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AOC threatens to blow up bipartisan infrastructure deal after Manchin demands spending “pause”

Second-term progressive Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) stood up to Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) on the question of infrastructure spending.

Manchin, a conservative Democrat, on Thursday had an op-ed published in The Wall Street Journal calling for a “pause” on the $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation bill.

“Instead of rushing to spend trillions on new government programs and additional stimulus funding, Congress should hit a strategic pause on the budget reconciliation legislation,” Manchin wrote.

However, the budget reconciliation legislation amounts to the vast majority of infrastructure spending in President Joe Biden’s “Build Back Better” agenda.

Ocasio-Cortez threatened to block the smaller portion of Biden’s infrastructure agenda, the bipartisan budget framework that Manchin has supported.

She also blasted the bipartisan budget framework as “Exxon lobbyist drafted” and cited climate change as a reason passing the larger legislation is necessary.

Rep. Jared Huffman (D-CA) agreed with Ocasio-Cortez’s attacks on Manchin, also citing climate change.

With disasters occurring from coast-to-coast, the climate change message progressives are using to support passing both bills is also being used by the White House.

“The past few days of Hurricane Ida, wildfires in the West, and unprecedented flash floods in New York and New Jersey are another reminder that the climate crisis is here,” Biden wrote on Thursday.

“We need to be better prepared. That’s why I’m urging Congress to act and pass my Build Back Better plan,” he said, referring to passage of both bills.

Capitol riot commission seeks McCarthy’s phone records following telecom threats

House GOP leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) threatened telecom companies this week if they complied with the Capitol riot House select committee’s request for phone records — and now it seems this threat may have been of a more personal nature.

CNN is reporting that McCarthy “is among a group of GOP lawmakers whose phone records are of interest to the select committee,” which is probing lawmakers’ communications with former President Donald Trump that took place during the deadly riot at the United States Capitol building.

McCarthy earlier this week warned telecom companies that a “Republican majority will not forget” if they provide the Capitol riot commission with telephone records.

Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY), one of the two Republicans on the committee, said that the committee would not bow to McCarthy’s threats.

“We will not be deterred… attempted obstruction and we will not rest until our task is complete” Cheney said.

“Somebody’s got to wear the leather pants”: Rick James doc filmmaker on the infamous rock star

Rick James may be as well known for his No. 1 hit, “Superfreak,” (which featured a hook that allowed it to crossover to white audiences) as he was for his drug addiction and brushes with the law. (James served three years of a five-year sentence for assaulting two women and avoided other convictions.) Moreover, his hook from “Superfreak” was later sampled in MC Hammer’s “U Can’t Touch This,” (earning him more money than the original record). He also became known to a younger generation through the catchphrase, “I’m Rick James, bitch!” when it was said on a segment of “Chappelle’s Show.”

But with Showtime’s “Bitchin’: The Sound and Fury of Rick James,” director Sacha Jenkins uncovers some lesser-known facts about James. He collected money for his mother who was running numbers in Buffalo as a child, and he went AWOL from the Navy, hiding out in Toronto, where he made music with the likes of Levon Helm and Robbie Robertson — before they were “The Band” — as well as Neil Young and Bruce Palmer (pre-“Buffalo Springfield”). James also wrote songs for Motown, but was frustrated at the lack of opportunities, and headed to California, where he eventually started his own band. Wisely, he did not attend Jay Sebring’s party the night of the Tate-LaBianca murders when invited. James also spoke out against MTV for their reluctance to show videos by Black musicians, which did his as much harm as it did good. 

Jenkins’ enjoyable documentary uses animation, archival footage and interviews — with James as well as his daughter Ty, his exes Syville Morgan and Tanya Hijazi, and various bandmates and musicians including Ice Cube and Nile Rodgers, among others — to show James warts and all. His penchant for excessive showmanship may have fueled his self-destruction and years of drug addiction, and his toxic behavior was rooted in his growing up in an abusive household. But “Bitchin'” shows that when James was focused on his music, he was driven and successful. 

Jenkins talked with Salon about Rick James and making “Bitchin’.” 

What do you recall about first hearing Rick James, and what did his music mean to you?

My dad was a filmmaker, Horace Byrd Jenkins III, and he was making a film in New Orleans in the summer of 1981. I remember hearing Rick James and Teena Marie back to back to back that whole summer. I just have such fond memories of that moment. I’m 50 years old, so my memories of Rick James go back that far.

Why make this film now? What motivated you to explore James, whose life was as surprising as it was complicated. You certainly get at both his sound and his fury.

I felt like the way culture works now, particularly for folks of color, the world is way more open and accessible. You can like a little rock and roll and ride a skateboard and still be an authentic African American or Caribbean American. When Rick James was doing what he did, he was stepping out of the box. He wound up making music that was potent because he was a student of many people, places, and cultures, on a very authentic level. He is not just Neil Young’s Black friend; he is Neil Young’s friend. They were collaborating and making music together, and it’s a cultural exchange, and it’s an American-Canadian exchange. He’s in a foreign land on the run from the U.S. Navy. He was a really interesting guy who to me was very contemporary. Look at Pharrell, who has a broad range of influences culturally, from skateboarding, to BMX and to rock and roll, and he has made all this “Black music.” I think Rick James was a prototype of folks like Pharrell. So, making “Bitchin'” was an interesting opportunity to tell a contemporary story about a man who is no longer here. 

In your film, a teacher once said that James would be either a hoodlum or a great entertainer. He is said to have too much adulation, entitlement, and was emotionally ungrounded. What are your observations about his personality? He was a showman, but he was self-destructive. How do you reconcile his genius and toxicity which gets such a balanced treatment in the doc? 

His music and persona are a reflection of his experiences of a Black man in America. America loves when you are creative and “articulate,” which he was by traditional standard of American English. He was a thoughtful, articulate man. He knew how to relate to lots of different people. But when you consider that he is technically introduced to crime at a very young age, so when he’s doing crimes as an adult, then he is being shunned. But why is he doing crimes in the first place? Why was his mother running numbers in the first place? She did it to provide for her family. The young Rick James wouldn’t have been exposed to crime if his mother didn’t have to do it to take care of him and his siblings. I think that who he became and the music he made was a reflection and reaction to his environment. Some things you inherently can’t escape. 

Can you talk about your approach to the narrative? You feature animation and talking heads, interviews and performance clips. Given all that there is to say about James, what decisions did you make about the anecdotes to include?

In many ways, he was a sort of Forest Gump of music culture for a few decades. Finding stories that were both sensational but also spoke to passions and convictions. He railed against MTV who wouldn’t play his music, or allegedly, in a cocaine fit, when the record label didn’t do what he wanted on the promotional side of things — he spoke out. A lot of the things we chose to highlight, particularly in the animation, seemed incredible and over the top, but they were also a window into who he really was in ways that archival footage couldn’t do or someone telling a story about his exploits couldn’t do. 

He says in the film, there’s Rick James, the character, and there is the other guy, the guy from Buffalo. I wanted to show the guy from Buffalo, who is a serious songwriter, but the guy from Buffalo is also friends with Rick James, who is an extreme, over-the-top rock star. There are expectations people have of rock stars. The guy from Buffalo understood that. So, when he created this other guy, he wanted this guy to live to those expectations. The film should also have a window into who that guy was, too. Some of it is extremely over the top and sensational, but according to those who were there, it’s very real and that’s who he was. I wanted to make sure there was balance, and it’s not just sniffing cocaine on someone’s desk and knocking shit over. He was a guy who didn’t make it until his 30s as a musician. That wouldn’t happen now. The fact that he stuck around for as long as he did was really impressive. 

He certainly helped musicians like Joanne “Jojo” McDuffie, lead singer of the Mary Jane Girls, and Teena Marie. Prince toured with James (and incurred his wrath in the process). I admire James for calling out MTV for not playing enough/any Black musicians. He certainly contributed to our culture. But I could argue that some of these efforts could be seen as self-serving or controlling. What are your thoughts about his contributions? 

Some of the greatest artists we’ve ever known, there is a level of selfishness you need to find that success. He wasn’t afraid to be selfish, but seemingly most people that I interviewed will tell you he was selfish, will also tell you there’s a flip side — he was very generous — in showing people the way, showing musicians how to write songs. Guys in the band will tell you that he knew how to play just enough to convey what he wanted, he wasn’t a prolific musician per se, but in terms of being a conductor, and orchestrator, he knew what he wanted and how to put all the pieces together. Sometimes you have to be selfish and insist on what it is you want. If Rick James didn’t insist on what he wanted, he would not have been Rick James. Somebody’s got to wear the leather pants.

In this era of “cancel culture,” what are your thoughts about how James was able to treat women the way he did and his machismo and bravado? They were, perhaps, a product of his upbringing — an animated scene in the film shows his introduction to sex — but as someone notes in the film, he probably could not have made those videos today. 

He was a man of his time. Elvis liked underage girls. Jerry Lee Lewis married his cousin. There are all kinds of examples. Rock and rollers were not nice to women or young ladies. Rick James was a man of his time. How do you look at 1981 Rick James with 2021 glasses? I think that’s a personal decision in how you want to feel about him. People won’t listen to Michael Jackson because of things that have been alleged about him, but there are plenty of people who won’t let go of Michel Jackson in spite of what he may have been accused of. Do I think Rick James could do in 2021 what he did in 1981? No. But there are also plenty of artists today making misogynistic music that isn’t nice to women, or that exploits women. While some things have changed and people are very vocal about how culture and art reflect women, there is still a lot of that stuff going on today.

As James faded out of the spotlight, he became a bit of a caricature later but also benefitted from “U Can’t Touch This” and the “Chapelle’s Show” catchphrase (even reclaiming that). What are your thoughts on his late career experiences, where he tried to recapture the spotlight? I applaud his reinvention.

At that point, he’d been in the business for so many years, he had already beaten all the odds. He was so used to the adulation, it got him high, naturally, and he wasn’t afraid to chase that high. He also had a lifestyle that he wanted to maintain coming out of prison, so in order to make money, people have to care about what you think or have to say, and his bad boy image was brought to the fore by Charlie Murphy, Eddie Murphy’s brother, who brought these legendary stories about his experiences with Rick James to the public years and years later. It was thoroughly entertaining, and the fact that Rick was a part of the storytelling just made it authentic. It made folks feel like, this guy is on board with this, and he’s owning his persona, and personality. Love him or hate him, people respected that he was part of the story and laughing along with it. That endeared him to a new generation of folks who probably didn’t know who he was. He had another life when Hammer sampled him. He supposedly might have made more money from the Hammer song than from the original song. He’s had lifelines in ways a lot of other people would never have had a second or third shot. There is something to be said about his persona. I think that’s what makes him contemporary. I won’t be the old guy who says new music isn’t as good, but I will say it feels like your total package and what you represent in your lifestyle and attitude is very important these days. Plenty of younger artists who are inspired by Rick James — the way he dressed, and carried himself, and conducted himself, his honesty, sometimes his brutal honesty, all of these things today are things that people still admire. 

One comment that struck me was that during his funeral, many of James’ friends spoke fondly of him, but during his downward spiral, they were not there for him. He struggled for years to get the help he needed but prison may have been the best thing for him. What are your thoughts about this?

That’s the ups and downs of show business. When you’re hot, people want to stand by the flames and when you’re cold they want to put on really thick parkas and move out of the way. As his ex-wife said, he was in over 30 rehabs. He sincerely tried to get clean, but the longest he ever gone was two to three months. His ex-wife says drugs robbed him of his natural ability to enjoy laughter and happiness. Drugs can create the illusion of happiness, but once they wear off, the feeling of isolation and coldness and sadness is hard to shake. His senses became extremely dull, and he was living for the past in many ways, and a lot of people in his life had moved on from the glory days where he was burning up the charts and had lots of money. He didn’t have lots of money and wasn’t burning up the charts. Fairweather friends are always going to be fairweather friends, and he had more than a few as a celebrity.

Do you think “Bitchin'” is a cautionary tale, that we need to learn from this example, or that it is a story of promise wasted? I can see so many young musicians with the same ambition and frustration.

Rick James lived his dream. He fought hard for it. He was not an overnight success. He had a lot of test runs and trial runs, but they were all learnings. He is a perfect example of failure can also be a win. You don’t look at your failures as a loss, but as a moment of learning. He was able to continue to strive, make his mistakes, and improve every time. Those improvements led to his success. In many ways, the Rick James story is a story of great success, and a dream come true. Unfortunately, the flame burned out too quickly and he couldn’t turn it back on again. He is famous and infamous at the same time. What you want to focus on is an individual choice, but that staying power of his songs, and the influence he has had over the years, is undeniable.

“Bitchin’: The Sound and Fury of Rick James” premieres Friday, Sept. 3 at 8 p.m. on Showtime.

No, we’re not living “The Handmaid’s Tale” – it’s worse, and a show highlighting how was passed over

Next weekend we will see whether “Lovecraft Country” gleans any Emmy wins out of its 18 nominations. If it does, said victory or victories will be bittersweet since, despite the overwhelming critical acclaim it received and the solid ratings for its first and only season, HBO canceled it.

After the bad news left the show’s supporters wondering why, series creator Misha Green subtly provided an answer by releasing a glimpse of what she envisioned for the second season.

“Wish we could have brought you #LovecraftCountry: Supremacy,” Green tweeted. “Thank you to everyone who watched and engaged” tellingly adding the hashtag “#noconfederate” in her sign-off.

Confederate,” for those who may have forgotten, was a series HBO announced in 2017, an alt-history drama from “Game of Thrones” creators D.B. Weiss and David Benioff weaving its “what if” plots from a scenario in which the Confederacy won the Civil War. News of its development received a level of furious protest the network obviously did not anticipate, and yet its executives refused to confirm that the show wasn’t moving forward until January 2020.

But the reason Green’s small reveal of what could have been haunted me on Wednesday is entirely divorced from that debacle. What brought it to light was the flotilla of references to “The Handmaid’s Tale” floating through my Twitter feed, right on schedule.

That show’s title comes up whenever abortion-related rollbacks hit social media, you see. And there’s such admirable predictability to these reflexive citations that I’m surprised Hulu hasn’t set its recommendations algorithm to capitalize on the angst. Imagine the suggestion headers: “Because you’re freaking out about what’s going on in Texas . . .”

This may come off as a flippant dismissal of the very real and legitimate crisis. I assure you it is not. Honestly, I can understand why a wide swath of people read the Supreme Court’s silent refusal to stop Texas’ draconian Senate Bill 8 from going into effect on Sept. 1 as a sign marking our entry into Margaret Atwood’s Gilead.

Its implications are severe. SB8 effectively ends Roe V. Wade’s protections at the state level by banning abortions at six weeks with no exception for rape or incest and deputizes private citizens, including people who live outside of Texas, to enforce the law by suing anyone believed to have assisted in facilitating an abortion procedure. That means a patient’s friend, the office manager employed by the provider, the person driving them to the clinic could be found liable. If said plaintiffs prevail in court, they can receive up to $10,000 – a bounty, essentially – and have their legal fees paid for by the defendant. The defendant is not entitled to such protections.


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In the coming days I’m guessing we’ll see protesters don red robes with white winged hats to bring attention to this violent injustice. Engaging in such cosplay makes for attention-grabbing civil disobedience, but it also plays a part in eliding the reality that women like Elisabeth Moss’ heroic June – which is to say, white middle-class professionals with resources – will probably have access to safe abortions no matter what happens to Roe v. Wade.

Women like Yvonne Strahovski’s Serena Joy, loyal wives, family members and colleagues to sexists who reward their complicity, will continue to vote against their own and fellow women’s rights to retain agency over their own bodies. Any laws restricting choice won’t negatively impact them and theirs.

What “The Handmaid’s Tale” doesn’t reflect is the reality of which people disproportionally affected by anti-abortion and anti-reproductive health legislation: poor women, Latinx and Black women, queer folks and women trapped in abusive situations.

This is what brought me back to wondering what could have been if Green had been granted a chance to bring “Lovecraft Country: Supremacy” into being.  The title hints she was onto something that’s urgently needed in the speculative fiction space, which is an examination of how white supremacy is the behind the corrupt forces destroying American democracy for all but a very powerful few.

