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How Big Pharma delivered campaign cash to key lawmakers with surgical precision

The Biden administration and Congress are embroiled in high-stakes haggling over what urgent priorities will make it into the ever-shrinking social spending bill. But for the pharmaceutical industry there is one agenda: Heading off Medicare drug price negotiation, which it considers an existential threat to its business model.

The siren call to contain rising drug costs helped catapult Democrats to power, and the idea is popular among voters regardless of their politics. Yet granting Medicare broad authority to intervene in setting prices has nonetheless divided the party.

And so, as it normally does, the drug industry gave generously to members of Congress, according to new data from KHN’s Pharma Cash to Congress database. Contributions covering the first half of this year show that some of its biggest donations were delivered with surgical-strike precision to sympathetic or moderate Democratic lawmakers the industry needs to remain in its corner.

Campaign donations to members of Congress — which must be reported to the Federal Election Commission — are the tip of the iceberg, signaling far greater activity in influence peddling that includes spending millions on lobbying activities and advertising campaigns.

Unusually, in the first half of this year Republicans and Democrats in Congress were virtually neck and neck in pulling in drug industry money, according to a KHN analysis of campaign contributions. In prior years, Republicans dominated giving from that sector, often by huge margins.

Pharmaceutical companies and their lobbying groups gave roughly $1.6 million to lawmakers during the first six months of 2021, with Republicans accepting $785,000 and Democrats $776,200, the Pharma Cash to Congress database shows. Since the 2008 cycle, the industry has generally favored Republicans. The exception was 2009-10, the last time Democrats controlled both chambers of Congress and the White House.

Democrats again narrowly hold both the House and Senate, and political scientists and other money-in-politics experts said the contributions likely reflect who is in power, which lawmakers face tougher reelection bids next year, and who has outsize sway over legislation affecting the industry’s bottom line.

Several pharmaceutical companies paused contributions to Republican lawmakers who voted against certifying the results of the 2020 election, blunting the GOP’s total fundraising haul and overall industry giving compared with other years.

The drug industry’s campaign contributions are markedly strategic, said Steven Billet, an associate professor at the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington University.

“This is a really well-organized commercial sector,” Billet said. “If I’m one of these PACs, I’ve surveyed the landscape at the front end of the process, decided on our agenda and budget, and figured out who I may be able to get to and who I wouldn’t be able to get to.”

Of the top 10 recipients of funding, Republican lawmakers accounted for six; Democrats, four. Rep. Scott Peters (D-Calif.) received the most money of any member of Congress, with $63,900 in contributions in the first half of the year. Peters, whose San Diego-area district includes multiple drug companies, has consistently accepted money from drugmakers since he took office in 2013, according to KHN’s database. Right behind Peters was Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.), who received $50,000 from the industry in the first six months of 2021. McMorris Rodgers was chosen this year to be the most senior Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has significant influence on pharmaceutical issues. Peters sits on the same committee.

“They’re typically going to saturate the committees that are relevant to their industry,” said Nick Penniman, CEO of Issue One, a nonprofit that advocates reforming money’s influence in politics.

Next in line was Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), who accepted $49,300, the most of any senator this year despite not facing reelection until 2024. The vote of Menendez, a longtime ally of the industry, would be crucial for Democrats to pass any proposal giving the government greater control over drug prices. The pharmaceutical industry is a major employer in New Jersey, home to headquarters of behemoths like Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Novo Nordisk and Sanofi.

Menendez said he’s waiting to see the proposal, “which I expect will include language to allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices.”

“The focus of any proposal must be lowering patient costs,” he said, “and that will drive my analysis.”

Among other moderate Democrats is Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), whose vote also is critical to passage. She received $108,500 in pharma contributions in 2019-20, according to the KHN database. However, in the first half of this year, she received only $8,000. She has not said publicly where she stands on the current pricing proposal.

As Billet sees it, the pharmaceutical industry knew allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices would likely be on the table, and drug companies shored up members, such as Peters and Menendez, who have sided with them in the past. Plus, “right now, the Democrats are driving the train, and because of that they’re going to get a few more contributions,” Billet added.

Peters received funds from nearly two dozen companies or industry groups, including Eli Lilly, Takeda Pharmaceutical, Pfizer, Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, EMD Serono and Amgen. Menendez’s donors included Boehringer Ingelheim, Sanofi, Pfizer, Merck, Gilead Sciences, Eli Lilly, Teva and Novo Nordisk. A spokesperson for Peters did not respond to request for comment.

Controlling drug prices has broad support among adults regardless of political party, according to polling from KFF (KHN is an editorially independent program of KFF). But facing industry opposition, Democrats have yet to agree on a plan as lawmakers weigh which policies make it into a massive domestic spending bill to expand the social safety net and address climate change. Central to the industry’s argument is that greater government intervention in setting prices would harm new drug development; however, drug pricing experts generally say this argument is overblown. Republicans remain unanimously opposed, which means Senate Democrats can’t afford any defections to advance legislation.

Fourth in industry contributions was Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), a freshman lawmaker on the powerful Senate Finance Committee, which oversees legislation pertaining to federal health programs like Medicare. Cortez Masto received $46,000, with cash flowing in from companies like Eli Lilly, Merck, Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson and Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals, the latter of which filed for bankruptcy in 2020 after being swamped with litigation over its alleged role in the opioid crisis. One of her recent aides, Eben DuRoss, was hired as a lobbyist this year by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, or PhRMA, federal disclosures show.

Cortez Masto is up for reelection next year in a battleground state that’s been competitive between Republicans and Democrats in recent elections. She was narrowly elected in 2016, and recent polling showed she held a small lead against her expected Republican challenger in 2022, former Nevada attorney general Adam Laxalt.

But her contributions dwarf those of other Senate Democrats in close races. For example, in the first half of this year, Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), who also sits on the Senate Finance Committee, reported having accepted $6,000.

Two other lawmakers in competitive seats, Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) and Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), didn’t receive funding from the pharmaceutical sector.

Sarah Bryner, research director of OpenSecrets, a nonprofit that tracks money in politics, noted several reasons Cortez Masto would pull in more money. In addition to her committee seat and competitive race, politically she’s more moderate than progressive lawmakers who have been bigger agitators against the drug industry.

“She’s not seen as an extremist, which is the kind of person who would typically take in more money” from political action committees, Bryner said.

Cortez Masto was also a recent past chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and therefore heavily involved in the party’s national fundraising efforts to preserve Democrats’ Senate majority. Those relationships with corporate and other donors could be leveraged for her own race, Bryner said. “Once you’ve made all the relationships, it’s not like they just disappear,” she said.

Still, the freshman Democrat has openly supported allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices, in contrast to Menendez, who voted against the idea in 2019. The Nevada senator recently told KHN that she “absolutely” backs the policy and that the pharma cash flowing into her campaign coffers doesn’t influence her decisions.

“I’ve already supported it in Finance and actually voted to pass legislation to do just that,” Cortez Masto said. “We need to reduce the health care costs for so many in this country, and that’s what I’m focused on doing, including reducing prescription drug costs.”

Peters — who unseated a Republican in 2012 — was one of four moderate House Democrats who in September voted against a plan to give Medicare broad authority to negotiate prescription drug prices. They backed a narrower alternative that includes caps on out-of-pocket spending and limits the scope of Medicare’s negotiating authority to a smaller set of medications.

The money Peters and McMorris Rodgers got from drugmakers ($63,900 and $50,000, respectively) significantly jumped from the same periods in past cycles. In the first half of 2019, Peters received $19,500, and during those same quarters in 2017 he got $36,000. McMorris Rodgers’ haul for the first six months of 2019 was $2,500, and two years earlier it was $3,000. However, Menendez received more funding in the first half of 2019 ($52,000) than this year.

That some drugmakers — including Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, Gilead and Eli Lilly — as well as PhRMA and the Biotechnology Innovation Organization, another lobbying group for the industry, paused contributions to Republicans after the events of Jan. 6 seems at least in part to account for overall pharma contributions dropping in comparison with other years. In the first half of 2019 drugmakers gave $3.7 million, and in the first half of 2017 they gave about $4.4 million, versus 2021’s $1.6 million.

However, other drug company PACs and their industry groups kept up contributions or failed to void checks they’d issued to those who refused to certify the election results, according to a KHN analysis of the FEC data.

They include Merck, Novo Nordisk, GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, Genentech, Boehringer Ingelheim, Amgen, Teva, EMD Serono and the Association for Accessible Medicines, which all gave $1,000 or more to at least one of the 147 Republicans who voted to overturn the election results.

Direct contributions to lawmakers’ political accounts are only one way for the industry to channel cash to Congress. Companies also give money to trade associations and 501(C)(4)s, which are nonprofits that often function as “dark money” groups because they are not required to disclose their donors.

“We know that they’re giving; they didn’t stop giving. Their giving went underground,” said Carlos Holguin, research director for the Center for Political Accountability, a nonprofit that tracks money in politics.

Groups also funnel money into advertising — in September, PhRMA announced a seven-figure ad campaign opposing Democrats’ drug pricing plan — or into advocacy groups from which it may eventually trickle down to political candidates.

Another factor? Hail Mary covid-19 vaccines, developed and distributed in record time, that may have shored up goodwill with lawmakers. Or that, despite everything lawmakers have said about lowering drug costs, the industry suspects drug pricing legislation will stall once again and don’t want to spend their political capital on the issue.

“I think, frankly, drugmakers know they’ve won the match when it comes to drug pricing. This whole question of the cost of pharmaceuticals, it has come up for literally decades now and they have successfully shut it down, year after year,” Penniman said. “At a certain point, they know they have driven the nail far enough in the wood and they don’t need to do much more.”

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Virginia set to be first test of GOP’s Big Lie

There’s just one day to go before the much anticipated Virginia gubernatorial race will be decided, and since the polls say it’s close, I think we can expect some MAGA fireworks whether their candidate, Glenn Youngkin, wins or loses.

If they lose, we know that they will say the vote was rigged. If Youngkin wins, Donald Trump’s Big Lie will be equally well-served. They will say it’s because of the vigilance of the hordes of Republican poll watchers who are set to descend upon polling places on Election Day. Trump made clear what he wanted last year at the presidential debate and they will not let him down this time:

“I’m urging my supporters to go into the polls and watch very carefully because that’s what has to happen. I am urging them to do it. Today there was a big problem. In Philadelphia, they went in to watch. They’re called poll watchers, a very safe, very nice thing. They were thrown out. They weren’t allowed to watch. You know why? Because bad things happen in Philadelphia.”

He was lying, however, as usual.

One woman who claimed she was working for the Trump campaign had complained that she was not allowed in a satellite early voting location. However, she did not have an official certificate because, by law, no poll watchers were authorized at such locations. Trump was likely under the assumption that he could just send his MAGA mob to storm the polling places, no questions asked. And a spate of new election laws being enacted by Republican state legislatures are essentially making that reality now.

Trump’s comments during that debate set off election officials’ alarm bells all over the country. What Trump was describing is better known as voter intimidation. Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford tweeted the next day, “Voter intimidation is illegal in Nevada. Believe me when I say it: You do it, and you will be prosecuted.” Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring said that the president’s loose talk was dangerous, adding:

“The President is blatantly urging his supporters to congregate at polling places, go inside, and ostensibly harass and intimidate voters.While there are authorized ‘poll watchers’ who monitor polls on Election Day, their duties are clearly laid out, and they do not include what President Trump has suggested.”

There were some poll watching shenanigans on election day in 2020, but the Big Lie launched the GOP into action.

Last May, The New York Times reported a national program to train tens of thousands of MAGA faithful to “watch.” The report highlighted one recruitment seminar in which a precinct chair in a white suburb of Houston exhorted volunteers to go into the Black, Asian and Latino areas on election day because “that’s where the fraud is occuring.” That is not true, of course. But it illustrates what they actually have in mind: suppression and intimidation of racial and ethnic minority voters, particularly in urban areas.


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That is nothing new. Partisans used such tactics for centuries. I wrote about this years ago here on Salon, including the stunning tale of former Chief Justice William Rehnquist who, as a young lawyer in Arizona, personally applied some ugly racist intimidation against Latino and Black voters in the 1964 presidential campaign. The GOP ran the program in which he participated called “Operation Eagle Eye” throughout the nation.

While researching his book on the Goldwater campaign, called “Before the Storm,” historian Rick Perlstein unearthed a memo written by a Lyndon Johnson staffer outlining the scheme:

“Let’s get this straight, the Democratic Party is just as much opposed to vote frauds as is the Republican party. We will settle for giving all legally registered voters an opportunity to make their choice on November 3rd. We have enough faith in our Party to be confident that the outcome will be a vote of confidence in President Johnson and a mandate for the President and his running mate, Hubert Humphrey, to continue the programs of the Johnson-Kennedy Administration.

But we have evidence that the Republican program is not really what it purports to be. It is an organized effort to prevent the foreign born, to prevent Negroes, to prevent members of ethnic minorities from casting their votes by frightening and intimidating them at the polling place.”

I bring this up again because it’s important to remember that Trump didn’t invent this stuff. He’s never done anything original in his life. People have been at this for a very long time. Trump’s just supercharged it.

Over the past half century, the nation had made great strides in controlling the threat of poll watcher intimidation. The majority of states put laws in place to ensure that people felt safe at their polling places. The problem was pretty much snuffed out for several decades. But now it’s back.

The Washington Post reports that Virginia has poll watchers by the hundreds ready to go Tuesday. In fact, they have already been on the job during the early voting. In Democratic counties, the poll watchers are 2-1 Republican, many of them trained and organized by the Youngkin campaign. The candidate, who insists he’s not a MAGA kind of guy, has been pushing the voter fraud myth like crazy and his voters are out in force. One of the Virginia groups doing training was created by a Republican candidate who lost his election by 23 points in 2020 and refused to concede. According to the Post, other groups involved in similar activities throughout the country are Tea Party Patriots, Americans for Limited Government, No Left Turn in Education and Alliance for Free Citizens, led by former Kansas secretary of state Kris Kobach, a vote fraud zealot who Trump once enlisted to prove that Hillary Clinton didn’t win the popular vote in 2016. (Needless to say, he failed.) Another group called The Virginia Project, a purveyor of the Big Lie, has been subtly intimidating election officials. At one of its meetings, Joe Flynn, the brother of General Michael Flynn, asked the crowd if they believe Joe Biden won the state of Virginia in 2020. The crowd roared, “No!” Biden won the state by 10 points.


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Glenn Youngkin may very well win the election tomorrow. The polls are neck and neck. And if he does, the pundits and analysts will immediately construct a narrative that tells us the national implications of the GOP victory. But the right’s narrative will be that they were able to keep the Democrats from stealing the election the way they stole 2020 and they’ll double their efforts around the country. The Big Lie will be validated one way or the other. 

Right-wing media and the pandemic: A toxic feedback loop that nurtured fascism

Years ago, when I was in high school, my friend’s older brother purchased a copy of “The Anarchist Cookbook” from the local Army-Navy store. He told everyone he’d gotten the book from the owner in some type of illicit backroom deal. That book had totemic power: Supposedly it was illegal, and even possessing it was some type of crime. Of course that wasn’t true. But for teenage boys who grew up during the 1980s, socialized into a fake military ideal of masculinity by movies like “Rambo,” “Delta Force” and “Red Dawn,” the facts didn’t really matter.

My friend told me that his brother learned how to make napalm from “The Anarchist Cookbook.” I and a small circle of friends were invited to a “secret” test after school on a Friday, near the running track of a local trade school that had been closed for renovations. Using the military language we were so obsessed with, my friend commanded me and the others to maintain “OPSEC” (for “operational security”) telling us that all this was on a “need to know basis.”

In the early evening, a dozen or more of us gathered to watch the detonation — OPSEC only goes so far in high school. My friend’s brother had a small drum filled with a mixture of gasoline and other substances he refused to divulge. He told us to stand back and lit some type of fuse. Nothing happened. He was obviously frustrated as the crowd teetered on the verge of mockery and laughter. Regaining confidence, my friend’s brother then threw a entire pack of matches into the drum.

I began to back away. I was the only Black person there and didn’t want to end up being mentioned in the newspaper, burned alive or otherwise injured. What a joke I would have been among the Black folks in the community: “Damn fool got burned up hanging out with white people, doing stupid things. We thought he was smarter than that.”

This time the drum full of “napalm” started to burn, producing acrid black smoke that stunk like rubber, plastic and petrol. The crowd scattered in terror, people screaming and convincing themselves that the toxic brew had exploded. The “explosion” was more smoke than fire. My friend’s brother feigned pride that his test had gone so well. But his slumped shoulders revealed his true disappointment.

That next week my friend was absent from school. Rumors circulated about the his brother, the authorities and another “napalm” test. That following Monday my friend was back, looking emotionally spent and physically exhausted. He told me in a low, flat voice that his brother had made more of his toxic concoction and started a terrible fire at their house. His brother’s arms were badly burned. The fire department had to come put out the fire. My friend’s brother was “sent away,” he vaguely suggested, to some kind of reform school or youth bootcamp.

