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What’s the true cost of shipping all your junk across the ocean?

Take a look around your home and you’ll likely find plenty of goods that traveled by cargo ship to your doorstep. A set of IKEA plates made in China. A dresser full of pandemic-era loungewear, ordered on Target and made in Guatemala, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam. Tracing the impact on the environment from shipping any of these goods is incredibly tricky to do. The data — if you can find it — involves many companies, countries, and cargo carriers. 

Such obscurity makes it hard to count the full cost of our consumption. But a recent report helps unravel some of the mystery.

Two environmental groups, Pacific Environment and Stand.earth, worked with prominent maritime researchers to track goods imported by the 15 largest retail giants in the United States. They then quantified the greenhouse gas emissions and air pollutants associated with those imports, usually ferried across the oceans on cargo ships running on dirty bunker fuel. In 2019, importing some 3.8 million shipping containers’ worth of cargo generated as much carbon dioxide emissions as three coal-fired power plants. These shipments also produced as much smog-forming nitrous oxide as 27.4 million cars and trucks do in a year, according to the report. 

“Our report affirms that these retail giants’ dirty ocean shipping is fueling the climate crisis,” said Madeline Rose, climate campaign director for Pacific Environment and the study’s lead author. 

The study is the first to trace retailers’ shipping-related emissions, and it used data from a separate, larger project to track the industry’s emissions that’s set to launch in October. The findings are likely just a snapshot of the true environmental toll: Researchers said they could only verify emissions for one-fifth of shipments by the 15 retailers, owing to a lack of data and the companies’ use of shell companies and franchises.

The largest retail company in the United States, Walmart, was also the biggest polluter of the bunch. In 2019, Walmart imported enough goods to equal 893,000 shipping containers, resulting in some 3.7 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions. 

Maritime shipping is a crucial part of the global economy. About 80 percent of everything bought and sold travels on oil-burning, seafaring freighters at some point. All that shipping activity accounts for nearly 3 percent of the world’s annual greenhouse gas emissions, as well as a significant share of air pollution in coastal communities. The International Maritime Organization, which regulates the industry, has recently adopted measures to curb cargo ship emissions and reduce fuel consumption. But experts say stronger regulations and bigger investments are needed to steer the industry away from fossil fuels and toward cleaner technologies, such as hydrogen fuel cells, batteries, and wind-harnessing devices.

Another way to spur companies to action is through accounting — figuring out how many emissions are produced by which activity, from which company, at which location. In the world of ocean freight, a shipment of cargo can pass through many hands and even owners between the time it leaves a factory and reaches a warehouse on the other side of the planet. The goal of the new research, Rose said, is “to bring baseline environmental and public health accounting oversight to this incredibly murky issue.”

For the report, the environmental groups commissioned University Maritime Advisory Services, or UMAS, a well-regarded research consultancy in London. UMAS has developed a proprietary tool for estimating fuel consumption and emissions from individual ships and is also a partner in the SEA-CASE project at the Stockholm Environment Institute. That initiative has gathered billions of records on vessel movements, detailed shipment lists, import and export data, and other information from big economies like the United States, Brazil, and China.

“Once you combine all of that data, it’s a very powerful thing,” said Javier Godar, a senior research fellow at the Stockholm Environment Institute, who was not directly involved in writing the July report. “You can really start looking at responsibility for those emissions.”

After Walmart, the next top polluter in the report was Ashley Furniture, which imported 270,000 containers and generated over 2.2 million metric tons of CO2. Next up was Target, with some 600,000 containers and over 2 million metric tons of CO2. Researchers could only track some 123,000 container imports for Amazon, a company whose 2019 revenues topped $280 billion. Those imports were responsible for more than 390,000 metric tons of emissions.

Representatives from Walmart and Amazon didn’t comment directly on the study but provided information on their companies’ efforts to curb emissions from their supply chains. In response to a request for comment, a Target spokesperson said the company is committed to “reducing our shipping carbon footprint,” as it works toward becoming a “net zero enterprise” in its operations and supply chain by 2040.

A spokesperson from IKEA, which came in seventh place for CO2 output, said addressing emissions from cargo ships is “a significant topic” for the Swedish furniture giant. Ocean shipping accounts for about 40 percent of IKEA’s total carbon emissions from transportation. The spokesperson said the company is working to reduce its carbon footprint from every shipment by 70 percent on average by 2030. To that end, IKEA participated in a 2019 pilot project to test biofuels in an ocean-going container ship. 

Researchers who worked on the retail-focused report said it took them months to scour and analyze data. And it’s taken years to develop the statistical models and build the database that underpin the recent findings. 

Godar said his ship tracking efforts began in 2014 with the launch of Trase, an online database that follows the flow of agricultural commodities that are driving deforestation in tropical countries. A United Nations report might show the total amount of soy shipped from Brazil. With Trase, however, the idea is to discern whether that soy came from, say, illegal logging in the Amazon rainforest or a legal farm elsewhere, and then follow that to the final customer.

Researchers are increasingly able to access such valuable information as more companies keep records in digital form, Godar said, and as the ability to “scrape” data from the internet improves. Still, there are limits. Most data isn’t publicly available, and it’s expensive for researchers to buy. Godar hasn’t been able to get a hold of shipping-related data from the European Union and other countries, which leaves an informational black hole.

A beta version of the SEA-CASE platform will launch this fall and be free for anyone to access. A preview over Zoom showed a flurry of yellow lines connecting continents, each one revealing a detailed breakdown of a particular voyage in 2019. A casual user could, for example, trace coffee imports by Starbucks into the United States, then see the carbon emissions associated with the shipments.

Ultimately, this kind of information could help consumers push retailers to cut carbon emissions from their suppliers, said Gary Cook, the global climate campaigns director for Stand.earth. Cook previously led Greenpeace campaigns challenging tech giants like Facebook and Apple to stop powering their data centers with coal-fired electricity and replace it with renewable energy. 

“Companies can move very fast when motivated,” he said. “It’s to their advantage to show their loyal customers they care about the climate and are taking action.”

Republican star Lauren Boebert spins fables about her childhood — but the real story is better

Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado, a right-wing Republican and prominent member of the “Sedition Caucus,” frequently speaks about her upbringing in a family struggling with poverty, describing herself as a “welfare child.” Boebert has even blamed the liberal ideals held by her mother as the reason why her family was poor and required government assistance during her childhood.

But both in Washington circles and in speaking to voters in her Colorado district, Boebert has not discussed in detail exactly what circumstances landed the future right-wing firebrand and her mother in this disadvantaged situation. An investigation by Salon suggests that it had less to do with liberal ideology and more to do with her mother’s failure to obtain the child support payments to which she was rightfully entitled.

Boebert’s mother, Shawn Roberts Bentz, tried valiantly for years to receive child support — and it appears likely that she and her daughter fell victim to a corrupt phlebotomist, a professional wrestler turned deadbeat dad, and a negligent North Carolina child support system that allowed Bentz’s case to slide through the cracks.

Boebert has occasionally been asked what role her biological father played in her family’s struggles, and has repeatedly declined to answer. Exactly who her father was, in fact, remains officially uncertain: No father’s name was listed on her 1986 Florida birth certificate, nor in the local newspaper’s birth announcement.

But both Boebert and Bentz apparently believe that her father is Wallace Stanfield Lane, a former North Carolina pro wrestler known in the trade as “Sweet” Stan Lane — and there is significant evidence to back up that theory. 

Boebert and her mother believe that Lane may have engaged in fraud regarding a paternity test he took more than 30 years ago that appeared to rule him out as Boebert’s father. 

Karen Weary, the North Carolina phlebotomist who took Lane’s blood sample in July of 1990, was convicted of switching samples in a different case. Once child support services in North Carolina found out about this, they were mandated to notify everyone involved in Weary’s cases and retest all the samples she had taken that excluded fathers. 

But Boebert’s mother was never notified, and Lane was never retested.

As her birth certificate makes clear, Lauren Opal Roberts was born in Orlando, Florida, on Dec. 19, 1986. Her mother, Shawn Elaine Roberts, was 18 years old and unmarried. As mentioned above, no father was listed either on the birth certificate or in a birth announcement published a few weeks later in the Orlando Sentinel. 

(Record above obtained by Salon.) 

Two months after Boebert’s birth her mother opened a child support case against Wallace Stan Lane, who, under the name “Sweet” Stan Lane was a member of at least two pro wrestling tag teams, the Midnight Express and the Fabulous Ones. 

Over the course of Salon’s reporting on the matter, MEL Magazine published a detailed report on Lane and the paternity dispute, nailing down many of the details also used in this story. Lane was a prominent professional wrestler who performed several times in central Florida around the time of Boebert’s conception in early 1986. He was 33 years old when Boebert was born, and by all accounts was financially solvent. (He also had a reputation in the wrestling game as a ladies’ man.)

 

Shawn Roberts’ child support case was first filed in Orange County, Florida, where Lauren had been born, but was then moved to nearby Seminole County, where Lane was eventually ordered to pay child support of $100 per week or $430 per month. At the time of the judgment, Boebert’s mother was working full-time at a convenience store called Handy Way for $4 an hour, then the minimum wage. Her average take-home check would have been about $650 a month, which even 30-plus years ago was well below the federal poverty line. (The extra $100 a week would have put Roberts and her daughter just above that level, in 1987-88 standards.)

It appears that Lane made few, if any, of those mandated child support payments, although his pro wrestling career continued and there’s no evidence he was in financial distress. Lane admitted he had had sexual relations with Roberts, according to court records reviewed by Salon, and Roberts swore in an affidavit that she had not had sex with anyone other than Lane at the time her daughter was conceived.

Roberts finally had papers served on Lane that compelled him to take a paternity test, which he did in the summer of 1990, when Lauren was 3 years old. That test, administered by the above-mentioned Karen Weary, appeared to rule out Lane as the girl’s father. So the child support case was closed, and Lane was no longer required to pay Shawn Roberts anything.

That, however, was not the end of the story. 

Years later, Roberts apparently learned that Weary was subsequently convicted for taking a $500 bribe from a former NFL player in a strikingly similar case, involving a blood sample collected just two months later than Lane’s, in September 1990. 

In both cases, Weary collected a sample at the Department of Child Support Enforcement and then delivered it to a company called Genetic Design for testing. This story became big news in North Carolina in 1993 when Weary’s corrupt scheme was exposed, but by then Roberts and her daughter had moved from Florida to the Denver area and never learned of it. They also never learned that Genetic Design offered “to retest, at no cost,” all samples drawn by Weary that excluded a man from a paternity case. Weary, also known as Karen Best Sherow, died in 2012, before Lauren Boebert or her mother discovered Weary’s involvement in criminal blood-sample switching.

In October 2012 Boebert’s mother, who by then was known as Shawn (or Shawna) Roberts Bentz and lived in Rifle, Colorado, contacted the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation to ask for an investigation of Lane, whom she believed was shirking his responsibilities. Records indicate that throughout 2013 Bentz contacted numerous other agencies, including the Mecklenburg County District Attorney, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, and court clerks in both Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, and Seminole County, Florida, asking that Lane’s case be reopened on the matter. She could not rouse the bureaucracy in any of those agencies to pay attention.

One letter that Boebert’s mother wrote to Seminole County Superior Court in 2013 specifically called for a new paternity test. Bentz wrote:

Her father is Stan Lane a former professional wrestler who at that time was a member of the tag team The Fabulous Ones.  When Stan learned I was pregnant, he encouraged me to have an abortion and said that the child would be damaged because of the steroids he had taken. … Stan did end our relationship when he learned I was pregnant and soon fled the state of Florida.

Bentz’s letter, reproduced below (with some of her personal information redacted), includes a number of other compromising or incriminating details about Lane’s 1990 paternity test, including the suggestion by Charlotte newspapers that Karen Weary may have falsified numerous other tests and the fact that the photograph used to identify Lane at the time appeared to be a staged publicity shot rather than a candid portrait. Bentz also included a letter from Cindi Straughn, a cousin of Stan Lane’s, who wrote to Lane urging him to cooperate and saying that Straughn believed Lauren Boebert to be his daughter.

Despite Bentz’s considerable efforts, Stan Lane — long retired from pro wrestling and more recently an announcer for speedboat races — has never taken a second paternity test and has continued to insist that Lauren Boebert, now a nationally known figure in conservative politics, is not his child. 

Boebert’s congressional office did not return a request for comment on this story. Salon’s attempts to reach Shawn Roberts Bentz and Stan Lane for comment were unsuccessful.

Madison Cawthorn admits he “erroneously” tried to bring gun onto plane

On Friday, The Daily Beast reported that new audio showed Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) tried to bring his Glock onto an airplane in February — an event that his campaign chalks up to an accident.