After all, the same people hellbent on subjugating women by forcing them to give birth against their will and then gutting healthcare and education funding are also passionately working to deny the vote to people of color and roll back rights protecting LGBTQIA+ folks. These are the same folks imposing their political will by mob intimidation by storming school board meetings and town halls railing against masking mandates and vaccination requirements.

As legal scholar and NAACP Legal Defense Fund President Sherrilyn Ifill neatly spelled out in a Twitter thread posted on Wednesday, “it is part of a desperate effort to do by harassment, intimidation, & menacing what could not be accomplished by regular channels of democratic engagement.”

All of them are under the sway of the same force, the one after which Green named her potential second season.

The standard caveats apply here of course, starting with the acknowledgement that there were probably many reasons HBO passed on “Lovecraft Country: Supremacy.” Also, said season could have ended up being a massive misfire; we’ll never know.

However, the reason that tweet came to mind hinges less upon that specific pitch than the concept itself. There are a million reasons why “Confederate” was an awful idea, but there certainly is room for a thoughtful genre series based upon a view of America as it is experienced by marginalized people, centered upon a cast drawn from those communities.  But in frightening legislative scenarios like the one we’re grappling with right now, no such show exists as a reference point.

If those frequent references to “The Handmaid’s Tale” tell us anything, it is that audiences are more apt to process our steady erosion of legal protections through watching shows like that than they are to pore over expert analysis or court documents.

Sadly though, a likely reason that television and mainstream film studios haven’t placed major backing behind politically relevant dystopic visions centering people of color is for the very same reason that “Handmaid’s Tale” is popular. Dystopias depicting white characters appeal to the target audience’s darkest fantasies about being threatened by a world through which they can otherwise move safely.

The rallying power of “The Handmaid’s Tale” proves this, along with other popular movie and TV titles featuring white heroines such as “The Hunger Games,” Amazon’s adaptation of “The Man in the High Castle” or the “Divergent” series, to name a few.

In those stories the audience isn’t encouraged to contemplate the ways in which the few characters of color in the heroine’s sphere might have faced a level of discrimination she didn’t. As in “The Handmaid’s Tale,” racism and class stratification usually isn’t explicitly examined. It’s assumed that since the world has crumbled to the point where it’s terrible for people like June, it must be equally bad for everyone.

Except it isn’t, evident in the shocking – shocking! – recent news coverage of all the ways that reproductive health discrimination and the anti-abortion movement has disadvantaged women of color, immigrants and the queer community for decades. Centuries, truly. But if “The Handmaid’s Tale” is the only lens through which one evaluates America’s reproductive rights struggles, you may not make that connection. 

Where were the scores of “America is becoming ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’!” warnings in September 2020, when a whistleblower filed a complaint about a government-contracted doctor sterilizing women in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody without their knowledge or consent?

Where were they when increasingly restrictive laws shut down women’s health centers in other rural communities in Texas, limiting access to adequate preventative medicine, pre-natal care and maternity services?

Granted, some people made the connection between the show and reality in the 2019 case of Marshae Jones, a Black woman in Alabama indicted for the death of her fetus after she was shot multiple times in the stomach – in part, I’m guessing, because Atwood herself linked her vision of dystopia to the case.

Suffice it to say yes, reproductive rights advocates have a right to be alarmed and fed up. But before you reductively cite “The Handmaid’s Tale” as a frame of reference reconsider what it implies. Because the dystopia it cloaks in vivid costumes and outrageous Aunt Lydias has been the reality for millions of poor people, many of them Black and Latinx, for a very long time. But that reality has never received the benefit of striking costumes or grand sets, let alone a full TV season.

Collins calls Supreme Court decision on Texas abortion ban “extreme,” stays mum on Kavanaugh support

Sen. Susan Collins isn’t eating crow — at least not yet — over her support for right-wing political operative-turned federal judge Brett Kavanaugh’s appointment to the Supreme Court after this week’s surprise 5-4 decision effectively allowing a total abortion ban to stand in Texas.

When Collins was weighing her 2018 decision to support then-President Donald Trump’s second nominee for Supreme Court, the moderate Maine Republican went on the cable news circuit to assure worried viewers that he seemed largely harmless. To make her point, Collins repeatedly said Kavanaugh would not overturn the precedent of Roe v. Wade, which established abortion as a constitutional right — using the example as a stand-in to make a larger point: she did not expect the court to undertake hardline right-wing actions, despite Kavanaugh’s record and a resurgent right-wing Christian movement empowered by Trump.

Yet on Wednesday, the Supreme Court all but nullified the 1973 ruling in the country’s second-largest state, setting up a path for other states to do the same. The court, led by all three of Trump’s nominees, failed to block a Texas law that effectively bans the procedure before most women know they are pregnant. Perhaps most notable is the law’s enforcement mechanism, which deputizes anyone — quite literally anyone — to file a lawsuit against anyone (again, in the literal sense) who assists another person in obtaining an abortion. 

Those affected by the law may still file a legal challenge, though that process will likely take months. In the meantime, officials in several other states, including Florida and South Dakota, have already announced plans to enact similar laws.


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In light of the Supreme Court decision, critics have dredged up Collins’ past comments — and the numerous warnings she was offered before acting as the key deciding vote to approve Kavanaugh  — giving progressives a bittersweet “I told you so” moment.

Podcast host Brian Tyler Cohen even put together a supercut of all the times Collins, on national television, said Kavanaugh would not overturn Roe v. Wade:

“Susan Collins was wrong about Kavanaugh and Gorsuch. She sold women out, and Maine voters should never forget that,” George Takei, the actor and progressive activist, tweeted.

Left-wing media outlet Occupy Democrats weighed in as well: “Retweet if you haven’t forgotten that Senator Susan Collins insisted that Brett Kavanaugh would defend Roe v. Wade before she voted to confirm him to the Supreme Court — and even called those of us who criticized her for putting abortion rights at risk “gullible” and “naive.”

Collins weighed in on the decision Thursday, calling the Supreme Court decision “extreme and harmful.”

She joined a host of high-profile Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and President Joe Biden, in their criticism of the measure. 

Biden said in a statement it was “an unprecedented assault on a woman’s constitutional rights under Roe v. Wade, which has been the law of the land for almost fifty years.”

Pelosi also called on Congress to pass a law codifying Roe v. Wade — which would likely prove to be an uphill battle for the evenly-divided Senate, even given support from Collins and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska.

Any abortion bill would have to garner a 60-vote filibuster-proof majority to pass.

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

Between natural disasters and once-in-a-lifetime pandemics, the word “unprecedented” has perhaps been overused in the past year. Yet nature continues to shock us with new, previously unseen crises, warranting the adjective’s use in print. That’s especially true in the case of California’s 2021 wildfire season, which is indeed unprecedented.

 Currently, there are two massive wildfires burning across California’s Sierra Nevada mountain range— the Caldor Fire, and the Dixie Fire. The Caldor Fire started on August 14, 2021. Over the last 17 days, it has burned 204,390 acres and is only 20 percent contained. As it encroaches on the Lake Tahoe basin, a popular vacation spot for Californians in the summer and skiers across the world in the winter, evacuation orders have been mandated in many neighborhoods and have even expanded from California to Nevada as many expect the massive fire to cross the state line.

According to CalFire, 544 homes and 12 commercial properties were confirmed destroyed as of early Wednesday morning. Less than two hundred miles north in the same mountain range, the Dixie Fire has been burning since July 14, 2021. To date, it has burned 844,081 acres, qualifying it as the second largest wildfire in California’s history. Only 52 percent of it is contained. (The August Complex Fire from 2020, which burned more than 1 million acres, ranks first.)

Despite both the Dixie and Caldor Fires’ location, they have another characteristic in common warranting the “unprecedented” label: both managed to burn from one side of the Sierra Nevadas to the other, raging across mountaintops that, in previous years, have had enough moisture and snowpack to stop fires, or at least slow them down. 

Chief Thom Porter, of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said there have been no known fires to have burned from one side of the Sierra to the other — until now, according to the Los Angeles Times.

“Two times in our history and they’re both happening this month,” Porter said. “So we need to be really cognizant that there is fire activity happening in California that we have never seen before.”

As rare as it is, Craig Clements, a professor and director of the Wildfire Interdisciplinary Research Center at San José State University, previously told Salon that he and his colleagues suspected that this years’ wildfires would outpace 2020’s. In April, Salon reported on how the California Bay Area’s live fuel-moisture content (FMC), a metric which measures the ratio of moisture to natural combustible material, was historically low, signaling prime conditions for yet another catastrophic wildfire season. He believes both fires were able to travel from one side of the mountain range to the other because the fuel-moisture content at higher elevations is extremely low, too.

“What’s unique about both these fires is that the fires have burned up into very high elevation in the Sierra Nevada,” Clements said. “One reason that likely is the drought, lower snowpack . . . those higher elevations are drying out sooner, so, your fuel-moisture content in those plants are drier — and we predicted that in April that this was going to be the case.”

Fire behavior, Clements explained, depends on the fuel, the fuel’s condition, the weather, and the terrain. Clements added that the Wildfire Interdisciplinary Research Center’s forecaster predicts that the Caldor wildfire will potentially cross into Nevada by today, Sept. 2.

Clements emphasized the center’s wildfire forecaster is “experimental” and for research — meaning, it is not a national weather forecast — but it has been accurate throughout tracking these fires.

Still, this week’s gusty conditions quite literally fanned the flames of both fires, making it more difficult to slow them down or contain them, which also played a role in the fire traversing the mountain range.

Historically, the granite ridge that overlooks the Tahoe basin has been viewed as a protective barrier that prevents fire from entering the area. But strong winds on Monday night helped spread embers onto the dry brush, setting fire on the other side of the mountain. The Dixie Fire traveled over its highest peak in mid-August, and continues to cause evacuations as it rages down the Sierra Nevada.

Near South Lake Tahoe, Calif., firefighters are now tasked with keeping the Caldor Fire up the hill, and trying to keep it from barreling down where it could burn the town.

“We’re just right now trying to see what happens with the structures and businesses in our community and our homes,” South Lake Tahoe Mayor Tamara Wallace told CNN. “There was a huge amount of granite between the fire and us and I woke up on Sunday and it had, it had jumped that granite and now it is in the Lake Tahoe basin and homes are threatened and our community is threatened and I never thought that was possible.”


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To keep future wildfire seasons from topping the previous ones, Celements said “we need to treat the landscape, we need to bring prescribed fire back, we also need to do a better job at fuel management, and allow low intensity fires to burn.”

Indeed, as unprecedented as these fires are, some argue that we need to stop using superlatives to talk about the fires. Rather, this is just the new normal in California.

“Historically, we’ve used terms such as ‘anomaly,’ ‘unprecedented’ or ‘extreme’ to describe the wildfires that we have seen burn throughout the state over the past 10 to 20 years,” said Cal Fire spokesman Chris Anthony. “These terms are no longer appropriate given the clear trends associated with drought, changing climate and un-resilient forest stands. Unfortunately, these factors contribute to the resistance to control that we are seeing with the Caldor fire.”

Manchin releases op-ed opposing Biden’s infrastructure plan following corporate lobbying blitz

Sen. Joe Manchin, R-Va., is calling for a “pause” on President Biden’s landmark $3.5 billion infrastructure package following a sudden wave of pushback from Corporate America, including major drug makers, investment banks, and tech giants. 

“Some in Congress have a strange belief there is an infinite supply of money to deal with any current or future crisis, and that spending trillions upon trillions will have no negative consequence for the future,” Manchin wrote on Thursday in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. “I disagree.”

Citing concerns around the national debt and inflation, Manchin argued that “a pause is warranted because it will provide more clarity on the trajectory of the pandemic, and it will allow us to determine whether inflation is transitory or not.” According to Bloomberg, “in comments Wednesday at an event hosted by the West Virginia Chamber of Commerce, the moderate Democrat said his party should ‘hit the pause button,'” citing concerns after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan as a more urgent priority. 

Manchin also suggested that his Democratic colleagues have not done a full accounting of the bill’s economic implications, but are instead more interested in fixing urgent social problems. He explained: “Establishing an artificial $3.5 trillion spending number and then reverse-engineering the partisan social priorities that should be funded isn’t how you make good policy.”

The Democrat’s op-ed earned a wave of backlash from various progressive groups. “Abolish the Senate,” Ellen Sciales, Communications Director of Sunrise Movement, said in a Thursday statement. 

Manchin’s aggressive stance against the bill comes just as Corporate America mounts a new and strident effort to put the measure down. According to The Washington Post, companies like Pfizer, ExxonMobil, and Disney are currently organizing a “lobbying blitz” through various interest groups and trade associations such as National Association of Manufacturers, the Business Roundtable, PhRMA, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.


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The campaign, the Post noted, is expected to entail traditional lobbying channels as well as a flood of attack ads against Democrats. “We’re doing it in every way you can imagine,” Aric Newhouse, the senior vice president for policy at the National Association of Manufacturers, told the Post.

Manchin, long a centrist debt hawk, has consistently cautioned against federal overspending throughout his political career. But his campaign donations might tell a clearer story. Over the past two decades, the West Virginai Democrat has collected millions of dollars in campaign contributions from corporate donors, including Goldman Sachs, Comcast, Capital Group, and Dominion Energy – all of whom would suffer from the corporate tax hike couched into the Democrats infrastructure plan.

Back in August, the Senate passed the Democratic-led $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill dedicated to repairing roads, bridges, railways, and developing improved broadband throughout the U.S. As part of a long-awaited deal, Democrats agreed to downsize the original price tag of that measure and approve another standalone $3.5 trillion infrastructure plan to cover issues like childcare and climate control.

Now, the Democratic Party intends on passing the $3.5 trillion bill through budget reconciliation – a legislative maneuver which allows them to duck an inevitable Republican filibuster. Budget reconciliation does, however, require a simple majority for the measure to pass (which would be achieved with Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote) – and without Manchin’s support, the bill could be doomed to fail

Are women people? Why the Supreme Court just signed off on a Texas law that denies women’s humanity

In 1915, the suffragist Alice Duer Miller wrote a delightful book of satirical poetry titled “Are Women People? A Book of Rhymes for Suffrage Times.” Here we are, 106 years later, and Texas and the Supreme Court have weighed in with their opinion, which is very much no, women are not people. They are human-shaped, but they cannot be regarded as full people, capable of making very basic decisions about their own bodies and lives. After a full day of the Supreme Court not yet deciding whether to enjoin a Texas law banning all abortions two weeks after the first missed period, the court finally made a decision late Wednesday night. In full violation of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court is allowing Texas to ban abortion

This is not, as the mansplainers will let you know, an official overturn of Roe. That is still coming, in the form of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a case looking at another abortion ban in Mississippi that has been explicitly held out as an opportunity for the court to simply overturn the 1973 case that legalized abortion. Still, as Jessica Mason Pieklo, a legal expert at Rewire News Group writes, “Let’s just get this out of the way: We can stop debating about whether the Court overturned Roe v. Wade. They did. So what if it’s on a technicality? It’s not a technicality to the people forced to carry pregnancies to term against their will.”

The human cost of this last minute abortion ban can be felt in this piece at The 19th that details the scene at a clinic in Fort Worth at 8PM on Tuesday, when providers realized they only had four hours to help “two dozen people [who] were still waiting for the procedure,” before the ban went into effect at midnight. It was a nightmare race against the clock, as the “staff worked without stopping to eat, shifting patients in and out of rooms.” One woman “dropped to her knees on the cold tile floor,” begging to get a place in line before the ban came down. All while a crowd of Christian fundamentalists, drunk on misogyny and their own victory, screamed at top volume outside. 


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As a writer, I’ve been covering the religious right over 15 years now. As a person who grew up in Texas, I’ve known these kinds of broken souls who support this law my whole life. They are small people, who spend their time trying to dominate the lives of others, rather than face up to the fears that prevent them from embracing full lives of their own. Donald Trump spoke to them, despite his barely concealed contempt for their religion, because they saw themselves in him: A man so poisoned by hate that his only real pleasure in life is bullying others. So, I get it, intellectually. On a deeper, emotional level, though, understanding will always elude me. How can so many give up their one precious life to cruelty, rather than just take the easier and humane path of “live and let live?”