I don’t know what really happened to my friend or his family. It was nearly the end of the school year, and not long after that they abruptly moved away. No one at our school talked about him or his brother anymore.

That homemade napalm, with its mixture of foul-smelling ingredients and its noxious smoke, is something like America in this moment of democracy crisis.

RELATED: Jen Senko on how Fox News brainwashed her dad — and is now prepping its audience for fascism 

America’s fascist brew contains many ingredients. There is the white supremacy, gangster capitalism, consumerism, extreme wealth and income inequality, anti-intellectualism, a news media that cares more about “balance” than the truth, a societal crisis of existential meaning and value, anti-rationality, collective narcissism, a culture that rewards and fetishizes violence and cruelty, sexism and misogyny, widespread corruption, a broken commons, a bloated and dying empire, a corporate oligarchy, paralyzed and dysfunctional political and social institutions, the surveillance society, general loneliness, nihilism and despair. Nearly everyone in American society knows that something is fundamentally wrong, even if we lack the language to explain it.

America’s fascist brew was already highly unstable, and then even more dangerous accelerants were added to the drum of political napalm: Donald Trump and his movement, the right-wing propaganda machine, “Christian” nationalism and other right-wing religious extremism, a Republican death cult with its attack on reality and truth, white anxiety about “demographic change” and, not least of all, the coronavirus pandemic.

New research by Dan Romer and Kathleen Hall Jamieson, featured in the December 2021 edition of the journal Social Science & Medicine, offers further insights into the combustible relationship between the right-wing propaganda and the “news” media, the spread of conspiracy theories and the coronavirus pandemic. As the site PsyPost summarizes, the research found “that conservative media in the United States is particularly appealing to people who are prone to conspiratorial thinking. The use of conservative media, in turn, is associated with increasing belief in COVID-19 conspiracies and reduced willingness to engage in behaviors to prevent the spread of the virus.”

Romer, who is research director at the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, explained: “We have found that belief in conspiracies about the pandemic is related to lower levels of social distancing and personal hygiene behaviors recommended by the CDC, as well as mask wearing, and intentions to vaccinate. Given the importance of these behaviors to ending the pandemic, we are interested in understanding the factors that encourage these conspiracies.”

PsyPost elaborates further:

Participants were asked to indicate how strongly they agreed or disagreed with the statements “The coronavirus was created by the Chinese government as a biological weapon” and “Some in the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, also known as CDC, are exaggerating the danger posed by the coronavirus to damage the Trump presidency.”

Romer and his colleagues found that the use of conservative media (including Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, and The Drudge Report) was related to increased belief in both pandemic-related conspiracy theories. Users of conservative media also exhibited greater conspiratorial thinking in general, agreeing more strongly with statements such as “Much of our lives is controlled by plots hatched in secret places.”…

Some of the study’s conclusions should come as no surprise. Romer told PsyPost that conservative media is “particularly engaged in entertaining and supporting conspiracies about the pandemic,” and deliberately caters to “a segment of the population that is prone to accepting these conspiracies. … We find that those followers increasingly accepted pandemic conspiracies over the course of 2020 and that the increase in those beliefs was associated with less reported mask wearing, lower intentions to vaccinate, and reduced confidence in the authority of the CDC.”

This offers yet more evidence of how effective the right-wing propaganda machine has become in shaping public opinion, as well as the public mood at large and the personal identities of its most loyal audience.

What explains the right-wing propaganda machine’s power? Various things: It is highly coordinated and self-contained. Its messages are repeated. It uses emotional appeals to target the fear center of the brain — there is considerable evidence that right-wing authoritarians and other conservatives are highly susceptible to such strategies.

Today’s Republican Party and the larger fascist movement function as a type of political religion where faith and loyalty — and specifically belief in Donald Trump as a type of civic deity — takes the place of reason and empirical reality. In that sense, right-wing media functions as a type of a church chorus and community-building space for the faithful.

Instead of making reality more legible — the supposed responsibility of the free press in a healthy democracy — right-wing media deliberately circulates lies and disinformation that are understood by its target audience as gospel truth.


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It’s important to note that right-wing media would not be so nearly so effective in confusing and misleading its audience if the latter were more informed to start with about real facts, real knowledge and real expertise. In that sense, this is about a much larger cultural problem in America. Conservative media has become highly adept at using the Dunning-Kruger effect to manipulate its public into believing they are better informed, and less purely ignorant, than they actually are.

One can crudely summarize the Dunning-Kruger effect, as I did not long ago, as the self-reinforcing process where “stupid people don’t know that they are stupid.”

In a 2017 essay for the Pacific Standard, psychologist David Dunning explained the concept:

In many areas of life, incompetent people do not recognize  —  scratch that, cannot recognize  —  just how incompetent they are, a phenomenon that has come to be known as the Dunning-Kruger effect. Logic itself almost demands this lack of self-insight: For poor performers to recognize their ineptitude would require them to possess the very expertise they lack. To know how skilled or unskilled you are at using the rules of grammar, for instance, you must have a good working knowledge of those rules, an impossibility among the incompetent. Poor performers  —  and we are all poor performers at some things  —  fail to see the flaws in their thinking or the answers they lack. What’s curious is that, in many cases, incompetence does not leave people disoriented, perplexed, or cautious. Instead, the incompetent are often blessed with an inappropriate confidence, buoyed by something that feels to them like knowledge.

Right-wing media also gains immense power — to the point where some in its audience will literally follow commands to hurt themselves and other people — because of the long-term educational crisis in the United States. More than 50% of Americans cannot read at a sixth-grade level. A public so intellectually hobbled can be easily compelled towards the simple solutions, promises and feelings of power offered by fascism, and by demagogues like our former president.

The American people feel understandably exhausted by the Age of Trump, when the many crises besieging the country have come to seem insurmountable. That outcome is at least partly by design: Right-wing elites and other anti-democratic forces — especially the gangster capitalists at the top of the economic pyramid — have spent decades destroying the commons and undermining social democracy. Widespread despair is an excellent way to weaken public resolve and grease the downward slope into dystopia. 

America’s failing democracy and the ascendant fascist movement are complex and interlinked problems that defy any simple solution. There is no one cure for what ails America because the problem is cultural and societal, not simply “political” in the narrow sense. Like the “napalm” fire I saw all those years ago, the United States is currently smoldering, and on the verge of exploding.

Saving American democracy will require hard work — and not just by political elites, activists and journalists, but also by ordinary people. Here is the paradox: Fatigue is understandable, but it also marks the moment when we must work hardest to push toward victory. The fascist onslaught is not over. It is only beginning.

More from Salon’s extensive coverage of how right-wing media has reshaped American politics:

Joe Manchin is blocking Build Back Better — and that’s making him richer

Regardless of what ends up in the Build Back Better package, the opposition from Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., is already enriching coal investors like him by sending the price of coal skyrocketing. Manchin’s opposition to climate change measures, and his defense of fossil fuel, are helping to goose coal prices by signaling a slower decline in demand for coal than was once anticipated — and giving investors confidence to put more money in coal ventures.

Although Manchin’s coal brokerage company, Enersystems, is privately traded, it still benefits from rising coal prices. That’s helping Enersystems make significantly more money than it otherwise would.

“I think in the absence of Manchin, the price would be much lower,” said Michael Greenberger, the former director of the Division of Trading and Markets at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and now professor and director of the Center for Health and Homeland Security at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law.

Manchin’s moves are helping the coal industry at large. By proposing policies that support the need for coal, that’s driving up the price of coal — an otherwise dying fuel source.

So far this year, the price of coal has surged approximately 260 percent, and the biggest jump was in the last few months. The price of coal soared by about 140 percent since just the beginning of July, when the third quarter started.

RELATED: Joe Manchin kills Democrats’ paid family and medical leave proposal

“The future, absent Manchin, for investment in coal should be on the decline and prior to this year it was on the decline,” Greenberger told TYT.

Manchin’s grandstanding comes amid surfacing reports illuminating just how deep the West Virginia senator’s connections are to the coal industry. For Enersystems, the elevated price of the commodity means more money lining the company’s pockets. That means a bump for Manchin’s income in particular. Earlier this month, TYT reported that since 2011, Manchin has raked in more than $5.2 million from Enersystems. That makes up 71 percent of Manchin’s investment income.

For his peers running publicly traded companies — like Peabody Energy Group, the nation’s largest coal producer — Manchin’s obstruction to Biden’s climate change package also means their stock prices will rise. And that’s exactly what we’re seeing.

In the third quarter, Peabody Energy reported $900 million in sales. That’s the highest it’s been in seven quarters. The company’s stock is also up more than 10 percent this year, after several quarters of declines dating back from a high in June 2018.


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According to Federal Election Committee filings, Peabody Energy’s PAC donated $5,000 to Manchin as recently as July amid active negotiations on Biden’s agenda.

And even coal executives are echoing Greenberger’s assessment. Alliance Resource Partners CEO Joe Craft publicly thanked Manchin. In a quarterly earnings call late last month, Craft said:

I think the positive news for the people in the coal business, it looks like Sen. Manchin’s been successful in keeping out some of the draconian measures that were in the earlier bills. But we really need to see what in the world comes out of the Biden administration this quarter heading into next year, and what their reaction is going to be relative to whether it be legislation incentivizing alternatives, more importantly, what position are they going to take toward our financial institutions and access to capital. Because there have been signs recently that the Federal Reserve has been encouraging the banks not to lend the coal industry.

Greenberger told TYT, “I think the confidence that investors and their industry have in Manchin’s ability to tie up climate change proposals is a prop for [the coal business]. … Anybody who understands the way these prices work would have to say that his interference has supported the price of coal.”

Without Manchin, there are few, if any, financial reasons to support further investment in coal. Today only 19 percent of the country gets electricity through coal. That’s down 33 percent from 1990. Manchin’s state, however, is not on par with the rest of the country’s energy diversification. West Virginia still relies on coal to produce a staggering 89 percent of its electricity.

Manchin’s position on the Biden agenda has shifted. Earlier this year he voiced support for $4 trillion in spending. In negotiations since then, he has moved the goal posts, and now says his red line is closer to $1.5 trillion.

One of Manchin’s few consistent positions has been his allegiance to coal industry executives. Before Biden was even inaugurated, Manchin addressed a January symposium of the West Virginia Coal Association. Manchin promised the organization, including Craft, the head of Alliance Resources, “I will be a voice of reason in the Senate on coal and energy. I will continue to advocate for a total, all-in energy policy and for the continued use of coal.”

In late July, Manchin made good on his word. He sent a one-pager to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to argue that “carbon capture utilization and storage” should be included in legislation and that both coal and natural gas “feasibly qualify.” Manchin also requested that, if wind and solar energy tax credits were included, then existing tax credits for fossil fuels should not be repealed.

But if executives and investors in the coal business are getting a helping hand from Manchin and his grandstanding, it’s not helping the average West Virginian. Coal sales are up along with share prices, but so is the cost to consumers. According to reporting from CNN, the average utility bill through American Electric Power, one of the state’s largest utilities providers, has risen by 122 percent in the last 13 years, with some residents paying electric bills that are higher than their mortgages.

Manchin’s support for coal is not particularly helping the state’s workforce either. Coal is now the ninth largest industry in the state and only accounts for 3 percent of the state’s workforce. According to West Virginia University, in 2020 mine employment fell below 11,000, and the forecast suggested that employment levels would not return to pre-COVID numbers within the next five years.

More on Joe Manchin, Big Coal and the Build Back Better battle:

WaPo refused to publish full Trump response to Jan. 6 report due to “unrelated, inflammatory claims”

On Sunday afternoon, the Washington Post published a partial response from former president Donald Trump who called their Jan 6th investigative reports “fake news” and claimed that he “greatly objected to them.”

The Post also stated they would not subject their readers to the entire text because it was larded with “unrelated, inflammatory claims” that they refused to have any part in publishing.

Days after the Wall Street Journal published a letter from the one-term president that was loaded with misinformation — leading the conservative publication to fact-check it after the fact due to widespread criticism — the Post appears to have avoided the same fate.

Under a byline that read, “Washington Post Staff,” they wrote they had published a three-part investigation on Sunday that “found that law enforcement officials failed to heed mounting red flags that there would be violence when Congress formalized the electoral college vote on Jan. 6,” adding that it was based on “interviews with 230 people and thousands of pages of court documents and internal law enforcement reports.”


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After supplying Trump and his advisors with a list of 37 findings they had reported upon, the paper revealed they received an answer from Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich, reporting he had responded with “a lengthy written response that included series of unrelated, inflammatory claims that The Post is not publishing in full.”

Before publishing what they felt was suitable from the former president, the Post noted, “In response to the investigation’s findings, Budowich said that the former president ‘greatly objected’ to all of them. He disputed The Post’s investigation as ‘fake news’ and falsely cast people who entered the Capitol on Jan. 6 as ‘agitators not associated with President Trump.’ The statement repeated Trump’s false claim that the 2020 election was rigged.”

You can read the portion they agreed to publish here.

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Lindsey Graham wanted to shoot MAGA rioters, report claims: “You’ve got guns — use them!”

The Washington Post’s lengthy report about the January 6th Capitol riot has a number of explosive new details, including one about Sen. Lindsey Graham’s (R-SC) reaction to Trump supporters storming the Senate chamber.

According to the Post’s sources, Graham was so angry at being forced to flee the Senate while confirming the results of the 2020 election, he told Capitol police to start shooting MAGA rioters.

“What are you doing?” he yelled at the Senate sergeant-at-arms, according to the Post. “Take back the Senate! You’ve got guns. Use them!”

This message apparently didn’t sink in, so Graham reportedly repeated it: “We give you guns for a reason — use them.”


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Additionally, the Post reports that Graham begged first daughter Ivanka Trump to get her father to tell the rioters to leave the building.

“You need to get these people out of here,” he told Ivanka. “This thing is going south. This is not good. You’re going to have to tell these people to stand down. Stand down

Graham, who has morphed over the years from a major Trump critic into one of the former president’s most devoted followers, eventually voted to certify the results of the 2020 election after the Capitol had been retaken from the rioters.

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11 facts about Anne Rice’s “Interview with the Vampire”

Forty-five years after its publication, Anne Rice’s 1976 novel “Interview With the Vampire” stands as one of the most influential bloodsucker tales ever published — second only, perhaps, to Bram Stoker‘s “Dracula.” Rice’s debut novel is almost single-handedly responsible for the image of vampires that dominates pop culture today: conflicted, brooding, and oozing sex appeal from every moonlit pore. There had been angsty, romantic vampires before, but even Barnabas Collins seemed like a relic from another time. Rice gave Nosferatu a modern makeover, imagining vampires as literal rock stars.

But the influence of Rice’s novel doesn’t stop at setting the stage for vampire yarns like “The Lost Boys,” “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” and “True Blood.” LGBTQ+ readers embraced the book for its queer subtext (which just became, well, text in later series installments) and its depiction of vampires as outsiders feared by mainstream society. It also became a seminal work for the burgeoning goth subculture; Liisa Ladouceur, author of 2011’s “Encyclopedia Gothica,” calls “Interview With the Vampire” “a goth bible of sorts.” The novel kicked off a decades-spanning, 13-book series, inspired a hit film and multiple comic book adaptations, and established the template for a popular vampire trope.

With vampire fiction back on the rise and a new television adaptation in the works, here are 11 things you might not know about Interview With the Vampire.

1. Anne Rice wrote “Interview With the Vampire” to cope with grief.

In August 1972, the author and her husband lost their 5-year-old daughter, Michele, to a rare form of leukemia. The following year, Rice, who had recently completed a master’s degree in creative writing, quit her job to focus on writing. “I pitched myself into writing and made up a story about vampires,” Rice told The Independent in 2014. “I didn’t know it at the time but it was all about my daughter, the loss of her and the need to go on living when faith is shattered.”

2. “Interview With the Vampire” was written in about five weeks.

Rice first explored the idea of a reporter interviewing a vampire with a short story called “Interview with the Vampire,” which she revised several times. After her daughter’s death, she pulled the story out again, and over the course of five weeks in 1973, expanded it into a full-length novel.

3. “Interview With the Vampire” was heavily influenced by the 1936 universal horror film “Dracula’s Daughter” . . .

Rice saw “Dracula’s Daughter” when she was a kid and was captivated by its portrayal of the title character as a tormented artist who longed to be human. “It established to me what vampires were — these elegant, tragic, sensitive people,” Rice said in a 2017 interview with The Daily Beast. “I was really just going with that feeling when writing ‘Interview With the Vampire.'”

4. . . . but Anne Rice was not a fan of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula.”

In fact, she hadn’t even read Stoker’s seminal vampire novel when she wrote “Interview With the Vampire.”

5. The name of “Interview With the Vampire”‘s most famous character was the result of a misspelling.

When Rice named the character who would go on to star in the 1985 sequel “The Vampire Lestat” and headline the rest of the Vampire Chronicles series, she was misremembering a common Creole name. “I actually thought I was using an old Louisiana name,” Rice said in a 2014 interview at the Chicago Humanities Festival. “But I was misspelling it; the old name is ‘Lestan.'” It was several years before she realized her error.