“The incident was first revealed in audio obtained by FireMadison.com, a group trying to drive the far-right Cawthorn from the halls of Congress,” reported Justin Rohrlich. “But according to the 25-year-old legislator’s spokesman, the entire dustup was just a simple mistake. ‘Five months ago, while boarding a flight, Rep. Cawthorn erroneously stowed a firearm in his carry-on (that often doubles as a range bag) instead of his checked bag,’ Cawthorn spokesman Micah Bock said in a statement.

Bock added that the Glock was “secured and unchambered,” and stressed that “Rep. Cawthorn endeavors to always follow TSA guidelines, and quickly rectified this situation before boarding his flight.”

Cawthorn, one of the youngest people ever elected to Congress and known for a history of incendiary racial remarks, has invited controversy repeatedly since taking office, including with a claim that President Joe Biden could use door-to-door vaccination drives to “take your Bibles.”

Texas now has more COVID deaths than New York — despite once trailing by 29,000

At the start of the novel coronavirus pandemic, New York served as the disease’s ground zero in the United States, as it rapidly infected an unsuspecting public and quickly overwhelmed the state’s hospitals.

At the time, states like Texas were far behind New York in terms of total statewide COVID-19 deaths, but the Houston Chronicle reports that the Lonestar State has now surpassed New York despite once trailing it by 29,000 total deaths.

Spencer Fox, associate director of the University of Texas COVID-19 Modeling Consortium, tells the Chronicle that he’s not surprised that Texas has surpassed New York’s death total given the two very different approaches they’ve taken to the pandemic.

“They enacted really strong, precautionary measures that overall are well based in the available science,” Fox told the paper. “It seems that many of the Texas policies were put in place to try and prevent health care collapse rather than trying to prevent transmission.”

Texas has now recorded 53,275 total COVID-19 deaths since the start of the pandemic, placing it only behind California, the nation’s most populous state that has suffered 64,372 virus deaths.

Despite the current surge in COVID-19 cases caused by the delta variant of the virus, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has vowed to not put in any more restrictions aimed at lowering the spread of the disease.

Dolly Parton invested “I Will Always Love You” royalties to honor Whitney Houston’s legacy

In these highly polarized times, it often feels like the one thing we can all agree on is Dolly Parton and her general delightfulness. Whether she’s funding life-saving COVID vaccine research or, this week, standing with pop icon Britney Spears through the oppression of her conservatorship, Parton is more than a music icon — she’s a cultural one, too.

And on a Thursday appearance on “Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen,” Parton revealed that she used the royalties from her 1973 song “I Will Always Love You,” later famously covered by the late Whitney Houston in 1992, to invest in a Black neighborhood in Nashville. Forbes reports that Parton has made about $10 million from the song.

“I bought my big office complex down in Nashville. So I thought, ‘Well, this is a wonderful place to be,'” Parton told Cohen. “I bought a property down in what was the Black area of town, and it was mostly just Black families and people that lived around there. It was off the beaten path from 16th Avenue and I thought, ‘Well, I am gonna buy this place — the whole strip mall.’ And I thought, ‘This is the perfect place for me to be,’ considering it was Whitney.”

Parton, who has spoken emphatically about her love for Houston’s cover of her song for “The Bodyguard” soundtrack, saw this move as a way to honor and respect Houston. “I thought this was great — I’m just gonna be down here with her people, who are my people as well,” she said. “So I just love the fact that I spent that money on a complex and I think, ‘This is the house that Whitney built.'”

Last summer, Parton vocally spoke up and expressed her support for Black communities, stating unequivocally that Black lives matter in an interview, and surprising some who thought Parton risked alienating her legions of white, southern fans. Yet, Parton has retained her tremendous, global popularity, and continues to be an outspoken advocate for racial and social justice.

In addition to divulging to Cohen what she spent some of her “I Will Always Love You” royalties on, Parton also revealed a deep regret of hers: not being able to perform the song with Houston before the legendary singer’s untimely death in 2012.

“I was never asked to perform that with Whitney. I wish that could have happened,” Parton said. “I would’ve loved that, but I don’t think I could’ve come up to [sing] with her, though — she would’ve outsung me on that one for sure.”

You can watch her Thursday interview with Cohen below:

Bombshell notes expose Trump’s pressure campaign to get DOJ on board with election lies

Lawmakers in the House Oversight Committee released new evidence on Friday of former President Donald Trump’s extensive pressure campaign to use the Justice Department to help him overturn the result of the 2020 presidential election in the final days of his administration.

Notes from conversations between the president and DOJ officials detail his aggressive push to have the department validate the wild conspiracy theories about election fraud that he fomented, despite the lack of evidence.

On Dec. 27, when told the department couldn’t “snap its fingers” and “change the outcome of the election,” Trump said, “Don’t expect you to do that, just say that the election was corrupt + leave the rest to me and the R. Congressmen,” according to the notes.

These new revelations follow a recent report from the Washington Post that Trump called acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen about the election almost daily at the end of 2020 about the election. Bill Barr had resigned as attorney general in part because of his split with Trump on the legitimacy of the election.

Publicizing notes of communications between the president and the heads of administration departments is highly unusual, but the Biden administration concluded that it was an “extraordinary circumstance” to have “congressional investigators were examining potential wrongdoing by a sitting president,” according to the New York Times.

Trump repeatedly pressed the department to investigate the wild claims of election fraud that percolated in right-wing media and corners of the internet at the time, which were repeatedly debunked. At one point, having been told that certain claims he was pushing were simply untrue, Trump reportedly responded: “Ok fine — but what about the others?”

According to the notes, he also told the DOJ officials: “You guys may not be following the internet the way I do.”

Perhaps one of the most significant revelations is that Trump was recorded as directly threatening the officials’ jobs based on their handling of the investigation. The New York Times explained:In a moment of foreshadowing, Mr. Trump said, “people tell me Jeff Clark is great, I should put him in,” referring to the acting head of the Justice Department’s civil division, who had also encouraged department officials to intervene in the election. “People want me to replace D.O.J. leadership.”
“You should have the leadership you want,” Mr. Donoghue replied. But it “won’t change the dept’s position.”

Mr. Donoghue and Mr. Rosen did not know that Mr. Perry had introduced Mr. Clark and Mr. Trump. Exactly one week later, they would be forced to fight Mr. Clark for their jobs in an Oval Office showdown.

George Conway, a conservative lawyer, argued on Twitter that the evidence could support a potential criminal case against the president.

3 GOP lawmakers face ethics complaints for failing to disclose $22 million in stock trades

Three Republican lawmakers were accused of violating a federal ethics law through their prolific stock trading, according to complaints filed by a watchdog group Friday.

Sen. Tommy Tuberville and Reps. Pat Fallon and Blake Moore all reportedly failed to disclose dozens of trades worth up to $22 million within the 45 days mandated by a 2012 law called the STOCK Act, which was intended to fight conflicts of interest by lawmakers.

“When members of Congress trade individual stocks and fail to disclose those trades, they break the law and diminish the public’s trust in government,” the complaints, filed by the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center, say. The organization also wrote that a recent spate of stock-related misconduct shows that the STOCK Act is not working as intended — indeed, fines for missing required filing deadlines are as low as $200 and more serious lapses are rarely forwarded to the Department of Justice or the Securities and Exchange Commission for criminal investigation.

As Salon reported earlier this month, Fallon also dumped $250,000 worth of Microsoft stock just weeks before the company’s high-profile cloud computing deal with the Pentagon, valued at up to $10 billion, was abruptly cancelled. He sits on the House Armed Services Committee’s brand new Subcommittee on Cyber, Innovative Technologies, and Information Systems, which has oversight over the deal in question, known as the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) contract.

“The recent prevalence of STOCK Act violations in the House shows that merely the threat of a fine is not deterring members of Congress from breaking the law; real accountability is necessary,” the CLC wrote in its complaint.

All three lawmakers told Insider that the trades were executed by financial advisors who buy and sell stocks on their behalf — though the STOCK Act states that each Congressperson is personally responsible for following the law.

The number of ethics complaints related to Congressional stock trading has grown over the last few years — and is one of the rare areas of Washington, D.C. where bipartisanship still reigns. Two Democrats, Rep. Tom Malinowski of New Jersey, and Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, from New York, also had similar complaints filed against them earlier this year by the CLC and Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust, respectively. 

Michael Che and the “edgy,” male comedian’s obsession with rape jokes

On Thursday evening, as the world continued to needlessly react to Olympic champion Simone Biles’ decision to withdraw from the women’s gymnastics team all-around final for her safety, “Saturday Night Live” star and self-identified comedian Michael Che for some reason felt qualified to speak on the matter. In a series of since-deleted, truly heinous Instagram stories that were screengrabbed, Che posted he had “like 3 mins of Simone Biles jokes in my head,” which he then unwisely let out of his head.

“I’m going to the [comedy] cellar tonight to say them into a microphone. As the dorky kids say, I’m choosing violence,” the post reads. What followed was a series of “jokes” dunking on Biles’ mental health, and comparing her step back from the Olympics to Larry Nassar’s conviction. Nassar is a household name for sexually assaulting scores of young, female gymnasts — including Biles herself. 

Notably, conservatives who have always for some reason found it appropriate to bully Biles, a survivor of sexual assault who’s been open about her mental health struggles, have been harsher toward Biles than they ever were toward the man who abused her. But Che’s so-called joke takes this twisted, racist and sexist hatred of Biles — and really, all survivors — to another level. 

Che may be backtracking on the Instagram posts now – claiming he was hacked in the wake of massive backlash – but his jokes would be perfectly in line with his history of sexist, transphobic and otherwise offensive jokes punching down at the marginalized, rather than up at the abusive and powerful, which he’s faced backlash for spewing, before. Che is hardly the only male comedian who’s asserted their rights to make fun of victims, children, LGBTQ folks, and the powerless, in the name of comedy and edginess. Some male comedians have maintained a fondness for and defensiveness of rape “jokes,” in particular.

Louis CK, who was outed early on at the rise of the #MeToo movement for sexually harassing and masturbating in front of women without their consent, has notoriously written rape “jokes” into comedy sets, and defended a fellow male comedian who did so. In one of CK’s first sets back after his #MeToo exposure prompted him to take a step back, he launched into a bizarre rant about political correctness and dunked on trans kids. 

Of course, when people and especially white comics like CK bemoan “PC culture,” what they’re really whining about is a culture in which marginalized people increasingly feel empowered enough to speak up about mistreatment and abusive language they’ve long been expected to shoulder without complaint. Yet, that progress is erased when we fixate on what powerful white men and childish comedians are supposedly no longer allowed to say without consequences.

Specific to rape “jokes,” let’s be clear: any issue or topic can be the subject of a joke, if done right. Leading feminist thinkers from writer Rebecca Solnit to comic Samantha Bee have been showing this for years, and survivors often tell the most devastating and hilarious rape jokes of all. But what makes these jokes resonant, substantive, and not more of the same misogynistic abuse is that they make fun of and criticize perpetrators of sexual violence, in addition to the greater rape culture that breeds this violence and shields abusers from accountability.

In a comedy special called “Rape Jokes,” performed at the height of the #MeToo movement in 2018, comedian and survivor Cameron Esposito recounts the story of her own sexual assault, her life after it, and throws in jokes about how sexual assault is often portrayed onscreen. “She’s assaulted and then she becomes very good at swords,” Esposito said. “That was not my experience. I stayed the same amount good at swords: expert.” She also slammed male comics who have cried “censorship” when faced with backlash over their offensive “jokes” or behaviors.

“That’s the wrong word,” Esposito said. “Feedback. You have gotten feedback.”

No survivor’s path to healing is the same; some find comfort coming forward, reporting their experiences or sharing them very publicly, while others never tell anyone. But Esposito certainly isn’t the only survivor of sexual trauma who’s found comfort, laughter and community by making jokes at the expense of rape culture, rather than the estimated one in five women who is a victim of rape or attempted rape.

The “jokes” shared on Che’s Instagram story, on the other hand, reflect the worst and most reductive interpretation of comedy possible — the punchline of choice is the young, Black sexual assault victim he’s chosen to mock and dehumanize.

To state the obvious, this is what traditional, sexist rape jokes are all about; their purpose is to embarrass and exert social power over rape victims. Embarrassment is a natural feeling and instinctive response to when someone degrades you, or takes away your power. And it’s precisely the intention of perpetrators of sexual harm to make their victims feel embarrassed, because when someone is embarrassed, they don’t talk about what they’ve experienced. It’s this embarrassment, this culture of stigma and shame that’s long protected abusers from any sort of accountability. 

Yet, at the end of the day, as the comedy of women like Esposito has shined a critical light on, when it comes to acts of sexual harm, the only people who should feel embarrassed are the perpetrators. Being victimized is not a moral failure, nor a joke, nor in the least bit embarrassing. What is embarrassing is to participate in rape culture, to be complicit in rape culture, certainly, to tell jokes at the expense of rape victims. Not only are CK, Che, and others in their ilk of “edgy,” male, so-called comedians woefully unfunny, they’re also just deeply embarrassing people.