At this point, these sadists will try to defend themselves by claiming this is all about “life.” It’s a lie that worked for decades to give cover to their malice. It’s collapsed in the age of a deadly pandemic that conservatives are doing everything in their power to spread, a pandemic that is especially dangerous for the fetal life they only care for when it can be weaponized against women’s rights. 

No, the Texas law — and the Supreme Court endorsement of it — is about one thing and one thing only: Denying the humanity of women, and, of course, denying the humanity of those who don’t neatly fit in that category of “woman,” but can get pregnant anyway. This is about reducing these people to mere vessels, and rejecting the idea that they are autonomous human beings who have sovereignty over their bodies and their lives. On the contrary, having a uterus renders you as little more than human livestock in the eyes of conservatives. 

We see this attitude in the enforcement mechanism of the law.

The law allows any person – even a complete stranger to the person getting an abortion — to sue an abortion provider or any other person who helps with the abortion. The right to control a pregnant person’s body, in this Texas law, belongs quite literally to anyone but the woman herself: Her father, her husband, her ex, her neighbor, some random misogynist who just wants to ruin a life because he spends too much time on incel forums. Just so long as it’s not the person actually living in that body. 

This rejection of women as autonomous beings is also baked into the parameters of who can be sued. The abortion bounty hunters are permitted to go after health care providers or any other person who helps a woman get an abortion, but they cannot sue the person who wants an abortion. She is viewed simply as an empty vessel, not as a thinking, feeling person who is making a decision. And so the responsibility for the abortion decision is assumed to belong to another person, because conservatives simply cannot admit that women are capable of making such decisions. 


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This rejection of female autonomy is generally presented as chivalrous in anti-choice rhetoric, as if they are trying to “protect” women from abortion. The Texas Right to Life site defends the law as supposedly saving women “whose lives are irrevocably altered by the death of their children.” They even use condescending memes like this, which erase the fact that it’s women themselves choosing abortion. 

Needless to say, there’s piles of research showing that women’s main feelings after abortion are relief, not grief. But even without that research, it’s clear how offensive it is to pretend that women don’t actively choose abortion. It’s treating women like dumb animals, refusing to believe they have any more capacity to make reproductive decisions than a feral cat. It’s ugly, dehumanizing rhetoric, no matter how much anti-choicers try to pass it off as “compassion.”

That some of the people who are behind these kinds of laws are women themselves doesn’t change this fact. Justice Amy Coney Barrett voted to uphold the Texas law, but she is also quite famously a religious fundamentalist, a status that reassures the religious right that she’s simply upholding beliefs handed down to her by a patriarchal faith. As for the motivations of the female misogynists themselves, well, that’s why Aunt Lydia of “The Handmaid’s Tale” was such a good character. For women committed to living with, instead of resisting, male dominance, being an enforcer gives them power over other women. It’s not quite as good as being a man, but hey, at least it gives you someone else to control and look down on. 

Sadly, the misogyny baked into the Texas law is about to spread like wildfire across red America. The Supreme Court will not issue a formal ruling on whether Roe stands until next summer, but this support for the Texas law is an open invitation to every state legislature run by woman-hating Bible thumpers to pass versions of their own. Accompanying the law will be more dehumanizing rhetoric, treating women as livestock who can’t be trusted to make decisions, or even acknowledged as capable of making decisions. Because debasing women has always been what the anti-choice movement is about. Now Americans will start to see the real life damage such hatred can wreak in women’s lives. 

“Self-owen”: Candace Owens mocked after she was denied COVID test for spreading misinformation

Conservative commentator Candace Owens revealed that she was denied a COVID-19 test by an Aspen clinic on Tuesday, with the clinic refusing anyone who has “worked to make the pandemic worse by spreading misinformation.”

Last week, Owens missed a speaking event due to a “sudden illness,” which she repeatedly claimed was not COVID-19. “I’ve been to six countries and 28 states since the start of this pandemic (maskless outside of planes) and I still don’t have Covid,” she tweeted last Wednesday. “I slept next to my husband every night that he had it (what amounted to a light chest cold) and I still never got it.”

This week, Owens claimed that she signed up for a local test in Aspen to meet her busy travel schedule, but was denied by “rabid activist” Suzanna Lee, co-founder of the Aspen COVID-19 Testing.

“We cannot support anyone who has proactively worked to make this pandemic worse by spreading misinformation, politicizing and DISCOURAGING the wearing of masks and actively dissuading people from receiving life-saving vaccinations,” Lee wrote to Owens over email. “My team has worked overtime, to exhaustion, unpaid and underpaid this past year, spending our own capital to make sure our community remains protected. It would be unfair to them … to serve you.”


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Owens predictably went ballistic in her emailed response, calling Lee “arrogant” and “emotionally unstable.”

“That nobody stopped you from hitting send on such an emotionally unstable and hysterical email leads me to believe that the people who work for you must love me, and would therefore never deny me this entertainment,” the conservative wrote back. 

Owens added on Twitter: “[Lee] clearly isn’t stable enough to work in health and is a danger to the Aspen community.”

On Twitter, users wondered why Owens would even bother to share:

The pundit also accused the lab co-owner of politicizing the virus, despite the commentator’s well-documented history of doing so. 

Last year, Owens tweeted that the “coronavirus is the greatest rigging of an American election that has ever taken place.” 

Last week, Owens was challenged with a $20 million lawsuit for her alleged defamation of former Maryland congressional candidate Kimberly Klacik. Owens accused Klacik of, among other things, “money laundering, tax fraud and campaign fraud” – all of which Klacik has denied. 

This Mediterranean potato salad is all you need for dinner

Why is it entirely acceptable to serve pasta or beans a main course, but potatoes are forever considered a side dish? Starchy, filling, cheap, incredibly versatile and so damn good, potatoes deserve a better reputation than mere supporting player. And there are few better arguments for potatoes than potato salad.

My Irish ancestry means I come by my love of potatoes as naturally as I do my melancholy, pugilistic temperament. Growing up, we had potatoes six nights a week, almost exclusively in the mashed format. Today, however, I will gladly accept spuds in any form imaginable. One of my favorite interpretations is a Mediterranean spin, with potatoes bathed in olive oil and redolent of lemons and oregano.

This dish is often made with roasted potatoes, but in her beautiful “Ripe Figs: Recipes and Stories from Turkey, Greece, and Cyprus,” Yasmin Khan (“Zaitoun”) does a punchy salad instead. And while other people get very passionate and very particular about their potato salads, deeming theirs alone the platonic ideal, I plan on spending the rest of my life eating through every possible potato salad variation created. This one’s a keeper.


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“It’s like really easy to make,” Khan said during a recent phone call. “It’s new potatoes, and then it just you just blitz it with these beautiful Mediterranean flavors like lemon zest, fresh herbs, dried herbs, capers and olives. It feels both virtuous and really flavorsome. You can mix it up as well, with the herbs that you have around. It is very flexible.” It’s also vegan, if that’s a consideration, and takes less than a half hour to make from start to finish.

Khan’s whole book is full of easy, intensely flavorful recipes, but it’s also a remarkable work of storytelling, history and reportage. “I’m often curious — my background is as a human rights activist — as how we can we can bridge divisions between communities, countries, each other,” says Khan. “And what excites me about food is that it’s not merely the gateway to joy and deliciousness on a plate. But when we really explore food, the exploration of a country or a region’s cuisine doesn’t just tell you about a set of raw ingredients. It tells you about history, it tells you about trade relations, geography, climate, gender relations. As someone who wants to celebrate the joys of good cooking, but also write books that help us understand ourselves and the world around us, food to me seems the perfect means.” This is a book to sit down with and savor reading, working up an appetite the whole time.

I have eaten Khan’s potato salad for lunch, and I would eat this for dinner with a big glass of pinot grigio and absolutely zero qualms. But if you are having people over or feel strongly that spuds must have a costar, you could serve this with a good rotisserie chicken, sliced tomatoes and a big green salad.

***

Cypriot Potato Salad

Inspired by Yasmin Khan’s “”Ripe Figs: Recipes and Stories from Turkey, Greece, and Cyprus”

Serves 4

Ingredients:

  • 2 pounds of small new potatoes
  • 1/4 of a red onion, sliced
  • 1/3 – 1/2 cup of pitted and chopped mixed olives
  • 2 – 3 tablespoons of capers, drained
  • Handful of mint, chopped
  • Handful of cilantro, chopped (You can swap in your favorite fresh herbs here.)
  • 1 teaspoon of oregano
  • 3 – 4 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
  • Juice of half a lemon
  • Sea salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
  • Optional: Red pepper flakes, zest of your lemon

Directions:

  1. Bring a big pot of salted water to a boil.
  2. Cut the potatoes into large chunks. Don’t bother peeling them.
  3. Boil the potatoes about 15 minutes, then drain and place in a big bowl.
  4. Add your other ingredients and stir well.

From here, you can serve warm, or refrigerate and let the flavors intensify overnight.

Note: I am obsessed with Agrumato’s insanely good extra virgin olive oil pressed with lemons — you can substitute it here for an even bigger lemon kick.

 

More Quick & Dirty: 

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16 cool-as-a-cucumber-salad recipes

We love ’em for snacking, or slicing them thin and using them to infuse water so it makes it feel like we’re at a spa. But another way to enjoy cucumbers is in the form of a crisp, cool cucumber salad. Keep things simple by tossing them in herby yogurt sauce, mixing them with mozzarella and chickpeas for a hearty twist on a Panzanella salad, or giving them some kick with a spicy, dry-fried combination of Thai dried chile peppers, jalapeño peppers, and Sichuan peppercorns. If any of those ideas sound appealing, you’re in luck. We’re sharing 16 different cucumber salad recipes that are crisp and refreshing (even when they pack in some heat).

* * *

Our best cucumber salad recipes 

1. Cantaloupe and Cucumber Salad with Basil and Feta

This simple summery salad isn’t too fussy or over-the-top, which is for the best. The low-key method really allows the melon and cucumbers to shine alongside feta cheese and fresh basil. Just be sure to use really good quality ingredients (down to the balsamic vinegar and flaky sea salt) so that everything is on its A-Game.

2. Mom’s Bulgogi with Cucumber Kimchi Salad

Joanna Gaines can certainly fix up a central Texas house like nobody’s business. But she’s also a whiz in the kitchen. This cucumber salad is a hybrid of American and Korean flavors that pair super well with her mom’s recipe for Bulgogi, a beef tenderloin that has been marinated in a sweet combination of brown sugar, soy sauce, sparkling dessert wine, and green onions.

3. Cucumber Salad with Magic Spice Blend

Magic spice may sound like something you’d find in a forbidden forest, but really it’s just a basic (but potent!) blend of dark brown sugar, smoked paprika, garlic powder, cayenne pepper, and celery seeds. It brings a serious punch to thin slices of cucumbers.

4. Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid’s Spicy Cucumber Salad

After quickly marinating cucumbers in rice vinegar and sugar, they’re topped with a crackling combination of Thai dried chile and jalapeño peppers, plus Sichuan peppercorns, for a powerfully flavorful side dish.

5. Smashed Cucumber Salad with Crispy, Crunchy Bits

It’s super crispy and crunchy, but it’s also the greenest salad in all the land, thanks to a beautiful pairing of cucumbers, kiwis, Asian pears, and the always-chic French breakfast radish (which is pink, not green, but you get the idea).

6. White Bean With Cucumber and Sumac Salad

“The crisp, cooling texture and flavor of the cucumber make this a great salad for sharing at a late-summer barbecue, where it can serve as a side dish or main,” writes recipe developer Daniel Shumski.

7. Creamy Cucumber Salad

If you’ve grown tired of potato salad, make this creamy cucumber salad recipe in its place. The ingredients list will look pretty familiar (mayonnaise? Check. White vinegar? Check. Plenty of herbs? Check. Greek yogurt? Sure, why not!), with a few fun extras like feta cheese and shallots.

8. Seaweed Salad with Kale and Cucumber

If you’ve only ever tasted seaweed in the form of dried sheets rolled into bite-sized pieces of rice and fish, this salad brings it all together with kale and cucumbers for an umami-packed side dish.

9. Cucumber and Fennel Salad with Chinese Vinaigrette

The crunchy texture and light, bright anise flavor of fennel is incredibly lovely alongside cucumber. But wait, hold up! There’s some contrast from a spicy vinaigrette that gets its heat from red pepper flakes, rice vinegar, and sesame oil.

10. Cucumber And Radish Salad with Harissa Yogurt

Dress up cucumbers and radishes with a harissa-yogurt sauce, fresh parsley, and crunchy sesame seeds in this side salad recipe.

11. Tomato, Cucumber, and Fresh Herb Salad

A colorful update to the Caprese — which typically pairs umami-rich tomatoes with mild, fresh mozzarella — this salad adds some crunch in the form of cucumbers and boosts the refreshment factor with fresh mint and parsley,” says our editorial team.

12. Cucumber and Red Onion Salad

Call it a slaw, call it a salad, call it pickled vegetables, or just call this recipe straight-up delicious.

13. Tomato, Cucumber, Corn, and Herb Summer Salad

Take the road less traveled by with this summer salad that offers lots of room for imagination. The base features seasonal veggies that are at their best in August (looking at you, tomatoes and corn) but you can also incorporate whatever is in season and looks really crisp and colorful.

14. Chopped Kitchen Sink Salad with Yogurt Dressing and Bottarga

Like the previous cucumber salad recipe, this one is also designed to use up whatever is in your fridge. Recipe developer Sara Jenkins chose cucumbers, green beans, fennel, and scallions but there’s certainly no harm in leaving one or two of those veggies out (or adding a few more in).

15. Sushi Salad

We’re all about repurposing last night’s leftovers for today’s lunch or dinner, and recipe developer Hetty McKinnon does that beautifully with this family-friendly sushi cucumber salad.

16. Springy Mozzarella and Chickpea Salad

Tiny bite-sized pieces of baby mozzarella balls, chickpeas, cucumber halves, and cherry tomatoes create a salad disguised as a beautiful rainbow.

Abortion funds and beyond: Here are the best ways to help Texans

As of midnight on Wednesday, when the Supreme Court allowed a near-total abortion ban in Texas, abortion care at or after six weeks of pregnancy — AKA, before most people know they’re pregnant, or are able to have an abortion — is banned in the state of Texas. And the cherry on top of this cake of cruelty and draconian reproductive coercion is that pretty much anyone can enforce it. 

The newly enacted law doesn’t just grant Gov. Greg Abbott and his Republican majority in the mostly white and male Texas state legislature the power to force people to remain pregnant or give birth without their consent, it also empowers and incentivizes local extremists to sue anyone who they suspect had or helped someone have an abortion.

“This is a dark day for Texans,” Neesha Davé, deputy director of Lilith Fund, which provides a wide range of financial and logistical support for abortion access, said in a statement. “Our hearts break for the people who woke up this morning unable to access the essential, time-sensitive healthcare they need… and we will keep fighting for you.” Providers in the state reported receiving more than 400 calls from patients seeking abortions by Monday afternoon, and being forced to tell callers they legally wouldn’t be able to provide care after Wednesday.

“As a mom, physician, and Texan, I am deeply concerned for the people I care for and for my community,” Dr. Ghazaleh Moayedi, OB/GYN and abortion provider, said in a statement. “This law deprives us of our basic humanity… [and] intends to intimidate and harass my colleagues and me, simply for doing what we were trained to do: provide high quality, evidence-based healthcare to our fellow Texans.”

The aforementioned citizen policing feature of the new law is arguably the most disturbing part of it. There’s a long history of extremist vigilantes policing and targeting their neighbors of color, a trend that’s likely to be encouraged with the $10,000 in legal fees they can recuperate if their lawsuit is successful. Texas’ latest abortion law will almost certainly be weaponized by vengeful co-workers, abusive exes, or otherwise nosy neighbors to stalk, surveil and harass suspected pregnant people around them. 


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Already, most states require some form of reporting abortions to the government, and we’ve seen more and more people arrested and jailed for self-managing abortions or miscarrying. This trend of surveillance and criminalization will only increase with a citizen police force, and a near-total abortion ban that will result in miscarriages being treated as criminally suspect.