6. After is was rejected by several publishers, “Interview With the Vampire”‘s fortunes changed at a writer’s conference.

Rice submitted her novel to several agents and editors in 1973, but there were no takers. The following year, she attended a Squaw Valley writers conference where, according to The New York Times, staffers read her manuscript and got excited enough to talk it up to Knopf editor Victoria Wilson, who was also in attendance. Rice landed an agent at the conference, and that agent happened to be a friend of Wilson’s. Wilson loved the manuscript, and before the year was over, Knopf had picked up hardcover rights to “Interview With the Vampire,” paying Rice a reported $12,000 advance — considerably more than most debut novelists were being paid at the time, according to Rice.

7. “Interview With the Vampire” landed Anne Rice a stunning paperback rights deal.

Rice’s $12,000 advance was nothing compared to what lay in store for her in the months leading up to her novel’s publication. First, the Literary Guild mail-order book club paid $7500 to add the book to its selections; then, things got serious when Paramount optioned the film rights for $150,000. With paperback rights still on the table, other publishing houses were scrambling to find Xeroxed copies of the manuscript, and after several rounds of bidding, Ballantine scored paperback rights to “Interview With the Vampire” for a whopping $700,000 (the equivalent of more than $3 million in today’s market). For comparison, Stephen King‘s now-legendary paperback rights sale for “Carrie” netted him $400,000 just three years earlier.

8. Anne Rice undertook a substantive rewrite of “Interview With the Vampire” after she sold the manuscript.

According to Rice’s website, the book changed dramatically between the initial sale in 1974 and its publication in 1976. Her editor thought the novel “peter[ed] out” toward the end, and asked Rice to rework it — so Rice wrote an additional 200 pages. The entire sequence involving the Theatre of the Vampires was added during the rewrite, as was the return of Lestat; in the original version, the flamboyant vampire died in the fire set by his protégé, Louis. In what Rice describes as “a very amicable process,” she worked with her editor to whittle the manuscript down to the version that would eventually be published.

9. Anne Rice balked at the copy edits she received on “Interview With the Vampire.”

The publishing process is a notoriously lengthy one that involves several stages of editing, including substantive edits that address issues such as plot, character, and structure, as well as copy edits, which pertain to things like grammar and sentence structure. Rice was fine with the upper-level edits she received on “Interview With the Vampire,” including the aforementioned rewrite. But she took umbrage at the copy edits that would have, in her view, dramatically altered the book’s tone and style. In a process she has described as “harrowing,” Rice went through the extensive copy edits with an ink pen and “changed them all back.”

10. Contrary to popular belief, Anne Rice did not base “Interview With the Vampire”s Lestat on Rutger Hauer.

In an oft-repeated bit of “Interview With the Vampire” lore, Rice supposedly named the Dutch actor as the inspiration for Lestat, who played a supporting role in “Interview With the Vampire” but has since become the star of the ongoing Vampire Chronicles series. But while Hauer certainly entered Rice’s mind during “Interview With the Vampire”‘s lengthy trek to the big screen, the character was not based on him. “I didn’t encounter [Hauer] till after I’d written’ Interview With the Vampire’ in which Lestat sprang to life pretty much on his own,” Rice wrote in a 2015 Facebook post accompanied by a photo of the actor from the 1973 film “Turkish Delight.” “But this is surely how I see my beloved Brat Prince hero.”

11. “Interview With the Vampire” is being adapted again — this time for television.

Fans who were disappointed by Neil Jordan’s famously troubled 1994 film adaptation should take heart; Interview With the Vampire is being resurrected as a TV series that will hopefully kick off a flurry of new Anne Rice adaptations. AMC, which acquired the rights to 18 of Rice’s novels in 2020, has ordered eight episodes of an “Interview With the Vampire” TV series that will star “Game of Thrones“‘s Jacob Anderson as Louis and Australian actor Sam Reid as Lestat. According to the Hollywood Reporter, AMC plans to premiere the series in 2022 as an effort to “launch a franchise universe based on Rice’s novels.” The network is also developing a series based on Rice’s “Lives of the Mayfair Witches” trilogy.

“Succession”: how true to life is the TV series?

“Succession” is back for another series of excruciating family interactions and vicious backstabbing. Going behind the scenes at Waystar Royco – the fictional version of the world’s biggest media and entertainment company – has never made for comfortable viewing.

The business has long turned the family against each another – yet they must work out who will be crowned successor to Logan Roy, the founder and CEO of the media conglomerate and the patriarch of the Roy family. Over the past two series, viewers have watched on as three of the four Roy children – Kendall, Roman and Shiv – each attempt to prove their worth as the right person to take over the firm.

For many family businesses, when the person at the top takes ill, dies or wants to retire this can often mean the end of the business. Research shows that succession planning must be anticipated long in advance, but often isn’t. And without plans in place, everything else can quickly topple.

My research looks at successions in family businesses – specifically, how knowledge should be passed on during this process. It’s clear to me that the Roy family are missing many important elements that add up to create a successful succession — namely, a trusting atmosphere, a loving family and most of all, a CEO that is willing to retire.

How a succession should look

In many ways, the TV series “Succession” demonstrates the exact opposite of what family businesses should do. Rather than things being planned, considered and clearly articulated, the process is highly dysfunctional, unpredictable and often downright abusive.

I have found that there are certain factors companies must consider should they want to avoid the Roy-style situation. In an ideal world, a succession would go through three stages, the first of which involves ground rules being established so everyone knows what to expect.

A loving and trusting family relationship is important during this foundational stage and family meetings often play an important role. The Roy family obviously do not relate to each other in a loving and trusting way. So while there are many family dinners and family meeting scenes, these seem to resemble something closer to the “Last Supper” — and end with similar levels of betrayals.

Research shows that the leadership style of the current CEO of a business also plays a vital role in the success of this initial phase. Ideally, this is someone who will openly participate in the process and who is supportive. In the case of “Succession,” Logan often holds back knowledge from his children and plays them off against each other in his typical power-hungry fashion.

Adding to all these difficulties, as with many businesses, Waystar Royco also features a host of non-family employees and other stakeholders. All these individuals have their own experiences and knowledge that need to be captured and passed on to the new CEO, but research shows this is often hard to do.

Indeed, in the first episode of season three, Logan declares that if one of the kids was to take over, the first thing they would do would be to sack some of his longstanding advisers — which is what often happens in real life. Instead, Logan has decided to temporarily elevate the company’s general counsel (or chief legal officer), Gerri Kellman, to the top spot — while still steering the ship from the shadows, of course.

The grooming stage

Once the ground rules have been established, “the grooming stage” can then commence — this is where the successor is nurtured to be the next leader of the business. The Roy family dynamic will again likely play out negatively in this phase as nurturing is not a word many of them are familiar with.

Logan’s determination to decrease any successor’s autonomy, combined with his controversial moral and ethical standards, will also mean that things will be very difficult for interim successor Gerri — and for any eventual successor of the firm. Indeed, it will be hard for anyone to really make any difference — particularly in light of the allegations of covered up rapes and murders on cruise liners that the company owns.

Research has found that, at the grooming stage, good mentoring and coaching is important to ensure knowledge is passed on between generations. Though jealousy and rivalry can stop things going smoothly here: as Logan has made clear, the Roy family members are “at war” with each other as they battle to find a new successor, so it’s unlikely this stage will go to plan for the Roys either.

Passing the baton

The final phase of a succession involves the current CEO “passing the baton” to the successor — and this phase needs to be managed well for the effective running of the company. This stage offers opportunities to reshape the strategic direction of a business. Many family businesses, for example, use the next generation’s knowledge in digital technology to broaden their presence on social media.

This is also a time when other potential successors (if managed appropriately) can be brought onto the board or the top management team. This helps to maintain family control and ensure things are operating in a way that is in keeping with the family’s wishes.

It’s clear the Roys still have some way to go before they decide upon their successor. And judging by the current climate at the company, the process will continue to be highly dysfunctional and challenging for all involved. What more could fans want?

Bingbing Ge, Teaching Fellow in the Department of Entrepreneurship and Strategy, Lancaster University

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

She was struggling with infertility. Her best friend was pregnant. Would their friendship survive?

When I called up Mel, my best friend of 15 years, to tell her I was pregnant, she replied with a whisper: “Can I hang up now?”

Throughout their years-long infertility journey, Mel and her partner spent upwards of $50,000, enduring five miscarriages and four failed in vitro fertilizations. I’d been one of the few friends Mel opened up to, and she’d been there for me when I miscarried six months earlier. Sometimes sharing pain is easier than sharing joy.

Whitney Barrell, LCSW, a therapist in Salt Lake City, Utah, recommends asking friends going through infertility what kind of communication and support they’d like. I did not do this. I thought I was being mature by picking up the phone to deliver my news. Turns out, Mel would have preferred an email.

Soon after, Mel told me she needed space. That space lasted years. I mostly understood, but wisps of resentment and hurt remained. I missed my friend.

While we were estranged, I read Sharon McKellar’s “A Letter to All the Pregnant Women in My Life.” McKellar, who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, estimates during the five years she experienced infertility, 20 of her close friends and family had babies. In her letter, McKellar writes, “There are moments, brief and beautiful moments, when I am so in love with my life that I forget about infertility and I feel actual joy. Those moments never happen around you. I can’t forget around you.”

McKellar’s letter helped me understand how painful seeing or even talking to me was for Mel. It also revealed that Mel and I are part of a widespread cultural phenomenon.

Friendships are suffering — even ending — from the strain of infertility.

Though there is negligible research on the impact of infertility on friendships, Barrell and Dr. Loree Johnson, LMFT, in Los Angeles, both of whom specialize in infertility, agree that 100 percent of their clients experiencing infertility have strained friendships.

“From what I’ve observed,” says Dr. Johnson, “there appears to be a direct correlation between the length of time that someone struggles with infertility and the impact on their relationships.”

McKellar used to be more involved in her friends’ pregnancies. She says, “That was when I still had hope, when I thought, ‘This could be me next month.'”

But as treatments went on, McKellar needed to distance herself from some people, including her friend Claire Gunter, when she became pregnant.

They didn’t see each other until Gunter was six months along. McKellar had been doing infertility treatments for over a year.

 “She did not look down to see my belly,” remembers Gunter. “She obviously didn’t want to talk about it. I imagined she was hurt, and thought it was directed at me. So much of pregnancy is self-centered.”

McKellar’s letter helped Gunter understand not to take McKellar’s distance and pain personally. Gunter sent her friend an email, with the subject heading, “So I Thought It Was Me.”

“That correspondence drove a really beautiful conversation for us,” recalls Gunter. Before then, McKellar thought of Gunter as a fun acquaintance. McKellar says, “Having her reach out to me with such compassion, care and openness bumped her into a different category of friendship. It made me feel like she’s someone I can trust and talk with about harder things.”

Their communication softened the blow when McKellar declined Gunter’s baby shower invitation. “I would have been honored if she’d come,” says Gunter, “but I knew there was potential for every single thing to be painful, like death by a thousand paper cuts.”

For people experiencing infertility, triggers are everywhere: a pregnant woman on the subway, a conversation about college funds, a billboard with a baby on it. Dr. Johnson describes infertility as “a web of invisible losses that don’t get recognized or discussed.” Infertility is an unacknowledged emotional experience for which there are no grief rituals. In the 1980s, grief expert Kennth J. Doka coined this type of unsanctioned bereavement “disenfranchised grief.”

“Infertility is not something people bring you a casserole for,” says Barrell.

The grief you do bring a casserole for is what sealed the friendship between Sara B. Franklin and Molly McHenry. When they were becoming friends in New York City, both were reeling from the tragic deaths of loved ones. “We went for so many 7-mile walks,” recalls McHenry. “We just walked our grief together.”

Franklin and McHenry both struggled to get pregnant, though always at different times, which may have helped ease potential strain on their friendship. Sara began her 3-year journey to conceive first. Even before McHenry and her wife began trying to conceive, she says, “There was already grief, knowing our kids weren’t going to be half me, half the love of my life. I don’t feel like I have an infertility issue. I have a lack-of-resources issue. Any jealousy I had with Sara is the jealousy I have with all straight people—they just get to bone and have a baby.”

Despite Franklin’s challenges getting pregnant, she knew this was a painful spot for McHenry. “I was caught between wanting her support as one of my closest friends and not wanting to rub it in her face,” Franklin said.

Nichelle Polston of Delaware was struggling to conceive with her husband in 2014 when her longtime friend Alisha Jones, a graphic designer, helped Polston build a website. She titled it “Give Me a Ring and a Baby”; in it, Polston chronicled her journey through marriage and infertility.

As Polston says of Jones, “She was that one friend I could cut up with.” Jones was diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a common hormonal disorder that includes infertility as one of its potential complications. Polston has “unexplained infertility,” a diagnosis that offers no answers. The friends commiserated over their shared potential fates of never being able to birth their own children. 

Then, in 2019, Jones unexpectedly got pregnant. “I wasn’t in a serious relationship, and it was a whirlwind of emotions,” she says. When Jones called Polston to work through her feelings, Polston thought it sounded like Jones was complaining about good news. Trying to feel better about her situation, Jones said, “Well, at least I’ll have a legacy beyond myself.”

Polston says, “Her comment pierced my soul in a negative way.” The two discussed it days later, but their friendship has not fully recovered.

It is no surprise such friendships are suffering. Dr. Johnson says that someone going through infertility is working through “a major life crisis” that often includes emotional trauma. While some friendships are able to weather infertility, others unravel beyond repair. As with all grief, time is a salve.

McKellar now has twins through IVF, and Gunter also has two children. They remain friends, and just before the COVID-19 pandemic began, they went to a Lizzo concert together.

McHenry and her wife have two children: a baby they adopted, and a 3-year-old they foster and hope to adopt. Franklin has twins through IVF. Their godparents are McHenry and her wife.

After a few years’ reprieve, Polston and her husband are trying to conceive again. She renamed her website “Her Normal” in 2019. Jones’ daughter will turn one this summer. Though the friendship is still rocky, Jones remains hopeful: “I think when we’re old biddies we’re going to laugh about it.”

As for Mel and I, we’ve found our way back to each other. She had a child through surrogacy around the time I had a second baby. We text each other pictures of our daughters and “LOL” at their fierceness.

I have another close friend about to embark on IVF. I’m planning to bring her a casserole.


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Correction (Nov 15 11:03 AM PST): Polston’s condition was previously misstated. The story has since been corrected. 

“Red flags were everywhere”: Bombshell report finds Trump administration ignored Jan. 6 warnings

A new report from the Washington Post published on Sunday detailed a deep dive into the extensive warnings the federal government received of potential violence and efforts to interfere with Congress’s counting of the Electoral College votes on Jan. 6. Despite this ample foreshadowing, the administration and law enforcement agencies were still unable or unwilling to prepare adequate defenses to keep the mob from storming the Capitol that day.

The FBI, in particular, comes off looking inept — if not driven by politically inspired cowardice or indifference.

“The FBI received numerous warnings about Jan. 6 but felt many of the threatening statements were ‘aspirational’ and could not be pursued,” the report found. “In one tip on Dec. 20, a caller told the bureau that Trump supporters were making plans online for violence against lawmakers in Washington, including a threat against Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah). The agency concluded the information did not merit further investigation and closed the case within 48 hours.”

Donell Harvin, the head of intelligence at the homeland security office in Washington, D.C., did raise the alarm, according to the report. It explained how he “organized an unusual call for all of the nation’s regional homeland security offices” — a call joined by hundreds of officials sharing their concerns. They were reportedly warning of an attack on Jan. 6 at 1 p.m. at the U.S. Capitol, just when the insurrection occurred. The planning was happening all over social media, after all — inspired by then-President Donald Trump’s own tweets and rhetoric. Harvin reached out to the FBI and other agencies to warn them of what was coming, the report found.


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He feared a “mass casualty event,” according to the Post.

“While the public may have been surprised by what happened on Jan. 6, the makings of the insurrection had been spotted at every level, from one side of the country to the other,” it said. “The red flags were everywhere.”

Despite specific warnings of the exact nature of the attack that was coming — the planning of which would certainly be illegal — it appears the FBI limited itself for fear of infringing on First Amendment-protected activity. The Post also suggested that FBI Director Christopher Wray, who was often under fire from Trump, feared angering the man who appointed him by speaking out about the potential for violence.

“The FBI chief wasn’t looking for any more confrontations with the president,” the Post found, citing current and former law enforcement officials.

Wray remains in his position to this day.

Meanwhile, the Post reported, the Department of Homeland Security did not put out a security bulletin to alert other agencies of the dangers, despite receiving, “sobering assessments of the risk of possible violence on Jan. 6, including that federal buildings could be targeted by protesters.”

As has previously been reported, officials in the U.S. Capitol Police were aware of at least some of the danger posed by Trump supporters still angry about the election in the run-up to Jan. 6. These warnings, however, didn’t make it to Chief Steven Sund, and he failed to effectively coordinate with the National Guard to get protection for the Capitol. The Capitol Police itself was woefully under-prepared for the assault, as has been widely reported. Sund resigned following the attack, one of the few officials to face real accountability for the failures that led up to that day.

