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11 actors who nearly starred in “The Lord of the Rings” franchise

This year marks the 20th anniversary of the cultural juggernaut that is Peter Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, which started with the release of “The Fellowship of the Ring” on December 19, 2001. The movies could have been a lot different, though, and not just because one executive apparently had Hobbit murder on the brain. Here are 11 actors who were almost cast in the blockbuster fantasy series

1. STUART TOWNSEND

Technically, Stuart Townsend did make it to J.R.R. Tolkien‘s Middle-earth, in the sense that he was actually cast as Aragorn — and rehearsed and trained for two months — only to be let go the day before filming. According to Rings star Dominic Monaghan, who played Merry:

“We didn’t get a chance to say bye to Stu [. . . ] We were all stunned. I didn’t think we could get fired at that point. I thought you were in . . . but it wasn’t the case. And Sean [Astin] said ‘well, has he left the project or has he been fired?’ And I think they were trying to protect Stuart as much as they could. They just said, ‘We will let Stuart tell you that, but he’s no longer with us.’ We couldn’t contact him. Email was very new at that point. He just disappeared.”

Townsend finally addressed the matter in 2019, saying, “I have no good feelings for those people in charge, I really don’t. The director wanted me and then apparently thought better of it because he really wanted someone 20 years older than me and completely different.”

While Viggo Mortensen famously stepped into the role and speaks positively about the experience in the years after, he later admitted that he felt “awkward” about replacing Townsend at the last minute, adding, “I hear he’s a nice guy and I am sorry that happened.”

2. RUSSELL CROWE

A sticking point for Townsend’s version of Aragorn is that he was too youthful to play the grizzled, somewhat world-weary Ranger and future King of Gondor. In need of a new star for the franchise, Jackson turned to fellow New Zealander Russell Crowe. The actor confirmed in an interview with Howard Stern that the deal, had it come to fruition, would have given him 10 percent of backend grosses, i.e. about $100 million. But he was put off by a phone call with Jackson, where he got the impression the director “was forced into talking to me, because there was a moment in time when everyone wanted me in everything.” Crowe continued, “I am talking to him on the phone, it is like, I don’t think he even knows what I have done. I just knew that my instinct was that he had somebody else in mind, which turned out to be Viggo [Mortensen], and he should be allowed to hire the actor who he wants.”

3. NICOLAS CAGE

The role of Aragorn was also offered to a few more people. One of them — and someone who would have given the series a way different vibe — was the maestro of bonkers, Nicolas Cage. “There were different things going on in my life at the time that precluded me from being able to travel and be away from home for three years,” Cage told Newsweek on turning down the part. “But the thing is about [movies I could have starred in], I can watch them. I can enjoy them as an audience member. I don’t really watch my own movies. And so I genuinely do have the joy of watching these — especially with ‘Lord of the Rings.'”

4. DANIEL DAY-LEWIS

The final — but perhaps most enticing — actor who was seriously considered for Aragorn was Daniel Day-Lewis. Unfortunately, the feeling wasn’t mutual on Day-Lewis’s end. Jackson apparently offered him the role on numerous occasions, all of which were soundly rejected. The actor hasn’t spoken about why he rejected the part, but he’s on record about simply being uninterested in ever doing a big-budget blockbuster, no matter who’s in the director’s chair.

“[This is] not meant to belittle those films or the people [who work on them], because there are people that need to do those films and love to do those films — they can be fantastically entertaining for the people who love to see them — but it’s not for me,” the actor said about starring in blockbusters back in 2009. “When I’m working on something, if I’m intrigued by it, I’m never bored. I’m incapable of being bored. If I found myself working on a film and during the course of that work I was bored, because I didn’t really know what the hell I was involved in, I would find that infinitely demoralizing and it might well make me decide to pack my bags.”

5. SEAN CONNERY

Production company New Line Cinema offered Sean Connery between 10 and 15 percent of worldwide box office if he agreed to play the role of Gandalf, an amount that would have netted the actor somewhere between $150 and $225 million. Connery read the script and declined the role on the grounds that he didn’t understand the complicated epic, later saying, “Yeah, well, I never understood it. I read the book, I read the script, I saw the movie. I still don’t understand it. I would be interested in doing something that I don’t fully understand, but not for 18 months.”

6. UMA THURMAN

Uma Thurman was offered — and turned down — the role of Éowyn, something she still jokingly considers “one of the worst decisions ever made.” Still, it was understandable: Thurman had just had her first child, and she later told Stephen Colbert on “The Late Show” that she was “a little housebound” at the time. Referring to the 18-month shoot, Thurman said, “It was a little unknown for me, but it’s really definitely a regret.”

7. ETHAN HAWKE

In the “Lord of the Rings,” Éowyn ends up with Faramir, the younger brother of Fellowship member Boromir and eventual ally of Gandalf and the Fellowship. Up for the role of Faramir was Thurman’s then-husband Ethan Hawke. “Ethan was a huge fan of the books and was very keen to be involved,” Jackson recalled. “Uma was less sure and rightly so, because we were revising how we saw Éowyn’s character literally as we went. In the end, Ethan let it go — with some reluctance.”

8. SYLVESTER MCCOY

In casting Bilbo Baggins, Ian Holm had a big leg up due to the fact that Jackson admired his prior performance as Frodo Baggins in a “Lord of the Rings” radio adaptation. Runner-up for the role was “Doctor Who” star, Sylvester McCoy. He bears no ill will for being passed over, telling Den of Geek, “To be in the company of Ian Holm was wonderful.” In any case, McCoy made his way into the Tolkienverse years later, when he was cast as Radagast the Brown in “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.”

9. CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER

Add Christopher Plummer to the list of actors who were down for a role in “Lord of the Rings” . . .  except for that whole “having to be in New Zealand for ages” thing. Plummer was offered the role of Gandalf, but declined, later telling Conan O’Brien, “I don’t know why I turned it down. I thought, maybe, three or four years in New Zealand, [I thought there] are other countries I’d also like to visit before I croak!”

10. SAM NEILL

Sam Neill, along with a whole passel of actors, was also considered for the part of Gandalf before it eventually went to Ian McKellen. (Though it’s hard to imagine anyone other than McKellen as Gandalf now, even that casting was touch and go for a bit, due to scheduling conflicts with his role in the X-Men franchise.) New Zealander Neill said in a 2001 interview that Jackson “did offer me a role in ‘Lord of the Rings,’ but unfortunately, I was unable to do it because I had other commitments. I’m very fond of Peter and I’m very keen to work with him. When he makes ‘Lord of the Rings 7,’ I’m up for it.”

11. KEVIN CONWAY

Actor Kevin Conway, whose long career in film and TV has included such projects as “The Quick and the Dead,” “The Good Wife,” and “The Outer Limits,” was offered the role of Théoden, but turned it down because of the long production schedule. Though Théoden is “a wonderful part,” he said, “[they] wanted me to go out in January to New Zealand for six weeks, then go home, then go back again for another six weeks, then go home again and then come back again for three months. I said, ‘Whoa!’ The character is in two of the films. It wasn’t worth it. He has a couple of good scenes, but the rest is all battling with armor and stuff. You could have a stuntman do that, which they probably would have done anyway. But I really suffered about it.”

What Joe Manchin wants

Senator Joe Manchin’s sudden declaration that he opposed the President’s Build Back Better initiative sent shockwaves through Washington and the climate movement – although many progressives had previously feared that Manchin would, after weakening many climate vital provisions, turn on the whole project.

They were right.

As Democrats wrestle with how to rescue a reasonably robust version of Build Back Better from the ashes, consider all the progressive positions Manchin has taken in the past. All along, the Democratic senator from West Virginia swore that his lodestar was energy policy aimed at “innovation, not elimination.” In other words, encourage all kinds of new energy — particularly carbon capture and storage that might extend the coal and gas era — but also manufacturing sector breakthroughs like green hydrogen.

What is the Senator’s excuse for opposing Build Back Better?

“The energy transition my colleagues seek is …. faster than technology or the markets allow” with “catastrophic consequences for the American people,” he says.

This is utter nonsense — and Manchin needs to be gently reminded of this. The final version of Build Back Better, after Manchin’s pruning,  was probably the most carrot-heavy, stick-free major energy bill ever crafted.  And the transition pace envisaged would leave the United States an also-ran in the global clean energy transition.

Still, the flimsiness of Manchin’s excuse for bailing on the bill does strongly suggest a political strategy to win his vote back.

Indeed, Build Back Better was remarkable for its toothlessness, a fact underappreciated by most commentary on the bill. It offered tens of billions of dollars for technology neutral tax credits and finance guarantees — not only for wind and solar, but for energy storage of all kinds: new nuclear, geothermal, green hydrogen and, yes, carbon capture and storage.

Its only restrictive proposal, a tax on leaking methane from oil and well, was designed to encourage innovation within that industry, not shut it down.

On frontier technologies like green hydrogen and carbon capture, Build Back Better (BBB) offered billions of dollars of potential tax credits for technologies Manchin says he supports, like carbon capture and storage. (Indeed, in part because of those investments, the United Mine Workers is opposing Manchin’s decision to vote “no” on the bill).

So why did Manchin flip-flop? Two apparent reasons. First, he ran into the internal contradiction of his “innovate don’t eliminate” approach. As Bloomberg’s Liam Denning pointed out before Manchin walked, “innovation ultimately begets elimination.” 


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As Manchin pruned mandates and bans, the White House and Democrats beefed up the incentives to keep the same outcome – ultimately a 45% reduction in emissions and close to 80% zero carbon electricity in 2030. If you run the numbers, those goals — the foundation of Manchin’s complaint about a reckless energy transition — don’t leave much room for high-priced West Virginia coal and gas. America still consumes some coal, gas and oil in 2030 – but low-cost producers, like coal from Wyoming, gas from the Gulf of Mexico, and oil from the Persian Gulf, will dominate those shrunken markets. In a rapidly decarbonizing economy, there is very little room for steadily dwindling West Virginia coal seams, or $60+ barrels of Texas oil.

Unfortunately Manchin’s solution – which is essentially slow down the transition – requires him to sell America short. Way short.  Biden’s – or BBB’s – pace of transition barely keeps the US competitive in global markets. 

Look at the numbers.  BBB would cut US carbon emissions by 45%. The EU, already ahead of the game, has committed to 55%. BBB attempts to finance the construction of 450 gigawatts of US wind and solar.  China has committed to 1200 GW of renewables, and even India, with a power sector dwarfed by America’s, is planning 500 GW.

So if a “let’s come in third or fourth” clean energy transition strategy (more or less what BBB offers) is too ambitious for Manchin, his approach requires America to be further saddled with dependence on outmoded coal, oil and gas technologies — in other words, falling even further behind Europe, China, and India in the race to the future.

But Manchin’s choice of Fox News as the venue to announce his abandonment of his commitments to work with the Democratic caucus on its keystone Build Back Better bill strongly suggests that he has his eyes firmly planted on how his move plays back home. And the back home voice that most needs to be mobilized is the business community.

That’s because the second major driver of Manchin’s betrayal was an orchestrated campaign by a narrow slice of West Virginia business determined to lock the US economy into uncompetitive, dirty fossil fuel energy. The arguments Manchin made about needing to slow-walk the energy transformation came straight from America’s Power, a coal industry trade organization. Technology neutral tax credits, historically one of the most bi-partisan energy policy tools, were suddenly flagged by the West Virginia coal industry as a fatal threat – because, quite simply, they enable faster replacement of no longer competitive incumbent technologies.

The New York Times reported that the West Virginia Coal Association told Manchin that “the credits … in the bill would have resulted in an almost total displacement of coal generation.” There it is. American coal is no longer competitive. Only by cutting off finance for innovation in other energy sectors can it survive.

Here lies the political path forward. If a fading segment of West Virginia business, employing half as many workers as a decade ago,  has driven Manchin to abandon his commitment to innovation, the rest of the the state’s business community should be able to bring him back. Data centers, operated using clean energy, are the fastest growing customer of the state’s utilities. Wood products, chemicals, metals and glass; health care and pharmaceuticals; aeronautics and automotive manufacturing – the rest of West Virginia’s economy — are all energy consumers, not producers. They benefit enormously, and in some cases require, the rapid development of cleaner, cheaper energy. None benefit from an America strangled by overpriced and pollutive fossil fuel energy.

Certainly none flourish in a nation where investment in energy innovation is hobbled because such innovation displaces outmoded technologies.

Will the fossil fuel industry succeed in destroying America’s economic future? Joe Manchin’s vote may decide. Business – particularly West Virginia business — is the key to that vote.

America’s past should not strangle West Virginia’s choices. Nor should West Virginia’s past betray America’s future. 

The mind of Manchin:

16 Ina Garten recipes to channel your inner Barefoot Contessa

When I’m feeling stressed or overwhelmed, there’s a little trick I sometimes use that makes me relax in a near instant: turn on an episode of “Barefoot Contessa” starring Ina Garten, a cookbook author, lover of all things Paris, and of course, the Hamptons’ very best host.

I’m not sure if it’s the easy listening vibes of the show’s opening theme song or Ina’s serene, sprawling estate (that kitchen! those gardens!), but it’s hard not to feel ultra-calm as you watch her effortlessly cook through a handful of recipes — whether she’s setting up a laid-back lunch for company or preparing a special meal for none other than Jeffrey himself. (How easy was that, right?)

Speaking of recipes, Ina’s are some of the best and most foolproof you’ll find on the internet (or in one of her many cookbooks). I turn to them often, for weeknight meals, big dinner parties with friends (those were the days) — you get the idea — and truthfully, not one has let me down. And when I don’t want to turn on the oven for dessert, I stock up on her baked goods through Goldbelly. How easy . . . you get the idea.

There are literally hundreds of Ina Garten recipes to choose from, but if you ask me, these are some of her very best.

Ina Garten’s best recipes

1. Ina Garten’s Skillet-Roasted Lemon Chicken

This one-pan roast chicken has everything we love about a classic Ina recipe: a no-fuss ingredients list, bright and clean flavors (fresh thyme, lemon, garlic), and of course, a clever trick (letting the lemon slices roast with the chicken till they’re caramelized and ready to sop up with bread).

2. Ina Garten’s Parmesan-Roasted Broccoli

Meet what’s practically guaranteed to be the best broccoli of your life. It all comes down to the ingredients the broccoli gets tossed and coated with before it hits the oven — a flavor-filled combination of lemon zest, toasted pine nuts, fresh basil, hunks of shredded Parmesan, garlic, and a healthy drizzle of good-quality olive oil.

3. Ina Garten’s Lemon Capellini

Ina’s super-simple capellini also happens to be one of food writer Alyse Whitney’s all-time favorites, too. Calling for just lemon zest, lemon juice, and two sticks of butter (plus salt and pepper), it “remains one of my favorite weeknight comfort recipes as a fellow angel hair enthusiast,” she writes.

4. Ina Garten’s Devil’s Food Cake

If this irresistibly moist, meringue buttercream-frosted devil’s food cake is good enough for Jeffrey — it does come from the cookbook Ina dedicated to him, after all — then it’s 100% good enough for us.

5. Ina Garten’s Pasta alla Vecchia Bettola

This Genius-approved pasta is Ina’s version of a longtime favorite (we’re talking over 20 years) from Nick and Toni’s restaurant in East Hampton, New York. The creamy vodka sauce gets its rich, highly concentrated flavor from an important technique: roasting the sauce in the oven for about an hour and a half.

6. Ina Garten’s Outrageous Brownies

Consider this the brownie recipe to end all brownie recipes. Complete with a mix of semisweet and bitter chocolate (over two pounds in total), a few tablespoons of instant coffee to give the flavors extra depth, and chopped walnuts for textural crunch, it checks just about every box we can think of. And should you want to take the store-bought route, you can grab a tray of these brownies along with our other faves from Ina herself via Goldbelly. How easy is that? (Okay, we’ll stop.)

7. Ina Garten’s Mac and Cheese

I consider myself a macaroni and cheese connoisseur. I’ve sampled many a recipe over the years, but I always come back to Ina’s. There’s just something about the crumbly bread crumb topping, lush cheese sauce with Gruyère and extra-sharp cheddar, oh, and the addition of sliced tomatoes — that totally makes it.

8. Ina Garten’s Cauliflower Toasts

Cauliflower toasts might not seem all that appealing on first glance, but as Ina points out in Cook Like a Pro, it’s “a highly under-appreciated vegetable.” To bring out its flavor, simply roast it. Mixing it with grated Gruyère, creamy mascarpone, and thinly sliced prosciutto doesn’t hurt either.

9. Ina Garten’s Chicken Piccata

Ina’s chicken piccata is a weeknight regular in my house. The chicken itself is juicy and golden-crisp, but my favorite thing about the dish is the pan sauce — a reduction of white wine, butter, and lemon juice (that’s also great over spaghetti).

10. Ina Garten’s Roasted Brussels Sprouts

As it turns out, four ingredients are all you need for superlative roasted Brussels sprouts. A quick toss with olive, salt, and pepper and 30 or 40 minutes in the oven, and — voila — a crispy green side dish you can serve with anything from grilled meats to Ina’s perfect roast chicken.

11. Ina Garten’s Crispy Chicken with Lemon Orzo

Another day, another Ina chicken recipe here to save dinnertime. This one comes together in a flash and is a complete meal, to boot, with crispy, juicy herbed chicken breast perched atop a bed of zingy lemon-infused orzo pilaf. Briny feta and buzzy dill buoy the buttery, rich flavors and perk up the whole dish.

12. Ina Garten’s Slow-Roasted Spiced Pork

For a show stopping dinner-party main (or a freezer-friendly meal that could feed me for literal months), try out this spice-rubbed, slow-roasted pork. It hangs out in the oven for about six hours, meaning it’s largely hands-off; it also won’t dare to dry out if you forget about it for a little while, as I am certainly wont to do.

13. Ina Garten’s Broccoli and Kale Salad

Trust Ina to make vegetables exciting again — this time in the form of crunchy broccoli and vegetal kale, swathed in a creamy Caesar dressing. Top it all with a couple of jammy eggs (they’re a must) and a handful of crispy, oily croutons (also essential), and there’s a salad that will remain on my forever menu.

14. Ina Garten’s Salmon Teriyaki with Broccolini

A lil’ sweet, a lil’ spicy, and more than a lil’ simple, this very virtuous-looking salmon dinner is also packed full of flavor, Ina-style. Steam some basmati rice using the Contessa’s no-fail technique and you’re solid.

15. Ina Garten’s Vanilla Brioche Bread Pudding

I’ve been dreaming about this vanilla brioche bread pudding ever since I watched Ina make it on an episode of Cook Like a Pro (aptly titled “Best in Class”) on Food Network. But with a yield of 9 to 10 servings, I might wait till I’m able to entertain again to make it (a more likely scenario: I’ll halve the recipe for myself).

16. Ina Garten’s Cheddar and Chutney Grilled Cheese

And because no Ina Garten recipe list can end without something as simple and satisfying as a grilled cheese, I had to include one here. Be sure to use your favorite, boldly flavored cheddar (Cabot clothbound, anyone?) and a high-quality chutney with a lot of verve (I’m partial to Brooklyn Delhi’s Sweet Mango Chutney) for the best results. How easy was that, right?

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Kevin Feige thinks there’s an awards show bias against Marvel movies

It seems like every other movie made these days is about superheroes, but you don’t often see the tights-and-capes set taking home the gold at awards shows. Is that because the movies usually don’t deserve it, or are voters biased?

Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige is leaning towards the latter explanation. “I think we are always at a deficit because of the Marvel logo and because of a genre bias that certainly exists,” Feige recently told The Hollywood Reporter. “I just loved that for a shining moment there with ‘Black Panther’ that was put aside and the work was recognized for the achievement that it was.”

