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E.O. Wilson’s lifelong passion for ants helped him teach humans about how to live sustainably

E. O. Wilson was an extraordinary scholar in every sense of the word. Back in the 1980s, Milton Stetson, the chair of the biology department at the University of Delaware, told me that a scientist who makes a single seminal contribution to his or her field has been a success. By the time I met Edward O. Wilson in 1982, he had already made at least five such contributions to science.

Wilson, who died Dec. 26, 2021 at the age of 92, discovered the chemical means by which ants communicate. He worked out the importance of habitat size and position within the landscape in sustaining animal populations. And he was the first to understand the evolutionary basis of both animal and human societies.

Each of his seminal contributions fundamentally changed the way scientists approached these disciplines, and explained why E.O. – as he was fondly known – was an academic god for many young scientists like me. This astonishing record of achievement may have been due to his phenomenal ability to piece together new ideas using information garnered from disparate fields of study.

E.O. Wilson reflects on insect society, human society and the importance of biodiversity in 2009.

Big insights from small subjects

In 1982 I cautiously sat down next to the great man during a break at a small conference on social insects. He turned, extended his hand and said, “Hi, I’m Ed Wilson. I don’t believe we’ve met.” Then we talked until it was time to get back to business.

Three hours later I approached him again, this time without trepidation because surely now we were the best of friends. He turned, extended his hand, and said “Hi, I’m Ed Wilson. I don’t believe we’ve met.”

Wilson forgetting me, but remaining kind and interested anyway, showed that beneath his many layers of brilliance was a real person and a compassionate one. I was fresh out of graduate school, and doubt that another person at that conference knew less than I — something I’m sure Wilson discovered as soon as I opened my mouth. Yet he didn’t hesitate to extend himself to me, not once but twice.

Thirty-two years later, in 2014, we met again. I had been invited to speak in a ceremony honoring his receipt of the Franklin Institute’s Benjamin Franklin Medal for Earth and Environmental Science. The award honored Wilson’s lifetime achievements in science, but particularly his many efforts to save life on Earth.

My work studying native plants and insects, and how crucial they are to food webs, was inspired by Wilson’s eloquent descriptions of biodiversity and how the myriad interactions among species create the conditions that enable the very existence of such species.

I spent the first decades of my career studying the evolution of insect parental care, and Wilson’s early writings provided a number of testable hypotheses that guided that research. But his 1992 book, “The Diversity of Life,” resonated deeply with me and became the basis for an eventual turn in my career path.

Though I am an entomologist, I did not realize that insects were “the little things that run the world” until Wilson explained why this is so in 1987. Like nearly all scientists and nonscientists alike, my understanding of how biodiversity sustains humans was embarrassingly cursory. Fortunately, Wilson opened our eyes.

Throughout his career Wilson flatly rejected the notion held by many scholars that natural history – the study of the natural world through observation rather than experimentation – was unimportant. He proudly labeled himself a naturalist, and communicated the urgent need to study and preserve the natural world. Decades before it was in vogue, he recognized that our refusal to acknowledge the Earth’s limits, coupled with the unsustainability of perpetual economic growth, had set humans well on their way to ecological oblivion.

Wilson understood that humans’ reckless treatment of the ecosystems that support us was not only a recipe for our own demise. It was forcing the biodiversity he so cherished into the sixth mass extinction in Earth’s history, and the first one caused by an animal: us.

Color-coded map of forest losses.

E.O. Wilson long advocated conserving the world’s biodiversity hot spots – zones with high numbers of native species where habitats are most endangered. This image shows deforestation from 1975 to 2013 in one such area, West Africa’s Upper Guinean Forest. USGS

A broad vision for conservation

And so, to his lifelong fascination with ants, E. O. Wilson added a second passion: guiding humanity toward a more sustainable existence. To do that, he knew he had to reach beyond the towers of academia and write for the public, and that one book would not suffice. Learning requires repeated exposure, and that is what Wilson delivered in “The Diversity of Life,” “Biophilia,” “The Future of Life,” “The Creation” and his final plea in 2016, “Half-Earth: Our Planet’s Fight for Life.”

As Wilson aged, desperation and urgency replaced political correctness in his writings. He boldly exposed ecological destruction caused by fundamentalist religions and unrestricted population growth, and challenged the central dogma of conservation biology, demonstrating that conservation could not succeed if restricted to tiny, isolated habitat patches.

In “Half Earth,” he distilled a lifetime of ecological knowledge into one simple tenet: Life as we know it can be sustained only if we preserve functioning ecosystems on at least half of planet Earth.

But is this possible? Nearly half of the planet is used for some form of agriculture, and 7.9 billion people and their vast network of infrastructure occupy the other half.

As I see it, the only way to realize E.O.’s lifelong wish is learn to coexist with nature, in the same place, at the same time. It is essential to bury forever the notion that humans are here and nature is someplace else. Providing a blueprint for this radical cultural transformation has been my goal for the last 20 years, and I am honored that it melds with E.O. Wilson’s dream.

There is no time to waste in this effort. Wilson himself once said, “Conservation is a discipline with a deadline.” Whether humans have the wisdom to meet that deadline remains to be seen.


Doug Tallamy, Professor of Entomology, University of Delaware

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

Donald Trump may finally face prosecution in the New Year: But the trauma won’t end there

The Republican American narrative has changed. Once the party favoring small government, which preached we should pull ourselves up by our bootstraps, the GOP has morphed into a party led by those who’ve had everything handed to them and want to dictate to us our worth, our value and our freedom.

As far as the size of government goes, the GOP still wants it small when it comes to social services, health care and infrastructure — but not so much when it comes to defense, corporate bailouts or pork barrel legislation.

There are those who maintain the Republican narrative was never anything so rosy, or anywhere near that idyllic. I can offer them no comfort.

Cynics tell us our overall national narrative is more accurately a tale of greed, rape and exploitation. The optimists want a tale of redemption and hope. Liars tell us we’re the greatest, while idiots, morons, racists, populists, Republicans, Democrats,  mainstream media and evangelical Christians all push their own narratives — with enough twists and turns to keep us confused and/or amused. But little of it is real. In America it seems we build a reality based on our feelings and beliefs, while facts have little sway.

At this point the average information-saturated American wonders if there exists an absolute truth — or at least a narrative that includes objective facts. But wait! Some celebrity has just been exposed for doing something indecent in public — and that now has our attention.

This inability to deal with facts, this infatuation with prurient and salacious innuendo, led us to Donald Trump — a man who is as vacuous as he is pompous. He is as phlegmatic as he is he is mind-numbing, as combative as he is clueless, and as un-American in deed as a battle-hardened Nazi stormtrooper. Donald Trump is the antithesis of the American dream, a nightmare ramshackle of a man who rattles around in the cage he made for himself, stinking of Adderall, perspiration and fear. He’s straight from the Hollywood B-list, with A-list dreams that can never come true — and he’s going to make the world suffer, if he can, for his own failures.

RELATED: Former federal prosecutor: We’ll see “a tidal wave of criminal charges against Donald Trump”

Shortly after the beginning of the New Year, if my sources in the Justice Department are accurate, Donald Trump could face federal RICO charges. Of course there have been threats against Donald Trump in the courts for years, and as his minions know, he’s dodged every bullet fired his way. But in the end it only takes one to land, and with the House Jan. 6 committee breathing down his neck, the Southern District of New York and even the Manhattan D.A. still investigating him, it appears as if this cheap polyester suit of a man, the ultimate troll and ultimate grifter, will eventually face a paroxysm of litigation even he cannot conquer. But then again, don’t hold your breath: There are many who believe Trump will never face justice until he takes his last breath.

It’s not that we don’t know what went on Jan. 6, 2021. It’s not that we don’t know Trump was behind it. It’s not that we don’t know something was done that fundamentally betrayed the principles of our founding fathers. It isn’t that we don’t know he’s a grifter, a con man or a thief. It is merely a matter of whether or not Trump can get away with it.

Some would rehabilitate Trump. Some have reported on his public support for getting a pandemic booster shot and encouraging others to get it. For some reason, there are those who believe that redeems Trump for his years of denial and criminal behavior. But Trump cannot be rehabilitated before he is charged and prosecuted. Anything else is merely grist for the Trump propaganda mill and an attempt to avoid justice being delivered to him for his obvious or likely crimes. 

Innocent until proven guilty is a legal principle that applies to everyone — even Donald Trump. But until he’s held accountable, his redemption is not plausible nor, by definition, is it justice.


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So as we begin the New Year, it behooves us all to take a look at how we handle Donald Trump. Personally I’m making it a New Year’s resolution to reduce my coverage of Trump to just a few possible events:

  1. His indictment.
  2. His official announcement as a candidate for higher office.
  3. An unprecedented cataclysmic event in which he plays a part.

I don’t need to cover his attempts at redemption until later. I don’t need to report this dullard’s boring brutal assaults on the American psyche, thus spreading them. I don’t need to snidely comment on every gastrointestinal-like utterance from his larcenous heart, or his neighborhood-bully approach to those who question him.

America needs as little of Donald Trump as we do of the coronavirus.

It’s not that Trump created right-wing and QAnon conspiracists who believe the “Deep State” is run by baby-eating aliens. It’s that Trump gave them a pathway to legitimization. Everyone has a right to their opinion, but your opinions need to be based on vetted facts. Aaron Rodgers, the Green Bay Packers’ star quarterback, recently said that science needs to be questioned and he should be free to offer his opinion upon it. He’s right on both counts. Science is science because it’s questioned and it isn’t propaganda. But Rodgers needs to shut up. Most climate scientists couldn’t tell him how to thread the needle on a cover-two man under defense with a blitzing inside linebacker — and Rodgers knows squat about science and epidemiology. But like so many famous people, Rodgers confuses his public platform for a universal one, from which he can offer opinions on issues of which he has no knowledge. We have Trump to thank for enabling everyone with an ignorant and uninformed opinion to believe it’s just as valuable as those held by people who have actual knowledge of the issues. It is a not-to-subtle method for undermining education and science.

The fourth estate amplifies this problem.  With every president since Ronald Reagan stripping reporters of their power to inform, journalism has  been reduced to infomercials and arguments on national television between hacks who pretend to be experts and talking heads who pretend to be reporters. We give ignorance a seat on the stage, speak to it and encourage it. Few of us even bother to read newspapers. They are dying. 

It’s the perfect storm. We live in a world where the media fails to adequately inform a public that is largely unwilling or unable to check the facts, while hacks and con men roam free, cloaking themselves in the flag and Bible and preaching a foul stench that further confuses a laconic electorate.

A politician once said there was nothing wrong with America that couldn’t be cured by what was right with America. Today, what’s overwhelmingly wrong with America is that we won’t take the time to embrace what’s right with it. We’re far too lazy, content and delusional. One of our chief spokesmen is a narcissistic, fat, old, rich white man born into privilege, who is unable and unwilling to understand what the average American faces, but is eagerly preaching to us against our own self-interest. Because of the lack of education and a compromised fourth estate, many continue to buy what this acidic human being sells.

Donald Trump will one day again be legitimate news. But until then he’s unworthy of ink. 

World events. The pandemic, infrastructure, the economy, education and health care are but a few issues that deserve more ink than Trump or any NFL quarterback exposing his feet to show he doesn’t have “COVID Toe.”

I’ve always taken New Year’s resolutions seriously. There is no better time to reassess your own actions and goals than at the end of the year; that week after Christmas and just before the next year kicks into gear.

It’s the best time to sit, eat leftovers, have a nice drink if you’re so disposed and sit by the warm gas fire of a roaring furnace, if you have one, to think for a while.

Donald Trump was our creation. Our cultural slouch into bedlam, feel-good news, anger politics and Spy vs. Spy mentality (with apologies to Mad Magazine), along with our exponentially increasing inability to recognize fact from fiction, made Trump both possible and inevitable.

If there is a grain of truth to the adage that what is wrong can be fixed by what is right, then as long as we are above the dirt we’ve got a shot at redemption.

It begins now. Hopefully it doesn’t end with us saying, “Don’t Look Up.”

Read more on Donald Trump’s potential legal jeopardy:

Holiday climate chaos: It was warmer in Alaska than Southern California this week

As parts of Alaska obliterated high-temperature records earlier this week, meteorologists and climate scientists warned that extreme heat and rainfall are the new normal in the nation’s largest state and other Arctic and subarctic zones.

On Sunday, the town of Kodiak in southern Alaska hit 67°F — seven degrees warmer than the daytime high in San Diego — shattering the December record for Alaska by nine degrees, according to the National Weather Service. The town also broke the local December record by more than 20 degrees.

“I would not have thought such a thing possible,” Rick Thoman, a climate specialist at the Alaska Center for Climate Assessment and Policy, tweeted Tuesday.

CNN meteorologist Brandon Miller said that “we’ve become somewhat numb to these ‘never before seen’ extremes in temperature and weather as climate change continues to push the envelope on what is possible all over the globe.”

“In and around the Arctic this is especially true, where temperatures have been rising around twice as fast as the rest of the planet,” he added.

Warmer air is wetter air, as higher temperatures mean the atmosphere can store more water vapor. Miller said this explains why more intense rainstorms and flooding are increasing along with global temperatures.

“Each degree Fahrenheit of warming can hold about 4% more water vapor,” he said, “and much of Alaska was 40 degrees Fahrenheit or more above average temperatures for late December.”

Parts of Alaska have suffered record rainfall this month. CNN reports that Fairbanks has been inundated with 4.75 inches of liquid-equivalent precipitation for the month — more than 10 times the historical average.


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A study published last month in Nature Communications noted that “as the Arctic continues to warm faster than the rest of the planet, evidence mounts that the region is experiencing unprecedented environmental change,” with “the hydrological cycle … projected to intensify throughout the 21st century [and] increased evaporation from expanding open water areas and more precipitation.”

The paper projected that Arctic winters will experience more rain than snow beginning sometime in the 2060s.

Extreme temperatures aren’t just occurring during the Alaskan winters. In July 2019, Anchorage recorded an all-time high of 90°F. In July 2021, the record-breaking heatwave during which Lytton, British Columbia, set a Canadian record of 121°F triggered a 2.7-magnitude cryoseism, or “ice quake,” near Juneau, Alaska’s capital, as 92-degree heat melted glacier ice that subsequently saturated into the soil and then rapidly refroze.

Wildfires — which accelerate global heating by releasing massive amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere — are also increasing along with Alaska’s rising temperatures.

Scientists also warn that thawing Arctic permafrost in the northern parts of the state constitutes a “geological time bomb” set to release potentially devastating quantities of methane — a super-potent greenhouse gas whose emissions are roughly 87 times more potent than carbon dioxide emissions over a 20-year period — into the atmosphere.

Read more on the urgency of the climate crisis:

By watering down COVID self-isolation period, CDC defers to commerce

The CDC’s decision to halve the self-isolation period for COVID-positive healthcare workers and the rest of the essential workforce is being roundly condemned by the unions that represent that workforce and the occupational health experts they trust.

The policy, which does not even require a negative test to return to work, was called “reckless” by public health experts interviewed by the Boston Globe.

Curiously, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reduced the quarantine requirement from ten days to five after a few notable worker shortages. First, there was the cancellation of thousands of flights due to worker shortages starting before Christmas, which made major news headlines. But in the background lurks widespread healthcare worker shortages throughout the nation, which have occurred as tens of thousands of essential workers were sidelined due to infection with the hyper-contagious omicron variant.

Three strikes

For front-line unions, the CDC’s kowtowing to business interests is merely one in a long line of examples of the CDC’s expedient disregard for workers. Early on, the nation’s leading public health agency notoriously instructed nurses to ignore their training on infectious disease control and reuse their N-95 masks for days at a time.

At the time, the nurses’ unions predicted three things would happen: their members would get sick, many would die, and the hospitals would themselves become vectors for the virus. All three things happened.

Scroll forward to May of this year, when the CDC decided to lift the universal mask mandate for the vaccinated in indoor public places. The same nurse unions, joined by frontline retail worker unions, begged the CDC to reconsider. They rightly pointed out that too much of the country was unvaccinated; that vaccinated people could still transmit the virus; and that the CDC’s mandate change, which occurred under the guise of “open[ing] the economy,” would actually help spawn more variants.