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These horror movie foods are supposed to be gross… but look delicious!

I didn’t want to admit it, but I was inspired to write this article because of a meal prepared by a Latrine.

In Mel Brooks’ classic spoof “Robin Hood: Men in Tights” (my second favorite Brooks movie, followed only by “History of the World, Part 1”), a hideous witch named Latrine (Tracey Ullman) decides to make a magic omelette for King John (Richard Lewis) so he can defeat Robin Hood (Cary Elwes). The devilish breakfast includes raven’s egg, blood of a hen, eyeballs of a crocodile and testicles of a newt; since this is a comedy, shtick is spouted while the stomach-churning concoction is put together. Yet when Latrine actually presents the meal to King John, the final product looks… honestly, not too bad.

If it hadn’t been for the courage of a Twitter user who goes by “Bashmore,” I would never have publicly admitted this. Last month I asked people on the platform about supposedly gross foods they’d seen in movies which actually look delicious. In my post, I alluded to how “witches’ potions in bubbling cauldrons look like tasty chunky soup,” which I absolutely believe to be the case. The key to being able to crave cinema’s disgusting offerings is to see the potentially edible mixed in with the ostensibly inedible. As Bashmore said regarding Latrine’s omelette, “it has an eyeball and half a shell, but pick around those bits and it looks quite nice.”


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A similar point could be made of the tauntaun guts, which were brutally exposed by Han Solo (Harrison Ford) in “The Empire Strikes Back” so that his friend Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) wouldn’t die in the cold. When Solo swings his lightsaber into the dead reptomammal’s flesh so he can stuff his shivering companion inside, the goo that pours out looks a bit like translucent white sausages. As Twitter user Gwydion pointed out, “when Han Solo slices open Luke’s Tauntaun, I always thought the Tauntaun guts looked kinda tasty.” In the “Star Wars” universe, this is a dumb beast that smells even worse on the inside than it does on its outside. Back on this planet, though, those merely look like potentially tasty plump sausages. They might need a little seasoning, given the lack of color, but otherwise they seem potentially delightful.

If you’re able to check your morals at the door, you could even be convinced to feel that way about the memorable pizza in “A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master.” It is covered in cheese, what seem to be strips of pepperoni, and the most succulent little meatballs. True, when dream demon Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund) pops them in his mouth, we can tell that those meatballs are actually the shrieking tormented souls of hapless teenage murder victims. If you can simply set aside that inconvenient detail, though, is it possible to not at least be impressed that this pizza joint didn’t skimp on the toppings?

This facetious query, though, raises a somewhat more serious question. Does this mean that, behind the world of cinematic gross foods, there is a universe of real-life culinary delights?

Alas, sometimes you’ll be disappointed when you try to learn the truth behind the silver screen’s seemingly repulsive snacks. In the introduction of “Jason Goes To Hell: The Final Friday,” a coroner (Richard Gant) is possessed by slasher killer Jason Voorhees (Kane Hodder) after the dead murderer’s heart hypnotizes him into, well, an act of cannibalism. As he chows down on Jason’s inflamed and diseased heart, black sludge gushing from his maw, I couldn’t help but note that the heart looked like candy. As it turns out, I was correct: The prop designers made the prop out of gelatin and filled it with fruit cocktail and black food dye to create an oozing effect. Despite its mundane origins, however, Gant reportedly still felt nauseous by the disgusting thing, and nearly vomited during the take as a result.

I suppose the underlying lesson here is that, because movie gross foods are fictional, it is healthy and normal to project mundane gustatory preferences onto them. Perhaps if we had an opportunity to eat props like Jason’s heart or one of Freddy’s victim’s souls, we would not be able to suspend our disbelief and really think we were doing something gross. Then again, perhaps we would convince ourselves that we really are eating a sweet piece of candy or juicy meatball, and won’t be grossed out at all.

Either way, I’m not longer ashamed to say that I think Latrine’s omelette looks pretty good. Just don’t serve me an omelette from an actual latrine!

“Bye Ron”: Roger Stone threatens to run against Ron DeSantis over lack of 2020 election audit

Longtime GOP operative and Florida resident Roger Stone announced that he’s considering a campaign against Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis over his frustrations that the state has not yet implemented a statewide audit into its 2020 election results, which former President Donald Trump won. 

“If Florida governor Ron DeSantis does not order an audit of the 2020 election to expose the fact that there are over 1 million phantom voters on the Florida voter rolls in the Sunshine state,” Stone wrote on Gab, “I may be forced to seek the Libertarian Party nomination for governor Florida in 2022.” 

Stone went on to include the hashtag “#ByeRon” in the Gab post, complete with a picture of himself.


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Within a subsequent message posted to his Telegram channel, Stone continued to rail against DeSantis. 

“I heard governor Ron DeSantis say that Florida had the most honest election in our history in 2020,” Stone stated. “Yet I know for a certainty there are 1 million phantom voters on the Florida voter rolls. These ‘voters’ simply do not exist.”

In true Stone-style, he added that the Republican lawmaker “can kiss his arrogant Yalie ass goodbye.” 

A Salon request to comment to Sone wasn’t returned on Sunday afternoon.

It remains unclear why Stone is seeking an audit in Florida, since Trump won the state by over 300,000 votes in the 2020 election. The calls to audit Florida originated, notably, from MyPillow CEO-turned-2020 election conspiracy theorist Mike Lindell, who has been at the forefront of pushing baseless claims that Trump won the state by over 1.2 million votes

The provocative comments from Stone come as DeSantis is being hailed as a hero in right-wing media over his handling of the coronavirus — which currently leads all states in its per-capita death toll since the Delta variant first swept ashore.

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Celebrating Day of the Dead with a spread of beloved recipes

Mexico’s Dia De Los Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrates loved ones who have passed. Some families put together an ofrenda, an altar created in their honor, featuring photographs and the deceased’s favorite foods and drinks. Other families picnic at the burial sites of their loved ones. “When you travel to the cemetery to feast and celebrate the lives of your ancestors,” Mexican Chef Tello Carreon (formerly of Nixta in St. Louis) says, “It’s an experience you don’t really forget.”

While Mexico is known for its street food, the variety of vendors setting up shop depends on the day of the week and time of the day. You might be craving esquites, a cup brimming with boiled corn off the cob, dressed in a combination of lime, chile, salt, butter, mayo, and cheese; however, if it’s mid-day or earlier, you’ll have to wait until after dinner to get your fix. That’s not the case with tamales. Wrapped in corn husk and filled with meats, cheese, or sweets, tamales can be found on every corner, throughout the day. This inexpensive food is commonly grabbed on the go for breakfast — en route to a Dia De Los Muertos ofrenda, perhaps — with some vendors offering it up in a bolillo (a Mexican baguette, if you will).

“The best dish we made in celebrating Day of the Dead was the tamales,” says Carreon. (Find his recipe here or above.) “As a child, we used chicken, pork or beef stuffing, and sweetened the corn dough with strawberry and banana puree. I love all of the different variations of the dish.” According to Delia Cosentino, an Associate Professor of Art History and Architecture at DePaul University who specializes in the visual culture of Mexico, “The mouth-watering smells of favorite foods are believed to draw in the dead to such celebrations in their honor.”

Mexico’s tamale vendors often sell other masa-based goods, too, namely masa-based drinks like atole and champurrado. Champurrado is a chocolate-flavored atole, a warm Mexican beverage, chock full of ingredients indigenous to Mexico: masa, chocolate, and canela (cinnamon). The beverage is introduced into the diets of many Mexicans at an early age, and pairs perfectly with adult comfort food like tamales and cake.

Maybe the thought of drinking corn masa doesn’t sound appealing to you. To get over the foreign concept, think of it as a cereal-infused milk. You only need to look at the popularity of Momofuku Milk Bar‘s cereal-flavored soft serve to see that it’s not a strange option. “Champurrado has an ancient and deeply rooted spiritual meaning because the drink dates back to the Aztec and Maya civilizations,” says Yanni Sanchez, chef at Chicago’s Bar Takito. “[It] will continue to increase in popularity.” (See Yanni’s recipe, here or above.)

“Traditional Mexican food is anything corn-based,” says Cosentino. “Such as the masa used to make a tamale and champurrado.” She explains how these kinds of ingredients highlight a deep affinity with the ritual’s indigenous roots. Festivals honoring the underworld could be found in Mexico well before European invasion. The combination of these two aspects of indigenous culture make Dia De Los Muertos truly special. Cosentino explains how particular food and drinks marking the occasion often vary across Mexico, because regional celebrations are often different from one another. But items like mole, pan de muertos, and atole transcend regional boundaries.

The holiday is not only a personal celebration of family members who have passed on, but a demonstration of ancestral, pre-colonial pride, an appreciation of our indigenous roots. Nothing embodies this more than champurrado with it’s homegrown ingredients that have largely gone unchanged through the centuries. Said simply, champurrado — and many other corn-based Mexican foods, like tamalas — transcend the living and the dead.

Food has always been a unifier — no news there. But when someone goes through the painstaking task of creating something delicious for a person who can no longer eat it, you realize exactly how magical food can be. And nothing highlights this sentiment more than the Day of the Dead. These recipes are special because they come from chefs with Mexican roots, who grew up on the tradition of Dia de Los Muertos. It’s not something that they admired from afar and learned to create. They lived the experience of making food, alongside other family members, for someone who was gone but not forgotten. As a result of those memories, these recipes blossomed.

* * *

Day of the Dead recipes

1. Champurrado (Mexican Hot Chocolate-Ish)

Celebrate Day of the Dead with a cup of spicy hot chocolate. This recipe gets a kick from both chipotle powder and whole cinnamon sticks, which both infuse the milky chocolate mixture with natural spice and a little bit of heat.

2.  Chicken Tamales with Salsa Verde

Tamales are a go-to main course for Day of the Dead feasts, and while there are plenty of variations and fillings, try this chicken version. Our editors recommend using boneless, skinless chicken thighs for the best flavor; the meat is amped up with our homemade three-ingredient salsa verde.

3. Pan de Muerto (Day of the Dead Bread)

Sweet bread is a staple during día de los muertos celebrations. This version is flavored with anise seeds and orange zest, plus a little bit of vanilla extract.

4. Janet’s Mexican Pork Tamales

Another version of tamales worthy of a family-wide celebration is these pork-filled ones. We favor pork butt, which has plenty of fat and flavor to keep things interesting. To make the masa, the corn-based dough for the tamales, you’ll need pork lard, leftover pork broth (from cooking the pork butter for the filling), and instant masa, a quick-cooking corn flour.

5. Mushroom Tamale Pie with Lime Cornbread Crust

Although it’s not exactly a traditional recipe for Day of the Dead, enjoy this meat-free, modern-day twist on a tamale entrée for your Dia De Los Muertos feast. “It’s rich and flavorful without being terribly heavy, sure to please meat-eaters and vegetarians alike,” writes recipe developer Jarrett Melendez.

6. Entomatadas (Cheese-Filled, Tomato Sauce-Smothered Tortillas)

“Like enchiladas that have shrugged off their heavy winter coats, entomatadas are a bit lighter, milder, and sweeter, well-suited to warming weather and earlier hours, to a glass of orange juice rather than a bottle of beer,” writes recipe developer Sarah Jampel. It’s exactly what we want to eat in early November as the leaves start to change and the temperature drops.

7. Mole Sencillo (Simple Mole)

Mole is a work of patience and art, and traditionally, it has a long (LONG) list of ingredients. Food52 resident Rick Martinez was determined to make a mole that was just as flavorful and just as complex as recipes developed by generations of family members before him…but also simpler, quicker-cooking, and with far fewer ingredients. We think he nailed it, as always.

8. Roberto Santibañez’ Classic Guacamole

You’ve probably come across dozens, if not hundreds, if not thousands of stellar guacamole recipes in your life. The list of ingredients in this recipe won’t surprise you — avocados, white onion, cilantro, and jalapeno peppers — but Roberto Santibañez’s technique for getting the texture just right is what sets this one apart from the rest.

9. Classic Leche Flan with Vanilla Bean

End your Day of the Dead celebration on a sweet note with our recipe for a classic creamy flan covered in a rich caramel sauce.

10. Tamales Azules de Elote

Resident and recipe developer Rick Martinez explains how his family used to make dozens of red pork tamales for Christmas every year. Taking a page from their book, his updated version calls for blue corn masa, a spiced brown sugar and chile syrup, and a cool and rich crema.

11. Tequila Old Fashioned from Don Julio

It’s not really a proper Day of the Dead party without a little (okay, a lot) of tequila. Sure, you can drink it straight up or in the form of a margarita, but we also love this riff on the classic Old-Fashioned cocktail that uses tequila and agave syrup in place of the usual bourbon and simple syrup.

12. Breakfast Churros with Cinnamon Sugar

Churros are a delightful sweet snack, but somehow they taste extra-special on this Mexican holiday. Make sure to roll the crispy, golden brown dough in a mixture of cinnamon sugar as soon as it comes out of the fryer, as the residual hot oil will help the sugar to stick.

13. Mexican Concha (Sweet Cookie-Topped Buns)

For an even sweeter spin on Mexican sweet buns, recipe developer Sarah Jampel had the genius idea to top brioche buns with a thin, buttery cookie. It’s hard to imagine that we’ll ever return to our old ways.

14. Horchata

This is a traditional Latin American drink, but it’s been easily embraced as a non-alcoholic (and naturally dairy-free!) drink for festive occasions, like Day of the Dead, in Mexican culture. The base is made with a combination of brown rice and blanched almonds, plus agave for sweetness and cinnamon for that essential hint of spice.

15. Buckwheat Persimmon Bread

Buckwheat flour adds a woodsy flavor and pleasing grain to this not-too-sweet loaf with currants, walnuts, and nutmeg,” writes recipe developer Alice Merdich. But just don’t take her word for it. Try baking this for breakfast or as a snack for Dia de Los Muertos.

16. Mexican Chocolate Churro Rounds

Instead of the thick, twisted sticks of dough that we usually associate with churros, these adorable bite-sized churros are formed into small balls and deep-fried, then promptly rolled in cinnamon and sugar (of course), plus cayenne pepper and cocoa powder.

Between “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and “Succession,” TV presents the fall (and rise) of old white guys

Larry David is perfectly content to remain in his California bubble. That principle has guided “Curb Your Enthusiasm” for more than 20 years, informing cringeworthy situations that result from Larry leaving his house to interact with other people or letting them into his domain.

But as the recently launched 11th season shows, neither he nor anyone else he knows can prevent old age from taking up permanent residence in their midst, nor lock death out of their lives. That’s true for all of us, but few of us have enough money and influence to wildly distract us the inevitability of our mortality.  

The premiere provides an example of this in Larry’s confidante, comedian Albert Brooks, deciding to throw himself a living funeral, the product of having attended memorial services for five friends within the last three years. Losing loved ones can lead us to take stock of our own lives and think about whether we’re living well or to the fullest. Unless you’re a wealthy man like Brooks, to whom few people say no.  

The fictionalized Brooks’ grand takeaway from all this grieving is that he should be able to see and hear all the nice things people would say at his service while he’s alive. “I can’t stand that all this praise is going to somebody in a box,” Brooks says to Larry in a “what a shame” tone he means to sound thoughtful and revolutionary, as opposed to coming off as an egocentric boob.

Related: Has Larry David officially curbed our enthusiasm?

Between “Curb” and “Succession,” Sundays on HBO are giving us a great view into the hearts and minds of rich old white guys. What we see does not inspire confidence, but whether on TV or in life, it rarely does. These bicoastal bookends to the premium channel’s tentpole evening are emblematic of a season that’s all about obscenely wealthy male Boomers.


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In Congress, they’re leading the charge to dismantle voting rights and hamper progress on infrastructure improvements. West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin refused to join fellow Democrats in supporting a bill that contained provisions funding paid family and medical leave and aggressive but necessary climate change legislation, in part because he’s an old guy who draws a significant portion of his wealth from the coal industry.

Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, a willful participant in the GOP’s obstructionism, tried to funnel off some of the goodwill surrounding Apple TV+’s “Ted Lasso” to camouflage his lack of support for measures that would, for example, protect voting rights.

Each is the type of politician “Succession” media mogul Logan Roy (Brian Cox) would love to have in his pocket. He refuses to let the next generation take over because it would mean giving up that level of power, even though his main response to the federal investigators gathering at his gates has been, “Tell them to f**k off.” This isn’t because he knows what he’s doing or that he’s untouchable.

From a distance it may sound like a giant’s roar. Up close, we can see Logan has reached a point in his life when “f**k off” could mean exactly that, or it masks fear and uncertainty, or it could be what’s coming out of his mouth when he means to say, “I am having a stroke.” Astronomical wealth buys him a favorable translation from the company he’s in, which is why he surrounds himself with his power-hungry children and other sycophants.

Larry doesn’t quite occupy that stratum of wealth and power in Los Angeles, but the “Seinfeld” co-creator can stroll into Netflix with his best friend and manager Jeff (Jeff Garlin) and sell them a bland pitch without much effort.