It’s true that 2018’s “Black Panther” broke through the awards shield more than any other superhero film before it, snagging wins for Best Costume Design, Best Original Score, and Best Production Design and getting a nomination for Best Picture. Feige would love something similar to happen for a movie like “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings”:

There are a lot of comic fans that didn’t know who ‘Shang-Chi’ was. And yet the work that [director Destin Daniel Cretton] did and [screenwriter Dave Callaham] did and [production designer Sue Chan] did and [composer Joel P. West] did, created something new that connected with audiences. We recognized it, the audience recognized it, and I sure would love the hard work of all of these people who are telling their story to get recognized.

The Academy Award nominations are announced on Feb. 8. We’ll see what happens.

Superhero stuff has fared a bit better on TV; “The Boys” and “WandaVision” had strong showings at this year’s Emmy Awards, for example, although neither took home the top prize. Often I think it’s hard for something like a Marvel movie to compete on that level, since by their nature they’re very transactional, but with so many superhero movies being produced, it’s only a matter of time before one takes home the gold, right?

Hell on Earth, small town-style: Climate change transformed my life in 2021

Half a mile south of what’s left of the old Gold Rush-era town of Greenville, California, Highway 89 climbs steeply in a series of S-turns as familiar to me as my own backyard. From the top of that grade, I’ve sometimes seen bald eagles soaring over the valley that stretches to the base of Keddie Peak, the northernmost mountain in California’s Sierra Nevada range.

Today, stuck at the bottom thanks to endless road work, I try to remember what these hillsides looked like before the Dixie fire torched them in a furious 104-day climate-change-charged rampage across nearly one million acres, an area larger than the state of Delaware. They were so green then, pines, cedars and graceful Douglas firs mixed with oaks pushing through the thick conifer foliage in a quest for light and life. Today, I see only slopes studded with charred stumps and burnt trees jackstrawed across the land like so many giant pick-up-sticks.

Dixie did far more than take out entire forests. It razed Greenville, my hometown since 1975. It reduced house after house to rubble, leaving only chimneys where children once had hung Christmas stockings, and dead century-old oaks where families, spanning four generations, had not so long ago built tree forts. The fire left our downtown with scorched, bent-over lampposts touching debris-strewn sidewalks. The historic sheriff’s office is just a series of naked half-round windows eerily showcasing devastation. Like natural disasters everywhere, this fire has upended entire communities.

RELATED: California’s massive wildfires are doing something no wildfire has ever done before

Sadly, I have plenty of time to contemplate these devastating changes. I’m the first in a long line of vehicles halted by a burly man clad in neon yellow and wielding a stop sign on a six-foot pole. We motorists are all headed toward Quincy, the seat of Plumas County and its largest town. My mission is to retrieve the household mail, a task that would ordinarily have required a five-minute walk from my second-floor office to the Greenville Post Office. Now, it’s a 50-mile round trip drive that sometimes takes four hours due to the constant removal of hazardous trees. I’m idling here impatiently.

Greenville still has a zip code, but the fire gutted the concrete-block building that was our post office. The box where I once received magazines bills, and hand-decorated cards from my grandkids lies on its back, collecting ashes. Whoever promised that “neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night” would impede postal deliveries never anticipated the ferocity of the Dixie fire.

Few did. That blaze erupted in forests primed for a runaway inferno by a climate that’s changing before our eyes. Temperatures worldwide are up 2 degrees Fahrenheit since 1901 and 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit in the United States since 1970. This past year has been California’s driest in a century. Only 11.87 inches of rain or snow fell, less than half what experts deem average. Combine that with a century of forest management that suppressed natural fires and promoted the logging of large, more fire-resistant trees and these forests needed only a spark to erupt into a barrage of flames that swept from the Feather River Canyon to north of Lassen Volcanic National Park, the equivalent of traveling from Philadelphia to New York City.

Pacific Gas & Electric Company (PG&E) almost certainly provided that spark, as company officials told the California Public Utilities Commission. Earlier, they had accepted responsibility for the deadly 2018 Camp fire, which destroyed the sadly named town of Paradise, and three other blazes. Those fires are the outsized products of corporate greed and a gross failure to maintain the company’s electrical infrastructure.

PG&E’s negligence comes at a time when a dramatically changing climate is wreaking havoc worldwide. For every victim of the Dixie fire, there are thousands who were hit last November by massive hurricanes in North and Central America, and hundreds of thousands who find themselves escaping rising seas in places like Bangladesh and elsewhere in the global south. As the UN High Commissioner for Refugees reported in April, the number of people displaced by climate-change-related disasters since 2010 has risen to 21.5 million, most of them in poor countries and small island states.

Climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe calls all of this “global weirding,” adding, “No matter where we live or what we care about, we are all vulnerable to the devastating impacts of a warming planet.”

Ten minutes pass.

The bored man with the stop sign pounds it onto the pavement like a squirrel defending its nuts. Waiting here in a quest to retrieve my mail is the least of the indignities of living in the scar of the Dixie burn. In fact, I’m among the fortunate. Although the fire did destroy my office in downtown Greenville, the erratic winds that bamboozled firefighters for months inexplicably shifted flames away from my house and the surrounding forestland.

Two neighboring communities had already gone up in a firestorm of torched trees and burning embers after a pyro-cumulous cloud collapsed above them on July 24. Ten days later, it took less than 45 minutes for fire to reduce Greenville’s tarnished Gold Rush charm to smoldering ash.

The town has now lain comatose for more than four months. Those of us whose houses were spared drive through it white-knuckled, stomachs churning, compulsively reciting the names of our neighbors whose ruined homes we pass. Like the victims of climate disasters everywhere, such former residents have scattered to the — I’m sorry to even use the word — winds in a diaspora that’s shattered our community and left those of us who remain wondering how we can possibly rebuild our town.

Greenville has always been the stepsister of Plumas County, the least affluent of its four major communities, the least politically significant, and the first to be threatened with school closures. It lacks even one rich philanthropic resident. In fact, its median income declined by 15% in 2019, to $26,875. Try supporting a family on that even without a major wildfire. It’s no surprise, then, that this neediest of Plumas County communities is suffering the most. As Solomon Hsiang reported in 2017 in Science magazine, climate change inflicts its heaviest economic impacts on the poorest 5% of the population, reducing average incomes post-disaster by as much as 27%.

When California Gov. Gavin Newsom visited Greenville shortly after it was devastated, he mentioned getting calls from friends at Lake Almanor, a wealthy, well-connected enclave 15 miles to the north — but not from our town, of course. The state authorized an immediate $5 million for disaster relief. But the response of county officials has been anemic at best. County supervisors have done little more proactive than declare a disaster. The county school district, responsible for the virtually undamaged Greenville elementary and high school campus (talk about survival miracles!), took no initiatives to turn its abundant facilities into safe, warm, functioning spaces for Dixie victims. Only recently has it agreed to house a resource center providing them with everything from blankets and jackets to soup and cat food.

At the most local level, the Indian Valley Community Services District, with bankruptcy looming, is struggling with how to collect the usual fees for water and sewer use from a town with almost no residents. The local chamber of commerce is in complete disarray.


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Those of us who still have our houses live with reduced services. Frontier Communications, the only telephone and primary internet provider, has always been known for its piss-poor service in this backwoods region of California. Four months after Greenville burned, we still have no landlines, no Frontier internet, and no promise of either one for months to come. PG&E provided immediate electricity through diesel-belching generators, a service we accepted with gratitude, but gasoline, pharmaceuticals and the mail I’m trying to retrieve remain a 50-mile round trip on distinctly clogged roads.

The anguish of living in a burn scar takes a toll. My dreams are littered with drifting pages of burned books bearing faces I no longer see here: a blue-eyed woman with a voice like a code-red alert, a clerk with straight black hair cascading down his back. We lock eyes before they sink into the dark.

Twenty minutes pass.

The stop-sign guy no longer needs to wave his sign to alert approaching vehicles. The line is now a quarter-mile long — too far for the drivers just pulling up to see him. He turns his back on us, releasing a puff of vaporous steam. Who could blame him for an occasional toke on a day when his most exciting activity is likely to involve turning his sign from “Stop” to “Slow”?

In October, heavy equipment began moving into Greenville: backhoes, bulldozers, dump trucks, stump grinders and PG&E’s unmarked fleet of white extra-cab pickup trucks. The whine of chainsaws began to pierce the deadly quiet, while androgynous figures in white hazmat suits swarmed through the rubble. By early December, more than 150 of the town’s 800 destroyed structures had been cleared of debris, leaving lots as smooth as cemetery lawns awaiting possible rebuilding. Many of their former occupants, however, are gone, some having used instant insurance cash to buy houses in the neighboring, unburnt towns of Quincy and Chester. Others have moved farther away: Idaho, Kentucky, Missouri, Utah. Some are still here, sleeping in tents despite 20-degree nights.

Hopelessly haunted by the devastation all around me, I find myself revisiting the rubble. On one compulsive trip, I met a sweet-faced, curly-haired young man changing the tire of an aging, mud-spattered SUV. Its battery was dead, he told me with a wan smile. Since his house burned down, this has been his home. He looks weary but is amazed when I tell him about the resource center 10 miles down the road where he can pick up clothing, a sleeping bag and food.

I wander off to the burned-out shell of the sheriff’s substation, once a copper-roofed bank owned by a woman who managed to nurture it through the Great Depression of the 1930s. No more. The hulking remains of a vault is perched awkwardly in the open amid the ashes of a sergeant’s wooden desk. My office was next door. No longer. I turn my back on Main Street and weep – for the history lost, the curly-headed youth with a charred future, all of us touched by this fire and the horrific costs climate change levies.

Thirty-two minutes.

The stop-sign guy has suddenly come to life. Strutting to his post in the center of the highway, he gives me a nod, turns the sign to “slow,” and directs me to follow the pilot car up the highway and over the grade. It’s a short-lived reprieve. Ten miles further on, we’re stopped again, this time next to piles of wood chips four stories high. The grief of witnessing entire mountainsides denuded of every tree, living or dead, is deepened by seeing potential timber and firewood ground up and hauled off. How many hundreds of houses could have been built or warmed by those piles of dead wood?

In spite of the devastation and in defiance of approaching winter, clusters of green shoots have nonetheless emerged from the charred soil beside the road, bearing leaves that wave in the breeze as we wait. We, too, are slowly emerging from the bleak, post-fire desolation. It was an all-out celebration when Evergreen Market, Greenville’s only grocery story, reopened on Oct. 1. I again shed tears in the checkout line as the owner overcame his shyness and greeted me with a handshake. The fellow who owns Riley’s Jerky, Greenville’s only locally made product — a dried-meat snack — has announced that he’ll rebuild at triple the former size. A realtor’s trailer occupies a cleared space near the grocery store, while in a food trailer next to the ruins of a former gas station, Mary’s German Grill is serving bratwurst and potato pancakes spiced with Mary’s cheery greeting: “So how’s the apocalypse treating you?”

Fifty-seven minutes.

A neon-clad clone of the first stop-sign guy turns his sign to “slow” and once again we creep down the road. I’m now nearly halfway to Quincy. No one died in the Dixie fire, a credit to the aggressive evacuation strategy quickly put in place by Plumas County Sheriff Todd Johns. But the shock of losing a home and the stress of moving multiple times as smoke and flames advanced have been devastating. Teachers who formed their identities around generations of Greenville students have lost them. Business owners who held forth behind well-worn wooden counters are broken. And now, the trauma of it all is beginning to pick us off one at a time in unheralded deaths that will never be counted among the costs of the Dixie fire.

Like people wracked by climate-disaster recovery everywhere, we’re facing a bootstrap recovery and a generational challenge. People in high places with money to share are not riding over the ridge to our rescue. Instead, we’ve been turning to one another, relying on our mutual commitment to the place we’ve long called, and continue to call, home. There’s a buzz of enthusiasm about the possibility of rebuilding an all-solar town and kissing PG&E goodbye. Others are researching how to use the locally made bricks that survived the fire in new construction to honor the town we lost. A group called the Dixie Fire Collaborative is working to coordinate a host of independent initiatives.

Strengthening us is the resilience of Native American Maidu tribal leaders and the experiences that kept them on this land. They stood up again and again after the destruction of their communities and they remain standing today. “This is a time of renewal, a time of immense opportunity,” says Trina Cunningham, executive director of the Maidu Summit Consortium

One hour and 45 minutes.

After one more tree-removal stop, I finally arrive in Quincy to find a postal box crammed with slick flyers from attorneys promising to recover my monetary losses. Call it cruelty or irony, but among the envelopes is a bill from PG&E. I fill up with gas, still not available in Greenville, and face what could be another two-hour drive back through that same scarred landscape.

It’s dark by the time I arrive in Greenville. The lights still on in Evergreen Market are welcoming, but most of the town has no electricity or even poles to mount street lights. The only true intersection, at Highway 89 and what’s left of Main Street, is illuminated by a generator when it’s working. It’s a little chancy, but I take a shortcut on a side street past burned-out residential debris looming in the dark. And there, suddenly, are tiny lights spiraling improbably into the night on a 10-foot Christmas tree. Just beyond it, multicolored lights outline a set of stairs to a house that’s no longer there. Who knows where those lights will lead us?

Copyright 2021 Jane Braxton Little

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Read more on the wildfires changing the landscape of the West (and the world):

Want to immediately improve your meals in 2022? Reach for some crunchy, toasty and crisp ingredients

I was recently emailing with a friend who, like most of us, has spent more time cooking from home over the last two years than he has in his entire life. Thanks to some meal kit services and a bunch of YouTube tutorials, his cooking skills have vastly improved (from “nightly takeout to actually being able to hold a knife,” as he put it). But he emailed me this question the other day: “Hey! Why do restaurant meals consistently taste better than what I make at home? I feel like there’s got to be some simple tricks that I’m missing.”

I filled him in on the basics. There’s the now-infamous Anthony Bourdain bit, delivered on “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” about how butter “is usually the first thing and last thing in — in just about every pan, really.” 

“That’s why restaurant food tastes better than home food,” he continued. “Of course, most things have butter because butter makes things taste better. Yeah, it’s a chef secret. It mellows sauces, it gives it that restaurant sheen and emulsified consistency that we love. And it’s — you know, it’s classic.” 

RELATED: Bacon, coffee and pasta pie: A look back at your favorite Quick & Dirty recipes of 2021

I sent along a video from MAD 2012, a symposium organized by René Redzepi, in which David Chang discusses the (mostly racist) vilification of MSG and how the “umami” flavor you taste in many restaurant dishes — even those found in fine dining restaurants — often derives from it. 

So more butter, more MSG — what else? “How often do you think about the texture in your food?” I asked. “Uh . . . almost never,” my friend responded. “Well, let’s change that in the New Year,” I wrote. 

I think the idea of textural contrast is one that often seems second-nature; if you were, say, planning a dinner party, you might be like, “Oh, hey, I need a little crunch” if you intended to serve meatloaf and mashed potatoes. 


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But the dish-level importance didn’t really stick for me until a few years ago. I was at a little Italian restaurant in D.C.’s Adams Morgan neighborhood and ordered a ricotta-stuffed agnolotti with mint pesto

The dish was beautiful. The pasta was pillowy, the ricotta was superbly fresh and the pesto had a wintergreen-allium punch that I’ve many times since tried to recreate at home. What really pushed it over the edge, though, were the toasted and salted pistachios that topped the pasta. With them in the mix, all the other elements seemed to shine that much more, and the interplay in each bite between the soft and crunchy bits was sublime. 

I made pasta all the time at home and thought I was doing it “right,” dutifully ensuring that I kept my pasta al dente and reserved the water for a slick, glossy sauce. However, when thinking back to my favorite restaurant pastas, there tended to be one thing in common: that extra crunch. 

The best bucatini I’d ever had was topped with rabbit ragù and fresh-torn and toasted bread chunks. One of my favorite aglio e olios had more coarsely ground, but just as crisp, breadcrumbs. The restaurant dishes that I found myself choosing came with pine nuts or pumpkin seeds or, as in the case of that angelotti, crushed pistachios. 

Once you start looking for textural contrast on a menu, it’s everywhere — from salads with crispy chickpeas to tomato soup with cornbread croutons. There are chocolate cakes with shatteringly-crisp cacao nibs and sandwiches griddled until crisp and then stacked with a layer of kettle chips. 

All this to say, if you want to take your at-home meals to the next level in the coming year, start stocking your pantry with easy items that you can grab to add some texture to your plate. Here are a few suggestions to help get you started: 

  • Panko bread crumbs: Toast and season these to add to pasta dishes or vegetable gratins.
  • Nuts: Top grain bowls, stews and curries with peanuts or cashews; season and bake some pecans or walnuts to toss over ice cream.
  • Seed and spice blends: Everything bagel seasoning adds a nice little touch to everything from avocado to eggs, as does dukka or duqqa, an Egyptian condiment consisting of a mixture of herbs, nuts and spices. 
  • Tortilla strips: Add these to taco salads, tortilla soups or chilis. 
  • Crushed potato chips: Toss these into potato salad for some welcome crunch, use them as a casserole topping (I swear, it’s so good!) or as a layer on a sub sandwich. 
  • Chickpeas or peas: Search your supermarket snack aisle for crunchy chickpeas or wasabi peas. These are an ideal salad or grain bowl topper. 
  • Scallions and pickled vegetables: Check your refrigerator for some crispy vegetables or alliums — like giardiniera, kimchi, pickled vegetables or scallions — and use those to round out your everyday meals. 

Some of our favorite shortcut recipes: 

The Brontës, Shelleys & Kingsley and Martin Amis: Research suggests relatives share writing styles

From Jane Austen to James Patterson, every author has their own way of writing. And that writing is often discussed in terms of “style.” Essentially, style refers to “how” something is written — it is more concerned with form than content. So when, for example, someone remarks that they “enjoyed the story” but “didn’t like how it was written,” they are commenting on the style.

If you want to see an example of different styles in action, just compare something like “The Hobbit” by JRR Tolkien to “Ulysses” by James Joyce. “The Hobbit” is written for a general audience, it’s a good old-fashioned story told through clear, accessible language. Ulysses is a more difficult read, full of obscure terms, complex phrasing, and cryptic references to other materials.

Obviously, Joyce still tells a story in Ulysses (and a great one at that), but he isn’t solely concerned with telling his tale. Joyce is also using the novel’s structure and language to experiment with form and challenge established ideas of what literature should look like.

But while style differs across authors, it would seem it doesn’t change so much across writers who are part of the same family. In my recent research, I looked at the literary styles of authors related to each other to see how their writing compared. Most members of the same literary families that I looked at tended to write in similar ways.

Literary families

Examining an author’s style based on their tendency to choose particular words is increasingly done with a process called “stylometry.” Stylometry uses computers to statistically measure the most frequent words in a text. Authors are consistent with the regularity with which they use certain words, so counting words can give an indication as to how a particular author or group of authors tend to write.

Stylometry is most often used for authorship attribution, answering (usually unfounded) questions around who really wrote a particular novel, as has been the case with “Wuthering Heights” and “Go Set a Watchman.”

But stylometry isn’t just useful in cases where a text’s authorship is disputed, it can also be used to analyze stylistic similarity more generally. And literary families present a unique opportunity to study why authors write in certain ways because relatives tend to develop within similar social environments.

In my research, I used stylometry to look at the writing styles of the following literary families: Kingsley and Martin Amis (father-son), Anne, Charlotte, and Emily Brontë (sisters), William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, and Mary Shelley (father-mother-daughter), A.S. Byatt and Margaret Drabble (sisters), W. Somerset and Robin Maugham (uncle-nephew), John le Carré and Nick Harkaway (father-son).

The results show that relatives involved usually wrote in similar styles. Without exception, each of the authors tested clustered with the other members of their family. This means that the computer was able to tell different families apart, based on their respective writing styles, with 100% accuracy. The next stage would be doing a larger study with more families to see if this trend holds more widely.