Pending who you follow, an overwhelming sense of helplessness and doom has likely ensued on your social media timelines, and these feelings are entirely justified. We live in a country in which nine individuals — two of whom have very publicly been accused of egregious sexual misconduct — can rule on whether Americans have the right to housing in a pandemic, whether refugees are worthy of protection, and now, whether pregnant people have the right to bodily autonomy. And rather than hold public hearings, or at least pretend to listen to all sides, the Supreme Court has increasingly been making these most fundamental and consequential decisions about our bodies and lives in the shadows.

Specific to the abortion ban that’s been allowed to take effect in Texas, this development effectively guts the Roe v. Wade precedent — because it’s been allowed to take effect by our legal system, any other law that flagrantly violates Roe should soon be allowed, too.

For those of us who don’t live in Texas, or anyone who might not be directly impacted by the law, there’s no excuse for inaction. Texas abortion providers, community abortion funds, organizers, health care workers, and certainly, pregnant Texans, have been doing the work for years, moving mountains just to help people reach a basic health care service that should be a human right. 

In return for their herculean efforts, they’ve received unending harassment and violence targeting local abortion clinics, and never-ending mutations of the same dehumanizing abortion bans in the legislature each session. Even from so-called “pro-choice” liberals (as if abortion care has ever been as simple to access as a “choice”), Texan abortion advocates have often received condescending reassurances that abortion could never actually be banned, or, from some blue-state voters, snide suggestions to just magically vote these bans away next time. 

It’s past time for anyone who agrees abortion is a human right to actually do something tangible about this belief, and support the Texans currently standing in the eye of the storm. They can start by understanding first what’s been going on in the state for years.

1. Educate yourself about what Texans have been up against.

To learn what’s been happening in Texas requires more than following a couple national organizations like Planned Parenthood Action or NARAL on social media. 

Across the state of Texas, 96% of counties lack an abortion provider, compared with 90% across the country. The state has some of the most complex and restrictive abortion laws in the nation, and not coincidentally, one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the industrialized world

Texas has been at the center of the national abortion rights fight before: In 2016, the Supreme Court sided with Whole Woman’s Health in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt on a law that imposed medically unnecessary requirements on state abortion providers, intentionally and successfully shutting down dozens of clinics. Between 2013 and 2016, more than half of the state’s original 41 abortion clinics were forced to shut down.

Despite this ruling from the court, abortion care in Texas has remained virtually inaccessible through the years. Patients seeking abortion care in the state were forced to travel an average of 85 miles to their nearest clinic. This travel time, as well as mandated, paternalistic “waiting periods” and other requirements, have made getting an abortion in Texas a costly and exhausting if not impossible undertaking. 

2. Instead of telling Texans what their options are, listen.

The majority of people who seek abortion care are people of color, already parents, and often struggling financially or on Medicaid. To have an abortion, they need to be able to afford exorbitant transportation and lodging costs, child care, and also be able to take time off work — not everyone can do that. 

You’ll hear often that this abortion ban in Texas isn’t a huge deal, since pregnant Texans can simply “travel out-of-state” for care. But depending on where in the state they live, this may not be a viable option for them, especially during an ongoing, deadly pandemic.

You might also hear about how banning abortion doesn’t stop it from happening, but only makes it less safe. This can certainly be true in some ways, and may have been true before the FDA’s approval of medication abortion pills in 2000. But this statement, void of the context that self-managed abortion with medication is highly safe and effective, can be stigmatizing or damaging. 

Naturally, in a state like Texas, which is increasingly making an effort to surveil pregnant people and regulate access to abortion medications, access to the medication will come with its own complications. This could even include criminalization, at a time when policing and criminalizing pregnancy outcomes with bogus “fetal endangerment” charges are on the rise. But nonetheless, it’s harmful to not acknowledge that medication abortion is a safe option for someone, if they’re able to get the pills online or through other means.

In other words, rather than try to prescribe options to Texans, consider educating yourself, and listening to and supporting them instead. 

3. Donate to and support Texas abortion funds.

There’s no need to reinvent the wheel, or declare on social media that you’re moving to Texas to devote your life to facilitating abortion access. People on the ground are already doing this, and we should keep our focus on them.

Lilith Fund, Texas Equal Access Fund, Fund Texas Choice, Jane’s Due Process, Frontera Fund, Buckle Bunnies Fund, West Fund, the Bridge Collective and Clinic Access Support Network are all abortion funds in Texas that are run entirely through community support and mutual aid. These funds have been supporting patients seeking care through massive legislative and logistical barriers for years, and they’ll continue to find ways to support patients through this crisis, too. 

You should be following, donating what you can, and getting those around you to follow and donate what they can to these funds, too. The Texas funds created an ActBlue donation link that allows you to split a donation between all of them at once, here.


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4. Donate to and support Texas abortion providers and organizers over national organizations.

In addition to Texas abortion funds, Abortion Care Network’s Keep Our Clinics fund supports independent abortion clinics including those in Texas. Whole Woman’s Health operates independent abortion clinics across the state.

Texas’ Afiya Center is dedicated to building upon the legacy and tradition of the Black women-led reproductive justice movement, organizing and advocating for comprehensive sexual and reproductive health care from a lens of racial justice. Avow Texas is a team of unapologetic, grassroots organizers dedicated to protecting and expanding abortion access in their state.

Instead of donating to or lifting up high-profile national organizations, consider supporting these Texas-based providers and organizers who have been doing the work in their communities for years.

5. Share resources on how people can safely get abortion care options online.

Educate yourself and share informational resources about the availability of reproductive health care options like medication abortion online. It’s helpful to know your options if you’re someone who could become pregnant. And it’s important to be prepared to help anyone you know who might need abortion care someday. 

Websites like Plan C and Abortion On Demand were created by public health researchers and providers, and can help anyone safely and legally find a way to access abortion pills. The doctor-run M+A Hotline is a confidential, private and secure hotline to seek expert advice on self-managing your abortion or miscarriage. If/When/How’s Legal Defense Fund is available to offer legal or financial support to anyone who has legal concerns about their pregnancy or using medication abortion. If you or anyone you know is trying to self-manage an abortion, these resources and hotlines are vital to keep on hand.

6. Learn how you can support independent abortion providers near you, no matter where you live.

It’s Texas today, but the success of SB8 sets a dangerous precedent for any state to potentially pass copycat legislation, or other extreme abortion laws. Find and support your local abortion fund, and your local clinic if you have one. Familiarize yourself with your state legislators and their voting records on reproductive health issues. Even if they already identify as “pro-choice,” press them to take action to protect and expand abortion access. Let them know that this isn’t a third rail, “women’s” issue — it’s a crisis that’s already on our doorstep, and has been decades in the making.

Amanda Hesser’s beloved peach tart has one unlikely crusader

It won the award of “Your Best Peach Pie or Tart” in the classic A&M (aka Amanda and Merrill) Smackdown. It has over a four-star rating from more than 600 reviewers. It’s prime for peach season and has been baked by home cooks time and time again. There’s a lot of love for Amanda Hessert’s Peach Tart recipe . . . but there’s some hate, too.

As a criminal defense lawyer, Rob Herrington’s natural instinct is to defend things he believes are worthy of a second chance. But this time, we’re not talking about his clients. We’re talking about Food52’s co-founder’s peach tart recipe. After baking Amanda’s Peach Tart and falling in love with the crust, Herrington, who lives in Dallas, Texas, did something he rarely does on recipe posts — he left a review. “I commented that the recipe was great and all of a sudden, I started getting emails that people were commenting ‘this was the worst recipe in the history of the universe.’ If it was something really complicated like pheasant under glass or bouillabaisse, I could understand if you messed up, but the recipe was really quite straightforward.”

After he read a series of negative reviews mixed into the comments, Herrington came to Amanda’s defense, pro-bono of course, correcting commenters who misread the recipe or incorrectly measured ingredients such as oil or milk. But he also offered a helping hand, too. After one baker commented that the tart browned too quickly, Herrington responded, recommending that “[y]ou have to lay or tent some foil lightly across the top. It will still brown, and won’t burn. Also watch the time.” It seemed as if every time someone had a bad experience with Amanda’s Peach Tart, Herrington was by her side. Recipe comment sections, like all comment sections, can be fraught places, but Rob’s love for this peach tart, and his quest to help other people make it and love it too, caught Food52 editors’ eyes. What drew Herrington to this particular recipe? And what was it that made him fall in love with it?

Earlier this year, Herrington had picked up some nectarines from the grocery store and had a craving for a peach tart. He came across Amanda’s recipe and immediately knew it was what he was looking for. “Peaches, sugar, milk, and butter . . . what can go wrong? I saw this peach tart and I said, ‘Lord have mercy.’ I thought if I could even come close to how it looked in the photograph, ‘I’m going to be happy.'”

This tart recipe was also appealing to him because he grew up watching his mother cook from The Betty Crocker Cookbook in the 1950s. “Betty Crocker’s crust is a lot like Amanda’s crust because it’s oil-based with a little bit of milk,” he told me. “As soon as I looked at Amanda’s recipe, I was comfortable with it. The proportions were a little different than what I was used to, but when I saw it, I knew it had to be good and would work.”

Herrington cut back on the sugar — “I am addicted to sugar but I’m 68 and my wife doesn’t like that much sugar, so I cut the sugar by maybe 25 percent the first time.” He was also nervous about the butter-sugar crumble on top, since he didn’t distribute the mixture evenly across the peaches. But miraculously, the recipe still worked. “This tart really takes care of itself in the oven.”

Herrington acknowledges that all home bakers mess up from time to time, whether it be forgetting to add sugar or adding too much leavener. But he believes there is no room for hate for something so sweet.

Don’t toss that burnt pan! Here’s how to clean it

I’ve burned a few pans in my life (who hasn’t?), but my mom definitely takes the cake for “Biggest Mess.” I got a text from her that said: “Lovely start to my day. Ruined my favorite pan and burned the porch.” This was the photo that came along with it:

Apparently she walked away while making hummingbird food — which is essentially just sugar water — and somehow turned it into this volcanic rock-looking monstrosity. When she smelled the burning, she grabbed the pot off the stove and put it outside on the porch, not thinking that hot pan + wooden flooring = more burning. Oops.

She was fairly distraught over the state of her stainless steel sauce pan (understandable so), but I assured her there was a way to salvage it. After several years as a writer, I’ve learned my fair share of pan-cleaning techniques, and it was time to put them to the test! Here are a few of the tactics I recommended to her.

Scrape And Soak

Whether you have a serious mess like my mom or just a mildly burnt pan, the first step is usually to scrape off whatever you can — you’ll want to use a wooden spoon to avoid scratching the pan. Don’t worry if there are still clumps of baked-on food; these will loosen up in the next step.

Next, fill the pan up with a generous squirt of dish soap and warm water. You can also try adding this laundry room staple to the soak. Let it sit overnight and then go back in with your trusty wooden spoon to scrape off or sponge it off. Repeat the soaking process, if needed, or try boiling water and dish soap to further loosen things up.

Scrubbing? No Thanks

If you’re anything like me, you avoid scrubbing pans unless there’s absolutely no other option. (I’d like to say it’s because I don’t want to scratch my cookware, but in reality, I just hate dealing with a gunky sponge.) Luckily, there are several tactics you can try that require little to no elbow grease.

Deglaze with water or white vinegar 

You’ve probably used the deglazing technique while cooking, and it can help when cleaning pans, too! Heat the pan up on the stovetop, and when it’s hot enough that a drop of water sizzles on it, pour in a cup of water or vinegar. You can then go in with your wooden spoon to scrape off the burnt-on bits.

Use a dishwashing tablet 

Ok, this technically isn’t a pantry item, but dishwashing tablets can be used to clean tough stains — after all, they’re formulated to help break down caked-on food. Fill the pot with water, then drop a tablet in. Bring the water to a boil, then reduce it down to a simmer for 10 minutes. The scraps should lift right off!

Boil with hydrogen peroxide 

As suggested by one of our readers, hydrogen peroxide can help lift stains without any scrubbing. Simply fill the bottom of your pot or pan with 1/2 inch of the liquid, then bring it to a boil on your stove. (You’ll probably want to open a window, as this can be a bit smelly.) Reduce the heat and let it simmer for 10 minutes, and the stains should come off with minimal effort.

DIY away

For milder burns and scorches on stainless steel and aluminum pans, you can usually make do with a few pantry staples. However, these tactics do require some manual power, so roll up your sleeves and get ready to scrub.

Scrub with baking soda . . .

Baking soda is the jack-of-all-trades no pantry should be without, so it should come as no surprise that it can help clean burnt pans. Mix the powder with a bit of water to create a paste, then spread it over the burnt area. You can go in with a gentle sponge and start scrubbing, or you can spray a little white vinegar over the paste to make it foam, and then scrub.

. . . or cream of tartar

Similar to baking soda, this common baking ingredient is mildly abrasive, making it great for scrubbing off tough gunk without damaging pans. Plus, it’s also acidic, helping to break down baked-on food. To use it on your burnt pan, create a thick paste using cream of tartar and white vinegar, then use it to scrub the trouble areas.

Soak in ketchup

No, that’s not a typo! The acetic acid in ketchup effectively breaks down the copper oxide that forms when you burn food, so you can use the condiment to clean up burnt pans. Just slather the burn in ketchup, let it sit for 30 minutes or so, and scrub away.

Swap your sponge for tin foil

If your regular sponge isn’t making a dent in the burnt-on mess at the bottom of your pan, here’s a useful hack. Crumple up a piece of aluminum foil into a ball, and sprinkle a generous layer of baking soda into the pan. Use the aluminum foil to scrub and get ready to be wowed by how easily it removes stains! (This method should only be used on metal pans, as it will scratch nonstick or ceramic finishes.)

Bring in reinforcements 

If your poor pot is still crying out for help, you might want to invest in a heavy-duty cleaning product.

Bar Keepers Friend is an extremely popular cookware cleaner that you can use on pretty much most pans — stainless steel, porcelain, enamel, copper, and more. The product’s combination of oxalic acid and fine abrasive particles will lift off even the toughest stains! Just be sure to thoroughly wash and rinse your pans after using this type of cleaner.

Bon Ami is another highly-touted kitchen cleaner that can be used to banish burns and stains. It uses all-natural ingredients, and some people say its smell is less offensive than Bar Keepers Friend.

Cleaning nonstick and cast iron pans 

The methods above work best on stainless steel and aluminum pans, but if you have a cast iron or nonstick pan that needs cleaning, there are things to remember when removing tough stains.

For one, you’re not supposed to use soap or other harsh cleaners on cast iron, as it can damage the pan’s seasoning. Instead, you’ll want to use a product like the Ringer — a piece of chainmail that you use like a washcloth to scrape off food particles — or simply rub down the pan with course salt, which will clean the metal without harming the finish.

With nonstick pans, you need to avoid any type of abrasive cleaner or sponge that can damage the finish (though, if you’re having problems with food sticking to the surface, your finish may already be damaged). Instead, fill the pan with water and add a generous sprinkling of baking soda. Bring the contents to a boil, then let it simmer for 10 or 15 minutes. This should help to loosen up the baked-on gunk so you can scrape it away with a spoon.

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Beyond Afghanistan: Biden turns the page on war — and the U.S. enters a new era of history

While the pundits and politicians continue to argue about President Biden’s decision to end the two-decades-long U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan, many of us are missing the bigger picture — and a very important point:

What is the future of our involvement in the Middle East — and by extension the rest of the world?

Many have tied themselves into a Gordian knot trying to decide the righteousness or the stupidity of Biden’s decision to leave Afghanistan, how it was handled, how it does or doesn’t expose our isolationist tendencies, who was affected and how it exposes our weaknesses. It is clear Biden has moved on and is leading us into uncharted waters. Buried deep in his speech Tuesday was this: “This decision about Afghanistan is not just about Afghanistan. It’s about ending an era of major military operations to remake other countries.”

That statement may make the military industrial complex nervous because Biden, it appears, is out to influence the world — not with military might but with something else. His statement regarding “ending an era” is long overdue. One of America’s most decorated soldiers, Marine Corps Brig. Gen. Smedley Butler, wrote in 1935 “War Is a Racket,” criticizing our government for using military might to influence and topple regimes.