His proposed comedy is about, what else, another up-and-coming comedian based on a younger version of himself. This one moves in with his elderly uncle and does everything he can to accelerate his relative’s demise. Hilarity is guaranteed to ensue because . . . look who’s making it.

It’s unlikely that HBO would allow one of its shows to feature their main competitor in a subplot unless the larger storyline is designed to be a dig at them. Instead of guessing where David is going with this, it’s better to consider what he’s showing us now. Here is a man whose life runs on complaints about etiquette breaches and minor irritations, whose entire claim to fame is that nothing good ever comes of leaving your house.

But this same guy can exhale a whiff of a passable concept and a production company with deep pockets will buy in, no questions asked.

The other side to this is that both “Curb” and “Succession” depict power and wealth as costumes that camouflage frailty. “Curb” makes that a central joke in the premiere, as if to acknowledge that David has been making this show on and off since October 2000, interrupting its run with a six-year break between 2011 and 2017. Despite his performative misanthropy and selfishness, he knows he’s no spring chicken.

Hence, in the same premiere in which Albert Brooks caters his own wake while watching his friends eulogize him via a video feed viewed from the comfort of his king-size bed, Larry needles a friend rumored to have early onset dementia to pay him back for an expensive group outing, only to have his own mental acuity questioned after he walks into a glass door.

That accident – which, as he points out, could happen to anybody – botches his burgeoning relationship with Lucy Liu, a woman more than two decades his junior. Once the glass lays him out she loses all interest, responding to his sexual overtures after the fact by suggesting he go home, take a bath and wrap himself in a blanket to “get cozy.”

Thus far, Larry has had success with younger women because he’s a rich old guy. Some septuagenarians do have that kind of magnetism; we’re not saying it’s impossible any more than we’re implying the season’s rising stock in old guys only benefits miserable creatures. Charles-Haden Savage, Steve Martin’s protagonist on “Only Murders in the Building” and another Old Man for Fall Season (and not a rich one, we should add), probably earned the comedian a few zaddy points by playing up the character’s vulnerability.  

Martin presents an excellent case of a late-career popularity resurgence in which neither the performer nor the character is attempting to play younger than he actually is. Charles is fine with being in his 70s and written to be respectful and platonically supportive of his neighbor and friend Mabel (Selena Gomez) while romancing his neighbor Jan like an old-fashioned gentleman, seducing her with a sexy game of Scrabble.

The Hulu show made this year a great one for Martin, and his co-star Martin Short, who not only makes a splash in it as Oliver Putnam, but turns up in a scathing cameo in “The Morning Show” and in a cameo via photograph in the “Curb” premiere.

Short’s Oliver makes a running joke out of trying to seem younger than he is, something Larry never does on “Curb” while insisting, without success, that he’s still quite virile. Age and aging isn’t merely a joke in his Los Angeles, it’s the joke. But its bite doesn’t pierce him or his circle nearly as deeply as it does others.

Brooks only loses his girlfriend (played by Laura Kightlinger) when she finds out he’s hoarding pandemic supplies along with all the other enablers attending the comedian’s living funeral. They exit in a righteous huff, angry that they’ve been tricked into pretending to mourn a healthy, living man with a closet full of hand sanitizer and PPE.

They probably would have been more forgiving if Brooks were no longer around to defend himself or his life; no matter. They’ll forget soon enough and welcome him and Larry back into their good graces, because that’s how things work in these shows. An old millionaire TV star can be as unbearable as he likes, and an elderly billionaire can still be considered a colossus even if he can barely make the short walk to a podium to address his faithful. In these times of ours they’re still big enough to assert their gravitational pull over us while we watch, transfixed, anxious to see what they do next.

“Curb Your Enthusiasm” airs Sundays  at 10:30 p.m. on HBO.

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GOP candidate claims Michael Flynn hoped to blackmail U.S. officials into pro-Trump “audits”

A Republican Senate candidate alleged over the weekend that Michael Flynn, the retired general and former national security adviser, has sought damaging information on elected officials in a number of states, with the apparent goal of blackmailing them into supporting conspiratorial election audits meant to reinforce Donald Trump’s false claims that the 2020 election was fraudulent. 

Everett Stern, a businessman who owns a private intelligence firm called Tactical Rabbit and is running for the open U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania, held a press conference Saturday to share his purported findings, later tweeting out a link to the video of his remarks titled, “Everett Stern Releases New Evidence of Ongoing Domestic Terror Threat Links to General Michael T. Flynn.”

“I’m here today not as a candidate running for U.S. Senate, I’m here as a citizen who is genuinely concerned about our country, sincerely concerned about the undermining of our democracy,” Stern said in the opening moments of his statement. He also claimed to be in touch with federal law enforcement about the situation.

Stern claims that at least two people representing a Flynn-linked group called “Patriot Caucus” approached him earlier this year after a public speech, offering to hire his firm to gather “dirt” on officials and recruit others to assist in the plot. One of the men allegedly told Stern that they had retained the services of active intelligence officials “both domestic and foreign.”


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“They wanted to gather intelligence on senators, judges, congressmen, state reps, to move them towards the audit,” Stern said. “The word ‘move’ was emphasized tremendously. It was clear to me what they wanted was not traditional opposition research — what they wanted was to extort and to literally move people towards the audit with dirt.”

Stern claimed he was targeted because of his political ties in Pennsylvania, a key swing state targeted by election conspiracy theorists who longed to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 electoral victory there. Patriot Caucus apparently wanted Stern to focus on two Republican state officials in particular: Sen. Pat Toomey and Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick. (Toomey is retiring, and Stern is now a candidate for his seat).

“He said to me, ‘PA GOP better move towards the audit, or we will crush them,'” Stern said, alleging that he feigned interest in order to gather documents and audio recordings that could be used to expose the group. 

Beyond the goals that Patriot Caucus was chasing, Stern claimed, it was the methods Flynn’s group encouraged Stern that made him uncomfortable.

RELATED: Mike Flynn swears allegiance to QAnon in wild Fourth of July video

He claims that he was told to “accomplish the mission even if you have to use domestic terrorism.”

“I believe that Gen. Flynn has committed treason against the United States,” Stern said on Saturday. “Based on what I have seen and witnessed, I truly believe that’s the case.”

Stern said he was moved to expose Flynn’s alleged plot out of a moral imperative — something he said he was also familiar with as a corporate whistleblower at HSBC, where he exposed the bank’s billion-dollar money laundering scheme. The case ended with a $1.92 billion fine against HSBC.

This is just the latest controversy around Flynn, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant general who once headed the Defense Intelligence Agency and was later pardoned by Trump after his conviction on charges of lying to the FBI. He was pictured last summer purportedly swearing allegiance to QAnon, the conspiracy theory positing that a group of cannibalistic, pedophile Satanic elites control much of the U.S. the government. (Flynn’s family later denied the video in question had anything to do with QAnon.) 

He also appeared to advocated the violent overthrow of the U.S. government, saying that a military coup like the one in Myanmar-style coup “should” happen here following Trump’s loss to Joe Biden last November. (Flynn later claimed he had been misunderstood.)

Flynn did not respond to Salon’s request for comment.

Watch Stern’s full remarks here via YouTube:

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story contained information about Patriot Caucus that Salon was unable to independently verify and has since removed. The story is now updated.  

Everything to know about hard apple cider, fall’s signature drink

Now that the leaves are changing and we’re eating apple cider donuts every hour on the hour, it seems hard to remember a time when hard apple cider wasn’t also part of our autumn menu. While the craft beer craze and consumption of spiked seltzers and canned cocktails are at an all-time high, so is hard cider. Cider is naturally gluten-free, so a lot of people are able to consume it, which is a big reason why it has become so popular. Five years ago, you could count on one hand the number of hard ciders available nationwide, and most of them were quite sweet. Now, there are hundreds, if not thousands, of cideries producing warm and spiced, fruity, funky hard ciders for consumption from the Finger Lakes of New York to the Pacific Northwest.

If you’ve never tried hard cider before, maybe you’re skeptical. Or maybe you’re excited, but just have no idea where to begin. It’s not nearly as saturated of a market as craft beer is, but there is still plenty to learn and lots of varieties to sip.

Behind the scenes

At a very high level, cider-making is a rather uncomplicated process. All you need is two ingredients: apple juice, which are added to a tank or barrel (these could be made from stainless steel, polymer, or even old wine or rum oak barrels). The yeast will convert all of the sugars in the juice to ethanol (aka alcohol) and after about two weeks, the cider is ready. More or less. “The higher the sugar content, the longer it will take to ferment,” explains Brittnay Perlo, Master Cidermaker at Austin Eastciders. Generally, between two to four weeks is a normal fermentation time.

After the apples have fermented, the cider may be passed through a micron filter to remove the yeast, which creates a clarified, crisp cider. Most hard ciders are filtered; however, some cideries like Downeast Cider House in Boston brew unfiltered cider, which contains yeast, resulting in a cloudier product that tastes, well, yeastier.

At Austin Eastciders, they produce pure hard apple cider, as well as blended fruit cider. This is the stage when any fruit juices — blood orange juice, pineapple juice, etc. — may be added and blended. Dan Pucci, author of “American Cider: A Modern Guide to a Historic Beverage,” explains that there are two different ways to brew cider with fruit: co-fermentation and post-fermentation blending. Co-fermentation is when fruits like berries or grapes are fermented with the apples from the beginning, creating a very flavorful, complex cider. He says that co-fermentation is especially popular in California, where wildfires have destroyed many vineyards, leaving a lackluster crop that isn’t ripe for wine-making, but perfect for cider. “That’s very different from when fruit purée is added at the end,” he says. “The flavor of post-fermentation will be less complex than co-fermentation.”

Whether or not fruit is added, the final step of cider making calls for carbonating the cider with CO2 to make it effervescent, and then it is either canned or kegged.

How do you like them apples?

Unlike beer, which is made with wheat, hard cider is made exclusively with apples. However, not all apples are alike. But we’re not just talking about the difference between Galas and Granny Smiths. There are two very broad categories of apples — culinary apples, which is the kind we’re used to snacking on and baking with, and bittersweet and bittersharp apples . . . aka cider apples. “Traditionally, cider was made with cider apples, which are similar to crabapples,” says Perlo. She says that cider apples are to grocery store apples what wine grapes are to grocery store grapes. They are higher in tannins, acidity, and sugar, which makes them ideal for fermentation. Part of the reason why cideries like Austin Eastciders uses cider apples is because of availability. Prohibition wiped out the majority of cider apples in the U.S., according to Perlo, so some producers may source their apples from outside the country in order to meet the demand.

At Citizen Cider in Burlington, Vt., they stick to culinary apples, but partner with a number of different orchards across the U.S. in order to ensure they have enough supply. Tim Costello, culture and field marketing manager for Citizen Cider, says that if cider is made with culinary apples, it will taste different during peak apple harvest season (aka the fall) vs. the off-season. During peak season, Citizen Cider, which primarily uses culinary apples to brew their ciders, uses only about seven varieties of apples. That’s all that’s needed because the apples have so much fresh, complex flavor. In the off-season, it takes a greater variety of apples — up to 15 varieties at Citizen Cider — to brew cider that is just as flavorful and complex as when. “It’s not that the fall is the best season for cider, but it certainly allows for the most interesting flavor profile,” says Costello.

What does cider taste like?

On a technical level, there are sweet and dry ciders. It may sound obvious, but sweet ciders are sweeter than dry ciders. “Sugar can come from lots of different places. It might be added, it might be residual from the fermentation, or it might be added back in in the form of honey or fruit blends,” says Soham Bhatt, co-founder of Artifact Cider in Cambridge, Mass. But the sugar content isn’t the only factor that affects the flavor of cider. A cider that has a high sugar content, but is also very tart and acidic, will taste less sweet.

However, there’s more to cider than just sweet or dry notes. Bhatt says to consider the “structure” of the cider, meaning how it comes together on the palate. Is it balanced? Does it have tannins? More tannins create a more structured cider, which will cause dryness in your mouth similar to what you may experience from drinking certain red wines or black tea.

Like champagne, there are also brut ciders. Think of brut as a lighter, less sweet version of a traditional “dry” cider, so more of the apple characteristics shine through. If you’re here for the apple flavor, choose brut.

If you don’t know where to begin with cider, grab an assortment of four to six different ciders and try them side by side, making note of what flavors are present, and how acidic, sweet, or dry it tastes. And if you’re really lost, Pucci recommends starting with Yonder Cider in Seattle or Bhatt’s Artifact Cider, both of which aim to create transparent packaging that will educate consumers about what’s inside the can using clear language and meaningful descriptors.

Time for dinner

Aside from cider donuts and apple pie and butternut squash soup and so many other fall delicacies, cider pairs especially well with hard cheeses and smoked meats. “Because cider is low ABV, it’s quite versatile,” Bhatt adds. Pair fruity, berry ciders with anything that goes well with rosé wine but especially fresh goat cheese and black olive focaccia. As an introductory pairing, try a semi-dry cider or fruit cider with a barbecue feast.

Bhatt likes to serve a dry, clean cider with fresh Vietnamese salads. He finds that a tannic, funky cider can go well with rich Indian food. This should come as no surprise given its prime season, but an aromatic cider goes well with heavy Thanksgiving dishes like turkey and stuffing.

Despite the pandemic, human health overall is better than it’s ever been. Here’s why

In April 2020, the United Nations University World Institute for Development Economics Research released a working paper esti­mating that the economic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic could drive up to half a billion people around the world into poverty, which would be the first increase in global poverty since 1990. This reflects some­thing paradoxical about the COVID-19 moment: on one hand, it felt like a time of unprecedented disruption. But on the other hand, that an increase in global poverty could be seen as such a profound anomaly speaks to the fact that when the pandemic appeared, in many respects the world had never been better off or healthier. In a number of key areas—life expectancy, rises in education and literacy, reductions in preventable diseases such as HIV/AIDS— the 21st century was, and is, a more favorable time to be alive than any other point in recorded history.

Right now, it can be easy to overlook our histor­ical successes. On any given day, we are likelier to hear a news anchor report that 37 people were killed in a terrorist attack than we are to hear her say that global poverty continued to decline, as it has for the last 30 years. Yet news of the decline in global poverty is far more representative of the trajectory of life for most people in the 21st century than news of a terrorist attack is. Seeing this requires us to look beyond the moment, when our feelings about our health are clouded by the soupy fog of COVID-19, and view the sweep of history, seeing how the decades leading up to now have ushered in unparalleled progress.

Seeing the scale of the progress we have made in building a healthier world raises questions about the drivers of this success. A good way to find the answers is by looking at the last century. How our past shaped our present holds lessons for how we might shape our future, and how to continue the positive upward trend in human health.

So how does life in the first year of the 20th century com­pare to now? In some respects, discussing 1900 and discussing today is like talking about two different worlds. But among the most striking measures of progress is the rise in life expectancy. In the United States, a child born in 1900 could on average expect to live to about age 47. Today, that child can expect to live to about age 79.

Why this difference? The answer most people would give is sim­ple: better medicine. It is a compelling answer, but it is only partially true. One of the reasons life expectancy is among the most useful measures of overall population health is because no single factor accounts for it. Life expectancy is the product of the con­text in which our lives unfold. So while it is true that the last century saw remarkable achievements in medicine—from polio vaccination to, more recently, advanced treatments for HIV/AIDS—medicine alone cannot account for such a significant, multi-decade gain in life expectancy. Something deeper is at work.

Let us, then, compare the life of someone born in 1900 with the life of someone born today. In the years leading up to 1900, the U.S. industrialized and urbanized in the wake of the Civil War. Concurrent with these trends came waves of immigrants hoping to settle in this land of rapidly growing opportunity. They came for better lives, yet for many the opportunity of America was interwoven with hardship.


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Imagine, then, a child is born in 1900 to immigrant parents in New York City. His parents are poor, lacking money for basic ameni­ties, including clean clothes and nutritious food. Like so many others, they live in cheap, overcrowded tenement housing, where necessities such as electricity and proper ventilation are hard to come by. In this environment, the boy is often malnourished and sick. Later, instead of getting a good education, he begins working odd jobs to earn money for his family. They are dangerous jobs, which result in the child sustaining a number of injuries. With the outbreak of World War I, he sees military service as both a patriotic duty and a way out of poverty. At 16, he lies about his age in order to enlist, seeing combat in the final year of the war, which leaves him with a case of what was then called shell shock, but which we now call post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

After the war, he returns home, and eventually establishes himself as a grocer, working his way up to a managerial position. He dreams of buying his own store, but then the U.S. is hit with the eco­nomic shock of the Great Depression, which leaves him penniless and unemployed. These challenges worsen his mental health struggles, and he begins to drink heavily. All this leads to him passing away in his early forties from the effects of alcoholism, despair, and a lifetime of injury and poor health.

Were we to meet this man near the end of his life, we would likely ascribe his decline to a series of poor choices on his part, and perhaps to his lack of access to adequate healthcare. But when we examine the full range of his experience, we see how his poor health was more fundamentally a product of the historical moment in which he lived. Poverty, urbanization, poor housing, inability to access education and nutritious food, lack of a social safety net and legal protections for workers, war, and economic crisis all created a context for poor health to emerge. These forces were at the heart of Americans’ lower life expectancy at the start of the 20th century.