What “Ted Lasso” could help us to understand about athletes protecting their mental health

Mental health has center field placement in the second season of “Ted Lasso,”  starting with an issue highly relevant to USA gymnastics champion Simone Biles’ decision to withdraw from the Tokyo Olympics competitions this past week: a condition known as the yips.

Maybe you’re familiar with the term. Ted (played by Jason Sudeikis) and Coach Beard (Brendan Hunt) would insist that you refrain from reading it aloud. “It’s like saying Macbeth in a theater or Voldemort at Hogwarts,” he tells his British colleagues Higgins (Jeremy Swift) and Nathan (Nick Mohammed), when they ask for a definition.

Coach Beard breaks it down for them: “It’s when just out of nowhere an athlete suddenly can’t do the basic fundamentals of their sport.”

The athlete to whom they’re referring is AFC Richmond striker Dani Rojas (Cristo Fernández), who unravels after a high-pressure penalty kick derailed by a freak accident. His goal shot should have ended a streak of frustrating draws for Richmond. Instead the team’s canine mascot leaps in the ball’s way, and it hits the dog hard enough to kill it . . . in front of a stadium full of fans, no less.

Immediately Dani dims from a beacon positivity with supernatural accuracy to a gloomy, shambling pile of insecurities. Afterward, none of his kicks hit their targets. He can’t even execute simple passes.

“Wow. We’re watching the end of someone’s career,” Dani’s unfiltered Dutch colleague observes during a miserable practice before other teammates chastise him.

Season 2 of “Ted Lasso” was written and filmed long before Biles experienced the gymnast’s version of the yips, known as the twisties, and subsequently announced her choice to step off the mat for the rest of her team’s competition in the 2020 Olympics summer games.

People who watch the types of sports that are broadcast on a regular basis are more familiar with the yips than the twisties because generally, we only gather to watch champion gymnasts compete every few years. However, people mainly associate the yips with uncharacteristically poor performance on fields or courts leading to errors and low scoring.

However the twisties, which involves a sudden loss of spatial awareness mid-air, can result in serious injury, possibly even death. Most of us heard about it for the first time after other athletes came forward to defend Biles from attacks accusing her of a weak mental fortitude, citing feats from past Olympic medalists as evidence that pushing through physical pain is what makes a champion a champion.

After witnessing the bitter invectives hurled at her for recognizing the warnings her brain and body were providing, I really wish that these episodes of “Ted Lasso” were more broadly available.

I don’t say this with any Pollyanna-ish expectations that ignorant trolls taking shots at the Olympic champion might suddenly find their hearts growing three times normal size. That will never happen. My reason is simpler: I would like as many people are possible see Ted, Beard and sports psychologist Dr. Sharon Fieldstone (Sarah Niles) acknowledge that the yips are real, serious and require care to overcome.

For the many Higgins and Nathans out there who have never heard of such phenomena as the yips or the twisties and perhaps don’t understand how serious they can be, the way the show processes Dani’s tragic accident is illuminative.

So is how the writers do it, which says a lot about our national inclination to hang failure around the necks of athletes for refusing to break their bodies to thrill us. 

Before hiring Dr. Sharon, Ted tries to help Dani with some good old American “walk it off” encouragement. “It’s a tragic occurrence. A one-time thing!” he tells his player. “So let’s get away from the bad mojo coming off of that penalty box and have some fun. Let’s kick some corners!” From there he hands the kid a ball, and a distraught Dani boots it right into his coach’s backside. This results in coaches and Higgins deciding that talk therapy is in order.

Nearly all American entertainment behaves as an extension of the tales we tell ourselves about our exceptionalism. Nowhere is this more assuredly perpetuated than in sports entertainment, whether in live events or documentaries.

Hence, one of the more widely circulated responses to Biles’ withdrawal on social media was the archival broadcast clip of Kerri Strug‘s gold medal-winning vault in the 1996 Olympics, in which she lands on one foot before collapsing on the mat. 

If you have Netflix, you can see other gymnasts place this moment into context in 2020’s “Athlete A.”

Like 2019’s “At the Heart of Gold,” “Athlete A” focuses on the decades-long pattern of predation by convicted and imprisoned sex offender Larry Nassar, the one-time USA Gymnastics doctor alleged to have sexually abused at least 265 women and girls, including United States national champions and Olympians such as Biles.

But the larger point it and other documentaries make about champion athletes is that uncompromising coaches such as Béla Károlyi and Márta Károlyi drill into them, and us, a mentality that getting hurt is part of the path to victory. Complaining is not allowed. Former Olympians speak about competing through fractured and broken bones.

As for Strug’s extraordinary feat, “She’d been competing on a severe injury,” says USA Gymnastics national champion Jennifer Sey, who watched the 1996 competition from her home. The archival footage shows Strug’s face contorted in pain as she crawls off the mat, and we hear the announcer expressing concern her injury . . . until the score comes in. Then his focus on Strug’s well-being dissolves into screams of glee at her gold medal victory for the United States.  

“Everybody’s cheering her on as this hero,” Sey continues, “and all I could think was, why are we celebrating this? Don’t pretend she had a choice. She was not going to do anything but go do that vault.”

Sey doesn’t present Strug’s choice as some spiritual mandate to boost America’s glory. She’s referring to how the Károlyis would have reacted if she refused, lending a sinister tone to Béla Károlyi flatly telling a dazed Strug to “wave to the people” as he carries her off the floor. (Biles has said that one of the reasons she feels safe and supported enough to prioritize her mental and physical well-being is that her new coaches, Cecile and Laurent Landi, encourage her to do so.)

Other documentary series about champions, including Netflix’s latest on Naomi Osaka and ESPN’s “The Last Dance,” are carefully polished stories of overcoming. Serena Williams’ story follows her comeback after a childbirth experience that nearly killed her. Osaka’s Netflix limited series mentions the toll her demanding career takes on her mental health without much in the way of her expressly explaining how that impacts her well-being.

I’m not saying that would have changed the negative reaction to her withdrawal from the French Open because of her discomfort with doing press – she’s an introvert who battles depression, two concepts most people don’t fully comprehend. Neither mixes well with public interaction, to say nothing of being a focal point of engaged attention. But like “Being Serena,” it’s more of a celebration of her greatness than an examination of what it means to be a famous introvert in a culture that loves you one day and relishes trying to take you down the next.

Michael Jordan confronts this in the seventh episode of “The Last Dance” as he recalls his 1993 retirement. Earlier in the same year he led the Chicago Bulls to their third consecutive NBA championship win, only to suffer through his father’s murder a month after getting his ring. The press mourned with him . . . and soon began spinning conspiracies that his father’s murder was somehow related to his gambling problem. Or printing circumspect stories that Jordan was secretly suspended by then-NBA commissioner David Stern.

Jordan explains that none of that was true. “I needed a break,” he explains in his present-day interview. “My father just passed, and I retired.”

“The Last Dance” transcends the expectations of the standard sports documentary treatment because Jordan doesn’t try to be anything more than human. The journalists who cover him remind us time and again how weighed down and exhausted he was, even in his prime. His retirement was a refusal to cater to the expectation that he play through the pain. People respected that decision because he’s Michael Jordan.

Serena Williams, Naomi Osaka and Simone Biles are saddled with the dual taxes of womanhood and Blackness; we expect them to excel beyond what we think is possible and criticize their lack of gratitude when they say they’ve had enough. The good news in Biles’ case, and Osaka’s before her, is that nowadays more people understand the necessity of protecting one’s mental health.

But they and we still don’t exist in a “Ted Lasso” kind of world.

Much of what occurs in that show would not happen so easily in real life, if at all, which is the point. Sudeikis, Hunt and their fellow writers present an aspirational view of the world as we and they wish it were. Therefore we’ll never, ever see Dani or other non-white players be subjected to death threats or racist taunts for mistakes made during games. We wouldn’t want to.

This is a world that runs on understanding and forgiveness, another way that it is far less concerned about the intricacies of soccer – or football – than exploring what makes the people who play it tick.  

“The yips are not a superstition,” Dr. Sharon tells Ted and Coach Beard in response to their attempt to write off Dani’s state as some kind of hoodoo. “They are a mental condition, one that can be fixed with discipline, not denial.”

Dani recovers, but not alone and with ample care. Dr. Sharon speaks to him in his native language and gets him back on his feet. Other players witness the success she has with Dani and line up for counseling sessions by choice, not by force. Watch closely, America. We could stand for more of this to be put into practice in our games, and in life.

New episodes of “Ted Lasso” stream Fridays on Apple TV+. “The Last Dance,” “Naomi Osaka” and “Athlete A” are streaming on Netflix. “Being Serena” and “At the Heart of Gold” are available to stream on HBO Max.

Capture the taste of Southern summers with a white cheddar and cornbread-topped tomato crumble

Living in the South, it doesn’t actually feel like summer until your garden or the farmer’s market is bursting with ruby red tomatoes. The most perfect way to eat them is, of course, the simplest — bite into it like an apple and feel the taut, slick skin give way to juicy and acidic flesh. From there, you can add a variety of accoutrements (or fixins, as my grandmother likely would’ve said with a wink). 

The perfect tomato sandwich, for instance, is just white bread, Duke’s mayonnaise and a sprinkle of salt. You can get more complicated with tomatoes from there, obviously, and I often do — blitz them into salsas and sauces, stuff them with wild rice and herbs, put them in a pie crust — but they really are always best when I keep seasonality in mind. 


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Since tomatoes scream “summer” I wanted to pair them with a dish that does so just as loudly and effortlessly: fruit crumbles. I was inspired after reading Sohla El-Waylly’s “Magic Ratio of Turning Any Fruit into a Crumble” for Food52. 

“Fruit crumbles are endlessly forgivable, no structural integrity necessary,” El-Waylly writes. “You can run wild and free and create whatever crumble is calling your name.”

While tomatoes are botanically a fruit, I had to make some adjustments to lean into the tomato’s bright, savory flavors, but her ratio for the crumble topping — which leans on fat and “add-ins” for flavor and fun — is spot-on here. I kept my add-ins Southern-inspired and used torn cornbread, which gives this savory, cheesy crumble a hearty and toasty topping. 

Tomato Bake with a White Cheddar and Cornbread Crumble Topping
Inspired by “Sohla’s Magic Ratio of Turning Any Fruit into a Crumble”
Serves 4 to 6

Ingredients
Filling

  • 4 ½ cups of sliced tomatoes (cut them roughly into eighths)
  • 2 tablespoons of salt 
  • 1 tablespoon of red pepper flakes
  • 3 tablespoons of olive oil 
  • 2 teaspoons of oregano

Topping

  • 1 cup of flour
  • ½ of cornmeal
  • ⅔ cup of grated white cheddar cheese
  • ⅔ cup of cornbread, torn into 1-inch cubes 
  • 10 tablespoons of butter cut into ½-inch pieces, plus extra to prepare the baking dish 

Directions

1. Butter a standard pie dish or a small baking dish and preheat the oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl, combine the tomatoes, salt, red pepper flakes and oregano. Toss in olive oil until fully coated and combined. Place inside the pie dish. 

2. In a large mixing bowl, combine the flour, cornmeal and butter. Using your fingers, mix until it takes on a sandy consistency. Add the white cheddar and cornbread and stir until just combined. Spread over the tomatoes.

3. Bake until the tomato juices are bubbling around the edges of the pie dish and the topping is firm to the touch and golden, about 25 to 30 minutes. Let the crumble cool for about 15 minutes before serving. 

 

In a Massachusetts COVID outbreak, many of the infected were vaccinated: CDC study

A sobering study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reinforces the idea that vaccination against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is not always enough to stop transmission. Researchers arrived at this conclusion after analyzing the infected from a COVID-19 outbreak in Provincetown, Massachusetts, in which three-fourths of the infected were already fully vaccinated.

“This finding is concerning and was a pivotal discovery leading to CDC’s updated mask recommendation,” CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky explained in a statement. “The masking recommendation was updated to ensure the vaccinated public would not unknowingly transmit virus to others, including their unvaccinated or immunocompromised loved ones.”

When she referenced an “updated mask recommendation,” Walensky was describing the agency’s recent policy urging people to wear masks when indoors in areas where the virus transmission is high or prolonged. Walensky also said that people who go to schools should be fully masked the entire time. Although the United States had made progress in reducing COVID-19 infection and spread several months ago, those achievements have been gradually reversed as unvaccinated Americans — many of them motivated by support for Donald Trump — continue to incubate and spread mutant strains of the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

The most dangerous of the bunch is the delta variant, which the CDC describes as being as infectious as chickenpox and capable of causing more severe illnesses than other types of COVID-19. On Friday, the CDC shared internal documents detailing how the new variant gives both vaccinated and unvaccinated Americans similarly high viral loads. The CDC’s experts estimate there are 35,000 symptomatic infections each week among the 162 million vaccinated Americans.