This recent experiment was prompted by my previous study on the Brontës (perhaps one of the most famous literary families), which shows that, compared with a selection of their peers, the Brontë siblings all share a remarkably similar literary style. This is perhaps unsurprising when you consider the extent to which the Brontës are known to have collaborated, but this trend also seems consistent across other families.

The creative collaboration seen with families like the Brontës is common practice among relatives who all write. But it’s still significant to see that familial influence is so strong that it can be detected using stylometric techniques. This could indicate that essential characteristics of an author’s voice might be inherently connected to their formative environments and upbringing.

Nature v nurture

But such findings also revive the (perhaps tired) debate between nature and nurture. Mary Shelley, who is best known for writing “Frankenstein,” clusters alongside her parents, William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft.

While the stylistic similarity between the other literary families analyzed might be attributed to collaboration, Mary Shelley never knew her mother as she died 10 days after Mary was born. And yet, they still share similar literary styles.

Her mother’s only novel was published before she began her relationship with Godwin, so it is unlikely that his influence is simply connecting the female members of his family. Again, perhaps Mary Shelley had a similar upbringing to Mary Wollstonecraft.

Or perhaps there is something else beyond nurture, something genetic that simply passed from mother to daughter. While such an explanation seems highly unlikely, what is undeniable is that Mary Shelley, without having known her mother, grew to resemble her literary style.

Perhaps then, being an author is just in one’s blood.

James O’Sullivan, Lecturer in Digital Arts & Humanities, University College Cork

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

As omicron explodes in New York, hospitals aren’t seeing a corresponding rise in patients

Once again, New York City is the center of a COVID-19 outbreak.

As the omicron variant of COVID-19 continues to spread across New York City, it has been estimated that one in 50 Manhattan residents have been infected with COVID-19 over the past week. Last week, the state of New York as a whole broke a single-day record, topping 49,708 positive cases on Tuesday. Previously, the record was set on January 11, 2021, when the seven-day average was 251,232.

In New York, COVID-19 is spreading across at a faster rate than at any other point during the pandemic, including during the deadly first wave in spring 2020.  More than 110,000 people have tested positive just since Christmas Day in New York City, according to the New York Times.

However, unlike previous surges, hospitalizations have not climbed as fast as positive cases. That might seem like good news on paper — and may suggest that the pandemic is on to a less deadly phase.

But experts say the situation in hospitals is a bit more complicated than it seems at first.


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According to the New York State governor’s office, hospitalizations increased on Tuesday by 12% in one day, totaling 6,173 in the state hospitalized. That number is 647 people more than were hospitalized on Monday.

Notably, hospitalizations in New York are about one-third of what they were during the worst part of the 2021 winter surge. While hospitalizations have nearly doubled over the last two weeks, they haven’t reached the levels of previous COVID-19 waves.

Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center, told Salon that it makes sense that cases are rising faster than hospitalizations.

“Cases are expected to rise at a faster rate than hospitalizations because not everyone who gets infected requires hospitalization,” Adalja said. “There is a decoupling going on because there is so much vaccination that has occurred.”

In the state of New York, 71 percent of its population is considered to be fully vaccinated. Meanwhile, during the January 2021 surge in New York, New Yorkers were bracing the wave amid a slow and tiered vaccination roll-out. Nationally, nearly 61.9 percent of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated.

Adalja emphasized that “cases are not of the same caliber in the pre-vaccine era.”

“This is why the focus needs to be on hospitalizations, not on the sheer number of cases which are going to increase for some time and ebb and flow,” Adalja said.

Indeed, in many places where hospitalizations are increasing, a majority of those hospitalized are unvaccinated. For example, this week the Louisiana Department of Health announced that 449 people in Louisiana were hospitalized with COVID-19 – a number that doubled in a week.

“The last time we reported this many COVID-19 hospitalizations was mid-October, as we came down from our fourth and then-worst COVID-19 surge,” the Louisiana Department of Health stated in a news release. “Eighty percent of people currently hospitalized with COVID-19 are not fully vaccinated.”

In Florida, coronavirus cases and hospitalizations are surging; specifically, the number of people in Florida hospital in-patients has reached 3,800 this week. But again, this is nowhere near the high hospitalization rates Florida saw between July to September, when the delta variant swept across the state. In August, COVID patients were accounting for over 25% of hospital patients; currently, COVID-19 patients in Florida take up 7.22% of all inpatient beds.

Across the country, in California’s Los Angeles County, health officials expressed concern over increasing hospitalizations to 966 people this week, compared to 748 the week before.

“While the hope is that omicron symptoms are milder, the current rise in hospitalizations is a cause for concern,” health officials wrote. “Hospitalizations have increased by 30% since last Tuesday; the alarming rise in hospitalizations follows an alarming increase in cases last week.”

Across the United States over the last month, the number of pediatric hospitalizations has increased by 52 percent, according to an NBC News analysis of Department of Health and Human Services data. That brings the number to 1,933 children hospitalized. On Christmas Eve, the New York State Department of Health sent a notice to physicians alerting professionals of an “upward trend” in pediatric hospitalizations. Notably, half of the hospital admissions were those under the age of 5 years-old, who aren’t yet eligible for the vaccine.

Doctors have urged that the rise in pediatric hospitalizations doesn’t mean omicron is affecting children more severely.

“I think the important story to tell here is that severity is way down and the risk for significant severe disease seems to be lower,” said Dr. David Rubin, a researcher at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia told the New York Times. “While we are definitely seeing more transmission among children, both vaccinated and unvaccinated, I think we have to be very careful to avoid sending the message that Omicron poses an unusual risk to kids.”

Doctors are urging children who are eligible to get vaccinated as soon as possible.

“We need to get child vaccinations up,” Mary T. Bassett, acting commissioner of the New York State Department of Health, told CBS. “We need to get them higher than they are, particularly in the 5- to 11-year-old age group.”

Inside the omicron surge:

Despite all the chaos and discord of 2021, Americans still need each other

As a number of towns in Kentucky and other communities in the Midwest try to recover from devastating tornadoes, public officials have been lauded, up and down, for praying and getting out and helping. 

It’s how this thing always goes. 

Here’s an account from a county judge in Kentucky at a press conference, who stepped up to the microphones after Gov. Andy Beshear, obviously very emotional in the face of the nearly utter devastation and loss of life caused by a tornado that may have stayed on the ground for some 200 miles: 

Our local officials right now — you want to know where the heroes are — they’re out here in the trenches, trying to find people. That’s what they are doing right now. And they don’t ask for nothing. They just want to resolve the situation and help somebody.

Fulsome praise, really, for helping in a crisis (when nearly anyone would do so). Americans always step up in a crisis. It may sound harsh, but helping in a crisis is what a public servant does, is paid to do. And public officials are praised most when they are present and seen to be personally involved with rescue efforts. 

We have a political crisis in America largely because we have a whole lot of elected officials in one party who have, for a long time now, not considered themselves public servants. Or, after decades of anti-government rhetoric about “starving the beast” and the like, their definition of public servant equates to nothing more than obstructionist. They do the work of the people (the ones who voted for them, anyway) by not doing the work of the people. Yet they are still willing to step up in a weather-related emergency or glom on when the other party votes for infrastructure dollars. 

RELATED: Beltway media’s moronic coverage of Build Back Better is cheating the nation

We have been shown yet again that whenever there is a tragedy caused by a storm, conservatives ask for prayers and assistance from their fellow citizens (which are already flooding in) and wholeheartedly, even tearfully, praise the response of public officials. Those public officials, Republicans and Democrats alike, don their most official-looking jacket or storm gear and speak of marshaling all the tools of government in the effort to rescue people and to do the hard, years-long work of returning their lives to some level of normalcy.

This ought to remind us we are more alike than we are told to believe. We all believe in rescuing people from a storm; people of a liberal or moderate bent just have a more expansive, more existential definition of what constitutes a storm.

While Republicans believe in less government — unless it supports their political goals, or until they need to profit from it personally or must turn to it during a tragedy — people of liberal and moderate political views (the vast majority of Americans) understand that life is itself a tragedy in slow motion for all of us. We get sick, a job vanishes, a full-time job doesn’t pay a living wage or provide benefits, we suffer a disabling injury, we grow old. We find that we need some assistance because (to paraphrase the late Texas Gov. Ann Richards, who most famously said it referring to George H.W. Bush) we were not born on third base, thinking we hit a triple.

As Jill Lepore writes in her superb history of the United States, “These Truths,” progressivism actually had its roots not only in Protestantism, encompassing all the ideals of democratic rule, but in late-19th-century populism:

Populists believed the system was broken; Progressives believed that government could fix it. Conservatives, who happened to dominate the Supreme Court, didn’t believe there was anything to fix but believed that, if there was, the market would fix it. Notwithstanding conservatives’ influence in the judiciary, Progressivism spanned both parties.

Well, the more things change, the more they stay the same. Progressive thinking exists about social issues among both Democrats and Republicans, as was proved by polling around the Build Back Better plan, with various proposed benefits individually garnering a high degree of support (e.g., adding dental and vision benefits to Medicare, 82% approval; funding for home health care for seniors and people with disabilities, 79%; allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices, 72%; paid family and medical leave for new parents, 70%; funding for affordable housing, 66%; funding for child care and universal pre-K, 62%).


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Although the issue has been thoroughly politicized for decades, many people of both parties believe in the tragedy of environmental degradation and climate change, which directly leads to more superstorms and literal tragedies on the ground.

People of both parties are also well aware of the tragedies in our history — of the enslavement of Black people, the genocide of Native Americans, the Jim Crow era and lynching, the ongoing mistreatment of immigrants, the lengthy period when women endured second-class citizenship — and know we must acknowledge these truths to move forward as a healthy society. Others simply do not like to hear of such things and wish they were not discussed in public. At one time, people with that attitude might blanch or leave the room at such talk; now they scream at school board members and even threaten their lives.

Although the capacity for empathy obviously varies, mostly based on one’s upbringing, conservatives in general may not need to be hit by a hurricane or a tornado or an earthquake to recognize the tragedy inherent in all our lives. But conservative politicians seem to recognize the need to display empathy only when it’s clear their own voters are in need.

Every time they put on the squall jacket with the governor’s seal on the breast and call out the National Guard and marshal the levers of government in the service of their citizens — or, for that matter, when they talk up infrastructure money coming to their state after ostentatiously voting against it — they put the lie to their philosophy that government cannot work for the people. It surely can; outside the context of an obvious disaster (and the condition of our infrastructure more than fits that description), it just depends on which people you’re talking about.

Read more on the climate crisis and its ripple effects:

What will 2022 bring in the way of misinformation on social media? 3 experts weigh in

At the end of 2020, it seemed hard to imagine a worse year for misinformation on social media, given the intensity of the presidential election and the trauma of the COVID-19 pandemic. But 2021 proved up to the task, starting with the Jan. 6 insurrection and continuing with copious amounts of falsehoods and distortions about COVID-19 vaccines.

To get a sense of what 2022 could hold, we asked three researchers about the evolution of misinformation on social media.

Absent regulation, misinformation will get worse

Anjana Susarla, Professor of Information Systems, Michigan State University

While misinformation has always existed in media – think of the Great Moon Hoax of 1835 that claimed life was discovered on the moon – the advent of social media has significantly increased the scope, spread and reach of misinformation. Social media platforms have morphed into public information utilities that control how most people view the world, which makes misinformation they facilitate a fundamental problem for society.

There are two primary challenges in addressing misinformation. The first is the dearth of regulatory mechanisms that address it. Mandating transparency and giving users greater access to and control over their data might go a long way in addressing the challenges of misinformation. But there’s also a need for independent audits, including tools that assess social media algorithms. These can establish how the social media platforms’ choices in curating news feeds and presenting content affect how people see information.

The second challenge is that racial and gender biases in algorithms used by social media platforms exacerbate the misinformation problem. While social media companies have introduced mechanisms to highlight authoritative sources of information, solutions such as labeling posts as misinformation don’t solve racial and gender biases in accessing information. Highlighting relevant sources of, for example, health information may only help users with greater health literacy and not people with low health literacy, who tend to be disproportionately minorities.

Another problem is the need to look systematically at where users are finding misinformation. TikTok, for example, has largely escaped government scrutiny. What’s more, misinformation targeting minorities, particularly Spanish-language content, may be far worse than misinformation targeting majority communities.

I believe the lack of independent audits, lack of transparency in fact checking and the racial and gender biases underlying algorithms used by social media platforms suggest that the need for regulatory action in 2022 is urgent and immediate.

Growing divisions and cynicism

Dam Hee Kim, Assistant Professor of Communication, University of Arizona

“Fake news” is hardly a new phenomenon, yet its costs have reached another level in recent years. Misinformation concerning COVID-19 has cost countless lives all over the world. False and misleading information about elections can shake the foundation of democracy, for instance, by making citizens lose confidence in the political system. Research I conducted with S Mo Jones-Jang and Kate Kenski on misinformation during elections, some published and some in progress, has turned up three key findings.

The first is that the use of social media, originally designed to connect people, can facilitate social disconnection. Social media has become rife with misinformation. This leads citizens who consume news on social media to become cynical not only toward established institutions such as politicians and the media, but also toward fellow voters.

Second, politicians, the media and voters have become scapegoats for the harms of “fake news.” Few of them actually produce misinformation. Most misinformation is produced by foreign entities and political fringe groups who create “fake news” for financial or ideological purposes. Yet citizens who consume misinformation on social media tend to blame politicians, the media and other voters.

The third finding is that people who care about being properly informed are not immune to misinformation. People who prefer to process, structure and understand information in a coherent and meaningful way become more politically cynical after being exposed to perceived “fake news” than people who are less politically sophisticated. These critical thinkers become frustrated by having to process so much false and misleading information. This is troubling because democracy depends on the participation of engaged and thoughtful citizens.

Looking ahead to 2022, it’s important to address this cynicism. There has been much talk about media literacy interventions, primarily to help the less politically sophisticated. In addition, it’s important to find ways to explain the status of “fake news” on social media, specifically who produces “fake news,” why some entities and groups produce it, and which Americans fall for it. This could help keep people from growing more politically cynical.

Rather than blaming each other for the harms of “fake news” produced by foreign entities and fringe groups, people need to find a way to restore confidence in each other. Blunting the effects of misinformation will help with the larger goal of overcoming societal divisions.

Propaganda by another name

Ethan Zuckerman, Associate Professor of Public Policy, Communication, and Information, UMass Amherst

I expect the idea of misinformation will shift into an idea of propaganda in 2022, as suggested by sociologist and media scholar Francesca Tripodi in her forthcoming book, “The Propagandist’s Playbook.” Most misinformation is not the result of innocent misunderstanding. It’s the product of specific campaigns to advance a political or ideological agenda.

Once you understand that Facebook and other platforms are the battlegrounds on which contemporary political campaigns are fought, you can let go of the idea that all you need are facts to correct people’s misapprehensions. What’s going on is a more complex mix of persuasion, tribal affiliation and signaling, which plays out in venues from social media to search results.

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As the 2022 elections heat up, I expect platforms like Facebook will reach a breaking point on misinformation because certain lies have become political speech central to party affiliation. How do social media platforms manage when false speech is also political speech?


Anjana Susarla, Professor of Information Systems, Michigan State University; Dam Hee Kim, Assistant Professor of Communication, University of Arizona, and Ethan Zuckerman, Associate Professor of Public Policy, Communication, and Information, UMass Amherst

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

Understanding Joe Manchin’s BBB stance: Likely his standard West Virginia pivot

Joe Manchin isn’t averse to taking a shotgun to policy he dislikes.

In 2018, the senator starred in a political ad in which he explains how a lawsuit to repeal the Affordable Care Act — something his opponent, state attorney general Patrick Morrisey, was at the time trying to do — would strip health care from numerous West Virginians. Manchin then takes out a shotgun and unloads on the Morrissey lawsuit.

The ad, titled “Dead Wrong,” simultaneously displays Manchin’s support for a popular program while signaling a pro-gun stance.

It is also instructive for understanding the political challenge that Manchin faces over the Biden administration’s Build Back Better bill – legislation that Manchin has seemingly torpedoed.

As a scholar and native of the state who has long followed West Virginian politics, I know that Manchin is typically deft in balancing support for government programs that will benefit people in the state with the social conservatism that many adhere to. It is what he did in the “Dead Wrong” ad, and it is what he is trying to do now by delivering tangible benefits on some dimensions, while “standing up” to the president and Democratic leadership on others.

What say the lodestar?

There are reasons to suppose that West Virginians would be in favor of many elements contained in Build Back Better, Biden’s package of legislation that aims to fix problems ranging from child care costs to climate change.

The legislation contains not only the child tax credit, which would send monthly payments of up to $300 per child to families across the U.S., but also improvements to the Affordable Care Act, upgraded infrastructure for health care and better access to housing. Its largest portion is $555 billion dedicated to climate change — representing the first major legislative action on climate in the U.S.

RELATED: West Virginia unions push Joe Manchin to back down on Build Back Better

In a state where poverty is highrural health care is sparse and climate change threatens to bring frequent, intense flooding, it seems unimaginable that the senator would fail to support the legislation.

Yet on Dec. 19, 2021, Manchin announced on Fox News that he would not. That Manchin did this on Fox News speaks to the general public sentiment in West Virginia.

It sparked a very public “battle of the Joes” in which Biden maintained that Manchin dealt in bad faith after months of personal cajoling and negotiations by the president. Manchin, for his part, reportedly offered Biden everything in Build Back Better except for the Child Tax Credit.

The fight threatens consequences for man and party. The viability of the razor-thin Democratic majority’s ability to govern headed into the 2022 midterms is at stake. But the conflict also poses a major problem for Manchin himself, with Biden using Manchin’s opposition to the child tax credit as a political pressure point — publicly shaming the West Virginian for failing to support a measure that would deliver support to many families in his own state.

Reconciliation masks broad agreement

To understand what Manchin opposes, it’s useful to understand what reconciliation does to a multidimensional bill.

Normally, major legislative initiatives would each have their own bill. But each would need to pass the Senate with 60 votes in order to avoid a filibuster that could end up killing the bill. To get past that hurdle, Democrats have piled all of Biden’s initiatives into what’s called a budget reconciliation bill, which only requires a majority of votes to pass — a much lower threshold and one that a united Democratic Party could meet in the Senate.


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Yet because legislators must cast a single vote for what is a diverse package, disagreement on one dimension can sink the whole reconciliation bill — even if there is broad agreement on the other proposals. In this case, Manchin wants to jettison the child tax credit, but made an offer that reportedly includes the improvements to the ACA, health care infrastructure, as well as the climate change provisions — remarkable for a senator from a state so dependent on fossil fuels for economic growth and stability.

It is likely Manchin will return to the bargaining table over the next few weeks, absent, or in spite of, the public shaming over the child tax credit from the president.

The typical Manchin pivot

West Virginians tend toward conservative views on typical culture war issues like guns, abortions and race.

The purported support for Build Back Better in West Virginia is likely overstated among the electorate — polling is sparse and generally done by supportive organizations — though West Virginians typically are in favor of government programs that benefit them. Winning elections in West Virginia historically entails candidates pledging to bring home benefits to the state. And this is exactly the approach Manchin typically adopts, delivering policy that has majority support, while signaling his fidelity to culture war issues.

Manchin has continually referred to his constituents as his lodestar: “If I can’t go back home and explain it, I can’t vote for it.”

Normally, Manchin gets pressure on social issues from the more liberal wing of the Democratic Party. This criticism from the wider party is fuel for his positioning and policy goals within the state. On such issues, the more criticism he receives from the left, the better. He is deft at pivoting on this pressure to make policy that has general support in the state, such as displayed in the “Dead Wrong” ad.

The public pressure on child tax credits is not the norm and does not offer the same pivot for Manchin. West Virginians value programs like the child tax credit.

Furthermore, support in the state for child tax credits means Manchin is left exposed politically in a way that damages his ability to maintain the fragile coalition that he normally relies on. And, despite progressive outcry for a primary challenger, make no mistake about it, no other Democrat could hold that West Virginian seat.