The same forces are just as influential in our own time, but the nature of their influence has changed as conditions have improved.

Let us consider a child born in the United States in 1990. This child grows up in a middle-class household. Her family is not rich, but they have enough so that she never lacks food, clothes, or other basic necessities. Naturally, this means her home has electricity, adequate space, and, later on, Internet access. While she works summer jobs as a teen and young adult, she does so for pocket money, not from a need to support her family. She attends college and quickly transitions to a professional career as a doc­tor. She marries, has three kids, and currently lives a comfortable life in New Jersey, where she enjoys multiple hobbies in her spare time, takes yearly vacations, and suffers from no major health issues.

The contrast between her life and that of the child born in 1900 is stark. The child in 1900 had a future clouded by disadvantage, making a healthy life difficult for him to attain. Yet for the child born in 1990, having a healthy life seemed a relatively straightforward matter, a path of unbroken progress. But this path was straightforward only because the state of the world in the last 30 years made it so. Lack of large-scale, global conflict meant many young people could grow up without facing the trauma of war. A strong economy meant more people could access the basic resources necessary for health. The Internet democratized access to information, supplementing the education available in public schools. Networks of legal protections for workers made jobs less dangerous than they were a hundred years ago. If the child born in 1990 had needed it, there was a social safety net in place to help her through hard times.

These changes, far more than any medical innovations, account for improvements in health and life expectancy. It is true that between 1900 and 1990 tremendous advances were made in the field of med­icine. Had the child born in 1990 become sick, she would have had access to better treatments than the child born in 1900. But more sig­nificant for health were the changes in how we live our lives, changes that were shaped by social, economic, and political forces. Health means not needing medicine because we do not become sick in the first place. Whether we get sick in the first place depends largely on our quality of life and the forces that shape it. The influence of these forces is like air—easy to overlook precisely because it is so ubiquitous. It is what we encounter each day, with direct implications for the health of our bodies and minds.

Seen in real time, these forces can be subtle and easy to miss. But there are times when their influence converges at precise historical moments to draw a sharp line between good health and bad. When these moments arise, no special insight is necessary to see that events are being steered by large-scale forces. COVID-19 was such a moment. It was a time when everyone could see how politics, the economy, racial injustice, new technologies, and shift­ing ideas of national and global solidarity intersected to shape health. Even as we pursued medical solutions to the crisis, this broader con­text was never far from mind.

During COVID-19, it was jarring to realize that something as inti­mate as our health could be so much at the mercy of seemingly abstract forces. In a sense, it was akin to feeling the influence of such forces during wartime, when their effect on health is arguably most direct.

Which brings us back to our earlier question about the reasons behind our improved life expectancy. Broadly speaking, the answer is that our longer lives are due to better living standards generated by the social, political, and industrial trends that drive global economic development. The unfolding of these trends over the last 150 years has helped lower the cost of goods and broaden access to the funds that purchase them. It is a simple calculation: better health depends on our ability to access the basic resources that allow us to live and thrive. These resources cost money. The cheaper they are, the more easily we will be able to buy them, and the healthier we will be.

This leads us to today, and the conclusion that I draw here: the most important step toward bet­ter health for all is choosing to no longer accept the conditions that undermine it. While there is much about the status quo that is good and makes us healthier, not everyone has shared this progress equally. Creating a healthier world will not require us to dismantle all that came before, much of which is responsible for our healthier present. But we must be discerning in our efforts, building on the progress we have made while addressing the challenges we still face. 

# # #

Adapted from “The Contagion Next Time” by Sandro Galea. Copyright © 2021 by Oxford University Press and published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

Trisha Yearwood’s collard-stuffed wontons with hot honey pimento sauce are the best new comfort food

Like Trisha Yearwood, my favorite greens are also collards. Though preparing this vegetable is labor-intensive, few things are as rewarding as when you finally take a bite and taste the flavor inside each and every leaf.

One reason I don’t make collards regularly is they take a lot of time to make — we’re talking hours. Luckily, Yearwood simplifies things for the home hook in “Trisha’s Kitchen,” her new cookbook of easy comfort food recipes. Included among the 125 recipes is a new way to make collard greens in a matter of minutes. 

The Instant Pot recipe takes you about 15 minutes, and it’s really flavorful,” Yearwood told me on a recent episode of “Salon Talks.” “Usually, collards have some sort of ham hock or something in them. This has a little bit of bacon in there — and it’s so good.”

After Yearwood had already finished her game-changing collards recipe, a friend told her about trying fried collard green wontons at a restaurant. 

“I was like, ‘I don’t know what’s in that, but I’m going to figure that out,’ and so we kind of spun that recipe,” Yearwood said. “We used the recipe from the Instant Pot for that with a sweet dipping sauce, and it sounds kind of crazy — but it’s so good.”

As with her breakfast lasagna, the collard-stuffed wontons, which Yearwood serves with a hot honey pimento sauce, were a huge hit with Garth Brooks. 

RELATED: Trisha Yearwood on family recipes and the power of love

“Garth actually doesn’t think he likes collard greens either because he’s not a southerner,” Yearwood said. “But he came through when I was making those, and didn’t know what they were and he pretty much ate them all. And then I said, ‘You just ate collard greens,’ so that was really cool.”

When Yearwood recently appeared on “Salon Talks,” we talked about her new cookbook, the importance of family, the joys of southern cooking and the secret ingredient that fuels her kitchen. You’re going to want to invite your friends over for brunch next weekend after you hear about these exciting new recipes. To learn more, watch our conversation on Youtube or read our conversation here.

***

“Anybody who knows me knows that collards are my favorite greens. I’m always looking for ways to serve them. Other than my traditional childhood method of spooning over fresh cornbread (yum), I have used them in very nontraditional ways, in place of grape leaves for Mediterranean dolmas, sweetened with brown sugar for a crispy side, and even mixed into a grits casserole! I use Instant Pot–braised collards for these wontons. If you don’t do spicy, just use regular honey in the sweet dipping sauce. You can substitute a different leafy green in these wontons, but I promise you’ve never tasted a collard green like this!” — Trisha Yearwood

***

Recipe: Collard-Stuffed Wontons 

Serves 6 to 8

Hot Honey Pimento Sauce

  • 1/4 cup hot honey
  • 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons pureed pimentos
  • 2 teaspoons cornstarch 

Wontons

  • 1 quart vegetable oil, for frying
  • 1 cup Instant Pot Collard Greens (see below), drained and roughly chopped
  • 1 (8-ounce) package cream cheese, at room temperature
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 32 square wonton wrappers

1. MAKE THE SAUCE: In a small saucepan, mix together the honey, vinegar, and pimentos over low heat. In a small bowl, stir together 1 tablespoon water and the cornstarch until the cornstarch dissolves, creating a slurry. Add the slurry to the honey mixture, stir, and simmer until the sauce thickens, about 5 minutes. Set aside. As the sauce cools, it will thicken even more.

2. MAKE THE WONTONS: Pour the oil into a heavy bottomed medium Dutch oven (it should come about 1 1/2 inches up the sides). Clip a deep-fry thermometer to its side and heat the oil over high heat to 350°F. Fit a wire rack over a rimmed baking sheet and set it nearby.

3. While the oil is heating up, in a medium bowl, combine the collards, cream cheese, and pepper and whip using a hand mixer until combined, about 1 minute.

4. Fill a small bowl with a few tablespoons of water and lay out half the wonton wrappers on a clean surface. Add about 3/4 tablespoon of the cream cheese filling to just the side of the center of each wrapper. Dip your fingertip in the water and wet the edges of one wrapper all the way around, then fold over into a triangle and press the edges together. Set aside and repeat with the remaining wrappers and filling.

5. Working in batches of about 6, fry the wontons in the hot oil for 1 to 2 minutes, until they are a light golden brown, using a slotted spoon to flip them to cook both sides. Transfer the wontons with the slotted spoon to the rack to drain and cool slightly. Repeat to fry the remaining wontons.

6. Serve the wontons with the hot honey pimento sauce for dipping.

***

Recipe: Instant Pot Collard Greens

Ingredients

  • 1/4 pound bacon, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 large sweet onion (I like Vidalia), halved and thinly sliced
  • 4 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 2 bunches collard greens, ribs removed and leaves cut into 2-inch-wide strips
  • 3/4 cup chicken stock

1. In an Instant Pot set to Sauté, combine the bacon, salt, and black pepper and sauté for 6 minutes. Add the onion and sauté for 4 minutes more. Add the garlic and stir until fragrant, about 1 minute.

2. Add the vinegar and deglaze the pot, scraping up any browned bits with a wooden spoon, then let the liquid reduce for about 2 minutes. Stir in the honey and red pepper flakes.v

3. Add the collard greens and chicken stock and stir. Secure the lid on the Instant Pot, select Manual, and set to cook on high pressure for 5 minutes. Allow the pressure to release naturally for 20 minutes, then manually release the remaining pressure.


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More from Trisha’s kitchen: 

How extremist Christian theology is driving the right-wing assault on democracy

Progressive policies and positions are supposed to be rooted in reality and hard evidence. But that’s not always the case when it comes to the culture wars that have such an enormous impact on our politics — especially not since the unexpected evangelical embrace of Donald Trump in 2016, culminating in the “pro-life” death cult of anti-vaccine, COVID-denying religious leaders. If this development perplexed many on the left, it was less surprising to a small group of researchers who have been studying the hardcore anti-democratic theology known as dominionism that lies behind the contemporary Christian right, and its far-reaching influence over the last several decades.

One leading figure within that small group, Rachel Tabachnick, was featured in a recent webinar hosted by the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (archived on YouTube here), as part of its Religion and Repro Learning Series program, overseen by the Rev. Dr. Cari Jackson. Tabachnick’s writing on dominionism can be found at Talk2Action and Political Research Associates, and she’s been interviewed by Terry Gross on Fresh Air

Her presentation sheds important light on at least three things: First of all, the vigilante element of the Texas anti-abortion law SB 8. Second, the larger pattern of disrupting or undermining governance, including the “constitutional sheriffs” movement, the installation of overtly partisan election officials and the red-state revolt against national COVID public health policies. While Donald Trump has exploited that pattern ruthlessly, he did not create it. And third, the seemingly baffling fact that an anti-democratic minority feels entitled to accuse its opponents — including democratically elected officials — of “tyranny.”

Some dominionist ideas — such as the biblical penalty of death by stoning — are so extreme they can easily be dismissed as fringe, others have been foundational to the modern religious right, and still more have become increasingly influential in recent years. Those latter two categories are what we need to understand most, say both Tabachnick and Jackson. 

“One of the things that struck me, as a relative newcomer,” said Jackson, a former Congregationalist minister, “was that there was not sufficient understanding about the theological frames used by many individuals who are opposed to abortion.” She continued, “I’m a strategist in a lot of ways, and one important strategy, I believe, must be to understand what the teachings and the theological frames are” on the other side. Which links directly to the question of what progressive activists need to do differently in this changed environment.

This failure to understand the nature of dominionism has hampered activists, not just in the realm of reproductive justice, but across an entire spectrum of political issues, both cultural and economic. Jackson discussed her own background, raised within a conservative Christian worldview.

“I was taught a very individualistic approach,” she said, “taught that we shouldn’t pay taxes, because doing so enabled people who were not working, and enables people whose lifestyle we don’t agree with.” There’s nothing new about such views, but dominionism provides believers with an even stronger foundation for them. 

Jackson describes her current understanding of religious faith as highly intersectional: “We believe that to understand the attacks on abortion also invites us — or even requires us — to look at attacks on voting, to look at attacks on immigrants, attacks on prison reform, attacks on equal pay and on and on,” she said. “It’s all of the same cloth: They are all attacks on humans flourishing. That’s my language. The God of my understanding wants all of us to flourish in who we are.”

The language of dominionism is strikingly different, to put it mildly. In her webinar, Tabachnick played a clip of one of the movement’s leading figures, C. Peter Wagner, providing a definition: 

Dominion has to do with control. Dominion has to do with rulership. Dominion has to do with authority and subduing. And it relates to society — in other words what is talked about, what the values are in heaven [that] need to be made manifest here on earth. Dominion means being the head and not the tail. Dominion means ruling as kings. It says in Revelation chapter 1:6 that “he has made us kings and priests,” and check the rest of that verse, it says “for dominion.” So we are kings for dominion. 

Later she provided a definition from Frederick Clarkson, author of the 1997 book, “Eternal Hostility: The Struggle Between Theocracy and Democracy“:

Dominionism is the theocratic idea that regardless of theological view, means, or timetable, Christians are called by God to exercise dominion over every aspect of society by taking control of political and cultural institutions.

Wagner, who died in 2016, is known as the founding father of the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR), one of the two main branches of dominionism, which grew out of the Pentecostal and charismatic traditions within evangelical Christianity. Dominionists in the other branch, known as “Christian reconstructionism,” come out of conservative Calvinism, with a focus on bringing government and society under biblical law. They tend to be more circumspect, often obfuscating their true intentions and avoiding the word “theocracy” in favor of “theonomy,” for example. But not Wagner, as can be seen in the title of his 2011 book, “Dominion!: Your Role in Bringing Heaven to Earth.” The NAR talks constantly about taking dominion over the “seven mountains” of society: education, religion, family, business, government, arts and the media.

But it’s the other branch, the Christian reconstructionists, who have excelled at strategic organizing and providing blueprints across different right-wing constituencies for almost 50 years. They are the ones Tabachnick focused most of her presentation on, specifically two key figures: Rousas John Rushdoony, the movement’s master theologian, and his son-in-law Gary North, a prolific strategist, propagandist and networker who was once a staffer for Rep. Ron Paul, the libertarian hero.

Christian reconstructionism, Tabachnick explained, is “about bringing government in all areas of life under biblical law, a continuation of the Mosaic law in the Old Testament, with some exceptions.” This dispensation would include, “according to Gary North, public execution of women who have abortions and those who advise them to have an abortion.”

In a recent private presentation, Frederick Clarkson asked a rhetorical question: “People have long said that there should be Christian government, but if you had one, what would it look like? What would it do? Rushdoony was the first to create a systematic theology of what Christian governance should be like, based on the Ten Commandments, and all of the judicial applications he could find in the Old Testament — including about 35 capital offenses.”

But the “Handmaid’s Tale”-style extremism of dominionists’ ultimate vision shouldn’t really be our focus, Tabachnick told Salon. “Nobody cares about the theocratic, draconian future envisioned by reconstructionists because they don’t believe it will happen,” she said. 

What’s happening right now, however, is that this ideology has had tremendous impact on more immediate politics. “Christian reconstructionism is the merger of a distinct brand of Calvinism with Austrian School economics,” Tabachnick said. “In other words, it’s an interpretation of the Bible grounded in property rights.” The results have been far-reaching: 

For more than 40 years, its prolific writers have provided the foundations and strategic blueprints for the attacks on liberation theology and the social gospel, as well as many other streams of Christianity which do not share the Reconstructionists’ belief in unfettered capitalism as ordained by God and its fierce anti-statism. 

The larger religious right’s attack on public education, the social safety net and most government functions are largely grounded in the writings, strategies and tactics formulated by reconstructionist writers. Reconstructionism is not the only (and certainly not the first) source of interposition and nullification in this country. However, much of what is currently being taught today about using interposition to undermine the legitimacy of government is sourced in reconstructionism.

This idea of “interposition” comes through what’s known as the doctrine of the “lesser magistrate,” which we’ll return to below. But its significance — especially in the post-2020 Republican Party — has only recently become apparent. Reconstructionism’s initial appeal was more immediately, as Tabachnick explained in the seminar:

What Rushdoony provided is a package that included attacking what these fundamentalists hated and feared most in society, often expressed in terms of “This is communist. This is socialist.” But Rushdoony provided a way to sacralize these ideas, and at the same time not just tear down the old order, but provide a blueprint for the new order.

Everyone didn’t have to agree on the blueprint, she said: “Rushdoony’s ideas went out in bits and pieces. The Christian right leaders took what they wanted and discarded what they didn’t.”

“Christian reconstructionism, as articulated by Rushdoony, provided a standard by which everyone else had to measure themselves,” Clarkson told Salon. “Not everyone on the Christian right agreed with Rushdoony and his fellow Reconstructionist thinkers on, for example, the contemporary application of capital crimes listed in the Old Testament. And followers were often at pains to distinguish themselves.” 

Clarkson cites the case of conservative Presbyterian theologian Francis Schaeffer, who disagreed with Rushdoony on the applicability of biblical law, but became a driving force behind the anti-abortion activist movement Operation Rescue. That “militant Schaefferism,” Clarkson said, “led activists to think: What’s next, beyond political protest and stopping abortion? This is where the conversation has been in the Christian right for decades.”

The doctrine of the “lesser magistrate,” mentioned above, first emerged into public discourse out of Operation Rescue. But it did so as part of a larger, more complicated story.