These frontline experts, whose lived on-the-job experience is consistently ignored by public health bureaucrats, warned that the lifting of the universal mask mandate promoted a false sense of invincibility for the general public and the obscuring of the key medical reality that vaccinated people can transmit the virus.

What happened next?

In no time at all, the delta variant got traction and in a matter of weeks, the CDC was revisiting the issue — suggesting even the vaccinated consider masking up after consulting their local county’s transmission rate.

Now, the same agency that has consistently ignored the healthcare unions wants to ensure the nation’s hospital have sufficient COVID-fodder and bodies in the sky to keep America flying at any price. And so, it appears they have calculated that the aggregate risk of spreading COVID by radically reducing the quarantine time for these essential workers is worth taking if it keeps the hospitals and the airports humming.


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For the public unions from New York and New York City, with veteran members in their ranks of the NYPD, the FDNY and scores of other agencies, this homage to commerce is eerily similar to what the Bush administration’s EPA and former Mayor Rudy Giuliani cooked up when they promoted the false notion that the air in an around lower Manhattan was safe to breathe so as to assure that Wall Street opened quickly after the 9/11 WTC attack.

Nurses ignored

“The New York State Nurses Association [NYSNA] condemns the Centers for Disease Control (CDC)’s recent emergency guidance as potentially dangerous for healthcare workers and the communities we serve,” wrote Pat Kane, a registered nurse and the executive director of the association. “This guidance is inconsistent with proven science, vague, and doesn’t provide definitions or explain standards at a time when decision-making for healthcare systems is critical.”

Kane continued: “The CDC’s ‘contingency’ strategies for ‘when staffing shortages are anticipated’, allow vaccinated healthcare workers who have higher risk exposures to continue to work and infected healthcare workers to work after 5 days, ‘as long as they are well enough.'”  

According to NYSNA, healthcare worker infection rates are not even being tracked; as they write, “there’s no substantial evidence behind the CDC changing this guidance. But there is a healthcare staffing crisis the CDC cited as the justification for it.”

Death and COVID is not an abstract concept for NYSNA.

The union lost an estimated 40 members to the virus. They are part of an honor roll, which the Guardian and Kaiser Health News created last April, which includes the names of the estimated 3,600 healthcare workers that died in the first year of the pandemic alone.

“One key finding: two thirds of deceased healthcare workers for whom we have data identified as people of color, revealing the deep inequities tied to race, ethnicity and economic status in America’s healthcare workforce,” the newspaper reports. “Lower-paid workers who handled everyday patient care, including nurses, support staff, and nursing home employees, were far more likely to die in the pandemic than physicians.”

Our federal government has no idea how many essential workers have died from their occupational exposure, and it certainly is clueless about how many thousands languish in the hell of long haul COVID, often having to fight their employers who have rejected their Workers’ Comp claims.

The leadership of HPAE, Health Professionals and Allied Employees, New Jersey’s largest health care union, blasted the CDC’s watering-down of the COVID quarantine standard and looped in the US Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration for going along. The union rightly observes that the latest moves on behalf of management will accelerate the exodus from the profession, further hampering the ability of the entire health care system to withstand the next wave — or the next pandemic.

Indeed, our national health care system is so deeply rooted in the ideology of market capitalism that it thrives on the scarcity it promotes, which is enabled entirely by its Beltway protectors. This sick and brutal system feeds off the scarcity of N-95s, COVID tests, and now, reducing the time that healthcare and essential workers receive to heal themselves from the virus they contracted serving us.

Send in the troops

The system is coming apart, and only those in its employ continue to resist calling it out for just how broken it all is. 

“The COVID omicron variant has shown to be a highly contagious and infectious virus, as cases are quickly spiking, threatening to overwhelm the hospitals in our state,” HPAE said in a statement. “In fact, assistance from the National Guard and FEMA have already been solicited as some of our hospitals are already having difficulty meeting the demands of the increased census.”      

The statement continued, lambasting CDC and OSHA for not protecting them sufficiently.  

“Nearly two years after the start of this pandemic, healthcare workers are seeing more of the same watering-down of protections from both the CDC and OSHA,” the statement ran.

“Getting workers back on the job sooner to ease the staffing shortage is counterintuitive,” HPAE observed. “It will only result in more illness, exhaustion, stress, and exodus from the professions.  Healthcare workers and patients alike are at risk.  During a surge it is time for more protections not less.”    

Scarcity = disease + death 

Lt. Vinnie Variale is president of DC 37’s Local 3621, which represents the New York City Fire Department’s (FDNY) emergency medical services (EMS) officers. Several FDNY EMS members have died from COVID along with almost 400 New York City municipal workers.

The Fire Department confirmed that close to 20 percent of their EMS members are out sick; Variale estimates half of that roster is suffering with COVID. Meanwhile, call volume continues to climb as omicron rages.

“It’s clearly the case that whenever they have a shortage, they choose to disregard our safety,” said Variale of the CDC’s latest guidance. “Now, they see a labor shortage in healthcare industry, nurses, doctors, EMTS and paramedics so they are cutting the quarantine down from ten days to five. How convenient.”

Variale continues: “When you start cutting back your safety standards in such a transparent way, a science agency like the CDC just loses their credibility. It all goes back to our leadership’s failure to invest in a public health system that not only cares for our people but prepares for a pandemic like we are dealing with. Now, their failures are being put on the shoulders of the people, like my members, who are going to have to continue to face these risks to themselves and even their families.”

Charlene Obernauer is the executive director of the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health, a non-profit advocacy group supported by unions and occupational health experts.

“We looked into the science behind this policy [shift] and having these shorter isolation periods doesn’t seem consistent with the science,” Obernauer said during a recent phone interview.

Obernauer continued. “From our perspective, when our front-line healthcare workers are getting COVID, they are exhausted. They have all this stress landing in their laps and our response is to shorten the amount of time that someone gets off after they have had COVID is not a way to support healthcare workers that have given everything to keep our communities everything to keep us safe.”

“We said we wanted to hear from medical professionals on the best guidance for quarantine, not from corporate America advocating for a shortened period due to staffing shortages,” wrote Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants, CWA, in a statement. “The CDC gave a medical explanation about why the agency has decided to reduce the quarantine requirements from 10 to five days, but the fact that it aligns with the number of days pushed by corporate America is less than reassuring.” 

Nelson was particularly incensed by how “pandemic fatigue” had led to “decisions that extend the life of the pandemic” by putting workers at risk.

“Already the lack of paid sick leave creates pressure on workers to come to work sick,” Nelson said. “Corporations that fail to recognize this with paid sick leave, or pressure workers to come to work sick or face discipline, are failing their workers and their customers. Any Member of Congress who doesn’t support paid sick leave is saying that their constituents’ lives don’t matter.”

Nelson continued. “After more than 800,000 funerals, millions suffering effects of long COVID, our hospitals so full people can’t get the medical treatment they need, and frontline workers facing violent attacks simply for working to keep everyone safe, can we finally take this pandemic seriously and do what needs to be done to end it? Our workplace is the world. We will isolate ourselves from the world if we don’t lead on safety.”

Read more on frontline workers during the pandemic:

10 amazing facts about Bruce Lee

Bruce Lee is one of pop culture’s most multifaceted icons. Legions of fans admire him for his movies, his martial arts prowess, his incomprehensible physical fitness, his championing of Chinese culture, and even his philosophies on life. Yet for all the new ground Lee broke, most of his recognition only came after his death at the age of 32. Read on to learn more about the life of this profound, if enigmatic, superstar.

1. Bruce Lee’s first starring role in a movie came when he was just 10 years old.

In 1950’s “The Kid,” a pre-teen Bruce Lee played the role of Kid Cheung, a streetwise orphan and wry troublemaker, based on a comic strip from the time. Starring opposite Lee, playing a kindly factory owner, was his father, Lee Hoi-chuen, who also happened to be a famous opera singer. (Bruce Lee was actually born in San Francisco while his father was there on tour; Lee would move back to the U.S. in 1959).

According to Lee biographer Matthew Polly, the movie was a big enough success in China to earn sequel consideration. There was just one problem: A young Bruce Lee was getting into fights at school and out on the streets, so his father forbid him from acting again until he straightened up — which, of course, didn’t wind up happening.

2. Bruce Lee was deemed physically unfit for the U.S. Army.

While he may have walked around with body fat in the single digits and could do push-ups using only two fingers, Lee still managed to fail a military physical for the U.S. draft board back in 1963. Despite being an adherent to physical fitness all his adult life, it was an undescended testicle that kept him from fighting for Uncle Sam in Vietnam.

3. Bruce Lee was a exquisite cha-cha dancer.

Long before he was known for breakneck fight choreography, Bruce Lee’s physical skills were focused on the dance floor. More specifically, the cha-cha. In Polly’s book, “Bruce Lee: A Life,” the author explains that the dance trend made its way from Cuba through the Philippines and soon landed in China. And once the cha-cha settled into the Hong Kong social scene, it didn’t take long for youth dance competitions to spring up. Lee had been taking part in cha-cha dancing since the age of 14, and in 1958, he won the Crown Colony Cha-Cha Championship. Foreshadowing his later dedication to martial arts, Lee would keep crib notes of all 108 different cha-cha steps in his wallet so that he could obsessively memorize them.

4. Bruce Lee refused to lose a fight to Robin.

“The Green Hornet” aired its first episode in September 1966, with Bruce Lee as the Hornet’s (Van Williams) lightning-quick sidekick, Kato. The series would immediately be compared to “Batman,” ABC’s other costumed crime-fighting show, and it wouldn’t be long before a two-part crossover episode was in the works. And as heroes do, before they teamed up, they first had to fight each other. According to “Newsweek,” since “Batman” was by far the more popular show, the script featured a fight between Burt Ward’s Robin and Bruce Lee’s Kato that was set to end with the Boy Wonder getting the upper hand. But who would really buy that?

Well, Lee certainly didn’t — and he knew no one else would, either. Williams later recalled that Lee read the script and simply said, “I’m not going to do that,” and walked off. Common sense soon prevailed . . . sort of. The script was rewritten to change the ending — not to a Kato K.O., but to a more diplomatic draw. Though “The Green Hornet” was Lee’s first big break in the United States, the series itself lasted only 26 episodes.

5. Bruce Lee trained numerous Hollywood stars.

As Bruce Lee worked to become a big-screen heavyweight, he made a living as a martial arts trainer to the stars. Among Lee’s students were Steve McQueen, James Coburn, James Garner, Roman Polanski, and Sharon Tate. For his services, Lee was known to charge about $275 per hour or $1,000 for 10 courses. McQueen and Coburn grew so enamored with Lee over the years that they remained close friends until his death in 1973, with both men serving as pallbearers at Lee’s funeral (alongside Chuck Norris).

6. Roman Polanski may have (briefly) believed that Bruce Lee murdered Sharon Tate.

In addition to providing Roman Polanski and his wife Sharon Tate with kung fu lessons, Bruce Lee also lived near the couple in Los Angeles when Tate and four others, including Lee’s close friend Jay Sebring, were murdered by the Manson Family in August 1969. It would be months before the Manson Family was arrested for the murders, but in the meantime, according to an article from “Esquire,” Polanski had grown obsessed with finding a suspect, looking for potential perpetrators even amongst his own inner circle.

During one kung fu lesson in the months after the murders, Lee had mentioned to Polanski how he had recently lost his glasses, which immediately piqued the director’s interest. A mysterious pair of horn-rimmed glasses had been found at the murder scene near his wife’s body, after all. Polanski had even purchased a gauge to measure the lenses and find out the exact prescription so that he could do his own detective work, according to The New York Post.

The director, without giving himself away, offered to bring Lee to his optician to get a new pair — this would allow him to hear Lee’s prescription firsthand and determine if the specs discovered at the crime scene belonged to him. It turned out Lee’s prescription didn’t match, and Polanski never told his friend about his suspicions.

7. Bruce Lee had his sweat glands removed.

Bruce Lee brought an impeccable physique to the screen that was decades ahead of its time. But because his roles required so much physicality, he would be drenched with sweat while filming. And apparently, the martial arts pioneer loathed the sweat stains that would show up on his clothing as a result. His solution? In 1973, Lee actually underwent a procedure to surgically remove the sweat glands from his armpits to avoid the fashion faux pas from showing up on camera.

8. Bruce Lee’s cause of death still raises questions.

Bruce Lee’s death at the age of 32 on July 20, 1973, was officially ruled the result of a cerebral edema, or swelling of the brain. Lee had complained about headaches on the day of his death, and was given a painkiller by Betty Ting Pei — an actress who claimed to be Lee’s mistress — before lying down for a nap. He never woke up.

Though many reports at the time suggested Lee had an allergic reaction to an ingredient in the painkiller, Polly points to a mystery that began on May 10, 1973, when the star previously collapsed in a hot recording studio while dubbing new dialogue for “Enter the Dragon.”

In Polly’s opinion, Lee’s collapse had to do with heatstroke, since his stint in an overheated recording studio was compounded by a lack of sweat glands that prevented his body from cooling off naturally. Heatstroke can also cause swelling in the brain, much like was found during Lee’s autopsy. And Dr. Lisa Leon, an expert in hyperthermia at the U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, told Polly, “A person who has suffered one heat stroke is at increased risk for another” and that there may be long-term complications after the initial incident.

9. Footage from Bruce Lee’s funeral was used in 1978’s “Game of Death.”

At the time of his death, Bruce Lee was involved in numerous projects, including the movie that would become “Game of Death,” his next directorial effort. According to “Vice,” there wasn’t much completed on the film by the time of Lee’s passing — there were some notes, a story outline (which simply read “The big fight. An arrest is made. The airport. The end.”), and 40 minutes of footage, including Lee’s now-iconic fight against NBA great Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

Usually, a project in that situation would just be a lost cause, but production company Golden Harvest wanted to salvage what they could, so they hired “Enter the Dragon” director Robert Clouse to put together . . . something. The result was a Frankenstein’s monster of a film, comprised of 11 minutes of existing footage Lee shot, overdubbed clips from his previous movies, and stand-ins to fill out certain scenes. The director even resorted to using an unfortunate Bruce Lee cardboard cutout to complete one shot.

That’s not even the top rung on the ladder of poor taste: When the movie called for Lee’s character to fake his death, they used footage from his actual funeral to realize the scene, complete with waves of mourners, pallbearers, and closeups of Lee’s open casket.

10. Bruce Lee’s posthumous success resulted in its own sub-genre.

Lee’s career was exploding in China and gaining momentum in the United States by 1973, but he passed away just a month before his biggest hit was released: “Enter the Dragon.” The movie, which grossed more than $200 million at the worldwide box office, catapulted the late Lee to icon status. But with the star himself no longer around to capitalize, there would soon be a wave of knockoff films and wannabes looking to take advantage of the martial arts craze.

Both affectionately and derisively known as “Bruceploitation” films, this strange sub-genre of martial arts cinema gave life to z-movie oddities like “Re-Enter the Dragon” and “Enter the Game of Death,” starring the likes of — and we’re not kidding — Bruce Le and Bruce LiJackie Chan was even roped into a few of these movies, like 1976’s “New Fist of Fury.” In 1980, Bruceploitation even went meta with “The Clones of Bruce Lee,” starring Dragon Lee, Bruce Le, and Bruce Lai, who play genetic reconstructions of the late actor after scientists harvest his DNA.

A version of this story ran in 2020; it has been updated for 2021

Take homemade pasta to the next level with easy techniques that use simple ingredients

Today, there are various types of “pasta” on the market to accommodate people with allergies or intolerances, as well as vegans, vegetarians or those who are simply looking for healthy alternatives.

For people who are allergic to wheat, there are many whole grain pastas made from buckwheat, corn, quinoa and rice. And for those who do not eat grains, there are pastas made from legumes, nut flours and vegetables like zucchini, sweet potatoes and squash.