This is the strain that circulated among the unlucky people of Provincetown who celebrated July 4th. The Cape Cod community is famous for its parties, especially on Independence Day, and at the time of this writing almost 900 cases have been reported for the full outbreak. The CDC only studied a subset of 469 cases, finding that people within that group “reported attending densely packed indoor and outdoor events at venues that included bars, restaurants, guest houses, and rental homes.” The study also found that among people with breakthrough cases (that is, cases in which fully vaccinated people get sick), no one died and only four (1.2 percent) were hospitalized, with the most common symptoms being “cough, headache, sore throat, myalgia, and fever.”


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The fact that fewer people have died or suffered severely, as might have otherwise been the case, underscores a very important point: while the COVID-19 vaccines may not be as effective as we would like, one is undeniably better off being vaccinated than not. One’s chances of dying or experiencing serious symptoms diminishes enormously after receiving one’s shot (or shots).

A statistical misunderstanding of the CDC’s Provincetown study, exemplified in several news headlines appearing in multiple outlets, conflates the idea of how susceptible the vaccinated are to the delta variant. The Washington Post’s alarming headline read “CDC study shows three-fourths of people infected in Massachusetts COVID-19 outbreak were vaccinated,” which implies that three-fourths of all vaccinated people would be inevitably infected. In fact, the three-fourths number was only among the subset of those infected. 

That misinterpretation is stoking alarm among some watchdogs.

“Please don’t do this,” Matthew Gertz of Media Matters for America tweeted at The Washington Post for their headline. “Provincetown has one of the highest vaccination rates in the country. As vaccination rates increase the percentage of cases that are in vaccinated people NECESSARILY increases.” He pointed out that Reuters, The Boston Globe and CNBC had used similar headlines, noting that Trump supporters may use headlines like those from Reuters and The Boston Globe to argue that “they don’t work, what else aren’t they telling us.”

Indeed, the CDC is not arguing that vaccines are ineffective, but rather than for the broader public health, we may need to consider a return to more stringent lockdown policies.

“Findings from this investigation suggest that even jurisdictions without substantial or high COVID-19 transmission might consider expanding prevention strategies,” the CDC writes, suggesting that people wear masks in indoor public settings even if they are fully vaccinated.

The delta variant has a number of mutations that have made it more threatening than other strains. A mutation called D614G is believed to increase the density of the spike protein on the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The spike protein causes the spike-like objects which stick out of virus’ internal sphere, allowing it to penetrate and infect the body’s cells. Although vaccines are designed to protect cells against those spikes, this mutation may help the virus circumvent those defenses.

The delta variants also has a mutation called L452R that scientists think may help the virus fight antibodies, which the immune system creates to eliminate threats. In addition, it has a mutation known as P681R which increases the viral loads in patients so they shed 1,000 times more of the virus than from previous coronavirus strains when they sneeze, cough, spit or otherwise release potentially infected bodily fluids.

None of this was inevitable. As President Joe Biden said during a Thursday press conference, “the existing vaccines work to prevent death, serious illness, and hospitalization.” If “every American is vaccinated, in fact, we would be out of the woods.” Speaking to Salon in May, Dr. Bernard Lo — professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco — anticipated that the vaccines may not be as effective against mutant strains. Lo also warned that unvaccinated people could cause a resurgence in the pandemic, although he stressed that not everyone who remains unvaccinated is doing so for political reasons.

“It’s a worldwide issue as well,” Lo explained in regard to how many poorer countries do not have access to the same vaccines as their wealthier counterparts. “There are a lot of countries that really don’t have access to vaccines, and variants could emerge there.”

Amanda Knox calls out new Matt Damon movie “inspired” by her story: “Does my name belong to me?”

Amanda Knox is speaking out about the use of her story in the new Matt Damon film “Stillwater,” out this week. Knox became a household name in 2007 when she was studying abroad in Italy, and was falsely charged with killing her roommate, Meredith Kerchner. She was subsequently imprisoned in Italy for almost four years, before being acquitted and released in 2015.

Now, in a series of tweets and a Medium post shared on Thursday, Knox is criticizing “Stillwater” for essentially retelling her story, and in this fictionalized version of her life, strongly implying her guilt. 

“Does my name belong to me?” Knox wrote. “Does my face? What about my life? My story? Why is my name used to refer to events I had no hand in? I return to these questions because others continue to profit off my name, face, and story without my consent. Most recently, the film ‘Stillwater.'”

Knox references interviews from filmmaker Tom McCarthy and Damon, in which they refer to their movie at different points as “loosely based” or “directly inspired by” her life. In particular, Knox takes issue with Vanity Fair calling the movie the “Amanda Knox saga.”

“What does that refer to?” Knox asked. “Does it refer to anything I did? No. It refers to the events that resulted from the murder of Meredith Kercher by a burglar named Rudy Guede.”

She continues, “It refers to the shoddy police work, prosecutorial tunnel vision, and refusal to admit their mistakes that led the Italian authorities to wrongfully convict me, twice.”

In “Stillwater,” Damon plays an American father who must travel to France and navigate the complexities of the French legal system when his daughter (Abigail Breslin) is charged with murdering her friend while studying abroad there. Damon’s onscreen daughter proclaims her innocence, but is later revealed to be involved in the killing. 

Knox takes issue with this for obvious reasons, writing, “By fictionalizing away my innocence, my total lack of involvement, by erasing the role of the authorities in my wrongful conviction, McCarthy reinforces an image of me as a guilty and untrustworthy person.”

This is hardly the first time Knox has struggled with media coverage of her story, as well as fictionalized spins on it. Throughout the years of her trial, imprisonment, and even following her exoneration, she’s been widely demonized, her disproven “involvement” in her roommate’s murder widely sensationalized.

This goes beyond the usual societal obsession with true crime and murder mysteries. In this case, specifically, the murder of Meredith Kerchner isn’t a mystery, as she was killed by Rudy Guede, who was released from Italian prison at the end of last year, serving roughly the same amount of time Knox did despite her acquittal and his guilt.

The obsession with Amanda Knox’s character and story, as she writes in her Twitter thread, speak to a greater issue of how we deny women agency in society.

“In those four years of wrongful imprisonment and eight years of trial, I had near-zero agency,” Knox wrote. “Everyone else in that ‘saga’ had more influence over the course of events than I did. The erroneous focus on me by the Italian authorities led to an erroneous focus on me by the press, which shaped how I was presented to the world. In prison, I had no control over my public image, no voice in my story.”

Knox even draws a fair comparison between media coverage and treatment of her and Monica Lewinsky. Both were ultimately victims, yet were positioned as the faces of the scandals that involved them. “It matters what you call a thing. Calling that event the ‘Lewinsky Scandal’ fails to acknowledge the vast power differential, & I’m glad that more people are now referring to it as “the Clinton Affair” which names it after the person with the most agency in that series of events,” Knox said in a later tweet.

Despite Knox’s frustration with Damon and McCarthy, who she claims have not responded to her attempts to reach out to them about “Stillwater,” she recognizes “there’s money to be made, and you have no obligation to approach me.” 

She concludes her Medium post by describing her request to overcome this trauma and return to some form of normalcy as “an uphill battle.”

“My only option is to sit idly by while others continue to distort my character, or fight to restore my good reputation that was wrongfully destroyed.It’s an uphill battle,” Knox wrote. “I probably won’t succeed. But I’ve been here before. I know what it’s like facing impossible odds.”

Representatives for the movie “Stillwater” have yet to comment on Knox’s harsh words for the film, and its spin on her story.

Horseshoes and widow’s peaks: Why do men go bald in different patterns?

In a 1997 episode of “Seinfeld,” a character named Kurt learns to his dismay that he is going bald. His dismay doesn’t stem from his aversion to being hairless; in fact, he is a swimmer, and is used to shaving his cranium to better compete. But when he learns that he may become involuntarily bald, he sinks into a state of impulsivity and depression.

While most bald people do not react as poorly as the “Seinfeld” swimmer, the episode does accurately capture a basic truth about male pattern baldness. Indeed, it is not simply that men are self-conscious, but that male pattern baldness imparts a feeling of disempowerment over their appearance.

“Male pattern baldness or Androgenetic alopecia is the most common cause of hair loss, affecting up to 80% of men in their lifetime,” Dr. Kristen Lo Sicco, an associate professor of dermatology at NYU Langone Health, told Salon by email. “About 75% of people with Androgenetic alopecia have at least one family member with this type of hair loss.”

That sense of disempowerment also stems from the mystery of baldness, and the lack of control over it. It is distressing for any human to feel that one’s body is out of one’s control, that it is doing things without our consent. Yet science has a sense of why, and how, baldness happens — and why men (and sometimes women) lose power over their hair. 

There is, apparently, a connection between a chemical that we associate with masculinity — testosterone — and the looming threat that your hair will start to thin. A man who suffers from male pattern baldness has hair follicles that are sensitive to the testosterone metabolite, or dehydrotestosterone. 

Like the color of your eyes or shape of your earlobe, the structure of your hairline is actually quite individual and says a great deal about you. Until recently, scientists didn’t have a particularly comprehensive knowledge about different types of hairlines. That’s because early major classification systems tended to mostly or entirely study only one race (Caucasian men, Japanese men). In 1975, a dermatologist and hair transplant surgeon named Dr. O’Tar Norwood studied male pattern baldness in over 1,000 males and came up with the system most commonly used today.

According to Norwood’s system, most hair loss begins at the temples and gradually recedes back, eventually leaving a peninsula of hair in the middle of the scalp. If the baldness continues, that peninsula will become more narrow while the hair on the crown starts to thin out. If your baldness insists on defoliating your cranium even further, the peninsula will start to shrink the direction of the bald patch on your crown. When the two areas of baldness finally meet, you will be left with nothing but a horseshoe-shaped ring of hair.

There is one variant to this system, which Norwood dubbed “Type A.” Its main features are that it deprives the early balding man of that precious peninsula but spares him that initial thinning on the crown. Instead, like a retreating army destined to be court marshaled for abandoning their position, the hair at the front simply gives up the fight and allows a hairless desert of skin to overtake the landscape atop one’s skull.


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Analogies aside, there are straightforward scientific explanations for why one’s hair seems to abandon you. The truth is that, with male pattern baldness, the hair isn’t falling off of your head in unusually large quantities. (Hair is supposed to fall out, after all.) It is rather that the hair doesn’t grow back as it normally would.

“A few things happen to cause the appearance of balding,” Lo Sicco explained. The first is called “miniaturization. “This means the hair shafts are becoming smaller and smaller in caliber (thickness) over time,” Lo Sicco continued. The second is “shortening of the growth phase of hair,” known as “the anagen phase.”

“This means less hair will be on the scalp and will become shorter,” Lo Sicco said. “This is because the length of our hair is determined by the length of the anagen phase.”

The type of hairline that you wind up with depends on how your biological chemistry impacts the hair follicles at different locations on your head.

Likewise, it turns out there is also a reason that bald men continue growing hair on the back and sides of their head — the “horseshoe” pattern of hair, as sported by celebrities like Larry David and the late James Gandolfini

“The hair on the top and front of the scalp is susceptible to androgens, however the hair on the back of it is not (occipital scalp),” Lo Sicco wrote. “This theory is known as ‘donor dominance,’ pioneered by Dr. Orentreich who developed hair transplantation in the US while at the NYU Skin & Cancer Unit.”

While it is easy to joke about male pattern baldness, it is not a harmless medical condition. Depending on the stage and severity, baldness has been linked to an increased risk of heart disease (although the extent of that risk is still debated), insulin resistance, high blood pressure and prostate cancer. The exact mechanisms are unknown, however, as much still remains to be learned about the exact mechanisms behind baldness.

Meghan McCain blows off COVID surge: “I have a higher likelihood of getting shot” in D.C.

On Friday’s episode of “The View,” Meghan McCain criticized Democratic lawmakers’ focus on defeating COVID-19’s delta variant, arguing that Democrats should turn their attention to rising crime rates instead.

McCain struck a defeatist tone when asked by Joy Behar if Americans should manage their expectations regarding the likelihood of returning to a pre-COVID normal, lamenting the CDC’s recommendation that vaccinated Americans return to wearing masks indoors.

“I think that the White House should be honest with the American public and say that there is no going back to normal, and taking off the mask was just a ruse, and there’ll probably be lockdowns,” she said. “This is probably going to be a state-by-state issue, and if you don’t want to live under masking, and if you don’t want to live under these mandates you’re probably going to have to move to a state where they’re not going to do it, like Arizona.”

McCain went on to criticize Democrats, particularly those in Washington, DC, where she lives, for failing to respond to crime rates, saying “Quite frankly, I have a higher likelihood of getting shot leaving this building than I do of getting COVID.”

McCain also took aim at what she views as the Biden administration’s lack of outreach to former President Donald Trump, whom she credits with the vaccines’ speedy development and distribution.