Manchin’s seeming obstinance can be understood in two ways. He’s either a conservative Democrat failing to get behind the president’s legislative agenda or he simply wants to prioritize programs within that agenda that keep to a general spending target.

Manchin’s opposition to the child tax credit reflects his concern about how the monthly benefit will affect the budget. Simultaneously, colleagues say he is concerned over how lower-income citizens will spend the money, reportedly worrying about it being spent on drugs.

This second concern echoes a common conservative trope. But if a comment like that might hurt a politician in a liberal state, it is understandable in the context of the West Virginia electorate’s social conservatism.

Despite Manchin’s comments sparking predictions that his position doomed Build Back Better, it may not be as clear cut as that.

The senator’s willingness to accept all the other major provisions in the bill leaves plenty of room for bargaining. If Manchin can find a way to do his customary pivot — supporting the Democratic proposals while satisfying his constituents that he’s being socially conservative and standing up to the left — he may well get on board and put away the shotgun.

Samuel Workman, Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University

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

Read more on West Virginia’s man in the middle:

How Unite the Right paved the way for Jan. 6 — and helped launch some of riot’s biggest players

Days after neo-Nazi James Fields Jr. murdered antiracist activist Heather Heyer in a horrific car-ramming attack in Charlottesville, Va., the Daily Caller, a website founded by Tucker Carlson, quietly removed articles by contributor Jason Kessler.

Kessler was the primary organizer of the Unite the Right rally, which saw neo-Nazis chant, “Jews will not replace us,” as they carried torches to the Rotunda at the University of Virginia on Aug. 11, 2017 and again the following day as they marched through Charlottesville.

More than four years later, the ideas that galvanized the Unite the Right rally are no longer considered too radioactive for mainstream conservative media. Carlson himself embraced the Great Replacement theory — responsible for fueling massacres in Pittsburgh; Christchurch, New Zealand; Poway, Calif.; and El Paso, Texas — on his Fox News show in April 2021. He accused Democrats of “trying to replace the current electorate” in the United States “with new people, more obedient voters from the Third World.”

There are distinct differences in messaging between Unite the Right, in which white supremacists used Confederate symbols and neo-Nazi aesthetics to nakedly promote white nationalism, and the Jan. 6 insurrection, in which Trump supporters filtered similar aims through QAnon, paranoid anticommunism, and a perverted version of patriotism.


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Amy Spitalnick, executive director of Integrity First for America — the nonprofit that won the civil lawsuit against the organizers of Unite the Right — is among those who see distinct similarities between the two events.

“The four years in between have shown us how much of this extremism has moved into the mainstream,” she said. “If you look at the tools and tactics, there are many, many parallels, from the use of social media to plan the violence to explicit discussion of the use of free speech instruments like flagpoles as weapons, to the immediate finger-pointing to ‘antifa, blaming them for the violence that far-right extremists were responsible for to even some of the ideology.

“While Charlottesville was explicitly white nationalist with holocaust imagery, and with KKK and Nazi paraphernalia like the tiki torches that are meant to evoke dark periods of our history, on January 6th when you think about ‘stopping the steal,’ it also speaks at its core to this same idea: There’s a plot to steal the country from largely white Christians,” Spitalnick continued. “That idea that Jews will not replace us is at the core of Unite the Right, but it’s also at the core of Jan. 6. We’ve seen how these ideas have been mainstreamed, from Tucker Carlson giving replacement theory a home on Fox News every night to Republican politicians talking about it.”

The two dozen leaders and organizations that were in trial earlier this month in Charlottesville have not been the primary drivers of far-right radicalization over the past four years. While the defendants who were the central organizers of Unite the Right have been financially hobbled by ongoing litigation, some of those who attended the rally played important roles in organizing support for the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol.

Nicholas Fuentes, who attended the rally as an 18-year-old Boston University student, gushed on Facebook on Aug. 12, 2017: “The rootless transnational elite knows that a tidal wave of white identity is coming. And they know that once the word gets outs, they will not be able to stop us. The fire rises!”

More than three years later, Fuentes was recruited to bring the legion of young, white men known — known as “Groypers” — that follow him into the #StopTheSteal coalition. Introduced by #StopTheSteal organizer Ali Alexander, Fuentes ascended a stepladder and addressed Trump supporters outside of the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta on Nov. 21, 2020.

RELATED: Mein Kampf, racial slurs and Antifa conspiracies lead wild first week at Charlottesville trial

“This is an intergenerational struggle of the real American people that constitute this country over and against the global special interests that have taken it over,” Fuentes said, electrifying the crowd. “If we are unsuccessful in our struggle to secure President Trump another term in office, then that will institute and introduce the rule of global corporations over this country.

“What is at stake is nothing short of our civilizational inheritance,” Fuentes continued, using language strikingly similar to that of Richard Spencer, the marquee leader at Unite the Right. “We Americans have inherited the greatest civilization in the history of the world, and we’re not giving it up without a fight.” Launching into a transphobic rant accusing global elites of harboring “sick plans” for Americans, Fuentes then falsely equated immigration with criminality, claiming that the globalists “want dirt and scum and crime on these streets.” He declared: “This is not a Third World country; this is the United States of America!”

The Proud Boys, which also emerged from the alt-right movement that rode Trump’s coattails, are likewise intertwined with the organizing efforts surrounding Unite the Right, though they evaded legal liability in Charlottesville.

As well as being a contributor to the Daily Caller, Kessler was also a member of the Proud Boys. As the complaint in the civil suit noted, prior to Unite the Right, Kessler organized a “Proud Boys” event in Charlottesville in which he was initiated into the gang by being beaten in an alley until he could name five breakfast cereals. The plaintiffs introduced into evidence an article published by defendant organization Traditionalist Worker Party entitled, “Proud Boys are Cordially Invited to Unite the Right.”

But shortly before Unite the Right, Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnis publicly disavowed the event. Many Proud Boys, including future national chairman Enrique Tarrio, attended anyway. Shane Reeves, a Proud Boy from Colorado posted a photo of himself on Facebook providing a security escort for Augustus Sol Invictus at Unite the Right. Invictus led the short-lived Fraternal Order of the Alt-Knights, formed as the “tactical defense arm” of the Proud Boys. Both Invictus and Fraternal Order of the Alt-Knight were defendants in the Charlottesville lawsuit. Although they did not show up in court to represent themselves during the trial, the plaintiffs are seeking a default judgement against them.

RELATED: The Charlottesville model: Trump’s “fine people” praise of white nationalists is now GOP mainstream

“It is still an overwhelming experience to process, and the men I met that day I consider brothers for life,” Reeves wrote in the Facebook post.

As other far-right groups dealt with the legal fallout and public-relations backlash after Unite the Right, over the ensuing four years the Proud Boys would engage in escalating street violence against left-wing adversaries, build ties with the GOP, and supply foot soldiers to the effort to prevent Joe Biden from taking office. Dozens of Proud Boys face federal charges in connection with the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol.

“The clearest winners from Unite the Right were the Proud Boys,” said Alexander Reid Ross, a doctoral fellow at the Center for Analysis of the Radical Right. “They backed out. There’s a part of the alt-right within the Unite the Right coalition that was able to bring that legacy further into fascism. That was the Proud Boys.

“McInnis recognized astutely in a sense that with the National Socialist Movement getting involved, it was going to be a debacle,” Ross continued. “It was always going to be associated with the Nazi movement, and not just the broad right wing. He disassociated at the last minute. But the Proud Boys are interwoven with Unite the Right. Tarrio was there, as well as the Fraternal Order of the Alt-Knights.”

At least one person who attended Unite the Right has also been charged in connection with the storming of the US Capitol: Tim Gionet aka Baked Alaska.

RELATED: Charlottesville trial has Nazis on edge as extremism expert decodes their online “doublespeak”

On. Aug. 8, 2017, Gionet tweeted a photo of himself pointing a pistol at a camera, accompanied by the misogynistic text: “Get in b*** we are saving the world.” On Jan. 6, 2021, Gionet live-streamed himself inside a Capitol office saying, “America First is inevitable. F*** globalists, let’s go.”

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), who serves on the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, is among those who have drawn a tight connection between that event and Unite the Right.

“The events in Charlottesville in 2017 were a nightmare and a precursor and a foreshadowing of everything that would unfold over the next four years, culminating in the violent insurrection against the union on January 6th, the attack on our US Capitol,” Raskin said during an online fundraiser for Integrity First for America on Sept. 30.

The most horrific aspect of Unite the Right — James Fields’ deadly car attack — has unfortunately become a common feature in white vigilante response to antiracist protests.

As the civil complaint detailed, the tactic was already gaining mainstream acceptance prior to August 2017. In January 2017, Fox News’ opinion website tweeted out a video entitled “Reel of Cars Plowing Through Protestors Trying to Block the Road” that had originally appeared on the Daily Caller.

“One thought that perhaps the car attack in Charlottesville would diminish that strategy, and the Daily Caller deleted the post,” Ross said. But in 2020, there was an unprecedented number of car attacks — 129 since the beginning of the George Floyd protests in May 2020, and an additional five since the beginning of 2021.

“The Charlottesville car attack is a propaganda of the deed,” Ross said. “It publicized the act; people see it as possible and sort of proliferate it.”

While Biden’s election marks a victory for progressives, many observers continue to see far-right politics making inroads in American politics. Ross said that in the aftermath of Unite the Right, the Proud Boys were perfectly positioned to push forward the process of fascism.

“Their mission is to restore Western civilization to the seat of power culturally,” he said. “Their approach to doing it is a performance: If they can beat up enough of the people who disagree with them, they can show they’re superior and spread the myth of the crusading knights of Western civilization. It’s kind of like what the Klan did. They’re more inclusive than the Klan; they don’t exclude Catholics. But the underpinning of their ideology is white nationalist.”

Whatever the seeds of right-wing radicalization, there’s little doubt that extremism has taken a tighter hold since Unite the Right.

“I think people are sleeping on the idea that there’s a wide swath of America that is radicalized,” said Shawn Breen, an independent researcher who has tracked many of the participating groups since before and after Unite the Right rally. “Not necessarily due to these groups. They’ve been radicalized by proxy, by Trump and the GOP. People that weren’t receptive to these groups then would be a lot more receptive now.”

In a number of respects, the GOP base and what was known as the alt-right in 2017 have arrived at the same place.

“I think you can watch Tucker Carlson, and see many of the alt-right’s positions put plain and simple,” Ross said. “He goes off on the Great Replacement. He says white Americans are being replaced by immigrants. He specifies white conservative Americans being replaced by immigrants.”

Another point of convergence is admiration for Hungary.

Mike Peinovich, who was dismissed as one of the original defendants in the Charlottesville lawsuit, went on to co-found the National Justice Party, which is modeled after the ruling Fidesz party in Hungary. And in August, Carlson traveled to Hungary to meet the country’s authoritarian leader, Viktor Orban.

“The positioning of Hungary as an international center for conservatism — that is deeply disturbing,” Ross said. “This is a deeply authoritarian situation in Hungary. It’s admired for sure by the alt-right today with the National Justice Party. You can see the alt-right and the Republican Party reconverging over the dual exigency of illiberal populism.”

So far, at least, Ross said, Carlson has refrained from explicit antisemitism.

“Tucker Carlson will simply use liberals as a stand-in for the role played by the Jews,” Ross said. “He talks about [liberal financier George] Soros a lot. He promotes conspiracy theories, but he doesn’t make those the obvious center of his politics; it’s more obscure. That might be changing. We’ve seen in the US an increase in attacks on Jews. We’ve seen major sports stars and comedians come out with antisemitic extremism. I think we’re witnessing a frightening increase in antisemitism in the mainstream of the United States. I think they’re preparing the ground for openly antisemitic populism.”

In her closing remarks during the Sept. 30 fundraiser, Spitalnick said the goal of the lawsuit against the neo-Nazis who organized the Unite the Right rally was multifaceted.

“This case is about making clear the consequences of violent hate, about winning accountability for our plaintiffs, who survived the unthinkable; for the community of Charlottesville, which was violently targeted by the extremists who descended on their city from around the country,” she said. “It’s about setting a precedent serving as an example of how you can bring violent extremists to justice, and deterring others from participating in the next violent act.”

But Spitalnick wanted to make sure the last point didn’t get overlooked.

“And it’s about helping to wake up our country to the crisis of white supremacy and hate,” she said.

“A race to the bottom”: House GOP slammed for “really disgraceful” anti-vaccine tweet

At a time when former President Donald Trump is surprising his critics by encouraging Americans to get vaccinated for COVID-19, the House Judiciary GOP posted an anti-vax tweet this week. The tweet in question has since been removed, but it is still being slammed as misleading and irresponsible.

On Thursday, a tweet from @JudiciaryGOP read, “If the booster shots work, why don’t they work?” In fact, booster shots of the COVID vaccines have been shown to significantly increase immunity and protect recipients from the coronavirus, including the latest omicron variant.


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That claim echoed what Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio posted on December 23:

Actually, they work well. Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Joe Biden’s top White House medical adviser, has been stressing that although it is certainly possible to be vaccinated for COVID-19 and get infected anyway, the vaccinated are much more likely to survive a COVID-19 infection than the unvaccinated. At this point, the vast majority of COVID-19 fatalities in the United States are among the unvaccinated — which @JudiciaryGOP failed to mention.

Nick Beaudrot, in response to the House Judiciary GOP tweet, posted:

Patrick Chovanec was equally critical of @JudiciaryGOP, posting:

Politico’s Sam Stein noted that the anti-vaxxer tweet from @JudiciaryGOP is totally different from what Trump has been saying about vaccines. During a recent appearance in Dallas with radio host Bill O’Reilly, Trump revealed that he had received a COVID-19 booster shot and encouraged others to do the same.

Here are some more reactions to @JudiciaryGOP’s anti-vaxxer tweet:

During a COVID-19 surge, “crisis standards of care” involve excruciating choices

The Conversation is running a series of dispatches from clinicians and researchers operating on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic. You can find all of the stories here.

As the omicron variant brings a new wave of uncertainty and fear, I can’t help reflecting back to March 2020, when people in health care across the U.S. watched in horror as COVID-19 swamped New York City.

Hospitals were overflowing with sick and dying patients, while ventilators and personal protective equipment were in short supply. Patients sat for hours or days in ambulances and hallways, waiting for a hospital bed to open up. Some never made it to the intensive care unit bed they needed.

I’m an infectious disease specialist and bioethicist at the University of Colorado’s Anschutz Medical Campus. I worked with a team nonstop from March into June 2020, helping my hospital and state get ready for the massive influx of COVID-19 cases we expected might inundate our health care system.

When health systems are moving toward crisis conditions, the first steps we take are to do all we can to conserve and reallocate scarce resources. Hoping to keep delivering quality care – despite shortages of space, staff and stuff – we do things like canceling elective surgeries, moving surgical staff to inpatient units to provide care and holding patients in the emergency department when the hospital is full. These are called “contingency” measures. Though they can be inconvenient for patients, we hope patients won’t be harmed by them.

But when a crisis escalates to the point that we simply can’t provide necessary services to everyone who needs them, we are forced to perform crisis triage. At that point, the care provided to some patients is admittedly less than high quality – sometimes much less.

The care provided under such extreme levels of resource shortages is called “crisis standards of care.” Crisis standards can impact the use of any type of resource that is in extremely short supply, from staff (like nurses or respiratory therapists) to stuff (like ventilators or N95 masks) to space (like ICU beds).

And because the care we can provide during crisis standards is much lower than normal quality for some patients, the process is supposed to be fully transparent and formally allowed by the state.

What triage looks like in practice

In the spring of 2020, our plans assumed the worst – that we wouldn’t have enough ventilators for all the people who would surely die without one. So we focused on how to make ethical determinations about who should get the last ventilator, as though any decision like that could be ethical.

But one key fact about triage is that it’s not something you decide to do or not. If you don’t do it, then you are deciding to behave as if things are normal, and when you run out of ventilators, the next person to come along doesn’t get one. That’s still a form of triage.

Now imagine that all the ventilators are taken and the next person who needs one is a young woman with a complication delivering her baby.

That’s what we had to talk about in early 2020. My colleagues and I didn’t sleep much.

To avoid that scenario, our hospital and many others proposed using a scoring system that counts up how many of a patient’s organs are failing and how badly. That’s because people with multiple organs failing aren’t as likely to survive, which means they shouldn’t be given the last ventilator if someone with better odds also needs it.

Fortunately, before we had to use this triage system that spring, we got a reprieve. Mask-wearing, social distancing and business closures went into effect, and they worked. We bent the curve. In April 2020, Colorado had some days with almost 1,000 COVID-19 cases per day. But by early June, our daily case rates were in the low 100s. COVID-19 cases would surge back in August as those measures were relaxed, of course. And Colorado’s surge in December 2020 was especially severe, but we subdued these subsequent waves with the same basic public health measures.

A chart depicting the number of COVID-19 patients hospitalized from Feb. 2020 to Dec. 2021.

Number of COVID-19 patients hospitalized from Feb. 24, 2020 to Dec. 20, 2021. Our World in Data.org, CC BY

And then what at the time felt like a miracle happened: A safe and effective vaccine became available. First it was just for people at highest risk, but then it became available for all adults by later in the spring of 2021. We were just over one year into the pandemic, and people felt like the end was in sight. So masks went by the wayside.

Too soon, it turned out.

A haunting reminder of 2020

Now, in December 2021 here in Colorado, hospitals are filled to the brim again. Some have even been over 100% capacity recently, and a third of the hospitals expect ICU bed shortages during the last weeks of 2021. The best estimate is that by the end of the month we’ll be overflowing and ICU beds will run out statewide.

But today, some members of the public have little patience for wearing masks or avoiding big crowds. People who’ve been vaccinated don’t think it’s fair they should be forced to cancel holiday plans, when over 80% of the people hospitalized for COVID-19 are the unvaccinated. And those who aren’t vaccinated … well, many seem to believe they just aren’t at risk, which couldn’t be further from the truth.

So, hospitals around our state are yet again facing triage-like decisions on a daily basis.

In a few important ways, the situation has changed. Today, our hospitals have plenty of ventilators, but not enough staff to run them. Stress and burnout are taking their toll.

So, those of us in the health care system are hitting our breaking point again. And when hospitals are full, we are forced into making triage decisions.

Ethical dilemmas and painful conversations

Our health system in Colorado is now assuming that by the end of December, we could be 10% over capacity across all our hospitals, in both intensive care units and regular floors. In early 2020, we were looking for the patients who would die with or without a ventilator in order to preserve the ventilator; today, our planning team is looking for people who might survive outside of the ICU. And because those patients will need a bed on the main floors, we are also forced to find people on hospital floor beds who could be sent home early, even though that might not be as safe as we’d like.

For instance, take a patient who has diabetic ketoacidosis, or DKA – extremely high blood sugar with fluid and electrolyte disturbances. DKA is dangerous and typically requires admission to an ICU for a continuous infusion of insulin. But patients with DKA only rarely end up requiring mechanical ventilation. So, under crisis triage circumstances, we might move them to hospital floor beds to free up some ICU beds for very sick COVID-19 patients.

But where are we going to get regular hospital rooms for these patients with DKA, since those are full too? Here’s what we might do: People with serious infections due to IV drug use are regularly kept in the hospital while they receive long courses of IV antibiotics. This is because if they were to use an IV catheter to inject drugs at home, it could be very dangerous, even deadly. But under triage conditions, we might let them go home if they promise not to use their IV line to inject drugs.

Obviously, that’s not completely safe. It’s clearly not the usual standard of care – but it is a crisis standard of care.