What we know as “pasta” originated in Italy, and pasta means paste in Italian. It is made by mixing ground grain or flour with liquid (eggs, water and/or oil). While many different cultures ate some sort of noodle-like food, composed mostly of grain, the key characteristics of pasta are durum wheat semolina, with a high gluten content, made with a technique that allows the resultant dough to be highly malleable.

There are ways to elevate your pasta dishes with easy techniques and simple ingredients.

Add shiitake “bacon”

Shiitake “bacon” gives pasta dishes a comforting, umami-rich flavor. Simply trim and thinly slice half a pound of shiitake mushrooms, toss mushrooms with two tablespoons olive oil and a half teaspoon of salt. Bake until crisp, stirring once, about 20 minutes. 

Get creative with pesto

Pesto can be made with anything from herbs, to leafy greens, to the tops of carrots or beets. Adding it to pasta dishes is a great way to get key vitamins and nutrients from green varieties like spinach, arugula or parsley. Our favorites are arugula-walnut pesto and carrot top pesto.

Include cheese alternatives

Hosting a gathering and serving pasta? Make sure there are dairy-free alternatives for those who are intolerant or allergic when it comes to cheese and sauces. Try making cheese using nuts and soy! Make one quart of tofu ricotta by mixing a pound of firm tofu (pressed), two tablespoons of lemon juice, one tablespoon of extra-virgin olive oil, one teaspoon of minced garlic, one tablespoon of white miso and one teaspoon of umeboshi paste in a food processor and process until smooth.


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Spiralize your veggies

If you are cutting down on carbohydrates or looking for a healthy alternative to traditional pasta, spiralizing or making ribbons out of your vegetables successfully mimics our beloved pasta noodles while adding nutrients, such as beta carotene, vitamin C and fiber from sweet potatoes or potassium, folate and vitamin A from zucchini. Try sweet potato noodles with sage-brown butter sauce for a comforting dish.

Keep it simple

You do not need a lot of ingredients to elevate your pasta dish. Infused oil, roasted garlic and stewed vegetables can make a delicious dish that requires very little work. 

By the Natural Gourmet Center at the Institute of Culinary Education

Even more ways to up your pasta game: 

Marjorie Taylor Greene “must be expelled” for “toying with the idea of civil war,” congressman says

In a tweet this Tuesday, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., suggested that Democratic voters who move from blue states to red states should be subject to restrictions in order to prevent them turning red states to blue.

Greene was quote-tweeting another Twitter user who said he supports “discriminating” against “transplants like this” through legislation. “They shouldn’t be able to vote for a period, and they should have to pay a tax for their sins.”

In her tweet, Greene said the suggestion is “possible in a National Divorce scenario.”

“After Democrat voters and big donors ruin a state like California, you would think it wise to stop them from doing it to another great state like Florida. Brainwashed people that move from CA and NY really need a cooling off period,” Greene wrote.

According to Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., Greene is “toying with the idea of civil war.”

“The fact that a sitting Member of Congress is toying with the idea of a civil war 8 days before January 6 should alarm everyone. We expelled 14 Members in 1861 for supporting the confederacy,” Bowman tweeted.

“Why does Marjorie Taylor Greene still have her seat? She must be expelled,” he added. 

Greene was stripped of her committee assignments after less than one month in office.

Jury finds Ghislaine Maxwell guilty on 5 of 6 counts in sex trafficking trial

On the 18th day of Ghislaine Maxwell’s trial for enticement of minors and sex trafficking of underage girls, the jury reached a verdict after nearly 40 hours of deliberations.

Maxwell, an associate of Jeffrey Epstein, was found on five of six counts, CNN and MSNBC reported Wednesday.

“As the verdict was read, Maxwell appeared to show little reaction behind a black mask. She stood with her hands folded as the jury filed out, and glanced at her siblings as she herself was led from the courtroom, but was otherwise stoic,” the Associated Press reports. “She faces the likelihood of years in prison — an outcome long sought by women who spent years fighting in civil courts to hold Maxwell accountable for her role in recruiting and grooming Epstein’s teenage victims and sometimes joining in the sexual abuse.”

She was found not guilty of Count Two, enticement of an individual under the age of 17 to travel with intent to engage in illegal sexual activity.

“Preserving the innocence of children is among the most important responsibilities we carry as adults. Like Epstein, Ms. Maxwell chose to blatantly disregard the law and her responsibility as an adult, using whatever means she had at her disposal to lure vulnerable youth into behavior they should never have been exposed to, creating the potential for lasting harm,” FBI Assistant Director William F. Sweeney Jr. said when announcing the charges.

“Jockey” star Clifton Collins Jr. on “catching the magic” working with horses despite phantom pains

With his phenomenal performance as Jackson Silva in “Jockey,” the reliable character actor Clifton Collins Jr. has been generating awards buzz ever since cowriter/director Clint Bentley’s film premiered at Sundance back in January. And with good reason; Collins Jr., who won an acting prize for his role at the fest, has been long overdue for a part that showcases him so well. 

In “Jockey,” Jackson is in the homestretch of his career. He is fighting various health issues that he prefers to ignore, and he winces in pain — or simple exhaustion — as he pushes through and pushes himself to his limits. He hopes to lose some weight to ride Dido’s Lament, a new horse his friend Ruth (Molly Parker), just purchased. While the chance to win excites Jackson, what “stops his heart” is an exchange he has with Gabriel (Moises Arias), a young up-and-coming jockey who claims to be Jackson’s son.

Collins Jr. internalizes Jackson’s emotions as he absorbs everything from a doctor’s remarks about his health to his interactions with Gabriel or Ruth. Many of his scenes are shot in silhouette, but the actor conveys so much with his body language. During the racing scenes, Bentley closes in on Jackson’s face, allowing viewers to see the race just from his expressions. (It’s a clever approach). Collins Jr. is especially impressive in his last scene, a lengthy tracking shot that reveals so much sans dialogue. 

RELATED: Take it from the youngest winner of the toughest horse race: “We all have a bold mode”

The actor is perfectly cast here, and if there was any justice this year, he would get an Oscar nomination, if not the award itself. Collins Jr. recently chatted with Salon about his work on “Jockey.”

Jackson says he never felt worthy of riding a horse like Dido’s Lament. He doesn’t have the showiness that his friend Leo (Logan Cormier) has. Does he have an inferiority complex? What were your thoughts about Jackson?

It’s like, “Careful what you wish for.” You can be striving for this thing that seems unattainable, but you are constantly striving. You’re riding that high and you have that community of riders and trainers, and horses, and your highs and lows. And you have some legendary stories. Jackson has these stories from his past that are sensational. In an earlier cut, there was a long tale of one of those stories. But there is that moment where he knows he is not being upfront with everybody. And that is a very common thing with a lot of the jockeys.

Same with actors. Actors who get sick will hide their ailments to knock off one more film. I get incredibly nervous when I have pickup shots and I’m flying because I don’t want the plane to go down. If I have a good film in the can, I’m OK if the plane goes down. I feel bad for the other people, but I’m OK. [Laughs] 

Jackson has these body things happening that he has not completely faced. It’s like not paying your bills in the hope that they call you, and you tell them you didn’t get it, until it really catches up to you. Until that horse [Dido’s Lament] happens, he doesn’t really want to be a burden to someone he cares about, like Ruth. Do I just let her go do this thing? We started this together, is she going to take offense if I [decline]? Or do I just go for mine, and do this with her? There are all these questions, and doubts. And it is hard not to doubt yourself when that big moment comes up.

As an actor, is there a parallel here for you, with this film being a big moment in your career? Is there pressure? 

On the outside, yes, but not on the inside. On the inside, I’m just focused on being Jackson, and being true. I want to do something that the jockeys can be proud of. For them to say, “I can’t believe they did that!” — that would be the greatest pain. Don’t get me wrong, all the accolades are overwhelming. I didn’t expect that. None of us expect that. What I did expect was for me to be able bring a truth to the characters and for the community that took us in to be proud. I’ve spoken to a few of those jockeys, and to hear them gush brings tears to your eyes. It shows you did the right things, made the right movies, created the details that touches their hearts. And they are the guys that you pulled from. 

What did you know about the world of horseracing and jockeys prior to making this film? Do you regularly bet on horses or have you done any real riding?  

I did quite a bit of riding on “Westworld.” And I started gambling on the horses when I was probably 8 or 9 with my dad. He’d be drinking with friends while I would be gambling. That was my weekend. We’d go from his trailer to the liquor store, then walk over the Hollywood Park and meet his friends.

These horses are beautiful animals and Above the Law, who was Dido in the movie, there was something so special about her. I never had peppermints in my pocket. I never had candies. I wanted my relationship with the horses to be strangely organic and authentic like the performances. I never cheated that way. Above the Law just had this way about her. She wouldn’t come to Clint [Bentley], but I’d say, “Hey, girl, you ready to come?” and she’d just look at me and come right over during the take. The moment with the wild mustangs — we didn’t have a horse wrangler. I was walking back to base camp, and those horses happened to come up and crossed paths with me, and I felt safe. I looked over, and our DP, Adolpho [Veloso] was on his belly and catching the magic.

Your performance is so deep and invested, we can tell what Jackson is feeling without seeing his face, since he is often shot in silhouette. Can you talk about creating the character’s body language?

That was really important, losing all that weight. I dropped to 143 in conjunction with my studying of my peers and friends, the jockeys. Even when we are hanging out, I am constantly studying them. Also, with the help of Clint, he guided me into being hyperconscious of how much Jackson is going through at what points in his life. We were meticulously tracking that. It is easy to blur the lines hanging with the jockeys and talking about getting injured. They have all been injured literally countless times. It was easy to have phantom pains. I’d feel those pains before going to set or shooting those scenes. Clint would tell me you’re going through that at this point, so I would hide the pain a little more, but it is still in me because I’ve already planted those seeds. I’ve tricked myself into believing all that. 

I felt that. Jackson has real health issues and the film emphasizes the toll a jockey’s body can take over time. These things all imbue his character with a sense of fatalism. He is someone who is in worse shape than he thought but just wants to power through this. 

It’s painful. Very painful. [Laughs] Strangely rewarding, too. These jockeys are amazing athletes and amazing human beings. They have such resilience and consistently do what their passion drives them to do — they want to race any chance they get. So, knowing he is breaking down, Jackson’s life is slowly crumbling before me.


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What can you say about his relationship with Gabriel?

He has this strange chance mentoring this youngster. Mentorship is a beautiful thing, because long after you’re gone, you have affected people around you who live and hopefully thrive. During the film, I cut off my ties with my friends in LA, with the exception of my two mentors and my grandmother, which spoke to Jackson’s mentoring relationship with Gabriel.

Jackson is someone who tamps down his emotions. He goes from someone who lies to those who trust him — Ruth and Leo — because he doesn’t want to hurt them. But he also inspires Gabriel, who tugs at his heart. Jackson has regrets, and expresses fear in a particularly vulnerable moment, but he may be most expressive in the best scene with that final tracking shot. How did you play that?

The last shot is his coming to terms with everything and accepting it. Whatever is to meet him the next day. This kid has been inspired by Jackson and something to be proud of. To have a moment not having to hide or lie anymore. Not have to deceive or give false hope and be completely 100 and whatever he did, and how he did it, is really irrelevant to the fact that he truly inspired people.

“Jockey” opens in theaters on Wednesday, Dec. 29. Watch a trailer for it below, via YouTube.

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Microplastics could be causing inflammatory bowel disease, study suggests

Industry’s insatiable desire for plastic, exemplified in food packaging and consumer goods, has infected not merely Earth’s oceans but also our bodies.  Because of plastic pollution, there are trillions of pieces of microplastic — meaning plastic bits smaller tham 5 millimeters — scattered all over the planet today. They can be found buried in the soil, floating in the ocean and fluttering through the breeze.

And for those with gastric issues, know this: Microplastics are, without question, stewing inside your guts. Now, a new study suggests they could also be the source of what makes many of us feel sick.

In an article published for the journal Environmental Science & Technology, scientists from Nanjing University and Nanjing Medical University reveal that people who had a high concentration of microplastics in their fecal matter were more likely to have severe versions of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). They suggest that microplastics may contribute to the development of IBD or, conversely, that IBD causes patients to retain microplastics to an unusual extent. 

Based on both a survey of the IBD patients and the physical characteristics of the microplastics found in stool samples, the researchers concluded that humans are exposed to the potentially unhealthy plastics by interacting with dust particles and inadvertently consuming plastic packaging on food.

Intriguingly, those who had IBD appeared to have higher quantities of microplastics in their bowel movements. In patients with IBD, the microplastic concentration in their feces amounted to an average of 41.8 items of plastic per gram of dry matter; for those who did not have IBD, the concentration fell to only 28 items of plastic per gram of dry matter.

The most common shapes of these microplastics were as sheets or fibers, and the most common types were poly(ethylene terephthalate) — which is used in food packaging, clothing and engineering resins — and polyamide, which appear in kitchen utensils, carpeting and textiles.


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Speaking to Salon by email, study co-author Dr. Yan Zhang explained that the scientists hope to determine the causes behind the correlations revealed in their research. All they know for sure is that having a large amount of microplastics in your stool means you are more likely to have IBD. Now they want to know whether the former causes the latter — and, if so, how.

“The relevant mechanism is not yet clear,” Zhang told Salon, referring to microplastics as MP. “On the one hand, MP may contribute to the development of IBD. On the other hand, people with IBD may be exposed to more MPs or retain more MPs in their [gastrointestinal tract].”

Millions of people worldwide suffer from IBDs like ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease; as of 2015, the average annual estimate put the number at 11 million regular sufferers. By definition, IBDs involve inflammation of the colon, small intestine and/or large intestine, and include symptoms like abdominal pain, diarrhea, severe spasms, cramping and rectal bleeding. Part of the reason scientists cannot be sure whether microplastics cause or exacerbate IBDs is that so much about their exact chemical composition is mysterious by design.

“Plastic is a byproduct of petrochemical manufacturers,” Jacqueline Doremus, an Assistant Professor of Economics at Cal Poly and expert in evaluating environmental policy effectiveness, told Salon by email in July. “Decreases in demand for oil and gas mean producers betting on plastic. At the same time, more than three-quarters of plastic additives are not disclosed to researchers, the public, or regulators because they are protected as intellectual property or are improperly documented. So we have two forces at work: strong incentives for a powerful industry to increase plastic production and a poor understanding of the sometimes toxic additives they use.”

Like other forms of plastic pollution, microplastics have been linked to major health issues like immune diseases and cancer. There is also evidence linking plastic pollution to dropping sperm counts among men, causing some scientists to worry that they will ultimately cause a mass fertility crisis.

Editor’s note: This story was updated at 8:21pm ET to correct the units that the plastic concentrations were measured in.  

Microplastics and their effects:

From Britney Spears to Lindsay Lohan, starlets reclaiming their lives is my favorite 2021 trend

In November, Britney Spears was officially freed from the nearly 14-year conservatorship controlled by her father Jamie Spears when a judge with the Los Angeles Superior Court terminated the arrangement. The conservatorship had given Jamie Spears authority over his adult daughter’s career, finances, and virtually all decisions in her life, including forcibly putting her on birth control and forbidding her from re-marrying.

The elder Spears had begun the conservatorship in 2008, claiming Spears’ mental health struggles at the time warranted the then-temporary guardianship. 

But in the years since, Spears has seen her two sons more (after losing custody to ex-husband Kevin Federline before the conservatorship, an arrangement that reverted to 30% unsupervised custodial rights for Spears). Any mental health diagnosis has not been made public — some have theorized Spears was dealing with untreated postpartum depression — but Spears’ conservatorship was terminated without a mental health screening, an unusual circumstance that would likely only happen, according to disability rights lawyer Zoe Brennan-Kohn: “If everyone in the picture thinks this person does not need to be in this invasive situation.”

And in the month since the conservatorship was ended, Spears has posted on her social media more: smiling and often dancing. Newly engaged to her partner of more than four years, actor and fitness trainer Sam Asghari, the two spent Christmas together. Spears had put up a Christmas tree early, in October, an advance celebration in hopeful anticipation of her freedom. 