Biden has seen beyond that particular mindset. As he pointed out, we have to learn from our mistakes. But is anyone listening? Did the president’s words fall on deaf ears? He was blunt:

And here’s a critical thing to understand: The world is changing.  We’re engaged in a serious competition with China. We’re dealing with the challenges on multiple fronts with Russia. We’re confronted with cyberattacks and nuclear proliferation. 

We have to shore up America’s competitive[ness] to meet these new challenges in the competition for the 21st century. And we can do both: fight terrorism and take on new threats that are here now and will continue to be here in the future. 

And there’s nothing China or Russia would rather have, would want more in this competition than the United States to be bogged down another decade in Afghanistan.

So how does the president aim to involve the United States in world affairs? Better yet, how can the U.S., as the world’s only remaining superpower, influence the world without taking up arms against terrorists and our enemies? Many people who live outside the United States still see us as a shining light on the hill. They want to live in a country where you aren’t judged by your social caste, and where you can get an education and pull yourself up by your own bootstraps — a place where hard work can lead to a decent life. The United States has had a hard time fulfilling its own ideals, but it and the Western European democracies are some of the few places on the globe where those ideals are still embraced. People around the world recognize it and envy it.

The joke often stated in my youth, as we sent soldiers to fight and die in Vietnam, was that we had to make the world safe for Coca-Cola and McDonalds. There is a truth to that and Biden sees it. Our culture, our ideals and our lifestyle are much more successful — if exported — in shaping the world than our military might. The world loves our movies, our lifestyle, our music and our ideals. It often resents our military.

All of our investment in military hardware, our 800 bases across the globe and our massive military budget cannot stop a determined lone suicide bomber anywhere. We have to attack the root causes of the despair that leads a person to strap a bomb on themselves and commit suicide and mass murder. For that, you need hope for a future for yourself and your family — and nothing is more enticing than the hope this country can deliver of a life worth living.

For those who support a continued military effort in Afghanistan, Biden addressed what a third decade of “low-grade” military presence in Afghanistan would look like:

Remember why we went to Afghanistan in the first place? Because we were attacked by Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida on Sept. 11, 2001, and they were based in Afghanistan.

We succeeded in what we set out to do in Afghanistan over a decade ago. Then we stayed for another decade. It was time to end this war. 

Biden hasn’t backed away from using the military. He merely framed it as part of a larger strategy — making the world safe from chaos and terrorism will include but will not be exclusive to the American armed forces:

And for anyone who gets the wrong idea, let me say it clearly. To those who wish America harm, to those that engage in terrorism against us and our allies, know this: The United States will never rest. We will not forgive. We will not forget. We will hunt you down to the ends of the Earth, and we will — you will pay the ultimate price.
 
And let me be clear: We will continue to support the Afghan people through diplomacy, international influence and humanitarian aid.

To be blunt, Joe Biden is striving to make the world over in America’s image. “But the way to do that is not through endless military deployments, but through diplomacy, economic tools and rallying the rest of the world for support,” he explained. It isn’t just American idealism that brought Biden to this decision, it’s pragmatism over “how much we have asked of the one percent of this country who put that uniform on, who are willing to put their lives on the line in defense of our nation.” Some of those who are in opposition to the Afghan withdrawal are those very people who would be called to serve.

A lot of our veterans and their families have gone through hell — deployment after deployment, months and years away from their families; missed birthdays, anniversaries; empty chairs at holidays; financial struggles; divorces; loss of limbs; traumatic brain injury; post-traumatic stress. 
 
We see it in the struggles many have when they come home. We see it in the strain on their families and caregivers. We see it in the strain of their families when they’re not there. We see it in the grief borne by their survivors. The cost of war they will carry with them their whole lives.
 
Most tragically, we see it in the shocking and stunning statistic that should give pause to anyone who thinks war can ever be low-grade, low-risk or low-cost: 18 veterans, on average, who die by suicide every single day in America — not in a far-off place, but right here in America. 
 
There’s nothing low-grade or low-risk or low-cost about any war. It’s time to end the war in Afghanistan. 

Biden lamented the “$300 million a day for 20 years” we spent in Afghanistan. Many members of Congress — on both sides of the aisle — and intelligence analysts agree: There’s a better way to spend the money. That’s one hell of an infrastructure bill for the U.S. — imagine if that much had been spent on infrastructure in Afghanistan. “What have we lost as a consequence in terms of opportunities?” Biden asked rhetorically when considering the cost in human lives and the economic price tag of our presence in Afghanistan.

This cannot be understated. We’ve proven we can blow things up, but can we build anything? Twenty years playing sheriff in a region that didn’t want us? Could we have “won the peace”  with an investment in roads, bridges, education and food production?

We will never know what might have been, only what can be. The root cause of extremism that leads to terrorism is poverty, lack of education and a lack of hope.

If Biden has looked down the road for a real solution to the problem, then history may well judge Tuesday’s speech as a turning point in history — when the world’s most powerful nation appealed to its better angels in an attempt to make life better for the downtrodden, instead of reflexively reaching for a gun.

Of course, as T.S. Eliot once noted, “Between the idea and the reality falls the shadow.”

Washington is too often dark with those who throw shade.

Humanitarians push to vaccinate in conflict zones

On March 23, 2020, with the deadly coronavirus reported in 167 countries and territories, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres called for a global ceasefire to support a public health response. It was the first global ceasefire appeal since the agency was founded in 1945, in the aftermath of World War II. “The fury of the virus illustrates the folly of war,” Guterres said. “End the sickness of war and fight the disease that is ravaging our world.”

On the ground, little changed. More than a dozen armed groups, from the National Liberation Army in Colombia to the Communist Party of the Philippines, initially endorsed Guterres’ appeal, but most offers to lay down arms were either one-sided or did not culminate in a formal ceasefire agreement. A U.N. Security Council resolution that July, which affirmed Guterres’ plea, also went nowhere. By fall 2020, the idea of a global ceasefire — which, in all of world history, has never taken place — was off the table.

On February 26, 2021, the Security Council tried another tack. It passed Resolution 2565, which less ambitiously but more pragmatically called for a “sustained humanitarian pause” in order to immunize the world. In this case, there were recent historical precedents: In the 1960s, representatives from the World Health Organization launched its intensified program to eradicate smallpox — focusing on countries such as Ethiopia and present-day Bangladesh, where the disease was endemic and where public health officials had to work around conflicts in order to bring lifesaving vaccines to civilians.

This triumph of public health diplomacy will have to occur once again, humanitarian professionals say, in order to bring the Covid-19 pandemic to an end. From Afghanistan to Myanmar, Nigeria to Azerbaijan, people caught amid violence and instability will need to be immunized. Public health experts fear that if conflict zones don’t receive vaccines soon, these places could become hot spots for transmission and incubators for potentially dangerous variants of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.

But hammering out temporary ceasefires won’t be easy. The political situation is more complex now than in the past, in part because of the abundance of nonstate actors like al-Qaida and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) that control large swaths of land, and are not necessarily eager to give governments credit for vaccination campaigns. Additionally, public health officials say, vaccine hesitancy and other pressing needs threaten to sabotage vaccination efforts. In Afghanistan, where the Taliban has recently recently taken over, Covid-19 vaccinations have already slowed.

Still, humanitarian negotiators are pressing ahead. “That’s the reality of our profession — that we never give up,” said Katia Papagianni, director for mediation support and policy at the Center for Humanitarian Dialogue, a Swiss-based private diplomacy organization. These negotiations are informed by the growing recognition that, in order to successfully broker time-outs in fighting for “humanitarian access,” mediators must engage with teachers, respected elders, women’s groups, local businesspeople, and other community leaders.

“It is not rocket science,” Charles Deutscher, a policy adviser for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), wrote on the organization’s Humanitarian Law & Policy blog in March. “It’s investing time and showing empathy — drink more tea, sit with people, and listen to them to understand their concerns, cultures, and creeds before coming at them with a needle.”

And when it comes to dealing with warring factions, those in the field say, it’s essential to stay politically neutral and to continually nurture the conditions for peace. “You literally have to negotiate every day,” said Papagianni. “You may negotiate every morning and every afternoon, if that’s what’s needed.”

Dee Goluba, senior director of field security for the humanitarian aid organization Mercy Corps, added that conflict parties will only allow aid workers access who have proven themselves to be outside of the fray, completely impartial. Humanitarian personnel must be “perceived as not helping the other combatants,” she said. “Trust is everything.”

* * *

Though the WHO’s smallpox eradication campaign was not history’s first global vaccination drive — that honor belongs to the Spanish government’s worldwide immunization effort against smallpox, which began in 1803 and deployed Edward Jenner’s early vaccine — the WHO’s program was the first and only to eradicate a human infectious disease.

Smallpox was the ideal target, in large measure for reasons that distinguish it from Covid-19. The smallpox virus can only be spread by people, meaning there were no hidden animal reservoirs, unlike the various species of bats and other mammals that harbor strains of coronavirus that have jumped to humans. Smallpox’s symptoms were distinct and easy to identify, and the virus was not spread by asymptomatic carriers. There was a stable and highly effective vaccine. And smallpox lesions, which could scar a victim for life, were universally feared, regardless of politics. The United States and the Soviet Union — bitter Cold War adversaries — joined forces to rid the world of the disease.

Even with these advantages, expunging smallpox from the planet was a formidable undertaking. “It required the cooperation of all countries throughout the world and the active participation of more than 50,” wrote the campaign’s director, the legendary Donald A. Henderson, in 2011. The final push of smallpox eradication — one of the landmark achievements in public health — took place from 1976 to 1977 and had to work around wars in Ethiopia and Somalia.

 

In 1995, former President Jimmy Carter negotiated the “Guinea Worm Ceasefire” during a fierce civil war in Sudan. The nearly six-month-long pause in fighting was, at that time, the longest humanitarian ceasefire in history. It enabled health workers to care for those suffering from Guinea Worm Disease, a gruesome parasitic infection, and distribute aid and preventive health measures.

Perhaps the most fitting contemporary precedent was the 1980s launch of a series of pauses in fighting to facilitate childhood immunization campaigns. The first attempt was in 1985 in El Salvador, a country then in the throes of an ongoing civil war. UNICEF director James Grant was inspired by the concept of “children as a zone of peace,” which called for children to be protected in conflict zones — an ideal he thought even antagonists with guns could agree on. Shuttling between the government of then-president José Napoleón Duarte and the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) rebels, and relying on support from the Catholic Church, Grant negotiated three “days of tranquility” — temporal islands of calm that allowed health workers to immunize children against polio, measles, diphtheria, tetanus, and whooping cough. Those first three days saw at least 250,000 children receive vaccinations; the pause in fighting occurred every year through 1991, dramatically reducing the incidence of measles and tetanus and helping eradicate polio in the country.

The “days of tranquility” model was taken up by the Pan American Health Organization for its “Health as a Bridge for Peace” program, which drew on effective communications and broad partnerships with local communities around planning and vaccine rollout to ensure success; the framework was adapted by the WHO for other parts of the world. During cessations of hostilities in the 1980s and 1990s, standard immunizations reached children in countries including Afghanistan, Cambodia, Lebanon, and Sudan.

* * *

In 2021, the notion of Covid-19 “days of tranquility” seems inconceivable. That’s because most armed conflicts of late are waged not between countries but within the boundaries of nation-states, according to a 2018 report from the Peace Research Institute Oslo. The ICRC estimates that more than 50 million people live in territories fully controlled by armed nonstate authorities, and some 100 million live in areas where control by these groups is more fluid.

This breed of conflict is protracted and open-ended. An ICRC assessment in 2016 found that the average length of time the agency spent in the countries hosting its 10 largest operations was more than 36 years. As of August 2021, the organization counted 605 armed groups in 44 nations that posed a concern to its humanitarian work; ICRC negotiators have maintained contact with 415 of these groups. Experts from the organization noted in March that “in some of the most complex recent conflicts, analysts have observed hundreds, if not thousands” of armed contingents present in a single country.

These groups “rapidly factionalize; opposing sides lack the funds or command structure to achieve definitive dominance; the conflicts multiply and move across populated terrain; and the fighting drags on for decades,” said Jennifer Leaning, a senior research fellow and former director of the François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University, at a workshop on mental health in the Middle East in 2014. Nowadays, she continued, it’s clear that “the primary pattern of war is intrastate, communalized, or sectarian. These conflicts are waged by nonstate actors untrained in or dismissive of the laws of war, or are waged by oppressive, brittle, or failing states against stigmatized groups of their own citizens or residents.”

 

Hichem Khadhraoui, director of operations for Geneva Call — a humanitarian nongovernmental organization focused on protecting civilians in armed conflict — borrowed, consciously or not, a word from current public health headlines to describe the situation. “The conflicts are mutating,” he said in an interview posted to the organization’s website. Negotiators for the ICRC, for example, may need to parley with 10 different commanders harboring 10 different opinions along a 10-kilometer road, said Esperanza Martinez, head of the organization’s Covid-19 crisis team — a cast of combatants that, according to Khadhraoui, may change completely from one year to the next.

Such shape-shifting dampens the prospects of pandemic peace. “Who stands to benefit? I mean that’s always what it comes down to, especially in ceasefire negotiations: pretty cynical cost-benefit analysis on the side of the conflict parties,” said Tyler Jess Thompson, a senior expert on negotiations and peace process support at the United States Institute of Peace, a nonpartisan institute founded by Congress. “If you have a territory that’s controlled by a nonstate armed group or a rebel group, more likely than not, the rebel group will welcome some kind of humanitarian assistance,” he said, explaining that it can boost their legitimacy. “The flip side challenge to that is a government party not wanting rebel-controlled territory to be seen as governed or services being provided there. So there’s a legitimacy battle.”

“You have this very kind of difficult situation that we have in front of us now of who gets the credit for bringing in the vaccines,” said Govinda Clayton, executive director of the Conflict Research Society. “It might be that, in the end, both parties decide it’s just in both of their best interest just to continue fighting and not allow the vaccination campaign to happen, because they don’t lose anything by doing that and they don’t let the other side gain anything.”

Some United Nations policies may be making the situation worse. February’s Security Council Resolution 2565 explicitly excludes pandemic pauses in military operations against terrorist groups such as al-Qaida and ISIL. Many humanitarian organizations think that’s a bad idea. “Covid-19 should reinforce the notion that, even when living under the control of armed groups and governments categorized by other states as terrorist, criminal, or rogue, civilians remain simply that: civilians,” noted a report published by the ICRC earlier this year.

“My personal opinion is that in order to solve Covid-19-related problems, humanitarian actors should engage with the authorities of these armed nonstate actors on the distribution of the vaccine,” said Ezequiel Heffes, a senior policy and legal adviser at Geneva Call. But, he conceded, “This is where law and politics kind of split.” According to international law, each party to a conflict is obliged to ensure that everyone within the territories it controls gets access to basic health care. But politically, some government authorities may not want to allot precious vaccines to people who seek to overthrow them.

Other observers questioned the secretary-general’s rhetorical attempt to tie the humanitarian goal of providing aid to the political goal of promoting peace. “The more decoupled that can be, the better,” said Thompson.

NGOs that work in conflict zones draw a glaringly bright line between politics and humanitarianism. “Humanitarian actors are very, very attentive to the importance of maintaining the space, what they call the ‘humanitarian space.’ And that means ensuring that they will never be accused of being partial to one side or another,” Papagianni said. The four fundamental principles of humanitarianism are humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence. This distinction and distancing from politics has become “even more acute the past few years,” Papagianni noted, “given the fact that major humanitarian actors have been attacked in the field.”

A report from the Safeguarding Health in Conflict Coalition found that 185 health workers died in conflict settings in 2020, more than in either of the previous two years. It also cited more than 400 attacks on health care efforts that specifically responded to the pandemic. In these incidents, health care workers “were abused, injured, threatened and harassed, and health facilities were attacked, damaged, and/or set on fire,” according to the report. Violence against health care efforts erupted, among other places, in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, India, Mexico, Syria, and Yemen.