Worse than all of this is anticipating the conversations with patients and their families. These are what I dread the most, and in the last few weeks of 2021, we’ve had to start practicing them again. How should we break the news to patients that the care they are getting isn’t what we’d like because we are overwhelmed? Here’s what we might have to say:

“… there are just too many sick people coming to our hospital all at once, and we don’t have enough of what is needed to take care of all the patients the way we would like to …

… at this point, it is reasonable to do a trial of treatment on the ventilator for 48 hours, to see how your dad’s lungs respond, but then we’ll need to reevaluate …

… I’m sorry, your dad is sicker than others in the hospital, and the treatments haven’t been working in the way we had hoped.”

Back when vaccines came on the horizon a year ago, we hoped we’d never need to have these conversations. It’s hard to accept that they are needed again now.


Matthew Wynia, Director of the Center for Bioethics and Humanities, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

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

Inside psychogenic death, the phenomenon of “thinking” yourself to death

In 1967, a woman was admitted to Baltimore City Hospital, complaining about shortness of breath, chest pains, nausea, and dizziness. She was 22 years old. She hadn’t had health problems until just over a month earlier. Now she was extremely anxious, hyperventilating, sweating and nearly fainting.

After two weeks, she finally confided to the doctor what she believed was wrong with her. By then, she only had a few days to solve it. As it happened, the woman had been born on Friday the 13th in Florida’s Okefenokee Swamp. The midwife who’d delivered her had also delivered two other children that day. She told the girls’ parents that all three children had been hexed. The first girl would die before her sixteenth birthday. The second would die before her twenty-first. The third—the woman in this hospital—would die before she turned twenty-three.

As it happened, the first girl was killed in a car accident on the day before her sixteenth birthday. The second girl made it to her twenty-first birthday. She thought the spell was broken, so she went out to celebrate, but at the bar a fight broke out, a gun went off, and she was also killed.

This left the third woman convinced, beyond all doubt, that she would die as the woman had foretold.

Then, on the day before her 23rd birthday, she did.

These sorts of cases have long puzzled physicians. In 1942, Walter Cannon—who researched and named the “fight or flight” syndrome — published a paper titled “Voodoo Death,” in which he gave examples from around the world of people dying from curses. Unlike his contemporaries, who suspected “voodoo deaths” were the product of overactive primitive minds, Cannon was convinced there was a biological side to it.

Yet until recently the idea that our beliefs, or our fears, could kill us was not taken seriously in Western medicinal circles, due to the lack of a mechanical explanation for how something as ephemeral as the mind could extinguish something as tangible as the body. Now, thanks to the work of a British psychologist and researcher named John Leach, that may change, as he has mapped out at least one road to this unfortunate end.            

More than 20 years ago Leach, who is a survival psychologist, started to investigate why some people lived through their time prison camps, shipwrecks, plane crashes and other disasters, while others did not. He spent years trying to figure out what was special about the survivors.

“I got absolutely nowhere,” Leach said, when reached in the U.K. “I couldn’t find any special characteristics of these people. Then one day, I realized I was asking the wrong question. The real question is not, ‘What makes a few people so extraordinary that they survive?’ The real question is, ‘Why do so many people die when there’s no need for them to die?'”


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History is full of such stories, some of which Leach included in a 2018 paper. As far back as 1607 in the doomed American colony at Jamestown, some of its citizens were noted to have “die[d] of Melancholye.” On slave ships, captives frequently died from “the sulks.” In Auschwitz, North Korea and Vietnam, prisoners of war would lie down, smoke their last hidden cigarette, and be dead within 48 hours.  One shipwreck survivor watched four others around him die, one by one. “I had no thought people could die so easily,” he said. “Their heads just fell back, the light seemed to go from their eyes, and it was all over.”

For years Leach pondered these cases, wondering what could cause a person to die of hopelessness. Then, around 2016 he homed in on the relationship between the prefrontal cortex and the basal ganglia, and the way dopamine in produced, or not produced, there. It was a revelation.

“With the advances in neurology and neurochemistry,” he said, “the pieces started to fall into place. After all these years trying to get an answer for this thing, when I finally did, I thought, ‘This is too easy. That can’t be right.'”

When humans are faced with a threat, they deal with it in various mental ways. They either face the threat head on to defeat it, or they try to run away from it. This is known as “active coping.”

Since Cannon first described the “fight or flight,” response, a third option has been added to the list: freeze. This is known as “passive coping,” and it happens when a threat is perceived as inescapable. It’s a way for the organism to conserve energy until the threat passes.

But sometimes the threat — or the perception of it — doesn’t pass. In that case, a person can lose hope of escape and, “the prefrontal cortex deliberately inhibits the production of dopamine in the basal ganglia to well below its functional level,” says Leach. “That’s associated with the feeling of hopelessness.” If this continues for too long, it can become impossible to restart dopamine production.  The person in this situation begins a “spiral of disengagement,” which consists of five stages: 

      1) Withdrawal

      2) Apathy

      3) Aboulia (loss of emotional response, initiative and willpower)

      4) Akinesia (lack of response to external stimuli, even to pain).

Most people who enter this neurological tailspin will emerge from it before they hit bottom. They take in new information. They adapt to the new situation. But the few who don’t may find themselves at stage five: Psychogenic death. The light goes out of their eyes. They say their goodbyes. They may perk up briefly as if they finally have a goal they can imagine, a solution to their problem: That new goal is death. And within a day or so, they’re gone.

In January, Leach will deliver a talk to the British Psychological Society Conference titled “Dysexistential syndrome: the pathology of psychogenic death,” in which he will explain his thinking on these processes and their implications. But some in the field already see it as providing a missing piece to the mind-body puzzle.

“What John’s paper has done,” says Sarita Robinson, who teaches cognitive neuropsychology and psychobiology at the University of Central Lancashire, “is actually plug this gap and said, ‘Look, the physical is important, yes. If you are in a concentration camp and you haven’t got enough food, that is going to eventually kill you. But actually, the psychological pressures of being in that extreme environment could also be impacting on your likelihood of survival.”

Robinson has seen this in her own life, when an elderly neighbor was sent to the hospital. “She was doing really well,” Robinson recalled, “Then the consultants came in the morning and told her that she had cancer, and that’s why she’d been so unwell. At that point she just went downhill and died that afternoon. It was literally giving upon life at that point.”

There are countless anecdotal reports of deaths soon after a diagnosis like AIDS or cancer, in which the name of the disease seems to work like curse. Leach’s model of dysexistential syndrome suggests a common mechanism.

David Kissane, who served as Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, studies the negative effects of “demoralization,” which is different from depression, and may also be a key to understanding dysexistential syndrome.

“Depression is a loss of happiness, joy and pleasure in the here and now” Kissane says. “Demoralization is future-oriented, that I won’t be able to experience pleasure in the days and weeks, months ahead.”

According to Kissane, this ability to construct a meaningful (or even possible) path into the future is related to our dopamine circuits, whereas depression is more closely associated with the serotonin circuits. When a person becomes hopeless, or demoralized, this hope-related part of the brain doesn’t function as it should.

“Demoralization can arise from a struggle to cope with a stress or event,” says Kissane, “which can include a medical illness, or entrapment in a predicament that you can’t control. Cancer is the illness par excellence that challenges patients existentially.”

Leach has seen the same thing since he started writing on the subject.

“I’ve been contacted by people working in cancer units,” he says, “with patients who’ve been diagnosed with different types of cancer. And sometimes when they realize they’ve got cancer, some, not all, suddenly just go downhill, following the pattern I’ve laid out, and die quite quickly, even though there is no need for them to have died so soon.”

So while prison camps and shipwrecks might be rare in this world, the prevalence of deaths from despondency may be more far more common than anyone has known.

“The same phenomena that John’s been looking at in camps,” says Kissane, “match exactly the phenomena that we’ve been studying in oncology, palliative care, advanced progressive illness. And you can find them in everyday citizens, in every town throughout America.”

On death and dying:

Match your salad to the winter season — the possibilities are quite endless

When you think of summertime foods, you immediately go to refreshing things like cool cucumbers, ice-cold watermelon or freshly-picked peaches. It’s a time when we focus on our “beach bodies”: We’re in and out of the gym and then right over to our favorite restaurant for that big bowl of summer roughage.

Once that first autumn breeze blows in, we almost immediately switch gears to heartier foods. Inspired by what’s happening around us with the changing leaves crunching under our feet, the aroma of burning fireplaces opens the mind to smoked foods.

Pine and juniper infusions come to mind when roasting foods or a gentle splash of the oils in wintertime cocktails. Pumpkin spice is everywhere, and at this point you simply give in to the pounds you’ll potentially gain from all the glorious spreads during the holidays.

But keeping the same summertime flavor mindset throughout the year is completely doable when you explore and realize all of the wonderful and healthy options that are readily available during the cold months.

My wife and I are big fans of salads, so some of our dinners will be a bowl of leafy greens with some fancy cheese and a small amount of grilled meat, simply dressed with extra-virgin olive oil, cracked black pepper, a squeeze of lemon and sea salt. That’s really all we need.

To channel this simple pleasure during the colder months, I prefer the more robust leafy greens, such as escarole, radicchio, endive, kale and collards. I like these because of their heartiness and ability to go well with other wintry items, such as warm chestnuts, pomegranate, farro, black rice, cranberries, persimmons and roasted squashes, just to name a few. Combining the greens with thinly shaved Brussels sprouts, small florets of roasted cauliflower, toasted barley and beet vinaigrette can add festive color and flavor for any holiday get together.

These winter creations can be super low-maintenance, like simply roasting a pear and pairing it with seasonal greens, shaved Parmesan and a simple balsamic vinaigrette. The possibilities are quite endless. Who says you have to quit your beach body regimen just because you’re wearing layers? Jump on the winter salad bandwagon and get ahead of the summertime game.

Here is a very simple winter salad that is as delicious as it is easy to prepare.

ICEWarm Roasted Radicchio, Smoked Mozzarella, Buckwheat, Aged Balsamic. (Photo courtesy of the Institute of Culinary Education)

***

Recipe: Warm Roasted Radicchio, Smoked Mozzarella, Buckwheat, Aged Balsamic

Ingredients

For the buckwheat:

  • 1 cup buckwheat groats (kasha)
  • 2 cups water
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

For the marinade:

  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 2 cloves of garlic, peeled and finely chopped
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes (optional)
  • 1 ball smoked mozzarella
  • 1 head radicchio
  • 1 bunch curly spinach, washed and spun dry

For the aged balsamic vinaigrette:

  • 3/4 cup aged Balsamic Vinegar of Modena (matured is also fine)
  • 2 cups extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
  • 1 tablespoon brown sugar
  • 2 cloves of minced garlic
  • 1/4 teaspoon sea salt
  • Cracked black pepper, to taste

Directions

  1. In a saucepot, add the buckwheat, water, oil and salt and bring to a simmer.
  2. Remove from heat when buckwheat is just tender, not overcooked and mushy, about 10 minutes at a mild simmer.
  3. Drain out the water and rinse buckwheat. Lay out on a sheet tray and let cool to room temperature. Once at room temperature, place it in a bowl and toss with olive oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper. Set aside.
  4. Take the head of radicchio and cut into quarters, leaving the bottom stem attached to hold the leaves together. Toss the radicchio quarters in the marinade until totally coated. In between the leaves, place thin slices of smoked mozzarella.
  5. Lay the stuffed radicchio on a sheet tray and roast in an oven at 350˚F until leaves are slightly wilted and cheese is melted. Remove from oven and set aside.
  6. In a stainless steel bowl, take washed spinach and toss with 3 tablespoons of the aged balsamic vinaigrette.
  7. On the plate or serving bowl, gently plate the warm stuffed radicchio. Place some of the buckwheat on top and finally, add the dressed spinach. Drizzle with balsamic as desired.

By Chef Chris Scott, Institute of Culinary Education

24 of the coziest dumpling recipes, from pierogi to gyoza

Lunar New Year is just about here: It’s the time for food, family, and traditions. And . . . dumplings. Because what better way is there to celebrate? Indeed, in Chinese culture, jiaozi, or steamed dumplings, are typically folded and eaten on New Year’s Eve; they’re said to symbolize luck and prosperity for the year ahead. They also symbolize deliciousness.

I, myself, am an equal-opportunity dumpling eater, year-round. But for some reason, making dumplings at home has never really occurred to me, but it’s actually the perfect weekend project. It’s a time investment, sure, but so are those sweet rolls I made this past spring, and that homemade whole-wheat tagliatelle. And there’s a huge upside: At home, I can put just about whatever I want in them, steam or fry them exactly to my preference, and freeze them for whenever a dumpling craving hits (they’ll probably run out soon). Best of all, dumpling-pleating seems like possibly the most therapeutic kitchen task imaginable, and I could always use a little chill.

So in the spirit of good luck and prosperity this Lunar New Year and beyond (and a satisfying weekend project, to boot), I’m happy to present 32 top-notch dumpling recipes: from pierogies to ravioligyoza to samosas.

Our Best Dumpling Recipes

1. Potato-Cheese Pierogi

Suzanne D’Amato, interviewed practically her whole family tree to reverse-engineer her Babcia’s potato–cheese pierogi recipe. And boy, are we glad she did. Try these boiled or pan-fried in butter, and topped with more butter and cool sour cream.

2. Sweet and Spicy Sesame Dumplings

These spicy and sweet fried dumplings are a head-scratcher — in a good way. They’re filled with a paste of nutty sesame seeds, chile, jaggery (a type of natural cane sugar), and salt, and deep-fried till they’re golden brown and puffed up. The fried dough exterior gets even crispier as it cools, an important incentive if you’re anything like impatient ol’ me (RIP roof of mouth).

3. Shrimp Soup Dumplings

Speaking of the burnt roof of my mouth, these shrimp and chicken consommé soup dumplings are another extremely tasty culprit — and also a pretty special project. Community member and recipe developer Kenny Lao even teaches a whole class on how to make these little babies! Luckily for us, Kenny breaks down the whole process here.

4. Savory Potato and Onion Knishes

These knishes are part onion-y mashed potatoes, part everything bagel, and entirely delicious. Definitely freeze some, unbaked, for a rainy day (or, you know, tomorrow).

5. Popo’s Pot Stickers

These pork pot stickers, the “gold standard of dumplings,” come from a legendary cook and beloved grandmother known as Popo. While Popo was known to make about 100 at a time, the recipe here makes 50 (but nobody’s saying you can’t double it).

6. Shish Barak (Lebanese Lamb Dumplings in Yogurt Sauce)

Ravioli-like pockets of harissa-spiced ground lamb are boiled, then topped with a cooling yogurt sauce, Aleppo pepper-infused butter, and dried mint (try saying that three times fast). Sending thanks to Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, and Palestine, who gave us Shish Barak.

7. Collards and Cheese Pasties

If you’ve never had a pasty (pronounced like “nasty,” though they’re instead extremely “tasty”), they’re a type of hand pie originating in Britain. This collard, cheese, and chorizo version has our name all over it (and is adaptable for vegetarians, if that’s how you roll).

8. Lamb Dumplings with Cucumber Vinegar Dipping Sauce

Here’s another lamb dumpling recipe hailing from the Middle East — but with a twist. Here, the filling is stuffed into wonton wrappers, and served with a zingy grated cucumber and rice vinegar dipping sauce that’s slightly reminiscent of East Asian flavors.

9. Mushi Gyoza (Steamed Gyoza)

Pork, shiitake mushrooms, and scallions are pretty epic foods on their own. But combine them all together and stuff them in tender gyoza wrappers? We’ll be back with you soon, as soon as we’ve finished making our batch. (PS: This one’s great to make with kids, who can lend their tiny hands to the pleating party!)

10. Baked Burrata Ravioli in Parmesan Broth

Oh, hi, hello, didn’t see you there. Was too busy drooling over these herby burrata-stuffed ravioli, served in a umami-rich Parmesan broth, aka all that is holy in this world. These are great to make ahead — tackle the broth, the pasta, the filling, and the garnish either all at once or over the course of the weekend — and eat well for a while after that.

11. Coconut Curry Puffs

These Southeast Asian-inspired curry puffs are basically a handheld spicy chicken (or turkey) potpie — but they’re also deep-fried, and I’ve never met a fried food I didn’t like.

12. Flaked Baked Samosas

Puff pastry dough comes to the rescue! In these flaky samosas, it’s the perfect, snuggly blanket around a curried-potato filling. My mom used to make a very similar dish growing up, and now I officially have no excuse to ask her to make it when I go home and visit.

13. Beet Casunziei

Ravioli (technically casunziei, a similar Northern Italian dish), we meet again — missed ya! These beet-filled pasta pillows are pretty in pink and topped with a luscious pat of butter and a sprinkling of poppy seeds. You can use store-bought wonton wrappers if you’re not looking to make your own fresh pasta (but if you’re me, you’re always looking to make your own fresh pasta).

14. Grandma Clari’s Empanadas

These Argentine classics are stuffed primarily with spiced beef, and punchy accents like green olives, raisins, and spring onions play a supporting role. A tender beef-fat dough encases the filling, baking up to be super flaky and delicious. Make sure you blow on them extra carefully before you eat.

15. Punjabi Buttermilk Stew with Spinach Dumplings

Community member Shveta Berry grew up eating this rich and tangy buttermilk stew with soft fried spinach dumplings — her mother would make “an enormous pot of it” and the dish would get better as the days passed and the flavors developed. Though these aren’t stuffed dumplings, they absolutely qualify as little pockets of joy.

16. Afghan Dumplings with Lamb Kofta and Yogurt Sauce

These spiced lamb dumplings were the winner of the “Your Best Dumplings” contest for good reason: they’re simple, made with wonton wrappers; they’re convenient, as they can be assembled in advance and frozen; and they’re dang delicious. If you don’t believe me, believe reader PaulaE: “I have made this dish at least 10 times now, and every single friend I’ve served it to has asked for the recipe. It’s a real stand-out and a permanent part of my go-to repertoire.”

17. Boiled Pork Dumplings with Dad’s Awesome Hot Sauce

This simplified take on classic pork dumplings (all hail premade gyoza wrappers and an unfussy, pleat-less folding technique) gets an extra boost from an equally simple, utterly delicious spicy dipping sauce. Freeze a double batch of the dumplings ahead of time and thank yourself later.

18. Mediterranean Dumplings with Yogurt-Mint Sauce

The dough in these traditional Lebanese dumplings is already super-intriguing, as it’s made with ground cherry pits. But then the pine nuts, allspice, and cinnamon that join ground lamb or beef in the filling make an equally bold statement. Last, a refreshing yogurt-garlic-mint sauce tops it all off, bringing some lightness and brightness to all the heady spices.

19. Baked Ricotta and Smoked Salmon Dumplings in Gyoza Skin

Kind of like a bagel and lox, but . . . not. The hardest part about this recipe is the dumpling-shaping, thanks to ready-to-eat smoked salmon and store-bought gyoza wrappers. We’ll gladly take the assist.

20. Avocado Dumplings in Curry Tomato Broth

Another non-stuffed friend that’s always welcome to our table. A light, cooling batter made with avocado creates a fluffy biscuit that’s perfect for floating in a spicy, tomatoey broth.

21. Vietnamese Style Shu Mai

Community member Yuko did extensive research to create this perfect dumpling hybrid: It’s got a rice-and all-purpose-flour encasing, that’s somewhere between a traditional shu mai wrapper and a fresh spring roll. It’s also got ground pork, shrimp, lemongrass, and lots of bright herbs, and is served with a fish sauce dipping sauce — flavors that skew Vietnamese, but also hearken back to Cantonese traditions.

22. Pancit Molo (Filipino Pork Dumpling Soup)

Shrimp, pork, onions, and scallions are tucked into these little parcels, which then make their way into a rich and warming chicken broth. Crispy fried shallots and garlic are listed as “optional” garnishes, but really, who’s kidding themselves.