Spears, who turned 40 in December, is not the only female celebrity, maligned and misunderstood in the early 2000s, now back in the spotlight for positive and healthy reasons. Starlets from my childhood are having a good year. They are finally having a year under their own control, to tell their own stories, an ownership that was denied to them in their youth. 

RELATED: Britney Spears freed from “abusive” conservatorship

This November, 35-year-old Lindsay Lohan announced her engagement to financer Bader Shammas after dating for several years. Lohan was a child model at the age of three, and teen star of movies “Mean Girls” and a remake of “The Parent Trap.” 

The bubbly redhead who had charmed audiences in family-friendly films like “Herbie: Fully Loaded” and “Freaky Friday” started to attend Alcoholic Anonymous meetings at age 21 while also being a nightly fixture on the club scene. In and out of rehab over the years, some court-ordered, including a stay at the Betty Ford Center, she faced DUI charges, and charges of reckless driving, driving under a suspended license, and drug possession, but served only days in jail.

In a 2013 interview with Oprah, Lohan described herself, when pressed, as an “addict,” admitting that she did cocaine in order to drink more. 

Lohan has mostly stayed out of the spotlight recently, abroad in Dubai, where she has lived for the past seven years (and where she met Shammas). Stable relationships are not the only marker of success, of course, and after appearing in some more serious, low-budget films and some live theater performances (British publication The Stage wrote that she was “out of her league” in David Mamet’s “Speed-the-Plow”), Lohan has a big movie planned in 2022. 

The Christmas movie, co-starring “Glee” alum Chord Overstreet, is so far untitled, but that didn’t stop it from taking attention away from 2021 holiday films. Forget this year. Give us 2022 Lohan with her hair long and red, and her smile wide, standing in a plaid scarf next to a romantic lead in some fake snow in a fake small town, please.

Start the sentence “Whatever happened to . . .?” and you can fill in the blank with any number of names of young women from the 2000s, singers and actors. Women who are back now, older, and a heck of a lot wiser about their careers, their personal lives, and the media which laid them bare. 

Avril Lavigne, the singer-songwriter criticized as a young teen for calling herself punk and for co-writing her songs with older, more established songwriters, has a new tour in the works. The 37-year-old announced she’s working on a film adaptation of “Sk8ter Boi,” her hit song from her 2002 debut album, about to celebrate its 20th birthday.  

Jessica Simpson celebrated four years of being sober in November. The singer posted an older photo of herself on Instagram, taken before she made the decision to stop drinking, and wrote about the person she was back then: “I didn’t love myself. I didn’t respect my own power. Today I do. I have made nice with the fears and I have accepted the parts of my life that are just sad. I own my personal power.” The 41-year-old published a memoir “Open Book,” which described her drinking and drug abuse, in 2020.

Even Tara Reid, a favorite target of critical press in the 2000s for her alleged hard-partying, has had a bit of a comeback, thanks to appearing in the cult hit series “Sharknado.” 

All these women were thrust onstage young, as children pushed on by their parents, many of whom had their own struggles with addiction (in a hearing about her conservatorship, Spears said she was afraid of her father).

All had easy and early access to drugs and alcohol. Lohan said she started using drugs before she could legally drink. Many women who became our favorite teen stars survived physical and sexual abuse. Many married young. Simpson married Nick Lachey at 22. Lavigne first married at 21. Spears had two children before the age of 25. 

Magazines were not kind to girls growing up publicly in the 2000s. Most made a ton of money off them.

In a 2014 interview with Time, Reid said she felt “like a cartoon. Because that’s what sells. Let’s write a bad story about Tara. Let’s show her drunk. Let’s show a party girl. Let’s show the worst situations.”

As Sophie Gilbert wrote in The Atlantic: “The early days of the internet collided with nonstop cable-news coverage and submerged us into a peculiarly banal kind of drama: Spears buying snacks at a gas station, swarmed by photographers waiting for her to cry, or yell, or do something that affirmed the public perception of her as unworthy.” 

Simpson was mocked for her breast size, and labeled “a dumb blond” repeatedly for her antics on the reality show she starred on with her now ex-husband, Lachey. Diagnosed with Lyme disease at age 30, after years of dealing with an unknown illness, many speculated that Lavigne simply had an eating disorder

“Everyone’s talking about it,” an interviewer said to Spears on TV. “Your breasts.”


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That’s a scene from the New York Times/FX documentary “Framing Britney Spears,” which aired in 2021, and may be, along with other documentaries about Spears, at least part of the reason for the renaissance in these women’s lives, and for the reckoning media needs to do about what was done to them as children.

That interview when Spears is asked by a middle-aged man to talk about breasts occurred when she was 17. Brooke Shields was 15 when Barbara Walters asked for her measurements in a television interview that Shields has since criticized as inappropriate. So far, Walters has not apologized. Neither did the interviewer of Spears (though he did a lot of defensive backpedaling).

The end of Spears’ conservatorship marks the start of the rest of her life, a life not controlled by men. It has drawn attention both to conservatorship in general, a practice some consider ableist (Amanda Bynes, singer and star of “What a Girl Wants” and “She’s the Man” is currently under a conservatorship managed by her parents), as well as to the years many young women of the 2000s like Spears were set on fire by the magnifying glass of the tabloids.

In some regards, their childhood was taken, paparazzi shot by paparazzi shot, bad joke by bad joke. Certainly, control of their own narrative was. And while no one can get that back, Spears, Simpson, Lohan, and Lavigne are making up for lost time.

Maybe Bynes (whose conservatorship has not received nearly as much attention as Spears’), Reid, and other women will too, as they approach middle age in the frustrating position of knowing you were wronged as a young girl, but not having enough power to do much about it, to recoup what was taken, or finally and fully to actualize. 

“I was the first one,” Reid, who began acting when she was 6-years-old, said in the Time interview. “I was before Paris Hilton, before Lindsay Lohan. I’m the oldest one — and I started selling their magazines.”

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Best of 2021: Sex in trees

I’ve always had sex in cities. That my sexual preferences were entangled with the sounds of traffic, midnight sirens, the mad ravings of lovers’ disputes outside my window, the too joyful soundtrack of an ice cream truck approaching, I took for granted. Cities had been a constant witness to when I wanted to make love, and when I wanted to fuck. My own windows at night, glowing and golden, were the unblinking gaze to my neighbors’ fantasies as much as they offered these strangers glimpses of my body twisted under cotton sheets, my muffled moans, my pleasure and humiliation. Even with the blinds shut, sex in the city is always on display.

* * *

As my husband and I prepared our move from Brooklyn to the countryside in upstate, New York, I told him that I was going to miss the seven coffee shops within a few blocks of our apartment, the ability to walk anywhere, my group of friends that I rarely see but felt they were around, within reach, and all the other abundance, riches, conveniences that a city offers. The day before we left, we laid in bed, held each other and cried. It seemed artificial to mourn a city, but moving always involves a kind of loss.

RELATED: Swiping right in the fertility doctor’s office: On pursuing romance and single motherhood at once

What I didn’t anticipate was the difference in how I experience sex without the anxiety of being overheard, the sense of being simultaneously voyeur and voyee, looking and unlooking. Outside the window of our cabin — trees and their shadows. The first time we made love in the country, I was distracted by the silence. Against this thick muteness, my ears strained to listen for something, anything.

“It’s just us here,” my husband said, smiling. “So private.”

Anechoic chambers are rooms designed to eliminate reflection and noises caused by electromagnetic waves. There is no echo, no feedback. Visitors have reported hearing their own heartbeat, the rushing sound of their blood flowing, their bones crunching as they turn their head. In short, you are the only source of sound you’ll hear. Forty-five minutes is the record time that a person has been able to stay in this state. The body craves feedback, so much so that it hallucinates in order to give us something to react to. Across from the Whole Foods in my old neighborhood in Brooklyn is a business offering float tanks, a kind of sensory deprivation chamber. I’d walked past it hundreds of times, but never gone in despite my curiosity. After all, I’d always had the country.

* * *

Sex is assumed to be an intensely private experience, but like much else, we experience one thing in relation to another. In that sense, sex is advertisement, sex is food, sex is car insurance, and mothers in Alo Yoga uniforms; sex is expensive baby strollers, and Seamless, a rat coming out of a garbage bag with a chicken bone in its mouth. Sex is subliminal. In the city, sex is ambitious, overwhelmingly so. How many times must we do it daily? Sex is competition. Sex is public.

For over seven years in the city, my husband and I were conscious that we must protect our sex lives, lest it get swallowed up in a smog of unrequited dreams, organized orgies, replacement therapy. We were overstimulated, perhaps oversexed, saturated with it not only via our bodies, but our minds. We wanted sex, but was it because we truly did so, or because the city wanted us to want sex? All day long, our libidos are saturated with messages from billboards, the lyrics to a song, other attractive people. By the time we approach each other in the bedroom, despite our best intentions, our desires are not our own. And yet, I asked myself if all desires must inherently involve the other, external to the self. Can desire ever be authentic?

RELATED: Living with my ex-husband — as friends — taught me I am better at relationships than I thought

On the roof of my apartment building, I looked into the window of a building opposite — a couple is engaging in foreplay. They are not thinking about me, of course, a stranger to them. They are engulfed by one another. An unconscious part of them must know that they’re on stage, in full view to anybody who might be looking intentionally or unintentionally. I myself have stepped out of the shower, changed, vacuumed, washed the dishes, in little to no clothes. I hope nobody is looking, the thought tugged at me every time, but closing the blinds only for a few minutes also seemed like a waste of effort. Fuck it, was another thought. I oscillated between modesty and indifference.

* * *

Sex in cities can sometimes be painful. Disembodied. My friends and I laughed about just getting it over with. We’ve all read “Cat Person.” We all agreed that despite the fear, the humiliation, the regret of having stepped foot inside a stranger’s apartment, it was still easier to get it over with, easier than confronting our own weakness, than saying no, feeling guilty, an infinite of unknowns. As women who live in cities, we are not precious, not fragile, not afraid of bad sex — how often was it good, anyway? We could have watched another episode of “Chef’s Table.” Sex is but another way to pass the time.

RELATED: A spy in the house of my first love

We can take off our own bras because in a few minutes, 30 tops, and often much less than that, we would be out on the street again, on our way to the subway, home to the comfort of our own bed, our familiar tea mug with a chipped rim we got at the farmers market. Soon after this dull exchange we’d engaged in with mechanic expertise, we would suddenly be empowered.

“Staying over?” asks Anonymous.

“No, thank you,” we say. This part is easy. Just like that, our underwear back on, we are back out in the city streets.

* * *

We are city people, we function within the market exchange of sex. We have sex while never having sex at all. Despite our liberal approach, we feel shame. Many of us do our best to repress our fantasies, key elements of who we are. In the many volumes of literature on various addictions, shame is the underlying common denominator. We feel shame, I believe, only in relation to other people or other entities, like God, but always we’re ashamed to be discovered.  A city is perhaps a breeding ground for shame, layering one on top of another, substituting one for the next. Cities offer corners in which we can hide, and yet as we know from our childhood games, hiding is only worthwhile when somebody is looking for you. There is always the chance of being found, found out. We’ve woven shame with pleasure to make it more bearable. We do not know how to extract ourselves from this pattern. For me, sex in cities has been circuitous, an intricate labyrinth of self-realization, discovery, punitive, wonderful, debilitating.

* * *

From this vantage point, only about a hundred miles from New York City, a short distance in the scheme of things, I am undergoing a transformation, perhaps a nicer word for utter confusion. Among the trees, I am lost to the world and to myself. I cannot be seen and I cannot see. At night, I walk my dog on the dirt road by our cabin — no street lamp to illuminate our path, only the stars obscured by dense gray clouds. Perhaps it will rain tomorrow. Unlike in the city, here my dog rarely pulls on the leash to sniff at a fire hydrant or an electric pole. She just walks, occasionally stopping to chew on a blade of grass. I wonder if she misses the scents of the city, indications of other dogs in the neighborhood, the ongoing refrain of life. I also wonder if she might feel freed from such compulsion, the urge to lunge from temptation toward another, never being quite satiated, never enough, choking herself on the leash.

RELATED: I grew up in the city, not hiking or camping. As an adult, I want my family to enjoy nature’s beauty

I am learning to attune my senses to subtleties. Upstate New York has served as the inspiration to the backdrop to my novel “Constellations of Eve,” three incarnations of one love story, except I’m a few steps behind my characters. In one version, Eve moves to the country with her husband. In another, they do not and neither are they married. We do what we think best holds our relationship together, even if it doesn’t make sense to anyone else. An intentional life, one we must design, redesign, edit, rewrite, demolish, reconstruct, rarely makes sense from the outside in.


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“I’m isolated from everything,” I said to our couple-therapist. “This morning I panicked because I thought we lost our duvet cover. We’ve been doing laundry at laundromats and at various people’s houses, so it could be anywhere. I don’t normally care about things, but here — it’s what I have of my old life.” I rambled, resisting the impulse to describe in minutiae my unexceptional, white duvet cover.

“You chose this,” our therapist said matter-of-factly.

I understand he’d not meant it unkindly. I’d chosen this.

“Something will turn up,” he said, sounding a bit like an oracle. I believe he meant more than just the blanket cover.

* * *

In “Cities & Desire,” Italo Calvino wrote of Anastasia, a fictional city, “the city appears to you as a whole where no desire is lost and of which you are a part, and since it enjoys everything you do not enjoy, you can do nothing but inhabit this desire and be content….your labor which gives form to desire takes from desire its form, and you believe you are enjoying Anastasia wholly when you are only its slave.” Out the car window, I watch hills of greenery roll past. I do not know, I do not know, are thoughts that flash across my mind. The weekend ends, cars are rushing back to the city, but not ours. I can no longer use pleasures to distract myself from pain.

I’m outside the city, external to a vacuum of speed, urgency, drive. Tonight, I stare into the fireplace and occupy myself with swatting mosquitoes.

An absence of desire. An absence of anxiety. Absence.

I’m afraid of what I do not know. I’d never been without ruthless wanting. I feel like crying at the suspicion that the construction of the self I’d labored over had perhaps been only reactions to circumstance. Which thoughts of mine are actually my own? I’m mourning for my city self, its booming energy, its ceaseless striving, its deafening cacophony of sounds, mutterings, that I’ve grown fond of, that I’ve integrated into my personal identity.

* * *

What has silence to teach me? I strain my ears — but wait, was that — the wind? And — were those chirps from crickets or frogs? It is terrifying when there is nowhere left to hide. In a bush of hundreds of species of plants, in stillness, my husband points out a sole leaf swinging to and fro like the pendulum of a clock. How bizarre, we both marvel over it. Perhaps a bug is climbing over it on the other side, hidden from our view. There are mysteries in the trees, slow secrets, waiting to be found. We are invited to look, leave damp footprints on a bed of fallen leaves, inhale the exquisite emptiness of nature.  

Read more of Salon’s Best of 2021 Life Stories.

Stray planets are more common than we thought: Astronomers find 70 “rogue” planets in our galaxy

According to our current understanding of solar systems, planets generally form out of the same nebulas that produce the stars that they orbit. This is why the landscape of the galaxy looks as it does — a series of stars every few light-years, most with multiple planets orbiting them. 

Because of this, rogue planets — meaning planets that drift in the darkness in-between stars, gravitationally loyal to no sun — were not believed to be a common occurrence. Yet sometimes it so happens in the astronomy world that scientists discover what they previously believed was a rare phenomenon is actually somewhat common.

A planet, by definition, is a celestial body that orbits a host star; but not all do. Some planets float aimlessly through space with no host star to orbit. According to a new research published in the journal Nature Astronomy, scientists have discovered at least 70 lost-soul exoplanets in our galaxy, suggesting that they’re not as rare as scientists previously thought.

“We did not know how many to expect and are excited to have found so many,” said Núria Miret-Roig, an astronomer at the Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Bordeaux, France and the University of Vienna, Austria, and the first author of the study.

Scientists say the discovery is the largest group of “mysterious galactic nomads” ever found. Miret-Roig and fellow researchers discovered the group of lost exoplanets by studying data spanning over the last 20 years from telescopes operated by the European Southern Observatory (ESO). 


