writing a story for the “Boston Globe,” which made me an easy target for the veterans’ anger. As a result, they badgered me to make our city’s newspaper of record print a daily report of deaths in the war. I explained that, as a freelancer, I had even less influence than they did and, unsurprisingly, such an accounting never came to pass.

Years later, as the U.S. endeavor in Afghanistan wound down and the Globe and other mainstream outlets did actually publish calculations of the costs, I found myself wondering if all those credible, influential media sources would ever publish a reckoning of how many times in the past 20 years, when it might have made a difference, they had run cost analyses of the blinding arrogance that defined U.S. foreign and military policy in those decades. The impact of such accountings might have been vanishingly small anyway.

It’s true, by the way, that Brown University’s Costs of War Project did a formidable job of tackling that issue in those endless war years, but their accounts were, of course, anything but mainstream. Even today, in that mainstream, accurate counts are still hard to come by. The New York Times, which recently published a groundbreaking report on civilian deaths in the Middle East caused by U.S. airstrikes, was stymied by the Pentagon for years when trying to get the necessary documents for just such an accounting, while provincial authorities in Afghanistan often denied that civilian casualties had even occurred.

Presence and power

In 2004, when Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) was just getting started, I was introduced to a small group of disillusioned but determined young vets, wonderfully full of themselves and intent on doing things their way. While they appreciated the earlier soldier-led antiwar efforts of the Vietnam War era, they wanted to do it all in a new fashion. “We’re sort of reinventing the wheel,” Eli Wrighta young medic, who had served in Iraq, told me, “But we’re making it a much nicer wheel, I think.” I was smitten. 

At first, those newly minted anti-warriors thought the very novelty of their existence in war-on-terror America would be enough. So, they told and retold their stories to anyone who would listen: stories of misguided raids and policing actions for which they were ill-equipped and ill-trained; of soul-destroying cruelty they found themselves implicated in; and of their dawning awareness, even while they were in Iraq, that they could no longer be a party to any of it. Believe me, those veterans told powerful and moving stories, but it wasn’t nearly enough.

In a piece about the power and pitfalls of storytelling, Jonathan Gottschall notes that, in the tales we tell, we tend to divide people into a tidy triad of heroes, victims and villains. My longtime trope was that we — by which I mean we Americans — allowed those fighting our endless wars to be only heroes or victims — the former to valorize, the latter to pity — but nothing else. (Admittedly, sometimes civilian peace workers did see them as villains, but despite an inevitable jockeying for position, civilian and military antiwar groups generally recognized each other as comrades-against-arms.) IVAW insisted on adding activist to that dichotomy, as they attempted to change minds and history. 

When you’re trying to do that, or at least influence policy, your odds of success are greater if you have a clear, specific goal you can advocate and agitate for and build coalitions around. Then, when you achieve it, you can, of course, claim victory. IVAW’s overriding aim was to bring the troops home immediately. That goal was finally (more or less) achieved, though at great cost and so much later than they had been demanding, making it anything but a resounding victory; nor did it, in the end, have much to do with those young veterans.

Their significance may lie elsewhere. Last August, in the midst of the chaotic U.S. pull-out from Afghanistan, I tuned in to a podcast about political and social activism just as Rashad Robinson, president of the racial justice organization Color of Change, was making a distinction between presence (“retweets, shout-outs from the stage”) and power (“the ability to change the rules”).

RELATED: Empire of chickenhawks: Why America’s chaotic departure from Afghanistan was actually perfect

It would be hard to come up with a better illustration of that difference than Camp Casey, the August 2005 encampment of antiwar military families, veterans, and their sympathizers. It was sprawled across a ditch in Crawford, Texas, a few miles down the road from the ranch of a vacationing President George W. Bush. Their protest made significant news for those five weeks, as media around the world featured heart-rending stories of mothers in mourning and veterans in tears, photos of an iconic white tent, and interviews with Cindy Sheehan, whose son, Casey, had been killed in Iraq the year before. The media anointed her the Grieving-Mother-in-Chief and news reports sometimes even got the protesters’ end-the-war, bring-the-troops-home message right.

Whizzing past in a motorcade on his way to a fundraiser, Bush ignored them, and the war in Iraq continued for another five years with the deaths of about 2,700 more sons and daughters of grieving American mothers. But the next month, when somewhere between 100,000 and 300,000 Camp Casey participants, veterans and their supporters gathered for an antiwar march through downtown Washington, the government was forced to acknowledge, perhaps for the first time, the existence of opposition to the war in Iraq. For context, the National Park Service estimated then that, of the approximately 3,000 permits it issued for demonstrations on the National Mall yearly, only about a dozen attracted more than 5,000 people.

Presence matters and in the few years following Camp Casey, when the antiwar veterans were at their most effective, they learned how to make themselves harder to ignore. They’ve since renamed their group About Face and reconceived its purpose and goals, but the perennial challenge to political activists is how to turn presence into power. 

Why didn’t the antiwar movement catch on?

In February 2003, as many as 10 million people took to the streets in 60 countries to protest the impending U.S. invasion of Iraq. But once that invasion happened, it was primarily the military-related groups, sometimes joined by other peace organizations, that kept the opposition alive. Why, though, couldn’t they turn presence into power? Why didn’t more Americans take up the campaign to end two such pointless wars? Why didn’t we learn?

I make no claim to answering those questions in a definitive way. Nonetheless, here’s my stab at it.