23. German Steamed Dumplings with Blueberry Sauce

And now, for a little dessert dumpling action. Similar to Chinese steamed buns in texture (light and fluffy) and slightly sweet flavor (just two tablespoons of sugar in the dough), these pillowy yeasted dumplings are made better only by the tart-sweet blueberry compote on top. And if the word “yeast” sends you into a panic, know that this recipe is as simple as can be (just throwing stuff into a mixing bowl, kneading, then letting things rest), but you will need to set a bit of time aside to make it — a perfect weekend project, if you ask me.

24. Apple Dumplings

Speaking of simple, these apple dumplings from Erin McDowell have all the flavors and appeal of a warm and comforting apple pie, but with a fraction of the time and effort. You’ll lightly sweeten and spice whole Honeycrisp apples with cinnamon, nutmeg, and sugar, then swaddle it in pie dough and bake it in the oven. There’s an optional apple cider caramel sauce to drizzle on top, too — but we all know it’s necessary.

25. Chicken Gyoza with Yuzu Dipping Sauce

A simple filling of ground chicken, cabbage, and soy sauce (and OK, a few other aromatics) are tucked into store-bought gyoza wrappers, formed, and pan-fried until crispy. They’re served alongside a three-ingredient dipping sauce.

26. Hanetsuki Gyoza with Thanksgiving Leftovers

Bet you never thought to make dumplings with your Thanksgiving leftovers, did ya? Leftover roasted turkey, Brussels sprouts, mashed potatoes, gravy — aka the whole feast — is mixed with fresh ginger, sesame oil, garlic, and soy sauce for a bite-sized version of yesterday’s feast.

27. Perfect Vegetable Dumplings

If you’re looking for a creative use of leftovers, make dumplings! I know I just mentioned Thanksgiving leftovers, but these are more for your everyday leftover veggies like mushrooms, carrots, cabbage, and ginger. Recipe developer WoonHeng Chia also added tofu to the mix, but feel free to use ground chicken or pork instead.

28. Shanghai Shao Mai (Sticky Rice Dumplings)

If you’re someone who prefers the filling in dumplings rather than the doughy wrapper, the popular Dim Sum snack known as Shao Mai are going to be right up your alley.

29. Sonoko Sakai’s Gyoza

If you need me, I’ll be on the couch, binging Succession, and eating every single one of these classic pork dumplings, which are pan-fried and served with spicy chile oil and soy sauce for dipping.

30. Brisket Empanadas

This recipe breaks down how to make empanada dough, shape them into individual rounds, and fill each one with braised spicy tomato brisket.

31. Cuban Beef Empanadas

“Every country has their own renditions and fillings that span the range from savory, to spicy, to sweet. These are classic Cuban empanadas, filled with a minced meat filling called ‘picadillo,'” writes recipe developer Sandra Gutierrez. Follow her step-by-step guide to making these popular Latin American snacks and you’ll be frying them by the dozens in no time.

32. Monika’s Perfect Polish Pierogi

Good-quality pierogies are equally about the filling as about the dough. This classic iteration calls for potatoes, bacon, farmers’ cheese (pressed cottage cheese), and a little bit of onion.

They were the pandemic’s perfect victims

By the time Cheryl Cosey learned she had COVID-19, she had gone three days without dialysis — a day and a half more than she usually waited between appointments. She worried how much longer she could wait before going without her life-saving treatments would kill her.

The 58-year-old Cosey was a dialysis technician for years before she herself was diagnosed with end-stage renal disease. After that, she usually took a medical transport van to a dialysis facility three days a week. There, she sat with other patients for hours in the same kind of cushioned chairs where she’d prepped her own patients, connected to machines that drew out their blood, filtered it for toxins, then pumped it back into their fatigued bodies.

Her COVID-19 diagnosis in the pandemic’s first weeks, after she’d been turned away from a dialysis facility because of a fever, meant Cosey was battling two potentially fatal diseases. But even she didn’t know how dangerous the novel coronavirus was to her weakened immune system.

Had she realized the risks, she would have had her daughter Shardae Lovelady move in. Just the two of them in Cosey’s red brick home on Chicago’s West Side, looking out at the world through the sliding glass door in the living room, leaving only for her dialysis.

After Cosey’s positive test in April 2020, Lovelady had to take her mother to a facility that treated patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19. The facility fit her in for one of its last appointments the next day.

At that point, Cosey had gone more than four days without dialysis.

Four hours later, after Cosey completed her treatment, Lovelady returned to the nearly deserted building to bring her mother home, the sun having long disappeared from the sky. Cosey, dressed in a sweater and a green spring jacket, was disoriented, her breathing sporadic.

Alone with her mother on the sidewalk, Lovelady ran inside to ask workers for help getting Cosey out of her wheelchair and into her car.

“They offered no assistance,” Lovelady said. “They treated her as though she was an infection.”

(A spokesperson for the facility said employees aren’t allowed to help patients once they leave, for safety reasons.)

As Lovelady waited for paramedics to arrive, she grabbed a blanket from her car to wrap around her mother.

“My mother has COVID. I know she has COVID, but I didn’t care,” Lovelady said. “I hugged her and just held on until the ambulance came.”

Then she followed the flashing lights to the hospital.

* * *

In the three decades before the pandemic, the number of Americans with end-stage renal disease had more than quadrupled, from about 180,000 in 1990 to about 810,000 in 2019, according to the United States Renal Data System, a national data registry. About 70% of these patients relied on dialysis in 2019; the other 30% received kidney transplants.

The Midwest stood out as the region with the highest rate of patients with the disease, and Illinois had the nation’s third highest prevalence after Washington, D.C., and South Dakota, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A rare bright spot was the downturn in the death rate. Although diagnoses have been going up, death rates for patients who are on dialysis have declined since the early 2000s.

Then COVID-19 struck. Nearly 18,000 more dialysis patients died in 2020 than would have been expected based on previous years. That staggering toll represents an increase of nearly 20% from 2019, when more than 96,000 patients on dialysis died, according to federal data released this month.

The loss led to an unprecedented outcome: The nation’s dialysis population shrank, the first decline since the U.S. began keeping detailed numbers nearly a half century ago.

They were COVID-19’s perfect victims.

“It can’t help but feel like a massive failure when we have such a catastrophic loss of patients,” said Dr. Michael Heung, a clinical professor of nephrology at the University of Michigan. “It speaks to just how bad this pandemic has been and how bad this disease is.”

Before most patients reach advanced kidney failure, they are diagnosed with diabetes, hypertension or a host of other underlying conditions. Their immune systems are severely compromised, meaning they are essentially powerless to survive the most dangerous infections.

Many are old and poor. They also are disproportionately Black, as was Cosey. A 2017 study called end-stage renal disease “one of the starkest examples of racial/ethnic disparities in health.” Those inequities carried through to the pandemic. Dialysis patients who were Black or Latino, according to federal data, suffered higher rates of COVID-19 by every metric: infection, hospitalization, death.

Their deaths went largely unnoticed.

* * *

To get their treatments, the majority of dialysis patients in the U.S. must leave the relative safety of their homes and travel to a facility, often with strangers on public or medical transportation. Once at the dialysis center, they typically gather together in a large room for three to four hours.

The fear of contracting the virus was enough to keep many from venturing out for medical care, including those already on dialysis and those set to get the treatment for the first time. Exactly how long patients can go without dialysis depends on a number of factors, but doctors generally begin to worry if they miss two of their thrice-weekly sessions.

Dr. Kirsten Johansen, director of the United States Renal Data System, said the rates of people starting dialysis had been relatively stable until the pandemic. “Then the floor fell out,” she said in an interview.

COVID-19’s collateral damage played out in other ways as well. It meant that people delayed going to the hospital for everything from heart disease to cancer. For dialysis patients, whose life expectancy in some cases is three decades shorter than the general population, the results were calamitous. Hospitalizations of dialysis patients for reasons unrelated to COVID-19 dropped 33% between late March and April of 2020, federal data shows.

Dr. Delphine Tuot, a nephrologist and associate professor at University of California San Francisco and Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center who focuses on vulnerable populations, found herself pleading with some of her patients to come in for their regular dialysis appointments.

One of them was a 60-year-old man whose shortness of breath landed him in the hospital in February. Doctors scheduled dialysis three times a week, and though he was initially resistant, Tuot said, he came around once he realized he would die without it.

Still, he missed appointments. When Tuot followed up, he told her he was afraid to leave the house because he was caring for his wife who had cancer, and he didn’t want to contract COVID and bring it home to her. Soon a cycle began. He skipped treatments, fluid built up in his body and an ambulance rushed him to the hospital because he couldn’t breathe. He got dialysis, was sent home and got back on track.

When cases surged and the delta variant took hold this summer, the cycle restarted — until he skipped dialysis for three weeks in a row, so long that his heart couldn’t recover, according to Tuot. He died last month.

Despite early efforts to mask and isolate patients at dialysis facilities, one study found the rate of COVID-19 hospitalizations of dialysis patients from March to April 2020 was 40 times higher than the general population.

Even with skyrocketing hospitalizations, it took three months after vaccines were approved before federal officials provided vaccinations to dialysis clinics, despite advocacy groups urging that this high-risk population be prioritized.

Although dialysis centers were swift to implement safety protocols in the pandemic’s early days, some facilities didn’t follow their own infection control policies, including washing hands properly, keeping workers home when sick or disinfecting equipment, federal inspection records show.

And home dialysis, which has been shown to be safer for patients during the pandemic, is out of reach for many, especially Black and Latino patients. Nephrologists had pushed for greater access to home dialysis before the pandemic; that need is more apparent now than ever, Tuot said.

“The fact that individuals had to go to a center with other individuals who are equally immunocompromised and had to get to that center, whether that was by public transportation or by van transportation, it’s clearly additional risks,” Tuot said. “Bottom line, they are very vulnerable. They’re very sick.”

* * *

The ambulance took Cosey to Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center. Lovelady filled in the staff on her mother’s medical history of end-stage renal disease, high blood pressure and asthma. The next day, Cosey called her daughter from her hospital bed. Lovelady noticed marked improvement from the night before.

“She sounded like herself,” Lovelady said. “We joked around a little bit. I asked her what kind of medicine she was on. She said they started her on dialysis.”

One by one, Lovelady added her sister, cousin and brother to the call. They told Cosey she had scared them, but now that she was doing better, they teased that they needed her to come home to bake her famous cheesecake. Her grandchildren hadn’t stopped asking about her either. They missed movie nights at Cosey’s house, when she made them popcorn and covered the floor with blankets.

Cosey’s boisterous laugh reassured them.

When Lovelady sensed her mother tiring, she told her she’d call her back the next day.

“Go ahead and get some rest,” she said.

* * *

While the arrival of the pandemic rocked the health care system as a whole, the effect on dialysis facilities has received little attention.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services typically monitor the facilities through routine inspections and surprise visits to investigate specific complaints. But federal officials are two years overdue on more than 5,000 inspections at dialysis facilities across the country, Medicare data shows, and three years behind on more than 3,000 of them. Since the start of 2020, the number of inspections to dialysis facilities by government officials fell by more than 30% from the previous two years, ProPublica found. Complaints made up a larger portion of investigations. In 2019, 35% of total visits were in response to complaints. Last year, it jumped to 51%.

A spokesperson for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said in a statement that the pandemic forced the agency to temporarily suspend or delay inspections for non-urgent complaints and routine inspections to focus on infection control and critical concerns that placed patients in immediate jeopardy. The agency is working with states, which act on behalf of federal officials, to address the resulting backlog, the spokesperson said, but “nearly all state agencies report insufficient resources to complete the required, ongoing federal workload.”

The spokesperson said “the COVID-19 pandemic has presented a unique challenge unlike any other in history and has impacted our routine oversight work,” adding that “complaint investigations remain our first priority to ensure we address the immediate needs of patients receiving care in dialysis facilities.”

Insufficient funding has compounded those challenges. The budget for inspections has “been flatlined” since fiscal year 2015, while the number of dialysis facilities has increased by 21% to nearly 8,000 today, according to the agency. After several years of requesting more money, the centers were approved to receive an increase for fiscal year 2022.

When investigators did inspect dialysis facilities, they found some violations specific to COVID-19 and others that involved general safety lapses, according to federal records from March 2020 to July 2021.

A dialysis patient who started treatment just before the pandemic died after a nurse at a Kentucky facility failed to properly dilute an antibiotic, according to inspection reports. Minutes after the medicine began dripping through an IV, the patient said: “My body is on fire! It’s going through my whole body,” records show.

At a New York facility, another patient died after losing more than 1 1/2 pints of blood when their catheter became disconnected, according to federal records. That same facility underreported its number of deaths in the first 11 months of the pandemic by 16 people.

Federal officials issued their most serious citation to an Indiana facility for refusing to provide dialysis to a patient suspected of having COVID-19. The patient’s previous dialysis had also been cut short because their assisted living facility did not provide them transportation after 9:15 p.m. So they did not receive a complete treatment.

An estimated 5% to 10% of end-stage renal patients live in congregate settings, such as nursing homes or assisted living facilities. The same factors that led to nursing home populations being decimated — age, health, difficulty isolating — applied to those dialysis patients. In the first months of the pandemic, they contracted the virus at a rate more than 17 times higher than those who lived independently, according to one study.

Workers at those facilities weren’t immune either. Oluwayemisi Ogunnubi, 59, worked as a nurse administering dialysis to patients inside a nursing home on Chicago’s South Side. A Nigerian immigrant, she had sent money home to pay for her children’s schooling until she was able to bring them to the U.S. Her smile and supportive nature made her popular among her coworkers, according to an official at Concerto Renal Services, the dialysis company where she worked.

On April 21, 2020, Ogunnubi’s body began to ache, and she was sent home early from work. She was later taken to a hospital, where she tested positive for COVID-19. She died three days later, federal and county records show.

Occupational Safety and Health Administration officials cited Concerto, and levied a penalty of $12,145. The company provided employees who performed dialysis on patients with N95 respirators, but investigators found that Concerto’s written procedures weren’t complete and that the company had failed to provide medical evaluations that ensured employees knew how to use the respirators.

Two other Concerto employees, including one who fell ill the same day as Ogunnubi, contracted COVID-19 at the time but survived. Within two weeks of Ogunnubi’s death, 10 residents at the nursing home died of complications related to COVID-19, according to Cook County Medical Examiner records. Half had kidney failure.

Kyle Stone, Concerto’s executive vice president and general counsel, said the first and only COVID-related death of an employee shook the company. Stone said Concerto “made a difficult choice” to use respirator masks without providing medical evaluations to employees, but it “was clearly the correct choice under the circumstances.”

If Concerto had been required to fulfill every aspect of OSHA requirements for a written policy that early in the pandemic, he said, the company would not have been able to provide the respirator masks, “almost certainly resulting in greater risk of harm and death.”

OSHA’s failure to “see and appreciate” the trying circumstances at the time, Stone said, was “baffling and disappointing.” Concerto eventually settled with OSHA, which downgraded the violation and reduced the penalty to $9,000.

“We are quite proud of our work in 2020 during the eye of the COVID storm,” Stone said.

As devastating as the pandemic has been, many experts say it could have been worse. Dr. Alan Kliger, a clinical professor of medicine at Yale School of Medicine, co-chaired the American Society of Nephrology COVID-19 Response Team that held weekly calls with chief medical officers from 30 or so dialysis companies, including the largest two, DaVita and Fresenius. The facilities, Kliger said, implemented universal masking and patient screenings before the CDC recommended them. They also treated COVID-19 patients in separate shifts or at specifically designated isolation clinics.

“There’s been a tremendous amount of collaboration and sharing of information and uptake of best practices in this group of competitive companies,” Kliger said. “They really rallied together to protect patients.”

Epidemiologist Eric Weinhandl said that there’s another battle on the horizon with the omicron variant spreading rapidly, which he finds especially worrisome given how federal officials failed by not distributing vaccines to dialysis facilities in December 2020.

“It’s heartbreaking because you look at this, and much like nursing home residents, these patients are completely vulnerable. But they still have to go to a dialysis facility three times a week,” Weinhandl said. “Why wouldn’t you prioritize this population?”

The CDC said in a statement that “demand exceeded supply” when vaccines were first authorized and “as supply increased and states adopted CDC’s recommendations, older adults and those with underlying health conditions began being prioritized.”

It wasn’t until March 25 that the Biden administration announced it was partnering with dialysis facilities to send vaccines to patients at the centers.

Now, Weinhandl wonders if dialysis patients will be a priority if the federal government approves a second round of boosters for high-risk patients.

“Is there a plan? Because I think that there should be,” he said. “I think this is getting pretty predictable. Every time COVID surges, you see the dialysis population’s excess mortality surge with it.”

Sometimes the frailty of dialysis patients is no match for COVID-19’s brutality.

Oscar and Donna Perez were the kind of siblings who loved each other without judgment or condition. After Oscar began dialysis in 2018, Donna picked him up from his appointments three nights a week. She cut his toenails when his feet were too swollen for him to reach and massaged them when the pain woke him up at night.

He was her son’s godfather, her best friend who shared his love of music with her — especially the 1960s R&B singer Billy Stewart — and annoyed her in the way only brothers can, swatting her feet off chairs just as she got comfortable and pestering her with questions when she was deep into Instagram.

But Oscar Perez was sick. In addition to his failing kidneys, the 38-year-old Latino father struggled with hypertension, diabetes and congestive heart failure. In early January, doctors performed coronary bypass surgery. He was not yet eligible for the vaccine, but the hospital tested him for COVID-19 when he was admitted. He was negative.

He went home on Jan. 18, the same day as the wake for his uncle, who, his family said, died after he missed too many dialysis appointments. But the next day, Oscar collapsed at home, confused and mumbling in pain, with signs that the coronavirus was flourishing in his lungs. He was rushed back to the hospital. A doctor called to tell Donna Perez that her brother had tested positive and needed to be intubated.

On Jan. 31, doctors called Donna again and told her that her brother’s condition was declining fast. She picked up her parents, another brother and his girlfriend, and headed to the hospital to visit Oscar from outside the glass door of his room. They told doctors to try to resuscitate him if his heart stopped.

That night, after they returned home, Donna Perez’s phone rang one more time. Oscar’s doctor said he probably wasn’t going to make it through the night. This time, they could visit him in his hospital room in PPE.

Seeing her brother up close, swollen and helpless, she leaned in, hugged him, and said, “I can tell you’re tired. You can go.” Donna promised to take care of his daughter.

Her family pushed back and said she had to tell him to be strong.

Donna told them they needed to let Oscar go. He died a few hours later.

“This disaster is one that befalls dialysis patients, with diabetes especially, regularly,” Dr. David Goldfarb, clinical director of the nephrology division at NYU Langone Health in New York City, who reviewed Oscar Perez’s medical records for ProPublica.

“Of course, it’s possible to do better,” he continued. “Given his age, it’s really tragic.”

* * *

The advent of technology to filter a patient’s blood revolutionized kidney care in the 1950s, and people lined up to get access to the limited number of machines. In 1960, one hospital created its own admissions panel, later nicknamed the “God committee,” to review cases to decide who would receive the groundbreaking treatment.

Twelve years later, Congress approved legislation that created the Medicare End Stage Renal Disease program, which guaranteed coverage of medical care, including dialysis and kidney transplants. It remains the only disease-specific Medicare entitlement program, credited by some as possibly saving more lives than any other federal government program. Generally, Medicare only covers those over age 65 and the disabled, but this program is available to people of all ages with end-stage renal disease.

Total Medicare-related spending in 2019 on end-stage renal disease patients topped $50 billion. Even with that budget, the agency hasn’t been able to fix persistent health disparities. That year, Black patients were more than four times more likely than their white counterparts to have the disease.

Black patients also progressed from chronic kidney disease to end-stage renal disease three times as often as white patients. Yet they are less likely to start off their dialysis treatments on a waiting list for a transplant — or eventually receive one from a living donor — than white patients.

In a statement, Medicare said it is working to address the disparities and said it is “committed to ensuring the health and safety” of all its dialysis patients.