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“The vast majority of our data come from ESO observatories, which were absolutely critical for this study. Their wide field of view and unique sensitivity were keys to our success,” said Hervé Bouy, an astronomer at the Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Bordeaux, France, and project leader of the new research. “We used tens of thousands of wide-field images from ESO facilities, corresponding to hundreds of hours of observations, and literally tens of terabytes of data.”

The lost planets were found using a clever astronomical trick. Though one might think a lone planet without a sun would be freezing cold, such planets — particularly gaseous ones with radiative interiors, like Jupiter and Saturn — are apt to still be far warmer than the background temperature of space, which is only a few degrees above absolute zero. That means that such a world would still emit a faint glow, detectable in contrast to the background of space. Astronomers suspected such worlds would be perceptible using the sensitive cameras on large telescopes, though their glow would be very faint.

They were right. Using this technique, scientists successfully found at least 70 new rogue planets with masses comparable to Jupiter in the Upper Scorpius and Ophiuchus constellation of the Milky Way galaxy.

“We measured the tiny motions, the colors and luminosities of tens of millions of sources in a large area of the sky,” Miret-Roig explained. “These measurements allowed us to securely identify the faintest objects in this region, the rogue planets.”

Notably, scientists believe that this could be just the tip of the iceberg in discovering rogue exoplanets.

“There could be several billions of these free-floating giant planets roaming freely in the Milky Way without a host star,” Bouy speculated.

Scientists don’t know exactly what causes a planet to go rogue in the universe, but they do have a suspicious that these unique celestial bodies form when a gas cloud is too small to lead to the formation of a star; or maybe, for some strange cosmic reason, their parent star(s) kicked them out of the solar system due to some gravitational mishap, such as an interaction with a larger massive body or an irregular orbit.

Regardless, researchers hope that further advances in technology will help unlock the mystery of these cosmic nomads.

“These objects are extremely faint, and little can be done to study them with current facilities,” Bouy said. Bouy noted that the Extremely Large Telescope, currently under construction in Chile and likely to be the largest telescope ever built when complete, will be “absolutely crucial to gathering more information about most of the rogue planets we have found.”

Read more astronomy news:

Denver shooting spree suspect raged about “female premarital sex” and “male honor violence”

A Denver man suspected of killing five people on Monday night harbored “extremist views,” law enforcement officials told ABC News.

Lyndon McLeod, 47, was fatally shot during a gunfire exchange with an officer after killing five people and wounding three others during a “shooting spree” that spanned four different locations, police said.

Federal law enforcement had McLeod on their radar before the shooting, according to ABC News. Multiple law enforcement officials told the outlet that federal law enforcement was aware that he “harbored extremist views” and had a history of psychiatric episodes. Law enforcement agents are now scouring his writings to determine what motivated him to carry out Monday’s killings.

Police said they investigated the suspect last year and earlier this year in separate incidents but did not arrest him.

McLeod appears to have written about “alt-right philosophies,” masculine supremacy and targeted violence against the “weak” online, according to the Daily Beast, where he used the alias Roman McClay to operate a “plethora” of social media accounts and release three books about a character named Lyndon McLeod who “commits 46 murders.” He cited the books while criticizing a “weak” reporter who was confronted by boxer Mike Tyson in a 2014 YouTube video.

“This is basically the plot to my stupid book. Our entire society is made up of shitty little fucks who insult badasses & get away with it because law enforcement & social norms protect the WEAK from the STRONG. I’m over it,” he wrote. “The weak better buckle up … shit is about to get real.”

In various Twitter posts, McLeod complained about “modern/liberal suppression” of “male honor violence” and raged against “female premarital sex.”

Gabriel Thorn, a man who bought a home from McLeod five years earlier, told local news outlet KDVR that “there were numerous hidden gun safes in the walls.”

“He just disappeared off the face of the earth when we bought the house,” Thorn said. “My wife and I joke that he’s changed his name and moved out of the country.”


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McLeod knew all his victims through business or personal relationships and likely targeted all of his victims, police said at a press conference Tuesday. The suspect first targeted a tattoo parlor in Denver, where he killed two women, including the shop’s owner, and injured a man, according to The Denver Channel.

McLeod then opened fire at a location where he previously owned a tattoo shop as recently as 2017, according to ABC News, but no one was injured. McLeod then burglarized two homes, where he killed another man, according to police.

Police were able to track down the suspect’s vehicle after the third shooting.

 “Denver police officers identified a vehicle associated with this incident. There was a pursuit that ensued,” Pazen said. “There was an exchange of gunfire between the individual, the suspect here, and our officers.”

Pazen said that no one was injured in the exchange but the suspect disabled a police vehicle and fled to the nearby suburb of Lakewood. Lakewood Police responded to a shooting around 6 p.m. where the department said a person was killed at a tattoo parlor. Lakewood Police found the suspect’s car at a shopping center, where he opened fire on police and fled to a hotel. The suspect shot a clerk at the hotel and shot and injured a female officer while fleeing the facility. The officer fired back, killing the suspect.

The FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are assisting with the investigation and police are appealing to the public for additional information.

“We need to dig in and find out what the motive was behind this,” Pazen said.

Read more on the danger of right-wing extremism:

“Hawkeye” originally had a different post-credits scene

Marvel went all out on the holiday cheer last week with the season finale of “Hawkeye.” Yes, there were deadly showdowns and cathartic bonding moments, but above all, the final episode of the show’s first season was about superheroes getting their superhero business done in time to be home for Christmas.

It’s fitting, then, that Marvel opted to make the finale’s post-credits scene the equivalent of a fun thank you for viewers. (Very minor SPOILERS ahead for “Hawkeye.”)

“Hawkeye’s” post-credits musical

It’s become a long-running tradition by now that most Marvel films or shows have some kind of tease during the end credits which sets up an upcoming projects. For example, “Black Widow’s” post-credits stinger showed Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh) getting recruited by the shadowy Val (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) to hunt down Clint Barton, which we saw come to fruition in “Hawkeye.”

“Rogers: The Musical” in “Hawkeye” (Marvel Studios/Disney)

With “Hawkeye,” Marvel instead opted to give fans a full version of the “Rogers: The Musical” song, “Save The City.” This is the song that Clint (Jeremy Renner) and his family are watching on Broadway in the show’s opening episode, with that ear-worm “I could do this all day” refrain. It’s no “Agatha All Along,” but it’s not a bad song by any stretch and it felt like a pretty appropriate send-off considering that the finale aired just days before Christmas. The good cheer was only bolstered by the fact that the post-credits version of the song guest starred Rent original cast member Adam Pascal and Ty Taylor, the voice of Lester Grimes on the show Vinyl.

All in all, it was a good time even if it didn’t move the plot forward for the MCU in any way.

“Hawkeye” was going to have a different post-credits scene

However, we now know that Hawkeye originally had a different post-credits stinger planned. But don’t expect this one to be any more substantial. Apparently, it was always in the cards for “Hawkeye” to have a light send-off.

Per Deadline, Elaina Scott, who is a former employee at Digital Domain who also worked on “Loki,” took to Twitter the day after the Hawkeye finale aired to tease fans about what they missed in the show’s original post-credits scene. For what it’s worth, Digital Domain states that it did not work on any elements on “Hawkeye.” 

The post credits [of] the finale of Hawkeye was meant to the owl taking the [bros] to its nest, kinda sad they cut it. Would have been hilarious!!

The owl she’s referring to here is the one Clint Barton came face-to-face with while he was dangling from the Rockefeller Christmas tree. During the climactic showdown with the Tracksuit Mafia, his protégé Kate Bishop (Hailee Steinfeld) shrinks one of their vans with a Pym-tech arrow. Before she and Clint can figure out what to do with the tiny van full of bros, the owl swoops down and carries it off.

It was a fun bit of classic Marvel humor, and now we know that originally the joke was meant to keep running.

But since we didn’t get the end credits scene, the mystery of the shrunken bros carries on. Will they go on a pint-sized reign of terror across the city? Will they reappear in “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantamania”? We may never know.

The full season of “Hawkeye” is now streaming on Disney+.

[CORRECTION: A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that Scott is a current employee of Digital Domain and implied that the company had worked on elements of “Hawkeye.” The story has been updated to reflect this error.]

Salon’s 2021 spicy take awards

The common wisdom about the “hot take” —  the derisive term for a provocative but poorly argued position — is that it persists because social media algorithms don’t really distinguish between people sharing something because they like it or because they’re dunking on it. But, in compiling my list for some of the smokingest takes of 2021 — a year when boredom and national unease made the hot takes industry especially fecund — I saw a theme emerging. The theme, pitifully but inevitably, was endless variations of the claim that Republicans aren’t as sinister, or frightening, or fascistic as the hotheaded #Resistance or “woke mob” make them out to be. 

Journalists generally spend too much time on Twitter, and it’s producing an irrationally strong urge in some media figures to portray themselves as the above-it-all voice of moderation, in contrast to Twitter noise-makers in their “Mueller Time” T-shirts. I even, on some level, get it. Social media rewards hyperbole. People take things too far every day. (For instance, reading lefty Twitter would leave one with the impression that a breakthrough COVID-19 case is a death sentence, as opposed to the relatively minor or even asymptomatic infection most people experience.) 

RELATED: 2021’s most despicable villains: Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema

But being annoyed by social media junkies who are addicted to self-righteous posturing is no justification for trolling folks with wrongheaded takes about how Republicans aren’t so bad. Whatever other flaws #Resistance might have as a community, they tend to be right about one thing: Republicans suck. One underestimates that fact at their own peril. Take a walk, turn off Twitter for awhile, do real work. Anything is smarter than firing up a computer and writing that spicy take about how Republicans aren’t the cartoon villains that they, in fact, are. 

That’s my two cents for 2022, but it’s too late for this year’s list of awardees for the hottest takes of 2021: 

Best hate click: What Trump Got Right

This piece in the Washington Post came just six months after the only president who attempted to end democracy by inciting a violent insurrection left office. The Post might as well have run a story about Mussolini’s excellent train management skills except the premise was somehow even stupider because, unlike the Italian fascist Trump learned his chin gestures from, Mussolini actually cared about some matters of governance. Needless to say, any policies that actually worked under Trump were purely by accident and were not really a credit to a man so wholly incurious about the world outside of his ego that the only app installed on his iPhone is Twitter

Most wrong: How Ron DeSantis won the pandemic

Trumpy Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida set out to become, and succeeded at, being one of the most notorious villains of the pandemic. He not only blocked most efforts to curtail the spread of COVID-19, but even went so far as to sell merchandise advertising his contempt for public health officials. Naturally, championing DeSantis was irresistible bait for Michael Kruse of Politico. In March, Kruse wrote a piece headlined “How Ron DeSantis won the pandemic,” and argued, “after 12 months in which he was pilloried as a reckless executive driven more by ideology than science,” Florida “has fared no worse, and in some ways better, than many other states.”

Then the delta variant hit, sending cases in Florida through the roof. The state has the 12th highest death rate and, as omicron tears across the country, has a case rate more than one-and-a-half times what it was during last winter’s peak — and climbing. Over 62,000 Floridians have now died of COVID-19.

Most stubbornly insistent on being wrong: “Republican vaccine denial is not a political strategy

Shortly after Joe Biden was inaugurated, it became obvious that Fox News and many GOP leaders saw a continuing pandemic as their best bet to undermine the Biden presidency. They quickly figured out that the easiest way to prolong things is convince their own supporters to eschew vaccination. There was some resistance, however, to say out loud that GOP leaders are willing to kill their own people for political gain, but some commentators — including myself and Brian Beutler from Crooked Media — were pointing this out early and often. Now, it’s commonly accepted wisdom in the pages of the New York Times and the Washington Post

RELATED: A year of dubious characters and dark drama: Salon’s best News & Politics stories of 2021

Still, Jonathan Chait of New York Magazine refuses to see what is plain. In August, he petulantly insisted that this cannot be a political strategy. “Never attribute to malice,” Chait argued, that “which is adequately explained by stupidity.”

This faith in the non-malice of the GOP was a particularly strange stance in 2021, a year when Trump tried to overthrow democracy and the party backed him. Chait stood by his refusal to accept the GOP’s sinister motives in November, even in the face of Republican governors bribing people to stay unvaccinated. Now right-wing media figures are raging at Trump for getting the booster. If they actually thought the shots were dangerous, they’d be worried about Trump’s health. Anger belies that this is about holding the strategy line, not a legitimate fear of the shots. 


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Biggest lemming: Kavanaugh Is the Last Hope for Abortion Rights

This is one where it’s hard to single out one hot take. Instead, this will be awarded based on a widespread rush to “prove” that the left is hysterical, one that blew up in many, many faces: The claim that Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett aren’t as bad as the ladies in the Handmaid’s costumes are saying. One juicy example is “Kavanaugh Is the Last Hope for Abortion Rights,” written by Harvard law professor Noah Feldman in August. After a couple less-than-apocalyptic decisions in the summer, nearly every mainstream outlet had to issue a tut-tutting scold of the supposedly hysterical left, with headlines like “Barrett Flashes Independence” and “the Court has largely avoided partisanship.”

Shortly after lulling the easily baited mainstream press into believing they aren’t that bad, however, the conservatives on the Supreme Court turned around and upheld not just an unconstitutional abortion ban in Texas, but blessed the bounty hunter system to enforce it. And that’s before they overturn Roe outright, which is what arguments in December suggested is all but inevitable next summer. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg of right-wing radicalism experts believe is about to be unleashed by the court in the coming months

RELATED: Justice Amy Coney Barrett defends the Supreme Court: We aren’t a “bunch of partisan hacks”

Biggest dupe: The neverending quest for one good Republican

This one is for everyone who briefly fell for the Chris Christie “comeback” hype in November. ABC, CNN, MSNBC, the New York Times, and even The Daily Show all gave Christie fawning coverage over the possibility that he could emerge as an anti-Trump figure, a supposed return of common sense and sanity to the GOP. (A narrative that ignores how little the party had of either to begin with.) The whole thing went over about as well as New Coke:

But the fantasy of the “good Republican” will never die in the mainstream media, so expect many more rounds of this until Trump wins the party’s presidential nomination in 2024.

Least fact-based: A maternity ranch” 

In November, Stephanie McCrummen in the Washington Post wrote a glowing profile of Aubrey Schlackman, a far-right Texas evangelical planning to start a “maternity ranch” for women forced to give birth, due to the state’s abortion ban. Anyone reading the article could see Schlackman’s plan is to trap isolated pregnant women on a ranch, extract unpaid labor from them, and subject them to mandatory Bible study and lectures on the sin of fornication. But McCrummen uncritically portrayed this as “a Christian haven where women could live stress-free.” 

As many folks pointed out immediately, a quick Google search on the history of such practices would reveal that “maternity homes” are less spa-like charities and closer in spirit to prison camps. Past violations range from traumatizing women by forcing them to give up babies to imprisoning women for life to throwing dead bodies of “fallen” women into mass graves. While not technically a take, McCrummen gets the award as a reminder to do a little research instead of just assuming the label “Christian” preempts the possibility that someone is up to no good. 

Biggest whitewash: Sinema speaks up — and shakes off her critics

Most of the reflexively wrongheaded impulse to troll the left centers on laundering Republicans. But I won’t ignore the November Politico effort to clean up the reputation of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, the Arizona Democrat who destroyed her own party’s good name in 2021 with a truly stunning combination of stupidity, ego, and corruption.

Sinema speaks up — and shakes off her critics,” reads the headline of the puff piece by Burgess Everett and Marianne Levine, which attempts to paint Sinema as a reasonable and tough-minded Democrat, instead of what she is, a sleazy traitor who sold out not just her party but democracy itself. Sinema was clearly trying to use Politico to fix her image with Democrats. But she couldn’t hold it together to coast on this reputation rehab very long at all. Within a month, she was spitting on Democratic efforts to protect election integrity and voting rights, reminding everyone that there is no amount of fawning coverage that can hide the rotten person underneath all those colorful clothes. 