* * *

Another stumbling block to pandemic ceasefires is that civilians and combatants alike face threats that they regard as far more urgent than the coronavirus. In most areas affected by conflict, the leading causes of death are not combat-related but rather the indirect consequences of war: malnutrition, chronic diseases that go untreated because of failing public health programs, and common childhood infections, to name a few.

Consider the catastrophe in Yemen, where the world’s worst humanitarian crisis has been dragging on for years amid a vicious civil war. More than 100,000 people have been killed and 3.6 million displaced as a result of the conflict, according to a report written by Thompson for the United States Institute of Peace. The country has suffered the worst documented cholera epidemic in recorded history, with more than 2.5 million suspected cases since the outbreak began in 2016. Mothers and children are dying from preventable complications during pregnancy and birth. Famine is bearing down, with tens of thousands of people starving to death and another 5 million on the brink. Last May, according to The Lancet, of an estimated 30 million Yemenis, 24 million — 80 percent of the population — needed humanitarian assistance.

Yemen’s ordeal transcends Covid-19. At the same time, the humanitarian disaster and the war that accelerated it have obstructed the pandemic response. Yemen’s health system has been shattered by fighting, economic collapse, and a recent shortfall in humanitarian funding. The Houthi movement based in the north — which has been fighting the pro-government coalition and controls Sanaa, the constitutional capital — has downplayed the coronavirus threat, withheld data on cases and deaths, and undermined international efforts to provide vaccines in areas under their control. Before agreeing to accept 10,000 vaccine doses, “one of the conditions the Houthi authorities set was that there should be no media coverage or social mobilization for a vaccination campaign,” noted a June article from Human Rights Watch, a nongovernmental organization that tracks human rights abuses around the world. “As of writing, the vaccination campaign hasn’t happened in the north,” it said.

On the same day in 2020 that the U.N.’s Guterres made his ceasefire appeal, a small Yemeni organization called Food for Humanity Foundation issued its own desperate ceasefire call. “With the world being engulfed in the coronavirus pandemic, the little attention that the Yemen war is getting, has all but disappeared,” it said. “But the war itself has not.”

Yemenis are not alone in objectively weighing the threat of Covid-19 against other perils. In Mali last year, after gunmen struck villages and killed at least 12 civilians, a local mayor said, “What is killing us isn’t coronavirus, but war.” This past February, a Somali cattle herder, who has lived most of his life in a region controlled by Islamist insurgents, told Reuters: “Before we get the vaccine, we need other things. We need food, water, health care, and shelter. Our people are dying because of the basics in life. We will need the vaccine when we are liberated, now we are basically under siege.”

Syria has been ravaged by 10 years of conflict and spent 21 years under the authoritarian rule of President Bashar al-Assad. According to a commentary published in April in The Lancet, since the beginning of the conflict in 2011, more than 585,000 people have died, child life expectancy has dropped by 13 years, more than half of the country’s pre-conflict population has been displaced, and at least half of public hospitals and public health centers are either “partly functioning or not functioning at all as of November 2020.” Other reports from the Syrian American Medical Society note that almost 80 percent of Syrians live in poverty and three-quarters of health care workers have either left the country or been killed. A study last fall by Imperial College London estimated that only 1.25 percent of Covid-19 deaths are being reported in Damascus. Not surprisingly, coronavirus cases are now surging. As an article last year in Newlines Magazine foretold, “Syria appears to be headed into a desultory experiment with herd immunity.”

Syrian feminist activist Hanadi Alloush said that many women in northern Syria whom she’s spoken with don’t even know about Covid-19 vaccines. She also underscored the near-collapse of the country’s health system, the precarious fate of internally displaced people, and the silence surrounding Covid-19 — a silence that has descended, she said, because civilians living in areas controlled by the Assad regime fear that if they so much as mention the virus by name, they will be detained. “What I want to share is that it is a very complicated situation that is beyond Covid,” Alloush said, speaking through a translator. “A more holistic approach to address it is needed.”

Part of that holistic approach, for all conflict zones, is public health support for nonpandemic emergencies. For example, humanitarian officials want to piggyback Covid-19 vaccinations on top of standard childhood immunizations, which have been severely interrupted by the pandemic. Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, a global health partnership that aims to provide vaccinations to poor countries, estimated last year that 10.6 million children had not received a single dose of basic vaccinations in 2019, before the pandemic made the shots even more difficult. Measles — a vaccine-preventable disease that mostly kills children under the age of 5 — hit a 23-year global high in 2019, killing 200,000. According to a March report from the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, as of last October, 30 countries had “either fully or partially postponed” vaccine campaigns against measles during the pandemic. And according to the CDC, 41 nations have either “already put off, or may put off” their measles immunizations campaigns that had been scheduled for 2020 or 2021.

“For the last couple of years, Congo has been facing its largest measles epidemic,” said Maria Guevara, the international medical secretary at Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF). She added that a recent outbreak in the northwest of the country prompted MSF to run, amid coronavirus spread, measles vaccination campaigns. “That was their issue, not Covid,” she said. “Measles were the thing, because kids were dying.” And that’s setting aside the country’s other recent crises: Ebola, malaria, a volcanic eruption, and scores of volcano-triggered earthquakes.

“It’s a balancing act,” said Guevara. “We need to just remember that in many parts of the world, Covid is not the only problem they’re facing, unfortunately.”

* * *

Vaccine hesitancy could also impede pandemic ceasefires, experts say. The hesitancy is partly driven by mistrust in public authorities in places where long-standing corruption or abuses of power have amplified political grievances. Such mistrust was a major hurdle in containing the Ebola epidemic which emerged in West Africa seven years ago.

Misinformation is false or inaccurate information that is spread, regardless of the intent to mislead. Disinformation is false or misleading information that is deliberately disseminated. Both abound in places of instability. “Part of it is the globalization of the anti-vaccine movement. That has thrown a lot of cold water on immunization programs and has worked to discredit them or devalue them,” said Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and author of the new book “Preventing the Next Pandemic.”

Falsehoods come in many forms. In Nigeria, some believe that both Covid-19 and its vaccines were engineered to wipe out Africans. In Somalia, the militant group al-Shabab has rejected the AstraZeneca vaccine as unsafe and has instead prescribed black seed and honey for Covid-19 sufferers. In Syria, a state-run radio station assured listeners that the coronavirus “loses potency in the Middle East’s hot climate,” according to Newlines Magazine. Meanwhile, in Myanmar, some citizens have decided to forego immunizations, not because of weaponized disinformation, but because the vaccines would be delivered by a military government that has in recent months killed hundreds of civilians.

Delays in vaccine production and distribution pose an additional challenge. While affluent nations pre-purchased more than enough doses to fully protect their populations, the Covid-19 Vaccines Global Access initiative, or COVAX, is desperately short of doses, and those it has acquired have not always reached the places that need it most. COVAX’s distribution model is based on an equity paradigm. The plan is for the partnership’s 92 low- and middle-income countries to receive proportionally similar allotments that would cover 20 percent of their populations. It prioritizes health care workers and other vulnerable groups first, with additional vaccine doses to follow as they become available. A “humanitarian buffer” of up to 5 percent of available doses will be set aside for certain populations — such as those living outside government-controlled areas.

According to a June report in The Lancet, of the 2.1 billion vaccine doses administered globally by that point, COVAX had facilitated less than 4 percent. As of July, COVAX estimates to have some 1.9 billion doses available for distribution by the end of the year, though this volume is not guaranteed. If the plan goes forward, COVAX should be able to reach at least 23 percent of the populations in 91 of those 92 low- and middle-income countries. (India was excluded from that estimate but will receive a “tailored package of support.”) But 23 percent protection still leaves these nations well short of the coverage they need to achieve herd immunity.

At a National Press Club event in March, Mercy Corps CEO Tjada D’Oyen McKenna warned that the longer vaccines are delayed in reaching conflict-affected countries, the greater the risk for violence within those nations’ borders. Mercy Corps teams have also seen that measures intended to curb the pandemic’s spread have unintentionally fueled conflict, she said: “Government responses to the pandemic, including lockdowns and border closures, are fraying community trust; misinformation is proliferating; and competition for resources has intensified.”

* * *

Conflict areas harbor the very conditions that promote viral spread. They are crowded. They may lack basic sanitation and health services. And people are on the move, often fleeing for their lives. “Getting displacement sites set up — water access, food, provisions — can take time,” said Jennifer Chan, the director of global emergency medicine at Northwestern Medicine. “And knowing what we now know of Covid, that can increase the risk for transmission.”

“The virus has a mutation rate that’s almost clock-like,” said Caroline Buckee, associate director of the Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The more that the airborne SARS-CoV-2 is transmitted, the greater the risk that new — possibly more virulent, or more contagious — strains will evolve.

According to Buckee, an infectious disease modeler, it will be difficult to monitor new variants’ circulation. Buckee’s work depends on sound data: particularly, accurate viral sampling. Obtaining those samples requires a robust surveillance system — another casualty of war. “Without surveillance, you can’t do models,” she said. “In places where the health system is damaged or almost destroyed, surveillance is out the window.” In the Covid-19 pandemic, she later added, that’s been a defining feature: “You can’t trust the data, especially the case data.”

Chan, who has worked for years on humanitarian programming in disaster areas, added that poor internet connectivity in conflict zones makes it difficult to send out for expert analysis whatever data does exist.

 

Many public health experts fear that conflict zones will end up on the bottom of the global vaccine distribution list, because it is more problematic and more expensive to reach these places. If pockets of Covid-19 cannot be contained, they could spawn no-go zones around the world reminiscent of off-limits locales going back a century or more, said Leaning, the senior research fellow from Harvard. “It will be like the world was post-World War II to about 1970 — and certainly, actually, throughout much of the 19th century as well — where if you wanted to go to regions that were remote, you had to prepare to die from contagious or infectious disease.” In 19th-century British India, for example, endemic malaria, plague, cholera, and leprosy were major threats, while yellow fever and malaria on the West African coast helped give rise to the odious epithet “the White man’s grave.”

Claude Bruderlein, director of the Geneva-based Center of Competence on Humanitarian Negotiation, wants to change COVAX’s equity model to one based on efficiency, prioritizing areas prone to major outbreaks. War zones and otherwise fragile states are precisely where alarming variants could develop, “but they are the last ones on the list,” he said. “When are they going to vaccinate in Afghanistan?” he asked back in May, when battles between government troops and the Taliban were in a brutal phase, but the fundamentalist organization had not yet overrun the country. According to Our World in Data, a project of the nonprofit Global Data Change Lab, as of August 11, only 0.6 percent of Afghans have been fully immunized against Covid-19. “This is a petri dish for variants,” Bruderlein said.

Bruderlein also pointed out that many of today’s conflict zones lack clear borders — meaning that people and the viruses they harbor can move around. He worries, for example, about Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh. With a population of nearly 900,000, it is the world’s largest refugee settlement, housing in numerous camps mostly Rohingya who fled from neighboring Myanmar. “Five people in three square meters,” Bruderlein said. If Bangladesh’s health system collapses, the refugees in Cox’s Bazar will simply leave.

According to Bruderlein, the same is true in most of the Horn of Africa and the Sahel, the semi-arid belt of land that lies between the Sahara to the north and savannas to the south. Here, state control is often nonexistent and some of the most protracted conflicts in the world are playing out. “The border doesn’t exist, basically,” he said. “You have hundreds of thousands of people moving over a few weeks.”

* * *

When the U.N. Security Council passed Resolution 2565 this year, calling for pauses in fighting to conduct mass vaccinations, it was, in effect, a green light for humanitarian agencies to do what they do best. “In contrast to the secretary-general’s ‘global ceasefire’ idea in 2020, which was a welcome but ultimately quixotic appeal, Resolution 2565’s focus on vaccination campaigns is rooted in decades of humanitarian action,” Richard Gowan, U.N. director at the International Crisis Group, wrote in April.

Humanitarian professionals are primed for the task. But in conflict zones, their work requires earning and sustaining the confidence of all sides — coincidentally, the very same requisites for successful public health campaigns. “Localized approaches to conflict resolution are now widely accepted as the gold standard for building peace,” wrote Amanda Long and Tyler Beckelman in a United States Institute of Peace commentary last fall. In his March post on the ICRC blog, Deutscher wrote: “Community engagement takes time, effort, and money.” That interpersonal investment, he said, is as important as cold-chain management — storing the vaccine under proper temperatures from the time it is manufactured until it is administered — and fielding enough qualified health workers.

Although Mercy Corps is not currently conducting broad-scale Covid-19 vaccination campaigns, the NGO has gleaned trust-building lessons from the past. According to Dee Goluba, it means reaching out to parent-teacher associations, soccer teams, Muslim clerics, and many others. “We employ women who are local — mothers and daughters, schoolteachers — and we engage with women in our work on a day-to-day basis,” she said. “Once you get mothers on board, the sons come on board, often. Once the sons are on board, their friends have a dialogue that makes its way to combatants, it makes its way within the community.” The goal, Goluba said, is to sow accurate, science-based information throughout the local population.

Alloush, the Syrian activist, knows the dynamics of home-grown conversations firsthand. She directs the social and women’s program at Damma Foundation, a community-based women’s network founded in Syria but now based in Lebanon, where she has lived since seeking refuge from the war in 2015. Its mission is to support women engaged in peacebuilding and to provide humanitarian aid, education, and relief services.

Between 2015 and 2017, Alloush said, Damma was active in the small mountain town of Madaya, Syria, which had been under siege for months by Syrian government forces and Hezbollah militia fighters — a total blockade that brought starvation and other horrors. Negotiating with suppliers that monopolized local trade, Damma volunteers helped bring in essential supplies — baby formula, milk, flour — according to Alloush. In 2012, in the nearby town of Zabadani, Damma contributed to temporary ceasefire negotiations that called for a halt to random sniping. The volunteers were able to achieve these demands, Alloush explained, because they were not perceived by combatants as acting out of self-aggrandizing motives. “Women, yes, they are the peacemakers,” she said. “All our demands were purely civilian. We didn’t have any military asks.”

Young people, too, may have a role to play in vaccination campaigns — yielding another kind of peace dividend. “If you’ve got lots of young men and women putting their energy into the common good,” such as vaccinating thousands of local people, “that’s a really creative and pro-peace activity for them to be doing,” said Hugo Slim, former head of policy and humanitarian diplomacy at the ICRC, and now a senior research fellow at the Institute of Ethics, Law, and Armed Conflict at the University of Oxford.

He cited surges of youthful altruism in places such as Nigeria, South Sudan, and Yemen. “It’ll be the young people who do all this,” Slim said, “because there’s so many of them and because they’re the ones that are going to have the energy and the agility and commitment to put on a Red Cross vest or a Caritas vest or an Islamic Relief vest,” and help their local health service “for days and days and days.”

Leaning can envision a grassroots network of competent volunteers to help administer the vaccine. Locals with deep roots in the community — from schoolteachers and students to long-haul tradesmen and women vendors in the market — could be trained to assist in immunization campaigns, with dedicated health workers on the ground to supervise and follow strict cold storage and distribution guidelines. All you need, Leaning said, is simply “any cadre of people who have an ethic of caring for a population.”

* * *

In the 17 months since António Guterres linked the “fury of the virus” and the “folly of war,” a shadow has crossed the globe. On the viral side of the ledger, as of August 24, the world has seen more than 212 million confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 4.4 million deaths. On the war side, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, political violence killed nearly 90,000 people in 2020 alone.

Did Guterres’ poetic plea make any difference at all?

“Secretary-generals of the U.N. have to give those lofty calls. We know that very often, they’re sort of calling into the abyss, as it were. But when they make that call, it does help give people an idea, potentially change a discussion, an environment,” Slim said. “Even if, out of 50 conflicts, his call helps two conflicts to come to some arrangement — you know, that’s good. That’s good.”

The fact that Guterres even broached the idea of a global ceasefire could have deeper reverberations. “The more you keep talking about these ideas — that you can have humanitarian ceasefires, that there are these things called humanitarian pauses — the more you keep them as real and as normal and as possible,” Slim said. “If you never talk about them, they disappear from being options.” When the next inevitable pandemic strikes, he added, people could point to instructive ceasefire precedents from today’s crisis.