Another area of concern is home dialysis, which research has shown is cheaper than in-center dialysis and offers similar or better survival rates, enhanced quality of life and greater flexibility. Barriers to home dialysis affect all patients, but the percentages of Black and Hispanic patients receiving home dialysis in 2019 were 10% and 11% respectively, compared with white and Asian patients at 17% each.

The push for closing that gap has gained traction, bolstered by federal data that found COVID-19 hospitalizations rates of patients who underwent home dialysis from late March to June 2020 were between one-quarter and one-third those of patients traveling to dialysis facilities.

“We do have to figure out a way to do better because we’re really, in essence, causing harm, when we’re not able to divert proper resources to patients who most require them,” said Dr. Kirk Campbell, a nephrology professor and vice chair of medicine for diversity, equity and inclusion at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.

Some patients don’t have the space to store the supplies needed for home dialysis. Others are overwhelmed by the prospect of having to keep the area around the catheter clean to prevent infection. But, Campbell said, that’s where patient education comes in. The most common type of home dialysis, called peritoneal dialysis, often is done at night while the patient is sleeping and does not involve blood flowing outside the body.

While home dialysis isn’t possible for all patients, some doctors are hesitant to recommend it at all, in part because the clinicians lack the training, experience or a certain comfort level with it. That’s especially true, Campbell said, for patients of color and those from disadvantaged backgrounds. There’s often an unconscious bias that those patients won’t be able to handle it, he said.

Campbell and others said it’s critical that clinicians receive additional training in home dialysis. He leads one of the few nephrology fellowship programs in the country where doctors can spend an extra year specializing in home dialysis. The results have been so promising, he said, that they hope to expand.

In July 2019, the Trump administration issued an executive order aimed at revamping kidney care in the United States through the Department of Health and Human Services’ Advancing American Kidney Health initiative. The goals of the initiative were lofty — some say unrealistic — and included having 80% of new end-stage renal disease patients in the U.S. receive in-home dialysis or transplants by 2025. In 1972, the year the Medicare program passed, 40% of patients were on home dialysis. Currently, about 13% of patients are receiving dialysis at home.

Starting January, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services will offer facilities greater reimbursement for improving their home dialysis rates for low-income patients.

Some observers say the change doesn’t go far enough. In September, U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, an Illinois Democrat, and Rep. Jason Smith, a Republican from Missouri, proposed legislation that would require Medicare to pay for workers to assist patients who need additional help with home dialysis. The measure, which was introduced without much fanfare, also calls for greater patient education around the treatment and a federal study analyzing racial disparities.

Hong Kong, where about three in four patients are on peritoneal dialysis, is a global leader in home treatment. Patients there receive peritoneal dialysis first unless there is a medical reason that would preclude it.

Dr. Isaac Teitelbaum, a nephrologist who has been the medical director of the home dialysis unit at the University of Colorado School of Medicine since 1986, said expanded training for clinicians and incentives for patients, including a reduced co-pay or a tax credit, could encourage more patients to dialyze at home.

“You don’t live just so you can do dialysis. You do dialysis so that you can enjoy life,” he said. “You do dialysis so that you can watch your children and grandchildren grow up and so that you can participate in family events and go on vacations.”

Cheryl Cosey was not offered home dialysis, her family said. Shardae Lovelady said it might have made all the difference for her mother.

Cosey’s health deteriorated quickly after the call from her hospital bed. Doctors transferred Cosey to the intensive care unit, put her on a ventilator and gave her medication to push the oxygen from her lungs into her bloodstream, according to hospital records.

The family braced themselves. Lovelady drove to Minnesota to pick up her sister. She gathered everyone for a big dinner the way her mother used to do.

Lovelady and her sister stayed up late talking, finally dozing off when the house quieted.

When the phone rang at three in the morning, Lovelady recognized the hospital’s 312 area code.

Everything she had done to prepare for that moment suddenly vanished, and she allowed herself to hope.

The call was short. She never even flipped on the bedroom light. She turned to her sister, who was asleep next to her, and nudged her awake.

“Mama gone.”


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31 New Year’s Day dinners for good luck

New Year’s Day dinner can mean a lot of different things to different people: If you resolve to eat healthier, you may be looking for recipes packed with protein and veggies. If this is the year when you are finally going to learn how to cook basic, classic recipes like roast chicken and lasagna, we have our go-to recipes. It may mean a chance to break old habits and try new recipes. It may also mean that this is one of your last days to spend with your extended family and friends during the holidays so one final hurrah in the form of a crowd-friendly dinner is in the cards.

No matter what hopes and dreams you have for the New Year, we hope it’s filled with good luck and delicious food.

10 DIY Decorations for Your New Year’s Eve Party

1. Cheesy, Creamy Black-Eyed Peas

For many folks in the South, eating black-eyed peas and greens on New Year’s Day is a sign of prosperity and good fortune. There are a number of theories for why this may be true, but this Brazilian recipe is a delicious way to test out the superstition for yourself.

2. Cast-Iron Skillet Cornbread

Another tradition is eating skillet cornbread on New Year’s Day. I will never make an argument against eating more cornbread, so this is a tradition I can get behind; the golden color is said to resemble gold and consuming it is believed to bring you great wealth in the upcoming year.

3. My Big Fat Halloumi Salad

This is for everyone who resolved to eat healthier in the New Year and is already regretting it: the crunch from roasted almonds, sweet dates, roasted eggplant, crispy chickpeas, and grilled Halloumi is proof that better-for-you meals can also taste better than you imagined.

4. Instant Pot (or Not) Soy-Ginger Pork with Noodles and Greens

In Japanese culture, eating long, squiggly noodles (okay, I added in the squiggly part) is said to be a symbol of a long life ahead and pork is seen as another food symbolic of prosperity. Together, they make for one satisfying, savory meal that bodes well for everyone.

5. Zesty and Zippy Tangled Collards

Feeling lucky? Like cornbread, the color of collards represents a prosperous New Year, only this time it’s in relation to green money.

6. Chickpeas and Cheddar Sauce with Chickpea Crispies

If you’re hoping to incorporate more protein-rich, plant-based ingredients in your diet during the new year, this chickpea-based mac and cheese is a great place to start. Plus, it’s kid-friendly for your little ones to enjoy while they’re home on school break.

7. Andrea Nguyen’s Vegan “Chicken” Phở

Trying your hand at cooking pho is a great way to kickstart your resolution of cooking more in general. It takes quite some time to put together, which makes this a great recipe for your day off.

8. Vegan Slow-Cooker Tomatillo Stew

Resolved to eat less meat in the new year? This hearty stew is packed with two kinds of beans, canned diced chiles, and tomatillos. Our readers have tried adding tofu, tempeh, and plant-based beef to the mix with much success.

9. Pad Thai from Kris Yenbamroong

Follow Kris Yenbamroong’s tips for making his famous pad thai recipe for a simple and delicious New Year’s Day dinner.

10. Mimi’s Pan Pizza Dough, Two Ways

If you have kiddos at home who are going stir-crazy over winter break, get them to help out in the kitchen by making this sheet pan pizza with all of the toppings that their heart desires.

11. Porcini Mushroom Risotto

This seemingly simple rice dish all comes down to technique. “Two of the most important tips for making sure it comes out perfectly: Don’t overlook the quality of the broth and make sure the rice has a good bite,” writes Kristina Gill. Fortunately, you have all day — make that all year — to perfect your craft and consistently churn out fantastic risotto.

12. Sheet-Pan Shrimp and Broccoli with Cocktail-Sauce Sauce

If you aren’t entirely shrimp cocktailed-out after the holiday season, this low-key sheet pan supper will hit the spot.

13. Slow-Roasted Chicken with Extra-Crisp Skin

Our editorial team calls this a best-of-all-worlds roast chicken. “In one simple recipe, you get both extremely tender, rotisserie-esque meat, plus the crispiest skin imaginable. Unheard of! It’s also just about impossible to overcook and extra-easy to carve, and not one bit will go to waste — all thanks to one of the more surprising Genius tricks yet.”

14. Tangy Baked Salmon with Calabrian Chile

Historically, healthy food hasn’t always gone hand in hand with comfort food. But away with antiquated tradition and in with this baked salmon dish that is equal parts nutritious and warming.

15. Pasta with Green Pea Sauce and Lots of Pecorino

This pasta dish is an ode to spring, which is just peeking around the corner, giving us a glimpse of its minty, fresh flavor.

16. Lentil, Tomato and Olive Baked Cod with Lemon-Caper Vinaigrette

In Italy, lentils are believed to bring good luck on New Year’s Day (a delicious superstition that dates back to ancient Rome). Here, they’re nestled with tomatoes, olives, and cod for a cold-weather healthy dinner that will feed a crowd.

17. Tomato Soup with a Whole Head of Garlic

In most parts of the country, New Year’s Day doesn’t just mean a chance to reset; it also means the dead of winter is here. Hunker down with a bowl of this flavorful and uber-easy soup recipe that will keep you satisfied on those single-degree days.

18. Instant Pot Beef Bourguignon

Are you sensing a theme? Can you tell I’m cold? Nothing warms the soul — or feeds a crowd — the way that beef bourguignon does. Making it in an Instant Pot is ideal for impromptu guests.

19. Brown Butter Pasta with Butternut Squash, Walnuts, and Sage

I’m just going to come out and say it — I miss fall. It’s January (or maybe almost January, depending on when you’re reading this). The holidays are over. Everything is dark and cold and miserable. But this nutty, buttery pasta dish studded with walnuts and sprinkled with sage reminds me that there are good things in life to be happy about.

20. Chetna Makan’s Vegetarian Chili

The epitome of cold weather comfort-food is chili. You can make an absolutely delicious, hearty version without any meat at all; this one puts kidney beans and black beans in marquee lighting.

21. Cheesy, Meaty Lasagna

Rick Martinez developed quite possibly our favorite lasagna recipe of all time. Every element of it is just very, very good.

22. Instant Pot Pork Chops with Mushrooms and Parmesan

Did you just receive an Instant Pot for Christmas and have absolutely no idea what to do with it? Been there, done that, and then made this fabulous bone-in pork chop recipe. It’s a home-cooked meal that resembles the best kind of restaurant cooking.

23. Chickpea Noodle Soup

We love a flexible, versatile recipe that’s not too fussy. In fact, that’s kind of our MO. “I call for a variety of vegetables, but don’t make a special trip to the store if you’re missing one or two. Embrace substitutions. The combination of protein-rich chickpeas and starchy noodles give this hearty vegan soup body,” says recipe developer and substitution stan Abra Berens.

24. One-Pot Squash and Barley Bowl with Miso

The creamy, savory flavors of this grain bowl is perfect for winter. “This easy one-pot meal is the kind of dish that looks and tastes like something you’ve been simmering all day, but it actually comes together in under 45 minutes — with very little attention,” writes Amy Chaplin.

25. Perfect Vegetable Dumplings

Challenge yourself to learn a new cooking technique in the New Year with this beautifully simple recipe for dumplings made with homemade wrappers.

26. Slow-Cooker Pasta e Fagioli

27. Vegan Mushroom Pie with Melted Leeks and Herbs

New Year’s Day means a few things: it’s probably cold outside, you probably have family around, and you probably have some time to spend cooking in the kitchen. I wouldn’t call this meatless pie a labor of love, but it does require some care and attention — in my book, it’s perfect for dinner.

28. Rao’s Meatballs

When we talk about mastering essential skills in the kitchen, meatballs tops the list. If you’ve never made them before, there’s no better recipe to start with than NYC’s famed Rao’s restaurant, which calls for warm water for extra moisture.

29. Butternut Squash Risotto with Mushrooms

This creamy risotto recipe is a one-two punch of family-friendly comfort food that has a seasonal spin for January. “Pour yourself a glass of wine, turn on the music, and stir your way to relaxation,” writes recipe developer Eric Kim.

30. Slow-Cooker Chicken Soup with Ginger and Fennel

We are widely devoted to slow-cooker meals all throughout winter, but especially on New Year’s Day. Not only does it deliver consistently warm and nourishing meals, but its “set it and forget it” technology is perfect on a day when you may be feeling a little slow and sluggish.

31. Lazy Ratatouille with Pork Chops

Resolutions aside, this cozy pork and vegetable medley is perfect for a family dinner at the start of the New Year because baby, it’s still cold outside.

“Benedetta” is the latest in a history of sexy nunsploitation that dates back to Enlightenment

They say it’s not really the holiday season until “The Sound of Music” has aired on at least one channel, but this year there’s a new contender for Fraulein Maria’s crown. “Benedetta,” Paul Verhoeven‘s tale of sapphic sadomasochism, has been dubbed on Twitter as “the horny nun film” and has already prompted protests by Catholic organisations.

The film itself isn’t perfect – something gets lost between the homage to 1970s nunsploitation and a genuine interrogation of faith and desire – but it’s the response from audiences and critics alike that is telling. When you read the words “lesbian nuns,” you instinctively know that this isn’t going to be a sober examination of homophobia and misogyny within the Catholic church. 

“You know how us Catholic girls can be,” Alanis Morrisette snarled on “Jagged Little Pill” in 1995. “We make up for so much time a little too late.” Two years later a Guinness advert claimed that “36% of strippers have a convent education,” admitting in the next breath that this was a made up statistic – but didn’t it feel true? The cliché of Catholic schoolgirls as embryonic sluts, simmering in the pop culture lexicon since Ken Russell’s “The Devils” was released in 1970s, came to the boil in the last decade of the millennium as long-standing sexual abuse scandals in the Catholic church hit the headlines. 

 RELATED: Real-life “Thorn Birds”: I married a priest

The association of Catholicism and aberrant or excessive sexuality is so deeply embedded in our cultural consciousness that it’s taken for granted – but the roots go deeper and are more political than we know. In fact, the link between religion and sex was so intertwined that until the late 19th century, “pervert” could refer to not only sexual deviance but religious deviance as well – or, more frequently, both. The “Benedetta” Virgin Mary dildo and “Fleabag’s” Hot Priest are only recent examples of kinky Catholicism as entertainment that has its roots in the British Enlightenment.  

The Act of Uniformity in 1662 had formalized the Church of England and limited the rights of Catholics to worship publicly or stand for political office, but it was the intellectual movement prioritizing reason over superstition that helped relegate it to a relic of less evolved times. 

Before the 1700s, religion was the sole method of interpreting human experience in the Western world. As new philosophies entered cultural currency, the meaning bled out of what were once essential tools arbiting the relationship between God and man; now they were simply props. Political anti-Catholic propaganda capitalized on this, and by the Victorian era, symbols of Catholicism were now seen through a filter of eroticism. Even the idea of the sexy nun costume dates back to at least the 1890s according to Toulouse Lautrec who witnessed them at the infamous Rue des Moulins brothel.

Anti-Catholic propaganda as entertainment came about as the pushback against Catholic oppression began to take force. The Roman Catholic Relief Act of 1829 removed most of the restrictions put in place in 1662 and the century saw Irish immigration that boosted Britain’s Catholic population from 30,000 at the start of the century to 750,00 by the middle. The possibility of unfettered Catholicism in Britain, with its treasonous allegiances to a foreign leader in the Pope, was condemned heavily by The Times as a threat to the British way of life. 

Xenophobia mingled with the recent – and bloody – fights over Catholic vs. Protestant rule was presented as a threat not only to the British way of life and the family, but to virtue itself.  According to “The Confessional Unmasked,” a 19th century book purporting to be a glimpse into the secret and torrid life of papists, Catholic priests used the sanctity of the confessional to rape women, and secret entrances were built into convents to allow them to enter nuns’ bedrooms. In what became known as “the great convent scandal,” stories in the press abounded of young Protestent women forced into nunneries where they were made to convert, endure flagellation and to serve priests sexually. Few, if any, of these were provable but it whipped up a frenzy that saw public protests, popular songs threatening violence against bishops and Cardinals and an entire genre of Gothic fiction that saw its young heroines imprisoned in convents against their will. 

Ann Radcliffe’s “The Mysteries of Udolpho,” devoured by Catherine Morland and parodied by Jane Austen in “Northanger Abbey” features a woman in a nun’s habit that perfectly encapsulates the fetishized dichotomy of religious chastity and unbridled sexuality. The hugely popular novel, whose readers were mostly women, presents, “her countenance . . . partly shaded by a thin black veil, and touched . . . with inimitable softness. Hers was the contour of a Madonna, with the sensibility of a Magdalen.” 

Of course, there were more salacious options on offer if one wanted to truly empathize with the poor innocent – and nearly always attractive – young women seduced into a life of Communion wafers and secret vice. “The revolting crimes of Monks, and the horrible fate of Females inveigled into Nunneries by Catholic Priests,” as it was described in “The Appalling Record of Popish Converts and the Awful Disclosure of Tortured Nuns,” became the locus for a socially acceptable form of pornography that marked Catholicism out as not only other, but dangerous. 

RELATED: 15 sexual hang-ups we can blame on the Catholic church

These were presented as true accounts, but tellingly these days Google categorizes “The Confessional Unmasked” under not only Fiction but also Erotica. Increasing religious tolerance and shifting political priorities replaced Catholicism in the popular imagination by other cultural “threats” such as the suffragettes and homosexuality by the early 20th century, and it wasn’t until the 1970s that it resurfaced in the campy sister-on-sister action of nunsploitation. By that point the Church itself was modernizing in some areas, but stood firm against the sexual revolutions underway. 


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“Benedetta” comes after Andrew Scott’s Hot Priest won the hearts and groins of viewers everywhere, Mike Flanagan turned his horror gaze to the church in “Midnight Mass” and UK series “Derry Girls” gained a cult following. Once again, Catholicism is having a pop culture moment – but now it has a very different cultural context to contend with. Lesbianism onscreen is no longer confined to the institutional homosexuality of prisons and convents, so Voerhoven has to up the ante to give his audience thrills. By an accident of timing, the plague that threatens the convent and the surrounding areas feels more immediate – and dangerous – than the lingering shots of naked novitiates. 

Reviewing the film for Autostraddle, critic Drew Gregory noted, “If you go into ‘Benedetta’ wanting sacrilege, you will technically find it. But if you’re queer, sacrilege is nothing new.” Sapphic sex behind cloistered walls is no longer enough to shock when the Catholic church itself is grappling with the meaning of sexual sin and the role of LGBTQ worshippers, and the zeitgeist has refocused its attention on Islam as the foreign religious threat of the moment, using much of the same language as the Times did back in 1850. 

Critical reception has been mixed. Verhoeven is an accomplished filmmaker who deserves his reputation, and the film is visually stunning. But as the Catholic church creaks into the 21st century and queer media is having a heyday, “Benedetta” feels like a relic of a previous time, much as the confessional and transubstantiation felt to a world embracing the new ideas of the Enlightenment.

“Benedetta” is available in select theaters and on demand. Watch a trailer for it below, via YouTube.

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Olivia Colman is magnificent in the mysterious “Lost Daughter,” which hooks you and doesn’t let go

Maggie Gyllenhaal‘s auspicious directorial debut, “The Lost Daughter,” which she adapted from Elena Ferrante‘s novel, is both bold and fraught, not unlike Leda (Olivia Colman), its protagonist. 

A professor of comparative and Italian literature, Leda has arrived on a Greek island to have a “working” vacation. Checking into an apartment managed by Lyle (Ed Harris), she spends her days mostly on the beach, which is where she first sees Nina (Dakota Johnson) and her young daughter, Elena. When Nina’s sister Callie (Dagmara Domincyzk) asks Leda to move to another location so their family can celebrate a birthday together, Leda politely, but firmly, refuses. As Leda is leaving, she and Callie make peace — or least form a truce. Leda later learns from Will (Paul Mescal of “Normal People“), an employee at the beach, that Nina and Callie’s family are not to be challenged.

“The Lost Daughter” shows Leda trying to enjoy her vacation, but she is constantly triggered to thoughts of her own children. In these flashbacks, Leda is played by Jessie Buckley and her daughters are Bianca (Robyn Elwell) and Martha (Ellie Mae Blake). Gyllenhaal provides many possible clues about what transpired in the past to keep viewers guessing and engaged. 