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Next year, everyone, let’s try to find some other reason to write stuff other than “this will annoy the overheated wine moms of #Resistance Twitter,” okay? Oh, who am I kidding? That’s like asking journalists to take time away from Twitter itself. Might as well ask the sun to stop rising or Donald Trump to think of someone other than himself. 

Dr. Oz and wife thought they’d hung up — got caught raging against “f**king girl reporter”

Dr. Mehmet Oz and his wife Lisa were overheard by a journalist describing her as a “fucking girl reporter” after they failed to hang up successfully while trying to duck her phone calls.

New York Magazine reporter Olivia Nuzzi traveled to Pennsylvania to profile Oz’s Republican Senate campaign but had difficulty tracking down the celebrity doctor or any signs of an actual campaign. After contact with the campaign “proved elusive,” she wrote, she showed up at Oz’s empty campaign office and asked a nearby business owner to connect her with Oz’s family. She was ultimately able to reach Lisa Oz, who hung up on her. When Nuzzi tried again, Lisa Oz presumably intended to hang up again, but connected her phone to her car’s sound system instead, allowing Nuzzi to hear her conversation with her husband.

“It’s Olivia from the New Yorker, the woman who talked to Michelle,” Lisa Oz said, referring to Nuzzi’s interview with a family friend.

Nuzzi tried to interject at that point, but they did not appear to hear her.

“Michelle should have never spoken to her,” Dr. Oz told his wife. “That’s who’s down at the office now.”

“Who’s down at the office?” Lisa Oz asked.

“She’s down at the office. Your father called and said there’s a reporter from the New Yorker waiting for me down there who said she had an appointment … We? We had an appointment to meet today!” Dr. Oz replied, though Nuzzi has said she never claimed to have made an appointment.

“You think she made it up?” Lisa Oz asked.

“I think she made it up completely!” Dr. Oz said. “It’s called lying also. It’s called being a liar.”

“This fucking girl reporter. This is the girl reporter who broke into some guy’s house and stole all his photo albums,” Lisa Oz said, referring to an accusation that Nuzzi has said was “made up by disgraced ex-Trump aide Corey Lewandowski in retaliation after I had reported details of his Single White Male obsession with a White House official.”

RELATED: Pennsylvania deserves better than Dr. Oz

The Oz couple continued their conversation for several minutes, with Nuzzi still on the phone. The couple discussed rushing to the office to make sure it was locked with Nuzzi nearby, and complained that their friend Michelle Bouchard had told Nuzzi that Dr. Oz was part of the “new guard” of the Republican Party, along with Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin.

“She said shit she shouldn’t have said! That I was going to be the next leader of the Republican Party,” Dr. Oz raged to his wife, who denied Bouchard had said that. “Michelle told her I’m going to be the next leader of the Republican Party, shit like that, that’s what you told me she said!” he continued.

The two continued to chat before the call got cut off.

Nuzzi, who ultimately failed to get an interview with Oz, said on Twitter that in retrospect the call was a lucky get for her article but “at the time I cried.”

Nuzzi did interview several Pennsylvania Republicans and people close to Oz, though most were not exactly keen on his Senate bid.


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“I love Mehmet, but I’m really pissed. I would have loved to see normal Republicans, but there’s no way you can be normal now,” one friend told Nuzzi, adding, “He’s a smart guy. He’s pragmatic. And that just doesn’t work in the Republican Party. Wait until they find out that he’s a Muslim! Or that he served in the Turkish army!”

People familiar with Oz’s television career were less generous, describing him as a con artist.

“Somewhere, I’m not sure how, he started to sell out — it happens to a lot of people when they get money and success; they want more money and more success. He went from doctor to entertainer to scam artist,” a veteran daytime producer told Nuzzi. “Dr. Oz is dangerous because he believes he’s got some divine power.”

A former producer on Oz’s show, which often touted bogus “miracle cures,” recalled the staff’s dismay at Oz’s softball 2016 interview with then-candidate Donald Trump and his hunger for ratings. “This guy is willing to do whatever it takes for money,” the producer told Nuzzi. New York Times reporter Frank Bruni, who profiled Oz in 2010, said “I’ve met and profiled very few if any people who so embody the wages of ambition.”

Oz frequently appears on Fox News and has promoted dubious COVID treatments, and has worked for years to burnish his conservative credentials in other ways. But his nascent Senate campaign and his “contortionist act” seeking to align himself with the current GOP has left a lot to be desired for Republicans in Pennsylvania, Nuzzi writes. (Especially since Oz appears to live in New Jersey, as he has for many years.)

“The influencer types are not fans of him,” a conservative operative told her, referring to prominent right-wing pundits. “Dude is getting blown up. They are on a jihad against this guy. So it’s a matter of ‘How much does that permeate into the grass roots?'”

Though Oz has sought to capitalize on Trump-backed candidate Sean Parnell’s departure from the GOP Senate race in Pennsylvania amid domestic violence allegations, some former Trump aides, including former White House aide Hope Hicks, are already rallying behind David McCormick, a hedge fund manager who is expected to jump into the race. McCormick is married to Dina Powell, who served briefly as a deputy national security adviser under Trump and now works at Goldman Sachs.

“We’re getting reports every day from people he’s meeting with — he’s doing these private meet-and-greet type of things — that he’s incoherent when it comes to the issues,” a former Trump adviser who now works for McCormick said of Oz.

TrumpWorld figures believe that candidates will have to go full MAGA to have a chance in the Republican primary, which puts McCormick at an advantage over Oz.

“I hate to say this, but if you’re not willing to go full retard in a Republican primary right now, it’s hard,” a pro-Trump operative involved in the race told Nuzzi. “The expectations are what they are.”

Read more on Dr. Oz’s efforts to go full MAGA:

15 best champagne cocktail recipes to elevate the everyday

Most of the time, I want to enjoy Champagne or prosecco unadorned in a Champagne flute. It’s the simplest drink, yet the most elegant. For years, I’ve celebrated every anniversary, birthday, and obviously New Year’s Eve with at least one glass (and sometimes, an entire bottle) of Champagne. But I have to admit: Champagne cocktails are really great. The first one I was ever introduced to was a French 75. If you’re skeptical of Champagne cocktails, this is a delightful introduction into the category — it’s made with simple syrup, gin, and lemon juice. Serve it in a Champagne glass and garnish with a lemon twist. I’m not the only one who thinks that this is a fabulous cocktail. “It’s light, citrus-forward, and contains all the bubbly. What’s great about this cocktail is how versatile it is. You can make it with pretty much any spirit of your choice: gin, vodka, tequila, cognac, the list goes on,” says Food52’s Resident Bartender.

With every Champagne cocktail here, you can always use a more budget-friendly sparkling wine instead. Here are our best Champagne cocktail recipes, ready to serve at the drop of a (top) hat.

Best champagne cocktail recipes

1. Champagne Cocktail

Dropping a sugar cube in a glass of Champagne is pure fun, because it riles up the crowd of bubbles. This cocktail calls for a little bit of that flourish, plus a couple of dashes of Angostura bitters and a lemon twist for garnish.

2. The Fall 75 – Fall Champagne Cocktail

This autumnal twist on the aforementioned French 75 recipe swaps blood orange juice in place of the usual lemon juice. There’s also a vanilla berry simple syrup, because why not?

3. Cockney Champagne Cocktail

“Same but different,” my Aunt Diane likes to say in a deep Southern drawl about two things that are quite similar, but also quite different. This is the exact recipe for a French 75, but under a new name. See? Same but different.

4. The Final Countdown

This gin-based Prohibition-era cocktail got a bubbly upgrade. Shake up a combination of dry gin, Green Chartreuse, Luxardo Maraschino liqueur, and lime juice; pour into a coupe glass and top off with Champagne.

5. Strawberry Juice and a Champagne Cocktail

Strawberries and Champagne are kind of a classic combination, are they not? Serve this simple stunner for Valentine’s DayMother’s Day, or all summer long when berries are at their brightest.

6. Mother’s Ruin Punch

Leave it to a speakeasy-style cocktail bar in the heart of Manhattan to develop a punch recipe with 10 ingredients, a couple of which might be a little tough to find (like tea-infused sweet vermouth). But if you’re up for a challenge and want to wow a crowd, you should definitely try this one.

7. Crimson Bulleit Punch

“This elixir has everything I look for in a holiday punch, a delicious ruby red color, the effervescence of Champagne, a hint of ginger spice, and enough sweetness (but not too much) to coax this rather potent punch down with ease,” writes recipe developer Oui, Chef.

8. Kiss the Ring, a Riff on the French 75

Top off this gin and Cointreau cocktail with a splash of brut Champagne or prosecco. If you can get your hands on them, it’s best with fresh-squeezed blood orange juice.

9. Not-Your-Typical Rum and Cola

Rum and Coke lovers may scoff at this Champagne cocktail…until they taste it. With amaro, dark rum, Angostura bitters, cola, and Champagne, there’s a lot going on but somehow it all just works together like absolute magic.

10. Pom Fizz

“Homemade, one-ingredient pomegranate syrup is your bar’s new best friend. Here, it’s paired with sparkling white wine and pomegranate seeds for a simple-but-stunning cocktail,” writes recipe developer Joanna Sciarrino.

11. Nardini Spritz

This Champagne cocktail calls for Amaro Nardini, which has intense notes of milk chocolate flavor, black licorice, and plenty of peppermint.

12. Honeyed Peach Melba Bellinis

Bellinis are usually a two-part combination of sparkling wine and peach purée, but in this roundup, we’re sharing the best of the best. This version features a homemade raspberry simple syrup and homemade honey peach sorbet. It seems like a lot of work (and it is!), but it’s so worth it for a crowd-friendly cocktail.

13. Holiday Sparkler

Wait, you mean there are holiday cocktails beyond eggnog? Yes! Think of this one as a more festive cosmopolitan — it’s made with cava, fresh mint, triple sec, freshly squeezed lime juice, and cranberry juice.

14. Blueberry Orange Spritz

There’s a double dose of fizz in this cocktail, thanks to both Champagne and soda water. With muddled blueberries and Cointreau (orange-flavored liqueur), I will take one poolside, on repeat all afternoon, please and thank you.

15. Our Best Classic Mimosa

“As legend would have it, the world’s very first mimosa debuted in 1925 at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Paris. Which seems fitting for a cocktail that’s effervescent, equal parts sweet and tart, and unapologetic about its ABV at brunch,” writes recipe developer Ella Quittner. For such a simple Champagne cocktail, it sure has quite a robust history.

10 DIY decorations for your New Year’s Eve party

In my personal (and time-tested) opinion, New Year’s Eve is best spent at home, whether it be yours or someone else’s. There’s less pressure to dress up and wear uncomfortable shoes, and you don’t have to elbow your way to the open bar to get your money’s worth before midnight, not to mention various chairs to plop onto when you’re full of snacks and bubbly.

Jut because you’re at home, though, doesn’t mean NYE needs to feel like yet another night in (but if you want to hang in your pajamas, go for it). You can get as festive as you’d like with decor that bridges the gap between the times you had the stamina to go out and that ever-growing part of you that would rather stay in.

Below, find some of our favorite DIY New Year’s Eve decorations to dial up the festivities no matter how big or small your celebration.

1. Chin, chin dah-ling

Is there any phrase that represents a fancy little New Year’s party more than “chin, chin?” OK, maybe “Happy New Year,” but that’s neither here nor there.

2. Save your Christmas tree branches

Even if you’re not into leaving the Christmas tree up for New Year’s Eve (but I mean, what’s a little more cheer, right?), save a couple branches and use them to spruce up an ice bucket.

3. Make butcher’s paper pinwheels

Got a roll of butcher’s paper handing around? Turn it into fun and easy pinwheels to affix to walls, doorways, bar carts, and anything else your heart desires.

4. Balloon that doorway

Balloons and some tinsel — that’s all you really need to say, “Hey, this is a party!” And party you will.

5. Tiny tinsel drink stirrers

Make a bunch of these little drink stirrers and pop them into a glass next to some straws, ice, and fixings of your choosing. A perfect drink station!

6. Disco ball it up

Disco balls are everywhere right now — even on your floor. This idea might not work in a home with pets, but if you don’t have any creatures with claws running around, go wild with balloons and disco balls all over!

7. Set up a champagne tower

Only cool people make Champagne towers, and you too, can be a cool person by following this tutorial.

8. DIY ball drop

Yes, yes you can. If you’re really committed, that is. Imagine how delighted your guests would be, though!

9. Not your grandmother’s party hats

Unless your grandma was like, really cool and trendy. No New Year’s Eve party is complete without accessories like hats and little noise makers, and these ones just take it up a notch.

10. Make a fun menu

Even if the food being served is an assortment of mini hotdogs, nachos, and sparkling wine, why not make it a little more special with a lovely little menu?

Marjorie Taylor Greene slams College Republicans for “happy Kwanzaa” message

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., lashed out on Twitter over a post by the national College Republicans wishing followers a happy Kwanzaa.

“Stop. It’s a fake religion created by a psychopath,” the conspiracy theorist wrote as millions of Black people kicked off the weeklong holiday. “You aren’t bringing in new voters, you are turning them away. People are tired of pandering and BS.”

RELATED: Twitter permanently bans Marjorie Taylor Greene’s account for spreading COVID misinformation

The College Republicans account, which itself misspelled it as “Kwanza,” does not appear to have responded to her criticism.

Kwanzaa is not a religion but a secular weeklong holiday in which Black families give gifts, eat traditional meals and light candles to celebrate the seven traditional values known in Swahili as Nguzo Saba and to honor their African ancestors.

“Naturally Happy Kwanzaa is turned into something dark and scary, & RACIST, when in fact: Kwanzaa is a Swahili word that means ‘first’ and signifies the first fruits of the harvest,” one Twitter user wrote in response to Greene.

RELATED: 2021’s biggest troll: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene

Greene’s tweet appeared to reference Maulana Karenga, who created the holiday in 1966 to “give blacks an alternative to the existing holiday and give blacks an opportunity to celebrate themselves and history, rather than simply imitate the practice of the dominant society.”

Karenga was convicted of felony assault in the 1970s against two women who accused him of beating and torturing them. Karenga denied any involvement in the attacks, claiming the prosecution was politically motivated due to his involvement in the Black Power movement and a feud with leaders of the Black Panthers. He was paroled in 1975 after calls from Black state officials. He went on to earn two PhD degrees and currently chairs the Africana studies department at California State University, Long Beach.

“The principles of Kwanza are worthy of celebration despite the actions of the founder,” another Twitter user said in response to Greene’s tweet.

Republicans, including former President Donald Trump, have often wished people a happy Kwanzaa during the holiday.

“Let us celebrate during this joyous time the richness of the past and look with hope toward a brighter future,” Trump said in a 2017 statement. “As families and friends join to light the Kinara, Melania and I extend our warmest wishes for a joyful holiday season and a prosperous year to come.”

But Greene appears to believe that acknowledging Black families hurts the party’s appeal to an increasingly white voter base.

“It’s a celebration of African American culture,” a Twitter user wrote. “We know that’s your issue with it. Just say so.”

Greene, one of the most far-right Trump allies in Congress, has repeatedly come under criticism for statements suggesting racist and conspiratorial views, which led to a House vote stripping her of all committee assignments earlier this year. Greene as a candidate in 2020 came under fire for calling Black people “slaves to the Democratic Party” and saying Black people should be “proud” of Confederate monuments. Greene, who at least formerly was a QAnon believer, later referred to “yellow people” while pushing back against claims that Republicans are a “white supremacist party.” Republican leaders initially condemned her past comments but have largely stayed quiet about her offensive antics since she came to Congress.

Reached for comment about her latest comments, a spokesperson for Greene told Newsweek that the tweet is “pretty self-explanatory.”

Read more on MTG (if you must):

Trump’s MAGA movement suffered in 2021 — but has big comeback plans for 2022

Last year at this time we were all counting down the days until the delusional lame duck president would finally be out of office and the world would tilt back on its axis. He and his clown car full of MAGA lawyers were pushing conspiracy theories all over the country while judge after judge was knocking down their arguments in court. And we had been told by people close to him (anonymously of course) that poor Donald Trump was just having a hard time accepting his fate and the best thing to do was just let him cry it out, after which he’d fade into the woodwork as all defeated president do.