There’s a long history of right-wing opposition to federal authority, particularly grounded in the 19th-century defense of slavery and continuing in the defense of Jim Crow segregation. In his famous “I Have a Dream” speech, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke specifically of the governor of Alabama “having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification.” 

As detailed by Randall Balmer in “Bad Faith: Race and the Rise of the Religious Right,” the religious right wasn’t initially fueled by opposition to the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973, but by opposition to a lesser-known decision in 1971, Green v. Connally, which threatened the tax-exempt status of racially discriminatory institutions, most famously the evangelical stronghold Bob Jones University. 

Anti-abortion activists have long sought not just to bury that past but to stand it on its head, somehow equating Roe v. Wade with the notorious Dred Scott decision of 1857 and claiming the moral heritage of abolitionism. 

“Throughout these movements there is also an attempt to turn the tables on the claims of racism,” Tabachnick said in her webinar. “This is one of the roles that anti-abortion activism as abolition plays. Also, there’s a promotion of narratives that provide a different history and legal justifications for interposition, nullification and even secession. One of the things that Christian reconstructionism has added to this dialogue is the concept of the lower magistrate.” 

As Tabachnick explains it, the “lesser magistrate” is a heroic figure who “resists the tyranny of a higher authority” — defining “tyranny” in biblical terms, potentially including any number of popular or common-sense laws or policies. This notion first gained salience in the anti-abortion context in the 1980s and ’90s, as Tabachnick went on to explain. 

“Many violent anti-abortionists have justified their actions in reconstructionist teachings,” she said. “One of these was Paul Hill, who studied under one of the major reconstructionist leaders and corresponded with others.” Hill went on to murder Dr. John Britton, a physician who performed abortions, as well as Britton’s personal bodyguard, in 1994. Hill was executed in 2003, but the reconstructionist movement sought to cast him out well before that.  

“Gary North responded, after the murders had taken place, in a book called ‘Lone Gunners for Jesus,'” Tabachnick said. His message to Hill was, “You’re going to burn in hell, you’ve been excommunicated. This was because Paul Hill stepped outside the bounds of the guidelines set by the movement.” 

To explain this, she quoted a passage from another book by North that offered qualified support for Operation Rescue: “We need a statement that under no circumstances will Operation Rescue or any of its official representatives call for armed resistance to civil authority without public support from a lesser magistrate.” 

“On the basis of their belief of what the law or the word of God is, they are allowed — on the advice, on the interposition, of a lesser magistrate — to commit acts of violence,” Tabachnick continued. North was seeking to control or curb anti-abortion terrorism, but without rejecting it in principle. Murdering abortion providers — or even murdering women seeking abortions — could be morally justified, with the blessing of a lesser magistrate. 

This is relevant to SB 8 in Texas in at least two ways. That bill bans abortions after six weeks and is enforced not by state officials, but by deputizing private individuals to sue anyone who performs the procedure or “aids and abets” it. First of all, giving private individuals these vigilante-style rights seems a lot like making them into “lesser magistrates,” however narrowly constrained.

Second, the Supreme Court’s refusal to stay the law — which clearly violates the Constitution and existing precedent, as Justice Sonia Sotomayor argued in her dissent — can be seen as an example of the doctrine in action. In more normal circumstances, the court would have stayed the law pending consideration on the merits, even if a majority of justices intended to overturn precedent. That’s how common law has worked for centuries.  

But biblical law isn’t common law, especially as reconstructionists understand it. Under the doctrine of the “lesser magistrate,” Roe is not precedent but an instance of tyranny — and the justices have a duty to God to resist it. Of course, not even Amy Coney Barrett or Clarence Thomas has said anything like that, but it’s entirely consistent with their behavior — as well as with their silence, since openly making such an argument would clarify just how radicalized they have become. But adherents of the doctrine of the lesser magistrate must surely appreciate the drift in direction.

Nor is the doctrine limited to abortion cases, as already noted. Matthew Trewhella is a pastor who was a prominent leader of violence-prone wing of the anti-abortion movement in 1990s, and author of the 2013 book, “The Doctrine of the Lesser Magistrates,” which greatly heightened its visibility. 

“Trewhella is now all over radio and the internet,” Tabachnick said in her webinar, “claiming to meet with state legislators and attorney generals at the moment, with the cause of fighting the ‘tyranny of mask mandates’ and vaccination for COVID. So you can see how this is a concept that is not just limited to abortion. It is a concept that can be used in resistance of government authority all over the country in all different kinds of ways — FEMA, EPA, Bureau of Land Management and so forth.”

Trewhella isn’t breaking new ground here. Clarkson’s 1997 book “Eternal Hostility” describes him making similar arguments in a speech to an anti-tax group in Wisconsin. He was just one figure among many spreading the seeds of reconstructionist resistance to federal authority among militia members, “freemen” and anti-abortion activists at the time. 

“This movement believes that rights come from God and not from any government,” Tabachnick told Salon. “Therefore, any ‘rights’ that conflict with their interpretation of God’s law are not actually rights. They are ‘humanist’ or a product of man’s laws and not God’s laws. This theme of ‘human rights’ versus inalienable rights from God has been at the center of the Christian Reconstructionist movement since its beginnings.”

She pointed to “What’s Wrong With Human Rights,” an excerpt from a book of the same name by the Rev. T. Robert Ingram published in “The Theology of Christian Resistance,” a collection edited by North. Ingram sweeps aside the Bill of Rights as “a statement of sovereign powers of states withheld from the federal authority of the Union,” and turns instead to the Virginia Declaration of Rights, authored by George Mason in 1776. 

The first section of the Virginia Declaration, beginning “That all Men are by Nature equally free and independent, and have certain inherent Rights,” is dismissed by Ingram for omitting any mention of God, as an “error of unbelief which falsifies all the rest that is said about human life.” The second, beginning “That all power is vested in, and consequently derived from the People; that Magistrates are their Trustees and Servants, and at all Times amenable to them,” he dismisses as well: “The meaning could not be more clear, nor more opposite Biblical thought. The ruling proposition of Scripture and Christian doctrine is that ‘power belongeth unto God.'” In short, there are no human rights.

The connection to the doctrine of the lesser magistrate is clear: Power comes from God, not the people. Whatever the people want is irrelevant. Whatever laws they may pass are irrelevant, too, if they go against God. “Tyranny” is whatever the Christian reconstructionist decides he doesn’t like.

Elsewhere, Ingram denigrates freedom of speech and the press:

Freedom of speech and freedom of press are, in fact, applied seriously only to giving government protection to instigators of riot and rebellion, as well as those who would undermine human order by more subtle attacks on morals and customs.

As for the right to dissent, he calls it “not a lawful claim to own or to do something, which is the true right,” but “a turning upside down of right and wrong, calling good evil and evil good.” Similarly, there is no scriptural right to “resist authority,” only that granted by the false doctrine of “human rights.”

Ingram’s interpretation of the Civil War is that “Yankee radicals inflamed the Northern peoples to mount the Civil War in the name of a ‘human right’ to be free … if they did not destroy the whole Southern Order, they did at least dismantle its vast and efficient plantation economy.” The civil rights movement, unsurprisingly, is understood as a defiance of “Tradition, law, and custom, which preserved public peace and order in the bi-racial state of the union, both North and South,” and became “the target of the right to resist in the 60’s, the supposed human rights justifying the violent means.”

Tabachnick didn’t dig into this text in her webinar, but it serves to illustrate her central principle: “This attack on the very concept of ‘human rights’ can be found throughout today’s religious right.”

Jackson told Salon that the most important part of Tabachnick’s presentation came “when she talked about humanism and the humanistic frame, from the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Those who are within the dominionist camp see that as contrary to God. I read those same documents and I say, this is pointing us toward the direction that God wants for us. They look at it and see that as counter to God, because humanism from their perspective is something very contrary to God.”

If we take such arguments seriously, then we understand why for dominionists there is nothing wrong with breaking any law at all, so long as “God wills it” and you have the blessing of a so-called lesser magistrate. This is the reconstructionist argument supporting a whole range of chaotic right-wing activity today, including baseless claims that the 2020 election was a fraud. After all, the fundamental reconstructionist argument is that all such democratic government is illegitimate.

“The goal of reconstructionism is to tear down the existing order and reconstruct a new society based on biblical law,” Tabachnick said. “Even if we assume that this vision of a theocratic America will never come to fruition, it’s important to recognize the movement’s impact on the ideas, strategies and tactics of the larger religious right and its role in sacralizing the actions of other anti-statist fellow travelers.

“As I wrote almost a decade ago, the theocratic libertarianism of Christian reconstructionism has been surprisingly seductive to Tea Partiers and young libertarians — many of whom may not realize what is supposed to happen after the government is stripped of its regulatory powers.”

Sourdough cider doughnuts put everyone in the fall spirit

The Perfect Loaf is a column from software engineer turned bread expert (and Food52’s Resident Bread Baker) Maurizio Leo. Maurizio is here to show us all things naturally leavened, enriched, yeast-risen, you name it — basically, every vehicle to slather a lot of butter on. Today, he’s discussing how to make one of fall’s finest apple cider doughnuts.

* * *

As a kid, I remember my grandfather would wake up every morning at 5 a.m. sharp. His destination was always the same: a local doughnut shop for a single glazed doughnut and a cup of piping-hot black coffee. I’d sometimes wake at the same time and wonder what the draw was. I mean, sure, doughnuts are great, but that’s just too early for anything. Now that I’m older, I realize the ritual of something sweet in the morning with your coffee makes for a beautiful way to get the day started. Your whole day is already filled with tasks and chores and meetings, but that bit of time in the morning is sacred, and a fabulous doughnut in hand makes it doubly so.

If you have a bubbling sourdough starter on your counter ready to go, everything you need to make light, fluffy, and delicious doughnuts is within your reach. Plus, it makes waking a little earlier each morning much easier.

Let’s look at fried sourdough doughnuts, specifically apple cider doughnuts, and the best way to prepare your sourdough to adjust the flavor profile, the easiest way to roll and punch out holes, and the best frying oils.

Why naturally leavened doughnuts?

While I don’t eat doughnuts as often as my grandfather, when I do, I like to make them by hand. Italian-style bomboloni are without a doubt my favorite — in their simplicity (just fried, enriched dough!) is their undeniable charm. Sure, the steps are lengthy, but most of the time you’re not doing much, just letting your starter transform the dough into something incredibly flavorful and leaven them into glorious puffy clouds. But why sourdough, versus something like instant yeast or chemical leavening like baking soda or powder, you ask?

First, baking soda and baking powder make an utterly different doughnut than sourdough does. These are your typical cakey doughnuts, which are a little denser and thicker than yeasted doughnuts, though no less delicious. Second, a yeasted or sourdough doughnut necessitates longer fermentation times for proper leavening. All of this means a lighter, fluffier result, and in the case of sourdough doughnuts, lighter and more flavor.

Flavor means many things to different people, but for me, and especially with sourdough, I like a little tang, even in sweets. The slight sourness cuts through the sugar to temper the whole thing into a more palatable and enjoyable breakfast — some doughnuts are essentially dessert, so sweet you need a nap and large coffee to remain functional.

When tangy isn’t too tangy

Like most people, I enjoy sweets, but I’m someone who doesn’t like it when things go too far — you’ll see me reach for a peanut butter cup before candy corn any day. Thankfully, with the slight acidity brought on through natural leavening, the sweetness of the sourdough doughnuts gets somewhat curbed.

The acids created as a by-product of sourdough fermentation are unavoidable. In almost every case, they’re something you’re looking for — not for mouth-puckeringly sour loaves, but for flavor. It’s what makes your taste buds dance when you take a bite of long-fermented bread; it’s not something we want to suppress. But in sweet applications, like sourdough apple cider doughnuts, we want to reduce the overall acidity as much as possible, but still have a little peek through at the end of each bite.

Why apple cider?

Using cider, the core ingredient of which is simply apple juice, as the majority liquid in sourdough apple cider donuts brings a unique apple flavor to the doughnuts, and the included spices, which are typically a mixture of cinnamon, nutmeg, and allspice, add even more flavor. Of course, apple juice is naturally sweet, so you get a boost to the overall sweetness of the doughnut when using it as well. If you’re not in the mood for apple-anything this fall, these doughnuts would be great using water instead of the spiced drink (and I’d also leave out the spices in the dough as well). Leaving out the cider will result in a less-sweet doughnut, but when dunked in a cinnamon-sugar topping, it’ll be plenty indulgent.

Chilling the dough

Speaking of the dough, what’s the best way to handle an enriched doughnut dough to make rolling and cutting easier? Use the refrigerator! Our microbial friends in sourdough starter work just fine after the dough has been in the cold, even for 12 hours.

With enriched dough that needs rolling, I typically place the dough after bulk fermentation into the fridge overnight. The next day, it’s straightforward to roll out and punch a thoroughly chilled dough. And this is important for doughnuts, which require rolling out and two sets of holes punched for each. Working with cold dough makes this a nonissue.

Which oil for frying?

When it comes to frying, I’ve tried several frying oils over the years, from canola to vegetable to refined coconut oil. My preference is refined coconut oil, which is solid at cool room temperature. This means when you finish frying your doughnuts, and they’ve cooled, the doughnut holds its shape well and even becomes a little crispy. They seem to taste fresher for longer, avoiding the soggy fate of most days-old doughnuts. The downside to refined coconut oil is its availability: While you can find it at some supermarkets, for large quantities I generally have to order this online in buckets.

For me, second to refined coconut oil is canola, which I find fries dough efficiently and leaves less of that fast-food-reminiscent aroma floating about in the kitchen than other oils, such as vegetable oil. In the end, choose the one that’s most accessible and budget-friendly — all will give you a glorious doughnut-centric breakfast.

Recipe: Sourdough Apple Cider Doughnuts

Trump blasted for doing Atlanta Braves’ “tomahawk chop” at World Series game

Eagle-eyed fans at Saturday night’s World Series game between the Atlanta Braves and the Houston Astros spotted former President Donald Trump and his wife, Melania Trump, doing the controversial “tomahawk chop” from their box.

The incident was captured on video and posted to Twitter, sparking a conversation over the gesture, which has long been used by Braves fans but recently caught the ire of those who wish to rethink Americans’ use of Native American symbols as sports mascots.

Last month, the MLB commissioner suggested during an interview that there was nothing controversial about the gesture, or the Braves’ embrace of a Native mascot.

“The Braves have done a phenomenal job with the Native American community,” Manfred said. “The Native American community in that region is wholly supportive of the Braves’ program, including the chop.


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But, following Manfred’s comments, Native groups spoke out against the Tomahawk chop, referring to it as a “caricature” and calling to halt its use immediately.

It has since become a culture war issue, taken up by the right-wing media as a tradition worth defending at all costs.

Many took to Twitter to criticize Trump for embracing the gesture.

“He’ll do anything to go viral again. He misses the Twitter attention so much,” one user wrote.

“I didn’t think the Chop could get more cringe but there you go,” another said.

The Nation’s sports editor, Dave Zirin, even predicted the controversy, writing that Trump “is traveling to the World Series just so he can be filmed doing the tomahawk chop in Georgia with his fellow @Braves. But if you state the obvious: that this all carries the stench of a white supremacist photo op, you’re being divisive.”

RELATED: Trump caught in a lie about being invited to World Series game by MLB commissioner: report

Trump also was caught this weekend in a lie about being invited to the game by Manfred — subsequent reports suggest he called MLB officials about getting into the game, and not the other way around.

Atlanta ultimately won the game 3-2 to take a 3-1 series lead.

Ghosts who grieve in video games – and how I helped them achieve a measure of peace

I’ve spent my year with ghosts.

First were the family ghosts, the scenes and snippets of stories that I found at the edges of my memory, as isolation stretched on and the rooms of the house grew more and more dull. Then curiosity got the best of me and I found myself down a 23&Me rabbit hole that ended with me staring at the livestream of a stranger’s funeral, watching my dad’s estranged father mourn his own. I imagined the ghost of the old man peering back at me from the tent set up in the middle of the graveyard — now, too, burdened with the secrets I’d been unraveling.

But I can’t help his ghost. I’ve never learned to help people through their grief, or even to navigate my own. And in a year of widespread loss and grief en masse, I have struggled to feel like a good friend, a good partner, a good daughter. And then I found more ghosts, this time through a smaller screen.

From a cozy seat on my couch, I watch my best friend Gwen, in the form of a beautiful animated deer, take a drag from a cigarette as she reminisces with me about our youth shared in Europe, before turning solemn as she considers unresolved feelings about her family. She is, of course, not real.

I’m playing a Nintendo Switch game, “Spiritfarer,” released in August 2020. In it, I am Gwen’s friend Stella, come to ferry her soul through the afterlife. But before she’s ready to cross through the final threshold, Gwen has to first confront the painful struggles of her life.

And the pain takes me by surprise, pinching in my chest as I read her dialogue, relating to a rift in her family, which seems to be her unfinished business. 

“I’ve been thinking about Father recently,” she tells me from her cabin on the ship, as the sound of waves plays in the background. “When he left with Doug, I didn’t feel anything. No sorrow. No hate. No relief.”

As she begins to work through it, we set sail back to her old haunts, her old home.