But it is an early sequence where Elena go missing — and Leda finds her — that sets the present-day story in motion. When Leda and Nina meet, they are both intrigued by one another, and as they continue to meet, sometimes secretly, they find that they share many qualities. One thing that bonds them is Elena’s missing doll, which is causing Nina grief with her daughter. Leda, it is revealed, has the doll and is keeping it hidden in her apartment.

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Leda’s questionable behavior is fascinating, and Colman makes her absolutely captivating. Gyllenhaal closes in tight on Colman’s face so viewers can scrutinize her and try to understand what she is thinking. Most of the people she interacts with can’t or won’t read her signals. Lyle, for instance, tries to pick her up in the bar/restaurant where she is having dinner, and he cannot or will not take the clear hints that she is sending him to leave her alone. She also has a series of unsettling episodes where she gets hit by an object, goes pale, or gets dizzy, as if something has forced her to lose her sense of self momentarily. They certainly add to the enigmatic quality of her character and Colman makes her compelling. 

“The Lost Daughter” toggles back and forth between the two periods of Leda’s life and Gyllenhaal’s mosaic approach ultimately forms a clear picture. When Leda tells the pregnant Callie that children are a “crushing responsibility,” there are scenes of a dispirited young Leda trying (and failing) to control Bianca and Martha. Young Leda later admits that she is scared she cannot take care of her daughters, and viewers are likely to share her fear — or fear for her daughters. The scenes of young Leda trying to reprimand her child who hit her, or take a phone call without interruption, or even ignore her daughter’s pleadings in order to do some work, provide a very clear sense of her struggles with motherhood and her shame about being a “bad” mother. 

Nina’s experiences echo Leda’s as Elena is always crying or clinging to her. There is an empathy and frustration these two women share as well as their own selfish need for “alone time.” This is a tricky topic to portray, and Gyllenhaal features scenes of each woman pursuing extramarital affairs. Young Leda gets involved with Professor Hardy (Peter Sarsgaard, Gyllenhaal’s real life husband) while Nina takes up with Will. What the film is saying about women who want children and a sense of guilt or freedom is left for viewers to parse.

“The Lost Daughter” certainly raises as many questions as it answers, which is why it is so gratifying. Watching the adult Leda behave the way she does — setting boundaries and courting trouble at the same time — reveals her character. A scene of Leda challenging Nina’s powerful husband Toni (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) when she wants to get in her car — only to realize she parked somewhere else shows she can be wrong about things. Likewise, when a group of young men are disruptive at a cinema, Leda becomes incensed as her threats are ignored. Her anger may be righteous, but again, she is more humiliated than satisfied.

The film’s best scenes are the exchanges Leda has with Nina, who admires this stranger and becomes her confidante. Leda confesses something shocking from her past to Nina, but “The Lost Daughter” builds its tension in the unlikely friendship that develops between these two women. Will Nina learn that Leda has her daughter’s missing doll, and how will she react if or when she does?


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Gyllenhaal is best at creating a discomfiting mood in her psychological investigation of motherhood. However, a scene where Lyle comes with an octopus and cooks Leda dinner (with the stolen doll in plain sight) crackles, even if Gyllenhaal can’t resist cutting to shots of the doll. Yet the filmmaker’s decision to open the film with a scene that happens in the final moments is perhaps a mistake. Even if the episode is initially ambiguous, the film as a whole could have been even more powerful without the foreshadowing. 

Colman is magnificent as Leda, a woman whose tough exterior masks an equally hard interior. Colman does not strive to make Leda likable which may be exactly why viewers root for her. As the young Leda, Jessie Buckley captures the exasperation Leda feels having to always be there for her kids, and the exhilaration she experiences without them. It is a high-wire act of a performance and she balances it brilliantly. In support, Dakota Johnson is suitably alluring, suggesting there is something just a bit dangerous or off about Nina.  

Gyllenhaal’s film is mysterious too. It sinks its hooks into viewers and does not let go.

“The Lost Daughter” is now streaming on Netflix. Watch a trailer for it below, via YouTube.

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Remembering Betty White, America’s grandmother and the first lady of television, dead at 99

Betty White, the five-time Emmy Award winner died Friday morning, reports said, leaving behind legions of fans who came to love her over the course of a storied career spanning more than 81 years. She was 99.

TMZ first reported the news of White’s death, citing police sources who confirmed that she passed away at home just weeks before her 100th birthday. 

“Even though Betty was about to be 100, I thought she would live forever,” her agent and close friend Jeff Witjas told PEOPLE. “I will miss her terribly and so will the animal world that she loved so much. I don’t think Betty ever feared passing because she always wanted to be with her most beloved husband Allen Ludden. She believed she would be with him again.” 

The near-universally beloved entertainment icon best known for her starring roles on “The Golden Girls” and “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” is remembered for being game for almost anything.

America got a reminder of that back in 2010 when White appeared in a Super Bowl commercial for Snickers, where she appeared to be knocked into a mud puddle during a football game with much younger men. “Mike, you’re playing like Betty White out there!” a teammate screams in her face a millisecond before she shoots back with, “That’s not what your girlfriend says!”

It bowled over millions of viewers, ignited a Facebook-based campaign to get White to host “Saturday Night Live” – which she did months later, becoming its oldest host at 88 – and introduced her to an entirely new generation of fans.


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“When I first heard about the campaign to get me to host ‘Saturday Night Live,’ I didn’t know what Facebook was,” White said in her monologue. “And, now that I do know what it is, I have to say, it sounds like a huge waste of time. I would never say that people on it are losers, but that’s only because I’m polite.”

Well, not too polite. White’s reputation for ribald riffing became the stuff of memes, including one quote that she swears she didn’t say, an assertion confirmed by Snopes: “Why do people say ‘grow some balls’? Balls are weak and sensitive. If you wanna be tough, grow a vagina. Those things can take a pounding.”

“That’s what I hate about Facebook and the internet,” she told The Guardian back in 2012. “They can say you said anything. I never would have said that. I’d never say that in a million years.”

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That may be the case, but it also discounts the reason that misattribution has such legs. We can completely imagine her saying it and wouldn’t have loved her any less if she had. Remember, she might not have uttered that particular quote, but this is still the woman who, in 2011, collaborated with British pop singer Luciana on a remix of the star’s club hit “I’m Still Hot,” appearing in a video surrounded by beefcakes barely swathed in tight gold hot pants.

And according to People, she did say: “My answer to anything under the sun, like ‘What have you not done in the business that you’ve always wanted to do?’ is ‘Robert Redford.'”

It is no exaggeration to say America adored Betty White. Whether this adulation is a result of connecting with her “Golden Girls” character Rose Nylund; or Sue Ann Nivens, the tart-tongued, sex-loving frenemy of Moore’s Mary Richards; or her work on the many series she’s starred in or produced since then, her appeal spans multiple generations and transcends partisanship.

White described herself as apolitical and did not identify as a feminist even though, as her lengthy list of outspoken characters she’s played indicates, she had few problems with playing them on TV, particularly in a subversive manner.

As for her politics, White may not have declared for a particular party but her advocacy behind the scenes did not go unnoticed. In 1954 she discovered tap dancer Arthur Duncan, who would become the first African-American regular to be featured on a variety series with his work on “The Lawrence Welk Show.”

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Duncan, who was featured in 2018 PBS documentary “Betty White: First Lady of Television,” told critics covering a PBS event promoting the film that he worked with White on her nationally distributed talk variety series for NBC, “The Betty White Show.” Back in the 1950s, he said, “They had people from various areas . . . that sort of resented black Americans on the program and they threatened to withdraw their support of the show if I continued on the show.”

Duncan said he wasn’t aware of the racist backlash to his appearance until White wrote about it in one of her memoirs.  “And she explained it this way,” Duncan recalled. “Her remark was, ‘Needless to say, we used Arthur Duncan every opportunity we could.’ . . .  I think that she just stood up for her beliefs, and that ended that.”

For every person wishing “America’s Grandmother” were actually their own, there are others who aspire to be like her in their mature years: bright, playful, mischievous, devoid of apology or, at least outwardly, regret. White is the only woman to win Emmys in all performing comedic categories, receiving her first nomination in 1951 and her most recent in 2011.

She also was the kind of woman “Tenet” star and future Batman Robert Pattinson would refer to with complete sincerity as “one of the sexiest women in America.”

And she remained busy well into her 90s, starring TV Land’s “Hot in Cleveland” between 2010 through 2015, and the NBC prank series “Betty White’s Off Their Rockers” from 2012 and 2017.  Her voice talents can be heard in a many children’s series, including the 2019 Disney+ series “Forky Asks a Question,” a spinoff of its “Toy Story” franchise. (She voiced a toy tiger called Bitey White.)

Cinephiles may recognize her feature film debut in Otto Preminger’s 1962 drama, “Advise & Consent.” But it’s equally as likely for people to recall her roles in the 2009 rom-com “The Proposal,” or 1999’s “Lake Placid.” Like we said – she was game for just about anything.

Betty Marion White Ludden was born on January 17, 1922, in Oak Park, Illinois, the only child of electrical engineer Horace White and his wife Tess, a homemaker. Her family moved to Los Angeles when White was two years old, and she grew up on Sunset Boulevard.

She began her Hollywood career working as an assistant at a local television station, and made her TV debut shortly after graduating from high school in 1939, according to the Guinness Book of World Records. White holds the record for Longest TV Career By an Entertainer (Female).

In 1949, White became the co-host of “Hollywood on Television with Al Jarvis,” a local live and unscripted variety show that ran for five and a half hours a day, six days a week. This led to her becoming one of Hollywood’s first female producers when, in 1953, she launched her first TV series “Life with Elizabeth,” which she developed with screenwriter George Tibbles, her partner in Bandy Productions alongside producer Don Fedderson. Tibbles would later work with White on NBC’s “The Betty White Show” in 1954.

For 19 years, during most of the 1950s and 1960s, White served as the hostess and commentator on NBC’s annual broadcast of Tournament of Roses Parade. NBC replaced her in 1975 due to the popularity of “Mary Tyler Moore” on network rival CBS, which responded in kind by naming White as hostess of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, a job she held for a decade.

In the 1960s White became a celebrity guest staple on game shows  – particularly “Password,” where she popped up many times between 1961 and 1975 – marrying the show’s host Allen Ludden, in 1963. (Ludden was her third husband, and they remained together until his death in 1981.) Her string of appearances on these daytime staples eventually earned her the unofficial title of “First Lady of Game Shows.”

But in 1983, she became the first woman to win a Daytime Emmy Award in the Outstanding Game Show Host category for her work on NBC’s “Just Men!,” mostly memorable for its role in securing White another piece of Academy of Television Arts & Sciences hardware.

Her appearances on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” as the “icky sweet” Sue Ann Nivens snagged White her second and third Emmys, but her portrayal of the daffy, “terminally naïve” Rose Nylund, of the iconic “Golden Girls” foursome, earned White her fourth.

And it is White’s work on the 1980s hit that cemented her popularity among Generation Xers, Millennials, and Zoomers. White originally read for the part of Blanche Devereaux, the legendary seductress played by Rue McClanahan, but at the suggestion of the pilot’s director Jay Sandrich, they switched roles. The rest is history.

White went on to reprise Rose after “The Golden Girls” ended in 1992 with Bea Arthur’s departure, in the show’s short-lived spinoff “The Golden Palace.” From there she remained in front of TV audiences by way of guest starring appearances on ’90s series such as NBC’s “Suddenly Susan,” CBS’ “Yes Dear,” and the ABC drama “The Practice,” and earned yet another Emmy in 1996 for her guest star appearance on “The John Larroquette Show.”

White was formally inducted into the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Hall of Fame in 1995, receiving a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1995. The Television Critics Association honored her with the TCA Career Achievement Award in 2009, and she won a Grammy for Best Spoken Word recording in 2011 for her work on the audiobook version of her book “If You Ask Me (And of Course You Won’t).”

On top of her massive TV resume, White was a lifelong animal rights and welfare advocate who worked with many organizations, and served as a member of the board of directors of the Greater Los Angeles Zoo Association since 1974.

White had no children of her own but is survived, instead, by a formidable legacy built on a deep foundation of hilarity, fortified with substance. She made us laugh and smile a lot over the decades, but according to her own report, never compromised her sense of self.

“You can lie to anyone in the world and even get away with it, perhaps,” she observed in “If You Ask Me,” “but when you are alone and look into your own eyes in the mirror, you can’t sidestep the truth. Always be sure you can meet those eyes directly.”

Correction: An earlier version of this story contained an error in the character Blanche Devereaux’s name. The story has been updated. 

The climate crisis report card for 2021

While COVID-19 was the most conspicuous science story of 2021, it may not have been the one with the most significant long-term consequences. This is not to say that the pandemic wasn’t continually traumatic and tragic; to the contrary. But in 50,000 years, when the effects of industrial pollution from this century are still affecting Earth’s climate, the coronavirus pandemic will be but a minor historical blip compared to the long-term ramifications of greenhouse gas emissions. 

That is why climate change remained a major news story in 2021 — even though, if you based your conclusions on the behavior of major political leaders, you might not have recognized that. Ominously, the climate change–related disasters are getting more intense, year after year. Although it is unlikely, one can only hope that the Earth doesn’t throw up as many warning signs in 2022 as it did in 2021.

The “Doomsday Glacier” is sending up a big red flag.

There is a glacier in western Antarctica that is as large as the state of Florida. Known as Thwaites Glacier, it goes by the nickname “Doomsday Glacier” because its melting could directly cause sea levels to rise all over the world. For instance, if an eastern ice shelf that holds up a drainage basin full of ice and water were to collapse, that single development would on its own raise the height of Earth’s oceans by more than two feet.

Unfortunately, scientists earlier this month at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) revealed that this appears to be starting to happen.

Imagine how a glass window develops cracks if there are structural problems near its base, with the spiderwebs of growing and criss-crossing fractures eventually causing the whole pane to shatter. That could be the scenario facing the eastern ice shelf. As scientists pointed out, the warming ocean water has loosened Thwaites Glacier’s grip on an adjacent land mass. Observers have already identified surface fractures that only grow as temperatures continue to increase.

“It is one significant step along the path of Antarctic ice sheet collapse and major inundation of our coastlines,” Dr. Michael E. Mann, a distinguished professor of atmospheric science at Penn State University, told Salon by email. “A worrying sign that really does underscore the urgency of climate action.”

A vital series of ocean currents is about to stir things up.

We tend to think of waves and currents as unchanging, and to some extent that is true.

Take AMOC, or the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. It has existed for thousands of years, so much so that countless species have grown used to it, even though it is often compared to a system of conveyor belts. The main “belt” flows north with warm water until it reaches the northern Atlantic Ocean, where it cools and evaporates. By the time it is done, the water in that area has become so salty that its temperature drops and it sinks, flowing south to create an additional current. This pair of “belts” is connected by a number of other oceanic features in the Nordic Sea, Labrador Sea and Southern Ocean.

Unfortunately, an August report in the journal Nature Climate Change described how global warming has led to “an almost complete loss of stability over the last century” within those currents. The good news is that the study remains controversial; the bad news is that, if it proves true, humanity could be looking at a radical and permanent shift in its way of life. Any disruption in AMOC is likely to cause rising sea levels along the North American eastern seaboard, plunging temperatures and increased storm frequency in Europe, and new weather conditions that result in food shortages in India, South America and Western Africa.


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President Joe Biden tried to be a transformative president when it came to climate change, but was stymied by partisan politics.

It was never going to be easy for Democrats to pass sweeping climate change reform — any meaningful bill was bound to be expensive and involve sweeping regulations that alienated powerful interest groups — but, because Biden entered power with a Senate split exactly in half, and Republicans determined to obstruct by acting as a unit, he had literally no margin for error.

In the case of saving the world from global warming, the name of Biden’s margin for error was spelled “Joe Manchin.” The powerful West Virginia senator with financial ties to the coal industry nipped in the bud any chance of developing a power sector that would be entirely free from carbon pollution by 2035, which was one of the incoming president’s signature goals. Soon, though, it became clear Manchin was dissatisfied with every increasingly watered down substitute that Democrats offered in place of the original ambitious target. As Salon’s Amanda Marcotte recently observed, Manchin and Arizona’s Kyrsten Sinema (his Senate Democratic partner throughout the year) never negotiated in good faith. It now remains to be seen if Biden will be able to do anything meaningful to protect the planet from climate change before the end of his term.

The supply chain crisis foreshadowed how climate change will destroy our economy.

While economists often talked about the supply chain crisis of 2021 in terms of supply and demand, the product shortages also gave Americans a glimpse of another way climate change will alter their future.

“Various hazard events can disrupt food supply chains by impairing production of and access to food,” Christa Court, an assistant professor of regional economics at the University of Florida, told Salon by email in August. As infrastructure is destroyed by climate change, it will be more difficult for foods to be brought to markets far away from where they are produced. Fluctuating conditions in temperature, hydration and other weather factors will damage countless agricultural crops. Problems with water quality and soil degradation will further limit ongoing food production needs. Take oranges, as one example.

“A major drought in California or freezing temperatures in Florida can throw a wrench into this market,” Dr. Ariel Ortiz-Bobea, an associate professor of applied economics at Cornell University, explained in August. “Those events can drastically reduce the supply of oranges from those regions. While oranges can be produced in other areas (e.g. Brazil), acquiring them is much more expensive especially if the supply chains are not already established and prepared to larger volumes.”

There was some good news from Glasgow.

It would be a mistake to end this on a down note, as there were some positive signs for Earth in 2021.

The main glimmer of hope came from the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference, better known as COP26 (as it was the 26th conference of its kind). Although China and India were able to weaken an initiative that would have eliminated subsidies to fossil fuel and coal power, the Glasgow Climate Pact was still the first climate deal that explicitly called for reducing humanity’s use of coal. What’s more, different nations made increasingly ambitious carbon pledges that if held would keep the world to only 1.8 degrees Celsius of warming. This would put the world on track to meet the Paris climate agreement’s goals.

“We came to Glasgow on a path to disaster (2.7°C),” Johan Rockström, an environmental scientist and the director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, wrote on Twitter. “We leave Glasgow on a path to danger (just below 2°C).”

2021, in retrospect:

Capitol Police officer stands up to Mike Pence for downplaying Jan. 6 insurrection

A U.S. Capitol Police officer is laying out his grievances about the lenient sentences riot suspects are facing for their participation in the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Speaking to NPR.org, U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell described the scene he was faced with on Jan. 6 while stationed on the west entrance to the Capitol. According to Gonnell, the scene was similar to a “medieval battleground.”

He also made it clear that he believes the sentences are not harsh enough considering the trauma Capitol rioters inflicted on him and other members of law enforcement.


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“Their jail time is less than my recovery time,” said Gonell, who is still recovering from a shoulder injury. “The charges they’re getting do not compare to the mental and physical injuries some of the police officers, including myself, got.”

On Twitter, Gonell was critical of former Vice President Mike Pence, who has downplayed the attack that targeted him:

But despite the trauma he endured, he also said that he would do it again if he had to.

“It’s mind-boggling to hear some of the things that are coming from some of these elected officials, Gonell said. “But at the end of the day, our job is to make them safe and make their work environment safer, regardless of our opinion or political affiliation.”

As a result of all that transpired on Jan. 6, several hundred individuals were arrested for storming the Capitol. Even now, Gonnell has admitted how difficult it is to see the lawmakers who supported their efforts.

“We risked our lives to give them enough time to get to safety. And allegedly, some of them were in communication with some of the rioters and with some of the coordinators or in the know of what would happen,” Gonell said. “And it makes you question their motives and their loyalty for the country, as we were battling the mob in a brutal battle where I could have lost my life and my dear fellow officers, as well.”

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