The MAGA movement seemed to have come to the end of the line. They had a good run and the reverberations would be felt for many years to come, but it was over. Their last hurrah, planned for January 6th when the faithful all planned to gather in Washington D.C. for one last Trump rally, promised to be the last of its kind. After what transpired that day we can now only hope that’s true. But there is little guarantee of that. The MAGA movement is anything but dead. In fact, it’s thriving.

Current polling shows that Trump managed to convince tens of millions of Americans that the election was stolen and his hardcore followers are still as rabidly enthusiastic about Trump himself as they ever were. And a new set of MAGA leaders emerged this year to carry the banner in DC. Republican Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Madison Cawthorn, R-NC, Lauren Boebert, R -Co, Matt Gaetz, R-Fl., Arizona’s Andy Biggs and Paul Gosar among others, have stepped up to troll, insult and otherwise cause chaos on behalf of the MAGA Movement in the Congress. Greene distinguished herself very early on when the House voted to strip her of her committee assignments after she “endorsed the executions of Democrats and spread dangerous and bigoted misinformation” — and was proud of having done so. The MAGA faithful immediately began sending her huge sums of money, showing just how profitable being an obnoxious, Trumpist cheerleader in Congress could be.

Later in the summer, she and Gaetz, currently under investigation by the DOJ for possible underage trafficking, took their act on the road with “Peaceful Protests Against Communism” events to entertain the troops. They weren’t welcome in certain places, but that just gave them even more MAGA street cred. Boebert made a name for herself by ostentatiously displaying her gun collection during zoom committee hearings and calling Democrats jihadist terrorists on the House floor and at fundraisers. Gosar sent out an animated video showing himself killing fellow Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and got himself censured for doing it. His faithful followers couldn’t love him more.

Meanwhile, across the nation, Trump voters dug in their heels and staged ongoing tantrums, threatening public health officials and school administrators who were trying to keep people safe during the pandemic and harassing election officials to say the election was stolen. They refused to get vaccinated, resulting in hundreds of thousands of unnecessary COVID deaths, instead putting their faith in the kind of snake oil cures Trump pushed relentlessly when he was president.

They are so dug in that they even booed Trump himself when he begged them to let him have credit for the vaccines. And they are shocked and dismayed that he subsequently said the vaccines actually save lives. (I’ll be shocked if he pushes that line again — the backlash from his faithful supporters was fierce.)

The MAGA media even had its own odyssey this year.

According to the Washington Post, Fox News had been contemplating moving away from Trumpism after the election, something which Trump sensed and tweeted about relentlessly. He promoted the small time rivals OAN and Newsmax and it had an effect. Fox lost viewership and quickly learned its lesson. It went back to all MAGA all the time and it’s ratings have never been better.

On the social media side, the results have been less stellar.

90 percent of the top-rated Facebook pages are Trumpist but the man himself has been banned from Facebook and Twitter so he is forced to send out what would formerly have been tweets as “statements” directly to his followers via email. There are a number of alternative right-wing sites, like GAB, Parler and Rumble backed by major corporate figures and billionaires but the former president is saving his essence for the new social media company called “Truth Social” he has conned some other rich marks into backing. (It will probably be better than his earlier attempt, which was basically an embarrassing blog that nobody read. )

Has Trump’s golden image tarnished a bit among his followers? Maybe just a little. But considering that he continues to this day to insanely insist that he actually won the 2020 election in a landslide and suggests that he could still somehow be reinstated, it’s amazing that his hold on the Republican Party is as tight as ever. Now he and his top henchwoman Marjorie Taylor Greene and her congressional clique have big plans afoot to pull the rope even tighter.

Trump has made it clear that he plans to participate in GOP primaries against incumbents he considers his enemies. The list of them is long. From Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wy., to Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, Trump is pledging to take out any Republican who crossed him in the past and/or refuses to say the election was stolen. Just this week, he informed Alaska Governor Steve Dunleavy that he would only endorse him if he agreed not to back incumbent Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski for re-election. The litmus test couldn’t be more clear: Trump then, Trump now, Trump forever.

Greene and fellow MAGA Caucus member Madison Cawthorn, R-NC., are ready to rumble too, endorsing candidates who are interested in helping them build power in the GOP. According to the Washington Post, they are working against any Republican incumbents who are deemed disloyal to the former president. Even more importantly, the candidates this group is backing say they are uninterested in fighting Democrats — they want to come to Congress to shame Republicans. One candidate told the Post that he wants to “force Republicans into tough votes, starting with articles of impeachment against President Biden and a full congressional inquiry into the 2020 presidential election, which he says was stolen from Trump.”

They seem like a terrific bunch. And I doubt that any new GOP House speaker, whether it’s Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, Ohio congressman Jim Jordan or Donald Trump himself will be able to control them. This group will make the House Freedom Caucus look like mild-mannered institutionalists by comparison.

MAGA is still kicking and it’s more powerful than ever within the Republican Party. In fact, in 2022 it may be gathering enough power that it doesn’t actually need Trump himself. I suspect Trump may know that, too. Those boos he got last week must have him kicking himself for failing to slap the Trump name on the movement the way he’s slapped his name on everything else he’s ever done. Without that brand is it really his? 

Code red, glacier blood, megadrought: The defining words of 2021

How do you put a year like 2021 into words?

It began in turmoil, with a mob invading the Capitol then President Joe Biden’s inauguration two weeks later (remember Bernie Sanders’ cozy mittens?). The pandemic stuck around, prompting seasonal mood swings and a greater familiarity with the Greek alphabet. People showed off their Band-Aids in vaccine selfies in the spring, and fretted over the spread of Delta in the summer and then Omicron in the fall.

And it was another year marked by fires in the West and flooding in the East, with a record-shattering “heat dome” that turned the normally temperate Pacific Northwest into a 120-degree oven in late June.

Dictionary editors try to make sense of the chaos the way that language nerds typically do: by analyzing it one word at a time. With the final flip of the calendar, they start picking their “words of the year” to capture its spirit. The words aren’t necessarily new terms, but ones that became more popular or sent people racing to Google. Merriam-Webster went for the obvious and chose vaccine; Oxford Languages picked the shortened form vax. Collins Dictionary, based in Scotland, settled on NFT, an abbreviation for non-fungible token, a kind of digital collector’s item. Cambridge Dictionary went all motivational-poster and selected perseverance to salute all those who stuck it out through a seemingly endless pandemic and to commemorate the NASA rover that landed on Mars in February.

The warming planet led to other shifts in our vocabulary. Scientists found novel ways to ring the alarm bells that have been going off for decades, and activists coined new phrases to express their exasperation. Mother Nature’s wrath crystallized into terrifying expressions: glacier bloodhawkpocalypseweather whiplash.

The year also ushered in expectations that the federal government would take sweeping action on climate change, with a political party that acknowledges the science in control of both houses of Congress and the White House. But just as visions of a blissfully “normal” post-vaccine summer were crushed by the Delta variant, those hopes met the slow-grinding political machine, and Democrats’ razor-thin majority shrank ambitions.

Grist’s picks for the words of the year reflect the zeitgeist of the climate movement as well as the realities of life on an overheating planet. They capture activists’ anger (blah, blah, blah), the jargon (climate-positive) and the signs of progress (green vortex) that characterized 2021.

Blah, blah, blah
An accusation of empty, meaningless words.

In January, at a gathering of world leaders in Davos, Switzerland, Swedish activist Greta Thunberg stressed the urgency of cutting emissions, criticizing corporations and countries for promises with “vague, hypothetical” targets such as going net-zero by 2050. “We understand that the world is a complex place and that change doesn’t happen overnight,” Thunberg said. “But you now have had more than three decades of blah, blah, blah. How many more do you need?” The phrase became a refrain in her speeches surrounding COP26, the international climate conference in Glasgow, with searches for blah, blah, blah jumping during the first week of November as the conference ramped up. The phrase adorned protest signs in ItalyPortugal, and France, reflecting a widespread attitude that the future is at stake and that the people in charge aren’t acting like it.

Civilian Climate Corps
A government jobs program to take on climate change and prepare for its effects.

Less than two weeks after taking office in January, Biden signed an executive order to create the Civilian Climate Corps, sort of like an AmeriCorps for the planet. It hearkens back to one of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s signature New Deal programs launched during the Great Depression, the Civilian Conservation Corps, which put 3 million people to work making hiking trails and fighting fires, among other duties. Biden has promised to give those who sign up jobs planting trees, restoring public lands and waters, and improving access to parks. But the program still needs funding. Biden’s Build Back Better package, which set aside $30 billion for the new CCC, passed the House in November but was recently shelved in the Senate.

Climate-positive
Removing more carbon from the atmosphere than you put in. A synonym for carbon-negative.

Sure, it might sound like you’ve just tested positive for some new disease associated with our warming planet, but being climate-positive is actually considered a good thing in the world of corporate pledges. As if expressions like carbon-neutral and net-zero weren’t already confusing enough, more and more companies, like IKEA and the TurboTax creator Intuit, are now aiming to go climate-positive — essentially, going a step beyond zeroing out emissions. In use for at least a decade or so, the phrase saw a spike in Google searches in October when Panera, the fast-casual soup and bread chain, declared its climate-positive intentions, as did the race car team Williams F1. More CEOs could soon steer their companies in the same direction if they take advice from a new book, Climate Positive Business: How You and Your Company Hit Bold Climate Goals and Go Net Zero.

Climate reparations
When countries that historically caused the most damage from climate change pay the ones that are dealing with its worst consequences.

Rich countries are behind on the $100 billion they promised to give poor countries every year to help them switch to clean energy and deal with rising seas, searing heat, and deadly downpours. At COP26 in Glasgow, campaigners around the world called delegates from wealthy countries to follow through on these promises and increase compensation goals to more than $1 trillion per year. That didn’t materialize, although developed countries did agree to double the funding for adaptation by 2025. The idea behind climate reparations rests on the belief that countries that have emitted the most greenhouse gases have a moral responsibility to own up and pay up. To name names, the world’s top historical polluter is the United States by far, followed by China and Russia.

Code red
A warning of imminent danger.

In August, not long after a searing heat wave scorched the Pacific Northwest, snapping record temperatures for three straight days and killing hundreds, the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a landmark report warning of “irreversible” planetary tipping points. In a statement, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres reached for language associated with hospital emergencies, saying that the findings amounted to “a code red for humanity.” People must have been frightened, or at least intrigued, judging by the spike in Google searches for it. Many summaries of the U.N. report used the dramatic expression, and it continued to pop up in headlines months later.

Doomsplaining
When someone “helpfully” explains that the world is headed toward inevitable collapse.

Last year brought us doomer, a person convinced the climate apocalypse is coming; this year gave us doomsplaining. The word, a relative of mansplaining, was coined in September by Richard Waite, a researcher at the World Resources Institute. In a much-liked tweet, he observed that doomers kept popping into discussions about addressing climate change and saying “WELL ACTUALLY naive one it’s too late and we should all just accept the end of civilization as we know it.” Waite countered that “every fraction of a degree matters.” While a relatively small proportion of Americans think it’s too late to do anything about global warming — about 13 percent — social media tends to amplify divisive messages, so people encounter plenty of doomsplaining online.

Glacier blood
Reddish-colored snow.

The glaciers are bleeding, and researchers are worried. This summer, the New York Times noted an increase in pink-hued glaciers around the world. The phenomenon, caused by snow-dwelling algae, can speed up the melting of glaciers since the darker colors absorb more sunlight than a white, reflective surface. In the French Alps, Cara Giaimo wrote, locals call this sang de glacier, or “glacier blood.” Visitors are more likely to call it “watermelon snow,” which frankly sounds delicious.

Green vortex
A feedback loop in which business, technology, and politics conspire to speed up decarbonization.

By most accounts, the U.S. government is not doing so well on climate change. It has failed to pass overarching legislation to cut carbon emissions, and the previous president attempted to pull out of the international Paris Agreement. But progress is happening. U.S. emissions have dropped more steeply than promised by President Barack Obama’s proposed 2009 climate bill that never passed. Robinson Meyer, a writer at the Atlantic, described the mechanism behind this momentum as the green vortex, an economic spiral in which piecemeal policy incentives and aggressive corporate carbon cuts send the country toward a clean energy future. Some vortex-y events this year: Two big carmakers, GM and Ford, rushed to build electric vehicles while people rushed to buy them, ExxonMobil shareholders voted to put three directors on the oil giant’s board who want more renewables and less fossil fuels, and solar power was declared “the cheapest electricity in history.”

Hawkpocalypse
A massive die-off of young birds of prey.

When searing heat baked the West Coast in June, it cooked millions of clams, mussels, and snails in their shells and sent baby birds plunging to their deaths as they tried to escape the sunbeams beating down on their nests. The coordinator for Shasta Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation in Anderson, California, told the Washington Post she saw baby birds “falling out of the sky” and declared it a hawkpocalypse. A center in Portland admitted more than a hundred Cooper’s hawks in four days in June as temperatures crested above 110, almost 10 times the number it would typically see in a full year.

Meatposting
Sharing pictures on social media that glorify meat consumption.

You’ve probably seen a version of it before: a big juicy steak, preserved in a photo; a hot dog eating contest champion posing with a giant medal and a mountain of franks. The caption next to it might chant something like “MEAT! MEAT! MEAT!” Given that beefy livestock account for up to 18 percent of the globe’s greenhouse gas emissions, this kind of meatposting is sure to raise some eyebrows among the climate-conscious. Emily Atkin, a climate writer who coined the term, compared meatposting to “filling up your car’s gas tank and being like ‘hell yeah gas!'” Of course Atkin’s idea met backlash online —including one article titled “The Joy of #Meatposting” — but it also sparked discussion about what meat means to people and why America is so hooked on it.

Megadrought
A period of extreme dryness that can last decades.

The West is in a drought so huge that everyone started throwing the prefix mega- in front of it. Much of the Southwest has been in chronic drought for 20 years, and it’s not just about low rainfall, but also hotter temperatures. A warmer atmosphere sucks more moisture out of the ground, leading to a so-called hot drought. Add megadrought to the growing list of oversized problems: megafires, megastorms, and megafloods.

Weather whiplash
Dramatic swings between extreme conditions.

The changing climate doesn’t just bring bad weather — it can take us for a seesaw ride between different types of bad weather. Take this fall’s weather whiplash in the Pacific Northwest. After a summer of record-smashing heat, parching drought, and roaring wildfires, devastating rains fell on the region from October to December, causing flash floods and mudslides that trapped hundreds of people. Seattle had its wettest fall on record with more than 19 inches of rain. Scientists expect to see even more extremes, and more weather whiplash, in the future.

* * *

Previous Words of the Year posts:

2020: Anthropause, ghost flights, spillover: Only a pandemic could bring words like these
2019: Birth strike, flygskam, Pyrocene: And we thought things couldn’t get worse
2018: Firenado, hothouse, smokestorm: The year fires went wild
2017: Hotumn, meatmares, ecoanxiety: Oh, how young we all were then

A year of dubious characters and dark drama: Salon’s best News & Politics stories of 2021

This long, long year began with high hopes that it would be better than the tumultuous election year of 2020, which also saw a summer of hopeful but traumatic protests and the onset of the most significant global pandemic in a century. We awaited the arrival of a new president, believing — oh, so innocently! It hurts to remember — that politics might become “normal” again. The idea that American life could be boring in 2021 was seen as a positive, am I right?

Well, so much for that. Was this year exhausting, soul-draining, mind-boggling and sometimes terrifying? I’d check all those boxes. But boring? Not so much. Five days into the year, Democrats won an unexpected double victory in the U.S. Senate runoff elections in Georgia, giving them a tenuous congressional majority after the puzzling and disappointing election results of November 2020. But you may recall what happened the day after that, on the 6th of January, when a joint session of Congress was to certify the electoral votes and declare Joe Biden the next president. It was a formality! Sometimes the opposition party squawks about it — as Democrats had done in 2001 and 2005 — but the business gets done and the country moves on. That’s just how it is!