We pick up other spirits as we sail — my old mentor, a loving uncle, a neighbor suffering dementia, a pair of criminals looking to pull one last job. With them, they bring joy and love, but also regret. They bring challenges that I must help them with, by creating safe and cozy homes for them on my ship, taking them to places they used to visit, and helping to move their stories forward until they feel the pull of the Everdoor.

As I row Gwen through her final crossing, she reflects. On the way she thought people went through life without caring about each other; but she knows better now. On forgiveness

“I still don’t know about Father,” she tells me as I row her through her final passage. “I should probably forgive him now. Find that last shred of strength left in me. Would that make me a better person?” she asks me as the game’s quiet music lets me hear the splash of my oar, cutting through the red water.

As we approach the Everdoor, she tells me her questions no longer matter, because I’m there with her in the end. “I can’t hold it any longer,” she says and I ferry her through the last few feet. She crosses over, her spirit rising to become a constellation in the night sky. 

Am I sad that Gwen has moved on? Am I happy for her? Gwen’s departure leaves me melancholy and I wonder at the emotions I feel at a simple video game. Maybe this is how I’m channeling the collective feelings of loss that we’ve all been accumulating. But Gwen seemed real, her pain seemed real.

Watch a trailer for “Spiritfarer” via YouTube.

Gwen was real, in a way. She was shaped in part by stories shared by the game’s development team. As were the other characters, says Nicolas Guérin, the game’s creative director. His grandmother can be found in a lynx called Astrid, whose philandering husband Giovanni reflects the struggles in marriage that Guérin’s own grandparents had. Another character, Buck, who stays with you through the end of the game, is an avatar for a friend who died when they were teenagers. 

Guérin says this approach helps make the game more believable for players.

“When you talk about death, generally you want to do an apology. You want to talk about someone and only talk about the nice things they did. But of course, it’s a bit of a hypocritical thing. It’s [looking] with rosy glasses about someone’s life,” he explains over a Google Meet call from Quebec. Halloween decorations adorn the mantle behind him. 

“Many people in their lives did terrible things, had s**tty behaviors. And we wanted to make sure that that also was portrayed in the characters in ‘Spiritfarer.’ For the example of Giovanni, being someone who can’t, for the life of him, be faithful to his wife. And he still dies being unfaithful. And it’s not nice, but it’s what he did. And that’s what his wife actually understood about him. Like, ‘I loved him, but still, even at the end, he betrayed me, so f**k him,'” Guérin explains, conjuring images of Astrid’s last moments in my rowboat. 

In her monologue, she tells me that life is suffering

“I don’t think it’s wise to live that long, Munchkin,” she says as I pull on the oars. “And being this old is disappointing. You just end up being ugly on the outside. And rotten on the inside. And it hurts so much!”

But despite that, she has no regrets. “The world is cursed. But still, you find reasons to keep on living,” Astrid continues. As the music swells, she tells me that amid the painful moments, she left behind ones that might make our world – and me, Stella – better.

“Some of them will live on forever. In you, in others.”

Her words encapsulate a foundational belief of the game. “Death is something that can be celebrated, as weird as it sounds,” Guérin told me. “One of the inspirations we had was in Mexican culture. Día de los Muertos, where they find solace in the continuum of lives and [do] not just think of [death] as a pure loss. There is a continuation of who we are, our legacy, our heritage, and how we go through life by knowing that we are part of something bigger than ourselves.”

Cozy GroveCozy Grove (The Quantum Astrophysicists Guild)

On another day, on the same couch, I downloaded another game that the Internet thinks I’ll like. “Cozy Grove,” released in March 2021, is full of ghosts, too. Instead of sailing with them, I am stranded with them on a deserted island. In another game, this might be terrifying — ghosts are often the enemy, capable of doing you harm. But in this game, the ghosts are as stranded as I, seeking answers and resolutions for distant memories. 

The game takes inspiration from “Animal Crossing” and many of its mechanics will feel familiar — fishing, harvesting flowers, catching bugs, expanding your home and making improvements to the island, as well as the real-time clock — but the stories that you unfold as you help the inhabitants take “Cozy Grove” from a casual collector’s game to an emotional allegory. The more you help these ghosts, the more they remember their lives, and the stronger a hold they seem to have on their corporeal forms. Each time you help a ghost, they reveal more of their story with you — sometimes dark memories, other times cheerful revelations — and the island around them is bathed in a warm glow that allows you to interact with more of your landscape.

“I want to do more for people than just entertain them when possible,” David Edery told me via email. He’s the co-founder and CEO of Spry Fox, the developer of “Cozy Grove.” He says the main goal for the game was “to encourage empathy for others, and it’s harder to feel empathy for others if you don’t understand or have any appreciation for the sorts of challenges that they’ve struggled with in life. So we try to help the player see those challenges.”

“So it’s been incredibly meaningful and satisfying to me to receive messages from players who tell us, ‘This game helped reduce my pandemic stress,’ and ‘This game helped me process a painful thing that I’ve been struggling with.'” Edery continues. “So many people have reached out to say that ‘Cozy Grove’ helped them process their troubled relationship with someone in their life, or that it has helped them manage their grief at the death of a loved one.”

Guérin, too, has heard from players. “[We] received tons of mail from people telling us how good the game was for them and how they could cope with loss, and grieve their own way through the game. . . . The most touching ones were some people who were working in healthcare. They wrote saying that, ‘Thanks to the game I could retain all my passion for the work.'”

Perhaps the biggest twist of “Spiritfarer” is that, despite having been completed before the onset of the global pandemic, Stella’s story had already been laid out to reveal to players that she had spent her life as a healthcare worker, tending to patients in a palliative care ward. Now, fallen ill and at the end of her own life, she is tasked with shepherding the ghosts of people close to her before she, too, can cross over.

Immersed in these ghost stories, it’s been difficult for me to see them as anything but a reflection of the time period. As real or metaphorical ghosts have continued to form as COVID-19 deaths have slowed but not stopped or even leveled off, the struggle to cope — with the unknown, with financial instability, with a barrage of bad news, political strife, our own grief and loss, and each others’ — is continuous, neverending.

And as I play these games, it feels that maybe our pain and our struggle to make peace with ourselves will follow us well past the ends of our lives. Until it’s finally time to move on.

Watch a trailer for “Cozy Grove” via YouTube:

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The pandemic has eroded our trust in doctors

In medicine, the relationship between doctor and patient is predicated on that most basic of societal values: trust. The concept of this relationship — and the notion that it is dependent on both parties’ participation — dates to the Greek enlightenment, around the 5th century B.C.E. Patients trust that their health care provider will make treatment recommendations based on what is in the best interest of a patient’s health, while doctors trust that patients will report symptoms honestly and execute treatment plans faithfully.

As it turns out, trust is in short supply, largely thanks to COVID-19.

I was reminded of this on a recent family visit to my parents-in-law, who live in rural western Pennsylvania. All of us have been fully vaccinated, and to be careful, we all tested ourselves for COVID-19 the night before our arrival, and during our visit. My mother-in-law, who has lupus and is on immunosuppressive therapy, had recently received her 3rd COVID-19 vaccine, following the guidelines provided by the CDC.

This was no small feat. When she first tried to obtain a booster shot from a local CVS pharmacy, she was turned away and erroneously told that the shots were only available to people who had received a kidney transplant.

This is not true. So she went to another pharmacy and was erroneously told she could only receive another vaccine if her doctor’s office called and verified that she had a compromised immune system.

This is also not true. Patients should only have to attest, and not prove, that they are immunosuppressed. But her doctor’s office did call so she could be properly vaccinated.

This is also not an isolated anecdote.  I specialize in leukemia, and have heard similar stories from multiple patients. I have had to call pharmacies near where I practice, in Miami, to verify my own patients’ immunocompromised status.

In reality, based on emerging data from Israel and the CDC, immunity appears to wane over time (particularly among older adults), and it may be that the vaccine is not as effective against certain COVID-19 variants. This was the basis for the recommendation for a booster from the Biden administration. Yet until recently, the FDA, in an effort to be either careful and deliberate, or to dig in its heels and demonstrate that it will not be strong-armed by the president, delayed recommending a booster vaccine to a broader population than just those who have compromised immune systems. That added to the mixed messaging — and further eroded public trust in medical institutions.

Based on these data, and the low risk and potential large benefit of getting the jab, my wife, who is an infectious diseases pharmacist, and I felt my healthy 86-year-old father-in-law should receive a third vaccine dose, along with the over 1 million people in the U.S. who have also received an unauthorized booster shot. So did he.

But to do so, at the time, he would have to lie, and claim that he was actually getting his first dose. Sitting in his screened-in porch, we tried to prepare him for his trip to the pharmacy by play-acting the interaction he would have, to ensure he would say the right thing. I pretended to be the pharmacist:

“Good morning sir,” I said. “How can I help you today?

“I’m here for my third vaccine dose,” he answered quickly.

My wife and mother-in-law shook their heads in dismay.

“No, pappy,” my wife said. “You have to say it’s your first vaccine dose.”

“I don’t wanna lie,” he answered. “I’ve never lied to my doctor.”

“You have to,” she insisted. “Otherwise the pharmacy won’t give the vaccine to you.” He muttered an “okay” and we started over.

“How can I help you?” I repeated.

“I’m here for a shot,” he said.

“What kind of shot?” I asked, knowing that flu shots were also available.

“Oh, I’ll have a whiskey!” he joked, to the consternation of my wife and mother-in-law. It was funny but not funny – we were asking him to betray the contract of trust between himself and a healthcare provider, for the good of his own health, and he was consciously or subconsciously rebelling.

Trust in medicine has taken a hit over the past year-and-a-half as we’ve reacted in real time to what we’ve defined as truth in a quickly moving pandemic, and in an era in which information is disseminated quickly.

At first, masks were de-emphasized, and cleaning of surfaces was stressed as being more protective of viral transmission, when in fact the opposite was true. The virus was not thought to be aerosolized; now we know that it is. At many hospitals, recommendations for appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE) were minimized –- not based on sound epidemiologic advice or concern for the safety of healthcare workers, but due to lack of supplies, and perhaps even to save PPE for nonessential elective surgeries, which are revenue generators. Thus, despite messaging that coming to hospitals was safe for patients, healthcare workers (many of whom are still not vaccinated) likely did infect patients with COVID-19.

Is it any wonder that some vaccine hesitancy can be attributed to suspicion of information about the safety and efficacy of the vaccines — information provided by the same healthcare authorities who first insisted that masks weren’t important?

My wife took my father-in-law to the Rite-Aid near their home, and he did receive his third vaccine dose. And while we all feel comforted knowing he has a bit more protection against COVID-19, I wonder if we’ve damaged his relationship with his doctor in the future.

As we enter future phases of the pandemic, perhaps finally reaching the point at which enough people have been vaccinated adequately or have developed immunity to protect them from COVID-19, we in healthcare will have yet more work to do.

We need to repair our relationships with our patients, so they will trust us again.


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Falling for Duran Duran’s “Future Past,” which reflects the band’s signature ingenuity and sentiment

There’s a moment in Duran Duran‘s new “Anniversary” video where tuxedo-clad bassist John Taylor encounters his younger self, in the form of an actor dressed like the spitting image of early ’80s John Taylor. The look on the real Taylor’s face is priceless: He looks both amused and awed when faced with his doppelganger, before recovering and flashing a matching toothy grin for a photo.

The brief scene is an apt metaphor for Duran Duran’s career. The Birmingham-formed group set an astoundingly high creative bar for themselves in the first part of the ’80s, thanks to albums such as 1982’s “Rio” and singles like “Hungry Like the Wolf,” “The Reflex” and “Planet Earth.” This massive superstardom always hovers in the background of everything Duran Duran does, though it’s not an albatross, but an increasingly benevolent presence. Times have changed, decades have passed, and the band are far different people and musicians than they were 40 years ago. 

The new “Future Past,” Duran Duran’s 15th studio album, naturally reflects this accumulated growth and sophistication. Like the best Duran Duran albums, the full-length is an immersive, cohesive statement with a meticulous sequence that takes listeners on a journey. Yet the guiding principle of “Future Past” remains the same as it’s been for nearly every Duran Duran album: explore the kind of new sounds and ideas that can send the band tumbling toward the future. 

RELATED: Duran Duran and art in the age of internet reproduction

Over the years, Duran Duran have achieved this goal by consistently working with collaborators fond of reshaping pop music — to name a few, producers like Colin Thurston, Nile Rodgers and Mark Ronson, and musicians such as Justin Timberlake and Janelle Monae. “Future Past” is no exception. In the studio, Duran Duran recorded with guitarist Graham Coxon, who cut his teeth in Britpop shapeshifters Blur and is known for adventurous solo work. Coxon is a good match for Duran Duran: He’s a cerebral player who knows his way around both jagged discord and beautiful melody, meaning he can conjure up razor-sharp accents on “Invisible” or add more delicate shading on the soft-glow title track.

Although “Future Past” notably features Duran Duran’s first collaborations with long-time idol Giorgio Moroder — how did it take so long for this to happen? — much of the album features co-production from Erol Alkan. That’s another inspired choice: The London-born DJ and producer — who’s helmed the stellar recent reunion albums by Ride and the Killers’ “The Man” single, among other projects in recent years — draws out the best performances from artists, without muting their unique sound and approach. On “Future Past” that translates to a mix where every member of Duran Duran is audible, and each musical part has its own precise place in a song: John Taylor’s funky bass snarls, Roger Taylor’s atomic clock-accurate drumming, and Nick Rhodes’ esoteric keyboard excursions.


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In that sense, “Future Past” is a throwback to “Rio,” another sonically and thematically cohesive album where every instrument is audible and pops out of the mix. But this precise approach also ensures that the guest musicians on “Future Past” make their appearances count. “Give It All Up” is the kind of pulsating electro-disco fantasia Duran Duran have always been destined to record, anchored by Nick Rhodes keyboard surges and sparkling guest vocals from pop star Tove Lo, while “More Joy!” is built on Kraftwerkian rhythms, sugary synth crackles and ebullient vocal accents from the Japanese rock band Chai. The funky, slithering “Hammerhead,” meanwhile, boasts squelching beats and a slinky rap from the British musician Ivorian Doll.

Of course, for as much as Duran Duran excels at vivacious dance-rock, they’re just as strong when unfurling grand ballads; their catalog includes the romantic fling elevation “Save a Prayer,” coy and carefree “Serious” and the somber remembrance “Ordinary World.”  And “Future Past” also contains several exemplary lush ballads, all of which are buoyed by Simon Le Bon’s inquisitive, empathetic vocals. The highlight “Wing” is old-fashioned spy noir, what with a twisted-vine melody and introspective lyrics, while the album-closing “Falling” is a languid, debonair song that luxuriates in comet-streak keyboards, silky beats and pianist Mike Garson’s classical-inspired cascading piano. The title track, meanwhile, is a throwback to the New Romantic melodrama you might have heard from Ultravox circa “Vienna.” 

It’s rare to find any sonic parallel on a Duran Duran album, as the band are always defiantly, aggressively themselves. But “Future Past” also has a sentimental streak, which translates to more than a few self-referential moments or inspiration nods. The rainbow-hued Moroder synth-pop banger “Beautiful Lies” especially brings to mind Pet Shop Boys’ early work, but has sly winks to Duran Duran’s past. The lyrics mentions both “cherry ice” and “paradise” (shout out to “Rio”!) and when vocalist Simon Le Bon mentions being “trapped inside a snare,” an uber-’80s drum blast pounds in the background. 

In a more touching development, “Future Past” is also lyrically sentimental. In interviews, band members have even noted that one of “Future Past”‘s overarching themes is commitment. “Tonight United” and “Invisible” stress maintaining a unified front in the face of division, while the exuberant single “Anniversary” is a heart-on-sleeve celebration of spending another year spent together. At the same time, Le Bon is an oblique enough lyricist that the idea of commitment emerges in enigmatic ways elsewhere — or is subsumed by moodier, darker brooding. Both “Wing” and “Hammerhead” especially speak to grappling with your own inner frustrations and flaws, while another interpretation of “Invisible” could speak to trouble connecting with someone: “Will you say my name?/Has the memory gone?/Are you feeling numb?/Or have I become invisible?”

And then there’s “Falling,” which is about a poignant moment of intense connection but features delightfully ambiguous lyrics: “Is this how it all begins? / With a quiet explosion within / Like a raindrop falling on skin / Am I falling into feeling?” Rather than spelling out the inspiration, “Falling” creates an outline that anyone can color in with their own experiences. Is it about a romantic dalliance? An elaborate metaphor about joining a band? Or does the romance arise because of the band? 

That mystery is one reason Duran Duran remain so popular and beloved. Few things are obvious with the band: There’s always something to puzzle through and figure out, whether it’s a video, an artistic statement or a lyrical twist. This complexity is a reflection of Duran Duran’s punkish art-school roots, sure, but also their dedication to creating pop music that’s both commercially accessible and artistically challenging. “Future Past” certainly fits this bill, while emphasizing that can look back fondly at your past self without getting lost in nostalgia. 

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