Esperanza Martinez, the ICRC Covid-19 crisis team head, grew up in Colombia, where, since the mid-1960s, violence has raged between the government, far-right paramilitary groups, crime syndicates, and far-left guerilla groups. By some accounts, the civil war claimed more than 260,000 lives.

In the 1990s, Martinez earned her medical degree in the capital, Bogotá, where, she said, bombings were a fact of life in the narcotics trade and the war against drugs. To cap her medical training, she was sent to a rural community in the southern part of the country. The town was under the control of the army, but a few kilometers away, down by the river, it was ruled by left-wing guerillas. Martinez said she had to cross the frontlines of war to negotiate the safe passage of wounded patients.

What has stayed with her from her upbringing, and from her work as a medical doctor, she said, “is the deep appreciation for the resilience of people.” Amid violence and deprivation, “They still send their children to school,” she said. “They still hope to have a better future.”

Martinez was grateful for the secretary-general’s 2020 ceasefire call, “because anything that allows to diminish the suffering of people affected by armed conflict is very welcome,” she said. But she harbors no illusions about the tangible results of Guterres’ plea. “The reality is that, if we look at what has happened during Covid,” armed conflict has not decreased, she lamented. “We have Nagorno-Karabakh, we have Tigray, we have devastating attacks in Afghanistan, we have growing violence in Iraq, persistent violence in Yemen. So wherever you look, really, the situation hasn’t diminished.” Indeed, she said, fighting has escalated in many places.

Martinez believes it’s crucial to support these conflict-plagued regions — not only with Covid-19 vaccines, but with health care services, education, jobs, and long-term investment in development programs that will eliminate the drivers of poverty, violence, and migration. “Just work on the root causes — on inequality,” she said. Today’s disparity in vaccine distribution, she suggested, is merely one glaring example among many such inequities: “One thing that Covid has done is to underline that, disregarding of where we live, we are all exposed and we are in all of this together.”

* * *

Madeline Drexler is a Boston-based journalist and a visiting scientist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. She is the former editor of Harvard Public Health magazine.

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

Hurricane Ida and the coming eviction crisis

Hurricane Ida has battered one of the poorest regions of the country, driving floodwaters into neighborhoods along the Gulf Coast and those along the Mississippi River in Louisiana. Its winds knocked trees through houses, and its rising waters sent people into their attics where they waited for rescue. Thousands will likely be without shelter for weeks or even months.  

A move by the Supreme Court last Thursday could make the struggle to find housing even worse. 

Despite a push from community organizations and members of Congress, the conservative court blocked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from enforcing a federal moratorium on evicting renters during the pandemic. In the South, the fight by housing advocates to maintain the eviction ban was undergirded by the knowledge that the states most likely to see evictions were those set to be hit by Hurricane Ida, a storm likely intensified by climate change.  

“Climate change is also a housing crisis,” said Andreanecia Morris, executive director of the housing advocacy nonprofit HousingNOLA. “Mother Nature is trying to evict us with cause.”

While natural disasters may uproot families and their homes, landlords have used hurricanes, floods, and other wild weather events as an opportunity to kick renters out. After Hurricane Katrina, thousands of low-income renters in Louisiana and Mississippi faced mass evictions and illegal price gouging. In New Orleans, homelessness rates soared in the following years, as people flocked to the city and helped drive average rental prices up 82 percent

According to the most recent Census Bureau survey, as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, 6 percent of renters nationwide say they are “likely” or “very likely” to face eviction. In Louisiana, the number is almost 1 in 5. In Mississippi, one of every 10 renters say they are at risk of eviction. Even before the pandemic, more than a third of renters in both states were low-income and facing the constant threat of eviction, according to tabulations of the 2019 American Community Survey by the National Low Income Housing Coalition. 

Hours after the Supreme Court’s ruling on Thursday, families across the state of Mississippi were given eviction orders through local court systems. This came three days before Hurricane Ida knocked out power and water systems for more than 1 million people across Louisiana and Mississippi. 

“We see this after every disaster,” said Sarah Saadian, vice president of public policy at the National Low Income Housing Coalition. “This power imbalance that exists between renters and landlords allows them to turn tragedies into money in their pockets.” 

Saadian says the Supreme Court’s ruling will give landlords a freer hand to evict tenants under the guise of remodeling and rebuilding battered homes and apartments. A loss of housing supply could also allow them to drive up their rents.

“All of a sudden, after disasters, there’s less housing supply because a lot of homes are destroyed, but then there are also more people displaced from their homes for socially constructed reasons — and both groups need to find housing,” Saadian said. “So that usually creates a cycle where landlords raise their prices and oftentimes continue evicting people, even if there’s no damage to their property, so they can make more money.” 

While resources for homeowners are typically made available following disasters through the Federal Emergency Management Agency, renters are offered much less protection. In the aftermath of storms, particularly in states with some of the weakest protections for renters like Mississippi and Louisiana, landlords sometimes manage to evict tenants without going through proper legal proceedings.

Morris believes that while legislative attention will be focused on stopping legal evictions in the wake of Hurricane Ida, these illegal evictions will go under the radar. “I think we’re going to see a spike in homelessness as a direct result of informal evictions,” she said, “not the destruction caused by the storm.” 

The timing of the storm, however, may have left people especially vulnerable. “With this storm coming at the end of the month, we have people either waiting to receive their next paycheck or people who’ve just used their money to pay rent,” Saadian said. “That means many people just didn’t have the resources to evacuate or be in a hotel for a couple of nights.” 

In the meantime, as the results of Ida’s destruction come to light, housing advocacy groups will continue to call for more robust protections for renters. The housing crisis, compounded by the pandemic and natural disasters, deserves a more coordinated response, they say. 

“We shouldn’t have a disaster response system that depends on whether or not you have money in your bank account,” Saadian said. 

Former Sen. Heidi Heitkamp now lobbies for tax loophole she called “one of the biggest scams”

Former Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, a moderate North Dakota Democrat who was defeated in 2018 and has become a frequent cable-news commentator, is now leading a dark money group’s effort to preserve a tax loophole that overwhelmingly benefits the wealthy. Just a few months earlier, Heitkamp had described the loophole as a “scam.”

Heitkamp, who was passed over for a job in President Biden’s Cabinet, now chairs a nonprofit called Save America’s Family Enterprises (SAFE), a dark money group that does not disclose its donors but has launched a six-figure ad campaign to lobby against a key provision in the Democrats’ $3.5 trillion budget proposal. The group aims to preserve the “stepped-up basis” loophole, which allows people to avoid capital gains taxes on inherited investments. Biden has called for closing the loophole to help pay for the spending plan, but Heitkamp has gone on a media blitz in the past week to “sound the alarm” over the proposal as big-money groups seek to water down key tax provisions in the budget framework.

It’s a strange turn for a former lawmaker who voted against the 2017 Trump tax cuts for the wealthy and just five months ago decried the loophole when former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie complained that capital gains taxes — which are paid on the profits of an investment when it is sold — amount to “double taxation” during an appearance on ABC News’ “This Week.”

“This is one of the biggest scams in the history of forever on income redistribution,” Heitkamp told Christie in April. “If you have a tax — if you have a stock, you can pass it on to your kids with stepped-up basis, and it’s never taxed. You know that there needs to be reform on unearned income. And so to demonize it and say it’s going to hurt the little guy, yes, that just is not factual, Chris. And you know it.”

The loophole overwhelmingly favors ultra-wealthy families and costs the United States more than $40 billion per year. Under existing law, if someone sells a stock or an asset they must pay capital gains taxes on “realized” assets, but if they instead leave stocks or assets behind to their heirs, under the “stepped-up basis” rule, the unrealized capital gains are never taxed at all. An estimated 64% of the wealth held by billionaires consists of untaxed capital gains that the government may never tax under the current rule.

Amy Hanauer, executive director of the Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy, told Salon that the current loophole “unfairly allows billionaires like Jeff Bezos to avoid paying income tax on most of their real income,” because it comes from appreciation on his assets, which are now worth $99 billion more than they were 10 years ago. “That’s not fair. At the very least, income tax should be paid on that income when Bezos dies and passes his assets on. That’s what the Biden proposal to end the stepped-up basis rule would accomplish.”

Biden’s proposal seeks to claw back those untaxed billions to pay for part of his spending plan, which includes a massive expansion of health care, child care and education. Biden has proposed repealing the lower capital gains tax rate so that investment income is taxed the same as ordinary income earned in wages and salaries, which Heitkamp says she supports. But if the stepped-up basis loophole is not closed, wealthy people could avoid paying the tax simply by holding on to their assets until they die and then leaving them to their heirs.

Closing the loophole is “essential to make the rest of Biden’s tax plan work,” Hanauer said.

“You can’t have it both ways,” she said. “If you agree with Biden that unearned income going to wealthy people should be taxed at the same rate as earned income, you can’t defend a tax break that allows lots of unearned income to escape taxes completely.”

But after being hired by SAFE, Heitkamp is now making exactly the same argument she attacked in April.

She argued in an interview with The Hill last week that the proposal would hurt “middle-class families” and would force the sale of family-owned businesses and farms and family-owned properties like vacation homes.

That seems like a stretch. In fact, Biden’s proposal includes exemptions for up to $1 million in unrealized gains for individuals and $2 million for couples, as well as additional exemptions for family-owned businesses.

“Heitkamp is ignoring what Biden’s proposal actually would do,” Hanauer said in an email. “Biden’s plan does not apply to any family business or farm as long as the family continues to own and operate it. If they sell or stop operating it, then they’d have to pay the tax on the unrealized gains over $1 million (if inherited from a single person) or over $2 million (if inherited from a couple). And they would have 15 years to pay the tax!”

Heitkamp elaborated her position in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday, arguing that she was worried about farms that were family-owned but not family operated.

“Think about what that means. Some family who lives on Martha’s Vineyard owns land in the Midwest that they don’t run, but get income from,” Hanauer said. “Heitkamp wants to make sure that if that absentee owner dies and passes the land on to an heir who has never set foot in the Midwest, the heir doesn’t have to pay taxes. Tax policy should not be focused on protecting unearned income to an absentee inheritor of land someone else is working!”

Heitkamp also argued that closing the loophole would hurt minority-owned businesses.

“Now that we see an emerging entrepreneurial class within the Hispanic community and within the African American community, they won’t be able to take advantage of these tax rules that will allow them to grow their business and keep capital in their business,” she told the Hill.

That argument seems like a rhetorical dodge, given that the existing system overwhelmingly favors white people, who hold an estimated 84% of the nation’s wealth, because the loophole inherently applies to income from wealth. There is little or no basis for arguing that the loophole helps people generate or build wealth; it primarily helps rich people hold onto the wealth they already have.

“Heitkamp is trying to preserve a system that leaves untaxed a type of income that surely flows disproportionately to white people,” Hanauer said. “Heitkamp’s approach would keep a tax code that entrenches white wealth and reinforces racial wealth inequality.”

Keeping the rule on the books would “supercharge” the racial wealth gap, said Seth Hanlon, a former economic adviser to President Barack Obama, expressing dismay at Heitkamp’s “cynical argument.”

“No one can straightforwardly defend letting Bezos and other billionaires avoid capital gains taxes forever,” he wrote on Twitter. “So they hide behind small businesses and/or minority-owned businesses. Typical DC.”

Along with Biden and a growing roster of progressive and moderate Democratic lawmakers, even centrist economists like Lawrence Summers have called for closing the loophole. While the current plan has encountered some pushback from congressional conservatives, Republicans like Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, and former presidential contender Jeb Bush have also called for end the loophole.

Heitkamp appeared to shift her argument on Wednesday, claiming that she is trying to protect Democrats from political blowback.

“I’m trying to sound the alarm, both economically and politically, for Democrats that this is not a path to walk,” she said, even though polls have shown that the public overwhelmingly supports closing tax loopholes for the wealthy and there has been considerable outcry over leaked IRS data that showed how the rich avoid paying income taxes.

Heitkamp’s push comes amid a lobbying frenzy aimed at watering down the tax increases that would be used to pay for the Democrats’ big spending bill. Since Democrats can pass the bill without Republican votes, business groups have launched an expensive campaign to “divide” Democrats on the plan and have allied with centrists like Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., and Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., all of whom have protested the price tag and various provisions in the proposal.

The moderates have also demanded that all the provisions in the spending bill be paid for, which was never plausible in the first place and is increasingly less likely given the forceful lobbying pushback. The capital gains tax increase has faced steep opposition from some Democrats and an increase to the estate tax is also reportedly unlikely. Though it is still early in negotiations, one analysis has found that about 75% of the proposed tax increases have already been axed amid the lobbying blitz.

Right-wing youth organizer Charlie Kirk illegally threatened employees over COVID precautions

Over the weekend, youth right-wing organizer Charlie Kirk threatened to fire any employee of his organization, Turning Point USA, who asks about COVID-19 safety precautions in the workplace. According to labor law experts, that was clearly illegal.

After speaking with an expert in the field of United States labor law, one thing has become increasingly clear: Kirk’s most recent attempt to be a right-wing provocateur might come back to present a series of legal challenges for the frequent Fox News guest. 

At a gathering on Sunday evening at the Godspeak Calvary Chapel in Newbury Park, California, Kirk responded to a an audience question about COVID vaccinations by saying that if one of his employees were to ask about vaccine mandates, they would be fired. 

“And somebody asked me the other day: ‘So Charlie, are you going to require the vaccine at Turning Point USA?’ He’s like a reporter,” he stated at the event, clearly not joking. “I said, look, you don’t work for me, but if you did, you would be fired for asking such a ridiculous question!” 

Marcy Goldstein-Gelb, co-executive director of the National Council for Occupational Safety and Health, told Salon that Kirk’s threat to fire employees simply for asking about COVID safety issues was not only “illegal” but also “dangerous.” 

“It is not only dangerous, it is illegal to threaten firing or any other form of retaliation against a worker who asks about health and safety protections in their workplace. Employer retaliation is, unfortunately, a very serious problem,” Goldstein-Gelb said. “It prevents workers and employers from working together to identify and correct safety problems.”

The labor rights expert added that “threatening workers who ask questions about how to protect themselves and their families is demeaning, dangerous and dumb.” 

As Goldstein-Gelb pointed out, Kirk’s remarks both broke the law and violated the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) workplace violence policy, which outlines the following

Workplace violence is any act or threat of physical violence, harassment, intimidation, or other threatening disruptive behavior that occurs at the work site. It ranges from threats and verbal abuse to physical assaults and even homicide. It can affect and involve employees, clients, customers and visitors. Acts of violence and other injuries is currently the third-leading cause of fatal occupational injuries in the United States. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI), of the 5,147 fatal workplace injuries that occurred in the United States in 2017, 458 were cases of intentional injury by another person. [More…] However it manifests itself, workplace violence is a major concern for employers and employees nationwide.

OSHA didn’t return numerous Salon requests for comment on Kirk’s threat. 

Turning Point USA has argued that Kirk’s remark was meant as a “joke,” but in a statement to Salon again attempted to justify it, arguing that if a TPUSA staffer were to bring COVID concerns to the attention of management, it could constitute a “fireable offense” because that employee wouldn’t be a good “cultural fit.” 

“The comment was made as a joke, clearly, but to be clear, the quote is ‘fired for asking such a ridiculous question,’ not for vaccination status,” TPUSA spokesperson Andrew Kolvet told Salon on Wednesday. “TPUSA literally sponsors a No Forced Vax campaign to protect students from draconian vaccine mandates. If an employee of TPUSA then turned around and asked whether or not TPUSA was planning on mandating vaccines, the questions would be absurd to the point of demonstrating either a bad cultural fit, gross incompetence or workplace intoxication. All of which are fireable offenses.” 

That wasn’t the only comment offered to Salon from TPUSA. Troy Meeker, the group’s administrative director of human capital, sent a statement reading, “Turning Point USA has both vaccinated and unvaccinated employees and the organization does not ask status. TPUSA is in full compliance with both federal and state laws.” 

It isn’t exactly new for right-wing media-oriented entities to violate the rights of their own workers. Most notably, in June of 2019, Federalist co-founder Ben Domenech threatened via Twitter to send his staff members back to “the salt mine” if they attempted to unionize, which would later be deemed unlawful by the National Labor Relations Board

Whether labor agencies will review Kirk’s remarks remains to be seen. 