OK, so much for that too. It seems unnecessary to point out that that day — and its as-yet-unfinished aftermath — was the biggest news story of the year. And then things really got weird. We began to realize, gradually and uncertainly, that the Philip K. Dick alternate-universe dream state of the Trump years wasn’t done with us yet. It was like Neo realizing that what he takes to be the real world is still inside the Matrix — or, more to the point, it was like when the characters in a “Nightmare on Elm Street” sequel realize they’re still asleep and there’s no escape from the guy with the long spiky fingers. 

Whether all the stuff that happened in 2021 really happened is perhaps a question for cosmologists and philosophers to dwell on in the years ahead (assuming there are any). What I can tell you is that the biggest stories in Salon’s News & Politics vertical in 2021 focused on an extraordinary array of dubious characters, most of them newly arrived on the national scene, or at least new to the national spotlight. The good news is that most of our widely-read stories didn’t focus directly on that guy who finally evacuated the White House last Jan. 20. But they certainly reflected his radioactive glow.

To cite the obvious examples, in 2020 Mike Lindell was still a guy who sold pillows on cable TV; Lauren Boebert was an internet conspiracy theorist, viewed as a joke even within the already-delusional Republican Party; and Joe Manchin was an obscure senator from an obscure state, arguably the last living specimen of the genus “conservative Democrat,” an important power bloc in Washington as recently as my 1970s childhood. I’m willing to bet you’ve heard more about those three people in the last year than in your entire life up till then (and quite possibly a lot more than you wanted to).

But that’s not our starting point! Let’s take these in chronological order. 

Sen. Tom Cotton campaigned on his “experience as an Army Ranger” — but he didn’t have any

Barely two weeks after the Jan. 6 insurrection, Salon investigative reporter Roger Sollenberger (since departed, and we miss him!) performed something of a demolition job on the reputation of Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, who had positioned himself as a potential 2024 candidate and Trump heir by literally calling for the military to put down the Black Lives Matter protests of 2020 — with lethal force, if necessary. Roger simply noticed a fact that was already in the public record, but had been politely ignored: Cotton had built his political career on his military record, and specifically on the oft-repeated claim that he had served as “a U.S. Army Ranger in Iraq and Afghanistan.” Which simply wasn’t true: Cotton had attended Ranger school, which allowed him to put a nifty little pin on his uniform, but “was never part of the 75th Ranger Regiment, the elite unit that plans and conducts joint special military operations as part of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command.” The Cotton ’24 campaign seems to have stalled out since then.

The entire Trump campaign was a scam — and it is not over

Our only really big Donald Trump story of the year — you remember him! — was a commentary by long-running Salon columnist Heather Digby Parton, based on a New York Times report revealing exactly how much of a shameless, unscrupulous grift the 2020 Trump campaign had been. As Heather observed, the campaign seemed to run on the same principles as “Trump University,” the multi-level seminar scam that wound up costing its notoriously cheap namesake a $25 million settlement: 

[T]he campaign and its online fundraising platform WinRed hustled its most loyal supporters out of tens of millions of dollars with deceptive donation links on their emails and websites. It’s unknown to this day how many people unknowingly signed up for weekly recurring donations and “money bombs” (agreements to donate a lump sum on a future date), but there were so many requests for refunds that at one point, 1-3% of all credit card complaints in the U.S. were about WinRed charges. … The sheer number of refunds to Trump donors amounted to a huge no-interest (and profitable for WinRed) loan to the campaign … [and] Trump’s post-election “Stop the Steal” fundraising at least partially went to pay off those “loans” from the campaign, making the whole scheme very Ponzi-esque.

Godless grifters: How the New Atheists merged with the far right

It’s always gratifying, as an editor, when you publish a story you know is important but you suspect very few people will read — and you’re totally wrong. That happened in June, when Salon contributor Phil Torres, an academic philosopher who writes for us a few times a year, made his decisive rift with the “New Atheism” movement associated with intellectual luminaries like Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins and Steven Pinker. Phil was once a true unbeliever, you might say, and wrote that when New Atheism emerged in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, as a counterweight to fundamentalism of all sorts, it appeared to offer moral clarity, it emphasized intellectual honesty and it embraced scientific truths about the nature and workings of reality. It gave me immense hope to know that in a world overflowing with irrationality, there were clear-thinking individuals with sizable public platforms willing to stand up for what’s right and true — to stand up for sanity in the face of stupidity.

His conclusion 15 or so years later was very different: 

What a grift that was! Many of the most prominent New Atheists turned out to be nothing more than self-aggrandizing, dogmatic, irascible, censorious, morally compromised people who, at every opportunity, have propped up the powerful over the powerless, the privileged over the marginalized.

Joe Manchin’s “highly suspicious” reversal on voting bill follows donation from corporate lobby

Only days later, the gentleman from West Virginia made his first prominent appearance of 2021 in our digital pages. That came with Igor Derysh’s report on the striking connection between Joe Manchin’s flip-flop on the For the People Act — the voting-rights package passed by the House — and the sudden inflow of political donations to Manchin from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which opposed the bill. This was long before we understood what a central role Manchin would play in torpedoing Joe Biden’s presidency and rendering the Democratic majority useless, but the writing was on the wall. 

As Igor wrote, Manchin was literally a co-sponsor of For the People when it was first proposed during the Trump presidency, but for reasons he has never adequately explained, changed his mind when it came to the prospect of actually passing the bill. Manchin’s op-ed announcing his opposition “echoed the Chamber’s talking points” and came shortly after the pro-business lobby “which has launched an expensive lobbying effort against the bill, resumed donations to Manchin’s campaign for the first time since 2012. Reuters described this flow of corporate dollars as a ‘reward for Manchin’s opposition to numerous Biden administration’s initiatives, as well as his stalwart support for the filibuster, which has almost certainly doomed the For the People Act.”

DeSantis signs bill mandating survey of the “political opinions” of students and faculty at state-funded colleges 

With Tom Cotton consigned to political oblivion and Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri too deeply implicated (if that’s even possible) in the Jan. 6 Capitol assault, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis became the leading alterna-Trump in Republican politics. (Whether DeSantis’ master will allow him to run for president all on his own remains to be seen.) Salon’s Brett Bachman was among the first journalists to notice perhaps the weirdest trick of DeSantis’ troll-like governorship: a state-mandated survey of the “political opinions and viewpoints” of students and faculty at Florida’s public universities. 

As Brett wrote at the time, this appears to be “part of a long-running, nationwide right-wing push to promote ‘intellectual diversity’ on campuses” and appears to reflect Florida state Senate President Wilton Simpson’s accusation that the Sunshine State’s public universities were “socialism factories,” an odd claim about institutions far better known for football than for Marxist study groups. In his patented fashion, DeSantis offered no specific explanation for why such a survey was necessary and tried to sound vaguely reasonable, saying only that he knew “a lot of parents” who were concerned “about their children being ‘indoctrinated‘ on campus.”

Why did Lauren Boebert lead a late-night Capitol tour three weeks before Jan. 6?

Salon reporter Zachary Petrizzo spent much of the year trying to untangle the puzzling personal, professional and political stories of Rep. Lauren Boebert, the newly-elected Colorado Republican with a passion for guns and a number of connections to QAnon, the MAGA movement and the conspiratorial far right. But of all Zach’s essays in Boebert-ology, nothing went deeper than the intriguing tale of a late-night U.S. Capitol tour she took with several family members on Dec. 12, 2020 — which was the same day as the big “Stop the Steal” pro-Trump rally in Washington, and roughly three weeks before she was sworn in as a member of Congress.

That last part is what makes this tour an unsolved mystery: 

There are several unanswered questions about this visit, which appears to have violated normal Capitol protocol in various ways. It’s not clear who authorized it, since Boebert was not yet a member of Congress and had no official standing in D.C. It’s perhaps even stranger that it occurred on a Saturday night, when the Capitol complex is closed. … It’s true that Boebert was a member-elect at the time, but that’s an important distinction: She certainly was not a sworn member of Congress and had no office, no staff and no official status in the Capitol complex. It’s even more puzzling that this tour took place on Saturday night. The guidelines for member-led Capitol tours state they are only available on weekdays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

The only conclusion to draw here — which we did not make in the context of a carefully reported news story — is that someone in the Trump administration (like, a very well-placed someone) gave one incoming member of Congress special access to the U.S. Capitol after hours. We still have questions! And they will never be answered.

Rudy Giuliani ridiculed after clip of him shaving in airport restaurant goes viral

Sometimes in journalism, you just have to give the people what they want. And sometimes what they want is a viral video of Rudy Giuliani, the former LifeLock spokesperson and mastermind of the Four Seasons Total Landscaping press conference, shaving in a restaurant at JFK airport. As Salon’s Jon Skolnik reported in August, the eating-while-shaving clip — amplified in mockery by comedian Michael Rapaport — was viewed more than a million times on Twitter within about three days. 

Mike Lindell’s meltdown begins: He recently sold a MyPillow plane to fund Dominion lawsuit

Zach Petrizzo’s other principal beat of 2021, as no regular reader of Salon can possibly have missed, was his on-again, off-again bromance with MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, the man who has brought restful sleep to millions and who spent much of the year vowing he would somehow bring Donald Trump back to the White House. I haven’t tried to count the number of stories Zach wrote about Lindell; it feels like one of those hypothetical numbers mathematicians theorize about but cannot precisely calculate. 

Lindell’s various deadlines for “reinstating” Trump to the presidency — a thing that cannot in fact be done, we shall remind you — have all come and gone with the goal nowhere in sight. But the acme or nadir of Lindell news came when Zach and Jon Skolnik worked together on a report that the pillow guy had been forced to sell one of his private planes to raise money to defend himself against the $1.3 billion defamation lawsuit by Dominion Voting Systems.

Leading up to Lindell’s August “cyber symposium” in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, which was intended to prove his extravagant claims about the 2020 election (but clearly did not do so) the plane registered to MyPillow was used in a number of Lindell’s schemes, including his alleged efforts to transport and conceal Dominion and Smartmatic voting machines at various locations across the country. (No such machines materialized at his Sioux Falls event, despite many promises that they would.) … Asked whether he had sold an airplane to raise money, Lindell called one Salon reporter “flying pond scum” and “slime.” 

(I don’t actually know whether that was Jon or Zach.)

Black flag: Understanding the Trumpists’ latest threatening symbol

Sometimes in journalism you try to answer the questions everyone is asking — and sometimes you answer the questions no one has even thought to ask. Such as: What’s the deal with the MAGA people and the all-black U.S. flags, which are barely recognizable as flags at all and are exceptionally unlikely to be linked to Black Lives Matter (at least in any positive way). Salon senior writer Chauncey DeVega, always attentive to the symbology of the scariest corners of the far right, was on the case in October:

​​Trump supporters have begun flying all-black American flags, in an implicit threat to harm or kill their opponents — meaning nonwhite people, “socialist liberals,” Muslims, vaccinated people and others deemed to be “enemies” of “real America.”

Salon could find no historical evidence for the MAGA World claim that black flags were used by the Confederates in the Civil War to signify “no quarter” against Union soldiers, but it appears that Trump followers, the “patriot” movement and other neofascist types believe it. Which isn’t great.

Democrats hit the panic button. Is it too little too late for Joe Biden?

A few days after that story ran, columnist Amanda Marcotte captured the mood shift so many of Salon’s readers were experiencing as the nation moved into fall: The pandemic wasn’t over (and we didn’t even know about omicron yet), Biden’s agenda was going nowhere, the 2022 midterms were looking bleak and the Republican campaign to undermine or overthrow democracy was gaining speed. In other words, “normal” and “boring” were not happening — and not likely to, anytime soon:

President Joe Biden’s economic agenda is stuck in the mud, supported by 96% of Democrats in the Senate yet blocked by two senators whose massive egos and lobbyist addictions are causing them to turn against the party. Biden failed to enact vaccine mandates early enough or broadly enough so now millions of Fox News-addled Americans still are resisting vaccines, prolonging the pandemic and contributing to the national sense of despair. On top of that, Donald Trump has faced no real consequences for his attempted coup while the various criminal apparatchiks he surrounds himself with are also walking around happy and free. So efforts to stop the next coup are moribund, hitting the wall of Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, who love that lobbyist-pleasing filibuster more than they love democracy. … No wonder voters are so depressed. A party that refuses to listen to voters is frustrating, but so is a party that hears them but still can’t do anything about it. Either way, it may not feel to many worth the effort to even vote. 

I’m sorry to leave you on a bummer as we head into another year, the traditional season of renewed hope. But the premise of our business, which isn’t always pleasant, is to tell the truth as we understand it, not to tell people what we think they want to hear. You can’t create change or create a more hopeful future without facing reality — and political reality right now, in the United States of America, is kind of harsh. Find love and joy where you can, cherish your moments with friends and family as we turn the page to the New Year. Gather what strength you can. We’re going to need it.

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

Following Sen. Joe Manchin’s informing President Biden that he would not support his $1.75 trillion Build Back Better legislation, West Virginia’s labor unions quickly reached out to the senator to prod him to reconsider, which may have breathed some life back into the bill.

The day after Manchin’s announcement on Fox News that he would not provide the decisive vote to approve the president’s signature program, which has no Republican support in the Senate, the West Virginia AFL-CIO and United Mine Workers of America issued statements urging him to return to negotiations.

“We remain grateful for his hard work to preserve the pensions and health care of our retirees across the nation, including thousands in West Virginia,” UMWA President Cecil E. Roberts wrote regarding the West Virginia senator. “He has been at our side as we have worked to preserve coal miners’ jobs in a changing energy marketplace, and we appreciate that very much.”

RELATED: Joe Manchin goes off after reporter asks about Biden’s stalled agenda: “You’re bull—-“

But Roberts warned that failure to pass the Build Back Better would result in the shift of the costs of the national program for treating Black Lung “away from the coal companies and on to taxpayers.”

Roberts noted that sustaining that occupational-health program was only part of what Build Back Better would accomplish.

“The bill includes language that will provide tax incentives to encourage manufacturers to build facilities in the coalfields that would employ thousands of coal miners who have lost their jobs,” he wrote. “We support that and are ready to help supply those plants with a trained, professional workforce. But now the potential for those jobs is significantly threatened.”

West Virginia AFL-CIO president Josh Sword pointed to Manchin’s history of bringing “opposing parties together to reach compromises on the most controversial of measures. … It is our hope that he will continue to negotiate with other national leaders in Washington on the legislation, which would help workers, our families and the labor movement both across the country and right here in West Virginia.”

He cited the “critical relief” Build Back Better would provide “on the cost of health and child care,” while creating and improving “jobs for home care workers” and “expanding access to affordable home and community care for seniors and the disabled.”


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While Build Back Better’s price tag has dominated the debate on the legislation, both labor leaders emphasized its provisions that would make it easier for workers to organize.

“The bill includes language that would, for the first time, financially penalize outlaw employers that deny workers their rights to form a union on the job,” Roberts wrote. “This language is critical to any long-term ability to restore the right to organize in America in the face of ramped-up union-busting by employers.” 

AFL-CIO New York City Central Labor Committee president Vincent Alvarez, in a statement, expressed hope that Manchin and his colleagues would “ultimately reach a reasonable compromise to provide this critical relief for working families across our country.”

He said Build Back Better would have “a transformative impact on the lives of working people, creating millions of good-paying jobs, addressing the soaring costs of health care and child care,” while “providing groundbreaking labor-enforcement provisions.”

In addition to supporting the future funding of the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund for the nation’s miners, Build Back Better in its present form would provide $2.86 billion to the World Trade Center Health Program, which provides medical treatment and monitoring for more than 110,000 responders and survivors of the 9/11 attacks. Participants in the program live in every state and in 434 of 435 congressional districts.

During a private caucus call with Senate Democrats, just 48 hours after Manchin’s Fox appearance, the senator appeared to be re-engaged with his colleagues.

On that call, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer pledged to press ahead with a floor vote on Biden’s agenda in January.

“I know we are all frustrated at this outcome,” he told his members on the call, according to Yahoo News. “However, we are not giving up on BBB. Period. We won’t stop working on it until we pass a bill.”

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