“At this point, if it’s this serious that we’re going to lockdown the country and everybody has to wear masks again, including, by the way, two-year olds, you should probably reach out to President Trump or somebody else in Trumpland to get the messaging out, because until then, we’re all just being held hostage until this maybe never passes,” she said.

Joy Behar pushed back at these comments, saying that Trump shouldn’t need to be encouraged to promote the vaccine.

“Nobody’s gagging Trump, he can go out and tell his people to get the vaccine,” she said. “He doesn’t do it.”

“Yes, but I think it would be nice to see a bipartisan push formally together and it’s just never gonna happen,” McCain said.

“I think Biden tries bipartisanship left and right and up the wazoo,” Behar shot back. “And nothing ever happens.”

Texas Gov. Abbott draws orders state troopers to pull over vehicles with migrants in search of COVID

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott ordered state troopers on Wednesday to begin pulling over vehicles whose drivers are transporting migrants who pose a risk of carrying COVID-19, escalating his hardline approach on immigrants and eliciting outrage from advocates calling the order a ticket to racial profiling.

The executive order allows Texas Department of Public Safety troopers to reroute those vehicles back to their origin point or a port of entry, or seize the vehicles if the driver does not comply.

Abbott said in a statement that his order “will reduce the risk of COVID-19 exposure in our communities,” though the governor will not allow local government officials to issue mask mandates even as coronavirus infections are again increasing across the state.

The order comes as officials in Laredo and Hidalgo County have grown frustrated with migrants being released from Border Patrol custody, saying that they may be spreading COVID-19 in their communities.

 

Advocates and immigration attorneys criticized Abbott saying this order will create more chaos for shelters that assist migrants get to their final destinations. Some of those shelters have already hit capacity in recent days.

Currently, the Biden administration is immediately turning back many migrants under Title 42, which allows agents to make migrants return to Mexico because of the risk of spreading COVID-19. This practice began under the Trump administration.

The governor’s office did not respond to emailed questions about how troopers would implement this order.

Rachael Pierce, a DPS spokesperson, also didn’t answer the questions, but said in a statement that DPS “is committed to securing our border under the direction of Governor Greg Abbott and through the Executive Orders applicable to DPS.”

“While the department does not discuss operational specifics, we will continue to monitor the situation at the border to make real-time decisions and adjust operations as necessary,” Pierce said.

Kate Lincoln-Goldfinch, an immigration attorney in Austin, said the order could be legally challenged because “how would DPS accomplish this task without racial profiling?”

“If it is followed to the letter, it’s going to violate someone’s rights,” she said.

Dani Marrero Hi, director of advocacy for La Unión del Pueblo Entero, an advocacy group, said it is hypocritical of Abbott to issue this order because he has not allowed counties to mandate COVID-related policies that could help mitigate the spread of the virus.

“For an area like the Rio Grande Valley, where I think a lot of people already experienced kind of racial profiling from cops, and we have local law enforcement collaborating with Border Patrol, this is just gonna have a catastrophic impact,” she said.

Border Patrol officials release some migrants to shelters where they stay temporarily until they can get a bus ride or a plane ticket to their families in the U.S. If Border Patrol agents release migrants, it usually means they can stay in the country as their legal cases are pending.

With this order, advocates fear that volunteers helping migrants get to their final destination would be targeted by state troopers.

“That’s unheard of and it’s blatantly unconstitutional,” said Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, an analyst with the American Immigration Council, a Washington, D.C., group that advocates for immigrants.

“This threatens and disrupts months of coordination” from groups helping migrant families not get stuck in border communities, he said.

 

In the Rio Grande Valley, where many of the migrants are attempting to cross, some officials have grown frustrated with immigrants being released from Border Patrol custody into shelters because they fear it could spread COVID-19 and its delta variant.

Last week, the city of Laredo sued the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, demanding the federal government stop transferring migrants to Laredo because of the risk of spreading COVID-19.

On Tuesday, Hidalgo County Judge Richard F. Cortez criticized both the state and the federal government for the handling of COVID-19 and migrants wanting to come into the U.S.

“I call on federal immigration officials to stop releasing infected migrants into our community and I am further calling on Governor Abbott to return to Hidalgo County the safety tools he took away that would help us slow the spread of this disease,” Cortez said in a statement.

In the past two weeks, Hidalgo and Webb counties have recorded 2.5 and 2.9 positive COVID cases per 1,000 people. Almost 20% of counties recorded higher rates than Webb in that time span, and more than 25% have reported higher rates than Hidalgo, according to state data analyzed by the Texas Tribune. But Dimmit County, which neighbors Webb, has had a rate of 20.8 positive cases per 1,000 people in the past two weeks. Farther north into Texas, Karnes County has had 13.9 infections per 1,000 people.

 

Kate Huddleston, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, said in a statement that Abbott’s order “continues a long, racist history of placing blame for the spread of disease onto immigrants and communities at the border.”

“There is no reason for the governor to halt travel in the state of Texas other than to terrorize these communities and distract from his own leadership failures,” she added.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2021/07/28/greg-abbott-texas-migrants-covid-19/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

IRS must release Trump’s taxes to Congress, DOJ rules

In a pivotal new ruling, the Department of Justice decided that the IRS must hand over Donald Trump’s income tax returns to Congress.

The move is a reversal from a 2019 ruling from the Trump-era Office of Legal Counsel which found that House Ways and Means chair Rep. Richard Neal, D-Mass., did not provide a strong enough request to warrant the release.

Trump’s taxes are “a plainly legitimate area for congressional inquiry,” according to the new ruling. “The Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee has invoked sufficient reasons for requesting the former President’s tax information,” the DOJ said this time around, adding: that the “Treasury must furnish the information to the Committee.”

“The statute at issue here is unambiguous: ‘Upon written request’ of the chairman of one of the three congressional tax committees, the Secretary ‘shall furnish’ the requested tax information to the Committee,” the department wrote. 

Throughout his time in office, Trump remained one of the only presidents in modern U.S. history to refuse to release his tax returns, long casting doubt over whether the former president had something to hide. Back in May of 2019, a New York Times investigation found that the former president had suffered from chronic financial losses for years.

Internal CDC memo paints grim picture of threat from new COVID variant: report

Back in March Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told reporters that she feared the rise of mutant coronavirus strains and a premature relaxing of COVID-19 restrictions would cause a pandemic resurgence.

“I’m going to pause here, I’m going to lose the script and I’m going to reflect on the recurring feeling I have of impending doom,” Walensky explained at the time. “We have so much to look forward to. So much promise and potential of where we are and so much reason for hope. But right now I’m scared.”

Flash forward four months, and Walensky’s fears seem to have come true.

An internal CDC slide presentation first obtained by The Washington Post reveals that a mutant strain known as the delta variant seems to spread as easily as chickenpox and cause more severe illnesses than other types of COVID-19. The document urges public officials to accept that “the war has changed” in terms of our fight against the pandemic and emphasizes the need for effective messaging about getting vaccinated, wearing masks and other health measures.

Perhaps most ominously, the document raised the possibility that vaccinated individuals may be just as likely to transmit the delta variant as unvaccinated individuals. The CDC based this assessment off of unpublished data from a number of scientific sources, many of which found that vaccinated people infected with the variant have similar measurable viral loads as unvaccinated people with the same infection. On one slide, experts estimated that among the 162 million vaccinated Americans there are 35,000 symptomatic infections each week. Findings like this one were apparently instrumental in the CDC’s recent call for everyone — unvaccinated and vaccinated alike — to wear masks when indoors in areas where the virus transmission is high or prolonged.

Speaking to CNN, Walensky emphasized the seriousness of the crisis.

“I think people need to understand that we’re not crying wolf here. This is serious,” Walensky said. “It’s one of the most transmissible viruses we know about. Measles, chickenpox, this — they’re all up there.”

Walensky also said that anyone who goes to a school should wear a mask at all times.

“The measures we need to get this under control — they’re extreme. The measures you need are extreme,” Walensky explained.

The presentation acknowledged the extremely difficult nature of this task, at least from a public relations standpoint. Vaccines are still effective and people should not be dissuaded from taking them, experts agree. At the same time, the slide show explained that the CDC is now compelled to move the “goal posts of success in full public view,” and therefore the challenge will be reconciling these two seemingly contradictory objectives in the public’s mind.


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There are a number of biological reasons for the delta variant’s extreme transmissibility. It has a mutation known as D614G that scientists believe increases the density of the spike protein on the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Spike proteins comprise the innumerable thorn-like appendages that jut out of every side of the virus’ internal sphere. These spikes help the virus invade cells, and although vaccines are designed to protect cells against those spikes, the evolved virus may be able to circumvent those defenses.

In addition, the delta variant has a mutation known as P681R that increases the viral loads in patients so they excrete 1,000 times more of the virus than they would have with earlier coronavirus strains. It also contains a mutation called L452R that, experiments indicate, helps the virus fight off antibodies, which are produced by our immune system to neutralize threats; and a mutation that makes the infected contagious after four days instead of the usual six, meaning that each infected person will spread the virus to an average of six people instead of two or three (as happened with the original coronavirus).

Experts have previously expressed alarm about the delta variant, although the CDC document paints a much direr picture compared to previous speculation. 

Commentators have also noted the role of politics in the current outbreak crisis. Studies have found that Republicans (especially men) are driving the movement to not take COVID-19 vaccines, and that movement has in turn hindered America’s ability to achieve herd immunity and prevent mutant outbreaks.

In the heavy-handed “Stillwater,” Matt Damon is an Oklahoman in France trying to free his daughter

“Stillwater” opens in the titular Oklahoma town where Bill Baker (Matt Damon) works a temporary construction job, because he is between gigs on oil rigs. He does cleanup and rebuilds. It is a heavy-handed metaphor — the first of many in the film — for the cleanup and rebuilding to come. 

A few scenes later, Bill is off to Marseille to visit his daughter, Allison (Abigail Breslin), who is in prison for murdering her lover and roommate, Lina. (Cue Amanda Knox reference). Allison claims she is innocent, and on this particular visit, she asks her father to deliver a note to her lawyer Leparq (Anne Le Ny). It suggests a young man, Akim (Idir Azougli), is responsible for the crime, and it asks Leparq to improbably reopen the case. The lawyer denies the request, leaving the blue-collar American to adopt his brand of American hegemony and take matters into his own hands. 

Bill lies to his daughter about Leparq’s response, which, of course, means she will eventually find out the truth. Allison doesn’t trust Bill anyway (her letter indicated this), but the strained family tensions feel muted here. They should add depth and shading to a fraught situation — and they do in an early moment, when Bill has a one-sided conversation with Allison about Oklahoma football during a prison visit— but mostly the father/daughter relationship feels underdeveloped. How, Bill, a man of faith who prays before he eats, feels about his daughter being a lesbian is never expressed. (It may not need to be discussed, but given that Bill’s character is such a faithful, dyed-in-the-wool Good Old Boy, surely, he has an opinion about homosexuality).

Sluggishly directed and cowritten by Tom McCarthy (“Spotlight”), “Stillwater” starts out like a detective story with Bill finding his way to Akim with the assistance of the English-speaking Virginie (Camille Cottin), whom he meets cute when she is temporarily housed in Marseille’s Best Western. Virginie is a theater actress with an adorable 9-year-old daughter, Maya (Lilou Siauvaud, an irresistible scene-stealer). Virginie helps Bill translate at meetings with folks who may know Akim. She even drives him to the dangerous neighborhood where Akim is reported to live. Bill is so hellbent on getting his daughter out of jail he is willing to risk danger to find this possible suspect, despite Virginie telling him that is “not how it’s done here.” 

McCarthy’s film is not uninteresting when it addresses the cultural divide, and yet there are clumsy scenes of Virginie and one of her friends asking Bill if he voted for Trump, and if he owns a gun, which stereotypes Americans to the same extent that the incurious Bill simplifies the French when he buys Maya chocolate croissants. Moreover, at one interview on Bill’s behalf, Virginie gets frustrated with an anti-Arab Frenchman, and walks away. Virginie’s refusal to communicate with a racist illustrates the film’s situational ethics. This teachable moment only means that her righteousness and Bill’s indifference will come into play again later as “Stillwater” lumbers to its conclusion. 

At 140vminutes, this overlong and underwhelming story drags in part because it spends considerable time depicting the easy domesticity that Bill and Virginie create when Bill moves into her apartment after failing to catch Akim. He becomes a surrogate father for Maya — an obvious redemption for not being there for Allison, who was raised by her grandmother, Sharon (Deanna Dunagan). The scenes between Bill and Maya are cute, and he cooks her hamburgers and tells her to do her homework. But this extended section of the film is really just a long pause until the detective story picks up again. At least the drama is punctuated by some picture-postcard shots of Marseilles. 

It is also during this portion of “Stillwater” that Allison gets a day’s release from prison. She spends it with her father, visiting Lina’s grave, observing that “Life is brutal,” and giving a speech about her love for Lina. Then she goes swimming in the big blue Mediterranean Sea, experiencing a brief sense of freedom before meeting Virginie and Maya at dinner. If nothing else, this episode gives Breslin a chance to flesh out her thin character. Perceptive viewers will read her comments — she warns Virginie that Bill will disappoint her — and actions clearly.

However, after Allison’s visit, there is scene in a hospital (with Bill praying) that feels cheap. Something dramatic happens quickly — and is resolved almost as fast — but it is never really discussed. This indicates that “Stillwater” glosses over some of its big moments as well as its tinier details. McCarthy trades in “big ideas,” but he gives them very little significance. Allison is a symbol for American guiltlessness. When she tells her father that she is learning Maghrib ideas about acceptance in prison it seems disingenuous. The entire film does, too. 

In fact, nothing in “Stillwater” feels real except the beefy Damon and his Oklahoma accent. Bill’s character is a gun owner and recovering alcoholic whose wife died by suicide. But that is all he is and represents; his character is too facile. When he and Virginie start to couple up, it feels more a romance of convenience. Surely, Virginie sees him as a fling — the very word she used to describe her relationship with Maya’s father. Had there been a more palpable love and desire between this odd couple, the film could have created some emotional impact. (This is not Camille Cottin’s fault; she is warm and inviting, both sensitive and sensible). Instead, “Stillwater” plays up the fact that Bill has never been to the theater, and McCarthy needlessly shows Bill watching Virginie rehearse some experimental play and then features a useless scene of him fumbling for a way to describe his thoughts. It is meant to be amusing but it is just dull. 

When the film finally circles back to the detective narrative, it does so in a contrived and groan-inducing way that is simply unforgivable. Suffice it to say “Stillwater” dives off the cliff with narrative leaps that involve secrets and lies, DNA samples and the police, and revelations that are meant to be shocking or surprising but are, in fact, neither. 

McCarthy wants all this drama to raise questions about shame, guilt and acceptance, as well as the importance of about finding peace, not justice. But “Stillwater” is so manipulative in its coincidence and so lazy in its character development that it becomes difficult to care if Allison is innocent or guilty, or what lengths Bill — a self-described “f**kup” — will go to free his daughter. Damon’s earnest performance alienates viewers as Bill makes a series of increasingly bad decisions that strain credibility. Watching him struggle and suffer is unsatisfying. And McCarthy fails to create suspense or jerk tears as Bill faces critical decision points. The music builds telling audiences what to feel, but it is all remarkably unmoving. 

“Stillwater” should be a deep investigation into a moral quandary, but it just ends up being shallow and irresponsible.

“Stillwater” is in theaters July 30.

Joe Manchin booed by fellow Senate Democrats after raising deficit concerns over infrastructure: rpt

Senate Democrats reportedly booed their fellow Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., after he mentioned the national deficit during a Tuesday caucus luncheon. 

Though it’s not clear why he brought up the sore subject, Politico, the first to report the incident, speculated that it may be related to concerns around the $3.5 trillion price tag of the Senate Democrats’ infrastructure reconciliation bill – a number that Manchin has suggested is far too lofty.

One source told Politico that Manchin was “jokingly booed” by his colleagues, but another disputed this account, alleging that the rest of the room didn’t see it that way. 

Manchin has gained notoriety, along with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz, for extreme moderation. The West Virginia senator, self-described as a “moderate conservative Democrat,” is a staunch opponent of nuking the filibuster – a maneuver which many progressives have argued is the only way to circumvent Republican obstructionism. Manchin has also fought against raising the federal minimum wage. Back in February, the lawmaker slashed an effort to raise the minimum wage to $15 – a proposal that was backed by President Biden as part of the Raise the Wage Act. Back in November, Manchin additionally demurred a progressive campaign to defund the police, calling the effort part of a “social agenda.”

“Defund the police? Defund, my butt,” he tweeted at the time. “I’m a proud West Virginia Democrat. We are the party of working men and women. We want to protect Americans’ jobs & healthcare. We do not have some crazy socialist agenda, and we do not believe in defunding the police.”

On the fiscal budget, Politico noted, Manchin has gained a reputation for his relatively hawkish stances, often cautioning against overspending due to the rising national debt and deficit. 

So far, however, Democrats have been unperturbed by Manchin’s hawkishness with respect to their reconciliation bill, which sets out revamping roads, bridges, and railways, as well as provide family leave, universal pre-K, expanded medicare, and child tax credits. 

Two weeks ago, Manchin told CNN that he felt “very, very disturbed” by the measure’s climate change mitigation provisions. 

Think the delta variant is scary? Anti-vaccination Trumpers are truly terrifying

Late Thursday night, the Washington Post published leaked documents from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) which showed the data used to draft the new federal recommendations that vaccinated people in COVID-19 hot spots wear masks in indoor public spaces. The scientific information is sobering, to say the least, showing that the “delta variant of the coronavirus appears to cause more severe illness than earlier variants and spreads as easily as chickenpox” and “vaccinated individuals infected with delta may be able to transmit the virus as easily as those who are unvaccinated.”

To be clear, the vaccines are still highly effective and breakthrough infections are relatively rare, so this is not, as some of the more hysterical or anti-vaccination voices on social media are suggesting, evidence that the vaccines don’t work. Moreover, even if a vaccinated person does get a breakthrough infection, it is likely to be relatively mild. The new masking recommendations from the CDC are not so much to protect the vaccinated, as they are to protect the unvaccinated. As one federal health official explained to the Washington Post, “Although it’s rare, we believe that at an individual level, vaccinated people may spread the virus, which is why we updated our recommendation.”

As President Joe Biden explained in a press conference Thursday, “the existing vaccines work to prevent death, serious illness, and hospitalization,” and if “every American is vaccinated, in fact, we would be out of the woods.”


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While some Americans — kids under 12 and a few people with medical conditions — cannot get vaccinated right now, the real problem is perfectly eligible adults who simply refuse to get the shot. If those folks all got the shot, the pandemic would likely be winding down. These biological details about the delta variant are alarming, but the fundamental reality has not shifted: In this era of effective vaccinations, the continuing pandemic is more a social phenomenon than a biological one.

The delta variant is just a mindless virus. The real problem is our fellow human beings who, as political science professor Scott Lemieux wrote recently, confuse “free riding with freedom — letting people do what they want with no consequences even when the consequences are borne by other people as well.” The problem, as I’ve written about more times than I care to think about, is political. Put bluntly, a huge percentage of Donald Trump’s America is refusing to get inoculated, to stick it to the liberals and undermine Biden’s presidency.

As far as trolling goes, this is a particularly risky way to go about it. While rates of hospitalizations and death remain lower than they were over the winter, there are still over 300 people dying a day of COVID-19 — and nearly all are unvaccinated. But, as a recent Politico article made clear, that just shows how much right-wing America is running on spite these days, with half of them choosing to roll the dice with COVID-19 rather than admit that Biden and the Democrats are right about anything, even something as scientifically inarguable as “vaccines keep you safe.” 

No doubt, the resurgence of mask recommendations and even mandates is minor compared to the severe social distancing requirements — which left many people adrift and lonely — needed to control the virus pre-vaccine. But what makes the current situation so frustrating is how unfair and unnecessary it is. This isn’t about people pulling together to fight back against a natural threat to humanity. This is about people being asked to make more sacrifices so that a third of Americans — mostly Trump-voting Americans — can keep refusing to do anything at all. 

To make it even more maddening, the people being the biggest crybabies about the new restrictions are the very same people who are the cause of the new restrictions. This was amply demonstrated on Thursday when Republican members of the House of Representatives threw a tantrum (which they called a “protest”) over new mask requirements. Requirements, mind you, that they caused with their own unbelievably childish levels of irresponsibility. 

As David Kurtz at Talking Points Memo pointed out, “The Senate is almost universally vaccinated,” but the “House remains a COVID cesspool,” because so many Republicans in that body refuse to get vaccinated. They are protesting a problem they continue to cause with their own recklessness. There was a similar situation in Missouri this week, when, as Salon’s Jon Skolnik reports, the “acting director of the St. Louis County Department of Public Health alleged that he was verbally and physically assaulted at a Tuesday City Council meeting after encouraging the council’s members to enact a mask mandate.” The thing is, he wouldn’t feel the need to recommend a mask mandate if people would just act like adults and get their shots.


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The GOP is supposedly the party of “personal responsibility,” but it’s quite clear that it’s a party of whiny brats who expect everyone else to do everything for them so that they never have to do even the bare minimum. Now they are freaking out about facing the consequences of their own actions. Unfortunately, everyone else is also paying the price for their irresponsibility. 

The solution, as it usually is with free riders, is to stop asking nicely and start forcing. We don’t ask people not to speed and drive drunk. We punish them with fines and jail time. Taxes are not a suggestion. And so it should be with vaccines. Anyone who wants to live in society and benefit from it should do their part. If you don’t like mask mandates, it’s time to get the shot, so we can be rid of the masks already. 

Biden is getting bolder on this front, instituting a new vaccine-or-regular-testing mandate for federal employees. The military is moving “quickly” in the same direction, according to Deputy Pentagon press secretary Jamal Brown. These are good moves. Still, things are moving far too slowly. Banning people who haven’t been vaccinated from flying, for instance, would move things along much faster. 

Mask mandates would go down a lot more smoothly for vaccinated America if there was some assurance both that it was a temporary set of affairs and that the real cause of the problem, which is vaccine refusal, was being taken care of. Mask mandates without vaccine mandates simply are unfair and ineffective. The delta variant is alarming, but our biggest problem — bratty Trumpers — hasn’t changed. We can’t make them be better people. But local, state and federal government entities can work together to keep them from continuing on as dangerous free riders. That needs to happen sooner rather than later for all of our sake. 

13 best places to eat at in Seattle (because it has some of the best restaurants in the country)

Seattle has some of the best restaurants in the country. A few summers ago, as I worked in New York and my partner worked in the Emerald City, I flew out to stay with him. We didn’t so much plan an itinerary as we planned meals — breakfast, lunch, and dinner; snacks between breakfast, lunch, and dinner — many of which were at Renee Erickson’s great restaurants. After cooking her recipes for years, one of my trip goals was to finally enjoy her food in person. And did we ever. But we also stumbled upon a lot of other wonderful eats. I spoke with my Food52 colleagues to get their takes on the best restaurants in Seattle, and here are our top 13 spots in no particular order.

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1. Sea Wolf

Two brothers — Kit and Jesse Schumann — founded Sea Wolf in 2014. They started by baking in borrowed kitchens and, a couple years later, graduated to their own space. Lucky for us, it was a jog away from Justin’s apartment. The bakery’s kitchen is wide open, so when you walk in, you can see bakers loading dough into bins and pulling loaves from the oven. There’s sunshine everywhere, thanks to the four skylights, and even from the door it’s easy to spot the larger-than-life cinnamon rolls. They’re made from croissant dough scraps (!) and filled with butter, cinnamon, and raisins. “They’re an homage to the cinnamon rolls we ate as kids at Carol’s Coffee Cup in our hometown,” Kit told me. “When you are nine, they look as if they are as big as your head. And they might have been.”

2. Ellenos

Ellenos says its yogurt “starts with the pure, pasteurized whole milk we source directly from local farms that creates our signature velvety texture and slightly sweet taste.” But that’s not what makes it special. Apparently, it’s the family’s own blend of probiotic cultures. (What? Your family doesn’t have one of those?) This is what makes their ultra-thick Greek yogurt stand out. Ellenos lives in a pint-sized stall at Pike Place Market. You’d almost miss it amid the craze if it weren’t for the long line or hoards of people wandering around with swooshy, swirly, get-me-some-of-that yogurt. While they have a slew of flavors — lemon curd! passion fruit! marionberry! — the nutty, fruity, oaty muesli was my favorite.

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3. General Porpoise Doughnuts

General Porpoise does doughnuts and caffeine — nothing more, nothing less — and they do it really, really well. The doughnuts are yeast-raised, sugar-rolled, and filled with — well, that’s the fun part. Classics include vanilla custard and lemon curd. Wild cards could be anything from chocolate marshmallow to peanut butter and jelly. When Justin and I were there, it was a sweet-tart rhubarb jam. But the vanilla custard was our favorite, especially with a giant mug of coffee that lived up to all the Seattle hype.

4. Country Dough

You’re at Pike Place. You’ve seen the fish-throwing (just what it sounds like) and the gum wall (also just what it sounds like) and survived the original Starbucks crowds. You want lunch — ASAP, please — and Country Dough is the place to be. This spot specializes in guo kui, crispy stuffed flatbreads, perfect if you want to wander and eat. We got ours with chicken, but you could get pork, beef, or mushrooms and young bamboo shoots. We also got the Chinese crepe and hand-shaven noodle soup. Justin said ordering dumplings, too, would be overkill, which I’m still low-key salty about.

Currently, Country Dough is temporarily closed due to the impact of COVID-19.

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5. The Walrus And The Carpenter

The Walrus and the Carpenter shucks anywhere between 100 and 140 dozen oysters every night. That’s 1,200 to 1,600 oysters — every dang night. Opened in 2010, this homey, lively space has a completely open kitchen surrounded by a bar, like having courtside seats at a basketball game. The oysters are so cold, they might as well have just been plucked from the bottom of the sea. The menu lists them from mildest to briniest, and the selection rotates regularly, depending on local farmer availability. Each one is served with freshly-grated horseradish, shallot-champagne mignonette, and lemon. We split too many (is there such a thing?) and said “Cheers!” before each one, clinking together the shells.

6. Barnacle Bar

What to do while you’re waiting in line at The Walrus and the Carpenter? Go to one of Erickson’s other spots — right next door. They’ll even tell you when your table is ready. Barnacle “celebrates the Italian aperitivo bar in a jewel box space with wines by the glass and all things canned, pickled, smoked, and cured.” Which means a mean spritz and all the snacks to go with. Or, say, that giant jamón serrano on the counter, hand-sliced to order, and silky chicken mousse with amaro-pickled cherries. Or, my pick, boquerones — buttery white anchovies — drowned in olive oil and topped with smashed green olives and crispy bread crumbs.

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7. Molly Moon’s

Plan a trip to Seattle, ask around for recommendations, and inevitably someone will tell you that you have to go to Molly Moon’s. Its namesake and founder Molly Moon Neitzel opened her first scoop shop in 2008. Today, the brand has seven more. Expect classics like strawberries (made with local fruit), chocolate (made with melted chocolate versus cocoa powder), and salted caramel (“dares to be saltier than all the others!” according to the website). But I was holding up the line with sample after sample of flavors you can’t find everywhere: Earl Grey, honey lavender, and yeti (yep, yeti), which is made with granola, vanilla caramel, and chocolate bits.

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8. Frankie & Jo’s

Justin and I didn’t find Frankie & Jo’s. Frankie & Jo’s found us. We went to dinner one night, left the restaurant on the lookout for Molly Moon’s, and saw all these people wandering by with ice cream cones. Then, there was Frankie & Jo’s, a plant-based ice cream shop. Cherry Bombe recently called its co-owners Autumn Martin and Kari Brunson “the vegan ice cream world’s most influential duo.” And you only need one scoop to see why. I opted for Tahini Chocolate (salty tahini ice cream with chocolate ribbons and sesame fudge) and Gingered Golden Milk (turmeric and coconut milk ice cream with cinnamon, cardamom, and candied ginger). My sweet-pea got the beet, strawberry, and rose sorbet. I have a feeling there isn’t a bad flavor at this place, but the highlighter-neon Golden Milk totally swept me off my feet.

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9. Salt & Straw

This not-so-ordinary ice cream shop with ever-changing flavors hails from Portland, Oregon, but has recently established a new outpost in the Pike/Pine neighborhood. It’s centrally located, super convenient for grabbing a scoop of signature flavors like Salted, Malted, Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough; Honey Lavender; or Arbequina Olive Oil.

10. Café Presse

Kaleigh Embree, Food52’s Customer Care Specialist, is a fan of this low-key French restaurant located in the First Hill neighborhood. A friend of mine who lives in Seattle told me I need to come visit for this place because “When the atmosphere, staff, and food are all at the same amazing quality, then I know I’ve found my new favorite haunt.”

11. Alki Beach Cafe

Food52’s Sample Coordinator Ace Baclay recommends this casual beachside restaurant with amazing views of Seattle’s skyline. The menu includes everything from tropically inspired cocktails and eggs Benedict to ahi poke bowls. But Ace calls the Caesar salad topped with crispy calamari especially “divine.”

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12. Paseo

When Ace wants a Caribbean-inspired bite, he heads to this Seattle restaurant and tiki bar with two locations in the city. His go-to order is the sautéed prawns sandwich, which features black tiger prawns sautéed in garlic tapenade and served with fresh cilantro, pickled jalapeños, caramelized onions, and crisp romaine lettuce.

13. Kedai Makan

“I dream about the roti jala net bread at Kedai Makan,” says Larissa Sanz, Brand Manager of Five Two. “This is hands down one of the top five dishes I’ve ever had in my life. I cannot find this dish anywhere in NYC. I re-created it recently after a ton of research, but it didn’t compare to this restaurant’s version. If I return to Seattle anytime soon, this will be stop #1.”

Poll: Majority of Republicans support use of “force” to save “the traditional American way of life”

Nearly half of all Republicans in the U.S. believe that “a time will come when patriotic Americans have to take the law into their own hands.”

The revelation, which emerged as a part of a June poll by George Washington University, comes just six months after the January 6 riot, in which thousands of self-described “patriots” stormed the Capitol building to forcibly stop President Biden from being confirmed by the Electoral College. 

While 47% of Republicans agree with the prediction – that a group of patriotic citizens will usurp government authorities and run the country themselves – just 9% of Democrats could say the same. 

The poll, which surveyed 1,753 registered U.S. voters from June 4 to June 23, found a wide set of disparities between Republicans and Democrats on a number of principles.

For example, 82% of Republicans agreed that it’s “hard to trust the results of elections when so many people will vote for anyone who offers a handout,” but only 15% of Democrats felt the same way. When it comes to future elections, 76% of Democrats expressed confidence in the security of the 2022 elections, while just 28% of Republicans were on the same page. 

There were also significant differences between political parties on certain hot-button issues.

For instance, the poll found that less than 30% of Republicans feel that “dealing with global climate change” is somewhat or very important. With Democrats, this number is just north of 90%. 

“Changing the nation’s gun laws,” meanwhile, saw support from about 20% of Republicans, but more than 80% of Democrats felt it was a priority. 

Finally, about 40% of Republicans somewhat or strongly supported the need for “addressing race relations in this country, while 90% of Democrats felt the same. 

It should be noted that there was a high level of agreement on certain issues as well. 

For example, about the same number of Democrats and Republicans (85%) supported reducing the influence of lobbyists in Congress. Both parties were also aligned on making Medicare and Social Security more “financially sound,” with about 90% of voters in both groups on board. 

Other issues which saw a bipartisan consensus included combating drug addiction, tackling rising healthcare costs, improving employment, improving the election system, and revamping the nation’s infrastructure. 

In recent years, there has been a strong sense amongst scholars and pundits that the U.S. is more politically polarized than it has ever been – a perception that runs counter to the poll’s findings on a number of issues. Some scholars have argued that the recent rise of the “culture war” – which Republicans have repeatedly used to cast a political valence on things that are otherwise benign – has contributed to a growing sense that the U.S. is more divided than ever. 

A sterile solution: How Crispr could protect wild salmon

Upon an otherwise unruly landscape of choppy sea and craggy peaks, the salmon farms that dot many of Norway’s remote fjords impose a neat geometry. The circular pens are placid on the surface, but hold thousands of churning fish, separated by only a net from their wild counterparts. And that is precisely the conundrum. Although the pens help ensure the salmon’s welfare by mimicking the fish’s natural habitat, they also sometimes allow fish to escape, a problem for both the farm and the environment.

In an attempt to prevent escaped fish from interbreeding with their wild counterparts and threatening the latter’s genetic diversity, molecular biologist Anna Wargelius and her team at the Institute of Marine Research in Norway have spent years working on ways to induce sterility in Atlantic salmon. Farmed salmon that cannot reproduce, after all, pose no threat to the gene pool of wild stocks, and Wargelius has successfully developed a technique that uses the gene-editing technology Crispr to prevent the development of the cells that would otherwise generate functioning sex organs.

In fact, Wargelius’ team was a little too successful. To be financially viable, commercial fish farms need at least some of their stock to reproduce. So the scientists went a step further, developing a method of temporarily reversing the modification they had already made. They’ve created what they call “sterile parents.”

The term may sound like an oxymoron, but the sterile parents have the potential to solve one of the most pressing problems facing salmon aquaculture, both in Norway and around the world. Wargelius says it could be up to a decade before the results of her work are commercially available, but once they are, they have the potential to make an already burgeoning food source markedly more friendly on the environment. And by prioritizing environmental concerns and employing a technique that simply turns off a gene rather than introducing one from a different species, Wargelius and her team may contribute to a shift in how genetic engineering is perceived in Norway, a country with some of the strictest regulations regarding genetically modified organisms on the books.

Aquaculture, the cultivation of saltwater and freshwater organisms under controlled conditions, has long been a controversial industry. On the one hand, it’s been hailed as an answer to overfishing and to a growing global population’s demands for protein; on the other, it can pollute the water and spread disease among both farmed and wild fish. Despite these drawbacks, around the world, aquaculture is booming. In the two decades of this century, production has increased an average of 5.3 percent per year, and as of 2018, more than 126 million tons of the seafood consumed annually came from a farm. Of those 126 million, 1.4 million were Norwegian salmon.

In fact, Norway is the world’s largest producer of farmed salmon, raising millions of the fish in sea pens scattered throughout its jagged fjords. Aquaculture is the country’s second-largest industry, and those pens are an important part of its reputation among major seafood producers for relatively sustainable production methods. Up to 260 feet wide and 160 feet deep, they are open-net, allowing the chilly waters of the North Atlantic to circulate freely and more closely replicate part of the salmon’s habitat.

Exact numbers are difficult to pin down, but one estimate puts the total number of escaped fish at 2.1 million in the last decade, and another study found evidence of genes from farmed fish in wild specimens that were caught in 109 out of 147 Norwegian salmon rivers. Already under threat from overfishing — the population has been cut in half in the last 30 years — the threat to wild salmon biodiversity from this aquaculture gene stock is so great that farms are fined for fish that escape. In one case this year, Mowi, a company based in Bergen, Norway, was fined $450,000 for a 2018 incident in which 54,000 fish escaped.

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In her early work, Wargelius focused on vaccines as a means of inducing the sterility that would minimize that threat. But her strategy changed soon after she learned about Crispr, the gene-editing technique that functions kind of like a Swiss Army knife, with different tools that make it possible to both insert material into a gene and snip it out.

Dorothy Dankel, a researcher at the University of Bergen who collaborates with Wargelius, recalled when Crispr first popped up. “Anna was saying, ‘Wow, there’s this new paper that just came out with something called Crispr,” Dankel said. “She felt like the vaccine approach, it’s really kind of hit or miss.” With Crispr, Wargelius thought, the team could hedge their bets.

But some scientists were skeptical, said Dankel. Genetically modified crops have encountered varying degrees of consumer resistance globally, in part because some modification techniques involve inserting genes from one species into another — a process that has provoked fears of Frankenstein foods. “People were freaking out, saying, ‘No, it’s GMO, we can’t do that in Norway,'” said Dankel.

But an exception exists for lab experiments. By using Crispr to treat newly fertilized fish eggs, Wargelius’s team was able to knock out a specific gene — called dead-end or dnd — that is responsible for the migration of germ cells to the gonad. Germ cells eventually give rise to gametes, or sexual reproductive cells, and without them, the thinking went, the fish in this initial cohort would not reach sexual maturity.

At the same time, the scientists also turned off a gene that controls for pigmentation, because the resulting albinism would make it significantly easier to keep track of which fish had been modified. Sure enough, many of the Crispr-treated embryos grew into yellow-hued salmon that lacked germ cells.

Salmon grow slowly, so it would take just over a year before the biologists could confirm the impact of the missing cells, but by 2016, it was clear: 100 percent of the albino fish failed to reach sexual maturity. They were all sterile.


Using Crispr to change a gene that causes sex organs to develop, scientists have created salmon that are sterile. But, with the right treatment, those same fish may have their fertility returned, and thus breed sterile offspring that still contain the edited gene. Video: Institute of Marine Research

“It was a very elegant experiment,” says Yonathan Zohar, a professor of marine biotechnology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County and an expert in aquaculture and fish reproduction technologies. Linking the dead-end gene to an albino gene provided “a very good visual indication” of which fish had been treated, he said. “Her approach made a lot of sense.”

There was only one problem: The element of Crispr they were using to produce the sterile salmon required a technician to manually inject each embryo with a protein that cut the dnd gene — a labor-intensive method that is hardly viable for commercial fisheries. Wargelius wanted to find a way to reverse the impact of the genetic modification without removing it from the salmon’s DNA. After all, the goal was pass sterility along to the next generation. A fish farm could then keep its brood stock separate from the rest of the salmon.

“We thought, okay, maybe the simplest way to produce enough sterile salmon is to enable some of the sterile fish to reproduce,” Wargelius explained.

She was skeptical the idea would work. But a year after her team injected a certain mRNA from wild salmon into newly fertilized eggs in an effort to effectively turn the fish’s fertility back on, Wargelius received a text from the research station with photos that proved the technique had worked. It read: “We have many fish with germ cells here!”

Eventually, the treated fish developed gonads and reached sexual maturity, producing offspring that inherited their parents’ genetic sterility. The scientists won’t have the full results until this fall, after the first generation is 8 to 10 months old — the age at which salmon normally develop gonads. But so far, they say, everything is on track. “Theoretically, yes we should get 100 percent sterility,” Wargelius says.

Of course, certain safeguards need to be in place. A Crispr experiment to breed hornless cattle in the U.S. was initially hailed as a major success, but was later discovered to have introduced an unintended stretch of bacterial DNA into the cows’ genome. “The producers thought that only their edit was being introduced,” said Jennifer Kuzma, a professor and co-director of the Genetic Engineering and Society Center at North Carolina State University. “You have to be cautious that you’re not getting any off-target” — or unintended — “effects,” she said. One way guard against this: Sequence the offspring’s entire genome and look carefully for unintended changes in the DNA.

The Norwegian team is taking care to do this, and Kuzma sees their work as, in many ways, exemplary. “The work has a societal benefit, it has biosafety mechanisms in place, and it’s being done in collaboration with ethicists,” she says. “It’s being done under a pretty solid, good governance model.”

The Norwegian scientists haven’t yet sequenced the salmon’s genomes to look for any secondary effects, and it’s still relatively early in the salmon’s lifespan, so they won’t know about behavioral changes until the sterile offspring are transferred to the sea pens; currently the juveniles are living in tanks in the lab. “Anna will have to demonstrate that when you take those fish to the net pens, they perform as well as the non-treated ones,” says Zohar. And, he adds, she’ll have to scale everything up.

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Those are significant hurdles, but the biggest hurdle, Zohar points out, is regulatory. From the time that genetically engineered crops first became widely available in the 1990s, their production has been regulated to different degrees, with some countries, such as the United States, merely demanding that the crops meet the same health and environmental standards as their conventionally bred counterparts.

Other countries have imposed stricter regulations on selected crops. In Mexico, for example, genetically engineered corn is banned because it poses a threat to the biodiversity of native maize. And other countries — especially those in Europe — have banned all genetically engineered crops intended for human consumption, as a food safety precaution. (To date, the safety concerns associated with GMOs have not been borne out.)

Norway has some of the most stringent restrictions in the world when it comes to genetically modified organisms: Farmers are barred from cultivating GMO crops and no genetically modified food products can be imported. Those policies, codified in the 1993 Gene Technology Act, were a reflection of both a powerful and fiercely protectionist agricultural sector and a public that is deeply conservationist and prides itself on its close connection to nature.

“It was black or white,” says Aina Bartmann, CEO of GMO-Network, an umbrella organization of nongovernmental organizations and corporations that represents 1.7 million consumers. “It was so obvious, I think, for everyone in Norway, in Scandinavia, and also in the European Union,” she said, that GMOs offered “no contribution to anything we want.”

Under the current legislation in Europe, Crispr is considered a gene modification technique, and no products created through it can be sold in Norway. (It is, however, authorized for research, and is being tested on lettuce and strawberries, in addition to salmon.) But that may be changing. Bjørn Kåre Myskja, a professor of ethics at Norwegian University of Science and Technology, is working on a study of the conditions that would make gene editing technology socially and morally acceptable to Norwegians.

His research is currently in progress, but he’s already seeing evidence, both in his work and anecdotally, that attitudes are changing — particularly when it comes to technologies like Crispr, which don’t always involve inserting the genes of one species into another. “When you do something that might happen in an ordinary naturally-occurring kind of mutation,” he said, “then there seems to be a larger percentage that will find that acceptable.”

Myskja has also observed in his research that opposition varies depending upon the perceived purpose of the modification. A modification that is intended to increase yields or to make an organism grow faster — and therefore increase the profits of the producer — is generally frowned upon in Norway. But a modification that achieves a broader good by increasing sustainability, for example, or improving animal welfare, might be tolerated. Therefore, a modification that benefits salmon, such as sterility or resistance to sea lice, “may fall on the acceptable part of the scale,” says Myskja.

His early findings are echoed in a survey conducted by GENEinnovate, a collaboration of private companies, research institutions, and the Norwegian Biotechnology Advisory Board, an independent committee made up of 15 members appointed by the Norwegian government. It found that a majority of Norwegian consumers had a positive attitude toward gene editing if it carried clear social benefits and was carefully labelled. Bartmann, of GMO-Network, has noticed the same even among her organization’s members. There are “a lot of uncertainties associated with many aspects of gene editing,” she said, and her members remain concerned about possible risks of releasing genetically modified crops — or animals — into the wild. “We support the research going on now in Norway,” she said, and “we think that the more knowledge we get about the new methods, the better.”

In the U.S., Kuzma has noted similar trends. “In surveys, people say they see edits or genes inserted from the same species as slightly more acceptable than transgenic,” she said, referring to genes inserted from different species. “In the marketplace, in part because there are so few products in the market, a significant proportion don’t really care. But there are still years of distrust to get over, and there’s a segment of around 20 percent that will reject GMOs in any form.”

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For the moment, the aquaculture industry in Norway is hedging its bets. Historically, the industry has taken a hardline position against GMOs, conscious that the appeal of their products rests on a public perception of genetic purity. AquaGen, a breeding company that supplies fertilized Atlantic salmon eggs, sent a statement to Undark, writing that “producing sterile salmon by Crispr may be a future solution, but many technical, ethical, legislative, and commercial issues need to be solved before commercial implementation.” Cermaq, an international salmon farming company, similarly wrote to Undark that “farming sterile salmon may have advantages, and research in this area is very interesting,” but noted that the company is currently not planning to farm the gene-edited fish.

Yet Dankel has seen change among industry representatives. In 2014, she interviewed a senior manager at AquaGen, and asked if she saw a future for Crispr in her company. Dankel received a hard no: “‘This is playing with fire,'” Dankel recalls being told. “‘Our customers expect pure genetics; they don’t want anything modified.'” Just a few years later, she says, the company told her the technique is part of their research strategy.

The speed with which Crispr technology is developing and being adopted in laboratories around the world helps explain some of that transformation. But locally, Dankel’s own work plays a role, too. Within the Wargelius lab, Dankel is the representative for Responsible Research and Innovation, a position devoted to ensuring that ethical and social considerations are embedded into the research.

This involves doing outreach — explaining the research to the public — and what Dankel calls inreach — getting people who aren’t used to collaborating on a subject to work together. When it comes to something as complex as Crispr, she finds that with these interdisciplinary teams that combine biochemistry and molecular biology with social and economic assessments, it is essential to “create a common language” for what the goals are, and what success — and failure — might look like.

Dankel too is noticing a change in the discourse in the wake of the Crispr salmon. The pendulum has swung “and now people — even the Biotechnology Council of Norway — are only saying the good things about Crispr and not anything about off-target effects,” Dankel said, “or that once you start this technology you can never put it back.”

Yet perhaps the clearest indication that Norway may soon adjust its legislation to make room for Crispr is the government’s creation, in November 2020, of a new committee to review the field of genetic technologies. Headed by Wargelius, it will report on its findings and recommendations in June 2022. “Norway really wants to promote a public debate about the law that is based in science,” says Dankel. “They could have chosen a law professor to lead that. They could have chosen someone who’s not a biologist.”

And Wargelius still has a lot of biology to do. She and her team are just now beginning to work on their second generation of fish and also are planning to sequence the genome of the sterile fish to ensure there aren’t any unintended edits. Wargelius estimates that any commercial licensing for this application, provided it is approved, is five to 10 years away.

But she’s in no hurry. With Crispr, she suspects, Norway is moving toward an application-based process, where the technology will be approved in cases where the need for or benefit from a specific use is sufficient to outweigh the risks. Which is why, she says, she chooses an open and thorough approach for her own research. “We also now are trying to start a collaboration with both economic and ethical researchers to see what is the potential in the market, what will people think,” said Wargelius. “I would like to have a quite slow process, where we really have all the documentation that we need to be certain that it’s a solid product.”

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Lisa Abend is journalist and food writer based in Copenhagen and Madrid. Her work has been published in Bon Appetit, Food and Wine, Time Magazine, The Atlantic, Wired, The New York Times, and Slate, among other outlets.

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

Good wildfire news? Evidence from the Bootleg Fire supports thinning forests

As the Bootleg Fire in southern Oregon swept toward him last week, Pete Caligiuri of The Nature Conservancy hustled to lay out water pipes and start the sprinklers to wet down the area surrounding a remote research station. The approaching wildfire had raged so fiercely that it had begun generating its own weather. Clouds of hot smoke formed towering thunderheads, which cast lighting down among the dry trees and urged the flames forward with gusts.

The Nature Conservancy had been preparing for this moment for decades. The Jim Castles research station sits at the north end of the Sycan Marsh reserve: 30,000 acres of mixed wetland and dry pine forest in the Klamath Basin, which the nonprofit acquired in the 1980’s. The conservation group worked with the Klamath Tribes that call this area home to restore the forested areas to the landscape that existed before Americans took over the land and began putting out fires. They cut down small trees, leaving fire-adapted specimens like thick-barked ponderosa pines, and they began setting fires, allowing them to consume decades of needles and branches on the forest floor.

The Bootleg Fire, now the largest in the country, is testing these methods. And the results offer a lesson for woodland communities throughout the West struggling to adapt to harsher fire seasons brought on by rising temperatures. As Caligiuri, the conservancy’s forest program director, was getting the sprinklers going around the station, he was also listening intently to the voices of firefighters crackling through a radio. “What we were hearing was that, as the fire moved out of the denser forest into these areas that had been treated, it came down out of the canopy of the trees and dropped to the ground,” Caligiuri said.

That’s exactly what the conservationists had hoped would happen. The fire moved gently along the ground and did not harm the research station. Caligiuri stressed that it’s far too early to consider his story as anything more than anecdotal evidence. But there’s abundant published science that supports the underlying theory.

“We have overwhelming evidence that when we treat forests by removing fuels, it generally — not always, you can never say always, but generally — moderates fire behavior,” said Maureen Kennedy, a professor who studies forest fires at the University of Washington, Tacoma.

Kennedy studied a similar situation as the one unfolding in the Sycan Marsh, following the 2011 Wallow Fire in Arizona. She looked closely at the places where people had thinned the forest around two small towns, Alpine and Greer, preparation that probably saved them. Forest treatments like this work by spacing out fuel, Kennedy said. When there is a continuous ladder of branches and small trees from the ground to the canopy, it allows fire to rise up into the treetops. And when trees are close together, fires move from one to the next, growing hotter and hotter. Trees that are farther apart, however,  encourage fires to fall to the ground. It makes sense, intuitively, but it’s still surprising when a wall of flame settles down and begins creeping across the forest floor, Kennedy said.

“No matter how many times I study it, no matter how much sense it makes in theory, it’s still amazing,” she said. “When you look at photographs from the Wallow Fire, that landscape was nuked, it was burning so hot that there were only blackened sticks that used to be trees left behind. Then, as you move into the treatment area the trees are brown, and then further in, they are green.”

You can see the same thing in a photo (below) taken after the 2020 North Complex Fire, near Quincy, California. There, too, the fire mellowed when it reached the area where workers had removed fuels, said Hannah Hepner, program manager for the Plumas County Fire Safe Council.

“That aerial photo is pretty incredible, and that is precisely where the fuels treatment took place,” Hepner said. But, she cautioned, these images shouldn’t set expectations too high: Fire behavior is unpredictable, and some areas always burn more severely than others. Just across the street from that photo, she said, the fire continued to blacken trees — though even there, previous forest management allowed firefighters to get down a narrow road and save a wood shingled building.

Examples abound: Forest management near Paradise, California, preserved the Pine Ridge School — a small island of standing structures amid the devastation of the Camp Fire. For years, other foresters thought John Mount was crazy for purposefully setting fires on the land that he managed for the electric company, Southern California Edison. But last September, the massive Creek Fire surrounded that land, licking up against it from three sides, but then settling to the ground and sparing trees.

Today, Mount’s heretical ideas have become mainstream. The story is different in coastal wet forests or in brushland, which evolved with less frequent fires. But it seems clear that the arid pine forests of the American West are much more resilient to fire when they are not packed with small trees, brush, and a century of dry foliage. “Fires are natural, inevitable, and necessary in these dry forests, and we removed them,” Kennedy said.

In the next few years, scientists will scrutinize the Sycan Marsh to see how the Bootleg Fire reacted to different types of forest management, Caligiuri said, which will help people understand how to tame wildfires. There’s a long way to go, but neighbors across the West are organizing community groups to thin trees and conduct prescribed burns, while state and federal agencies are ramping up spending to increase this kind of management. People are starting to move in the right direction, Hepner said, “and yet sometimes conditions seem to be outpacing us.”