You can watch Kirk’s comments below, via YouTube: 

Matt Gaetz claimed to be victim of “extortion” plot — but new DOJ charges tell a different story

A new grand jury indictment released on Tuesday revealed new details surrounding the complex and sordid case of Florida Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz.

The grand jury charged Florida man Stephen Alford, 62, of attempting to commit wire fraud and conceal evidence. Previous reporting had found that there was a federal investigation into a scheme by Alford and others to ask Gaetz’s father, Don Gaetz, for $25 million to fund a rescue mission in Iran.

Rep. Gaetz had claimed that this request was part of an “extortion” attempt related to the investigation into allegations that he has been involved in child sex trafficking, corruption and other crimes. An associate of his has already agreed to plead guilty to these charges, though Gaetz denies them. When the investigation into his conduct first emerged, Gaetz tried to distract from the scandal by pointing to the “extortion” tied to Alford.

He tried to argue that the investigation of him was driven by duplicitous agents out to get him. But it turns out that the supposed “extortion” attempt wasn’t quite that — at least insofar as the Justice Department sees it.

Rep. Gaetz’s argument was that the plot sought to use the investigation to extort his father out of money. What the indictment indicates, however, is that the plot wasn’t about extortion, just fraud. It says Alford falsely promised he could get a presidential pardon for Gaetz in exchange for money, and he used interstate wires to do it.


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When I previously wrote about Gaetz’s extortion allegations in April, I argued that they were not supported by the public evidence. For example, one document obtained by the Washington Examiner said that the plan was that after the Iran rescue attempt, the team will “strongly advocate that President Biden issue a Presidential Pardon, or instruct the Department of Justice to terminate any and all investigations involving Congressman Gaetz.” As I argued at the time, that doesn’t look like extortion. That just looks like a silly and obviously hollow promise — there’s no chance President Biden would pardon Gaetz for the allegations against him or intervene in a DOJ probe to help him.

The new indictment alleges that Alford made more than hollow promises, but demonstrably false claims in an effort to obtain Gaetz family money. It claims that Alford falsely communicated to Gaetz’s father (described as “D.G.” in the indictment) that Biden has said he will “strongly consider” pardoning Rep. Gaetz (called “Family Member A) or ending the investigations into him. Alford also reportedly said he “will get that pardon” and that he could “guarantee” no prison time.

It also says Alford attempted to destroy or conceal evidence on an iPhone in the course of the investigation.

It’s not clear how strong a case this really is against Alford. It certainly seems like a hare-brained scheme, but it’s not against the law to propose a terrible idea to someone. It is a crime to lie to them in order to get their money, but Alford may argue that he was just speaking hyperbolically about his hopes for the plan rather than defrauding anyone. It may be hard to judge the allegations without additional context.

Though it probably doesn’t help Alford’s case that, according to the Washington Post, he has already been convicted of local and federal fraud crimes.

But what does seem clear is that — unless the DOJ comes out with another indictment — investigators didn’t find substantial evidence of extortion. That’s important because it undercuts the reason Gaetz was so interested in drawing attention to the Alford scheme to begin with. If the charges were being used to extort the Gaetz family, it may be reason to believe that the investigation isn’t on the level and the congressman is being unfairly targeted. But that’s not what the indictment suggests. Instead, it suggests that a serious investigation of Gaetz was somehow discovered by a man with a ludicrous idea, creating a spectacular but ultimately inconsequential sideshow.

Two Trump employees to testify before grand jury amid criminal probe

Two Trump Organization employees are set to testify before a Manhattan grand jury, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.

Trump Organization Director of Security Matthew Calamari, Jr. and Jeffrey McConney, a “senior finance official” are expected to testify. Calamari is the son of the Trump Organization’s chief operating officer.

McConney reportedly prepared the personal tax returns of Matthew Calamari, Sr.

“Mr. Calamari Jr.’s testimony before the grand jury would grant him immunity on the subjects about which he testifies and signals prosecutors don’t plan to indict him,” the newspaper reported. “Prosecutors continue to investigate whether the elder Mr. Calamari received tax-free fringe benefits and to determine whether his cooperation would be helpful to them, according to people familiar with the matter.”

U.S. officials alarmed as white supremacists cite Taliban as model for domestic warfare

A CNN report Wednesday noted that the embrace of the Taliban by some white supremacists and anti-government extremists is causing concern among American officials.

The championing of the Taliban by the U.S. groups comes at a time that Afghan allies are coming to the United States as refugees for their own safety.

The report details trends from the groups that have been “framing the activities of the Taliban as a success,” and saying that it could be a model for their efforts to create a civil war in the U.S.

Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis chief John Cohen cited the “great replacement” conspiracy theory that has been promoted recently by Fox News host Tucker Carlson as fuel for these white supremacists.

“So we’re getting it and if history is any guide—and it’s always a guide —we will see many refugees from Afghanistan resettle in our country in coming months, probably in your neighborhood,” Carlson said during a recent broadcast. “And over the next decade, that number may swell to the millions. So first we invade, and then we’re invaded. It is always the same.”

“There are concerns that those narratives may incite violent activities directed at immigrant communities, certain faith communities, or even those who are relocated to the United States,” said Cohen.

A recent analysis from SITE Intelligence Group said that far-right extremist groups have been “invigorated” by Afghanistan. Either they want to emulate the Taliban or they want to fight back against “invasions” by the refugees.

“These farmers and minimally trained men fought to take back their nation back from globohomo. They took back their government, installed their national religion as law, and executed dissenters … If white men in the west had the same courage as the Taliban, we would not be ruled by Jews currently,” read one post from a fascist Proud Boys Telegram group that SITE found.

Read the full report from CNN.com.

How animators brought a classic Italian pasta dish to life on screen in Disney and Pixar’s “Luca”

What happens when a young sea monster in search of adventure, friendship and a few noodles of pasta touches land? Disney and Pixar’s “Luca” takes viewers on a stunning journey through a seaside town on the Italian Riviera to find out.

Available on Disney+ (as well as Blu-ray and digital), “Luca” traces the diverting journey of a sea monster and his friends Alberto (also a sea monster) and Giulia as they enjoy an unforgettable Italian summer — all while Luca and Alberto try to keep their sea monster genes a secret. Directed by Italian storyboard artist and film director Enrico Casarosa, the Disney Pixar team brought the vibrant, colorful world of Italian seaside culture to viewers through the charming, good-natured storytelling many of us have come to associate with Disney films.

So what was a post-grad, childless movie watcher like myself doing watching this kids’ film? Portorosso, the fictional town where Luca takes place, is based on the townscapes of Genova and Liguria, regions in Italy known for their colorful buildings, peaceful environments and culinary innovation.

RELATED: My 10-year carbonara journey (and the recipe for this perfect pasta dish)

The setting took me back to my own Italian summer, which included seemingly endless days of eating seafood pasta overlooking the gorgeous beaches in Finale Ligure, chasing trains to walk the cobblestone streets of Cinque Terre and listening to old grandmothers banter about the best way to make pasta in town squares.

For Pixar Animation Studios art director Paul Abadilla, it’s exactly the type of film that allows animators like him to bring their creativity to the forefront — and take viewers on a mesmerizing journey right in their homes.

“We had a very strong understanding that Luca is really told from the perspective of a child who is learning about this world and possibilities of just growing up,” Abadilla told me.

Among the brightly colored towns and character designs that the animation team brought to life, I found myself interested in one scene in particular. True to my food writing instincts, when Luca and Alberto are still disguised as fully human children, they inhale a green pasta dish called trenette al pesto, visibly complete with chunks of potatoes and green beans. Trenette al pesto comes from the Liguria region and — according to Abadilla — was included to further pay homage to the regional cultures of Italy.

“As designers and as artists, it’s part of our job to study, research and learn about the dish — and really do our best to convey that onto the screen — so that when folks who are very familiar and grew up with that dish see it on screen, they can get that feeling that they’re so familiar with,” Abadilla said. “And even for folks who aren’t familiar, we want their mouth to water and really just capture the essence of that very iconic Ligurian dish.”

Trenette al pesto is made with trenette pasta, a type of noodle that’s widely available in Italy. Here in the states, where trenette isn’t as easy to locate, it’s often substituted with noodles such as linguine or spaghetti. Chopped green beans and potatoes add heft to the dish, while the rich, handmade pesto, provides the fragrant, crisp sauce that’s come to define the meal.

Trenette Al Pesto
Trenette Al Pesto (Photo courtesy of Kayla Stewart)

Abadilla, who was responsible for the shading design in the scene, took his artistic responsibilities to heart and made the pasta at home.

“It was my responsibility to do the research and convey the artistic direction of the look of the pasta and how we would see it on screen,” Abadilla said. “The fun part of that assignment was the research itself. I had grown my own pesto in the backyard, and it was specifically the Genovese basil. When it was time to pick it, I did — and ground it up by hand. It took a lot of patience — I had never made pesto up until that time — and it was definitely a learning experience that was delicious.”

Trenette al pesto is a fairly simple dish to make. I deeply enjoyed making the pesto the old-school method with a marble mortar and pestle (just pretend you’re pounding Ercole Visconti’s face into the mortar!). If you don’t have one, a food processor works just as well. I found trenette online, but if it’s sold out, you can easily use a similar noodle like linguine or other long-length pasta of choice.

For the full recipe, who better that Giulia herself to bring this delightful dish straight to your table? Here are her step-by-step instructions:








(Courtesy of Disney/Pixar)

 

Read more “Tastes of Comfort”: 

Why “Shrek” memes shutting down anti-abortion snitch hotline are just the beginning

The anti-abortion movement’s routine barrages of nightmarish state-level abortion bills have ranged from sneaky, devil’s-in-the-details regulations to shut down clinics, to attempts to sentence abortion providers to the death penalty. But Texas’ latest law, which took effect Wednesday, is admittedly – and alarmingly – creative. It christens all citizens, not just in Texas, as a citizen police force who can sue anyone who has or helps someone have an abortion for upwards of $10,000, all on top of banning abortion at about six weeks.

And while abortion bans aren’t new (1973 really wasn’t that long ago, people!), the internet is (relatively speaking), and with it come some major caveats to how abortion access and activism work today. Recently, Texas Right to Life started an online anonymous tip line for bored, evil people to snitch on anyone they suspect may be trying to have or help someone have an abortion, in what felt like a crossover episode between “The Handmaid’s Tale” and “Black Mirror.”

The tip line, of course, could be exploited as an everyday, indiscriminate weapon. It could effectively be used by vengeful co-workers, nosy and sanctimonious neighbors, abusive exes, and otherwise vindictive individuals who might feel like ruining someone’s life, subjecting them to stalking, doxing or even an exorbitantly costly lawsuit.

Thankfully, things didn’t exactly go according to plan for Texas Right to Life. 

Their snitch site, ProLifeWhistleBlower.com, was shared widely . . . by abortion rights supporters and clever teens on Twitter, Reddit, and of course, TikTok, calling on the internet to rise up and render the tip line nonfunctional with spam. The calls to action caused a sensation; they quickly made it to Reddit’s front page, drew thousands of retweets on Twitter, and arguably most effectively mobilized the teens on TikTok. Almost immediately, ProLifeWhistleBlower.com was inundated with nearly countless false reports, hate mail, and — because Gen-Z is wonderful — “Shrek” memes.

Lots and lots of “Shrek” memes, some safe for work and others not so much.

One TikToker shared a video of their “report” to the tip line, in which they uploaded 11 “Shrek” images with a message that explains, “My wife aborted our baby 4 weeks into her pregnancy without my consulting me.”

As a result of this scheming, and tasteful “Shrek” memes and furry porn, the Texas site has gone from dystopic, crowd-sourced, right-wing doxing machine, to a useless social media spectacle. Its demise feels like a callback to the epic trolling spearheaded by TikTok teens and K-Pop fans that contributed to an empty Trump rally stadium in Tulsa last summer, after users reserved thousands of tickets to the event, only to not show and humiliate the former president’s bamboozled campaign team with rows upon rows of empty seats.

Later on, shortly after the presidential election that saw Trump evicted from the White House, social media users capitalized on his campaign’s utterly nonsensical election fraud hotlines and online forms as a perfect opportunity for trolling. People submitted memes, and even shared titillating tales of being seduced away from the voting booth by masked Antifa super-soldiers, until the hotlines had to be shut down. 

In other words, today’s young people and the surprisingly significant number of decent people on the internet are exceedingly crafty and astute. They know how to use the tools at their disposal to hold their own against their often less tech-savvy and — let’s face it — mostly old, white, male political foes.

Memes are great . . . until you comprehend the need for them

While this may be a triumph on some level, it’s more than a little sad that today’s young people have had to grow up in a world that requires them to know how to employ TikTok to take down fascist political rallies, or overwhelm an internet tip line designed to stalk, criminalize and put a bounty on pregnant people. 

It’s a classic, pitiable case of adults praising kids for “saving the world,” without considering that kids shouldn’t have to. In an ideal world, zoomers would have the peace to be able to use TikTok solely to learn dumb dances, or use Twitter just to subtweet irritating classmates. But instead, they’re stuck living in a world where they have to orchestrate mass, online efforts to foil the anti-abortion movement’s frequent diabolical, dehumanizing plans. 

“Shrek” memes and empty Trump rally stadiums may provide for some necessary, comforting comedic relief, but the threat we face from Texas’ abortion ban is anything but a joke. Not only is it the most extreme in the nation, and a signal of mounting extremism in a court system that’s often prevented the most overtly dangerous anti-abortion legislation from taking effect — it’s also an incentive for the most hateful and extreme people you can imagine to stalk and endanger women and pregnant people around them.

Race and abortion access have always been inextricably linked, as barriers to nearly all forms of health care often fall hardest on people of color, who are more likely to seek abortion care. All aspects of Texas’ new abortion ban, but mainly its citizen policing component, will disproportionately put pregnant people of color in harm’s way. Policing has a long, violent history of racial profiling, and “policing” by racist, neighborhood vigilantes certainly does, too.

Of course, spying on pregnant and pregnant-capable people isn’t a new tactic of the anti-abortion movement, which is behind a number of sneaky apps people can use to track menstrual cycles or pregnancies. Dozens of states require abortion providers to report abortions to the government, and just two years ago, Missouri’s top state health official admitted to tracking and recording Missourian’s menstrual cycles. 


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You might wonder whether Texas’ ban or any of this is an especially big deal considering we already live in the surveillance state hellscape that is the era of Facebook, but in the post-Roe v. Wade world that Texas is rapidly propelling us toward, surveillance will be crucial to enforce abortion criminalization, or even punish people who miscarry if a neighbor accuses them of self-inducing an abortion.

And unfortunately, there are limits to what even the best “Shrek” memes can do to protect women and pregnant people. While many social media users are a benign force of do-gooders who would engage in any spamming or trolling necessary for justice, social media platforms are notorious for protecting abusers, and enabling accounts that promote right-wing or anti-abortion extremism. Doxing and cyber harassment of women and LGBTQ people on social media has been on the rise, but Facebook remains busy at work banning female users who call men “scum.”

And most specific to Texas’ abortion ban, which will force many Texans to travel out of state for care if they can afford to, self-induce abortions, or simply carry an unwanted pregnancy to term, Instagram banned an account sharing World Health Organization-verified information and resources about accessing medication abortion, and safely self-managing an abortion, mere days before Texas’ law took effect. The move is particularly galling because Instagram has been a popular platform for cyber sexual exploitation or “revenge porn,” but its moderators have deemed the real problem to be medically accurate facts about self-managed abortion from an account run by health experts.

At the end of the day, tragically enough, not all problems can be solved by gathering the masses and spamming abortion doxing hotlines. Calling Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office to ask if his refrigerator is running may be momentarily satisfying, but won’t change the state of abortion access in Texas. 

But what can meaningfully change things is donating to the Texas abortion funds that have been doing the work against all kinds of logistical and legislative barriers for years, supporting the organizers on the ground that are helping people get care, or putting in the work to flip the state’s legislature of radicalized white men. After all, social media activism has its tricks and powers, but nothing can replace mutual aid and solidarity with those on the ground.