Let’s start with the obvious: the repercussions of an all-volunteer military. Only a small proportion of Americans, self-selected and concentrated in certain parts of the country, have been directly involved in and affected by our 21st-century wars. Deployed over and over, they didn’t circulate in civil society in the way the previous draft military had and, as warfare became increasingly mechanized and automated (or drone-ified), there have been ever fewer American casualties to remind everyone else in this country that we were indeed at war in Afghanistan and Iraq. For the troops, that distancing from battle also undoubtedly lessened an innate human resistance to killing and also objections to those wars within the military itself.

Next, stylish as it might be in this country to honor veterans of our wars (thank you for your service!), as Kelly Dougherty, IVAW’s first executive director, complained, “We come home and everyone shakes our hands and calls us heroes, but no one wants to listen to us.” Stories of bravery, horrific wounds and even post-traumatic stress syndrome were acceptable. Analysis, insight or testimony about what was actually going on in the war zones? Not so much.

Folk singer, labor organizer and vet Utah Phillips has observed that having a long memory is the most radical idea in America. With items in the news cycle lasting for ever-shorter periods of time before being replaced, administrations becoming ever harder to embarrass and the voting public getting accustomed to being lied to, even a short memory became a challenge.

The hollowing out of local news in these years only exacerbated the problem. Less local reporting meant fewer stories about people we might actually know or examples of how world events affect our daily lives. Pro-war PR, better funded and connected than any antiwar group could hope to be, filled the gap. Think soldiers striding onto ballfields at sports events to the teary surprise of families and self-congratulatory cheers from the stands. Between 2012 and 2015, the Pentagon paid pro sports teams some $6.8 million to regularly and repeatedly honor the military. Meanwhile, the mainstream media has made it ever harder for peace groups to gain traction by applying a double standard to protest or outsider politics, a reality sociologist Sarah Sobieraj has explored strikingly in her book “Soundbitten.

The nature of political protest changed, too. As information was disseminated and shared more and more through social media — activism by way of hashtag, tweet and Instagram — organizing turned ever more virtual and ever less communal. Finally, despite protestations about the United States being a peace-loving country, the military in these years has proven a rare bipartisan darling, while, historically speaking, violence has been bred into America’s bones.   

Maybe, however, the lack of active opposition to the endless wars wasn’t a new normal, but something like the old normal. Sadly enough, conflicts don’t simply end because people march against them. Even the far larger Vietnam antiwar movement was only one pressure point in winding down that conflict. War policy is directed by what happens on the ground and, to a lesser degree, at the ballot box. What an antiwar movement can do is help direct the public response, which may, fingers crossed, save the country from going to war someplace else and save another generation of soldiers from having to repeat the mistakes of the past 20 years.

Tom Cotton bashed for “asinine” comments blaming Biden for Putin’s actions

During her appearance on MSNBC’s “The Sunday Show,” former Republican Party campaign consultant Tara Seymater went off on an epic rant attacking Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) for trying to blame President Joe Biden for Vladimir Putin’s saber-rattling as he reportedly prepares to invade Ukraine.

During his own rant, Cotton claimed, “For four years when we had a Republican president who Democrats like Joe Biden accused of being in Vladimir Putin’s pocket, and for some reason Vladimir Putin didn’t invade Ukraine. It’s because the only way to confront an aggressive autocrat like Putin or Xi Jinping is to show strength from the very beginning. That’s the way to deter the kind of conflict that is likely about to happen in Ukraine.”

“Tara, what’s he talking about? ” host Jonathan Capehart asked.

“Let’s go back to the videotape, shall we?” Setmayer replied. “If it really means showing strength means kissing the ass of Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping and Kim Jong-un, well, then I guess that Donald Trump put America first.”

“It’s asinine for him to even imply that. Do we need to go over all the dozens upon dozens of examples of Donald Trump acquiescing to Vladimir Putin? Remember he wouldn’t call Putin a killer during the Super Bowl in 2017?,” she stated before quoting the ex-president remarking, “‘There’s lots of killers. Are we so innocent?'”

“What about Helsinki where Donald Trump stood on the world stage and gave more credibility to Vladimir Putin than our own intelligence agencies?” she continued. “What about how when Trump said, we don’t care about those sanctions, he can keep Crimea. What about the time where Donald Trump, with open arms, embraced Sergei Lavrov to come into the Oval Office of the United States and passed off intelligence information to the Russians? I could keep going, there are so many examples that are so egregious that the cold warriors of the Republican Party who know better freaked out over, and Ronald Reagan would be spinning in his grave over it.”

“I say to Tom Cotton, and the rest of them, get out the hell of here. We saw the video for four years, we lived through it,” she concluded.

Outrage for Franklin Graham’s “Pray for President Putin” plea

A tweet from Christian Evangelical leader Franklin Graham, calling for his followers to “Pray for President Putin today,” and not the people of Ukraine who are living in fear they will be invaded by Russia has set off a wave of criticism on Twitter.

According to Graham, who is a notable supporter of former president Donald Trump who has his own cozy relationship with the former KGB head, “This may sound like a strange request, but we need to pray that God would work in his heart so that war could be avoided at all cost. May God give wisdom to the leaders involved in these talks & negotiations, as well as those advising them.”

Commenters were quick to point out he didn’t ask for prayers for President Joe Biden by name as the United States attempts to intervene and stop what could be a devastating war in the region.

As one commenter pointed out, “Putin literally blew up a passenger airliner and mercilessly murdered 298 people.”

Another added, “A fine day to grovel to your overlord$ eh? Get off your knees, charlatan.”

You can see some more responses below: