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Fox News: 25 years of making everyone’s lives progressively crappier

Fox News Channel has offered us oh so many ways to mark its 25th anniversary. How could we possibly count them? Creating a chronological list of its Achievements in Outrage would be a massive undertaking; someone else is welcome to it.

Retracing its history back to the start, when the late Roger Ailes launched the network with an array of opinion-based programming packaged to resemble news and calling it “fair and balanced,” has been done. Citing poll data and statistics proving the extent to which the network’s dedicated viewership is more misinformed than other news’ outlets consumers would be similarly redundant.

Instead, let’s simply pause for a moment and marvel at the spectacular impact a quarter of a century’s worth of Fox News has had on American life itself. Whether a person watches the channel or never tunes in does not matter. In some way, Fox News has made your life remarkably crappier.


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That pandemic we’re still in? Fox News’ prime time hosts have taken joy in helping to prolong it, and purely for the sake of harpooning a Democratic president’s approval rating. Mask-wearing and vaccines, two common sense mitigants to get the spread of COVID-19 under control, are partisan issues dominating airtime on Tucker Carlson‘s and Laura Ingraham’s shows. 

Were you hoping to get a break from the sanity-testing anxiety created by the 2020 presidential election? Sorry! Joseph Biden’s win meant Fox News lost the main source of its ratings, Biden’s orange opponent. So it turned to a fresh energy source: amplifying The Big Lie and assaulting the integrity of our elections by echoing the losing party’s baseless claims that the results were rigged.

This may make it sound like Fox News has made life worse solely for liberals but, hate to break it to you Fox News fans, it’s also made life crappier for you.

Between Bill O’Reilly‘s nightly “Talking Points Memo” propaganda post-its, Megyn Kelly’s obsession with Jesus’ whiteness, Glenn Beck’s rants and the contents of any Sean Hannity or Carlson transcript from the past half decade, Fox News has become rich by drawing you into a loop of anger and paranoia.

That loop was built to keep you watching Fox News and primes you to doubt or fully reject other news sources. Outlets that base their reporting on helpful, illuminating details like data, input from accredited experts. Some of them also publish lovely recipes for quick and delicious weeknight meals.

Worse than all of that, Fox also somehow persuaded you to place your faith in hucksters like Rudy Giuliani, who became so legally radioactive that even they had to ditch him, and Mike Lindell, who may have persuaded you to sleep on his terrible pillows.

This is on top of convincing people that risking severe illness and death is worth it, so long as you protect your personal freedom to refuse scientifically proven preventative measures to protect you from that severe illness and death.

Back to those of us who aren’t necessarily saddled with relatives drooling a gravy of lies, illogic and outright bigotry all over otherwise pleasant family gatherings.  O’Reilly’s manufactured War on Christmas still managed to cast a mild pall on the simplest interactions with strangers. Remember that inanity?

Anyway, those were simpler irritants of a bygone era, when we did things like go over to other people’s houses, or spend time in large crowds without fear of infection or sudden outbreaks of hand-to-hand combat.

Change the lens to a wider view, and Fox’s destructive role becomes nothing to joke about.

Fox shaped the nation’s narrative by emboldening rewrites of history, reinterpreting fact and encouraging the disbelief of one’s own eyes. It wins by purposefully repeating misleading information reduced to catchy bumper sticker summations of divisive topics presented with little nuance and devoid of context.  

Television news’ overall quality is worse as a result, since Fox’s political influence and popularity shoved all mainstream news coverage rightward. The network infected journalism with the disease of false equivalency and obfuscation, as organizations contorted themselves to placate accusations of liberal bias. This is explains why, for a short time, NBC tripped over itself to hire Kelly before attempting and failing to normalize her, hoping the audience would eventually forget about her past. And they would have gotten away with it too, if not for her addiction to defending blackface.

The slippage began around the time of the 9/11 and the Iraq War, when Fox first surged ahead of other networks. But it accelerated in the lead-up to the 2008 election and during Barack Obama’s presidency when, among other feats, Fox amplified the birther lie.

The urge to ensure representations of all voices on all stories led to such situations as, for example, Republican energy lobbyist and climate change denier Rick Santorum being called upon to offer insights about a damning U.S. National Climate Assessment issued in 2018. He was featured on a news segment instead of a respected climate change scientist and author – who was bumped.

Fox News didn’t do that, by the way. That was CNN, doing its best to give a voice to “both sides.”

In fairness, and for the sake of balance, it would be silly to blame Fox News for everything that’s gone wrong in America over the last 25 years. Republican operative and strategic racist Lee Atwater planted the seeds from which our modern version of partisanship blossomed by the time Ronald Reagan was elected in 1980, long before Fox came into existence.

Rush Limbaugh’s toxic version of 1990s conservative talk radio was a fixture in media predating Fox as well. Certainly he gathered the first members of what would evolve into the channel’s flock. Ailes tried to launch Limbaugh in syndicated television before attempting to bring him over to Fox. He ended up settling for Sean Hannity instead.  

Point being, some version of a conservative news channel would have emerged eventually. And might have even been far worse. 

Still, one wonders how such a network might have fared if it emphasized journalistic integrity while incorporating a conservative point of view instead of perpetuating an endless cycle of fear, loathing and rage.

Don’t think about it for long: Fox tried that. That effort is called its news division, prime time’s parasitic twin that management calls forth from the lineup’s innards every election night like Kuato. But even the journalistic side succumbed to Breitbart’s influence after the 2016 election; with Fox’s older viewership dying off, disaffected young white men are replenishing the ranks. 

Indeed, for Fox to not have become what it is today, the Republican party, conservative talk radio and the Internet would have to be remarkably different entities than they are and always have been.

America itself would have to be different.

While you cannot blame the network for all that ails America and its imperiled democracy, you can certainly place a surfeit of responsibility upon it for the majority of the ills that befell us over the last six and continues to bedevil us now.  

Rupert Murdoch himself claimed credit for getting the 45th president elected and was happy for his network to serve as the administration’s propaganda arm.

You remember what happened after that, don’t you? Not the details of the blur, the low-grade despair born of being dragged in its current. In the past, when Republicans had an actual agenda, Fox helped sell it to the American people with no apologies. Maybe that meant persuading viewers to hate the French for no reason other than to prove one’s patriotism. Maybe it meant making up a non-existent threat like the New Black Panther Party to further stoke its viewers’ fear of being governed by a Black president.

Now, Fox’s talking heads drum up reasons for people to be afraid of or angry at people dedicated to making their lives better, such as teachers and scientists. Once the network drums up a misinformation campaign, there’s little that can be done to stop it from proliferating and mutating into its own virus.

Fox News hosts were key players in transforming “critical race theory,” which is taught in law school, into a plot to make white schoolkids feel bad by learning about slavery’s foundational role in the making of America. Carlson, the channel’s top rated personality is promoting the supposed “great replacement” of the white electorate by non-white immigrants, and spreading anti-vaccine and anti-mask rhetoric.

Crowds of people who could be engaging in any number of worthwhile pursuits – baking, reading, getting vaccinated – are intimidating school boards, threatening election officials and attacking healthcare professionals.

And at 25 Fox is still the top-rated cable news channel. According to Nielsen, in its third quarter the network’s ratings averaged 2.372 million viewers in prime time, beating MSNBC (1.267 million viewers) and CNN (822,000 viewers). All three networks suffered a year-over-year ratings decline, with Fox News down by 32% in prime time.

Its overall viewership may be declining, but that matters less than the channel’s gravitational pull. Think of the right wing mediasphere as the Star Wars equivalent of the Imperial armada – it’s a dreadnought, towing along all the smaller ships like OAN and Newsmax, destroyers and all.

Depressing, isn’t it?  But that’s why Fox News is inescapable. Have a few conversations with people you know, and odds are one of them will reveal they believe President Biden stole the election, or that the threat posed by the Jan. 6 insurrection is overblown, because Tucker said so.

Even if you live in a partisan bubble, someone in your circle of acquaintances is taking ivermectin or believes hydroxychloroquine can be used to treat COVID-19, because “The Ingraham Angle” touted these treatments.

They may have received that information from another source such as OAN, Newsmax, their yoga instructor or Joe Rogan. Rest assured you can draw a line right back to Fox News.

How do we move forward from this? Every answer is insufficient and exhausting. Fox News management isn’t interested in reining in its prime time hosts because they’re the channel’s main ratings magnets. De-programming experts have all sorts of suggestions on how to save the rabid Fox addicts in your life, but once again that places the burden on reasonable people to wade into a reservoir of hatred that’s been steadily filling for two and a half decades.

Oddly enough, I stumbled upon another response while watching a 1993 episode of “Northern Exposure,” where the characters gather for a feast to celebrate, yes, the 25th anniversary of the local media company owned by the town’s version of Roger Ailes, Maurice Minnifield. This is not a perfect parallel, since Maurice was the type of conservative Clinton-era liberals wanted to believe in, which is to say that despite his prejudices, he tended to behave humanely towards others.

Still, to mark that milestone, the town’s sage and disc jockey Chris Stevens raises his glass, looks the devil in the face and speaks honestly, calling Maurice a homophobe and a bigot. Then he adds, “One thing you can count on, there’s no hidden agenda with this man. Maurice Minnifield is not gonna stab you in the back! No, you’re going to see him plunge that dagger right into your belly, pull it up, and twist, and twist, until your guts spill right out onto your shoes.”

That doesn’t make the blade poking our belly feel any better – but like the man said, at least the adversary is right in our face. What matters next is how the media and democracy responds.

Tellingly Fox, at 25, has changed its slogan to “Standing Up for What’s Right.”

Accused war criminal’s foundation forced to refund MAGA donors angered by anti-Trump posts

Bitter TrumpWorld donors want their money back after Marine Lt. Col. Stuart Scheller, once an outspoken pro-Trump voice opposed to President Biden’s Afghanistan withdrawal, apparently turned on his far-right supporters and slammed former President Trump in a Facebook post.

This latest TrumpWorld internal drama began last month when Scheller faced discipline from his Marine Corps superiors after speaking out against his bosses over the Afghanistan withdrawal.

In what became a viral video in right-wing media, on Aug. 26 Scheller said: “People are upset because their senior leaders let them down. And none of them are raising their hands and accepting accountability or saying, ‘We messed this up.'”

Shortly thereafter, the Marine officer lost his post and was briefly jailed for his social media posting, in violation of orders to halt his online activities. On Tuesday afternoon, he was apparently “released from the brig.” Throughout the multi-week affair, his parents, Stu and Cathy Scheller, have spoken out, claiming that the Marine Corps told them their son could face “a long prison term.” 

That’s possible: Scheller now faces a series of serious charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, including charges of “willfully disobeying a superior commissioned officer” and “failure to obey an order.” 

The right-wing ecosystem roused itself, and financial aid from pro-Trump online forces poured in on Scheller’s behalf, directed to his family and legal defense team.

Eddie Gallagher, who was accused of murdering an Iraqi POW in 2017 but later acquitted, stepped in with his Pipe Hitter Foundation, which to date has raised north of $2.5 million on Scheller’s behalf. But here’s the rub: After Scheller expressed mild criticism of the twice-impeached ex-president in a recent Facebook post, TrumpWorld donors are livid and want their money back.

This donor backlash appears to have been sparked by a Sept. 25 post in which Scheller said, “President Trump. I was told by everyone to kiss the ring because of your following and power. I refuse. While I respect your foreign policy positions, I hate how you divided the country. I don’t need or want your help. You do not have the ability to pull [the] U.S. together. You may even win the next election. But your generation’s time is running out.”

Next Schiller took aim at Donald Trump Jr., the former president’s eldest son, stating: “Tell your son to stop tweeting about me. Your whole family knows nothing about [the] U.S. or our sacrifices. I could never work with you. I’d rather sit in jail and be released with a dishonorable [discharge] than make compromises in my beliefs.” 

Oh my word: Trumpist donors, by the hundreds, are beside themselves. One donor who identified herself as Barbra wrote: “What a scam artist you are! Worse than BLM last year! Give the money back! Cry baby! You are mental and your kids and wife will suffer. Karma all the way here. You knew damn well what you were doing to prey on people for Money!”

Barbra, by her own account, had given $3. She concluded: “A real Marine doesn’t have mommy and daddy crying for him!”


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Gallagher and his Pipe Hitter Foundation didn’t return Salon’s request for comment on this story. 

Another anonymous donor wrote: “You and to your family [sic] are frauds! Tell your parents to cry on the fake news channels. You hate Trump, his kids, and you think he divided this Country? You need help? Tell your loser family this E9 said [to] go to hell.” 

“Yes, I am making the MINIMUM $3 donation to let everyone else know to look you up before they consider any $$$ support for you,” another disgruntled donor wrote, in an apparent effort to warn away other Trump supporter. 

Another unhappy donor named Gretchen Smith wrote, “I sent Pipe Hitter an email for a refund of my $52.23 on 10/05/21.”

“How dare you disrespect President Trump,” wrote Marc. “Please refund my earlier donation. If the election wasn’t stolen, you wouldn’t be in jail right now because Trump would NEVER have allowed it. Thanks for your service, but maybe it’s your big mouth that’s causing all your issues.” 

Since Scheller went rogue with his anti-Trump comments, Gallagher’s organization has been tasked with issuing refunds to angry Trump supporters who had initially flocked to the cause. 

“We have been working all day today in giving people their money back, if they are asking for it,” Gallagher told Steve Bannon on his “War Room: Pandemic” podcast earlier this week. “It’s understandable,” the former Navy SEAL added. 

Gallagher insisted his foundation would not back down from supporting Scheller and his family, despite the backlash from Trump loyalists: “We are going to continue to raise money for them and help them out.” How that will be received remains to be seen. 

Congress fights over money for child care — but never questions billions for war

President Biden and the Democratic Congress are facing a crisis as the popular domestic agenda they ran on in the 2020 election is held hostage by two corporate Democratic senators, fossil-fuel consigliere Joe Manchin and payday-lender favorite Kyrsten Sinema. But the very week before the Dems’ $350 billion-per-year domestic package hit this wall of corporate moneybags, all but 38 House Democrats voted to hand over more than double that amount to the Pentagon. Manchin has hypocritically described the domestic spending bill as “fiscal insanity,” but has voted for a much larger Pentagon budget every year since 2016. 

Real fiscal insanity is what Congress does year after year, taking most of its discretionary spending off the table and handing it over to the Pentagon before even considering the country’s urgent domestic needs. Maintaining this pattern, Congress just splashed out $12 billion for 85 more F-35 warplanes, six more than Donald Trump bought last year, without debating the relative merits of buying more expensive military planes versus investing $12 billion in education, health care, clean energy or fighting poverty.

The 2022 military spending bill, known as the NDAA or National Defense Authorization Act, which passed the House on Sept. 23 would hand a whopping $740 billion to the Pentagon and $38 billion to other departments (mainly the Department of Energy for nuclear weapons), for a total of $778 billion in military spending, a $37 billion increase over this year’s military budget. The Senate will soon debate its version of this bill — but don’t expect much of a debate there either, as most senators are “yes men” when it comes to feeding the war machine. 

Two House amendments to make modest cuts both failed: one by Rep. Sara Jacobs, D-Calif., to strip $24 billion that was added to Biden’s budget request by the House Armed Services Committee; and another by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., for an across-the-board 10% cut (with exceptions for military pay and health care).  

After adjusting for inflation, this enormous budget is comparable to the peak of Trump’s arms buildup in 2020, and is only 10% below the post-World War II record set by George W. Bush in 2008 under cover of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It would give Joe Biden the dubious distinction of being the fourth post-Cold War U.S. president to militarily outspend every Cold War president, from Harry Truman to George H.W. Bush.

In effect, Biden and Congress are locking in the $100 billion per year arms buildup that Trump justified with his absurd claims that Obama’s record military spending had somehow undermined military preparedness. 

As with Biden’s failure to quickly rejoin the JCPOA with Iran, the time to act on cutting the military budget and reinvesting in domestic priorities was in the first weeks and months of his administration. His inaction on these issues, like his deportation of thousands of desperate asylum seekers, suggests that he is happier to continue Trump’s ultra-hawkish policies than he will publicly admit.

In 2019, the Program for Public Consultation at the University of Maryland conducted a study in which it briefed ordinary Americans on the federal budget deficit and asked them how they would address it. The average respondent favored cutting the deficit by $376 billion, mainly by raising taxes on the wealthy and corporations, but also by cutting an average of $51 billion from the military budget. 

Even Republicans favored cutting $14 billion, while Democrats supported a much larger $100 billion cut. That would be more than the 10% cut in the failed Ocasio-Cortez amendment, which garnered support from only 86 Democratic members and was opposed by 126 Democrats and every Republican.

Most of the Democrats who voted for amendments to reduce spending still voted to pass the bloated final bill. Only 38 Democrats were willing to vote against a $778 billion military spending bill that, once Veterans Affairs and other related expenses are included, would continue to consume more than 60% of discretionary spending.

“How are you going to pay for it?” clearly applies only to “money for people,” never to “money for war.” Rational policy making would require exactly the opposite approach. Money invested in education, health care and green energy is an investment in the future, while money for war offers little or no return on investment except to weapons manufacturers and Pentagon contractors, as was the case with the $2.26 trillion the U.S. wasted on death and destruction in Afghanistan. 

A study by the Political Economy Research Center at the University of Massachusetts found that military spending creates fewer jobs than almost any other form of government spending. It found that $1 billion invested in the military yields an average of 11,200 jobs, while the same amount invested in other areas yields 26,700 jobs when invested in education, 17,200 in health care, 16,800 in the green economy or 15,100 jobs in cash stimulus or welfare payments. 

It is tragic that the only form of Keynesian stimulus that is uncontested in Washington is the least productive for Americans, as well as the most destructive for the other countries where the weapons are used. These irrational priorities seem to make no political sense for Democratic members of Congress, whose grassroots voters would cut military spending by an average of $100 billion per year, based on the Maryland poll. 

So why is Congress so out of touch with the foreign policy desires of their constituents? It is well-documented that members of Congress have more close contact with well-heeled campaign contributors and corporate lobbyists than with the working people who elect them, and that the “unwarranted influence” of Dwight Eisenhower’s infamous military-industrial complex has become more entrenched and more insidious than ever, just as he feared.

The military-industrial complex exploits flaws in what is at best a weak, quasi-democratic political system to defy the will of the public and spend more public money on weapons and armed forces than the world’s next 13 military powers. This is especially tragic at a time when the wars of mass destruction that have served as a pretext for wasting these resources for 20 years may finally, thankfully, be coming to an end.

The five largest U.S. arms manufacturers (Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics) account for 40% of the arms industry’s federal campaign contributions — and have collectively received $2.2 trillion in Pentagon contracts since 2001 in return for those contributions. Altogether, 54% of military spending ends up in the accounts of corporate military contractors, earning them $8 trillion since 2001.

The House and Senate Armed Services Committees sit at the very center of the military-industrial complex, and their senior members are the largest recipients of arms industry cash in Congress. So it is a dereliction of duty for their colleagues to rubber-stamp military spending bills on their say-so without serious, independent scrutiny.

The corporate consolidation, dumbing down and corruption of U.S. media and the isolation of the Washington “bubble” from the real world also play a role in Congress’s foreign policy disconnect. 

There is another, little-discussed reason for the disconnect between what the public wants and how Congress votes, which can be found in a fascinating 2004 study by the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations titled “The Hall of Mirrors: Perceptions and Misperceptions in the Congressional Foreign Policy Process.”

The “Hall of Mirrors” study surprisingly found a broad consensus between the foreign policy views of lawmakers and the public, but also found that “in many cases Congress has voted in ways that are inconsistent with these consensus positions.”

The authors made a counterintuitive discovery about the views of congressional staffers. “Curiously, staffers whose views were at odds with the majority of their constituents showed a strong bias toward assuming, incorrectly, that their constituents agreed with them,” the study found, “while staffers whose views were actually in accord with their constituents more often than not assumed this was not the case.”

This was particularly striking in the case of Democratic staffers, who were often convinced that their own liberal views placed them in a minority of the public when, in fact, most of their constituents shared the same views. Since congressional staffers are the primary advisers to members of Congress on legislative matters, these misperceptions play a unique role in Congress’s anti-democratic foreign policy.

Overall, on nine important foreign policy issues, an average of only 38% of congressional staffers could correctly identify whether a majority of the public supported or opposed a range of different policies they were asked about.

On the other side of the equation, the study found that “Americans’ assumptions about how their own member votes appear to be frequently incorrect … [I]n the absence of information, it appears that Americans tend to assume, often incorrectly, that their member is voting in ways that are consistent with how they would like their member to vote.”

It is not always easy for a member of the public to find out whether their representative votes as they would like. News reports rarely discuss or link to actual roll-call votes, even though the internet and the Congressional Clerk’s office make it easier than ever to do so.

Civil society and activist groups publish more detailed voting records. Govtrack.us lets constituents sign up for email notifications of every single roll-call vote in Congress. Progressive Punch tracks votes and rates members on how often they vote for “progressive” positions, while issues-related activist groups track and report on bills they support, as CODEPINK does at CODEPINK Congress. Open Secrets enables the public to track money in politics and see how beholden their representatives are to different corporate sectors and interest groups.

When members of Congress come to Washington with little or no foreign policy experience, as many do, they must take the trouble to study hard from a wide range of sources, to seek foreign policy advice from outside the corrupt military-industrial complex, which has brought us only endless war, and to listen to their constituents. 

The Hall of Mirrors study should be required reading for congressional staffers, and they should reflect on how they are personally and collectively prone to the misperceptions it revealed. 

Members of the public should beware of assuming that their representatives vote the way they want them to, and instead should make serious efforts to find out how they really vote. They should contact their offices regularly to make their voices heard, and work with issues-related civil society groups to hold them accountable for their votes on issues they care about.

Looking forward to next year’s and future military budget fights, we must build a strong popular movement that rejects the flagrantly anti-democratic decision to transition from a brutal and bloody, self-perpetuating “war on terror” to an equally unnecessary and wasteful but even more dangerous arms race with Russia and China. 

As some in Congress continue to ask how we can afford to take care of our children or ensure future life on this planet, progressives in Congress must not only call for taxing the rich but cutting the Pentagon — and not just in tweets or rhetorical flourishes, but in real policy. 

While it may be too late to reverse course this year, they must stake out a line in the sand for next year’s military budget that reflects what the public desires and the world so desperately needs: Rolling back the destructive, gargantuan war machine and investing in health care and a livable climate, not bombs and F-35s.

‘Entirely unsurprising’: Merck slammed for 4,000% markup of taxpayer-funded COVID-19 drug

The New Jersey-based pharmaceutical giant Merck is facing accusations of price gouging after it charged the U.S. over $700 per patient for a taxpayer-funded coronavirus treatment that, according to research, costs just $17.74 to produce.

Last week, Merck announced plans to request emergency federal authorization for molnupiravir after a late-stage clinical trial showed that a five-day course of the antiviral drug cut the risk of COVID-19 hospitalization or death in half in patients with mild-to-moderate cases.

The same day Merck unveiled the results of the trial and White House officials hailed the drug as another possible tool against COVID-19, the “New York Times reported that “the federal government has placed advance orders for 1.7 million courses of treatment, at a price of about $700 per patient”—far more than the estimated cost of manufacturing the drug.

According to an analysis by Melissa Barber of Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health and Dzintars Gotham of King’s College Hospital in London, “the cost of production for molnupiravir capsules is US$1.74 per unit, or US$17.74 per five-day regimen.”

“Adding an allowance for 10% profit margin and taxes in India, we arrive at an estimated sustainable generic price of US$1.96 per capsule or US$19.99 per five-day regimen,” the researchers concluded.


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Dean Baker, a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, noted that the $712 price-per-course price the U.S. government is set to pay for molnupiravir amounts to a roughly 4,000% markup.

“Quartz”‘s Annalisa Merelli reported last week that with Merck expecting to produce 10 million courses of molnupiravir before the end of 2021, the company “could bring in revenue up to $7 billion.”

“This would make it, in only a few weeks, one of the 10 most lucrative drugs ever,” Merelli observed.

If authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, molnupiravir—which Merck developed in partnership with the Miami-based firm Ridgeback Biotherapeutics—would be the first antiviral pill approved to treat COVID-19, potentially a major breakthrough in the fight against the global pandemic.

But it’s unclear how accessible the treatment will be for people in the U.S. and around the world, given its cost and Merck’s monopoly control over production. Numerous countries, including Singapore and Thailand, are already racing to secure access to the drug.

“Governments must break Merck’s monopolies so generic companies can expand supply and slash prices globally,” said Asia Russell, executive director of Health GAP.

Heidi Chow of the Jubilee Debt Campaign decried the $700-per-patient price the U.S. government paid for molnupiravir as “another example of Big Pharma reaping billions from public investment into research by charging extortionate, rip-off prices for lifesaving COVID drugs.”

“This is why we need to waive patents on all COVID treatments and vaccines,” said Chow.

As “The Intercept”‘s Sharon Lerner reported Tuesday, molnupiravir was developed with the help of tens of millions of dollars in U.S. government funding.

“The Defense Threat Reduction Agency, a division of the Department of Defense, provided more than $10 million of funding in 2013 and 2015 to Emory University,” from which Ridgeback licensed the drug in 2020, Lerner noted. “The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health, also provided Emory with more than $19 million in additional grants.”

In addition to slamming Merck for selling the drug to the U.S. at a price 40 times higher than the cost of production, public health advocates stressed the Biden administration has an obligation to ensure that the treatment is made widely available and affordable to all.

“The public funded this drug, and therefore the public has some rights, including the rights you have it available under reasonable terms,” Luis Gil Abinader, a senior researcher at Knowledge Ecology International, told “The Intercept.

Abinader pointed to the federal government’s so-called “march in” rights under the Bayh-Dole Act. That law, enacted in 1980, allows the government to intervene and license a federally funded drug to a third party if the manufacturer fails to make the medicine “available to the public on reasonable terms.” The U.S. government has never exercised its march in rights to drive down the cost of a drug.

“The pressure for march-in rights around this drug is going to be huge,” Abinader said of molnupiravir. “When the Biden administration negotiates another supply agreement with Merck, they should probably leverage those rights in order to get a better price.”

Trump had dinner with Mitt Romney to “torture the guy”: book

The latest tell-all book about President Donald Trump’s administration revealed that the infamous 2016 dinner with the new president-elect and Mitt Romney was a ploy to “torture him.”

According to the new book from Stephanie Grisham, I’ll Take Your Questions Now, recalled a moment when campaign staffer Jason Miller told her about the dinner and that she needed to be ready to bring in the press to get a photo.

“He then revealed who was going to be in attendance: Trump and Mitt Romney. Though he didn’t say it in so many words, Jason made it obvious that Trump had cooked up the dinner, so to speak, just to torture the guy a little more. The setting was Trump’s turf—a restaurant in his building.”

She called it a power-play by Trump to show Romney who was in charge.


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“Trump wanted all the press to see that Romney would come all the way to New York and sit down with a man he had called a ‘con artist’ and ‘a fake’ to sing for his supper,” the book said. “Donald Trump was many things, but even his critics had to admit that he was a master at TV spectacles. This was yet another, set to be one for the ages.”

She described the scene as a disaster, with a tiny restaurant filled with secret service, press, staff and patrons. It was hot and diners were being smacked in the head with cameras and microphones.

“The president-elect loved it all,” she said. “His seat at the table was facing the press, and he made eye contact with every one of them, flashing big smiles and a thumbs-up. He was basking in his glory, the center of attention.”

Climate-change transition in the Age of Billionaires

It was supposed to be the greatest transition of modern times.

Practically overnight, a dirty, inefficient, and unjust system that encompassed 11 time zones was to undergo an extreme makeover. Billions of dollars were available to speed the process. A new crew of transition experts came up with the blueprint and the public was overwhelmingly on board. Best of all, this great leap forward would serve as a model for all countries desperate to exit a failed status quo.

That’s not what happened.

When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and Russia emerged from its wreckage as the largest successor state, government officials in the newly elected administration of Boris Yeltsin teamed up with a cadre of foreign experts to chart a path into a post-Soviet system of democracy and free markets. The West offered billions of dollars in loans while the Russians generated more funds through the privatization of state assets. With all those resources, Russia could have become an enormous Sweden of the east.

Instead, much of that wealth disappeared into the pockets of newly minted oligarchs. During the 1990s, Russia suffered an economic catastrophe, with the equivalent of $20 to $25 billion leaving the country every year and the gross domestic product (GDP) falling nearly 40% between 1991 and 1998. The Soviet Union once had the second largest economy on earth. Today, thanks only to a reliance on Soviet-era fossil-fuel and arms-export industries, Russia hovers just outside the top 10 in total economic output, ranking below Italy and India, but still manages only 78th place — that is, below Romania — in per-capita GDP.


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The failures of the Russian transition can be chalked up to the collapse of empire, decades of economic decay, the vengeful triumphalism of the West, the unchecked venality of local opportunists, or all of the above. It would be a mistake, however, to dismiss such a cautionary tale as a mere historic peculiarity.

If we’re not careful, the Russian past could well become humanity’s future: a transition bungled, a golden opportunity squandered.

After all, the world is now poised to spend trillions of dollars for an even more massive transition, this time from a similarly dirty, inefficient, and unjust economy based on fossil fuels to… what? If the international community somehow learns the lessons of past transitions, someday we will all live in a far more equitable, carbon-neutral world powered by renewable energy.

But don’t bet on it. The world is slowly replacing dirty energy with renewables but without addressing any of the industrial-strength problems of the current system. It should remind us of the way the Russians replaced state planning with free markets, only to end up with the shortcomings of capitalism as well as many of the ills of the previous order. And that’s not even the worst-case scenario. The transition might not happen at all or the decarbonization process could be so endlessly drawn out over decades as to be wholly ineffectual.

The proponents of Green New Deals promise win-win outcomes: solar panels and wind turbines will produce abundant energy cheaply, the climate crisis will abate, workers will leave dirty jobs for cleaner ones, and the Global North will help the Global South leapfrog into a gloriously Green future. In reality, however, transitions of such a scale and urgency have never been win-win. In the case of Russia’s transition from communism, nearly everyone lost out, and the country is still suffering the consequences. Other large-scale transformations of the past — like the agrarian and industrial revolutions — were similarly catastrophic in their own ways.

In the end, perhaps a key part of the problem lies not just in the flawed status quo, but in the mechanism of transition itself.

Pyramids of Sacrifice

Transitions can have harsh, even genocidal consequences. Just ask the Neanderthals.

Oh, sorry, you can’t. They were wiped out 40,000 years ago in the great transition to modern homo sapiens. Those early hominids left behind some bones, a few tools, and a small percentage of DNA in the contemporary human genome. Neanderthals might have died out because of inbreeding or due to climate change. More likely, they were killed off by our ancestors over thousands of years of conflict. Poor Neanderthals: they were among the eggs that had to be broken to make the omelet that’s us.

The fate of the Neanderthals is extreme, but not unique. Whenever humans take a great leap forward, they tend to do so over an enormous pile of bones.

Take the agrarian revolution, which spelled the end for hunter-gatherers, except for those who survived in isolated areas like the Amazon rainforest. On the plus side, humanity received the gift of civilization in the form of politics, trade, and literacy. On the negative side, as anthropologist Jared Diamond argued in a famous 1999 Discoverarticle, the Neolithic transformation spawned disease, malnutrition, and gross economic inequality. It was, Diamond concluded, “the worst mistake in the history of the human race.”

Ten thousand years later, humanity might have committed the worst mistake in the history of the planet. Sure, the industrial revolution of the nineteenth century eventually led to extended lifespans, food enough to feed the world, and TikTok. But the application of modern science and engineering to economic affairs also set in motion a ruinous despoliation of the planet. More ominously, as everyone who has gazed at the “hockey-stick” graph of carbon emissions knows, the industrial revolution marked the first time that humans, perhaps irrevocably, began changing this planet’s climate by burning fossil fuels at an ever more staggering rate.  

The new religion of economic growth at any cost also exacted a human toll. Children were put to work in the “dark satanic mills” of the early factories; a new proletariat was consigned to lives nasty, brutish, and short; and millions died as colonialism cut a huge swath of destruction through the global south. The oligarchs of the time, enriched by plunder and exploitation, created a Gilded Age of astounding economic inequality that, despite the best efforts of trade unions and social democrats, has made a striking reappearance in our own Age of Billionaires.

Though critical of the cruelties of capitalism, communists turned out to worship the same god of economic growth. Leaders from Vladimir Lenin onward firmly believed that state-led modernization and coercive tactics would enable new communist states to outproduce any capitalist country. Yet, in telescoping decades of industrial modernization into a few short years, their efforts to surpass the West magnified the horrors visited upon local populations. The collectivization of agriculture in the Soviet Union in the 1930s led to around 10 million deaths, while the similar Great Leap Forward in China that began in 1958 cost the lives of as many as 45 million people. As the bodies piled up, the communist 1% — a new class of Party officials and their cronies — orchestrated their own personal leap forward.

For sociologist Peter Berger, communism and capitalism both adopted a “sacrificial” conception of development in which myths of “progress” and “growth” claimed their share of victims, much as Aztec priests had once used ritual murder to propitiate the gods and save their civilization. In his book Pyramids of Sacrifice, Berger writes that the “elite almost invariably legitimates its privileged position in terms of alleged benefits it is bestowing or getting ready to bestow upon ‘the people.'” More often than not, however, these promised benefits accrue to the elite, not the masses.

Which brings us again to the “great transitions” of the 1990s, in which countries that had gone down the road to communism doubled back to take the turn-off for capitalism. The losses for Russia in the 1990s were nothing like the horrors of collectivization. Still, aside from a small number of people who made out like bandits, virtually all other Russians took a step backward as the costs of transition fell disproportionately on pensioners, blue-collar workers, and farmers. As a result, in the early 1990s, one-third of Russians dropped below the poverty line. Due to a combination of alcoholism and unemployment, the life expectancy of Russian men suffered an extraordinary decline from 63 years in 1990 to 58 years in 2000. Disillusionment with liberalization helped to boost popular support for Vladimir Putin, a politician who has skillfully capitalized on those thwarted hopes. His approval ratings still remain relatively high so many years later, even though only 27% of Russians believe that their economic situation today is better than during Soviet times.

The rest of the former Soviet bloc suffered similar, though less severe, dislocations. In Poland, the first country to experiment with the “shock therapy” of an overnight transition to capitalism, the winners came to be known as Poland A, a younger, more well-educated, predominantly urban elite that successfully surfed the waves of change. Poland B — the older, less educated, more rural “losers” of that transition — would eventually exact their revenge at the ballot box by supporting the decidedly anti-liberal Law and Justice Party, which has ruled the country since 2015. Throughout the region, an Eastern Europe B has helped bring similar right-wing populists to power in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Serbia, and Slovenia.

Disenchantment with such liberal transitions notwithstanding, those countries benefited from something that wasn’t available to Russia: the European Union (EU). A continuous flow of capital, and the provision of technical assistance on governance and the rule of law eventually enabled Eastern European countries to outperform their Russian neighbor. A large gap still separates much of Eastern Europe from the wealthier West, but the average Russian can only dream of the life of a second-class EU citizen.

Both of these experiences of transition offer valuable lessons for what may come next.

The Green New Deal

If you take the statements of the world’s governments at face value, almost everyone is now treating climate change very seriously and nations globally are feeling the heat to declare carbon-neutrality by 2050 (or sooner). In August, articles about the latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), emphasizing that global warming is “widespread, rapid, and intensifying,” were accompanied by terrifying photos of its real-world effects: the wildfires in California and Siberia, the disastrous flooding in Germany and China, the record-setting temperatures in Canada and Sicily, and that’s just to start down a list of climate disasters. Your head — or indeed, your entire body — would have had to be in the sand to ignore the emergency sirens going off all around you.

Nonetheless, despite such obvious warning signs of so much worse to come, the world has not, in fact, accelerated its pace of decarbonization. The next major climate-change conference is scheduled for Glasgow at the beginning of November, but the globe’s leading economies are all still falling painfully short of the commitments they made in Paris nearly six years ago. More horrifying yet, the IPCC reports that, even if countries were meeting those commitments, they would, by 2030, result in a mere 1% reductionin carbon emissions from 2010 levels. To avoid the worst-case scenarios of an overcooked planet, those emissions would have to be cut by nearly 50% within the next nine years. Only a couple of countries are preparing for such a dramatic transformation.

The time for modest reforms is long past. A radical cut in carbon emissions can’t be accomplished simply by banning drinking straws, ramping up production of electric cars, or even planting a billion trees. To meet the climate-change challenge will require a transformation comparable to the agrarian or industrial revolutions. But if those earlier system changes are guideposts, the losers of this next great leap forward will be legion.

Various “just transition” proposals are designed, at least on paper, to avoid such an enormous human toll. For a start, a “fair-share” approach would require the transfer of trillions of dollars to help the Global South keep fossil fuels in the ground while shifting to renewable energy. A similar approach within nations would provide the “losers of transition”– from coal miners to those on fixed incomes — with targeted assistance to “go green.”

Alas, such an approach runs counter to current practices. In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, for instance, the international community did not implement a “fair share” approach. The wealthiest countries largely cornered the market on vaccines, and poorer countries have had to rely on a trickle of handouts. Moreover, despite the unprecedented opportunity provided by the Covid crisis to begin to act on the next coming disaster, climate change, governments have generally failed to allocate recovery funds to finance any kind of major economic transformation. In the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan of 2021, for example, a mere $50 million went toenvironmental-justice grants, while $8 billion went to airports. Similarly, fully one-tenth of the $1 trillion infrastructure bill now making its way (or not) through Congress is devoted to improvements to roads and bridges, which will only reinforce America’s love affair with cars, SUVs, and trucks.

And where is the necessary shift of resources to the Global South to help with its transition? Back in 2009, rich countries had already promised to mobilize $100 billion for such climate financing by 2020. They’re still $20 billion short and the assistance has come mostly in the form of loans, not grants, only deepening the dependence and indebtedness of the Global South.

Worse yet, richer countries have been at least modestly reducing their own carbon footprints at the expense of poorer countries by relocating polluting industries to the Global South or substituting carbon-intensive imports for domestic production of the same. Although China continues to boost its share of domestic renewable sources of energy, it’s been financing 70% of all coal-fired power plants built globally (though its leader, Xi Jinping, recently pledged to end this practice). The European Union is actually phasing out coal power — which China is emphatically not doing — even as it continues to rely on high-carbon imports from coal-using countries like Russia, Turkey, Morocco, and Egypt.

To combat such a shift of carbon emissions from north to south — and protect its own less carbon-intensive industries — the European Union has proposed a Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, which penalizes imports of cement, fertilizer, steel, and the like based on the amount of carbon emitted in their production. Hitting Russia the hardest, this tariff would indeed push that country toward a “greener” manufacturing process for its Europe-bound products. However, countries in the Global South that don’t have the resources to upgrade their export industries would be left out in the cold.

This lack of resources in the Global South is compounded by debt. The poorest nations are devoting nearly $3 billion a month to servicing their debts, diverting resources that could otherwise go into a transformation of energy and industrial infrastructure. Bridging this divide would require large-scale debt forgiveness; equitable debt-for-climate swaps; or, more ambitiously, an Organization for Emergency Environmental Cooperation that would marshal trillions of dollars in public financing to pay for the entire world to transition to clean energy.

Here, the experience of Eastern Europe is relevant. The European Union’s transfer of resources, training, and technology from west to east helped cushion the transition that so devastated Russia. Although not enough to prevent the rise of Eastern Europe B, the EU’s modest generosity at least gestured toward the kind of solidarity economics that the Global North needs to adopt in any future climate negotiations with the Global South. If there is to be belt-tightening to shrink the global carbon footprint, those who can most afford to lose the weight should step forward.

Such schemes address the all-important question of equity. But there’s an elephant in the room that’s so far gone unmentioned. And that beast is only getting bigger.

A Rising Tide

All the major transformations of the past were predicated on rapid economic growth, whether the increasing food production of the agrarian revolution or the incorporation of the Soviet Union into the industrialized world through its Five-Year Plans. Most versions of the Green New Deal adhere to the same growth paradigm, with electric cars filling the roads and more sustainably produced widgets circulating through the global economy.

Even as richer countries promise to shrink their carbon footprints, however, they still imagine that they can maintain their overall way of life and export that lifestyle to the rest of the world. But this high-energy lifestyle of computers, air conditioners, and electric SUVs depends on the Global South. By one estimate, the Global North enjoys a $2.2 trillion annual benefit in the form of underpriced labor and commodities from there, an extraction that rivals the magnitude of the colonial era. Moreover, the cobalt and lithium necessary for batteries for electric cars, the gallium and tellurium in solar panels, the rare-earth elements needed for wind turbines are predominantly mined in the Global South and their extraction is likely to come at a huge environmental cost.

The high-growth assumptions of the current system reappear under the rubric of “Green growth,” promulgated by old-style industrialists in new Green clothing. During the transition from communism in the 1990s, “red capitalists” were well-placed in the old system to profit under the new dispensation. Today, a class of “green capitalists” have similarly emerged to enjoy huge profits from the early days of a putatively post-carbon economy — Elon Musk in the world of electric cars, billionaires like Robin Zeng and Huang Shilin with lithium-ion batteries, and Aloys Wobben when it comes to wind turbines. Huge sums of money are now available for the sketchiest of projects, from “blue hydrogen” to the sea-bed mining of rare-earth minerals.

Big profits minus serious regulatory oversight equals the possibility of big-time malfeasance. Fraud was rampant in European wind farms in the 1990s, while renewable energy companies in the Global North have been implicated in bribery schemes in the Global South. The additional bonanza of Green funds through recovery, infrastructure, or transition programs — like the one-time financial resources made available by Russian privatization — could easily disappear into dubious private ventures, bureaucratic black holes, or the swamplands of corruption.

A rising tide, it was once said, would lift all boats: economic growth would lead to general prosperity. But a “rising tide” now has a different meaning in a climate-changing world. The planet can no longer support that kind of growth, whatever its color.

The next transformation must be different from its precursors when it comes to both economic expansion and social equity. We can’t simply grow our way out of this predicament, nor should we sacrifice millions of human beings in the process. Despite the enormous economic and political gaps that separate people around the world, we have to somehow join hands across vast differences to leapfrog over the fossil-fuel economy. United we transform or united we fall.

Copyright 2021 John Feffer

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Federal judge temporarily blocks Texas abortion ban

U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman on Wednesday issued a preliminary injunction blocking a Texas law that bans abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, insisting the restraining order is necessary to “prevent irreparable harm to the United States’ interest in protecting the constitutional rights of its citizens.”

“From the moment [Senate Bill] 8 went into effect, women have been unlawfully prevented from exercising control over their lives in ways that are protected by the Constitution … This Court will not sanction one more day of this offensive deprivation of such an important right,” the order reads.

As the Wall Street Journal reports, Pitman’s order was issued in a federal lawsuit filed by the U.S Department of Justice against the state of Texas seeking both an injunction and “a permanent order that the Texas ban is invalid and unenforceable.

In his order, Judge Pitman accused Texas of contriving “an unprecedented and transparent statutory scheme” to deprive people of their “right under the Constitution to choose to obtain an abortion prior to fetal viability.”

Per the Journal’s Brent Kendall:

“Judge Pitman chose not to delay the effective date of his injunction to give Texas time to seek an immediate stay from an appeals court, meaning state abortion providers have at least a short time window to resume offering abortions to a broad range of patients if they choose to do so.”

Read the full ruling via Just Security.

AT&T is bankrolling Trump’s favorite new cable channel: report

One America News Network (OANN), a far-right news network that continues to provide an unwavering platform for Donald Trump’s baseless claims of election fraud – is overwhelmingly bankrolled by AT&T according to a bombshell Reuters report from Wednesday. 

The revelations stem from court documents, obtained by Reuters, that shed light how OANN was founded and has been maintained. Back in 2019, the company’s founder Robert Herring Sr. reportedly revealed in a deposition that the impetus for OANN was originally inspired by AT&T executives.

“They told us they wanted a conservative network,” Herring reportedly recalled. “They only had one, which was Fox News, and they had seven others on the other [leftwing] side. When they said that, I jumped to it and built one.”

Reuters reported that since the OANN’s origin in 2013, AT&T has proven a “crucial source of funding” for the network, providing OANN with millions in revenue to ensure the channel stays afloat. Especially a boon to OANN was its contract with satellite service provider DirecTV, which is also owned by AT&T. An AT&T filing indicates that the company distributed $57 million in monthly fees to OANN, though this figure was rejected by Herring. Herring reportedly testified that he was at one point offered $250 million for OANN, whose value he said “would be zero” absent the channel’s deal with DirecTV. 

On Wednesday, AT&T, which owns CNN, denied any financial affiliation with the OANN, saying in a statement: “AT&T has never had a financial interest in OAN’s success and does not ‘fund’ OAN.”


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“When AT&T acquired DIRECTV, we refused to carry OAN on that platform, and OAN sued DIRECTV as a result. Four years ago, DIRECTV reached a commercial carriage agreement with OAN, as it has with hundreds of other channels and as OAN has done with the other TV providers that it carries on its programming,” the company added. 

Though founded eight years ago, OANN became a major source of news for right-wing Americans during Trump’s candidacy in the 2016 presidential election. It has been described as the former president’s “favorite” news network, with Trump at one point saying that it covers topics that other media are too “afraid to show.”

Following the 2020 election of President Biden, the network served as a platform for Trump and his allies to promulgate the former president’s baseless conspiracy that the election had been “stolen,” often featuring the likes of MyPillow founder Mike Lindell and ex-Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani – both of whom appear to be in financial straits amid litigation. 

In August, OANN became the subject of a $1.6 billion lawsuit filed by voting systems company Dominion, alleging that the far-right channel “helped create and cultivate an alternate reality where up is down, pigs have wings.” 

During Trump’s now-failed audit of the Maricopa County election, OANN allowed two of its reporters to raise money for the effort. A number of producers anonymously objected to the move as an ethical lapse, according to Reuters, but said that it “did not surprise them.”

“If there was any story involving Trump, we had to only focus on either the positive information or basically create positive information,” Marissa Gonzales, a former OAN producer, told Reuters. “It was never, never the full truth.”

Greg Abbott’s privately funded Texas border wall bankrolled almost entirely by one billionaire

After former President Donald Trump left office and his dream of building a “big, beautiful wall” along the southern U.S. border using federal funds fizzled out, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott entered the arena with another idea: the state can sidestep the Biden Administration — and its own legislature — by crowdfunding a border wall using private donations

It even looked like the plan was working this summer, as the fund went from $1.25 million to $19 million in just a few weeks this past August, and then shot up to $54 million by the end of the month.

But nearly that entire sum — $53.1 million — was donated by just one man, who also happens to be the billionaire scion to one of the world’s richest families, according to a new report from The Texas Tribune Wednesday.

That man is Timothy Mellon, the 79-year-old grandson of legendary banker and former Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon. He has also bankrolled previous attempts to enact and defend controversial immigration laws, including the legal defense of a 2010 Arizona law that empowered police to inquire about anyone’s immigration status despite concerns that it would lead officers to racially profile civilians. That law went all the way to the Supreme Court and was partially struck down, though the thrust of the law Mellon sought to defend is still intact.


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In addition to his donations, Mellon also has a track record of racially charged public statements. The billionaire dedicated a good chunk of his 2015 self-published autobiography to outline a theory of government support for social programs as “Slavery Redux,” arguing that the “Great Society” programs of the 1960s made Black people “even more belligerent and unwilling to pitch in to improve their own situations.”

The extremely large donation is notable due to the fact that Mellon, who lives in Wyoming and owns a New Hampshire-based transportation logistics company called Pan Am Systems, does not appear to have any discernible ties to Texas — and had not previously donated to any of Gov. Abbott’s campaigns, the Texas Tribune reported.

He is, however, a top donor to Trump, giving more than $20 million to America First Action, the main super PAC that supported the former president’s reelection campaign in 2020.

His contribution to the border wall raises questions over the increasing sway the ultra-rich have in American politics — and the way such big-money infusions for large, contentious public projects can sidestep what is normally supposed to be a political process. 

“The thing that’s controversial about these kinds of donations is whether they’re distorting government priorities. If government collects money in taxes and the government — Legislature and governor — decide how to spend it, they’re setting their priorities based on the political environment,” Lloyd Mayer, a professor at Notre Dame Law School, told The Texas Tribune. “But if you open it up to donations, you’re handing what the government should spend their money on to wealthy donors.”

Mellon also decided to make the entire donation in stock, a savvy business decision that will likely yield a huge tax benefit. Rather than having to pay taxes on the profits when they sell shares, investors can get a deduction for the full amount if they donate stock to “charity.”

Despite its controversial and clearly political nature, the border wall likely qualifies as a tax deductible project that serves a “public purpose.”

Bad blood? Taylor Swift fans targeted to vote against Virginia’s GOP candidate for governor

Terry McAuliffe, Democratic candidate for governor in Virginia, is reaching out to a very specific base of voters in his state with weeks to go before the election: Swifties.

As McAuliffe tries to pull ahead, he’s launched a curious smear campaign that consists of a five-figure ad buy to reach Taylor Swift fans and those who engage with her content across Facebook and Instagram, the Verge reports. McAuliffe will also place ads in Google search results for Virginians who search for her name.

The Facebook ad reads, “Did you know that Republican candidate for Governor, Glenn Youngkin, helped buy Taylor Swift’s masters out from under her when he was co-CEO of Carlyle Group?”


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McAuliffe’s outreach to Swifties is strategic for a number of key reasons — namely that Youngkin has a past that involves working with Swift’s arch-nemesis, Scooter Braun. Braun is the record executive and media proprietor who purchased the master recordings of Swift’s music against her will in 2019. 

At the time, Youngkin served as co-CEO of the private equity firm Carlyle Group, which helped Braun acquire Big Machine Label Group and with it, the rights to all of Swift’s first six albums, from her self-titled debut to “Reputation.” This includes numerous hits, including “Sparks Fly,” “Shake It Off,” “Bad Blood,” “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” and “Look What You Made Me Do.” The acquisition by Braun that was facilitated by Carlyle, has since prompted Swift to re-record her past work so that she can own her own music, and raise awareness to other artists about the contracts they’re signing.

When Braun purchased Big Machine Label Group in 2019, Swift called the move her “nightmare,” and accused him of “controlling a woman who didn’t want to be associated with them. In perpetuity” in a post on social media. Last November, Braun sold the rights to Swift’s music to a private equity firm in a deal estimated to be worth more than $300 million.

Now, in Youngkin’s bid for Governor of Virginia, he might just have to answer for Carlyle’s partnership with Braun, and his participation in a deal that galvanized Swifties across the country behind the hashtag #WeStandWithTaylor. The McAuliffe campaign certainly isn’t letting him or Swift’s fans in Virginia forget what happened.

As political candidates are increasingly putting in the work to reach and mobilize younger voters, winning their trust via stan culture has proven surprisingly pivotal. In at least one other race, between Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey and his young Democratic challenger former Rep. Joe Kennedy, the campaign’s focused outreach toward young people resulted in the creation of accounts like @harries4markey and @barbz4ed, and nearly 100 others. This summer, President Joe Biden invited rising pop superstar Olivia Rodrigo to the White House to call on young people to get vaccinated. 

With the Virginia governor’s race in a dead heat and the election looming ahead next month, McAuliffe is clearly pulling out all the stops — and is giving his trust and campaign cash to Virginian Swifties.

Federal judge orders FEC to investigate allegations NRA illegally gave to Republican campaigns

A federal judge ordered the Federal Election Commission to investigate accusations that the National Rifle Association broke the law when it gave Republican campaigns millions of dollars through a series of shell entities — including the initial White House bid of former President Donald Trump.

The case originated with a 2019 lawsuit filed by the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, which was started by former Congresswoman and gun violence survivor Gabrielle Giffords. The organization argued in that the FEC had failed to take action on four separate complaints, alleging the NRA “violated the Federal Election Campaign Act by using a complex network of shell corporations to unlawfully coordinate expenditures with the campaigns of at least seven candidates for federal office.” 

The Giffords Law Center’s original complaint specifically alleges the pro-firearm organization donated up to $25 million illegally to Trump’s 2016 campaign through channels like the NRA Political Victory Fund. The complaint also argues that “illegal contributions to the Trump campaign alone are up to 9,259 times the limit set by Congress.” Other political candidates that the complaint alleges were implicated in the scheme include Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton and North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis.

In a one page ruling last week, Judge Emmett Sullivan of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, demanded that the FEC “comply with its statutory duty to act”, and gave the body 30 days to make a determination, denying the FEC’s motion to dismiss the Giffords Law Center’s suit. 

The FEC generally has five years to act on campaign finance violations — meaning this ruling forces the FEC to act on potential violations from the 2016 election that otherwise may have fallen outside the statute of limitations.

Former President Trump had previously stacked the FEC with GOP loyalists, including Trey Trainor, a former Trump campaign aide, while at the same time leaving enough seats vacant that the regulatory body was not able to meet for most of last year. When it finally reconvened in December 2020, they had amassed a whopping backlog of 446 cases.

Lars Dalseide, a spokesman for the NRA, said in a statement to The Hill that the lawsuit is “a baseless effort engineered by anti-gun groups who want to silence the voices of our members.”

After the ruling from Judge Sullivan, David Pucino, an attorney for the Giffords Law Centre, said, “It is clear the NRA will continue to violate the law until someone stops them.”

Trumpworld goes to war: Former Trump staffer sues former Trump staffer

An ex-Trump staffer turned congressional candidate, Max Miller, is suing former White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham for defamation after she accused him of abuse during their time dating while in the Trump administration.

Grisham recently told CNN’s Jake Tapper there was “abuse in every way” in her relationship with Miller. 

Cleveland.com then reported that in a complaint filed by Miller’s lawyer, Larry Zukerman, Grisham made “libelous and defamatory statements” and that the allegations are “absolutely untrue.” Miller also sought an injunction to block Grisham from repeating her claims, including interviews on CNN. It was subsequently declined. 

In July, in a profile of Miller, Politico reported that Grisham and Miller’s relationship ended “when he pushed her against a wall and slapped her in the face in his Washington apartment after she accused him of cheating on her.” According to Politico, sources verified the allegations, one source saying “It happened,” and “It was violent.” 

Another source said “This was not a moment of gossip. This was not a moment of slander. This was a moment of pain and fear.” 


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Court records show that Miller has a criminal record, including charges of assault, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest. Miller claims the accusations are only to harm him and for Grisham to sell more copies of her book, “I’ll Take Your Questions Now: What I saw at the Trump White House.” 

In an op-ed Grisham wrote for The Washington Post, she says former President Trump and former first lady Melania Trump showed little interest in taking any action against Miller. 

“The president and first lady seemed totally unfazed about whether there was an abuser … in their workplace.” Grisham continued, “There was no follow up from either of them to see if I needed help or protection. There was no investigation ordered. No effort to get to the bottom of this.” 


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At a rally in Wellington Ohio in July, Trump described Miller as a “great guy.” Trump told rally goers “You have the opportunity to elect an incredible patriot to Congress who I know very well.” 

Seeing Trump endorse Miller in his congressional bid felt like a “gut punch” Grisham told Tapper. 

Grisham left Miller unnamed in the op-ed and told Tapper “I didn’t put his name in there on purpose because I’ve moved on,” said Grisham. “If there’s anything I can take away, I’m almost stronger than ever now, and no one is ever going to abuse me again in any way, shape or form.” 

The secret ingredient missing from your homemade pot of chili is espresso powder

I tossed on a jacket and boots the first day that the temperature briefly dipped under 65 degrees here in Louisville, Ky. Then I made my way to Toasty’s Tavern, an easy-going neighborhood bar, where I ordered the most “fall” meal I could imagine — bourbon with a splash of ginger beer and a bowl of dark, spicy chili topped with a mound of shredded white cheddar cheese and minced raw onions. 

The next day was inevitably a scorcher — the capriciousness of “false fall” weather here is storied — however, I felt like I had heralded my favorite season with the pomp it deserves during that moment. The weather’s still teetering on too hot for October, but on the next cool day, I’m ready to dive into the kitchen to recreate that cozy meal at home.

This is thanks, in large part, to my six-ingredient DIY chili seasoning. It has a little more depth than the mixes you buy off supermarket shelves, thanks in large part to an unexpected addition — espresso powder. 

We love espresso powder here at Salon Food. If you know how to use it correctly, it’s a cheap, punchy ingredient that can be an all-purpose addition to both savory and sweet treats. Look no further than senior writer Mary Elizabeth Williams’ extra dark sheet pan brownies.

So what does espresso powder do to chili? Well, the dark bitterness really amplifies the smoky heat of the chili pepper while also cutting through some of the inherent fattiness of typical beef or steak stew cuts. Don’t worry — it doesn’t taste like “coffee” in this context. It just adds a little richness


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The below recipe makes a total of 2 tablespoons of DIY seasoning, which is an ideal amount for a single pot of chili. Feel free to multiply the recipe if you’d like to make extra to store. It will last in a covered container for up to six months (aka until the end of chili season).

***

Recipe: DIY Chili Seasoning 

Makes: 2 tablespoons 

Ingredients:

1 tablespoon of chili powder
1 teaspoon cumin
1 1/2 teaspoons of espresso powder
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon onion powder

Directions:

1. Blend the ingredients until fully combined. Use the seasoning to flavor your next pot of chili. 

Looking for more seasonal dinner inspiration? Here are more of our fall favorites:

From Monica Lewinsky to Paula Jones, “Impeachment” shows how testimonies are used to humiliate

Things are starting to heat up on “Impeachment: American Crime Story,” FX’s dramatized retelling of the story of Monica Lewinsky and the Clinton impeachment. Paula Jones’ sexual harassment lawsuit against Bill Clinton (Clive Owen) is now fully underway, and the FBI is investigating Lewinsky (Beanie Feldstein) with help from her former confidante, Linda Tripp (Sarah Paulson).

While “Impeachment” is foremost the story of Lewinsky and the devastating aftermath of her affair with the president, it’s also a story of women and power more broadly. In the latest episode, the Jones lawsuit, and the treatment of the numerous women who have been harmed by Clinton and are roped into the suit, present a stunning example of this.

At Jones’ deposition, which begins with Jones (Annaleigh Ashford) swearing to tell the truth, a Clinton lawyer asks her a rapid stream of deeply personal and embarrassing questions, ranging from whether her husband was her first sexual partner, to whether Clinton had actually “forced” her to kiss him or give him oral sex, to whether she had once given oral sex to three different men at a party in 1987. The insinuation here is that because Clinton “asked” for sexual favors rather than “forced” Jones to perform them, his actions weren’t sexually inappropriate. Furthermore, Jones’ supposedly sexual past is brought up to deny her any credibility in matters of consent.

Once the deposition is over and Jones is outside with her adviser, the self-titled “conservative feminist,” anti-abortion activist Susan Carpenter-McMillan (Judith Light), Jones expresses her shock at what just happened.

“Susie, you didn’t tell me it was going to be like that, you told me it was going to be OK,” Jones says, nearly crying.

On both sides of Jones’ lawsuit, she and other women are treated as little more than political pawns. No one with power on either Jones’ side of the suit or Clinton’s is particularly interested in the comfort and safety of the women involved. This becomes especially clear as we watch how men in power weaponize subpoenas, affidavits, and depositions to force or coerce female victims to relive traumas, and publicly slut-shame and humiliate them, pending their agendas.

Throughout “Impeachment,” Carpenter-McMillan and her powerful, conservative allies have been pushing Jones to move forward with the lawsuit rather than accept a settlement, which would have ended this painful theater. They’re happy to subject her to public shaming and humiliation to attack Clinton and advance their own political agenda. They see Jones, and all the other women being pulled into the lawsuit, as expendable tools, collateral damage.


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“These are ruthless, terrible people,” Carpenter-McMillan ironically says of the Clinton team, “but they are not going to win. They have no idea how hard it’s about to get for him.”

In order to give Clinton a hard time, however, more women must be put through the wringer like Jones. Shortly before we see Jones’ deposition, private investigators working with her legal team contact another woman they want to weaponize for their own agenda. Juanita Broaddrick (Ashlie Atkinson) had also accused Clinton of sexual assault, and since, her name has often been dragged through the mud, as she’s accused of lying due to her conservative politics. 

The investigators on her doorstep are more than aware of what will happen to Broaddrick if she comes forward to the world, and still push her to tell them her story. Clearly distraught, she says, “It’s the past, I don’t want to relive it, I’m sorry.” Not taking no for an answer, the male investigator tells her, “If you don’t talk to me and Bev here, those attorneys will subpoena you, do you understand that?” It’s a short, harrowing exchange that offers a glimpse into the ways our legal system and procedures deny victims any privacy or agency, and even threaten them to either retraumatize themselves or face the force of the law.

At the end of the episode, Tripp’s betrayal of Lewinsky is finally coming to a head. Tripp has told the story of Lewinsky’s affair to a powerful DC literary agent and Newsweek journalist, and now, she’s working with the FBI in exchange for immunity for the crime of nonconsensually recording her phone calls with Lewinsky.

Wearing a wire from the FBI, Tripp seeks to record a confession from Lewinsky that she lied in an affidavit, denying that she had a sexual or romantic relationship with the president, as well as a confession that she lied in exchange for a job at Revlon set up by the president’s fixer. With this recorded confession, Lewinsky can now be threatened with charges of perjury and obstruction of justice — solely for being a young woman who was taken advantage of by the most powerful man in the world, and had the audacity to want to keep her private life private.

The consequences for perjury and obstruction of justice could be years in prison. Historically, we know that for 12 hours Lewinsky was detained and interrogated by the FBI in a hotel room, where she was threatened with prison time if she didn’t disclose the intimate details of her private sexual relationship to a room full of men. The agents in charge of interrogating Lewinsky notoriously called the task “Operation Prom Night,” as a wildly inappropriate reference to time alone with a young woman in a hotel room.

Unfortunately, the treatment of Lewinsky, Jones, Broaddrick and the other women pushed to be involved in the conservative, anti-Clinton conspiracy, isn’t an aberration. Trials involving rape, domestic violence or sexual misconduct often unfold in a similar fashion. 

In 2016, during one of the most famous trials involving sexual assault in modern history, Brock Turner was often sympathetically referred to as the “Stanford swimmer” with infinite potential. In contrast, Chanel Miller, the woman he was convicted of assaulting, was the one who was treated as if she were on trial. She was asked questions about how much she drank, what she ate for dinner before the assault, and other questions suggesting the encounter had been consensual and she had cheated on her boyfriend. 

“Impeachment,” at its core, has always been a story of sex, power and politics. The invasiveness and cruelty of the legal proceedings against Jones, Lewinsky, and Broaddrick present a grim reality that speaks to why so few survivors come forward to law enforcement. This is the only path available for those who feel victimized in the legal system: one in which the alleged victims have everything to lose and almost nothing to gain from coming forward — especially if the person they’re accusing of abuse or harassment is someone like the president of the United States, with the power and resources to dig deep into their pasts and ruin their names forever.

Britney’s conservatorship exemplifies how the legacy of eugenics continues to affect disabled women

Britney Spears has been locked in a court battle 13 years in the making. While her father was suspended as conservator of her estate on Sep. 29, 2021, her conservatorship might not be terminated until the next hearing on Nov. 12.

During this conservatorship, she was limited in her ability to make everyday choices that most people take for granted.

One revelation that came out of Spears’ emotional testimony was that she was not allowed to go off birth control.

“[T]his so-called team won’t let me go to the doctor to take [my IUD] out because they don’t want me to have children — any more children,” Spears said.

Spears’ anguish over the loss of her reproductive agency was palpable. And her story is one shared by disabled women across the country who are denied the right to make decisions about their sexual and reproductive health.

Ensuring the reproductive rights of disabled women is a professional and personal issue for me. I am a public health researcher at the University of Iowa studying the social factors that influence accessibility for disabled people. I am also a disabled woman who has faced tough decisions about my own sexual and reproductive health.

Disabled women, especially those with intellectual or developmental disabilities, are often trapped by paternalistic decision-making. Courts and caregivers make choices about their lives with little input from the women themselves. Society views this approach as benevolent because women with physical and mental disabilities are often seen as sexually vulnerable and in need of protection for their own good. But these beliefs come from the long shadow of eugenics and the stigma and stereotypes that continue to dominate conversations around disability and reproduction.

The long shadow of eugenics

The United States has a history of forced sterilization policies that targeted disabled people, women of color, and those living in poverty.

These policies arose from the 1927 Supreme Court case Buck v. Bell, which permitted the sterilization of Carrie Bell, a young woman deemed “feebleminded” by her adoptive family and, eventually, the Supreme Court. Buck v. Bell became a bellwether of the eugenics movement, which sought to eliminate “negative traits” through selective breeding. The ruling opened the door for an estimated 60,000 to 70,000 forced sterilizations in the U.S. in the 20th century.

Buck v. Bell is a Supreme Court ruling that legalized forced sterilization of people deemed ‘unfit.’

Buck v. Bell and the U.S. eugenics movement has affected both state disability policies and reproductive health services. Today, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recognizes that disability is not a reason for sterilization, and that people should be able to make decisions about their own health as much as possible. However, this is only an ethics guideline for medical professionals, not enforced by robust public policy.

Stigma, stereotypes and reproductive agency

Stigma refers to the discrimination and exclusion that individuals or groups face when certain characteristics are labeled as undesirable. Disabled people often experience stigma because their bodies fall outside of what is considered “normal” by society.

One way that stigma takes shape against disabled women is that they are often stereotyped as uninterested, asexual or incapable of consent. These stereotypes prevent honest conversations with health care providers, sex education teachers and others about access to reproductive care and contraception. Disabled women also report barriers to accessing family planning counseling because of these assumptions.

Paternalism, or when an authority figure limits an individual’s or group’s freedom in what they perceive to be their best interests, also affects the sexual autonomy of disabled people. One way it manifests is through consent determination, a legal strategy that attempts to gauge whether a disabled person is capable of consenting to a sexual relationship.

While it is supposed to protect disabled people from sexual abuse, prevention of sexual activity does not necessarily equate to protection. Disabled people are still at an increased risk of experiencing sexual abuse and violence regardless of their consent determination status. Interviews with women with mild intellectual disability have revealed that they felt unable to report sexual abuse and that they lacked both social support and the ability to protect themselves.

Consent determination may also block access to sex education because it’s deemed unnecessary. Inadequate sex and healthy relationship education are risk factors for sexual abuse and violence. Disabled women are less likely than their nondisabled peers to receive formal sex education; if they do, it is often long past when it’s age-appropriate. For instance, one disabled woman deemed incapable of consent was informed by her high school that she was “exempt” from taking sex ed without being asked if she wanted to take the class.

Toward reproductive justice

Spears’ conservatorship centered around the stereotype that disabled people are unable to manage their own lives. However, she had produced four albums and gone on several world tours in this 13-year period. That she was still not allowed to act on her desire to have children is a testament to the enduring stigma around disability and especially mental illness.

Recognizing the reproductive rights of disabled women is about promoting reproductive justice for all women. This includes ending what one research subject called the “roaring silence” around sterilization, supporting evidence-based sex education, and fighting disability health stereotypes.

The disability rights slogan “Nothing About Us Without Us” conveys that disabled people know what is best for them and should not be excluded from conversations about their own health. And this includes reproductive rights.

# # #

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Michaela Kathleen Curran, Postdoctoral Fellow in Public Health, University of Iowa

13 organizing hacks for your tidiest fridge yet

I don’t have the prettiest of refrigerators. It is old, white (more like cream at this point), noisy, and inconvenient — standard New York City rental fridge. I spend hours dreaming of having a kitchen with a spanking new, stainless steel, French-door version. Ice-maker, wine chiller, giant freezer and all . . . (Hey, at least I’m not asking for a built-in camera!)

Until such a time manifests though, the one thing that I do have is a pretty organized refrigerator. I mean, you could surprise me with a visit, walk straight up the fridge, open it — and not recoil in horror. In fact, you might even remark on how clean it is, how easily you can find the labeled leftovers, the condiments, and how tidily the herbs are stored.

The reason for all the effort I put into keeping my refrigerator organized is that I really can’t cook in a kitchen that’s less than spotless — countertop, stove, cutting board and all. That quest for tidiness has prompted me to pick up a few tips and tricks along the way. Not just for organizing my fridge but making everything in it last that much longer, and stay that much fresher. Here are some of them that have worked for me.

***

Make your fridge so fresh, so clean 

1. Label everything

Says staff writer Kelly Vaughan, “Chefs swear by this trick — and after working in a restaurant, I do, too. No longer do you have to open a container, give it a sniff, and say to your roommate or partner, ‘When did we have these mashed potatoes?’ The label tells you everything you need to know.”

2. Separate certain fruits and vegetables 

Says market editor Jada Wong, “I learned from my mom at a young age to take fruits and vegetables out of any plastic wrapping or produce bags before putting them in the fridge or on the counter. It helps with proper airflow so fruit won’t get too ripe before you can eat them, or worse, develop mold.”

Plus, she points out, “I put most of my fruits and veggies in the crisper drawer or middle shelf of the fridge. It’s key to actually eating them. And I say most because I leave ‘hard’ fruit out on the counter, like apples, pears, and nectarines. ‘Soft’ fruit like mangoes, plums, and berries go in the fridge.’

3. Make use of baskets and bins 

Home52 editorial lead Arati Menon was fed up with parting ways with “condiments, chutneys, and spreads, teeny containers of takeaway sauces, and mason jars of pickled veggies” from a lack of fridge organization. She’s probably the ultimate when it comes to keeping things clean, but losing track of items within the fridge was plaguing her, so she turned to a storage solution she’d employed time and again in other parts of her home, but hadn’t thought of using in the fridge: bins. “If it’s good for your pantry, it’s probably good for the fridge,” Arati says, “after all, the same principles apply: zone, label, stack, elevate. So, why stop at bins? Why not employ all pantry organizers — trays, baskets, Lazy Susans, even tiered shelf organizers?”

4. Treat soft herbs like a bouquet of flowers 

If I could count the number of times I’ve bought fresh cilantro, and watched as its leaves went yellow and then brown! It’s usually at that point that I jump in (I’m working on it!) and try desperately to save the handful that are still half-green. To avoid this, writer Lisa Kolb suggests treating soft, leafy herbs (like basil, cilantro, parsley, or tarragon) as if they were fresh-cut flowers in The Best Way to Store Fresh Herbs. Simply trim a small amount off the stems and place the bunch in a glass or Mason jar filled with water. Cover loosely with a piece of Bee’s Wrap and store in the middle shelf of the fridge — they’ll last for at least a week.

5. Give pantry products a new home 

I’m going to let you in on something that took me by total surprise: There are a number of items that you currently store on the shelves of your pantry that would fare much much better in your refrigerator. I’m talking soy sauce, maple syrup, organic nut butters, soy and nut milks, and whole-grain and nut flours, just to name a few. The one that surprised me most? Yeast. Yes, yeast is actually best stored in a chilly environment, like the condiment shelf in your fridge, according to this Food52 Hotline thread. The reason for this is that yeast is easily destroyed upon exposure to light and heat. For longer-term storage, you can even keep yeast (in an airtight container) in your freezer, where it’ll last for up to a few months.

6. Save all your deli containers 

Assigning editor Rebecca Firkser packs all her leftovers “in quart, pint, or half-pint deli containers. Every size uses the same lid, they stack on top of each other neatly, and don’t leak if they accidentally get knocked over — they’re the only ‘Tupperware’ I own!” And if you’re wondering how long to keep these handy storage containers, we’ve got you.

7. Let eggs and dairy chill out 

For the longest time, I believed that dairy — milk, cream, eggs, and cheese should be stored on the inside door of the fridge. Turns out that’s not the best idea. Products like these belong in a spot with a constant cold temperature, like the top shelf of your fridge, so they don’t spoil. Storing them here also makes them easier to grab when you’re rushing to put together breakfast before heading out the door.

8. Give your lemons and limes a drink of water to last longer 

Contrary to common practice (even I’m guilty of this), the countertop is no place for your lemons and limes to live, according to food writer Valerio Farris. They’ll last much longer — up to a month! — if you store them in your refrigerator, sealed in a bag or container that’s filled with a little bit of water. The logic: Lemons and limes (and other citrus) are super porous, so they’ll dry out more quickly when left out in the open air.

9. Meat and fish belong at the bottom 

“Not only does storing meat, poultry, and fish at the bottom of the freezer keep them colder,” says Kelly, “but it also prevents cross-contamination. Otherwise, if you store it on a top shelf and the package leaks, the meat drippings may fall onto raw produce, packages of butter, or anything else stored in your fridge, which can easily spread bacteria.”

10. Store and arrange items according to what other items they go with 

This might seem like a well-duh tip, but you’d be surprised how many people toss things into their fridge with wild abandon. The next time you’re cleaning out your fridge (or stocking it with a fresh set of groceries), take a look at things that go together. I always keep my peanut butter and jelly, eggs and milk, and deli meats and cheeses all side by side for convenience. Think about your daily eating habits and find the pairings you reach for most often! The less time I spend hunting around my fridge and making things topple (and spill), the happier I am, so this makes complete sense.

11. Line shelves and drawers 

We can all admit that our refrigerators have a tendency to get a little messy, right? Sometimes it’s just too exhausting after a full night of cooking dinner and doing all the dishes to also wipe down the shelves in the fridge. Drips of opened drinks, drops of jam, crumbs from a poorly-wrapped pastry, they love to linger. The best (and easiest) way to combat this problem is to line the drawers and shelves with a heavy-duty, water-resistant liner that wipes up easily and can be removed for deep cleaning. One like this that has ridges is ideal because it will allow airflow above and below, preventing mold or mildew from any pooling liquids.

Jada does something similar, and uses “old sheet pans and baking trays that have warped or peeled as shelf liners instead of traditional plastic liners. They’re much easier to pull out (almost like a drawer) and the raised edges help contain spills a lot better, too. They also come in handy when I’m prepping large meals and want to group certain ingredients together — this way, I can pull out everything I need at once without having to dig around.”

12. Consider a Lazy Susan

Editorial lead Margaret Eby is a self-proclaimed “condiment maximalist,” which means “that I both have at least three kinds of hot sauce at all times, and that they tend to get lost in the depths of my fridge if I’m not careful. After accidentally rebuying the same kind of mustard that I already had twice, I finally invested in a clear, small, turntable (or a ‘Lazy Susan’ but listen, Susan, I know you were framed) for my fridge. It means that I can keep all those little bottles and cans organized, and that I just need to give it a spin to see my whole collection.”

13. Bonus tip: For untouched cakes, frosting acts as a seal 

Many frosted cakes can be stored at room temperature, but there are a few exceptions: if it’s hot and humid; or if the frosting is made using cream cheese. In both scenarios, you can store the unwrapped, frosted cake in the fridge for a few days, according to food blogger Stacie Billis. The frosting makes a seal that keeps the cake from drying out, so you won’t need to wrap it in plastic wrap and ruin your beautiful icing work.

A love letter to the vastly underrated kidney bean

One unexpected consequence of this year and a half of relentless home cooking is that I’ve developed an affinity for ingredient deep dives. It usually goes as follows: I’ll stumble upon a new-to-me or long-overlooked ingredient, and spend a week or so cooking it in as many ways as possible using (mostly) what I have on hand.

A few months back, while sleepwalking through my weekly grocery store trip, an unassuming bag of dried kidney beans jolted me to attention. Why do I almost never cook with kidney beans when I’ve never met a bean I don’t like? I wondered, hopefully not out loud.

I’ve never been all that into chili, so I decided to start my kidney bean journey a bit further afield — in Afghanistan via lubya, a sweet tomato curry infused with coriander, dried mint, and caramelized onions. A few days later, I went somewhere near Northern Italy, cooking down the kidney beans with the minestrone-esque flavors of cabbage, carrots, farro, and a Parmesan cheese rind.

When I posted my little kidney-bean diptych on Instagram, Yoshi Yamada, friend and chef/owner of fun-loving Indian restaurant Superkhana International in Chicago, chimed in to profess his love of kidney beans, calling them by their Hindi name, rajma (which, by the way, is also the name of a North Indian stew starring the titular ingredient). Our caption exchange sparked a real-life chat during which we waxed poetic on this special bean that is often, inconceivably, overlooked in a lot of households.

“I love kidney beans’ texture; I love their heartiness and I love their flavor,” Yamada said. “There’s something about the flavor that reminds me of the adzuki bean paste used in [the Japanese rice cake dessert] mochi — this vague, almost fruity quality.”

We agreed that while everyone occasionally needs the convenience and emotional support of canned beans, few things surpass the cooking liquid that red kidney beans produce when they’re prepared from dried — a rich, syrupy, funky sauce all its own. It lends depth of flavor and luscious texture to dal makhani, a creamy stew of black lentils (urad dal) and rajma that’s perfumed with warming spices and plenty of ginger and garlic, then enriched with cream and butter. I all but begged Yamada to share Superkhana’s version as a fittingly celebratory end to my week of kidney bean cookery.

This dish calls for maybe a quarter of the amount of kidney beans to lentils, meaning with every other bite you get a toothsome counterpoint to the silky-soft dal. The abundant dried spices — including sweet and nutty fenugreek; fruity, bright-red Kashmiri chile powder; and savory asafoetida — are as irreplaceable as the beans and lentils themselves, creating a symphony of fiery heat, sweetness, nuttiness and savory, smoky depth. Still, Yamada insisted that this hearty assemblage is merely a blueprint ripe for experimentation.

“There are certain expectations that go with the dish, but the soaked beans, aromatics and powdered spices can go in any direction,” he said. “I’ve taken it really cumin heavy, or added just a little turmeric and simmered the beans really lightly. There’s a lot of variance within the application of spices alone.”

However creative you get, please don’t replace that glorious, starchy-sweet kidney bean.

***

Recipe: Superkhana International’s Dal Makhani

Serves 4 to 6

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups dried urad dal
  • 3/4 cup dried red kidney beans
  • Canola or grapeseed oil, as needed
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 3-inch knob ginger, minced
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 green chile, halved (optional)
  • 2 tablespoons ground coriander
  • 2 tablespoons cumin seeds
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon garam masala
  • 1 1/2 tablespoon Kashmiri chile powder
  • 1 1/2 tsp asafoetida
  • 1 1/2 tsp dried fenugreek
  • 2 cups chopped tomato
  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 3/4 cup heavy cream

Directions:

  1. Rinse the kidney beans and black lentils thoroughly in a mesh strainer. Place them in a large pot, cover them with water and soak them for at least 8 hours or overnight. Drain and rinse the soaked lentils and beans, and set aside.

  2. In a Dutch oven or other large, heavy-bottomed pot with a lid, heat a few tablespoons of neutral oil over medium-high heat. Add the onions, ginger, garlic, chile and a generous pinch of salt. Sauté for about 2 minutes, then tip in the coriander, cumin, cinnamon, garam masala, Kashmiri chile powder (KCP), asafoetida and methi. Cook for 30 seconds to 1 minute, stirring constantly. Keep a pint of water handy throughout this portion of the method, and add a few splashes as needed, as the bottom of the pot has a tendency to burn.

  3. Add the tomatoes and cook for a few more minutes, until they start to break down, again adding splashes of water as needed. Add the lentils and beans and about 6 cups of water. Bring to a boil, then lower the heat to medium, and cook, partially covered until the lentils and beans are soft while still holding themselves together, 45 minutes to an hour (depending on how long you pre-soaked them).

  4. Add 1 to 2 teaspoons salt, taste, and season again if needed with additional salt and Kashmiri chile powder if you like more heat. Remove and discard the green chile. Cut the heat to low, and stir in the butter and cream. Taste again, and adjust with additional cream, salt and Kashmiri chile powder. Serve immediately over rice.

How the once-feared mu variant all but disappeared

In September, news broke that a new coronavirus mutation — the mu variant, formally known as B.1.621 — could potentially evade vaccine-induced immunity.

“This variant has a constellation of mutations that suggests that it would evade certain antibodies, not only monoclonal antibodies, but vaccine- and convalescent serum-induced antibodies,” President Joe Biden’s COVID-19 adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci told reporters in September. “But there isn’t a lot of clinical data to suggest that. It is mostly laboratory in-vitro data.”

At the time, the idea of a vaccine-resistant variant sent a shockwave of fear through the world. The dreaded delta variant was already known to be more resistant to vaccines than the original SARS-CoV-2 virus. Could mu, which was first discovered in Colombia, be worse than delta? Indeed, mu appeared to have specific mutations that have been associated with resistance to immunity, as well a mutation known as P681H that has been linked to accelerated transmission.

Now, nearly a month later — long after the World Health Organization dubbed the mu variant one “of interest” that needed to be monitored — data from outbreak.info shows the mu variant hasn’t been detected in the U.S., nor anywhere in the world, since September 21, 2021.

Does that mean the mu is no longer a threat? The short answer is: probably. But Joseph Fauver, an associate research scientist at the Yale School of Public Health, wouldn’t go as far as saying it’s been “eradicated,” as some news outlets have reported either.

“To say it was ‘eradicated’ would imply that we, humans, went out of our way to make that happen … but as far as mu or B.1.621 longer being around, yeah, I would totally buy that,” Fauver said.

Fauver clarified: “What actually happened was that it was effectively out competed by delta.”


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A similar trend has been observed with the alpha variant, or B.1.1.7, which was first found in the United Kingdom. According to outbreak.info, a multi-institution coronavirus public health database which collects genomic data from the GISAID Initiative, B.1.1.7 was last detected in the U.S. on September 17, 2021. It was last detected anywhere in the world on September 21, 2021.

As Fauver explained, these dates are derived from the last known genetic detection of each variant in random samples from patients. Because not every COVID-19 case is sampled and DNA tested, there is no way to know with absolute certainty if these variants are indeed still circulating — especially when COVID-19 positive case rates are as high as they are in the United States.

But as weeks go by, the delta variant continues to be the dominant strain worldwide.

Delta’s dominance over the other strains may be a blessing in disguise. Indeed, delta is spreading 50% faster than alpha and is 50% more contagious than previous variants. Yet mu certainly had its own set of troubling mutations.

“Mu contains a suite of mutations that are very concerning,” Fauver said. “Mutations that have been found in a lot of other variants of concerns, specifically in the Spike gene and receptor-binding domain, also by a variety of studies, look to be slightly more immuno-evasive than some of the other variants of concern.”

Fauver added: “If it would not be for delta it may have been much more concerning and it could have gotten to a lot higher frequencies.”

If that’s the case, why did the delta variant win out?

“Million dollar question,” Fauver said. “I can confidently say that delta is more transmissible, but exactly as to why, I think the jury’s still out and there’s still more science to be done.” Fauver speculated it could have to do with something happening at a molecular level. 

If the variants that made up the first part of the pandemic essentially die off, and delta is the dominant one worldwide, does that mean delta is the variant we can expect to stay around long-term? Not yet. That’s because RNA viruses like SARS-CoV-2 are always mutating. While viruses are technically not alive, it is their nature to mutate and evolve as they infect hosts’ cells and replicate.

In fact, the delta variant has already mutated— just not in a way that’s been significant to humans. In general, the rate at which mutations happen depend on the virus.

“Viruses replicate and survive and pass their genes to the next generation just by making more copies of themselves,” said Sasan Amini, founder and CEO of Clear Labs, a private genomics company. “This replication process is not a perfect process, meaning that while you’re going through the replication process errors will be introduced. But these errors are actually being corrected and the result of that actually ends up creating copies that are almost identical to each other.”

Many mutations get eliminated in the process of natural selection, Amini said, but sometimes mutants get a competitive advantage— like delta.

“Those mutants actually end up replicating faster, being more infectious, and end up over time becoming the more prevalent part of the population,” Amini said. “And that is pretty much what happened.”

Amini said some of delta’s mutations are similar to mu, but not all. This is all to say that it’s possible that delta could mutate into something different.

“Whatever is defined as delta today is not going to be pretty much the only SARS-CoV-2 that you will see in future,” Amini said. “And as a result of that actually means that it is very essential for any government entity, public health entity, all of the public health response, to surveil and sequence emerging and also existing versions of SARS-CoV-2.”

Does this mean an even worse iteration of delta awaits? Fauver said he’s not in the “prediction business,” but said that a lot of mutations seen in variants of concern are shared. They have, he said, the same “repertoire.”

“Is there some new suite of mutations out there, waiting to be found, to make the virus even worse? I have no idea,” he said. “Delta is really transmissible, it is a really bad virus, and I hope it doesn’t really get any worse than this.”

Mitch McConnell just made a mockery of Kyrsten Sinema and Joe Manchin’s filibuster defense

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell seems to be almost intentionally making a mockery of the small number of Democratic senators who continue to defend the filibuster.

Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona have vocally opposed any effort to change the chamber’s rules that require 60 votes to proceed on most legislation. Many Democratic lawmakers and advocates have called for the filibuster to be abolished, which would make it easier for the party to enact various pillars of its agenda.

The filibuster issue has once again come into focus because the debt ceiling. The American government is approaching the statutory limit on the amount of money it can borrow to fund the spending that Congress has already mandated, and if the limit is reached sometime later in the month, the country may go into default. The actual consequences of default are unknown because it has never happened before, but many analysts believe it would be economically calamitous and a devastating blow to the United States’ financial standing.

Few people seriously think default is a good idea. But McConnell has taken the firm position that every Republican in the Senate will refuse to vote to raise the debt ceiling, and will in fact use the filibuster to prevent Democrats from doing so. His intention appears to be to force Democrats to use the budget reconciliation process in order to waste time and make their lives more difficult — even though the Democrats consistently voted with the GOP to raise the debt ceiling when Donald Trump was president. Democrats have refused to play along with McConnell’s threats, setting up an extraordinarily high-stakes game of legislative chicken.

The Democrats do have another option to raise the debt limit. They could unilaterally change the filibuster rules to allow for the debt ceiling to be easily raised with just 51 votes. Manchin has already ruled this out, however, and Sinema likely agrees, since she’s shown no sign of wavering from her previous stance.

The problem for them is that McConnell’s hostage-taking exposes the central argument both Sinema and Manchin have made for keeping the filibuster as a fraud.

In separate op-eds, they have claimed that the 60-vote filibuster threshold encourages bipartisanship. Sinema wrote:

I understand bipartisanship seems outdated to many pundits. But the difficult work of collaboration is what we expect in Arizona. And I still believe it is the best way to identify realistic solutions — instead of escalating all-or-nothing political battles that result in no action, or in whipsawing federal policy reversals.

Since I was elected to Congress, a bipartisan approach has produced laws curbing suicide among our troops and veterans, boosting American manufacturing, delivering for Native American communities, combating hate crimes, and protecting public lands.

It’s no secret that I oppose eliminating the Senate’s 60-vote threshold. I held the same view during three terms in the U.S. House, and said the same after I was elected to the Senate in 2018. If anyone expected me to reverse my position because my party now controls the Senate, they should know that my approach to legislating in Congress is the same whether in the minority or majority.

Once in a majority, it is tempting to believe you will stay in the majority. But a Democratic Senate minority used the 60-vote threshold just last year to filibuster a police reform proposal and a covid-relief bill that many Democrats viewed as inadequate. Those filibusters were mounted not as attempts to block progress, but to force continued negotiations toward better solutions.

And Manchin wrote:

The filibuster is a critical tool to protecting that input and our democratic form of government. That is why I have said it before and will say it again to remove any shred of doubt: There is no circumstance in which I will vote to eliminate or weaken the filibuster. The time has come to end these political games, and to usher a new era of bipartisanship where we find common ground on the major policy debates facing our nation.

Many have already criticized these arguments, pointing out that the filibuster incentivizes inaction rather than compromise and that eliminating the 60-vote threshold might actually increase the amount of bipartisan legislation.

But the GOP’s current use of the filibuster is the height of absurdity. It has nothing to do with bipartisanship. Even McConnell explicitly agrees that the debt ceiling must be raised. He is simply using the filibuster and the threat of economic disaster to force the Democrats to run through procedural hoops that will make it harder to achieve their policy agenda. It is exactly the kind of “political game” that Manchin said he wanted to end by keeping the filibuster.

It would be hard to invent a more clownish and ridiculous use of the filibuster if you tried. And it’s entirely enabled by Sinema and Manchin’s stubborn insistence that the filibuster is good for democracy.

On Tuesday night, President Biden told reporters that changing the filibuster to raise the debt ceiling is on the table, in his mind.

But even if most Senate Democrats agree, they need complete unanimity as a party for the plan to work. McConnell, for his part, doesn’t seem to think Sinema or Manchin will be budging. As NBC News’ Sahil Kapur reported on Tuesday, when McConnell was asked about the possibility of a change to the filibuster, he literally smiled.

Why Joe Biden remains hostage to the GOP’s death cult

President Joe Biden’s administration, like the rest of those in non-idiot America, is quickly getting fed up with the antics of the right-wing death cult that has made their “right” to spread COVID-19 the center of their political identity.

On Monday, Attorney General Merrick Garland announced that the Department of Justice will be taking measures to address “a disturbing spike in harassment, intimidation, and threats of violence” against public school employees at the hands of right-wingers who demand schools do nothing to prevent outbreaks. The administration is also fighting Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis for refusing to cooperate with federal programs to fight COVID-19 and Arizona’s Republican Gov. Doug Ducey for blocking COVID-19 mitigation measures in schools

Meanwhile, right-wing media continues to heavily push the idea that being anti-vaccine is the great culture war of our time.

Tucker Carlson keeps hyping the lie that vaccines are dangerous, most recently by hosting conspiracy theorist and Republican Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin on his show to flog the idea taking medically useless horse paste is better than listening to medical experts. Media Matters, a left-leaning media watchdog group, has carefully documented how Fox News has undermined vaccines on a nearly daily basis for six months, hyping a bunch of fake “cures” and “treatments”  — including bear bile, vaping, and sunlight — as alternatives to vaccination. 

The death toll from this right-wing politicization of the pandemic is staggering.

Over 100,000 people have died from COVID-19 since mid-June when the vaccine was available for free to anyone who wanted it. That number doesn’t even include all the people who have died because COVID-19 patients are overcrowding hospitals and making it difficult for other patients to get timely care. Meanwhile, the anti-vaccine protests are just getting uglier and more violent, which is why the Biden administration has been forced to act. 

The White House has been desperate to depoliticize the pandemic since Biden first stepped into office, and for good reason. The right-wing grandstanding about it is killing people and sowing chaos (which is no doubt the point). But Biden’s initial strategy of trying to make nice and appeal to people’s rationality has clearly backfired, creating an opportunity for right-wingers to dig their heels in and make vaccine refusal central to their war on the rest of the country. So even as the administration has finally started to embrace vaccine mandates, they still don’t seem to understand that the best way to finally end the COVID-19 culture war is to roll out vaccine mandates far more aggressively than they are doing. 

This may sound counterintuitive. Wouldn’t more aggressive vaccine mandates cause an ugly backlash from the anti-vaccination set?

Yes, it would.

But the move would be ripping-the-bandaid-off style pain: sharp but over quickly. The current strategy of slow-rolling the vaccine mandates is prolonging the controversy, giving the right months and months to make hay they wouldn’t have if the mandates would have only come down more swiftly. Faster and more aggressive mandates will get shots into arms sooner, causing the pandemic to wind down and forcing right-wing media to find some other issue to create needless political drama over. (Dr. Seuss and Mr. Potato Head are feeling neglected!) The vaccine issue only has political salience because COVID-19 transmission numbers are still high, giving conservatives the chance to feel they’re “owning the liberals” by prolonging the pandemic. Take that from them, and they’ll move on to something else. 


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Early results from vaccine mandates demonstrate that loud-mouthed anti-vaxxers talk a big game, but that meaningful opposition to vaccines evaporates in the face of real consequences. Time and again, the prophesized mass resignations in the face of employment-based vaccine mandates don’t materialize. The vast majority of the unvaccinated just shut up and get the shot already. In New York, mandates on health care and public school workers did not cause major staffing shortages. Instead, unvaccinated employees rushed at the last minute to get the shot, bringing vaccination rates up to 92% among health care workers and 96% among teachers. Private employers are also finding that mandates jack the vaccination rates up to over 90% pretty swiftly. 

The vaccine inoculates the body against the coronavirus, but it should also be understood to inoculate the mind against anti-vaxx theatrics.

Resisting the vaccine only makes sense before you get it. Flaunting an unvaccinated status to trigger the liberals is a lot less fun when you’re not actually unvaccinated. But most importantly, the pandemic just won’t be a flashpoint for political theatrics if case rates start going down rapidly, which will happen only if shots start going into arms at a faster pace. 

Yet, while the Biden administration has accepted the necessity of vaccine mandates, they are still holding back from the aggressive enforcement needed to actually work on the anti-vaxx set. For instance, while Biden announced a sweeping mandate affecting every business with over 100 employees, the actual rollout has been bizarrely slow. It’s been almost a month since the announcement, but the actual policy details haven’t been released and there is no timeline for when employers should actually start complying. Unfortunately, as the New York example shows, holdouts will wait until the last minute to get their shot. Slow-walking this policy is deeply foolish, and dangerous, to boot — every day that there’s no deadline to get the shot, tens of thousands of people are needlessly infected. 


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The failure to ban the unvaccinated from planes is a similar oversight. The administration has a real opportunity here to force millions of people to choose between holiday plans or their vaccine resistance. Not only would this policy save thousands of lives, but it would also depoliticize the COVID-19 discourse at family dinner tables across the country. Conservative relatives would be vaccinated and thus far less likely to grandstand and start fights over this issue. That depoliticization is significant and would echo through the national discourse. 

Ultimately, the right’s culture war over COVID-19 may burn itself out. Case rates are currently falling across the country, in no small part because vaccine refusers keep catching the virus and developing immunity the hard way. There may be another surge in the winter, but there’s a very real chance that, by the midterms, case rates are low enough that masks are gone and the issue doesn’t have the political salience the parasitic culture warriors need to keep their tantrums going. 

Still, why risk it?

Vaccines will wind down the pandemic much faster than letting right-wing Americans inoculate themselves, one infection at a time. The political fights over COVID-19 don’t end until the pandemic does. And the more aggressive the vaccine mandates, the sooner that will happen. Mandates won’t just save lives, they’ll rid us of this idiotic death cult culture war once and for all. 

Idaho governor leaves town; lt. gov tries to ban vaccine mandates, deploy National Guard

Idaho Gov. Brad Little vowed to rescind an executive order issued by fellow Republican Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin on Tuesday banning vaccine requirements while he traveled to Texas for a photo-op at the southern border.

Idaho’s constitution requires the lieutenant governor to serve as the state’s acting governor when the governor leaves the state, which can be especially problematic because the two run for office separately rather than on a joint ticket. McGeachin, a far-right Republican, has repeatedly clashed with Little, and plans to run against him in the Republican primary next year.

McGeachin issued an executive order on Tuesday banning schools and businesses from requiring COVID vaccines or mandatory testing while Little was in Texas with nine other Republican governors for a joint appearance attacking President Biden’s handling of immigration. Little had already issued an executive order in April to ban state agencies from requiring vaccines, but not schools or businesses. McGeachin bragged on Twitter that she had “fixed” Little’s directive.

McGeachin’s order came as the state grapples with an alarming shortage of ICU beds amid Idaho’s worst surge of infections yet. Some hospitals in the largely rural state of 1.8 million people — less than half the population of Los Angeles — have been forced to ration care for the first time ever. State health officials have been particularly concerned about the rise of hospitalizations among children. Only 52% of eligible residents have been fully vaccinated, one of the lowest rates in the country, and some large counties have vaccination rates well below 40%.

Little said on Tuesday that he will be “rescinding and reversing” any actions taken by McGeachin when he returns.

“I am in Texas performing my duties as the duly elected Governor of Idaho, and I have not authorized the Lt. Governor to act on my behalf,” he said in a statement.


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McGeachin also unsuccessfully tried to deploy the state’s National Guard to the southern border, but Maj. Gen. Michael Garshak, who heads the state National Guard, told her she did not have the authority.

“As of Wednesday, my constitutional authority as Governor affords me the power of activating the Idaho National Guard,” McGeachin responded to Garshak in a letter obtained by the Associated Press. “As the Adjutant General, I am requesting information from you on the steps needed for the Governor to activate the National Guard.”

But Garshak rebuffed McGeachin again, writing: “I am unaware of any request for Idaho National Guard assistance under the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC) from Texas or Arizona. As you are aware, the Idaho National Guard is not a law enforcement agency.”

Little said that McGeachin’s request to the National Guard came before he had even left the state.

“Attempting to deploy our National Guard for political grandstanding is an affront to the Idaho constitution and insults the men and women who have dedicated their life to serving our state and the country,” he said, adding that he had previously sent Idaho state troopers to the border to “support drug interdiction efforts.”

Other Republicans also slammed McGeachin’s power grab.

“How stupid can you be?” Republican state Rep. Greg Chaney questioned on Twitter.

State House Speaker Scott Bedke, a fellow Republican who is running to replace McGeachin as lieutenant governor, called her executive order a “complete grandstand and abuse of her political office in an attempt to influence voters.”

It is the second time McGeachin has used her powers as acting governor to issue COVID-related executive orders while Little was away. In May, she issued an executive order banning mask mandates. Little rescinded the order after returning from a governor’s conference in Tennessee, arguing that those decisions should be left to local officials.

“Taking the earliest opportunity to act solitarily on a highly politicized, polarizing issue without conferring with local jurisdictions, legislators and the sitting governor is, simply put, an abuse of power,” Little said at the time. “This kind of over-the-top executive action amounts to tyranny — something we all oppose.”

The pair previously clashed over COVID restrictions last year. McGeachin opened her family’s bar in Idaho Falls in the summer of 2020 after Little had ordered all bars to close. That October, she appeared in a video holding a gun and a Bible and questioned whether the pandemic was even real. This spring, McGeachin attended a protest in Boise where anti-maskers encouraged kids to burn their masks on the Capitol steps.

McGeachin, a former state lawmaker, in May announced that she would run to unseat Little, vowing that under her leadership “you will certainly not be required to wear a mask.”

Lindsey Graham gets booed after asking Republicans to consider vaccinations

Sen. Lindsey Graham R-S.C., was booed on Saturday for encouraging people to get vaccinated against COVID-19. 

In a video from a Republican event in a South Carolina country club event, Graham tells attendees “If you haven’t had the vaccine you ought to think about getting it because if you’re my age -” until he was quickly interrupted by booing and jeering. 

The audience replied “No!” 

Graham responded, “I didn’t tell you to get it, you ought to think about it.” Again, the audience booed and shouted “No!” again. 

Graham mentioned how an overwhelming majority of hospitalized COVID-19 patients are unvaccinated. 

“Well I’m glad I got it. 92% of the people in the hospitals in South Carolina aren’t vaccinated.” said Graham, only to be heckled a third time by the crowd. “False!” said one attendee. 

Graham is one of many prominent Republican politicians that have expressed support and encouragement for people to get a COVID-19 vaccine. In August, Graham tested positive for COVID-19, and he wrote on Twitter, “I am very glad I was vaccinated because without vaccination I am certain I would not feel as well as I do now. My symptoms would be far worse.” 

Despite overwhelming evidence the vaccine is safe and effective, and encouragement from Republican leaders, Graham along with many of his colleagues have faced criticism and backlash from Republican supporters for encouraging the vaccine. In August, former President Trump told supporters in an Alabama rally, “Take the vaccine! I did it, it’s good. Take the vaccines!” The crowd promptly responded with boos. 

Prominent Republicans have faced so much opposition from their own base for supporting the vaccines because of misinformation that has been mainly circulating among Republicans. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., was suspended on Twitter for tweeting the vaccines were “failing”.

According to The New York Times, there is a large partisan divide between who is vaccinated. Almost every state that voted for Biden in the 2020 election has a higher vaccination rate than almost every state that voted for Trump. 

Graham tried to placate the audience by reiterating that he opposes vaccine mandates. “I’m with you on ‘let’s don’t mandate.’ I’m with you, that is probably unconstitutional.” said Graham. 
 

A 4-ingredient marinade for sheet pan tofu that gets dinner on the table in no time

When I was in late middle school or early high school, I went through a decent vegetarian phase. I loved the plant-based foods that I would eat at restaurants like gorgeous, vegetable-laden curries and stir-frys. However, I wasn’t particularly adept in the kitchen at that point, so I mostly lived on chocolate soy milk pudding cups and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches

My parents, bless them, were incredibly supportive, and I distinctly remember my mother driving me to the local health food store to stock up on items other than Annie’s shells and white cheddar studded with frozen broccoli (you know, for health!). We slowly rolled up and down the aisles, which smelled of boxed incense and a new delivery of fresh-baked sourdough. And we picked up items that I could use to make a complete meal: whole grain pasta, coconut milk, miso soup packets, a basket of vegetables, a smattering of nuts and seeds. 

Suddenly, we turned the corner and were face-to-face with white, gelatinous blocks of tofu. I’d only ever seen and eaten tofu after it had been cooked — typically fried crisp and served with rice — so I wasn’t quite sure what to do with it. It seemed like a very vegetarian thing to buy, so we did. 

RELATED: A 2-ingredient marinade for never-dry chicken breasts

That block of tofu sat unused in the refrigerator for a while, until I sliced off a single sliver — like a butcher shaving a portion of pastrami — and pan-fried it. There was no seasoning, no preparation — only heat and a prayer. Unsurprisingly, it wasn’t very good. 

The rest of the block of tofu was mixed into fruit smoothies for a serving of protein. Though I continued to order tofu while out, I refrained from making it at home until recently. 

Things shifted after I watched crispy tofu tutorials by Sophia Roe and Bettina Makalintal. Both recommend preparing your tofu beforehand — either freezing and thawing it, or pressing the water out of it — and coating it in cornstarch after marinating. The result is cubed tofu with a shatteringly crisp exterior, a tender interior and a wide variety of flavoring opportunities. 


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My Kentucky is going to show here, but when I set about making my perfect weeknight marinade, I immediately reached for the bourbon (specifically, Old Forester). It’s actually a great multi-purpose ingredient because of the nuance of flavor: some oakiness, a little peppery kick and some caramelized sweetness. I decided to play up that sweetness with a hint of maple syrup, which is cut with some apple cider vinegar. Finally, garlic adds a pungent, savory note. 

If you prefer, you can pan-fry your tofu (which is what Makalintal recommends), but you can also place the marinade and cornstarch-drenched tofu on a sheet pan, flipping halfway through cooking, for a similarly crisp effect.

***

Recipe: Bourbon Maple Sheet Pan Tofu 

Serves 4

Ingredients:

  • 4 tablespoons of bourbon 
  • 1 tablespoon of maple syrup
  • 2 tablespoons of apple cider vinegar
  • 2 cloves of garlic, minced
  • 1 12-ounce block of firm tofu, drained and cubed 
  • Cornstarch for coating 
  • Neutral oil
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Directions:

1. In a large mixing bowl, combine the bourbon, maple syrup, apple cider vinegar and minced garlic. Season with salt and pepper to taste. After draining the tofu (I like to do this by placing the block of tofu on a stack of paper towels and pressing it down with a weighted cast iron skillet), cube it and place it into the marinade. Allow it to sit for at least an hour in the refrigerator. 

2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Fill another bowl with enough cornstarch to coat the tofu. Remove the tofu from the marinade, and douse it in the cornstarch. Place the tofu cubes on a sheet pan drizzled with neutral oil. 

3. Bake the tofu for 24 minutes, flipping halfway through. Remove from the oven and salt again to taste. Serve with rice and a side of vegetables, such as steamed broccoli or sugar snap peas. 

More simple sheet pan recipes we love: 

Trump’s coup memo: Lawyers call for probe into author John Eastman

A coalition of over two dozen influential lawyers are calling on the California bar to open an inquiry into John C. Eastman – a right-wing lawyer who has recently come under national scrutiny over his key role in Donald Trump’s failed effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election. 

“The available evidence supports a strong case that the State Bar should investigate whether, in the course of representing Mr. Trump, Mr. Eastman violated his ethical obligations as an attorney by filing frivolous claims, making false statements, and engaging in deceptive conduct,” the group wrote to George Cardona, who handles disciplinary affairs for California bar. 

Eastman’s plot to undermine the 2020 election first emerged in public discourse back in late September, when it was revealed that he had produced a six-step “memo” outlining various ways in which the former president could challenge President Biden’s victory. CNN reported that the memo – first obtained by The Washington Post’s Bob Woodward and Robert Costa for their forthcoming book “Peril” – directed former Vice President Mike Pence to declare Trump the winner by throwing out electors from seven key states in which the former president lost. 

“The main thing here is that Pence should do this without asking for permission — either from a vote of the joint session or from the Court,” the memo read. “The fact is that the Constitution assigns this power to the Vice President as the ultimate arbiter. We should take all of our actions with that in mind.”


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Under Eastman’s plan, neither candidate would garner 270 electoral votes, leaving the U.S. House of Representatives with the final vote. Since the House was Republican-led during Trump’s presidency, Eastman figured that the chamber would vote in the former president’s favor. 

Ultimately, Trump did not have alternate electors to validly appoint, and Pence opted out of the plan, citing his limited roles under the Constitution. 

But the group of attorneys – which include U.C. Berkeley Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky, Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe, and former California judge Thelton Henderson – argue that Eastman’s work is enough to warrant an official probe by the California state bar. 

“The available evidence supports a strong case that … Mr. Eastman violated his ethical obligations as an attorney by filing frivolous claims, making false statements, and engaging in deceptive conduct,” they claimed. “On January 6, 2021, Mr. Eastman continued this pattern of misconduct by giving the crowd at the ‘Stop the Steal’ rally on the National Mall another version of his misleading advice and stating that, by rejecting it, Mr. Pence had proved himself undeserving of his office.”

Eastman, for his part, has tarred their complaint “hyperpartisan and political,” telling CNN: “I trust that the bar association will dispense with it summarily.”

This isn’t the first time that Eastman, once a tenured professor of law and dean at the Chapman University School of Law, has come under fire. Last year, the conservative lawyer wrote an op-ed erroneously alleging that then-vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris did not qualify because she was not an American citizen. The piece was widely panned by legal scholars, but it was reportedly pivotal in helping him establish a relationship with Trump following the 2020 election.